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Experimental photographic works of Mrs. R. Maynard’s Photographic Gallery

Series consists of 41 photographs produced by Hannah Maynard of Mrs. R. Maynard’s Photographic Gallery between 1880 and 1899. Images were examples of Maynard's advanced technical photographic skill in producing experimental works such as photocollages, composites, cut-and-paste montages, photosculptures (referred to by Maynard as “living statuaries” or “statuary from life”) and double- or multiple-exposure portraits. Photographs were produced as commercial products and to promote Maynard's photographic portfolio. Some of the composite photographs feature landscape views attributed to Richard Maynard.

Maynard, Hannah (Hatherly)

Dease Family records

Will, inventory of estate and effects, and contre-lettre of John Dease (1801); engagement of Peter Warren Dease to Alexander McKenzie and Company (1801; engagement of Francis Dease with Myer Michaels (1801); diary of John Warren Dease at Fort Vancouver with Dr. John McLoughlin (1829) and portion of a will (1829); correspondence of Albert E. Dease with the British Columbia Provincial Librarian regarding the Dease family (1924, 1928 1934).

Correspondence

Six letters from Baron Glenbervie on matters affecting English trade during the Napoleanic Wars. One letter discussing English trade on the northwest coast of North America.

Banks, Joseph, Sir

Records of the Russian American Company

The series consists of records of the Russian-American Company 1802-1867 including letters received by the Governors General, 1802-1866; letters sent by the Governors General, 1812-1867; logs of company ships, 1850-1867; and journals of exploring expeditions, 1842-1864.

Correspondence outward and accounts

The series consists of four copybook letters written by Simon Fraser in 1806 and 1807 while he worked for the North West Company. The letters are written in the same incomplete volume containing various Fort Liard (NWT) accounts created between 1803 and 1805.

The four letters were written by Fraser to Trout Lake (Fort McLeod) as follows:
December 21, 1806 from Fraser at Makesleh to James McDougall.
January 31, 1807 from Fraser at Natleh to James McDougall.
February 1, 1807 from Fraser at Natleh to John Stuart.
February 10 or 15, 1807 from Fraser at Natleh to James McDougall.

Foreign Office transcripts

This series consists of 14 volumes of transcripts of despatches and reports of foreign missions in the United States of America relating to settlement in the Pacific northwest and Hudson's Bay Company claims to Oregon territory. (P.R.O., F.O.5).

Great Britain. Foreign Office

Journal

The series consists of John Stuart's original journal which runs from December 20, 1805 to February 28, 1806. Stuart wrote the journal at "Rocky Mountains," a reference to Rocky Mountain House, Alberta, where he helped Simon Fraser to reestablish a trading post in the fall of 1805 for the North West Company. The journal details daily life at the fort, including interactions with the local Indigenous population. In particular, Stuart mentions "Beaver Indians," more properly known as the Dane-zaa or Tsattine peoples.

Vernon Llewellyn Denton records

Correspondence relating mainly to Simon Fraser and an atlas produced by Denton; notes and a typed manuscript relating to Simon Fraser, plus several copies of Fraser's 1806 and 1808 journals and letters 1806-1807. There are notes on the fur trade, early Vancouver Island, the Cariboo gold rush, Sir James Douglas, confederation and the Canadian Pacific Railway; and on Louis Riel and the Metis rebellions.

Denton, Vernon

Archer Martin papers re Red River Settlement

Correspondence, collected documents and copies of documents, research notes, etc. concerning the Red River Settlement used by Martin in the preparation of his volume on HBC land tenures; MS and proofs of Archer Martin, Hudson's Bay Co's land tenures.... London: Wm. Clowes and Sons Ltd., 1898.

Finding aid: file list.

Martin, Archer, 1865-1941

Foreign Office correspondence

This series consists of correspondence and reports from the British Foreign Office relating to possessory rights in Oregon, the San Juan boundary and the establishment of a transcontinental telegraph. (F.O. 115/20 to F.O. 115/172).

