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Colony of British Columbia (1858–1866)

The Colony of British Columbia was a crown colony in British North America from 1858 until 1866 that was founded by Richard Clement Moody,[1] who was selected to 'found a second England on the shores of the Pacific',[2] who was Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works for British Columbia and the first Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia. Prior to the arrival of Moody's Royal Engineers, Columbia Detachment, the Colony's supreme authority was its Governor James Douglas, who was the Governor of the neighbouring colony of Vancouver Island.

Colony of British Columbia
1858–1866
Anthem: God Save the Queen
The Colony of British Columbia in 1863
StatusBritish colony
CapitalFort Langley (1858–1859)
New Westminster (1859–1866)
Common languagesEnglish (official)
Northern Athabaskan languages
Salishan languages
Religion
Christianity, Indigenous beliefs
GovernmentConstitutional monarchy
Queen 
• 1858-1866
Queen Victoria
Historical eraBritish Era
• Established
2 August 1858
6 August 1866
CurrencyPound sterling (to 1865)
British Columbia dollar (1865–66)

This first colony of British Columbia did not originally include the Colony of Vancouver Island, or the regions north of the Nass and Finlay rivers, or the regions east of the Rocky Mountains, or any of the coastal islands, but it did include the Colony of the Queen Charlotte Islands,[3] and was enlarged in 1863 in the north and northeast up to the 60th parallel and the 120th meridian. The colony was incorporated with the Colony of Vancouver Island in 1866 to create the new Colony of British Columbia (1866–1871).

Background edit

The explorations of James Cook and George Vancouver, and the concessions of Spain in 1794 established British claims over the coastal area north of California. Similar claims were established inland via the explorations of such men as John Finlay, Sir Alexander Mackenzie, Simon Fraser, Samuel Black, and David Thompson, and by the subsequent establishment of fur trading posts by the North West Company and the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC). However, until 1858, the region which now comprises the mainland of the Province of British Columbia was an unorganised area of British North America comprising two fur trading districts: New Caledonia, north of the Thompson River drainage; and the Columbia District, located south of the Thompson and throughout the basin of the Columbia River.

 
Sir James Douglas, first governor of the Colony of British Columbia

With the signing of the Treaty of Washington in 1846, which established the US border along the 49th parallel, the HBC moved the headquarters of its western operations from Fort Vancouver on the Columbia River (present day Vancouver, Washington) to the newly established Fort Victoria, on the southern tip of Vancouver Island. Vancouver Island and the surrounding Gulf Islands in the Strait of Georgia were organized as a crown colony in 1849. Meanwhile, the mainland continued to function under the de facto administration of the HBC, whose chief executive, James Douglas, was also governor of Vancouver Island. The non-Indigenous mainland population during this time never exceeded about 150 at Fort Victoria,[4] mostly HBC employees and their families.

Governorship of James Douglas edit

By 1857, Americans and British were beginning to respond to rumors of gold in the Thompson River area. Almost overnight, some ten to twenty thousand men moved into the region around present-day Yale, British Columbia, sparking the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush. Governor Douglas - who had no legal authority over New Caledonia – stationed a gunboat at the entrance of the Fraser River to exert such authority by collecting licences from prospectors attempting to make their way upstream. To normalize its jurisdiction, and undercut any HBC claims to the resource wealth of the mainland, the district was converted to a Crown colony on 2 August 1858 by the Parliament of the United Kingdom, and given the name British Columbia. Douglas was offered the governorship of the new colony by the British colonial secretary, Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton, provided that he sever his employment by the Hudson's Bay Company, that Douglas accepted to do, and received a knighthood.

The numerous immigration into the new colony obliged Douglas to act quickly to define regulations and to create infrastructure. Magistrates and constables were hired, mining regulations drawn up, and town sites surveyed at Yale, Hope and Fort Langley to discourage squatting on crown land. In addition, roads were constructed into the areas of greatest mining exploration around Lillooet and Lytton. The colony, however, was not immediately granted a representative colonial assembly, because of uncertainty as to whether the gold rush would yield a stable, settled population. Douglas, who had conflicted with the assembly on Vancouver Island, was relieved.

 
A portion of the Cariboo Road in the Fraser Canyon, c. 1867

The rush indeed was short lived, and the exodus of miners, speculators, and merchants was already underway by the time the Royal Engineers had laid out the colony's new capital at New Westminster. Prospecting continued, however, and additional finds farther inland in the Cariboo region in 1860 signalled an impending second gold rush. Provisioning was already proving to be an acute problem, and with more distant finds it became clear that wagon trains would have to replace pack horses, necessitating new infrastructure.

Throughout his tenure in British Columbia, Douglas feuded with Richard Clement Moody, who was the first Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia, and the Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works for British Columbia,[5] whose jurisdiction overlapped with that of Douglas. Moody's offices of Chief Commissioner and Lieutenant-Governor were of 'higher prestige [and] lesser authority' than that of Douglas, whom The British Government had selected Moody to 'out manoeuvre the old Hudson's Bay Factor [Governor Douglas]'.[6][7]

Foundation by Richard Clement Moody edit

Selection edit

When news of the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush reached London, Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton, Secretary of State for the Colonies, requested that the War Office recommend a field officer who was "a man of good judgement possessing a knowledge of mankind" to lead a Corps of 150 (later increased to 172) Royal Engineers who had been selected for their "superior discipline and intelligence".[8] The War Office chose Moody: and Lord Lytton, who described Moody as his "distinguished friend",[9] accepted their nomination, as a consequence of Moody's military record, his success as Governor of the Falkland Islands, and the distinguished record of his father, Colonel Thomas Moody, at the Colonial Office.[8] Moody was charged to establish British order and to transform the new Colony of British Columbia into the British Empire's "bulwark in the farthest west"[10] and "found a second England on the shores of the Pacific".[9][2] Lytton desired to send to the colony "representatives of the best of British culture, not just a police force": men who possessed "courtesy, high breeding and urbane knowledge of the world"[11] such as Moody, whom the Government considered to be the archetypal "English gentleman and British Officer"[12] to command the Royal Engineers, Columbia Detachment. Moody's brother, Colonel Hampden Clement Blamire Moody, had already served with the Royal Engineers in Canada (mainly at Fort Garry), from 1840 to 1848,[13] to such success that he was subsequently granted command of the regiment across the entirety of China.[14]

