Family tension was high as not everyone was pulling their own weight to make their farm run smoothly. The Wright letters from Agassiz April 1897 show us what life was like for those settling in the Fraser Valley.
This post examines a series of letters written in April 1897 by members of the Wright family from Hazeley Ranch in Agassiz, British Columbia. Part of the ongoing Hazeley Letters series, these letters reveal growing family tensions within the Wright household, shaped by labour demands, uneven motivation among the brothers, and May Wright’s increasingly conflicted role as sister, mediator, and caretaker.
Beyond life at the Hazeley Ranch, the letters also talk about the family who remained in England. References to Dorothy Wright highlight how absence and responsibility continued to shape family relationships across the Atlantic, even as the Wrights attempted to establish themselves in the Fraser Valley.
Together, these April 1897 letters capture a moment when the optimism of settlement collided with exhaustion, frustration, and uncertainty offering a deeply human perspective on everyday settler life in nineteenth century British Columbia.
The Other Wright Siblings
The Hazeley letters follow May, Cecil, Howard, and Jack during their time in Agassiz in the 1890s, however they had other siblings who did not make the journey across the Atlantic to farm in Agassiz, British Columbia, Canada.
Edith “Dorothy” Phillippa Wright
Born in 1883, Dorothy was only 13 when the Wrights arrived in Canada. The youngest Wright sibling, Dorothy, did not journey across the Atlantic with her siblings, but instead stayed home with her parents in England.
May frequently talks about her sister in her letters, asking for photographs and sending items she thinks Dorothy may enjoy. The sisters were the oldest and the youngest siblings, with 10 years between them. Dorothy was able to visit Agassiz with her father in 1900. By that time, Cecil was the only one left running the farm.
Census records show that she worked at Vinton Garages as a clerk and later a company director at an unnamed business. Dorothy travelled frequently across the Atlantic She never married or had children and was recorded as a spinster and person of independent means when she died in 1970.
Ernest Preston Wright
Born in 1874m,Ernest was the first born child of Edith and Reverend John Preston. He died at the Earlswood Asylum also known as the Earlswood Asylum for Idiots. Currently it is called the Royal Earlswood Hospital. This is the same asylum where John Langdon Down was the medical superintendent and later whom Down’s syndrome was named.
Ernest died in 1889 of exhaustion of epilepsy and inflammation of the lungs due to lots of seizures.
Historical Context: Chinatown in Agassiz, B.C. 1897
During the the rapid influx of people into the Fraser Valley who were drawn by land settlement, gold-mining speculation, and seasonal agricultural work, Chinese migrants established an early and enduring presence in Agassiz. From the 1880s onward, Chinese residents were integral to the local economy, working in hop yards, market gardening, domestic service, and operating essential businesses such as laundries.
Although there is no visible Chinatown in Agassiz today, a small Chinese community existed near the town centre for many decades. Chinese residents provided vital services that sustained everyday life in Agassiz, particularly for settler households and farming families.
May Wright’s references to having her laundry done by Chinese workers reflect this broader historical reality. Laundry work was one of the few occupations open to Chinese men due to exclusion from many other forms of employment. While May’s comments reveal the social distance and racial attitudes common among settlers at the time, they also point to the dependence of rural communities like Agassiz on Chinese labour for daily domestic needs.
The Agassiz-Harrison Museum is re-opening up in February 2026 and it’s feature exhibit is Chinese New Year featuring many artifacts from the Fong family featured below.
Queenie Fong in front of Laundry in Agassiz’s Chinatown, circa 1930s. Queenie would become the first female sheriff in British Columbia.
Mary Fong and Emma Thompson (Midwife) in front of Fong house in Agassiz’s Chinatown
Wong Tang was a B.C. hopyard labourer who lived upstairs in the Fong Chong store on Pioneer Avenue East. Fong Chong is Queenie’s father.
Agassiz’s Chinatown is located on the left of the photograph.
Goodbye to Chinatown in the 1970s. The remaining buildings on Pioneer Avenue were torn down. Originally the building was built by Mr. Arthur Agassiz.
Letters
May’s Letter to Mother-April 17th, 1897
In this letter May worries about one of her friends back home, discusses choir practice, and the sudden change of weather into summer.
Hazeley Agassiz, B.C. April 17, 1897
My dearest Mother,
We have suddenly gone into summer, it is intensely hot day & night, & has been for nearly a week now the river is rising three or four feet a day, I am sorry to say it has washed away most of the breakwater the C.P.R. were putting up. The trains are most irregular & consequently the mails also, we got a letter to-day posted a day later than the —- & they came some time ago, I forget when.
I walked up for a choir practice this afternoon, it was intensely hot; we are go have a service to-morrow (Easter) if the train is on time, but I see very little chance of that, it was eight hours late to-day & five yesterday, & twenty nine the day before.
The fires have begun & the country is getting smokey again. I do hate these fires so. Harold is going to Chilliwack to-morrow. Mr. George has been working for Captain Jemmett for five days. I expect him home this evening. Have you heard anything about Miss Hadfield lately, I haven not heard anything about her since I left home. I sent her one of my photographs about two months ago.
So Hilda is really engaged, I wonder when she will be married; & Maud Buchanan too, when is her wedding coming off?
Harold has been working a little better lately though he is very tiresome about getting up in the morning.
Love to everyone, Your affectionate daughter,
May Wright.
May’s Letter to Mother – April 24, 1897
In May’s letter to Mother, she discusses her issues with the trains as well as family tension with her brothers. Their lack of motivation for working hard makes her question staying in Agassiz for another year. More excitement about the gold mining happening in Harrison and updates about their garden are shared.
