Archives West Finding Aid
Table of Contents
William Fraser Tolmie papers, 1833-1865
Overview of the Collection
- Creator
- Tolmie, William Fraser
- Title
- William Fraser Tolmie papers
- Dates
- 1833-1865 (inclusive)18331865
- Quantity
- .42 cubic ft. (2 boxes)
- Collection Number
- 4577 (Accession No. 4577-001)
- Summary
- Mid-19th-century superintendent of the Puget Sound Agricultural Company's Nisqually farm, whose writings describe the natural setting and native peoples of the Pacific Northwest.
- Repository
-
University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections
University of Washington Libraries
Box 352900
Seattle, WA
98195-2900
Telephone: 2065431929
Fax: 2065431931
speccoll@uw.edu - Access Restrictions
-
Open to all users.
- Languages
- English
- Sponsor
- Funding for encoding this finding aid was partially provided through a grant awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Biographical NoteReturn to Top
Best known for managing the Nisqually farm of the Puget Sound Agricultural Company (an agricultural subsidiary of the Hudson's Bay Company) , Dr. William Fraser Tolmie played a key role in the Company's development of the Pacific Northwest and British Columbia in the mid-nineteenth century. His personal observations about the region's landscape, plant life, and Native Americans have endured as a rich, primary source of regional history.
Tolmie was born in Inverness, Scotland, in 1812 where he received a classical education. He went on to Glasgow University where he became doctor of medicine in 1832 at the age of twenty. Although medicine was his profession, botany was his hobby and is a prevalent theme in his writings.
After receiving his medical degree, Tolmie went to work for the Hudson's Bay Company at Ft. Vancouver in what is now Washington State. In 1833 he was one of three doctors at the fort, leaving little for him to do medically. During this time Tolmie pursued other interests in botany and religion and has been credited with giving the region's Native Americans their first formal religious instruction.
Supervisors at Ft. Vancouver had recognized that the young doctor possessed valuable leadership skills in addition to his medical knowledge, and within a few months gave him leadership roles outside Vancouver that shaped the rest of his long career with the Hudson's Bay Company and its subsidiary, the Puget Sound Agricultural Company (PSAC). The Company first sent Tolmie to Nisqually, south of Puget Sound, where he was based from August until December of 1833. During his stay there, Tolmie was the first white man to attempt to climb Mt. Rainier and recorded the expedition in his journal, a copy of which is in the accession.
After his service at Nisqually, Tolmie was sent to Ft. McLoughlin on Milbank Sound (now part of British Columbia) as a trader, doctor, and Indian affairs man. Tolmie took an interest in the Native Americans and soon learned to speak many of their dialects. He stayed at Ft. McLoughlin until February, 1836, except for two absences. In May of 1834 he accompanied an expedition led by Peter Ogden on the Stickine River, and in 1834 he spent the summer at Ft. Simpson in northern British Columbia. Also while he was at Ft. McLoughlin, Tolmie started the first circulating library in the region.
In 1836 Tolmie returned to Ft. Vancouver, where he again lacked patients but developed his skills as a shrewd and skillful trader with Native Americans. He stayed at Vancouver for four years and acted as a trouble shooter whenever conflicts developed between the Company and nearby settlers. In 1841 Tolmie took a two-year leave of absence to return to Europe where he studied new developments in medicine and learned to speak Spanish.
After his return to Ft. Vancouver in 1843, Tolmie received an appointment as superintendent of the Puget Sound Agricultural Company's Nisqually farm. He received the post largely because of his agricultural interests and leadership skills, and soon implemented a hierarchical labor system with Native Americans and European indentured servants. Troubles between the British-owned Nisqually farm and the American settlers became a constant problem for Tolmie, especially after the farm became part of American territory after 1846. In 1856 Tolmie was promoted to Chief Factor of Ft. Nisqually, although he had been doing commensurate work all along.