Richard Clement Moody and his wife Mary Moody (of the Hawks industrial dynasty and of the Boyd merchant banking family) and their four children left England, for British Columbia, in October 1858, and arrived in British Columbia in December 1858,[5] with the 172 Royal Engineers of the Royal Engineers, Columbia Detachment, and his secretary the freemason Robert Burnaby (after whom he subsequently named Burnaby Lake), under his command.[5] The original Columbia Detachment consisted of 150 Royal Engineers, both sappers and officers, before it was increased to 172. Moody had three captains: Robert Mann Parsons, John Marshall Grant, and Henry Reynolds Luard. The contingent included two lieutenants, both of British landed gentry, namely Lieutenant Arthur Reid Lempriere (of Diélament, Jersey) and Lieutenant Henry Spencer Palmer, and Doctor John Vernon Seddall, and Captain William Driscoll Gosset (who was to be Colonial Treasurer and Commissary Officer), and John Sheepshanks (who was to be Chaplain of the Columbia Detachment).[15] Moody was sworn in as the first lieutenant-governor of British Columbia and appointed Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works for British Columbia.[5]

Ned McGowan's War edit

Moody had hoped to begin immediately the foundation of a capital city, but on his arrival at Fort Langley, he learned of an insurrection, at the settlement of Hill's Bar, by a notorious outlaw, Ned McGowan, and some restive gold miners.[5] Moody repressed the rebellion, which became popularly known as 'Ned McGowan's War', without loss of life.[5] Moody described the incident: The notorious Ned McGowan, of Californian celebrity at the head of a band of Yankee Rowdies defying the law! Every peaceable citizen frightened out of his wits!—Summons & warrants laughed to scorn! A Magistrate seized while on the Bench, & brought to the Rebel's camp, tried, condemned, & heavily fined! A man shot dead shortly before! Such a tale to welcome me at the close of a day of great enjoyment.[16] Moody described the response to his success: 'They gave me a Salute, firing off their loaded Revolvers over my head—Pleasant—Balls whistling over one's head! as a compliment! Suppose a hand had dropped by accident! I stood up, & raised my cap & thanked them in the Queen's name for their loyal reception of me'.[17]

The Foundation of British Columbia edit

In British Columbia, Moody 'wanted to build a city of beauty in the wilderness' and planned his city as an iconic visual metaphor for British dominance, 'styled and located with the objective of reinforcing the authority of the Crown and of the robe'.[18] Subsequent to the enactment of the Pre-emption Act of 1860, Moody settled the Lower Mainland. He founded the new capital city, New Westminster,[5][19] at a site of dense forest of Douglas pine[19] that he selected for its strategic excellence including the quality of its port.[18] He, in his letter to his friend Arthur Blackwood of the Colonial Office that is dated 1 February 1859, described the majestic beauty of the site:[20][12]

"The entrance to the Frazer is very striking--Extending miles to the right & left are low marsh lands (apparently of very rich qualities) & yet fr the Background of Superb Mountains- Swiss in outline, dark in woods, grandly towering into the clouds there is a sublimity that deeply impresses you. Everything is large and magnificent, worthy of the entrance to the Queen of England's dominions on the Pacific mainland. [...] My imagination converted the silent marshes into Cuyp-like pictures of horses and cattle lazily fattening in rich meadows in a glowing sunset. [...] The water of the deep clear Frazer was of a glassy stillness, not a ripple before us, except when a fish rose to the surface or broods of wild ducks fluttered away".[2]

 
Moody likened his vision of the nascent Colony of British Columbia to the pastoral scenes painted by Aelbert Cuyp
 
Moody designed the first Coat of arms of British Columbia

Moody designed the roads and the settlements of New Westminster,[19] and his Royal Engineers, under Captain John Marshall Grant,[19] built an extensive road network, including that which became Kingsway, which connected New Westminster to False Creek; and the North Road between Port Moody and New Westminster; and the Pacific terminus, at Burrard's Inlet, of Port Moody, of the Canadian and Pacific Railway (which subsequently was extended to the mouth of the Inlet and terminates now at Vancouver);[19] and the Cariboo Road; and Stanley Park, which was an important strategic area for invaluable the eventuality of an invasion by America. He named Burnaby Lake after his secretary Robert Burnaby, and he named Port Coquitlam's 400-foot 'Mary Hill' after his wife Mary Hawks. Moody designed the first Coat of arms of British Columbia.[8][21] Richard Clement Moody established Port Moody, which was subsequently named after him, at the end of the trail that connected New Westminster with Burrard Inlet, to defend New Westminster from potential attack from the United States.[19] Moody also established a town at Hastings which was later incorporated into Vancouver.[22]

The British designated multiple tracts as government reserves. The Pre-emption Act did not specify conditions for the distribution of the land, and, consequently, large areas were bought by speculators.[8] Moody requisitioned 3,750 acres (sc. 1,517 hectares) for himself,[8] and, on this land, he subsequently built for himself, and owned, Mayfield, a model farm near New Westminster.[22] Moody was criticised by journalists for land grabbing,[8] but his requisitions were ordered by the Colonial Office,[5] and Moody throughout his tenure in British Columbia received the approbation of the British authorities in London,[19] and was in British Columbia described as 'the real father of New Westminster'.[23] However, Lord Lytton, then Secretary of State for the Colonies, 'forgot the practicalities of paying for clearing and developing the site and the town' and the effort of Moody's Engineers was continually impeded by insufficient funds, which, together with the continuous opposition of Governor Douglas, whom Sir Thomas Frederick Elliot (1808 - 1880) described as 'like any other fraud',[24] 'made it impossible for [Moody's] design to be fulfilled'.[25]

Throughout his tenure in British Columbia, Moody feuded with Sir James Douglas Governor of Vancouver Island, whose jurisdiction overlapped with his own. Moody's offices of Chief Commissioner and Lieutenant-Governor were of 'higher prestige [and] lesser authority' than that of Douglas, despite Moody's superior social position in the judgement of the Royal Engineers and of the British Government which had selected Moody to 'out manoeuvre the old Hudson's Bay Factor [Governor Douglas]'.[6][26]

Moody had been selected by Lord Lytton for his qualities of the archetypal 'English gentleman and British Officer', and because his family was 'eminently respectable': he was the son of Colonel Thomas Moody, Kt., who owned land in the islands in which Douglas's father owned less land and from which Douglas's 'a half-breed' mother originated. Governor Douglas's ethnicity was 'an affront to Victorian society',[27] whereas Mary Moody was a member of the Hawks industrial dynasty and of the Boyd merchant banking family.[28] Mary Moody wrote, on 4 August 1859, 'it is not pleasant to serve under a Hudson's Bay Factor', and that the 'Governor and Richard can never get on'.[29] John Robson, who was the editor of the British Columbian, wanted Richard Clement Moody's office to include that of Governor of British Columbia, and to thereby make obsolete Douglas.[8] In letter to the Colonial Office of 27 December 1858, Richard Clement Moody states that he has 'entirely disarmed [Douglas] of all jealously'.[30] Douglas repeatedly insulted the Royal Engineers by attempting to assume their command[31] and refusing to acknowledge their contribution to the nascent colony.[32]