Great Britain. Foreign Office

Crease family collection

Henry Pering Pellew Crease (1823-1905) was born at Ince Castle, near Plymouth, England, educated at Cambridge, and called to the bar in 1849. He traveled to Upper Canada with his family and explored the Great Lakes area for mining potential before returning to England in 1851 or 2. He then worked briefly as a conveyancing barrister before becoming manager of the Great Wheal Vor United Mines in Cornwall. Following business difficulties, he emigrated to British Columbia in 1858, practicing law in Victoria and becoming a member of the Vancouver Island Legislative Assembly in 1860. In 1861 he was appointed Attorney General of the mainland colony and moved to New Westminster; he was appointed Attorney General of the united colonies in 1866 and returned to Victoria in 1868 when it became the capital of the colony of British Columbia. In 1870, he was made a supreme court judge. Crease was knighted in 1896. British Columbia. His family joined Crease in Victoria in 1860 and four more children, one of whom died in infancy, were born in British Columbia. Crease was interested in business and politics as well as the law. Both as a barrister and a supreme court judge he traveled throughout British Columbia on circuit. His wife accompanied him on some of these journeys. The Creases were prominent socially, and their house, Pentrelew, was a centre for Victoria society. Five of the Crease children lived into the 20th century, and three, Lindley (1867-1940), Susan (1855-1947) and Josephine (1864-1947), never married and lived at Pentrelew until their deaths. Susan was involved with the local Council of Women and Josephine with the Island Arts and Crafts Society. Both painted in watercolours, as did their mother. The two Crease sons, Lindley and Arthur, were sent to school in England and then practiced law in Victoria. Arthur served in France in the Canadian Army in the First World War.

The collection includes diaries, 1834-1900, correspondence inward, 1830-1904, and outward, 1830-1903, miscellaneous records and notebooks, including the minute books of the Colonial Securities Co., 1866-1868, of Sir Henry Crease; diaries, 1872-1913, correspondence inward, 1851-1922, and outward, and miscellaneous notebooks and records of Lady Crease; diaries, 1877-1937, correspondence inward, 1877-1940, and outward, 1893, and miscellaneous records of Lindley Crease; diaries, 1890-1960, account books, 1909-1954 and miscellaneous records of Arthur Crease; diaries, 1865-1943, correspondence inward, 1862-1891, 1902, and 1937, and miscellaneous records of Susan Crease; diaries, 1878-1942, correspondence inward, 1883-1890 and miscellaneous records of Josephine Crease; some correspondence inward of the other two Crease daughters, Mary Maberly (Walker) Crease and Barbara Crease; diaries, 1853, 1870, and 1898, and correspondence inward, 1847-1899, of Emily Howard Crease, Sir Henry Crease's sister, who taught school in British Columbia, and correspondence between members of the Crease and Lindley families in England and the Crease family in Victoria.

MS-2879 is an extensive collection of family papers which, in addition to the information it provides on the lives, activities and opinions of individual writers of letters and diaries, is a rich source of information on such topics as family life, childhood and the lives of women, and a major source on the economic, political, legal and social history of post-1858 l9th century British Columbia. The correspondence inward series to Sir Henry Crease includes letters from important figures in colonial and post colonial British Columbia. The collection contains some records relating to Sir Henry Crease's legal and business interests. It includes transcripts of Crease's private letter book, 1870-1873, Sarah Crease's diary of her trip to Cariboo, 1880, and her letters to her husband, 1849-1859. MS-2879 may be used in conjunction with MS-0054, MS-0055, MS-0056, and MS-0573.

Birch family papers

The series consists of photocopies of Henry William Birch's commonplace notebook, two diaries kept by Arthur Nonus Birch pertaining to a trip to North America and his service as colonial secretary of British Columbia, correspondence with various members of the Birch family, reminiscences of life in the colonial service by Arthur Nonus Birch, and photographs. The series also includes some Birch family papers on microfilm.

Ship's logs

The series consists of microfilmed copies of ship's logs of ships voyaging to the northwest coast of North America, the Hawaiian Islands, and Asia. The ships include:
Atahualpa (ship), 1811-1814
Behring (ship), 1814-1815
Mercury (ship), 1815
Isabella (ship), 1815-1816
Pedler (brigadier), 1816.

