Vancouver Island (Colony). Legislative Assembly

Identity area

Type of entity

Government

Authorized form of name

Vancouver Island (Colony). Legislative Assembly

Parallel form(s) of name

Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules

Other form(s) of name

  • Legislative Assembly
  • General Assembly
  • House of Assembly
  • The Assembly

Identifiers for corporate bodies

Description area

Dates of existence

1856-1866

History

The Legislative Assembly of the Colony of Vancouver Island was established in 1856 under its first name, the General Assembly (also known as the House of Assembly or simply the Assembly), after Governor James Douglas was reminded by the Colonial Office to establish an elected assembly of landowners as authorized in his 1851 commission. Prior to that, the government of the colony was administered, first, by the Hudson’s Bay Company and, secondly, solely by the 3-member Council appointed by Richard Blanshard in 1851.

By proclamation, dated 16 June 1856, Douglas announced the process by which the election of an Assembly would take place in the four designated electoral districts of Victoria, Esquimalt, Sooke and Nanaimo. The first House of Assembly was opened in August 1856 with seven members. The purpose of the Assembly was to represent the wishes of the general population to the governor and council on the provision of laws and legislation for the colony.

The second election, held in 1859, reflected the change in status of the colony resulting from the termination of its grant with the Hudson’s Bay Company and, at the same time, the influx of population resulting from the Fraser River gold rush and the establishment of the Colony of British Columbia. Three acts were passed to standardize election procedures. The Registration of Voters Act outlined the procedures for compiling voters’ lists, the Representation Act established electoral boundaries and representation for seats in the Legislative Assembly, and the Franchise Act established qualifications for voters. The Franchise Act also defined the duration of the House of Assembly as three years. The Representation Act provided for an increase in members to thirteen, including more members from Victoria and Esquimalt and adding representatives from parts of the colony north of Victoria (including the Lake District, Saanich, Salt Spring, and Chemainus districts).

In 1863, the governor, again under instruction from the Colonial Office, introduced a new government structure for the Colony of Vancouver Island. He dissolved the 3-member Council and replaced it with an Executive Council (5 members including the governor) and a Legislative Council (15 appointed members including 5 selected from the Legislative Assembly). The Assembly continued in its function as representative government with an increase to fifteen constituencies. The Assembly acted as lower house, where legislation initiated by the Executive and Legislative Councils (acting as upper house) was debated and approved. The Assembly was increasingly referred to as the Legislative Assembly from this time.

When the colonies of Vancouver Island and British Columbia were united in 1866, the government administration for the Colony of Vancouver Island ceased to exist. The power and authority of the Executive and Legislative Councils of the Colony of British Columbia was extended to include Vancouver Island. Two magistrates and four selected representatives from Vancouver Island were added to the Legislative Council of the united British Columbia.

Places

Legal status

Functions, occupations and activities

Mandates/sources of authority

Internal structures/genealogy

A Government Name

General context

Relationships area

Related entity

Vancouver Island (Colony). Council (1851-1863)

Identifier of related entity

7

Category of relationship

associative

Dates of relationship

1856-1863

Description of relationship

Related entity

British Columbia (Colony). Legislative Assembly ([1858?]-1871)

Identifier of related entity

3272

Category of relationship

temporal

Type of relationship

British Columbia (Colony). Legislative Assembly

is the successor of

Vancouver Island (Colony). Legislative Assembly

Dates of relationship

Description of relationship

Access points area

Subject access points

Place access points

Occupations

Control area

Authority record identifier

9

Institution identifier

Rules and/or conventions used

ISAAR(CPF)

Status

Level of detail

Dates of creation, revision and deletion

Michael Carter 2008-07-28
Revised: RMCRORY 2023-11-21

Language(s)

Script(s)

Sources

Central Name Authority File

Maintenance notes

Created by: Michael Carter

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