On July 1, 1864, the
American president Abraham Lincoln granted Western Union a right of way from San Francisco to the British Columbia border and assigned them the
steamship Saginaw from the
US Navy. The
George S. Wright and the
Nightingale, a former
slave ship, were also put into service, as well as a fleet of
riverboats and
schooners. To supervise the construction, Collins chose Colonel
Charles Bulkley, who had been the Superintendent of Military Telegraphs. Being an ex-military man, Bulkley divided the work crews into "working divisions" and an "Engineer Corps." The Colony of British Columbia gave the project its full and enthusiastic support, allowing the materials for the line to be brought in free of
duties and
tolls. Chosen as the British Columbia terminus, New Westminster gloated over its triumph over its rival,
Victoria, and it was predicted in the
British Columbian newspaper that "New Westminster, traduced and dreaded by its jealous neighbor, will now be at the centre of all these great systems." From
Mud Bay the telegraph line followed the
Kennedy Trail northwest across Surrey and North Delta to the Fraser River. At Brownsville, a cable was laid across the river to New Westminster. The surveying in British Columbia had started before the line reached New Westminster on March 21, 1865. Edward Conway had walked to
Hope and was dismayed by the difficulty of the terrain. In response to Conway's concerns, the Colony of British Columbia agreed to build a road from New Westminster to
Yale where it would meet the newly completed
Cariboo Road. The telegraph company's only responsibility would be to string wires along it. ==Route through Russian America==