Margaret A. Ormsby, who was the author of the Dictionary of Canadian Biography entry for Moody (2002), unpopularly censures Moody for the abortive development of the New Westminster.[8] However, most significant historians commend Moody's contribution and exonerate Moody from culpability for the abortive development of New Westminster, especially with regard to the perpetual insufficiency of funds and of the personally motivated opposition by Douglas that continually retarded the development of British Columbia.[33] Robert Burnaby observed that Douglas proceeded with 'muddling [Moody's] work and doubling his expenditure'[6] and with employing administrators to 'work a crooked policy against Moody' to 'retard British Columbia and build up... the stronghold of Hudson's Bay interests' and their own 'landed stake'.[34] Therefore, Robert Edgar Cail,[35] Don W. Thomson,[36] Ishiguro, and Scott commended Moody for his contribution, and Scott accused Ormsby of being 'adamant in her dislike of Colonel Moody' despite the majority of evidence,[37] and almost all other biographies of Moody, including that by the Institution of Civil Engineers, and that by the Royal Engineers, and that by the British Columbia Historical Association, commend Moody's achievements in British Columbia.

The Royal Engineers, Columbia Detachment was disbanded in July 1863. The Moody family (which now consisted of Moody, and his wife, and seven legitimate children)[5] and the 22 Royal Engineers who wished to return to England, who had 8 wives between them, departed for England.[5] 130 of the original Columbia Detachment decided to remain in British Columbia.[8] Scott contends that the dissolution of the Columbia Detachment, and the consequent departure of Moody, 'doomed' the development of the settlement and the realisation of Lord Lytton's dream.[38] A vast congregation of New Westminster citizens gathered at the dock to bid farewell to Moody as his boat departed for England. Moody wanted to return to British Columbia, but he died before he was able to do so.[39] Moody left his library behind, in New Westminster, to become the public library of New Westminster.[5][8]

In April 1863, the Councillors of New Westminster decreed that 20 acres should be reserved and named Moody Square after Richard Clement Moody. The area around Moody Square that was completed only in 1889 has also been named Moody Park after Moody.[40] Numerous developments occurred in and around Moody Park, including Century House, which was opened by Princess Margaret on 23 July 1958. In 1984, on the occasion of the 125th anniversary of New Westminster, a monument of Richard Clement Moody, at the entrance of the park, was unveiled by Mayor Tom Baker.[41] For Moody's achievements in the Falkland Islands and in British Columbia, British diplomat David Tatham CMG, who served as Governor of the Falkland Islands, described Moody as an 'Empire builder'.[5] In January 2014, with the support of the Friends of the British Columbia Archives and of the Royal British Columbia Museum Foundation, The Royal British Columbia Museum purchased a photograph album that had belonged to Richard Clement Moody. The album contains over 100 photographs of the early settlement of British Columbia, including some of the earliest known photographs of First Nations peoples.[42]

Governorship of Frederick Seymour edit

Douglas's successor was Frederick Seymour, who came to the colony with twenty years of colonial experience in Van Diemen's Land, the British West Indies, and British Honduras. The creation of an assembly and Seymour's appointment in April 1864 signalled a new era for the colony, now out of the shadow of Vancouver Island and free of a governor suspicious of sharing power with elected representatives. Douglas's wagon road project was still underway, presenting huge engineering challenges, as it made its way up the narrow Fraser Canyon. Successive loans authorised by Seymour's predecessor, largely for the purpose of completing the road, had put the colony £200,000 in debt; and the Chilcotin War of 1864 cost an additional £18,000 to suppress. Seymour himself made the difficult journey through the Great Canyon of the Homathko and Rainbow Range as a show of force and participation in the hunt for Klatsassin, the Tsilhqot'in war leader, but the armed expedition reached a denouement when Klatsassin surrendered on terms of amnesty in times of war, only to be tried and hanged for murder, as Seymour had not endorsed the terms.

On Seymour's return overland, he made a tour of the Cariboo minefields, and along the Fraser Canyon, which made him increasingly convinced of the colony's future prosperity. On returning to the capital, however, fiscal reality set in as it became clear that British Columbia's indebtedness was getting worse. Even as the colonial administration took drastic measures to augment revenues and improve the road system to attract prospectors and settlers, the economic situation grew increasingly dire, and agitation grew for an amalgamation of the two colonies. Seymour opposed this proposal, but with pressure from various quarters of the colonial government, he eventually relented, recommending that British Columbia be the dominant partner, and (unsuccessfully) that the capital be located at New Westminster. The two colonies were united by an Act of the British Parliament, and proclaimed on 6 August 1866 (see Colony of British Columbia (1866-1871)).

Governors edit

Colonial Assembly edit

Members 1863–1864[43]

Members 1864–1865[44]

Members 1866[45]