Hazeley Agassiz, B.C. April 24, 1897
My dearest Mother,
The books of songs came this week, & I have had three numbers of “The Queen” which I though were from cousin Fanny but I found Mrs. Pitt’s name on one of them so they must be from here, will you give her my love & say I think it is so very kind of her to have sent them, they are most acceptable to me & to the Agassiz’s to whom I have lent them.
Mr. Hamersley came up on the train to-night Cecil thinks so I hope the boys will be able to come to some sort of an agreement with him. He refuses to lower the rent, I have almost come to the conclusion that they had better go out there. There seems every probability of a flood, the Siwashes say it is going to be worse this year than ever before.
It is not satisfactory going on like this, the boys work to-gether so badly, it is uncontrollable bickering, they — of the, work as well as last year, Cecil seldom gets up before half past six & Harold later. Of course they do a fair days work but if this place is to do at all they out to work just as hard as last year or even harder. I’m afraid the are both naturally lazy; Cecil is very much inclined to give it up & here out for two years before starting at anything again is very hard to know what is best to do, I find it doesn’t do for me to interfere with them too much, I do have periodical rows with Harold, but then I fell afterwards that perhaps I have been hard on him, you see he has never known what work is. I don’t suppose he has every done a week of really hard solid work; I believe it would be the making of him to have to rustle for himself for a couple of years & feel he had no one to fall back upon.
I sometimes tell him that if he hates this life as he says he does, it would be far better for him to get something else to do, but he says do I take him for a fool is it likely he is going away when he has everything provided for him here without working for it, of course there are few boys who start so comfortably, they have no bother about their living, they have three meals ready for them at the right time, their clothes washed, mended & taken care of, which most boys have to light a fire & cook their dinner during their dinner hour & cannot rest then, & they have either to wash for themselves or take their clothes to a chinaan be swindled as I know they do swindle bachelors, at one time Mr. George used to pay 1.50 a dozen for his washing!
I think it would teach Harold a great deal if he had to hire out, but it may be best for them to go on here. I don’t know.. I have thought it over a great deal but can’t make up my mind.
The mining excitement is getting great, there are some men working on the mountain here, we see their camp fire at night but nothing else as it must be four miles away. I believe Mr. Brown has a big gang of men working for him up the lake, he is giving $2 a day & food. Mr. MacLarren has bought the Hot Springs Hotel. I believe it is op0en now; people say there are over a thousand men up on the lake now.
Harold has got some of the garden in, corn, onions, some potatoes and a strawberry bed, Connie Agassiz gave him the plants.
Mr. George is down in Victoria again. We were out at the springs last night at Mrs. MacPhersons, they seemed much annoyed that we left so early, but we didn’t get home till after three this morning, we couldn’t well get out of going to the two entertainments this week but we intend to refuse to go again if we are asked.
Much love to everybody,
Your affectionate daughter,
May Wright.
Harold’s Letter to Mother – April 25, 1897
Harold sends a long awaited letter to his mother updating her own his garden, his trip to Chilliwack, and the trains. He questions if the gold mining excitement is more excitement and less gold.
Hazeley Ranch Agassiz, B.C. April 25, 1897
Dear Mother,
I am afraid I have been very bad about writing for some time, but we have been very busy as the spring has been so late that we could not get any spring work done till April and it has thrown everything back. I am making quite a nice garden this year, but it is a very hard job as the place where I am making it was all grass and weeds, I have go it all dug up and a strawberry bed and 7 beds of vegetable in already.
About a week ago I went over to Chilliwack and got a siting of thorough bred eggs and I have got a thorough bed cock, so this fall I ought to have some very good fowls.
The gold fever is getting worse and worse here every body who can get away is going out to look for god, and every train that comes in, a whole lot of men get off and start up the lake to prospect. Every man who comes down from the lake says he has got the best thing ever found, and in most cases has all his pockets for of rock which he shows you and says they are full of gold although there is never a speck of gold to be seen.
Captain Moore is going about telling everybody he has refused $200,000$ for his claims, and last time I saw him he borrowed 1$from me to go down to Harrison with. I must stop now as it is getting very late so good bye.
Your affectionate son,
Harold P. Wright.
Why Letters Like These Matter to British Columbia History
The Hazeley Letters offer a rare and unusually detailed record of everyday settler life in Agassiz during the late nineteenth century. Unlike official records, newspapers, or promotional literature, these private family letters capture how ordinary people experienced migration, work, weather, community, and celebration in real time.
Importantly, the Wrights were not prominent figures. They were neither politicians nor major landowners. Their significance lies precisely in their ordinariness. Through descriptions of walking miles along muddy railway tracks, sewing worn clothing, hosting neighbours for tea, and speculating about mining ventures, the letters illuminate how communities functioned at a human scale in the Fraser Valley.
Preserved today at the Agassiz-Harrison Museum & Archives, the Hazeley Letters survived only narrowly. Their survival allows historians like myself to reconstruct aspects of local history that would otherwise remain invisible. By transcribing and contextualizing these letters, we gain insight not only into the Wright family’s experiences, but into the broader rhythms of settler life in British Columbia in 1897.
The letters reproduced in this post are transcribed verbatim from original manuscripts held at the Agassiz-Harrison Museum & Archives. Spelling, grammar, and punctuation have been preserved to maintain the integrity of the original documents. Editorial introductions and historical context have been added to assist modern readers and to situate the letters within the broader social and historical landscape of nineteenth-century British Columbia.
This post forms part of an ongoing research and transcription project examining the Hazeley Letters and the Wright family’s settlement in the Fraser Valley.
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