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History of British Columbia
Early European Explorations (1513-1788)

The arrival of Europeans began around the mid-18th century, as fur traders entered the area to harvest sea
otters
. While it is thought that Sir Francis Drake may have explored the British Columbian coast in 1579, it
was Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra who completed the first documented voyage, which took place
in 1775. In doing so, Quadra reasserted the Spanish claim for the Pacific coast, first made by Vasco Núñez
de Balboa in 1513.

In 1774, the Spanish navigator Juan José Pérez Hernández, a native of Mallorca, sailed from San Blas,
Nueva Galicia (modern-day Western México), with instructions to reach 60° North latitude to discover
possible Russian settlements and take possession of the lands for the Spanish Crown. Hernández reached
55° North latitude, becoming the first European to sight the Queen Charlotte Islands and Vancouver Island.
He traded with the natives near Estevan Point, although apparently without landing. The expedition was
forced to return to Nueva Galicia, due to the lack of provisions.

Since Pérez Hernández's first expedition failed to achieve its objective, the Spanish organized a second
expedition in 1775 with the same goal. This expedition was commanded by Bruno de Heceta on board the
Santiago, piloted by Pérez Hernández, and accompanied by Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra in La
Sonora. After illnesses, storms, and other troubles had affected the expedition, de Heceta returned to Nueva
Galicia, while Quadra kept on a northward course, ultimately reaching 59° North in what today is Sitka,
Alaska. During this expedition, the Spanish made sure to land several times and formally claim the lands for
the Spanish Crown, while verifying the absence of Russian settlements along the coast. In the following
years, several other Spanish expeditions would set sail from Nueva Galicia bound for the Pacific Northwest.

Three years later, in 1778, the British Royal Navy Captain James Cook arrived in the region, searching for
the Northwest Passage, and successfully landed at Nootka Sound on Vancouver Island, where he and his
crew traded with the Nuu-chah-nulth First Nation. Upon trading his goods for sea otter pelts, his crew in turn
traded them for an enormous profit in Macau on their way back to Britain. This led to an influx of traders to
the British Columbian coast, and ongoing economic contact with the aboriginal peoples there.
Early history (until 1513)

British Columbia is the westernmost province in Canada.
Indigenous peoples have inhabited the territory that is now
called "British Columbia", as described in their oral traditions,
from time immemorial. There are claims by the English to have
explored the region in the Sixteenth Century, but it was the
Majorcan-born Spanish navigator Juan José Pérez Hernández who did the first documented travel 1774. He
inaugurated a golden age for the Spaniards in the region, who in 1790 created the first colony in British
Columbia. The Spanish supremacy ended in 1795 when the Nootka Convention came in force, giving place to
United Kingdom. Originally politically constituted as a pair of British colonies, British Columbia joined
Canadian Confederation on July 20, 1871.
Early European settlements (1788-1790s)

In 1788, John Meares, an English navigator and explorer,
sailed from China and explored Nootka Sound and the
neighbouring coasts. He bought some land from a local chief
named Maquinna
and built a trading post there.

Two years later, in 1789, the Spanish commander Esteban
José Martínez, a native of Seville, established a settlement
and started building a fort in Friendly Cove, Nootka Sound,
which was named Fort San Miguel. This territory was already
considered as part of New Spain by the Spanish due to
previous explorations of the region. Upon Martinez's arrival, a number of British ships were seized, including
those of Captain Meares. This originated the Nootka Crisis, which almost led to a war between Britain and
Spain. The controversy resulted in the abandonment of the Nootka Sound settlement by the Spanish. Some
months later, Manuel Antonio Flores, Viceroy of New Spain, ordered a Francisco de Eliza to rebuild the fort.
The expedition, composed of three ships, the Concepción, under the command of De Eliza, the San Carlos,
under the command of Salvador Fidalgo and the Princesa Real, under the command of Manuel Quimper,
sailed in early 1790 from San Blas in Nueva Galicia and arrived at Nootka Sound in April of that year. The
expedition had many Catalan volunteers from the First Free Company of Volunteers of Catalonia,
commanded by Pere d'Alberní, a native of Tortosa. The expedition rebuilt the fort, which had been dismantled
after Martínez abandoned it. The rebuilt fort included several defensive constructions as well as a vegetable
garden to ensure the settlement had food supplies. The Catalan volunteers left the fort in 1792 and Spanish
influence in the region ended in 1795 after the Nootka Convention came into force.