Atahualpa (Ship)

Papers relating to the Red River Settlement

Series consists of correspondence; petitions; registers of births, marriages; etc. all relating to the Red River Settlement. Includes minutes, proceedings, etc. of the Council of Assiniboia; papers relating to legal suits involving Griffith Owen Corbett; abstracts of Hudson's Bay Company accounts re various outfits, Oregon and Western Departments.

Microfilm (neg.) 1813-1894 35 mm [A01220A01222]

Correspondence; petitions; registers of births, marriages; etc. all relating to the Red River Settlement. Includes minutes, proceedings, etc. of the Council of Assiniboia; papers relating to legal suits involving Griffith Owen Corbett; abstracts of Hudson's Bay Co. accounts re various outfits, Oregon and Western Departments.

Source: MS Finding Aids

Purchased from Gertrude Rhodes in 1942 and 1950.

Finding aid: reel/file list

Personal and profesional papers

Series consists of a family register and diary, 1815-1904, consisting of notices of births and deaths of Marcus Smith and his wife and children, obituary notices of Marcus Smith, and extracts from his diaries copied in 1896; [A00856]; various documents relating to C.P.R. exploration, 1862-1874, letter book, 1872-1875, diary, 1867, various memoranda, diary extracts and biographical notes, reel A00857; reel A00858 contains a 15 page typed autobiography of Marcus Smith and the family register and diary.

Donald Ross private and official HBC papers

Series consists of correspondence between Donald Ross and other Hudson's Bay Company officials and employees, private correspondence between Ross and members of his family, and a variety of other documents, including accounts, invoices, memoranda, marriage certificates, and trade reports. All items are letters inward to Donald Ross unless otherwise indicated in the finding aid. Also included are typewritten transcripts prepared by the BC Archives (BCA).

Charles Ross collection

The series consists of a variety of letters and papers relating to numerous individuals, many of whom have a distant relationship to Charles Ross, usually by marriage. The papers were originally in the Old Manuscript collection at the BC Archives, and all were given the same core classification number (A/E/R731). Index cards to the Old Manuscript collection indicate that these records belonged to the "Charles Ross collection," although whether they were acquired as such or artificially arranged subsequent to acquisition is not clear. When possible, family relationships to Charles and Isabella (Mainville) Ross has been stated in the lower-level descriptions

Correspondence

The series consists of a microfilm reel, two bound volumes of transcripts of correspondence, and several original inbound letters to Ermatinger from various Hudson's Bay Company officials and their families.

Correspondence

The series consists of letters inward and outward of James Murray Yale and family; letters inward of John Duncan Manson (Yale's son in law) and transcribed copies. The series also includes a photocopy of a manuscript by James Andrew Grant and Helen Beatrice Yale Kempster titled "An Unsung Pioneer, Life and Letters of James Murray Yale and his 30 Years at Fort Langley,"

James Murray Yale was born near Lachine, Quebec in 1798. At the age of sixteen, he entered the service of the Hudson's Bay Company [HBC] as clerk. Yale came west to Fort Wedderburn in Athabaska country with John Clarke in 1815. In 1821, he was put in charge of Fort George, New Caledonia, and seven years later began over thirty years of service at Fort Langley. In 1859, Yale was granted a year's furlough, after which he retired in Victoria, where he died at his home, Stromness, West Saanich, on May 7, 1871.

One of Yale's daughters, Aurelia, married John Duncan Manson in 1857 at Fort Langley. From 1858 until the winter of 1863-1864, Manson was chief trader at Fort Fraser. In 1864, the Mansons settled in Victoria. Aurelia's daughter, Isabella, married James Andrew Grant. Helen Beatrice Yale Kempster is the grand-daughter of Isabella Grant. In January 1931, Aurelia Manson died in the home of Mr. and Mrs. J.A. Grant.

This series consists of letters inward and outward of James Murray Yale and letters inward of John Duncan Manson. The original letters, which were among Aurelia Manson's possessions when she died, have been copied and transcribed by the Yale/Grant family and their secretary, Eva Reinhard, and were intended for publication. The original letters were donated by Helen Beatrice Yale Kempster in 1973. The copies came into the possession of Reinhard's son, Otis F. Reinhard, who donated them to the Provincial Archives in 1966.

