New Caledonia | |
---|---|
District of Hudson's Bay Company | |
1805–1858 | |
Capital | Fort St. James |
History | |
• Established | 1805 |
• Disestablished | 1858 |
Today part of | north central British Columbia, Canada |
New Caledonia was a fur-trading district of the Hudson's Bay Company that comprised the territory of the north-central portions of present-day British Columbia, Canada. Though not a British colony, New Caledonia was part of the British claim to North America. Its administrative centre was Fort St. James.[1] The rest of what is now mainland British Columbia was called the Columbia Department by the British, and the Oregon Country by the Americans. Even before the partition of the Columbia Department by the Oregon Treaty in 1846, New Caledonia was often used to describe anywhere on the mainland not in the Columbia Department, such as Fort Langley in the Fraser Valley.