Late British expeditions (1790s-1821)

Subsequently, European explorer-merchants from the east started to discover British Columbia. Three
figures dominate in the early history of mainland British Columbia: Sir Alexander Mackenzie, Simon Fraser,
and David Thompson. As employees of the North West Company, the three were primarily concerned with
discovering a practicable river route to the Pacific, specifically via the Columbia River, for the extension of the
fur trade. In 1793, Mackenzie became the first European to reach the Pacific overland north of the Rio
Grande. He and his crew entered the region through the Rocky Mountains via the Peace River, reaching the
ocean at South Bentinck Arm, near present-day Bella Coola. Shortly thereafter, Mackenzie's companion,
John Finlay, founded the first permanent European settlement in British Columbia, Fort St. John, located at
the junction of the Beatton and Peace Rivers.

Simon Fraser was the next to try to find the course of the Columbia. During his expedition of 1805-09, Fraser
and his crew, including John Stuart, explored much of the British Columbia interior, establishing several forts
(Hudson's Hope, Trout Lake Fort, Fort George, Fort Fraser, and Fort St. James). Fraser's expedition took
him down the river that now bears his name, to the site of present-day Vancouver. Although both Mackenzie
and Fraser reached the Pacific, they found the routes they took impassable for trade. It was David
Thompson who found the Columbia River and followed it down to its mouth in 1811. He was unable to
establish a claim, however, for the American explorers Lewis and Clark had already claimed the territory for
the United States of America six years earlier. The American Fur Company of John Jacob Astor had founded
the town of Astoria just months before Thompson arrived, and the Nor'westers had to content themselves
with establishing a rival post, which they named Fort Vancouver (present day Vancouver, Washington).


From fur trade districts to colony (1821-1858)

Although technically a part of British North America, British Columbia was largely run by the Hudson's Bay
Company after its merger with the North West Company in 1821. The central and northern interior of the
region was organised into the New Caledonia District, a name that came to be generally attributed to the
mainland as a whole. It was administered from Fort St. James, about 150 km northwest of present-day
Prince George. The interior south of the Thompson River and north of the Columbia River was organised into
the Columbia District, and was administered first from Fort Vancouver, and later from Fort Victoria.

Victoria was established as a trading post in 1843, both as a means to protect HBC interests, as well as to
assert British claims to Vancouver Island and the adjacent Gulf Islands. In 1844, the United States
Democratic Party asserted that the U.S. had a legitimate claim to the entire Oregon Country, but President
James Polk was prepared to draw the border along the 49th parallel, the longstanding U.S. proposal. When
the British rejected this offer, Polk broke off negotiations, and American expansionists reasserted the claim,
coining slogans such as "Fifty-four forty or fight!" With the outbreak of the Mexican-American War diverting
attention and resources, Polk was again prepared to compromise. The Oregon boundary dispute was settled
in the 1846 Treaty of Washington. The terms of the agreement establishished the border between British
North America and the United States at the 49th parallel from the Rocky Mountains to the sea, the original
American proposal, with all of Vancouver Island retained as British territory. In 1849, the crown Colony of
Vancouver Island was created; and in 1851, James Douglas was appointed Governor. Douglas, known as the
father of British Columbia, established colonial institutions in Victoria. Meanwhile on the mainland, New
Caledonia continued to be an unorganised region of British North America, its 100 or so European
inhabitants (mostly HBC employees and their families) under the administrative oversight of Douglas, who
was also the HBC's regional chief executive.


Two colonies (1858-1867)

In 1858, gold was found along the banks of the Fraser River in the Fraser Canyon north of Yale. When word
got out about the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush, Victoria was transformed overnight into a tent city as
prospectors, speculators, land agents, and outfitters flooded in from around the world, mostly from San
Francisco. The Hudson's Bay Company's Fort Langley burgeoned economically as the staging point for
many of the prospectors heading by boat to the Canyon.

At the time, the region was still not under formal colonial authority. Douglas, fearing challenges to the claim
of British sovereignty in the region in the face of an influx of some 20,000 Americans, stationed a gunboat at
the mouth of the Fraser in order to obtain licence fees from those seeking to head upstream. The British
colonial office responded to the new situation by establishing the mainland as a crown colony on August 2,
1858, naming it the Colony of British Columbia. The capital was established at New Westminster on the
southern reaches of the Fraser, which became the first city incorporated on the mainland in 1860. Douglas
was named joint governor of the two colonies.

