Border ambiguity The
Oregon Treaty of June 15, 1846, resolved the
Oregon boundary dispute by dividing the
Oregon Country/
Columbia District between the United States and Britain (future Canada) "along the
49th parallel of north
latitude to the middle of the channel which separates the continent from off-shore
Vancouver Island, and thence southerly through the middle of the said channel, and of the
Strait of Juan de Fuca, to the Pacific Ocean." However, two straits could be called the middle of the channel:
Haro Strait, along the west side of the off-shore
San Juan Islands; and
Rosario Strait, along the east side. In 1846, there was still some uncertainty about the region's physical geography. The most commonly available maps were those of Royal Navy Captain
George Vancouver, published in 1798, and of the
United States Navy's
Charles Wilkes, published in 1845. In both cases, the maps are unclear in the vicinity of the southeastern coast of Vancouver Island and the
Gulf Islands. As a result, Haro Strait is not fully clear either. In 1856, the U.S. and Britain set up a Boundary Commission to resolve several issues regarding the international boundary, including the water boundary from the
Strait of Georgia to the Strait of Juan de Fuca. The British appointed
James Charles Prevost, as First Commissioner,
George Henry Richards as Second Commissioner, and
William A. G. Young as Secretary. The U.S. appointed Archibald Campbell First Commissioner,
John Parke, Second Commissioner, and William J. Warren Secretary. On June 27, 1857, the American and British commissioners met for the first time on board the British Royal Navy warship
HMS Satellite, Prevost held that the channel specified in the treaty must have three essential qualities: • it must separate the continent from Vancouver Island • it must carry the boundary in a southerly direction • it must be navigable Only Rosario fulfilled these requirements, he wrote. Campbell countered that the expression "southerly", in the treaty, was to be understood in a general sense, that Rosario Strait did not separate the continent from Vancouver Island, but the San Juan Islands from
Lummi Island,
Cypress Island,
Fidalgo Island, and others, and that navigability was not germane to the issue, but even if it was, Haro Strait was the wider and more direct passage. Finally, he challenged Prevost to produce any evidence showing that the treaty framers had intended Rosario Strait. Prevost responded to the challenge by referring to American maps showing the boundary running through Rosario Strait, including one by
John C. Frémont, produced for and published by the US government, and another by John B. Preston,
Surveyor General of Oregon in 1852. To the other points, Prevost repeated his statements about Rosario Strait's navigability—the channels between Lummi, Cypress, and Fidalgo islands not being navigable—and that a line through Rosario would be southerly. At the same time, one through Haro would have to be drawn westerly. The two continued to discuss the issue into December 1857, until it was clear what each side's argument was and that neither would be convinced of the other. Prevost made a final offer at the sixth meeting, on December 3. He suggested a compromise line through San Juan Channel, which would give the US all the main islands except San Juan Island. This offer was rejected and the commission adjourned, agreeing to report back to their respective governments. Thus ambiguity over the water boundary remained. Because of this ambiguity, both the United States and Britain claimed
sovereignty over the San Juan Islands. During this period of disputed sovereignty, Britain's
Hudson's Bay Company established operations on San Juan and turned the island into a sheep ranch. Meanwhile, by mid-1859, twenty-five to twenty-nine American settlers had arrived. San Juan Island held significance not for its size, but as a military strategic point. While the British held
Fort Victoria on Vancouver Island to the west, overlooking the Strait of Juan de Fuca, the entry point to Haro Strait, leading to the Strait of Georgia, the nation that held the San Juan Islands would be able to dominate all the straits connecting the Strait of Juan de Fuca with the Strait of Georgia.
Political context Future
Union Army General-in-Chief,
George B. McClellan (who was also
George Pickett’s classmate at the
United States Military Academy at
West Point, New York and lifelong friend), claimed that General
William S. Harney, and Pickett conspired with a cabal, to start a war with
Britain (
United Kingdom), creating a common enemy, to head off a north–south confrontation. However, General
Granville O. Haller, disputed General McClellan's later theory. He said they had wanted to start a war, but with hope of distracting the North so that the South could secede from the federal Union. The theories are given credence when it is noted that later
Major General Silas Casey, then a
lieutenant colonel and deputy commander of the
9th Infantry Regiment, was reduced to a support role for lower ranked Captain George Pickett who was given independent jurisdiction over a vast area by General William Harney, then a
brevet major. On the other hand, it can be said that Lieutenant Colonel Casey had not been reduced, for he was given command over the
U.S.S. Massachusetts and Major Haller to protect and supervise the waters of the
Puget Sound. Based on his military experience, he was given discretion to deviate from his orders. ==The pig incident==