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| Belle
Vue Sheep Farm |
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On a chilly December 15, 1853, a group of Europeans, Hawaiians, and Indians
led by Fort Victoria Chief Factor James Douglas landed on the southern
tip of San Juan Island and turned loose 1,369 sheep to graze on the sweeping
prairies that gave onto the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Douglas also brought
along seed for crops and farm yard animals, including several Berkshire
boars. He then appointed Charles John Griffin chief agent of this new
Hudson's Bay Company establishment. Gazing at the magnificent Olympic
Mountains directly across the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Griffin appropriately
called his prairie home “Belle Vue Sheep Farm.”
While San Juan Island’s open prairies were ideal for agriculture
and livestock, Douglas’s primary purpose was political. The presence
of a thriving agricultural community would solidify Great Britain’s
claim to the island, which had been in dispute with the United States
since the two nations signed the Treaty of Oregon in June 1846. In his
role as governor of the crown colony of Vancouver Island, Douglas had
already
"succeeded in defeating every attempt made to preoccupy the Arro
Islands (San Juans) by American Squatters" by warning off Yankee
timber men, while at the same time establishing HBC fishing stations on
San Juan's western shore.
Belle Vue Farm was the last of the agricultural facilities established
by the HBC south of the 49th parallel. The foray into agriculture by a
company principally known for the fur trade, had begun in the 1820s as
means to feed and clothe employees. However, by the late 1830s the company
operated several corporate farms in the Oregon Country, which, combined
with timber and fishing interests, made it an economic force on the Pacific
Rim. Wool, mutton, lumber and fish, in addition to furs, were shipped
from the West Coast to Russian America (Alaska), China and other points
west, as well as to England. It was the realization of the vision expressed
by Alexander Mackenzie when he wrote about his epic journey across Canada
to the Pacific in 1793. |
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Belle
Vue farm as it was seen looking south in 1858 by Lieutenant James Madison
Alden, artist for the U.S. Boundary Survey. The Olympic Mountains and the
Strait of Juan de Fuca are in the background. |
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Griffin
set about establishing the operation with vigor. By early spring, crews
of Cowitchan Indian employees had cleared a rough track running north-south
up the center of the 16 1/2 mile-long island, which became known as the
"Cowitchan" (and later the "Military") Road. The road
and its many offshoots transited or terminated at open pasturage where
the flocks could expand. Several of these "prairies" would become
permanent sheep stations with names such as Porte L'Enfre (now Portland
Fair), Little Mountain on Oak Prairie (San Juan Valley) and New Station
(possibly the site of the town of Friday Harbor). A
large truck garden was planted at Home Prairie (just north of Grandma's
Cove at American Camp), while work began on log rail and picket fences
as well as the "post and sill" cottages that would compose the
farm's headquarters for the next eight years. Two years later,
the
farm was a going concern as evidenced by Douglas's January 1857 report:
"The sheep at San Juan are divided into four flocks, kept at
as many different stations; each flock being under the charge of an engaged
servant, with 3 Indians, and Murdoch McLeod, a very trusted Lewis man,
acts as head shepherd. There being no grass or other food for the sheep
in the wooded Districts, the sheep stations are, from necessity, placed
in the natural prairies of the Island; which are distant from each other,
and connected by roads, opened with much labour, through the forest..."
The
stations tallied a total of 4,250 sheep with 2,700 sheep on site, 1,000
supplied to "other places," 150 killed for food and 400 carried
away by Americans!
If the HBC's commercial empire fulfilled the vision of Mackenzie, it also
fueled dreams of "Manifest Destiny" by the Americans. Yankee
merchant captains visited the Oregon Country by sea as early as the 1780s
and commercial claims were staked by 1810 with the founding of Astoria.
By the mid-1840s, American farmers dominated the Willamette Valley, which
spurred the HBC to move its headquarters to Fort Victoria and begin to
curtail its farming operations between Puget Sound and the Columbia River.
By late 1853 with the formation of Washington Territory and the expected
arrival of an aggressive young governor and Mexican War hero, Isaac Stevens,
Douglas knew more Americans would move north of the Columbia and snap
up new lands in the Puget Sound basin. From there they would push up to
the 49th parallel and those who knew anything about agriculture would
gravitate to the San Juans with their bounty of timber, safe harbors and
prairies barren of trees but rich in topsoil. |
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This
photo, taken in September 1859 at the height of the Pig War crisis, shows
the Home Prairie headquarters complex looking north from just above Grandma's
Cove, which then served at the Hudson's Bay Company landing. |
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As
Douglas predicted, the establishment of Belle Vue Farm drew an immediate
response from the Americans. In the first two year's of the farm's operation
Griffin was besieged by federal customs officials and county tax collectors.
As mentioned above, the latter went so far as to hold a "sheriff's
sale" on the beach below Home Prairie and abscond at gunpoint with
35 breeding rams (as opposed to the 400 claimed by Griffin). An international
incident ensued which calmed down only when the President of the United
States gave his assurances that British property would be respected. Nevertheless,
U.S. customs inspectors regularly called at San Juan to keep book on Griffin's
operation in anticipation of the day the islands became U.S. possessions.