In 1859 the Hudson's Bay Company transferred Tolmie to Victoria at the time of gold excitement on the Fraser River, but he still remained the Chief Factor and business head of the Nisqually farm until the PSAC sold the farm to the US in 1870. At Victoria he was in charge of the farms on Vancouver Island, was elected to the board of management of the Hudson's Bay Company, and at the same time conducted Nisqually's business affairs by mail. Tolmie also began focusing more of his attention on his family and politics. He had married the daughter of a Hudson's Bay Company's Chief Factor and had seven children, including Simon Fraser, who later became Premier of British Columbia. Tolmie's political career had begun at Nisqually in 1846 when he represented Lewis County at the Oregon legislature. In 1860 Tolmie became a member of the House of Legislature Assembly and when the Province of British Columbia was created he represented Victoria in the Legislature until ending his political career in 1878. He had officially retired from the Hudson's Bay Company in 1870, after 37 years of service.
Tolmie passed his remaining years on an 11,000 acre farm outside Victoria named Cloverdale. There he raised a large herd of cattle and engaged in considerable agricultural activity. He also was credited with introducing the dahlia, acacia, and the strawberry to this region. He died in 1886 at the age of 74.
Content DescriptionReturn to Top
Tolmie's journal, which covers 1833 to 1836, is largely about the land, plants, and animals, and Native Americans that he encountered at Nisqually, Ft. McLoughlin, Ft. Vancouver, and during his various travels, including his attempted ascent of Mt. Rainier. The rest of the accession consists of correspondence mostly from the 1850s while he managed Nisqually farm, although some letters were written as early as 1845 and as late as 1865.
Use of the CollectionReturn to Top
Administrative InformationReturn to Top
Acquisition Information
The accession was acquired from historian Clarence Bagley in 1919.
Related Materials
The original Tolmie journals are in the Archives of the Province of British Columbia at Victoria. An edited copy of his journals published in 1963, located in the repository, includes entries from 1830 to 1833 and some writings after 1836 that this accession does not contain. Researchers should see his biography file in the repository. The UW Libraries also has copies of Tolmie's publications, The History of the Puget Sound and the Northwest , and a study of the comparative vocabularies of the Indian Tribes of British Columbia, which he co-authored with George Dawson.
Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top
Incoming LettersReturn to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates |
---|---|---|
Box/Folder | ||
1/1 | Alexander, John |
1858 |
1/1 | Allan, George T. |
1856 |
1/1 | Balch, Lafayette |
1852, 1855 |
1/1 | Ballenden, John |
1852 |
1/1 | Barnes, George A. |
1855 |
1/1 | Berens, W. H. |
1857 |
1/1 | Bishop, H. |
1850 |
1/1 | Bradley, John |
1851 |
1/1 | Bray, L. C. |
1853 |
1/1 | Breck & Ogden |
1853 |
1/1 | Brotchie, W. |
1853, 1854 |
1/1 | Chambers, Thomas M. |
1850 |
1/1 | Chenoweth, Francis A. |
1854-1859 |
1/1 | Cole, G. E. |
1854 |
1/1 | Cole, (G. E.) Eldridge & Co. |
1854 |
1/2 | D'Herbonier, Rev. L. |
1857 |
1/2 | Dement, John |
1851, 1854 |
1/2 | Dodge, Bruce |
1859 |
1/2 | Dorr, Eben May |
1850 |
1/2 | Douglas, James |
1845-1858, 1864 |
1/2 | Dumilatre, P. |
1853 |
1/3 | Ebey, Isaac |
1854 |
1/3 | Ebey, W. S. |
1853 |
1/3 | Ensign, George H. |
