1871
British Columbia Terms of Union
British Columbia Terms of Union (Order of Her Majesty in Council
admitting British Columbia into the Union)
At the Court at Windsor, the 16th day of May, 1871
PRESENT The QUEEN'S Most Excellent Majesty His Royal Highness
Prince ARTHUR Lord Privy Seal Earl Cowper Earl of Kimberley Lord
Chamberlain Mr. Secretary Cardwell Mr. Ayrton
Whereas by the "Constitution Act, 1867" provision was made
for the Union of the Provinces of Canada. Nova Scotia and New
Brunswick into the Dominion of Canada, and it was (amongst other
things) enacted that it should be lawful for the Queen, by and
with the Advice of Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council,
on Addresses from the Houses of the Parliament of Canada, and of
the Legislature of the Colony of British Columbia, to admit that
colony into the said Union on such terms and conditions as
should be in the Addresses expressed, and as the Queen should
think fit to approve, subject to the provisions of the said Act.
And it was further enacted that the provisions of any Order in
Council in that behalf should have effect as if they had been
enacted by the Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain
and Ireland. And whereas by Addresses from the Houses of the
Parliament of Canada and from the Legislative Council of British
Columbia respectively, of which Addresses copies are contained
in the Schedule to this Order annexed, Her Majesty was prayed,
by and with the advice of Her most Honourable Privy Council,
under the one hundred and fortysixth section of the hereinbefore
recited Act, to admit British Columbia into the Dominion of
Canada, on the terms and conditions set forth in the said
Addresses. And whereas Her Majesty has thought fit to approve of
the said terms and conditions. It is hereby ordered and declared
by Her Majesty, by and with the advice of Her Privy Council, in
pursuance and exercise of the powers vested in Her Majesty by
the said Act of Parliament, that from and after the twentieth
day of July, one thousand eight hundred and seventyone, the said
Colony of British Columbia shall be admitted into and become
part of the Dominion of Canada, upon the terms and conditions
set forth in the hereinbefore recited Addresses. And, in
accordance with the terms of the said Addresses relating to the
electoral districts in British Columbia, for which the first
election of members to serve in the House of Commons of the said
Dominion shall take place, it is hereby further ordered and
declared that such electoral districts shall be as follows:--
"New Westminster District" and the "Coast District," as defined
in a public notice issued from the Lands and Works Office in the
said colony on the fifteenth day of December, one thousand eight
hundred and sixty-nine, by the desire of the Governor, and
purporting to be in accordance with the provisions of the
thirty-ninth clause of the "Mineral Ordinance, 1869," shall
constitute one district, to be designated ' 'New Westminster
District," and return one member. "Caribou District" and
"Lillooet District," as specified in the said public notice,
shall constitute one district, to be designated "Cariboo
District," and return one member. "Yale District" and "Kootenay
District,'' as specified in the said public notice, shall
constitute one district, to be designated "Yale District," and
return one member. Those portions of Vancouver Island, known as
"Victoria District," "Esquimalt District," and ''Metchosin
District,'' as defined in the official maps of those districts
which are in the Land Office, Victoria, and are designated
respectively, ''Victoria District Official Map, 1858,"
"Esquimalt District Official Map, 1858," and "Metchosin District
Official Map, A.D. 1858," shall constitute one district, to be
designated ''Victoria District," and return two members. All the
remainder of Vancouver Island, and all such islands adjacent
thereto, as were formerly dependencies of the late Colony of
Vancouver Island District, shall constitute one district. to be
designated "Vancouver Island District," and return one Member.
And the Right Honourable Earl of Kimberley, one of Her Majesty's
Principal Secretaries of State, is to give the necessary
directions therein accordingly. (Signed) ARTHUR HELPS.
