New Caledonia (Canada)

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For the island nation in the Pacific Ocean, see New Caledonia. For other uses please see Caledonia (disambiguation).

Main article: History of British Columbia

New Caledonia was the name given to a district of the Hudson's Bay Company that comprised the territory largely coterminous with the present-day Canadian province of British Columbia, Canada. Though not a British colony, New Caledonia was part of the British claim to North America.

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The explorations of James Cook and George Vancouver, and the concessions of Spain in 1792 established British jurisdiction over the coastal area north and west of the Columbia River. Similar jurisdiction was 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 Northwest Company and the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC). However, until 1849, the region which now comprises British Columbia was an unorganised area of British North America. Unlike Rupert's Land to the north and east, the departments of New Caledonia and its southern neighbour, Columbia, were not concessions to HBC. Rather, the Company was simply granted a monopoly to trade with the First Nations inhabitants after its merger with the Northwest Company in 1821.

For all intents and purposes, New Caledonia came into being with the establishment of the first British fur trading posts west of the Rocky Mountains by Simon Fraser and his crew, during their explorations of 1805-08. These were Fort George (later Prince George) at the junction of the Fraser and Nechako Rivers, Fort Fraser on Fraser Lake, Hudson's Hope, near the Peace River Canyon, Trout Lake Fort on McLeod Lake, north of Fort George, and the administrative headquarters of the district, Fort St. James, located on the shore of Stuart Lake. In its proper sense, New Caledonia at first thus comprised the territory of the northwestern Interior Plateau drained by the Peace, Stuart and Bulkley River systems. The origin of the name is generally attributed to Simon Fraser and his companions, to whom the hills and woodlands were reminiscent of the Scottish Highlands.

The boundaries of the department were vague, and changed over time. For all practical purposes, New Caledonia extended as far as the economic relationships enjoyed by its designated trading posts, which greatly expanded over the years. Originally, the eastern boundary was considered to be the Rocky Mountains, the northern boundary the Mackenzie River basin, and the southern boundary the Cariboo or the Thompson River drainage. With the signing of the Treaty of Washington (1846), the boundaries of New Caledonia were set between the 49th and 54th parallels of latitude, and west of the Rocky Mountains. In 1849, Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands in the Strait of Georgia were designated a crown colony in their own right, the Colony of Vancouver Island.

Until 1846, the region south of the Thompson River and north of the Columbia was designated as the Columbia District and was governed first from Thompson River Fort (Kamloops), then from Fort Vancouver (present day Vancouver, Washington). In 1846, the southern boundary of the district was shifted to the 49th parallel, and was administered from Fort Victoria. Nonetheless, in popular parlance, the entire British-held mainland north of the US boundary and west of the Rockies was known as New Caledonia.

New Caledonia continued over the next few years to be administered by the HBC, whose regional chief executive, James Douglas, also happened to be governor of Vancouver Island. This situation was manageable, so long as the European population remained small (about 100, mostly Company employees and their families). All this changed in 1858, however, with the discovery of gold north of Yale, prompting the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush and the influx of twenty to thirty thousand people, mostly American. Douglas, who had no legal authority over the region, felt compelled to exert British sovereignty by placing a gunboat at the mouth of the Fraser River in order to obtain licence fees from prospectors seeking to travel upstream. The British colonial office was prompted into action, and legislation was passed designating New Caledonia a crown colony on August 2, 1858. The name given the new entity was the Colony of British Columbia, and a new capital, New Westminster was established on the southern reaches of the Fraser River.

The name New Caledonia is still used in official and commercial names in the region (e.g., the College of New Caledonia and the Diocese of Caledonia in Prince George; Caledonia Sr. Secondary School in Terrace).

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