The series also includes a photocopy of the manuscript of James Andrew Grant and Helen Beatrice Yale Kempster: "An Unsung Pioneer, Life and Letters of James Murray Yale and his 30 Years at Fort Langley," no date. Mrs. Kempster retained the original.

Church Missionary Society papers

This series consists of copies of Church Missionary Society (CMS) records related to British Columbia. Reels were duplicated from copies of CMS records on 52 microfilm reels relating to Canada held by the Library and Archives Canada (LAC). Records relate to the North-West America (Rupert's Land/Canada) and North Pacific (British Columbia) Missions of the CMS.

Records are divided chronologically into Class C, for records up to 1880, and Class G, for records created after 1880. They are then classified by mission: C.1. for the North-West America [Canada] Mission and C.2. for the North Pacific [British Columbia] Mission. They are further arranged by letter books of outward despatches (/L.); individual outward correspondence (/I.); original correspondence (/O.), which includes, journals, reports, indents, estimates, accounts, local CMS and diocesan committee minutes, medical certificates, maps, sketches, and translations into Indigenous syllabic characters; mission books (/M.); précis books of annotated agenda papers (/P.); and miscellaneous Canada letters and papers.

Malcolm McLeod family papers

Malcolm McLeod was a barrister and writer.

MS consists of correspondence, manuscripts and notes relating to the Puget's Sound Agricultural Company in Oregon, the Northwest Territories and the selection of a route for the Canadian Pacific Railway accumulated by McLeod in his attempt to secure recognition of the value of the information on the west provided to the Canadian government, CPR, etc., by his father, John McLeod, and himself; includes letters from fur traders, information on the McLeod family, manuscripts by M. McLeod on the Hudson's Bay Company's territories and the location of the CPR. Also includes correspondence with Ranald Macdonald, who taught English in Japan, 1848-1849; reminiscences and Japanese glossaries by Macdonald, manuscripts by McLeod entitled "Japan, story of adventure of Ranald Macdonald."

McLeod, Malcolm, 1821-1899

Colonial Office correspondence with Hudson's Bay Co. with regard to Vancouver Island

This series consists of transcripts of correspondence with the Hudson's Bay Company relating to the conveyance, settlement, and reconveyance of Vancouver Island. Correspondence is arranged chronologically.

Volumes:
Volume 1: 1822-1851
Volume 2: 1852-1856.
Volume 3: 1856-1858
Volume 4: 1858-1860
Volume 5: 1860-1863
Volume 6: 1863-1880

Great Britain. Colonial Office

Diaries and other material

Diaries kept by Black during an expedition along the Finlay River from the Peace River country, 1823-1825; typescript of a journal of "A Voyage of Discovery from Rocky Mountain Portage on Peace River to the Source of Finlays Branch and North-Westward," 13 May to 23 June 1824; one incomplete letter to Alexander Fisher, 1832; last will and testament (photocopy), 1835.

Ogden family papers

The series consists of records created by or relating to various members of Peter Skene Ogden's family, including his parents Isaac and Sarah (Hanson) Ogden, son Peter Ogden, and his nephews Michael and Isaac Evans Lowe Ogden. Records are generally related to family affairs, although the series also consists of limited correspondence with Hudson's Bay Company officials.

Ogden (family)

Correspondence

This microfilm is a copy of the original material held by the National Archives of Canada (MG 19 A 23). John McLeod (or MacLeod) entered service with the Hudson's Bay Company in 1811 and rose to the rank of chief trader in 1821. This microfilm includes letters received from friends and associates in the Hudson's Bay Company's service (1825-1837), a report on occurrences at Kamloops in 1822 and a rough journal of a trip from Kamloops to Edmonton in 1826. The material is in chronological order. Index to correspondence is on the film. Spelling of names may vary.

Peter Skene Ogden papers

The series consists of records created by, related to, or received by Peter Skene Ogden. The series consists of inward and outward correspondence, and Ogden's appointments as Chief Trader and Chief Factor in the Hudson's Bay Company. Records deal with both personal and Company matters.

Ogden, Peter Skene, 1794-1854

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