With the exception of the Memorialists themselves I apprehend
that few persons will be of opinion that
B.C. is ripe for our
highly finished form of Constitution. The permanent settlers are
very few, and, excluding the officials, are chiefly of the
Adventurer Class, devoid of means. The population is, for the
most part, composed of migratory miners. These elements are not
favorable for the construction of a regular representative
Gov.
The inhabitants of
B.C. will have to pass through the usual
seething of early communities, & ought to prove their faculty
for self Government by displaying their capacity for municipal
business. Up to the present time New West., which is the only
incorporated place in the Colony, has done nothing in that way,
that we, at least, have had reported to us. Should, however,
the
Duke of Newcastle lean to granting immediately a more liberal
form of
Gov than now exists perhaps the establishment of an
Executive Council composed of Senior public Officers, and a
Legislative C. of mixed Officers & selected Civilians, both
Councils on the Ceylon Model, might answer. Or an amalgamated
Council on the model of the Council given to Newfoundland by Act
of Parl, which lasted 4 years and answered excellently. A
simple Council might, a double Council would, at once, quiet the
anger of the population and would, I think, work better than any
other system wh could be given to the Colony at present.
But could any liberal form of
Gov subsist in
B.C. without
a Governor on the spot.
Gov Douglas is a man who is essentially
a despot. He relies upon & consults nobody but himself. He listens
to opinions, reserves his own. Englishmen, wherever they are, do
not choose to be governed by the will of one man. We are not apt
to suppose any single ruler unerring and infallible, and in places,
like
V.C. Isl, &
B.C. adjoining the U. States & so dependent
for their population on that Country it is not very likely that
they will be satisfied with a
Gov so much less liberal than
that of their neighbors. It may, therefore, be assumed that a
Governor on the spot & some species of representative
Gov
will ere long be granted to
B.C. the termination of the Act of
Parl relating to this Colony affording a favorable opp.
If
Governor Douglas were not Governor of the two Colonies, &
if he c be set aside with honor to the
Gov & satisfaction
to himself deputies from
B. Columbia might be sent to the
Houses
of Legislature in
VanCouver Island. Whilst
V.C.I. has the
advantage of a free port, and Coal fields
B.C. produces gold,
silver, [plumboys?], timber, fish, in short we don't know what it
does not contain, so that though the products of the two countries
are different their interests must blend with each other. Their
union ought to constitute strength, ensure harmony and save expense.
But a very jealous feeling has arisen in
B. Columbia. The
inhabitants think that
V.C. Island is preferred and favoured
by the Authorities whilst
they are neglected. I fear that to
roll
B.C. up in the
V.C.I. Legislature would affront and
dissatisfy the Colony. And, on the whole, it appears to me,
that there is nothing else to be done except to give the
Columbians, at the proper time, a Government to themselves
so framed as to enable them to do themselves as little mischief
as possible.