SCHEDULE
Address of the Senate of Canada To the Queen's Excellent Majesty
Most Gracious Sovereign, We, your Majesty's most dutiful and
loyal subjects, the Senate of Canada in Parliament assembled,
humbly approach your Majesty for the purpose of representing:--
That by a despatch from the Governor of British Columbia, dated
23rd January, 1871, with other papers laid before this House by
message from his Excellency the GovernorGeneral, of the 27th
February last, this House learns that the Legislative Council of
that colony, in council assembled, adopted, in January last, an
Address representing to your Majesty that British Columbia was
prepared to enter into Union with the Dominion of Canada, upon
the terms and conditions mentioned in the said Address, which is
as follows:-- To the Queen's Most Excellent Majesty Most
Gracious Sovereign, We, your Majesty's most dutiful and loyal
subjects, the Members of the Legislative Council of British
Columbia in council assembled, humbly approach your Majesty for
the purpose of representing:-- That, during the last session of
the late Legislative Council, the subject of the admission of
the Colony of British Columbia into the Union or Dominion of
Canada was taken into consideration, and a resolution on the
subject was agreed to, embodying the terms upon which it was
proposed that this colony should enter the Union; That after the
close of the session, Delegates were sent by the Government of
this Colony to Canada to confer with the Government of the
Dominion with respect to the admission or British Columbia into
the Union upon the terms proposed; That after considerable
discussion by the Delegates with the Members of the Government
of the Dominion of Canada, the terms and conditions hereinafter
specified were adopted by a Committee of the Privy Council of
Canada, and were by them reported to the Governor-General for
his approval; That such terms were communicated to the
Government of this Colony by the Governor-General of Canada, in
a despatch dated July 7th, 1870, and are as follows:-- 1. Canada
shall be liable for the debts and liabilities of British
Columbia existing at the time of the Union. 2. British Columbia
not having incurred debts equal to those of the other Provinces
now constituting the Dominion, shall be entitled to receive, by
half-yearly payments, in advance from the General Government,
interest at the rate of five per cent. per ann um on the
difference between the actual amount of its indebtedness at the
date of the Union, and the indebtedness per head of the
population of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick (27.77 dollars), the
population of British Columbia being taken at 60,000. 3. The
following sums shall be paid by Canada to British Columbia for
the support of its Government and Legislature, to wit, an annual
subsidy of 35,000 dollars, and an annual grant equal to 80 cents
per head of the said population of 60,000, both half-yea rly in
advance, such grant of 80 cents per head to be augmented in
proportion to the increase of population, as may be shown by
each subsequent decennial census, until the population amounts
to 400,000, at which rate such grant shall thereafter remain, it
being understood that the first census be taken in the year
1881. 4. The Dominion will provide an efficient mail service,
fortnightly, by steam communication between Victoria and San
Francisco, and twice a week between Victoria and Olympia; he
vessels to be adapted for the conveyance of freight and
passengers 5. Canada will assume and defray the charges for the
following services:-- A. Salary of the Lieutenant-Governor; B.
Salaries and allowances of the Judges of the Superior Courts and
the County or District Courts; C. The charges in respect to the
Department of Customs; D. The Postal and Telegraphic Services;
E. Protection and Encouragement of Fisheries; F. Provision for
the Militia; G. Lighthouses, Buoys, and Beacons, Shipwrecked
Crews, Quarantine and Marine Hospitals, including a Marine
Hospital at Victoria; H. The Geological Survey; I. The
Penitentiary; And such further charges as may be incident to and
connected with the services which by the "British North America
Act of 1867" appertain to the General Government, and as are or
may be allowed to the other Provinces. 6. Suitable pensions,
such as shall be approved of by Her Majesty's Government, shall
be provided by the Government of the Dominion for those of Her
Majesty's servants in the Colony whose position and emoluments
derived therefrom would be affected by political changes on the
admission of British Columbia into the Dominion of Canada. 7. It
is agreed that the existing Customs tariff and Excise duties
shall continue in force in British Columbia until the railway
from the Pacific coast and the system of railways in Canada are
connected, unless the Legislature of British Columbia should
sooner decide to accept the Tariff and Excise Laws of Canada.
