Stickeen Territories

Coordinates: 58°01′00″N 131°00′00″W / 58.01667°N 131.00000°W / 58.01667; -131.00000 (Stickeen Territories)
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Stickeen Territories
Territory of British North America
1862–1863
Flag of Stikine
Flag

Government
 • TypeProvisional administration
Monarch 
• 1862–1863
Victoria
Administrator of the Government
 
• 1862-1863
James Douglas
History 
• Established
1862
• Disestablished
1863
Preceded by
Succeeded by
North-Western Territory
Russian America
Colony of British Columbia (1858-1866)
Russian America

The Stickeen Territories

territory of British North America whose brief existence began July 19, 1862, and concluded July of the following year. The region was split from the North-Western Territory in the wake of the Stikine Gold Rush. The initial strike attracted large numbers of miners — mostly American — to the region; by detaching the region from the exclusive trade zone of the Hudson's Bay Company, British authorities were able to impose tariffs and licences on the speculators. The new territory, named after the Stikine River, was under the responsibility of the Governor of the Colony of British Columbia, James Douglas, who was appointed "Administrator of the Stickeen Territories" and under British law, within the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of British Columbia
.

The boundaries of the Stickeen Territories were the

A year later, the Stickeen Territories was dissolved, most of its former land being added to the

District of Yukon, as newly constituted during the midst of the Klondike Gold Rush. The remainder of the strip stayed in the Northwest Territories
.

See also

References

  1. ^ "British Columbia: From the earliest times to the Present, Vol. II, pp. 84-85, E.O.S. Scholefield and F.W. Howay, publ. 1914". Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2008-07-09.

58°01′00″N 131°00′00″W / 58.01667°N 131.00000°W / 58.01667; -131.00000 (Stickeen Territories)