From my personal experience your option (1) is an attractive choice, but there might be some interesting points in making it into a useable jQuery plugin.
I've been working on a financial data visualisation system that explicitly uses HTML5 Canvas for graph and chart drawing. We have different virtual 'scenes' or 'slides' in the canvas which 'slide in' and 'slide out' in the canvas, much like the same way you'd navigate in a big virtual canvas. All the event handling buttons are exclusively drawn on the canvas which dictate which screen we'd be showing, but we have a one/two normal HTML forms that take user inputs and brings those 'slides'. We use jQuery to handle events from these text boxes, but the jQuery codes are deeply nested inside the other Canvas drawing codes, (unlike an externalised call, which would be an idea candidate for making a plugin).
Sliding or updating the canvas is another thing. This is because not only it depends on the jQuery event that triggers the update but it also depends on the Canvas Framework (plain code or KineticJS, EaselJS, jCotton etc) that is responsible for the update. If you use a framework, you'll need to interface with the framework as well.
For simplicity let's assume that there is a callback function that you can call for that Canvas framework with parameters like movement offset (x, y), and the framework will add/remove this offset to the x and y positions of all the objects drawn in the canvas, most Canvas drawing frameworks also have a render()
function that it calls periodically so that next time it draws the scene the results will automatically show (in your case, scrolling through the virtual canvas).
So it basically comes down to not only writing it as a jQuery plugin but also a binding it to a particular Canvas Framework e.g. KineticJS or others.
If you use basic Canvas functions instead of using any of those Frameworks, then it's another story, you can write your own render and update functions for the canvas, but in that case it'll be restricting the potential user to adhere the limitations of your drawing functions, unless you expose an API to extend them; but then again, that means you are writing your own Canvas framework :)
I'm not sure if I understood your problem correctly, in that case you can safely ignore my advice :), but If I'm right, my opinion would be: making a plugin like this would require also binding to a Canvas framework to make it really useable.
Hope it helps.