A second gold rush in the Cariboo region of the colony occurred in 1861-62. The influx of gold into B.C.'s
economy led to the creation of basic infrastructure in B.C., most notably, the creation of the Cariboo Wagon
Road which linked the Lower Mainland to the rich gold fields of Barkerville. However, poor judgement and
mismanagement of funds made by the gold rush left B.C. in debt by the mid-1860s. In 1866, because of the
massive debt leftover from the gold rush, the mainland and Vancouver Island became one colony named
British Columbia, with its capital in Victoria.


Entry into Canada (1867-1900)

Both the depressed economic situation arising from the collapse of the gold rushes, as well as a desire for
the establishment of truly responsible and representative government, led to enormous domestic pressure for
British Columbia to join the Canadian Confederation, which had been proclaimed in 1867. The Confederation
League, spearheaded by three future premiers of the province — Amor De Cosmos, Robert Beaven, and
John Robson — took a leading role in pushing the colony towards this goal. And so it was on July 21, 1871,
that British Columbia became the sixth province to join Canada. In return for entering Confederation, Canada
absorbed B.C.'s massive debt, and promised to build a railway from Montreal to the Pacific coast within 10
years. In fulfillment of this promise, the last spike of the Canadian Pacific Railway was driven in Craigellachie
in 1885.
The mining frontier in B.C. led to the creation of many mines
and smelters, mostly through American investment. One of the
world's largest smelters still exists today in Trail, British
Columbia. The capital and work to be found in B.C. during the
turn of 19th century to the 20th century led to the creation of
several new towns in B.C. such as Nelson, Nakusp, Slocan,
Kimberley, Castlegar, Rossland, and Salmo. A large coal
empire run by Robert Dunsmuir, and his son and later premier,
James Dunsmuir also developed on Vancouver Island during
this era.
As the economy on the mainland continued to improve as a result of improved transportation and increased
settlement, other resource-based economic activity began to flourish. Throughout the latter half of the
nineteenth century, fishing, forestry, and farming (including the planting of extensive orchards in the
Okanagan region) became the "three F's" on which the new province built its economy — a situation that
pertained well into the late twentieth century.

With the booming economy came the expansion of the original fur trading posts into thriving communities
(such as Victoria, Nanaimo, Prince George, Fort St. James, Kamloops, and Fort St. John). It also led to
the establishment of new communities, such as Yale, New Westminster, and — most notably —
Vancouver. The product of the consolidation of the burgeoning mill towns of Granville and Hastings Mill
located near the mouth of the Fraser on Burrard Inlet, Vancouver was incorporated in 1886. Despite a
devastating fire which all but wiped out the city three months later, Vancouver quickly became the largest
city in the province, its ports conveying both the resource wealth of the province as well as that transported
from the prairie provinces by rail, to markets overseas. Vancouver's status as the principal city in the
province has endured, augmented by growth in the surrounding municipalities of Richmond, Burnaby,
Surrey, Delta, Coquitlam, and New Westminster. Today, Greater Vancouver is the third most populous
metropolitan area in Canada, behind Toronto and Montreal.


The Twentieth Century (1900-present)

During the 20th century, many immigrant groups arrived in British Columbia and today, Vancouver is the
second most ethnically diverse city in Canada, only behind Toronto. However, before 1945, racism was
more rampant and socially acceptable in Canada and British Columbia's immigration policies of the past
still leave an embarrassing scar. In 1886, a Head Tax was imposed on the Chinese, which reached as
much as $500 per person to enter Canada by 1904. By 1923 the government passed the Chinese
Immigration Act, which prohibited all Chinese immigration until 1947. Sikhs had to face an amended
Immigration Act in 1908 that required Sikhs to have $200 on arrival in Canada, and immigration would be
allowed only if the passenger had arrived by continuous journey from India, which was impossible. Perhaps
the most famous incident of anti-Sikh racism in B.C. was in 1914 when the Komagata Maru arrived in
Vancouver harbour with 376 Sikhs aboard, who were all denied entry. The Komagata Maru spent two
months in harbour while the Khalsa Society went through the courts to appeal their case. The Khalsa
Society also kept the passengers on the Komagata Maru alive during those two months. When the case
was lost, HMCS Rainbow, a Canadian Navy cruiser, towed the Komagata Maru out to sea while thousands
of white people cheered from the seawall of Stanley Park.

