The Lekwungen population was estimated to be 8,500 in 1859, but by 1914 the population had decreased to less than 200. At the time of the establishment of
Fort Victoria by the British in 1843, a Lekwungen village was situated adjacent to the fort. The village was subsequently moved across Victoria Harbour and a
reserve established adjacent to what is now the municipality of
View Royal. A traditional blessing in Lekwungen appears on a mural on the
Ogden Point breakwater. During the
1862 Pacific Northwest smallpox epidemic, which killed about two-thirds of all native people in British Columbia, the Lekwungen were largely spared due to
smallpox vaccines given by Hudson's Bay Company physician Dr. John Helmcken, as well as Lekwungen self-quarantining on
Discovery Island. Due to these factors the Lekwungen survived the epidemic with few deaths.
Douglas Treaties The Lekwungen were one of the few First Nations in BC to have a treaty with the British. Sir
James Douglas, governor of the
Vancouver Island colony, negotiated a treaty with the Lekwungen in 1850. The Lekwungen considered that the government of British Columbia had failed to honour the 1850 treaty and commenced a legal action against the province and the
Government of Canada for redress. A settlement of the action was announced in November 2006 by Songhees Chief Robert Sam, the federal Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development,
Jim Prentice, and the provincial Minister of Aboriginal Relations and Reconciliation, Mike de Jong.
Esquimalt First Nation They were signatories of the
Douglas Treaties as the
Kosapsum. x̣ʷiméɫǝɫ (Esquimalt) is the term which was originally used to describe the specific location of a group of Songhees people living near the mouth of the Mill Stream at the head of present-day Esquimalt Harbour. x̣ʷiméɫǝɫ was translated by J. W. McKay during the negotiation of the Douglas Treaties as meaning “a place of gradually shoaling”. Over time, the term “Esquimalt” came to be applied more generally to the harbour area and to a group of people living at the village known as Kalla, located on the northern shore of Plumper Bay (archaeological site DcRu-36). The contemporary Esquimalt Nation comprises descendants of the signatories of the Kosapsum Treaty, rather than the original group of individuals after whom the name originated. This latter group signed a distinct treaty known as the Whyomilth (Esquimalt) Treaty. ==See also==