Lytton acknowledges the receipt of Douglas’s private letter accepting the Office of Governor of British Columbia and his assurance that he will withdraw from the HBC and dispose of his Puget Sound Agricultural Company stock.
Lytton also responds to Douglas’s concern over an insufficient salary. He offers £1800 a year from the Parliamentary
Grant and authorises a further increase from local funds if Douglas’s accounts of the the local Revenue are such as to justify it.
I have to acknowledge the receipt of your private Despatch of the
4th of Oct announcing to me your acceptance of the Office of Governor
of BritishColumbia and your intention in consequence to take early
measures for withdrawing from the Hudson's Bay Company and disposing of
your Puget Sound
Stock.
2
I have on former occasions assured you of the high estimation in
which I hold the vigor and ability you have displayed in the incipient
stages of a Colony that promises to be so noble an accession to the
Dominions of our Sovereign; and it gives me peculiar pleasure to find
that you are disposed to continue your assistance towards the
development of resources which were first brought to light under your
administration of Vancouver's Island. You state your belief that the
sum of one thousand Pounds a year would be wholly inadequate for the
befitting Salary of the Governor of a Colony in which the necessaries of
life far exceed the Standards in England. Since the date of the
despatch in which that sum was named, the information that has reached
me is, as you are aware, much less vague as to the value of the Gold
fields than it was when, immediately on my accession to office, I
foresaw that we should lose no time in securing Law and Government to a
district hitherto unknown to Civilization—and I hastened to offer to
yourself the post you have gratified me by accepting.
I
I should rejoice to see the Revenues of the Colony such as would
justify a considerable increase to the Salary I originally proposed.
But until those revenues are actually in operation and their results
unequivocally apparent, I should feel it equally impossible to obtain
from the British Parliament, and unfair to the Colony to apportion to
its earliest expenses such a Salary for the Governor as you suggest. It
is my duty to consult economy pushed to thrift until the Colony is
provided with the ways and means that justify a more liberal
expenditure. Whenever that happens I think on every principle of sound
policy that we should secure to its administration the zeal and talents
of the ablest public officers—and to stint the salaries of such men,
would be in my judgment, to retard the growth of the Colony.
But you have now large expenses to meet, including the services, at
least the Colonial pay of the British Engineers.
These last I trust the early Sales of Land will suffice to
cover—yet until the statements you promise me as to the next year's
revenue arrive, it is clear that I cannot form a judgment of the
expenses I ought to sanction.
I shall not at present be enabled to recommend to the Lords
Commissioners ofthe Treasury a higher Grant than Eighteen hundred
pounds a year for the Governor of British Columbia and Vancouver's
Island out of the Parliamentary Grant—and I hope that this will be the
only item, except by way of advance, in which the House of Commons may
be called upon to contribute to the Expenditure of the Colony. But I
shall certainly not object to a large increase of that Salary out of
local funds, if your accounts of the local Revenue are such as to
justify it.
The extent of such augmentation must obviously depend upon the
character and the extent of those Revenues considered with reference to
other local charges which must be defrayed, and to a reasonable
calculation of their productiveness hereafter. More than this I am
unable to say at the present moment, but I shall look for the further
information which you promise me upon the financial prospects of the
Colony, and to any future explanations which you may wish to give on the
subject before I can come to a definite decision.