Supreme Court edit

In 1858 the British Government sent over Matthew Baillie Begbie as Chief Justice for the colony. Although trained at Lincoln's Inn he had never practised law, but soon published a Rules of Court and a timetable of sittings. He held the post, under consecutive administrative regimes, until his death in 1894.[46]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, Volume 90, Issue 1887, 1887, pp. 453-455, OBITUARY. MAJOR-GENERAL RICHARD CLEMENT MOODY, R.E., 1813-1887.
  2. ^ a b c Barman, Jean (2007). The West Beyond the West: A History of British Columbia. University of Toronto Press. p. 71. ISBN 978-1-4426-9184-1.
  3. ^ Douglas, James. Proclamation of the Colony of British Columbia.
  4. ^ Dunae, Patrick A.; Forward, C.N.; Newcomb, John (15 February 2017) [18 October 2011]. "Victoria (BC)". The Canadian Encyclopedia (online ed.). Historica Canada.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Tatham, David. "Moody, Richard Clement". Dictionary of Falklands Biography.
  6. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on 8 August 2016. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  7. ^ Dorothy Blakey Smith, ed., 'The Journal of Arthur Thomas Bushby, 1858 - 1859,' British Columbia
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Ormsby (1982)
  9. ^ a b Drummond, Sir Henry (1908). "XXIII". Rambling Recollections, Vol. 1. Macmillan and Co., London. p. 272.
  10. ^ Donald J. Hauka, McGowan's War, Vancouver: 2003, New Star Books, p.146
  11. ^ Scott (1983), p. 13.
  12. ^ a b Scott (1983), p. 19.
  13. ^ "Royal Engineers Museum, Library and Archive, Gillingham, Kent: Individual Records" (PDF). Retrieved 3 June 2017.
  14. ^ War Office of Great Britain (1863). Return to an Address of the Honourable The House of Commons, dated 25 June, 1863 : for, "Copy of the Correspondence Between the Military Authorities at Shanghai and the War Office Respecting the Insalubrity of Shanghai as a Station for European Troops:" "And, Numerical Return of Sickness and Mortality of the Troops of All Arms at Shanghai, from the Year 1860 to the Latest Date, showing the Per-centage upon the Total Strength". p. 107.
  15. ^ "Colonel Moody and what he did prior to arriving in British Columbia". Retrieved 4 July 2016.
  16. ^ Moody (1951), p. 95.
  17. ^ Moody (1951), p. 97.
  18. ^ a b Scott (1983), p. 26.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g Vetch1894, p. 332
  20. ^ Moody (1951), pp. 85–107.
  21. ^ "Heraldic Science Héraldique, Arms and Devices of Provinces and Territories, British Columbia". Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  22. ^ a b Brissenden, Constance (2009). The History of Metropolitan Vancouver's Hall of Fame: Who's Who, Moody. Vancouver History.
  23. ^ Edward, Mallandaine (1887). The British Columbia Directory, containing a General Directory of Business Men and Householders…. E. Mallandaine and R. T. Williams, Broad Street, Victoria, British Columbia. p. 215 in New Westminster District Directory.
  24. ^ "'Elliot, Thomas Frederick', University of Victoria British Columbia, Colonial Despatches of Vancouver Island and British Columbia". Retrieved 30 April 2023.
  25. ^ Scott (1983), p. 27.
  26. ^ Dorothy Blakey Smith, ed., 'The Journal of Arthur Thomas Bushby, 1858 - 1859,' British Columbia
  27. ^ Scott (1983), pp. 19–20.
  28. ^ Howard, Joseph Jackson; Crisp, Frederick Arthur, eds. (1900). "Boyd of Moor House, Co. Durham". Visitation of England and Wales. Vol. 8. pp. 161–164.
  29. ^ Scott (1983), p. 23.
  30. ^ Scott (1983), p. 25.
  31. ^ Scott (1983), p. 109.
  32. ^ Scott (1983), pp. 115–117.
  33. ^ Scott (1983).
  34. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 August 2016. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  35. ^ Cail, Robert Edgar (1974). Land, Man, and the Law: The Disposal of Crown Lands in British Columbia, 1871-1913. University of British Columbia Press. p. 60. ISBN 978-0-7748-0029-7.
  36. ^ Thomson, Don W. (1966). Men and Meridians: The History of Surveying and Mapping in Canada. Queen's printer. p. 282. ISBN 9780660115580.
  37. ^ Scott (1983), p. 131.
  38. ^ Scott (1983), p. 137.
  39. ^ New Westminster Council. Parks & Recreation History of Park Sites and Facilities, Moody Park…. p. 67.
  40. ^ New Westminster Council. Parks & Recreation History of Park Sites and Facilities, Moody Park…. p. 62.
  41. ^ New Westminster Council. Parks & Recreation History of Park Sites and Facilities, Moody Park…. p. 65.
  42. ^ The Royal British Columbia Museum: Annual Report: 2013 - 2014
  43. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 May 2013.
  44. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 May 2013.
  45. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 May 2013.
  46. ^ Duhaime, Lloyd (26 September 2012). . lawMAG. Archived from the original on 16 August 2021. Retrieved 6 October 2015.

Sources edit

  • "The Photographic Album of Richard Clement Moody, Royal British Columbia Museum" (PDF).
  • . Archived from the original on 8 August 2016. Retrieved 4 July 2016.
  • "Letters of Mary Moody, Royal British Columbia Museum Archives" (PDF). Retrieved 4 July 2016.
  • Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, Volume 90, Issue 1887, 1887, pp. 453-455, OBITUARY. MAJOR-GENERAL RICHARD CLEMENT MOODY, R.E., 1813-1181.
  • Cleall, Esme; Ishiguro, Laura; Manktelow, Emily J. (Spring 2013). "Imperial Relations: Histories of family in the British Empire". Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History. 14 (1). doi:10.1353/cch.2013.0006. S2CID 162030654.
  • Francis, Daniel, ed. (1999). Encyclopedia of British Columbia. Harbour Publishing. ISBN 1-55017-200-X.
  • Hayes, Derek (2005). Historical Atlas of Vancouver and the Lower Fraser Valley. Douglas & McIntyre. pp. 26–29. ISBN 978-1-55365-283-0.
  • Moody, Richard Clement (January 1951). Willard E. Ireland (ed.). "Letter of Colonel Richard Clement Moody, R.E., to Arthur Blackwood, February 1, 1859". British Columbia Historical Quarterly. XV (1 & 2): 85–107.
  • Morton, Arthur S. (1973) [1939]. A History of the Canadian West to 1870-71, Second Edition. University of Toronto Press. p. 775f. ISBN 0-8020-0253-6.
  • Ormsby, Margaret A. (1982). "Moody, Richard Clement". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. XI (1881–1890) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  • Scott, Laura Elaine (1983). The Imposition of British Culture as Portrayed in the New Westminster Capital Plan of 1859 to 1862 (PDF) (M.A. thesis). Simon Fraser University.
  • Sweetman, John. "Moody, Richard Clement". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/19085. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Vetch, Robert Hamilton (1894). "Moody, Richard Clement" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 38. pp. 332–333.

