Peter Brunton Whannell came from Australia and eventually became Justice of the Peace
                     at 
Fort Yale before getting let go due to a dispute called the “Ned McGowan War”.
Whannell came to 
Victoria in 
1858 with a letter of introduction from the British Consul in 
San Francisco in which he was referred to as 
Captain Whannell formerly of the Nizam's service in India.
 Douglas appointed Whannell to Justice of the Peace and Revenue officer at 
Fort Yale, reported in the 
Victoria Gazette as: 
Captain P. B. Whannell, of the Victoria Yeomanry Cavalry, in Australia, and late of
                        the Nigarris [sic] Cavalry in the East Indies.
 When this article was reprinted in an Australian newspaper, authorities in Australian
                     contacted 
Douglas to inform him that Whannell was not a captain, but only a trooper in the Yeomanry
                     Cavalry who had left the colony in 
1856 with the wife of a resident of Melbourne.
While employed as Justice of the Peace at 
Fort Yale, Whannel faced opposition while he attempted to enforce the law, which prompted 
Douglas to petition for a greater police force at 
Fort Yale. After his participation in incidents revolving around 
Edward McGowan and miners' unrest at 
Yale, Whannell was arrested by his 
Brother Magistrate,
 George Perrier. As a result of issuing the arrest of Whannell, 
Perrier was also dismissed from his position.
Whannell was dismissed on 
23 August 1859 by 
Douglas who prevented him from serving in any other government position. The Australian charges
                     were never investigated, and Whannell denied them. Upon his return to 
Victoria, Whannell opened a hotel on Broad street which he called Clifton House. After the
                     hotel failed, Whannell took claim to 160 acres of land on 
San Juan Island. However, his attempts at farming also failed and Whannell was left destitute. Whannell
                     attempted to return home to England, but only got as far as San Francisco.
                     
                     
                        - 1. Dorothy Blakey Smith, ed., The Journal of Arthur Thomas Bushby, 1858-1859, The British Columbia Historical Quarterly XXI (1957-1958): 195-196.
- 2. Ibid.
- 3. Douglas to Lytton, 8 January 1859, 2147, CO 60/4, 42.
- 4. Douglas to Lytton, 20 January 1859, 2738, CO 60/4, 70.
- 5. Dorothy Blakey Smith, ed., The Journal of Arthur Thomas Bushby, 1858-1859, The British Columbia Historical Quarterly XXI (1957-1958): 195-196.