Bute Inlet and the lower reaches of its major rivers, such as the Homathko and Southgate, were and are home to the Xwe’malhkwu, or
Homalco First Nation people. The Xwe’malhkwu are part of the
K'omoks, or Comox people, and speak a dialect of the Mainland
Comox language, part of the
Coast Salish branch of the
Salishan language family. Colonial influence eroded Xwe’malhkwu culture in the late 19th century.
Indian Residential schools further destroyed traditional Xwe’malhkwu culture and language. The Xwe’malhkwu and Tsilhqot'in never ceded their lands. Both are currently in the process of treaty negotiations with British Columbia and Canada. Both claim aboriginal title to parts of the Homathko River's watershed. In 1861
Alfred Waddington of Victoria sent surveyors to the Homathko River and Bute Inlet, seeking to build
Waddington's Road, to compete with the proposed
Cariboo Road. Both roads were a reaction to the
Cariboo Gold Rush and intended to provide access to the remote
Cariboo region. In 1864, just below the confluence of Mosley Creek and the Homathko River, a conflict between Waddington's survey party and a group of
Tsilhqot'in (Chilcotin) resulted in the death of fourteen members of the surveying party. This was the opening round of the
Chilcotin War of 1864. The land-surveyed townsite of
Port Waddington on today's maps is a relic of those times. The townsite had been surveyed as part of roadbuilder Alfred Waddington's obligations in having the licence to build the road, as well as profit from the sale of lots (and some lots were sold, but the townsite never came to anything). In 1871 the
Crown Colony of British Columbia joined the
Canadian Confederation with certain conditions, one of which was the construction of a transcontinental railroad to link the seaboard of British Columbia with the rest of Canada. The
Canadian Pacific Railway began to survey the several proposed routes. One such route crossed the
Chilcotin Plateau then followed the Homathko River to Bute Inlet and continued across
Sonora Island and
Quadra Island (then thought to be a single island known as Valdes Island) to reach
Vancouver Island via
Seymour Narrows. This route would then follow the eastern coast of Vancouver Island to terminate near
Victoria. After years of political wrangling
Burrard Inlet was chosen for the railway's terminus-port city, thereby creating the
City of Vancouver. The proposed Homathko River route was abandoned. In 1890 a new surveying expedition set out to explore the Homathko River route to the Chilcotin Plateau. Despite memory of the Chilcotin War and fear of the Tsilhqot'in, and although the terrain was challenging in places, the party reached
Tatla Lake in the
Chilcotin Country without undue incident. ==Wildlife==