History
and Heritage Tours in British Columbia

Events in the History of British
Columbia
History of Vancouver Island
Events
in the History of Vancouver Island
British
Columbia Archives
The modern history of British Columbia begins with the First Nations
people who have lived and flourished on the lush natural resources
of these lands for over ten thousand years, since some time after
the end of the last Ice Age.
There are three
prominent First Nations groups of the Pacific Northwest who have
divided the land between themselves for thousands of years: the
Nootka, the Coast Salish, and the Kwak'wala Speaking
Peoples. The rich land and marine resources enabled them to
develop complex societies and the intricate aboriginal art forms
that are now internationally acclaimed. To the east, in the region
now known as the British Columbia Rockies, the Kootenay were
the original keepers of the land, having fought fiercely for possession
of the precious hot springs found in these mountains. The Carrier
nation roamed the interior valleys, the Tsimshians ranged
the northern coast, and the Tlingits occupied southern Alaska
and northern British Columbia. The Sekani and Beaver
occupied the eastern region of the north while the Haida
lived on Haida Gwaii, formerly called the Queen Charlotte Islands.
As recently as 220 years ago the northwest coast of North America
was one of the least explored areas in the world. The geography
of the land presented many formidable natural barriers to European
explorers. To the east the soaring Rocky Mountains blocked the way,
and the huge Pacific Ocean separated distant land masses off the
west coast. The desire to explore and discover new land and natural
resources prevailed in the second half of the 18th century, with
expeditions mounted by the Russians, American, Spanish and British
explorers and traders.
The peaceful
existence of the aboriginal people was to change soon after the
first contact by Europeans in 1778, when Captain James Cook
set foot on Nootka Island on the northwest coast of Vancouver Island.
The Spanish later arrived and set up a base at Nootka under the
command of Don Juan Fransisco de la Bodega y Quadra, who
had claimed the coast of Alaska for Spain. In 1792, Captain George
Vancouver, with his ships Discovery and Chatham, arrived
at Nootka Sound to take regain control under the terms of the Nootka
Convention.
Both explorers made the trip to Tahsis to resolve years of Spanish/English
rivalry that had played out on this Island, and commenced working
together at the task of mapping and exploring the coast. A Treaty
in 1793 gave the two countries joint ownership of Nootka, but it
was not long after the signing that Spain's dominance in North America
began to wane. The last Spanish ship was ordered out of the area
in 1795, marking the end of the Spanish influence In British Columbia.
Southwestern
British Columbia's history centres around the discovery of the mighty
Fraser River. Ironically, the early European explorers roaming
the coast missed the mouth of the Fraser River due to the dense
fog. The Fraser was discovered in 1791 by Spaniard Jose Maria Narvaez,
a pilot in the Spanish Navy.
Adventurous explorers and fur traders of the Northwest Company were
heading west across the Rockies. Michael Phillips was the first
white man to blaze a trail across the Canadian Rockies from west
to east through an unexplored pass, although routes were long known
by the First Nations people.
The Peace River, the only British Columbia River that drains into
the Arctic Ocean, was navigated by explorer Alexander Mackenzie
in 1793. Mackenzie was the first European to navigate the Peace
River, which was named for a treaty between the Cree and Beaver
First nations in 1790. In the Dean Channel near Bella Coola on the
west coast, you can still see the rock where he inscribed Alexander
Mackenzie from Canada by land 22nd July 1793.
In 1794 the
first white settlement in British Columbia was established at what
is now Fort St, John. In 1805, the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC)
opened their first trading post in the region at Hudson's Hope in
the north. In 1808, when Simon Fraser visited the communities along
the mouth of the Fraser River, he thought he had found the Columbia
River. After Simon Fraser came the equally famous explorer David
Thompson, who followed the Columbia River through British Columbia,
into Washington and on to its mouth at Astoria, Oregon. The names
of these two explorers are indelibly printed in the history of British
Columbia, adorning hotels, rivers and street signs. The two major
fur trading companies, the Hudson's Bay Company and the North West
Company amalgamated under the HBC in 1821.
The Hudson's Bay Company built Fort Victoria in 1843, and the colony
of Vancouver Island was established in 1849 when the entire island
was leased to the HBC. In 1858, over 20,000 determined prospectors
(many from California, where the gold rush of 1849 had petered out)
came from the HBC stockade of Fort Victoria and up the Fraser River
in search of recently discovered gold on the Fraser River.
Soon, instant towns sprang up and grew to become flourishing boomtowns.
The legacy of these prospectors can be found in the many Ghost Towns
that dot the Interior today.
In response
to the frenzied discovery and mining of gold, the British Government
quickly created the mainland colony of British Columbia in 1858.
Governor James Douglas, chief factor of the Hudson's Bay Company
and governor of Vancouver Island, became the new governor of British
Columbia. In 1866 the colony of Vancouver Island was combined with
the colony of British Columbia, with Victoria becoming the provincial
capital of British Columbia on April 2 1868. In 1871, with the promise
of completing the Canadian Pacific Railway by 1885, British Columbia
was lead into confederation, rather than join the United States
to the south, with Victoria as the seat of Government.
Gold discoveries continued, with gold being found in the Peace River
in 1861. The Cariboo Wagon Road was constructed from the
town of Yale to the boomtown of Barkerville, which in in its heyday
was the largest city west of Chicago and north of San Fransisco.
Completed in 1865, the Cariboo Wagon Road opened up the British
Columbia Interior, with mule trains and stagecoaches plying the
route, and roadhouses and boomtowns dotting the roadside. Gold was
discovered further north, placing Dawson Creek on the brink of the
huge Klondike Gold Rush of 1898.
The mining industry,
the railway, and the geology of the land have all contributed to
the history and development of British Columbia. The rise and fall
of many settlements can be attributed to the route of the railway,
while natural features, such as the abundance of hot springs in
the BC Rockies, have been responsible for the eventual growth of
resort towns.
The fur and
salmon trade brought great prosperity to the First Nations people,
whose society was organized around wealth, possessions and potlatches.
The HBC generally treated the natives fairly, and their communities
thrived. However, the commerce caused the indigenous people to abandon
their traditional homesites in favour of settlements closer to the
forts for improved trading and protection. The settlers introduced
muskets, alcohol and smallpox, all of which had a devastating effect
on the native people. Christian missionaries arrived and set about
banning the natives' traditional potlatches and suppressing their
languages and culture. Colonization and land ownership conflicts
soon followed, continuing to this day.
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