During the Second World War, security concerns following the bombing of Pearl Harbor and Canada's entry
into the war versus Japan led to controversial measures. The local Japanese-Canadian population was
openly discriminated against, being put in internment camps. The Pacific Coast Militia Rangers were
formed in 1942 in order to provide an armed presence on the coast in addition to the pre-war fortress
garrisons, which were expanded after hostilities. Japanese military attacks against BC amounted to a small
number of parachute bombs released from great distance away and by the middle of 1942 the threat of
direct attack diminished following defeat at the Battle of Midway by US forces. A Pacific Command was
created in 1942 also, and was disbanded in 1945. Militia units from southern BC provided cadres for many
regiments that eventually fought in Europe, and the Rocky Mountain Rangers sent a battalion to fight the
Japanese in the Battle of the Aleutian Islands in 1943. Thousands more British Columbians volunteered for
the Royal Canadian Navy and Royal Canadian Air Force. Two soldiers, Ernest Alvia Smith and John Keefer
Mahony, were awarded the Victoria Cross for actions with BC-based regiments in Italy.

Alcohol was prohibited in British Columbia for about four years, from 1917 to 1921. A referendum in 1916
asked BC citizens whether they approved of making alcohol illegal (the other question was whether women
had the right to vote). The contested results rejecting prohibition led to a major political scandal that
subsequently saw the referendum being overturned and alcohol prohibited.[5] However, by 1921 the failures
were so apparent—a thriving black market, arbitrary (often class- and race-based) enforcement and
punishment, rampant corruption—that alcohol was established as a commodity subject to government
regulation and taxation as it is today. U.S. prohibition in the 1920s and early 1930s led to a thriving
business of producing and smuggling alcohol to quench the thirst of BC's southern neighbors. Many of
Vancouver's richest families built or consolidated their fortunes in the rum-running business. Some compare
today's robust cannabis-growing industry in BC (the number-one cash crop) to this earlier era.

In the 1960s, British Columbia ratified the Columbia River Treaty, which was intended to benefit Canadians
but actually lost them roughly $808 million.

The status of the First Nations (aboriginal) people of British Columbia is a long-standing problem that has
become a major issue in recent years. First Nations were confined to tiny reserves that provide no
economic base. They were provided with inadequate education and discriminated against in numerous
ways. In many areas they were excluded from restaurants and other establishments. Native people only
gained the right to vote in 1960. They were prohibited from possessing alcohol, which rather than preventing
problems with this drug, exacerbated them by fostering unhealthy patterns of consumption such as binge
drinking.[citation needed] The lives of status Indians are still governed by the Indian Act. With the exception
of what are known as the Douglas Treaties, negotiated by Sir James Douglas with the native people of the
Victoria, BC area, no treaties were signed in British Columbia. Many native people wished to negotiate
treaties, but the province refused until 1990. Another major development was the 1997 decision of the
Supreme Court of Canada in the Delgamuukw v. British Columbia case that aboriginal title still exists in
British Columbia.

60% of First Nations in British Columbia are aligned with the First Nations Summit. This bring a total of 58
First Nations, but only 20 are said to be in active-negotiations. Three Final Agreements have been settled,
with one being rejected by Lheidli T’enneh in 2007. The other two, the Maa-nulth treaty group, a 5
Nuu-chah-nulth member group, and the Tsawwassen First Nation. Although these treaties have yet to be
ratified by Parliament in Ottawa and Legislature in Victoria, neighboring First Nations are seeking to block
these treaties in the courts. A group of Vancouver Island and some mainland First Nations, the WSANEC,
Lekwungen, and Semiahmoo, are seeking to block to Tsawwassen First Nation treaty, claiming
infringement on their rights and land titles. On the westcoast of Vancouver Island, the Ditidaht First Nation
is doing the same against the Maa-nulth treaty group. The only treaty, the Nisga'a Treaty (1998) signed in
recent years was negotiated outside the current outside of the current treaty process. There is considerable
disagreement about treaty negotiations. Many non-indigenous are vehemently opposed to it. For
indigenous, there is mounting criticism of extinguishment of Aboriginal title, continued assimilation
thestrategies by attempting to change the indigenous peoples form nations to municipal style government.
Therefor, a substantial number of First Nations governments consider the current treaty process inadequate
and have refused to participate.

A November 2007 court ruling for the Xeni Gwet'in First Nation has called future participation in the process
into question. The judge ruled that the Xeni Gwet'in could demonstrate aboriginal title to half of the Nemaia
Valley, and that the province had no power over these lands.[6] Under the BC treaty process, negotiating
nations have received as little as 5% of their claimed land recognized. Grand Chief Stewart Phillip,
president of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, has called the court victory a "nail in the coffin" of the B.C.
treaty process.

All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.