Further reading edit

  • Ormsby, Margaret A. (1972). "Douglas, Sir James". In Hayne, David (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. X (1871–1880) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  • Ormsby, Margaret A. (1976). "Seymour, Frederick". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. IX (1861–1870) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.

colony, british, columbia, 1858, 1866, this, article, about, original, mainland, colony, second, colony, this, name, which, union, former, vancouver, island, british, columbia, colonies, colony, british, columbia, 1866, 1871, colony, british, columbia, crown, . This article is about the original mainland colony For the second colony of this name which was a union of the former Vancouver Island and British Columbia colonies see Colony of British Columbia 1866 1871 The Colony of British Columbia was a crown colony in British North America from 1858 until 1866 that was founded by Richard Clement Moody 1 who was selected to found a second England on the shores of the Pacific 2 who was Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works for British Columbia and the first Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia Prior to the arrival of Moody s Royal Engineers Columbia Detachment the Colony s supreme authority was its Governor James Douglas who was the Governor of the neighbouring colony of Vancouver Island Colony of British Columbia1858 1866FlagAnthem God Save the Queen source source The Colony of British Columbia in 1863StatusBritish colonyCapitalFort Langley 1858 1859 New Westminster 1859 1866 Common languagesEnglish official Northern Athabaskan languagesSalishan languagesReligionChristianity Indigenous beliefsGovernmentConstitutional monarchyQueen 1858 1866Queen VictoriaHistorical eraBritish Era Established2 August 1858 Incorporated with Colony of Vancouver Island to form Colony of British Columbia 1866 1871 6 August 1866CurrencyPound sterling to 1865 British Columbia dollar 1865 66 Preceded by Succeeded byNew Caledonia Canada North Western TerritoryColony of the Queen Charlotte IslandsStickeen TerritoriesRussian America Colony of British Columbia 1866 1871 This first colony of British Columbia did not originally include the Colony of Vancouver Island or the regions north of the Nass and Finlay rivers or the regions east of the Rocky Mountains or any of the coastal islands but it did include the Colony of the Queen Charlotte Islands 3 and was enlarged in 1863 in the north and northeast up to the 60th parallel and the 120th meridian The colony was incorporated with the Colony of Vancouver Island in 1866 to create the new Colony of British Columbia 1866 1871 Contents 1 Background 2 Governorship of James Douglas 3 Foundation by Richard Clement Moody 3 1 Selection 3 2 Ned McGowan s War 3 3 The Foundation of British Columbia 4 Governorship of Frederick Seymour 5 Governors 5 1 Colonial Assembly 6 Supreme Court 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further readingBackground editMain article History of British Columbia The explorations of James Cook and George Vancouver and the concessions of Spain in 1794 established British claims over the coastal area north of California Similar claims were established inland via the explorations of such men as John Finlay Sir Alexander Mackenzie Simon Fraser Samuel Black and David Thompson and by the subsequent establishment of fur trading posts by the North West Company and the Hudson s Bay Company HBC However until 1858 the region which now comprises the mainland of the Province of British Columbia was an unorganised area of British North America comprising two fur trading districts New Caledonia north of the Thompson River drainage and the Columbia District located south of the Thompson and throughout the basin of the Columbia River nbsp Sir James Douglas first governor of the Colony of British ColumbiaWith the signing of the Treaty of Washington in 1846 which established the US border along the 49th parallel the HBC moved the headquarters of its western operations from Fort Vancouver on the Columbia River present day Vancouver Washington to the newly established Fort Victoria on the southern tip of Vancouver Island Vancouver Island and the surrounding Gulf Islands in the Strait of Georgia were organized as a crown colony in 1849 Meanwhile the mainland continued to function under the de facto administration of the HBC whose chief executive James Douglas was also governor of Vancouver Island The non Indigenous mainland population during this time never exceeded about 150 at Fort Victoria 4 mostly HBC employees and their families Governorship of James Douglas editBy 1857 Americans and British were beginning to respond to rumors of gold in the Thompson River area Almost overnight some ten to twenty thousand men moved into the region around present day Yale British Columbia sparking the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush Governor Douglas who had no legal authority over New Caledonia stationed a gunboat at the entrance of the Fraser River to exert such authority by collecting licences from prospectors attempting to make their way upstream To normalize its jurisdiction and undercut any HBC claims to the resource wealth of the mainland the district was converted to a Crown colony on 2 August 1858 by the Parliament of the United Kingdom and given the name British Columbia Douglas was offered the governorship of the new colony by the British colonial secretary Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton provided that he sever his employment by the Hudson s Bay Company that Douglas accepted to do and received a knighthood The numerous immigration into the new colony obliged Douglas to act quickly to define regulations and to create infrastructure Magistrates and constables were hired mining regulations drawn up and town sites surveyed at Yale Hope and Fort Langley to discourage squatting on crown land In addition roads were constructed into the areas of greatest mining exploration around Lillooet and Lytton The colony however was not immediately granted a representative colonial assembly because of uncertainty as to whether the gold rush would yield a stable settled population Douglas who had conflicted with the assembly on Vancouver Island was relieved nbsp A portion of the Cariboo Road in the Fraser Canyon c 1867The rush indeed was short lived and the exodus of miners speculators and merchants was already underway by the time the Royal Engineers had laid out the colony s new capital at New Westminster Prospecting continued however and additional finds farther inland in the Cariboo region in 1860 signalled an impending second gold rush Provisioning was already proving to be an acute problem and with more distant finds it became clear that wagon trains would have to replace pack horses necessitating new infrastructure Throughout his tenure in British Columbia Douglas feuded with Richard Clement Moody who was the first Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia and the Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works for British Columbia 5 whose jurisdiction overlapped with that of Douglas Moody s offices of Chief Commissioner and Lieutenant Governor were of higher prestige and lesser authority than that of Douglas whom The British Government had selected Moody to out manoeuvre the old Hudson s Bay Factor Governor Douglas 6 7 Foundation by Richard Clement Moody editMain article Royal Engineers Columbia Detachment Selection edit When news of the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush reached London Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton Secretary of State for the Colonies requested that the War Office recommend a field officer who was