CHAPTER.PAGE
I.[The Experiences of a British Boy in San Francisco in the Early Fifties]11
II.[Theatrical Memories]20
III.[My Boyhood Days in Victoria]26
IV.[Victoria’s First Directory]38
V.[Some Recollections of Victoria by One who Was There in the Sixties]57
VI.[A Little More Street History]68
VII.[The Victoria Gazette, 1858]73
VIII.[Victoria in 1859–1860]84
IX.[Fires and Firemen]92
X.[A Siberian Mammoth]100
XI.[Mrs. Edwin Donald, Hon. Wymond Hamley, Hon. G. A. Walkem]109
XII.[The Consecration of the Iron Church]115
XIII.[The Iron Church Again]121
XIV.[Its Departed Glories, or Esquimalt, Then and Now]124
XV.[Old Quadra Street Cemetery]129
XVI.[Pioneer Society’s Banquet]144
XVII.[Victoria District Church]149
XVIII.[Christmas In Pioneer Days]153
XIX.[The Queen’s Birthday Forty Years Ago]159
XX.[Evolution of the Victoria Post Office]166
XXI.[Fifty Years Ago]170
XXII.[Forty Years Ago]174
XXIII.[The Late Governor Johnson]178
XXIV.[A Trip to a Coral Island]181
XXV.[A Victorian’s Visit to Southern California]183
XXVI.[An Historic Steamer]199
XXVII.[Colonel Wolfenden—In Memoriam]203
XXVIII.[The Closing of View Street in 1858]206
XXIX.[Mr. Fawcett Retires from the Customs]212
XXX.[Some Colored Pioneers]215
XXXI.[John Chapman Davie, M.D.]220
XXXII.[The Beginning of the Royal Hospital and Protestant Orphan’s Home]226
XXXIII.[Victoria’s First Y. M. C. A.]229
XXXIV.[The Late Mr. T. Geiger]234
XXXV.[Roster of the Fifty-Eighters]237
XXXVI.[More Light on Closing of View Street]240
XXXVII.[Bishop Cridge’s Christmas Story]244
XXXVIII.[Christmas Reminiscences]258
XXXIX.[My First Christmas Dinner in Victoria, 1860]263
XL.[Evolution of the Songhees]283
XLI.[Victoria the New and the Old]288

ILLUSTRATIONS

SOME REMINISCENCES OF OLD VICTORIA

CHAPTER I.

THE EXPERIENCES OF A BRITISH BOY IN SAN FRANCISCO IN THE EARLY FIFTIES.

I shall commence by saying that I, with my father, mother, brother and sister, arrived in San Francisco in 1850, in the ship Victoria, from Australia, where I was born. From stress of weather we put into Honolulu to refit, and spent, I think, three weeks there, and as my mother was not in good health the change and rest on shore did her a deal of good. During our stay we became acquainted with a wealthy American sugar planter, who was married to a pretty native lady. They had no family, and she fell in love with your humble servant, who was of the mature age of two and a half years. My mother, of course, told me of this years later, how that after consulting with her husband, the planter, she seriously proposed to my mother that she give me to her for adoption as her son; that I should be well provided for in the case of her husband’s death, and in fact she made the most liberal offers if she might have me for her own. It might have been a very important epoch in my life, for if my mother had accepted, who knows but what I might have been "King of the Hawaiian Islands," as the planter’s wife was "well connected." But, to proceed, my mother did not accept this flattering offer, as naturally she would not, and so we continued on our way to San Francisco with many remembrances of my admirer’s kindness. But this is not telling of my experiences in San Francisco eight years after.

My first recollections are complimentary to the citizens of San Francisco—that is, for their universal courtesy to women and children; but this is a characteristic of the people, and I will illustrate it in a small way. It was the custom in those days for ladies to go shopping prepared to carry all they bought home with them, and I used to accompany my mother on her shopping expeditions. The streets and crossings were in a dreadfully muddy condition, and women and children were carried over the crossings, and never was there wanting a gallant gentleman ready to fulfil this duty, for a duty it was considered then by all men to be attentive to women.

What induced me to write these maybe uninteresting incidents, was the last very interesting sketch of early life in San Francisco by my friend, Mr. D. W. Higgins, giving an account of the doings of the "Vigilance Committee," and the shooting of "James King of William," as I remembered him named, and the subsequent execution of Casey for that cold-blooded deed. Cold-blooded it was, for I was an eye-witness, strange to say, of the affair, as I will now relate.

I might premise by saying that my father was an enthusiastic Britisher. But he was a firm believer in the American axiom, though—"My country, may she ever be right; my country right or wrong," and I, his son, echo the same sentiments. It is this sentiment that makes me have no love for a pro-Boer. It was this pride of country that caused him to go to the expense of subscribing for the Illustrated London News at fifty or seventy-five cents a number, weekly, and I was on my way to Payot’s bookstore to get the last number, with the latest account of the Crimean War, then waging between England and France against Russia. I was within a stone’s throw of Washington and Montgomery Streets, I think, when I was startled by the sharp report of a pistol, and looking around I saw at once where it proceeded from, for there were about half a dozen people surrounding a man who had been shot. I, of course, made for that point, being ever ready for adventure. The victim of the shooting was James King of William, editor of the Evening Bulletin newspaper, and the assassin was a notorious politician named James Casey, proprietor of the Sunday Times, but a very illiterate man for all that.