When Customs and Excise duties are, at the time of the union of
British Columbia with Canada, leviable on any goods, wares, or
merchandizes in British Columbia, or in the other Provinces of
the Do minion, those goods, wares, and merchandizes may, from
and after the Union, be imported into British Columbia from the
Provinces now composing the Dominion, or into either of those
Provinces from British Columbia, on proof of payment of the
Customs or Excise duties leviable thereon in the Province of
exportation, and on payment of such further amount (if any) of
Customs or Excise duties as are leviable thereon in the Province
of importation. This arrangement to have no force or effect
after the assimilation of the Tariff and Excise duties of
British Columbia with those of the Dominion. 8. British Columbia
shall be entitled to be represented in the Senate by three
members, and by six members in the House of Commons. The
representation to be increased under the provisions of the
"British North America Act, 1867" 9. The influence of the
Dominion Government will be used to secure the continued
maintenance of the naval station at Esquimalt. 10. The
provisions of the "British North America Act, 1867'' shall
(except those parts thereof which are in terms made, or by
reasonable intendment may be held to be specially applicable to
and only affect one and not the whole of the Provinces now
comprising the Dominion, and except so far as the same may be
varied by this Minute) be applicable to British Columbia in the
same way and to the like extent as they apply to the other
Provinces of the Dominion, and as if the colony of British
Columbia had been one of the Provinces originally united by the
said Act. 1l. The Government of the Dominion undertake to secure
the commencement simultaneously, within two years from the date
of the Union, of the construction of a railway from the Pacific
towards the Rocky Mountains, and from such point as may be
selected, east of the Rocky Mountains, towards the Pacific, to
connect the seaboard of British Columbia with the railway system
of Canada; and further, to secure the completion of such railway
within ten years from the date of the Union. And the Government
of British Columbia agrees to convey to the Dominion Government,
in trust, to be appropriated in such manner as the Dominion
Government may deem advisable in furtherance of the construction
of the said railway, a similar extent of public lands along the
line of railway throughout its entire length in British
Columbia, not to exceed, however, twenty (20) miles on each side
of said line, as may be appropriated for the same purpose by the
Dominion Government from the public lands in the northwest
territories and the Province of Manitoba. Provided that the
quantity of land which may be held under preemption right or by
Crown grant within the limits of the tract of land in British
Columbia to be so conveyed to the Dominion Government shall be
made good to the Dominion from contiguous public lands; and
provided further, that until the commencement, within two years,
as aforesaid, from the date of the union, of the construction of
the said railway, the Government of British Columbia shall not
sell or alienate any further portions of the public lands of
British Columbia in any other way than under right of preemption,
requiring actual residence of the preemptor on the land claimed
by him. In consideration of the land to be so conveyed in aid of
the construction of the said railway, the Dominion Government
agree to pay to British Columbia from the date of the Union, the
sum of 100,000 dollars per annum, in half-yearly payments in
advance. 12. The Dominion Government shall guarantee the
interest for ten years from the date of the completion of the
works, at the rate of five per centum per annum, on such sum,
not exceeding Pound100.000 sterling, as may be required for the
construction of a first class graving dock at Esquimalt. 13. The
charge of the Indians, and the trusteeship and management of the
lands reserved for their use and benefit, shall be assumed by
the Dominion Government and a policy as liberal as that hitherto
pursued by the British Columbia Government shall be continued by
the Dominion Government after the Union. To carry out such
policy, tracts of land of such extent as it has hitherto been
the practice of the British Columbia Government to appropriate
for that purpose, shall from time to time be conveyed by the
Local Government to the Dominion Government in trust for the use
and benefit of the Indians on application of the Dominion
Government; and in case of disagreement between the two
Governments respecting the quantity of such tracts of land to be
so granted, the matter shall be referred for the decision of the
Secretary of State for the Colonies. 14. The Constitution of the
Executive Authority and Or the Legislature of British Columbia
shall, subject to the provisions of "The British North America
Act, 1867", continue as existing at the time of the Union until
altered under the authority of the said Act, it being at the
same time understood that the Government of the Dominion will
readily consent to the introduction of responsible government
when desired by the inhabitants of British Columbia, and it
being likewise understood that it is the intention of the
Governor of British Columbia, under the authority of the
Secretary of State for the Colonies, to amend the existing
Constitution of the Legislature by providing that a majority of
its members shall be elective. The Union shall take effect
according to the foregoing terms and conditions on such day as
Her Majesty by and with the advice of Her Most Honourable Privy
Council may appoint (on addresses from the Legislature of the
Colony of British Columbia and of the Houses of Parliament of
Canada in the terms of the 146th section of "The British North
America Act, 1867" and British Columbia may in its address
specify the electoral districts for which the first election of
members to serve in the House of Commons shall take place. That
such terms have proved generally acceptable to the people of
this Colony. That this Council is, therefore, willing to enter
into Union with the Dominion of Canada upon such terms, and
humbly submit that, under the circumstances, it is expedient
that the admission of this Colony into such Union, as aforesaid,
should be affected at as early a date as may be found
practicable under the provisions of the 146th section of ''The
British North America Act, 1867" We, therefore, humbly pray that
Your Majesty will be graciously pleased, by and with the advice
of Your Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council, under the
provisions of the 146th section of ''The British North America
Act, 1867" to admit British Columbia into the Union or Dominion
of Canada, on the basis of the terms and conditions offered to
this Colony by the Government of the Dominion of Canada,
hereinbefore set forth; and inasmuch as by the said terms
British Columbia is empowered in its address to specify the
electoral districts for which the first election of members to
serve in the House of Commons shall take place, we humbly pray
that such electoral districts may be declared, under the Order
in Council, to be as follows:-- That ''New Westminster
District," and the "Coast District", as defined in a public
notice issued from the Lands and Works Office on the 15th day of
December, 1869, by the desire of the Governor, and purporting to
be in accordance with the provisions of the 39th clause of the
"Mineral Ordinance,1869," shall constitute one district, to be
designated "New Westminster District," and return one member.