a man of good judgement possessing a knowledge of mankind to lead a Corps of 150 later increased to 172 Royal Engineers who had been selected for their superior discipline and intelligence 8 The War Office chose Moody and Lord Lytton who described Moody as his distinguished friend 9 accepted their nomination as a consequence of Moody s military record his success as Governor of the Falkland Islands and the distinguished record of his father Colonel Thomas Moody at the Colonial Office 8 Moody was charged to establish British order and to transform the new Colony of British Columbia into the British Empire s bulwark in the farthest west 10 and found a second England on the shores of the Pacific 9 2 Lytton desired to send to the colony representatives of the best of British culture not just a police force men who possessed courtesy high breeding and urbane knowledge of the world 11 such as Moody whom the Government considered to be the archetypal English gentleman and British Officer 12 to command the Royal Engineers Columbia Detachment Moody s brother Colonel Hampden Clement Blamire Moody had already served with the Royal Engineers in Canada mainly at Fort Garry from 1840 to 1848 13 to such success that he was subsequently granted command of the regiment across the entirety of China 14 Richard Clement Moody and his wife Mary Moody of the Hawks industrial dynasty and of the Boyd merchant banking family and their four children left England for British Columbia in October 1858 and arrived in British Columbia in December 1858 5 with the 172 Royal Engineers of the Royal Engineers Columbia Detachment and his secretary the freemason Robert Burnaby after whom he subsequently named Burnaby Lake under his command 5 The original Columbia Detachment consisted of 150 Royal Engineers both sappers and officers before it was increased to 172 Moody had three captains Robert Mann Parsons John Marshall Grant and Henry Reynolds Luard The contingent included two lieutenants both of British landed gentry namely Lieutenant Arthur Reid Lempriere of Dielament Jersey and Lieutenant Henry Spencer Palmer and Doctor John Vernon Seddall and Captain William Driscoll Gosset who was to be Colonial Treasurer and Commissary Officer and John Sheepshanks who was to be Chaplain of the Columbia Detachment 15 Moody was sworn in as the first lieutenant governor of British Columbia and appointed Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works for British Columbia 5 Ned McGowan s War edit Moody had hoped to begin immediately the foundation of a capital city but on his arrival at Fort Langley he learned of an insurrection at the settlement of Hill s Bar by a notorious outlaw Ned McGowan and some restive gold miners 5 Moody repressed the rebellion which became popularly known as Ned McGowan s War without loss of life 5 Moody described the incident The notorious Ned McGowan of Californian celebrity at the head of a band of Yankee Rowdies defying the law Every peaceable citizen frightened out of his wits Summons amp warrants laughed to scorn A Magistrate seized while on the Bench amp brought to the Rebel s camp tried condemned amp heavily fined A man shot dead shortly before Such a tale to welcome me at the close of a day of great enjoyment 16 Moody described the response to his success They gave me a Salute firing off their loaded Revolvers over my head Pleasant Balls whistling over one s head as a compliment Suppose a hand had dropped by accident I stood up amp raised my cap amp thanked them in the Queen s name for their loyal reception of me 17 The Foundation of British Columbia edit In British Columbia Moody wanted to build a city of beauty in the wilderness and planned his city as an iconic visual metaphor for British dominance styled and located with the objective of reinforcing the authority of the Crown and of the robe 18 Subsequent to the enactment of the Pre emption Act of 1860 Moody settled the Lower Mainland He founded the new capital city New Westminster 5 19 at a site of dense forest of Douglas pine 19 that he selected for its strategic excellence including the quality of its port 18 He in his letter to his friend Arthur Blackwood of the Colonial Office that is dated 1 February 1859 described the majestic beauty of the site 20 12 The entrance to the Frazer is very striking Extending miles to the right amp left are low marsh lands apparently of very rich qualities amp yet fr the Background of Superb Mountains Swiss in outline dark in woods grandly towering into the clouds there is a sublimity that deeply impresses you Everything is large and magnificent worthy of the entrance to the Queen of England s dominions on the Pacific mainland My imagination converted the silent marshes into Cuyp like pictures of horses and cattle lazily fattening in rich meadows in a glowing sunset The water of the deep clear Frazer was of a glassy stillness not a ripple before us except when a fish rose to the surface or broods of wild ducks fluttered away 2 nbsp Moody likened his vision of the nascent Colony of British Columbia to the pastoral scenes painted by Aelbert Cuyp nbsp Moody designed the first Coat of arms of British ColumbiaMoody designed the roads and the settlements of New Westminster 19 and his Royal Engineers under Captain John Marshall Grant 19 built an extensive road network including that which became Kingsway which connected New Westminster to False Creek and the North Road between Port Moody and New Westminster and the Pacific terminus at Burrard s Inlet of Port Moody of the Canadian and Pacific Railway which subsequently was extended to the mouth of the Inlet and terminates now at Vancouver 19 and the Cariboo Road and Stanley Park which was an important strategic area for invaluable the eventuality of an invasion by America He named Burnaby Lake after his secretary Robert Burnaby and he named Port Coquitlam s 400 foot Mary Hill after his wife Mary Hawks Moody designed the first Coat of arms of British Columbia 8 21 Richard Clement Moody established Port Moody which was subsequently named after him at the end of the trail that connected New Westminster with Burrard Inlet to defend New Westminster from potential attack from the United States 19 Moody also established a town at Hastings which was later incorporated into Vancouver 22 The British designated multiple tracts as government reserves The Pre emption Act did not specify conditions for the distribution of the land and consequently large areas were bought by speculators 8 Moody requisitioned 3 750 acres sc 1 517 hectares for himself 8 and on this land he subsequently built for himself and owned Mayfield a model farm near New Westminster 22 Moody was criticised by journalists for land grabbing 8 but his requisitions were ordered by the Colonial Office 5 and Moody throughout his tenure in British Columbia received the approbation of the British authorities in London 19 and was in British Columbia described as the real father of New Westminster 23 However Lord Lytton then Secretary of State for the Colonies forgot the practicalities of paying for clearing and developing the site and the town and the effort of Moody s Engineers was continually impeded by insufficient funds which together with the continuous opposition of Governor Douglas whom Sir Thomas Frederick Elliot 1808 1880 described as like any other fraud 24 made it impossible for Moody s design to be fulfilled 25 Throughout his tenure in British Columbia Moody feuded with Sir James Douglas Governor of Vancouver Island whose jurisdiction overlapped with his own Moody s offices of Chief Commissioner and Lieutenant Governor were of higher prestige and lesser authority than that of Douglas despite Moody s superior social position in the judgement of the Royal Engineers and of the