1853 |
1/3 | Fay, R. C. |
1850 |
1/3 | Finlayson, Roderick |
1845-1859, n.d. |
1/3 | Frost, M. H. |
1856 |
1/3 | Fuller, Truman, H. |
1857 |
1/4 | Gates, Levi S. |
1859 |
1/4 | Gibbs, George |
1852, 1856 |
1/4 | Goldborough, H. A. |
1850-1852 |
1/4 | Gove, Warner |
1856 |
1/4 | Graham, Jas. P. |
1847-1853 |
1/4 | Haden, John M. |
1853 |
1/4 | Hardisty, Joseph |
1851 |
1/4 | Hawkins, J. S. |
1859 |
1/4 | Hedges, A. T. |
1855 |
1/4 | Hill, B. H. |
1850 |
1/4 | Hindman, William |
1854 |
1/4 | Holbrook, Amory |
1852, 1854 |
1/4 | Howard, W. A. |
1852 |
1/4 | Huggins, Edward |
1865 |
1/4 | Hunt, James M. |
1855 |
1/4 | Huntington, H. D. |
1858 |
1/4 | Ingalls, Rufus |
1857 |
1/4 | James, Samuel |
1856 |
1/4 | Keys, E. D. |
1855, 1856 |
1/4 | Lancaster, Columbia |
1854 |
1/4 | Larnard, C. H. |
1854 |
1/4 | Lowe, James |
1855 |
1/4 | Lowe, Thomas |
1853 |
1/5 | Lowe, Thomas |
1849 |
1/6 | McClellan, George B. |
1853 |
1/6 | McKenzie, K. |
1854-1858 |
1/6 | McKinlay, Archibald |
1850-1857 |
1/6 | McLean, Alex |
1854 |
1/6 | McPherson, John |
1855 |
1/6 | MacTavish, Dugald |
1853-1857 |
1/6 | Mason, C. H. |
1855 |
1/6 | Maxon, I. G. |
1856 |
1/6 | Meigs, George A. |
1859 |
1/6 | Mendell, G. H. |
1856 |
1/6 | Moses, Simpson P. |
1851-1857 |
1/6 | Munro, Alexander |
1859 |
1/7-9 | Ogden, Peter Skeen |
1846-1854 |
2/1 | Nugen, John A. |
1855-1856 |
2/1 | Packard, John A. |
1857 |
2/1 | Pease, William C. |
1855 |
2/1 | Peers, Henry N. |
1856, n.d. |
2/1 | Pelly, J. W. |
1849 |
2/1 | Pemberton, B. |
1852 |
2/1 | Pemberton, I. D. |
1856 |
2/1 | Poe, A. M. |
1850 |
2/1 | Prevost, James |
1857 |
2/1 | Ricard, (Pere) |
1849, 1856 |
2/1 | Roberts, George B. |
1850 |
2/1 | Scranton, John |
1854, 1857 |
2/1 | Simmons, George |
1854 |
2/1 | Simmons, Michael T. |
1855 |
2/1 | Simpson, George |
1858 |
2/1 | Sinclair, William |
1857, 1858 |
2/1 | Slaughter, W. A. |
1854 |
2/1 | Smith, Albert J. |
1853 |
2/1 | Smith, I. H. |
1856 |
2/1 | Swan, John M. |
1857 |
2/2 | Terry, G. C. |
1854, 1856 |
2/2 | Tilton, James |
1855-1857 |
2/2 | Van Bokkelen, I. I. H. |
1859 |
2/2 | Wallace, H. H. |
1857 |
2/2 | Weed & Hurd |
1853 |
2/2 | White, T. S. |
1856 |
2/2 | Wiley, James |
1856 |
2/2 | Willard, G. |
1856 |
2/2 | Wishart, D. D. |
1851 |
2/2 | Work, John |
1855 |
Outgoing LettersReturn to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates |
---|---|---|
Box/Folder | ||
2/3 | Dalles, A. G. |
1861 |
2/3 | Huggins, E. |
1853-1865 |
2/3 | McMullin, Fayette |
1858 |
2/3 | Peers, Henry N. |
1856 |
2/3 | Sinclair, William |
1857 |
Bill of Exchange, 1853Return to Top
Container(s): Box-folder 2/4
Memoranda of AgreementsReturn to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates |
---|---|---|
Box/Folder | ||
2/5 | Chapman, John B. |
1852 |
2/5 | Huntington, H. D. |
1854 |
2/5 | McAlister, James; William P. Wells; W. Berry
|
1852 |
2/5 | Parker & Foster |
1852 |
2/5 | Simmons, M. T. |
1849 |
2/5 | Tolmie, W. A. and Joseph A. Cushman to U.S.A.
|
1853 |
Journal (Photocopy), 1833-1836Return to Top
Container(s): Box-folder 2/6
Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
- Frontier and pioneer life--Washington (State)
- Indians of North America--Washington (State)
Personal Names
- Tolmie, William Fraser--Archives
Corporate Names
- Hudson's Bay Company
- Puget Sound Agricultural Company
Geographical Names
- Fort Nisqually (DuPont, Wash.)
- Fort Vancouver (Wash.)
- Rainier, Mount (Wash.)
Form or Genre Terms
- Diaries
Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
- Personal Papers/Corporate Records (University of Washington)