After Confederation, Helmcken retired from politics, and refused offers of positions as a
senator,
premier, and
lieutenant governor. He did accept an appointment to the board of the
Canadian Pacific Railway. Even as a private citizen, Helmcken remained a respected and influential figure. He had a hand in having the capital of the province moved to
Victoria from New Westminster and in securing lucrative public work contracts for Victoria companies. In addition to his role as surgeon for the HBC, Helmcken was founding president of the British Columbia Medical Society in 1885, and helped found the Medical Council of British Columbia, which licences BC doctors, the next year. He was also the physician of the provincial jail and sat on the board of the
Royal Jubilee Hospital. John Helmcken died in Victoria at the age of 96. The
house Helmcken built in 1852 and lived in until his death is now a museum located at
Thunderbird Park in Victoria. A street in Victoria and one in
Vancouver's Yaletown neighbourhood bear his name. His son
Henry Dallas "Harry" served in the British Columbia assembly. ==See also==