British Government which had selected Moody to out manoeuvre the old Hudson s Bay Factor Governor Douglas 6 26 Moody had been selected by Lord Lytton for his qualities of the archetypal English gentleman and British Officer and because his family was eminently respectable he was the son of Colonel Thomas Moody Kt who owned land in the islands in which Douglas s father owned less land and from which Douglas s a half breed mother originated Governor Douglas s ethnicity was an affront to Victorian society 27 whereas Mary Moody was a member of the Hawks industrial dynasty and of the Boyd merchant banking family 28 Mary Moody wrote on 4 August 1859 it is not pleasant to serve under a Hudson s Bay Factor and that the Governor and Richard can never get on 29 John Robson who was the editor of the British Columbian wanted Richard Clement Moody s office to include that of Governor of British Columbia and to thereby make obsolete Douglas 8 In letter to the Colonial Office of 27 December 1858 Richard Clement Moody states that he has entirely disarmed Douglas of all jealously 30 Douglas repeatedly insulted the Royal Engineers by attempting to assume their command 31 and refusing to acknowledge their contribution to the nascent colony 32 Margaret A Ormsby who was the author of the Dictionary of Canadian Biography entry for Moody 2002 unpopularly censures Moody for the abortive development of the New Westminster 8 However most significant historians commend Moody s contribution and exonerate Moody from culpability for the abortive development of New Westminster especially with regard to the perpetual insufficiency of funds and of the personally motivated opposition by Douglas that continually retarded the development of British Columbia 33 Robert Burnaby observed that Douglas proceeded with muddling Moody s work and doubling his expenditure 6 and with employing administrators to work a crooked policy against Moody to retard British Columbia and build up the stronghold of Hudson s Bay interests and their own landed stake 34 Therefore Robert Edgar Cail 35 Don W Thomson 36 Ishiguro and Scott commended Moody for his contribution and Scott accused Ormsby of being adamant in her dislike of Colonel Moody despite the majority of evidence 37 and almost all other biographies of Moody including that by the Institution of Civil Engineers and that by the Royal Engineers and that by the British Columbia Historical Association commend Moody s achievements in British Columbia The Royal Engineers Columbia Detachment was disbanded in July 1863 The Moody family which now consisted of Moody and his wife and seven legitimate children 5 and the 22 Royal Engineers who wished to return to England who had 8 wives between them departed for England 5 130 of the original Columbia Detachment decided to remain in British Columbia 8 Scott contends that the dissolution of the Columbia Detachment and the consequent departure of Moody doomed the development of the settlement and the realisation of Lord Lytton s dream 38 A vast congregation of New Westminster citizens gathered at the dock to bid farewell to Moody as his boat departed for England Moody wanted to return to British Columbia but he died before he was able to do so 39 Moody left his library behind in New Westminster to become the public library of New Westminster 5 8 In April 1863 the Councillors of New Westminster decreed that 20 acres should be reserved and named Moody Square after Richard Clement Moody The area around Moody Square that was completed only in 1889 has also been named Moody Park after Moody 40 Numerous developments occurred in and around Moody Park including Century House which was opened by Princess Margaret on 23 July 1958 In 1984 on the occasion of the 125th anniversary of New Westminster a monument of Richard Clement Moody at the entrance of the park was unveiled by Mayor Tom Baker 41 For Moody s achievements in the Falkland Islands and in British Columbia British diplomat David Tatham CMG who served as Governor of the Falkland Islands described Moody as an Empire builder 5 In January 2014 with the support of the Friends of the British Columbia Archives and of the Royal British Columbia Museum Foundation The Royal British Columbia Museum purchased a photograph album that had belonged to Richard Clement Moody The album contains over 100 photographs of the early settlement of British Columbia including some of the earliest known photographs of First Nations peoples 42 Governorship of Frederick Seymour editMain article Frederick Seymour Douglas s successor was Frederick Seymour who came to the colony with twenty years of colonial experience in Van Diemen s Land the British West Indies and British Honduras The creation of an assembly and Seymour s appointment in April 1864 signalled a new era for the colony now out of the shadow of Vancouver Island and free of a governor suspicious of sharing power with elected representatives Douglas s wagon road project was still underway presenting huge engineering challenges as it made its way up the narrow Fraser Canyon Successive loans authorised by Seymour s predecessor largely for the purpose of completing the road had put the colony 200 000 in debt and the Chilcotin War of 1864 cost an additional 18 000 to suppress Seymour himself made the difficult journey through the Great Canyon of the Homathko and Rainbow Range as a show of force and participation in the hunt for Klatsassin the Tsilhqot in war leader but the armed expedition reached a denouement when Klatsassin surrendered on terms of amnesty in times of war only to be tried and hanged for murder as Seymour had not endorsed the terms On Seymour s return overland he made a tour of the Cariboo minefields and along the Fraser Canyon which made him increasingly convinced of the colony s future prosperity On returning to the capital however fiscal reality set in as it became clear that British Columbia s indebtedness was getting worse Even as the colonial administration took drastic measures to augment revenues and improve the road system to attract prospectors and settlers the economic situation grew increasingly dire and agitation grew for an amalgamation of the two colonies Seymour opposed this proposal but with pressure from various quarters of the colonial government he eventually relented recommending that British Columbia be the dominant partner and unsuccessfully that the capital be located at New Westminster The two colonies were united by an Act of the British Parliament and proclaimed on 6 August 1866 see Colony of British Columbia 1866 1871 Governors editSir James Douglas 1858 1864 Frederick Seymour 1864 1866Colonial Assembly edit Members 1863 1864 43 Arthur Nonus Birch Colonial Secretary and Presiding Member Henry Pering Pellew Crease Attorney General Wymond Ogilvy Hamley Collector of Customs Chartres Brew Magistrate New Westminster Peter O Reilly Magistrate Cariboo East E H Sanders Magistrate Yale Henry Maynard Ball Magistrate Lytton Philip Henry Nind Magistrate Douglas Joshua Homer New Westminster District Robert Thompson Smith Yale and Lytton District Henry Holbrook Douglas and Lillooet District James Orr Cariboo East District Walter Shaw Black Cariboo West DistrictMembers 1864 1865 44 Arthur Nonus Birch Colonial Secretary and Presiding Member Henry Pering Pellew Crease Attorney General Charles William Franks Treasurer Wymond Ogilvy Hamley Collector of Customs Chartres Brew Magistrate New Westminster Peter O Reilly Magistrate Cariboo Henry Maynard Ball Magistrate Lytton Andrew Charles Elliott Magistrate Lillooet John Carmichael Haynes Magistrate Osoyoos and Kootenay Joshua Homer New Westminster District Clement Francis Cornwall Hope Yale and Lytton District Henry Holbrook Douglas and Lillooet District George Anthony Walkem