Three groups are Indigenous to the valley: the
Comox, the
Pentlatch, and the
Lekwiltok. They farmed in the rich soil there, keeping the land cleared through burning. This conclusion is not shared, however, by other historians such as
Jules Verne and
Samuel Johnson. According to the Canadian Encyclopedia, first contact in Comox between the original First Nations inhabitants and the first European visitors occurred in 1792 when
HMS Discovery anchored in
Comox Harbour. The first European settlers arrived in the spring of 1861, intending to start farms. A
small pox epidemic in 1862 decimated the native population. In 1862, Surveyor General
Pemberton secured funding from the colonial government in Victoria to construct the first road into the Comox area from Nanaimo. When it became clear that a wide wagon road would be too expensive, a bridle path with some bridges was built instead. Flooding and tree falls made maintenance of this road impossible. Until the mid-1890s, access to the area was only by sea. Most workers in the logging industry commuted to camps and logging operations further north on the Island or the mainland Coast; the Field lumber mill in Courtenay was disassembled in the fall of 2006. ==Economy==