Between 1855 and 1859, taxes were assessed (but not collected) on the
HBC. As of May 20, 1859, the HBC had 4,500 sheep, 40 cattle, 5 yoke of
oxen, 35 horses and 40 hogs, plus 80 fenced acres under cultivation with
oats, peas, and potatoes. Griffin had 19 employees, three of whom were
naturalized American citizens who actually voted in the territorial election.
The company reported property holdings with structures at Stubbs Point,
Belle Vue Farm, Frasers Farm, Droyen Farm, Blakes Farm, Longacres Farm,
Chandlers Prairie, New Station, Limestone Station and John Bull Station.
There were altogether 29 settlers. No Americans settled on the island
until several frustrated miners drifted over from the Fraser River diggings
between the summer of 1858 and January 1859. Indian fears had heretofore
kept them away. For example, in April 1858 deputy customs inspector Paul
K. Hubbs, Jr., was shot at by a party of Clallams from the Olympic Peninsula
encamped on the island. Captain Granville O. Haller, commander of Co.
I. Fourth Infantry at Fort Townsend crossed the strait with a small guard
to “capture the offenders.” Griffin had helped Hubbs escape
and was pleased to see Haller and his men. The Clallam fled.
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Visitors
in the early 20th century poke about the ruins of Belle Vue Sheep Farm at
today's American Camp. |
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The
Americans were settled on preemption claims which they expected the U.S.
Government to recognize as valid, but which the British considered illegal.
Neither side recognized the authority of the other. The stage was set
in June 1859 for one of the miners-turned-farmers, Lyman Cutlar, to shoot
one of Griffin's hogs and precipitate the "Pig
War"
crisis.
For all of the ado it engendered, Griffin's journal entry for the incident
was succinct and buried in the text:
"Wednesday 15th Heavy rain during the night & showery all
day, light wind. --
Shepherds packing wool, finished shearing Ignace’s flock last eveg.
-- Jacob & Lamane hauling logs. Robillard & George sawing oak
for hay carts, cradles etc. -- Inds weeding etc. --
Napoleon left for Victoria to have his account settled. --
An American shot one of my pigs for trespassing!!!--
Beaver arrived wh Messrs Dallas, Fraser & Dr Tolmie. --"
Throughout crisis, Griffin continued to list events of international import
along with daily farming tasks, such as Pickett's landing and the men's
official encounter:
"Wednesday
27th Dark & cloudy wh constant thunder & showers of rain. -- wind
fresh west --
L’Gamine wh two kanakas out at Grande Prairie cutting hay. George
at cradles. Inds whitewashing house. --
Last eveg. late the U:S: Steamer “Shubrick” & “Massachusetts”
anchored in the Bay. They have been all day landing stores etc etc --
wh the intention I fancy of building a military station a number of soldiers,
officers etc- wh tents stores etc are encamped near the Lagoon at my wharf.
--"
"Saturday 30th Very warm & calm. --
Mens occupations as yesterday. --
This morning I lodged a complaint before Capt Picket personally his being
a trespasser here & warning him off the Island -- see official correspondence.
-- Mr Dallas left in “Beaver” about 1:30 pm: --"
Despite
his initial fury at losing a hog and his occasional consternation with
soldiers and sailors overrunning his property and shooting his livestock,
Griffin still managed to make many new friends, Americans and British
alike. However, with the coming of the soldiers and marines also came
more settlers, many of whom squatted on HBC property
and diminished sheep grazing areas. Moreover the island was beset by smugglers,
whisky sellers and prostitutes, which Griffin claimed was "demoralizing"
his employees. The company's London headquarters, acting on advice from
Alexander Grant Dallas, an HBC director in Victoria, ordered on Feb. 9,
1861 that Belle Vue Farm should be closed "as soon as circumstances
would permit. Charles Griffin left exactly one year later and was replaced
by Robert Firth, a shepherd, who later leased the farm from spring of
1864 until 1873, when he became owner of the land.
Thus ended the Hudson's Bay Company's remarkable chapter on San Juan Island.
The legacy left by Charles Griffin and his staff is still apparent. Many
of the island's roads today trace the paths of the sheep runs carved through
forest and around the tremendous rocks left behind by the glaciers. A
few of the prairies are still in use for grazing, though in some cases
sheep have given way to alpacas, which pay more per acre.
All
that is left of the Home Prairie complex today is the open expanse of
prairie preserved and protected by the National Park Service. But thanks
to the above photograph, we have learned that the Belle Vue Farm sheep
pens were girded by massive log fences, while white picket fences defined
the cabin areas. The note accompanying the photo claims that the U.S.
Army encampment lies in the distance, but all that is visible are the
tall trees that appear in actual photographs of the camp. The photograph
was used, along a period painting (also shown above) and Griffin's journals,
to create the color painting at the top of the page. |
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Belle
Vue Farm site today on a winter afternoon. |
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Mr.
Boyd Pratt contributed to this page. |
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