b. 1812-02-03
d. 1886-12-08
William Fraser Tolmie, having studied medicine at the University of
Glasgow, signed a five-year contract to serve as a clerk and surgeon in the
Columbia District in 1832. A keen and serious student, he used the eight-month voyage to
the Columbia as
an admirable opportunity for self improvement
, studying medicine, surgery, botany, biology, geography, and languages.
When Tolmie's contract expired in 1837, he requested a leave; however, he was delayed
for nearly four years because a replacement could not be secured.
Tolmie was successful in building relationships with the Aboriginal people in the
Columbia District area. He began trading furs with them, and eventually set up a Sunday school at
Fort Vancouver where he shared his faith. His Aboriginal allies also taught him that coal deposits existed on
Vancouver Island, which was, until then, unknown amongst explorers.
Forever the student, Tolmie studied the local flora, fauna and languages. He sent collections of plants, animals, and Aboriginal art and vocabulary home to
Scotland. Tolmie published some of the first compilations of Aboriginal vocabularies, including
Chinook jargon—an important trading language of the West Coast.
When Tolmie was finally granted his leave in 1841, he took the opportunity to travel—first
to Upper Fort Garry (now Winnipeg) and York Factory, and eventually to Paris and
London.
In 1842, he signed back on with Hudson's Bay Company and was sent back to
Fort Nisqually as a medical officer, trader, and manager of agricultural operations for the Puget's
Sound Company. It was hoped that his knowledge would aid in the PSC's goals to conduct farming operations
and encourage immigration of British settlers to this disputed territory; however,
when the Oregon Treaty was signed in 1846, setting the 49th parallel as the international
boundary,
Fort Nisqually became American land and the HBC was later removed from the area.
Tolmie moved to
Victoria in 1859, where he constructed
British Columbia's first large stone house on his 1,100 acres at Cloverdale Farm. Tolmie was asked to stand for the House of Assembly of Vancouver Island shortly after
his arrival, and was elected to serve in public office repeatedly between 1860 and
1878. After his retirement, he continued to publish collections of Aboriginal vocabularies. He also persisted in his botany research and at least eight plants were named after
him.
In February of 1850, Tolmie was married to Jane, the daughter of
Chief Factor John Work. The two had five daughters and seven sons together, including Simon Fraser Tolmie,
who would become premier of
British Columbia.
- 1. W. Kaye Lamb, Tolmie, William Fraser, Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online.
- 2. Ibid.
- 3. Ibid.
- 4. Ibid.
- 5. Ibid.
- 6. Ibid.
- 7. Ibid.
- 8. Ibid.
- 9. Ibid.
- 10. Ibid.
- 11. Ibid.
- 12. Ibid.
- 13. Ibid.
- 14. Ibid.
- 15. Ibid.
- 16. Ibid.
- 17. Ibid.
- 18. Ibid.
- 19. Ibid.
- 20. Ibid.
- 21. Ibid.
- 22. Ibid.