That ''Cariboo District," and "Lillooet District," as specified
in the said public notice shall constitute one district, to be
designated "Cariboo District,'' and return one Member. That
''Yale District," and "Kootenay District," as specified in the
said public notice, shall constitute one district, to be
designated ''Yale District," and return one Member. That those
portions of Vancouver Island known as "Victoria District," ''Esquimalt
District,'' and "Metchosin District," as defined in the official
maps of those districts in the Land Office, Victoria, and which
maps are designated respectively, ''Victoria District Official
Map, 1858," "Esquimalt District Official Map,1858," and ''Metchosin
District Official Map. 1858." shall constitute one district. to
be designated ''Victoria District," and return two Members. And
that all the remainder of Vancouver Island, and all such islands
adjacent thereto as were formerly dependencies of the late
colony of Vancouver Island District shall constitute one
district, to be designated "Vancouver Island District," and
return one Member. We further humbly represent, that the
proposed terms and conditions of Union of British Columbia with
Canada, as stated in the said Address, are in conformity with
those preliminarily agreed upon between delegates from British
Columbia and the Members of the Government of the Dominion of
Canada, and embodied in a Report of a Committee of the Privy
Council. approved by His Excellency the Governor-General in
Council. on the 1st July, 1870, which approved Report is as
follows:-- Copy of a Report of a Committee of the Honourable the
Privy Council, approved by His Excellency the Governor-General
in Council, on the 1st of July, 1870. The Committee of the Privy
Council have had under consideration a Despatch, dated the 7th
May, 1870, from the Governor of British Columbia, together with
certain resolutions submitted by the Government of that colony
to the Legislative Council thereof--both hereunto annexed--on
the subject of the proposed union of British Columbia with the
Dominion of Canada; and after several interviews between them
and the Honourable Messrs. Trutch, Helmcken, and Carrall, the
Delegates from British Columbia. and full discussion with them
of the various questions connected with that important subject,
the Committee now respectfully submit for your Excellency's
approval the following terms and conditions to form the basis of
a political union between British Columbia and the Dominion of
Canada [Here follow the terms of Union as stated supra, in the
Address of the Legislative Council of British Columbia]
(Certified) WM. H. LEE, Clerk Privy Council. We further humbly
represent that we concur in the terms and conditions of Union
set forth in the said Address, and approved Report of the
Committee of the Privy Council above mentioned; and most
respectfully pray that your Majesty will be graciously pleased,
by and with the advice of your Majesty's most Honourable Privy
Council, under the 146th clause of ''The British North America
Act, 1867'' to unite British Columbia with the Dominion of
Canada, on the terms and conditions above set forth. The Senate,
Wednesday, April 5, 1871. (Signed) JOSEPH CAUCHON, Speaker.
Address of the Commons of Canada To the Queen's Most Excellent
Majesty Most Gracious Sovereign, We,your Majesty's most dutiful
and loyal subjects, the Commons of Canada in Parliament
assembled, humbly approach your Majesty for the purpose of
representing:-- [The balance of the Address is identical inform
with the Address of the Senate and is omitted for that reason.]
JAMES COCKBURN, Speaker.
House of Commons, Saturday, 1st April, 1871. Address of the
Legislative Council of British Columbia To the Queen's Most
Excellent Majesty Most Gracious Sovereign, We, your Majesty's
most dutiful and loyal subjects, the Members of the Legislative
Council of British Columbia in Council assembled, humbly
approach your Majesty for the purpose of representing:-- [The
balance of the Address is set forth at length in the Address of
the Senate.] (Signed) PHILIP J. HANKIN, Speaker.