Sharing the land: the formation of the Vancouver Island (or 'Douglas') Treaties of 1850-1854 in historical, legal and comparative context

Chapter I introduces the Vancouver Island or ‘Douglas’ Treaties of 1850-54, entered into between several Vancouver Island First Nations and Hudson’s Bay Company Chief Factor, James Douglas, acting as agent of the Crown. The written versions purported to extinguish the aboriginal title of the First N...

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Main Author: Vallance, Neil
Other Authors: Foster, Hamar, Lutz, John S.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7089
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftuvicpubl:oai:dspace.library.uvic.ca:1828/7089 2023-05-15T16:15:14+02:00 Sharing the land: the formation of the Vancouver Island (or 'Douglas') Treaties of 1850-1854 in historical, legal and comparative context Vallance, Neil Foster, Hamar Lutz, John S. 2015 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7089 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7089 Available to the World Wide Web Treaties First Nations Vancouver Island James Douglas Land Sharing Treaties Modus Vivendi Washington (or 'Stevens') Treaties Ngai Tahu Land Agreement (or 'Kemp's Deed') of 1848 Hudson's Bay Company Silencing Thesis 2015 ftuvicpubl 2022-05-19T06:13:12Z Chapter I introduces the Vancouver Island or ‘Douglas’ Treaties of 1850-54, entered into between several Vancouver Island First Nations and Hudson’s Bay Company Chief Factor, James Douglas, acting as agent of the Crown. The written versions purported to extinguish the aboriginal title of the First Nations to their land. Recent research has indicated that these documents do not accurately reflect what was agreed between the parties at the treaty meetings. The goal of the dissertation is to ascertain the likely terms of the treaties. This task also posed my major research challenge, as very little contemporaneous documentation exists of the formation of the treaties. There are a number of first- and second-hand accounts reduced to writing long after the events described, but they have received little attention from scholars until now. Chapter II is devoted to a critical analysis and comparison of the extant First Nation and colonial accounts, from which I conclude that the treaties were likely agreements by the First Nations to share not cede their land. Chapter III makes a comparison with first person accounts of the Washington or ‘Stevens’ Treaties of 1854-55, entered into between vii viii Native American tribes and the United States government. I conclude that these accounts bolster the likelihood that the Vancouver Island agreements were sharing treaties. Chapter IV follows up on a fascinating connection between the written versions of the Vancouver Island Treaties and an agreement concerning land between the Ngai Tahu Moari of New Zealand’s south island and Henry Kemp, acting as agent of the Crown. The comparison provides a number of useful contrasts and parallels with the Vancouver Island Treaties. Chapter V describes the silencing of the Vancouver Island Treaties by the policies of successive governments, the inattention of scholars and the decisions of Canadian courts. Finally, Chapter VI reviews existing and potential categories of historical treaties between First Nations and the Crown. By analogy with ... Thesis First Nations University of Victoria (Canada): UVicDSpace
institution Open Polar
collection University of Victoria (Canada): UVicDSpace
op_collection_id ftuvicpubl
language English
topic Treaties
First Nations
Vancouver Island
James Douglas
Land
Sharing Treaties
Modus Vivendi
Washington (or 'Stevens') Treaties
Ngai Tahu Land Agreement (or 'Kemp's Deed') of 1848
Hudson's Bay Company
Silencing
spellingShingle Treaties
First Nations
Vancouver Island
James Douglas
Land
Sharing Treaties
Modus Vivendi
Washington (or 'Stevens') Treaties
Ngai Tahu Land Agreement (or 'Kemp's Deed') of 1848
Hudson's Bay Company
Silencing
Vallance, Neil
Sharing the land: the formation of the Vancouver Island (or 'Douglas') Treaties of 1850-1854 in historical, legal and comparative context
topic_facet Treaties
First Nations
Vancouver Island
James Douglas
Land
Sharing Treaties
Modus Vivendi
Washington (or 'Stevens') Treaties
Ngai Tahu Land Agreement (or 'Kemp's Deed') of 1848
Hudson's Bay Company
Silencing
description Chapter I introduces the Vancouver Island or ‘Douglas’ Treaties of 1850-54, entered into between several Vancouver Island First Nations and Hudson’s Bay Company Chief Factor, James Douglas, acting as agent of the Crown. The written versions purported to extinguish the aboriginal title of the First Nations to their land. Recent research has indicated that these documents do not accurately reflect what was agreed between the parties at the treaty meetings. The goal of the dissertation is to ascertain the likely terms of the treaties. This task also posed my major research challenge, as very little contemporaneous documentation exists of the formation of the treaties. There are a number of first- and second-hand accounts reduced to writing long after the events described, but they have received little attention from scholars until now. Chapter II is devoted to a critical analysis and comparison of the extant First Nation and colonial accounts, from which I conclude that the treaties were likely agreements by the First Nations to share not cede their land. Chapter III makes a comparison with first person accounts of the Washington or ‘Stevens’ Treaties of 1854-55, entered into between vii viii Native American tribes and the United States government. I conclude that these accounts bolster the likelihood that the Vancouver Island agreements were sharing treaties. Chapter IV follows up on a fascinating connection between the written versions of the Vancouver Island Treaties and an agreement concerning land between the Ngai Tahu Moari of New Zealand’s south island and Henry Kemp, acting as agent of the Crown. The comparison provides a number of useful contrasts and parallels with the Vancouver Island Treaties. Chapter V describes the silencing of the Vancouver Island Treaties by the policies of successive governments, the inattention of scholars and the decisions of Canadian courts. Finally, Chapter VI reviews existing and potential categories of historical treaties between First Nations and the Crown. By analogy with ...
author2 Foster, Hamar
Lutz, John S.
format Thesis
author Vallance, Neil
author_facet Vallance, Neil
author_sort Vallance, Neil
title Sharing the land: the formation of the Vancouver Island (or 'Douglas') Treaties of 1850-1854 in historical, legal and comparative context
title_short Sharing the land: the formation of the Vancouver Island (or 'Douglas') Treaties of 1850-1854 in historical, legal and comparative context
title_full Sharing the land: the formation of the Vancouver Island (or 'Douglas') Treaties of 1850-1854 in historical, legal and comparative context
title_fullStr Sharing the land: the formation of the Vancouver Island (or 'Douglas') Treaties of 1850-1854 in historical, legal and comparative context
title_full_unstemmed Sharing the land: the formation of the Vancouver Island (or 'Douglas') Treaties of 1850-1854 in historical, legal and comparative context
title_sort sharing the land: the formation of the vancouver island (or 'douglas') treaties of 1850-1854 in historical, legal and comparative context
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7089
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7089
op_rights Available to the World Wide Web
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