Cariboo East and Quesnel Forks District Walter Moberly Cariboo West and Quesnelmouth DistrictMembers 1866 45 Henry Maynard Ball Acting Colonial Secretary and Presiding Member Henry Pering Pellew Crease Attorney General Charles William Franks Treasurer Joseph Trutch Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works and Surveyor General Wymond Ogilvy Hamley Collector of Customs Chartres Brew Magistrate New Westminster Peter O Reilly Magistrate Kootenay Andrew Charles Elliott Magistrate Lillooet John Carmichael Haynes Magistrate Osoyoos and Kootenay Joshua Homer New Westminster District Clement Francis Cornwall Hope Yale and Lytton District Henry Holbrook Douglas and Lillooet District George Anthony Walkem Cariboo East and Quesnel Forks District Robert Smith Cariboo West and Quesnelmouth DistrictSupreme Court editIn 1858 the British Government sent over Matthew Baillie Begbie as Chief Justice for the colony Although trained at Lincoln s Inn he had never practised law but soon published a Rules of Court and a timetable of sittings He held the post under consecutive administrative regimes until his death in 1894 46 See also edit nbsp Canada portal nbsp History portal nbsp British Empire portalFormer colonies and territories in Canada Territorial evolution of Canada after 1867 List of governors of Vancouver Island and British Columbia Alaska boundary disputeReferences edit Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers Volume 90 Issue 1887 1887 pp 453 455 OBITUARY MAJOR GENERAL RICHARD CLEMENT MOODY R E 1813 1887 a b c Barman Jean 2007 The West Beyond the West A History of British Columbia University of Toronto Press p 71 ISBN 978 1 4426 9184 1 Douglas James Proclamation of the Colony of British Columbia Dunae Patrick A Forward C N Newcomb John 15 February 2017 18 October 2011 Victoria BC The Canadian Encyclopedia online ed Historica Canada a b c d e f g h i j k l Tatham David Moody Richard Clement Dictionary of Falklands Biography a b c Letters of Robert Burnaby 3rd December 1859 Archived from the original on 8 August 2016 Retrieved 3 December 2016 Dorothy Blakey Smith ed The Journal of Arthur Thomas Bushby 1858 1859 British Columbia a b c d e f g h i j Ormsby 1982 a b Drummond Sir Henry 1908 XXIII Rambling Recollections Vol 1 Macmillan and Co London p 272 Donald J Hauka McGowan s War Vancouver 2003 New Star Books p 146 Scott 1983 p 13 a b Scott 1983 p 19 Royal Engineers Museum Library and Archive Gillingham Kent Individual Records PDF Retrieved 3 June 2017 War Office of Great Britain 1863 Return to an Address of the Honourable The House of Commons dated 25 June 1863 for Copy of the Correspondence Between the Military Authorities at Shanghai and the War Office Respecting the Insalubrity of Shanghai as a Station for European Troops And Numerical Return of Sickness and Mortality of the Troops of All Arms at Shanghai from the Year 1860 to the Latest Date showing the Per centage upon the Total Strength p 107 Colonel Moody and what he did prior to arriving in British Columbia Retrieved 4 July 2016 Moody 1951 p 95 Moody 1951 p 97 a b Scott 1983 p 26 a b c d e f g Vetch1894 p 332 Moody 1951 pp 85 107 Heraldic Science Heraldique Arms and Devices of Provinces and Territories British Columbia Retrieved 3 November 2016 a b Brissenden Constance 2009 The History of Metropolitan Vancouver s Hall of Fame Who s Who Moody Vancouver History Edward Mallandaine 1887 The British Columbia Directory containing a General Directory of Business Men and Householders E Mallandaine and R T Williams Broad Street Victoria British Columbia p 215 in New Westminster District Directory Elliot Thomas Frederick University of Victoria British Columbia Colonial Despatches of Vancouver Island and British Columbia Retrieved 30 April 2023 Scott 1983 p 27 Dorothy Blakey Smith ed The Journal of Arthur Thomas Bushby 1858 1859 British Columbia Scott 1983 pp 19 20 Howard Joseph Jackson Crisp Frederick Arthur eds 1900 Boyd of Moor House Co Durham Visitation of England and Wales Vol 8 pp 161 164 Scott 1983 p 23 Scott 1983 p 25 Scott 1983 p 109 Scott 1983 pp 115 117 Scott 1983 Letters of Robert Burnaby 22 February 1859 Archived from the original on 8 August 2016 Retrieved 3 December 2016 Cail Robert Edgar 1974 Land Man and the Law The Disposal of Crown Lands in British Columbia 1871 1913 University of British Columbia Press p 60 ISBN 978 0 7748 0029 7 Thomson Don W 1966 Men and Meridians The History of Surveying and Mapping in Canada Queen s printer p 282 ISBN 9780660115580 Scott 1983 p 131 Scott 1983 p 137 New Westminster Council Parks amp Recreation History of Park Sites and Facilities Moody Park p 67 New Westminster Council Parks amp Recreation History of Park Sites and Facilities Moody Park p 62 New Westminster Council Parks amp Recreation History of Park Sites and Facilities Moody Park p 65 The Royal British Columbia Museum Annual Report 2013 2014 Journals of the Legislative Council of the Colony of British Columbia 21 January 1864 to 4 May 1864 Archived from the original on 13 May 2013 Journals of the Legislative Council of the Colony of British Columbia from the 12th December 1864 to the 11th April 1865 Archived from the original on 12 May 2013 Journals of the Legislative Council of the Colony of British Columbia from the 18th January to the 5th April 1866 Archived from the original on 13 May 2013 Duhaime Lloyd 26 September 2012 Wild Wild West Law lawMAG Archived from the original on 16 August 2021 Retrieved 6 October 2015 Sources edit The Photographic Album of Richard Clement Moody Royal British Columbia Museum PDF Col Richard Clement Moody Archived from the original on 8 August 2016 Retrieved 4 July 2016 Letters of Mary Moody Royal British Columbia Museum Archives PDF Retrieved 4 July 2016 Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers Volume 90 Issue 1887 1887 pp 453 455 OBITUARY MAJOR GENERAL RICHARD CLEMENT MOODY R E 1813 1181 Cleall Esme Ishiguro Laura Manktelow Emily J Spring 2013 Imperial Relations Histories of family in the British Empire Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History 14 1 doi 10 1353 cch 2013 0006 S2CID 162030654 Francis Daniel ed 1999 Encyclopedia of British Columbia Harbour Publishing ISBN 1 55017 200 X Hayes Derek 2005 Historical Atlas of Vancouver and the Lower Fraser Valley Douglas amp McIntyre pp 26 29 ISBN 978 1 55365 283 0 Moody Richard Clement January 1951 Willard E Ireland ed Letter of Colonel Richard Clement Moody R E to Arthur Blackwood February 1 1859 British Columbia Historical Quarterly XV 1 amp 2 85 107 Morton Arthur S 1973 1939 A History of the Canadian West to 1870 71 Second Edition University of Toronto Press p 775f ISBN 0 8020 0253 6 Ormsby Margaret A 1982 Moody Richard Clement In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol XI 1881 1890 online ed University of Toronto Press Scott Laura Elaine 1983 The Imposition of British Culture as Portrayed in the New Westminster Capital Plan of 1859 to 1862 PDF M A thesis Simon Fraser University Sweetman John Moody Richard Clement Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 19085 Subscription or UK public library membership required Vetch Robert Hamilton 1894 Moody Richard Clement Dictionary of National Biography Vol 38 pp 332 333 Further reading editOrmsby Margaret A 1972 Douglas Sir James In Hayne David ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol X 1871 1880 online ed University of Toronto Press Ormsby Margaret A 1976 Seymour Frederick In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol IX 1861 1870 online ed University of Toronto Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Colony of British Columbia 1858 1866 amp oldid 1190334807, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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