W.F. Forster, Horse Guards, to Under Secretary of State, War Office
Horse Guards
29 September 1863
Sir
Referring to your letters of the
14 August &
11 Sept 1861 I am directed by the Field Marshal
Commanding in Chief to enclose herewith a letter from
Colonel
Hawkins R.E. recommending that each of those men of the Corps
employed with the North American Boundary Commission who
purchased their discharge with a view to settle in
B Columbia
or
Vancouvers Island may be allowed
30 30 acres of land in either
of those Colonies, which indulgence was accorded to their
comrades who were granted free discharges on the return of
the Commission to England.
As the services of these men as Settlers could be made
valuable to the Colonists, HRH requests you will submit for
the favorable consideration of the
Sec of State for War that
the
Sec for the Colonies may be applied to to sanction the
grant to each
man man under such conditions of residence or Mil
Service as may be considered expedient.
A List of the men above alluded to is enclosed.
1.1 Hawkins to Adjutant General, R. Engineers, Horse Guards
HM Boundary Commission
2 Victoria Street, Westminster
September 15 1863
Sir
In my letter to you dated
Colville Dec 23, 1861 I stated
that on
22 Nov I had addressed the S of S for War in letter
N 106 suggestive that modified or proportionate indulgences
might be offered to the younger soldiers of the detachment of
R Engineers attached to the North American Boundary Commission
who might wish to be discharged for the purpose of settling in
the Colonies of
British Columbia or
Vancouver Island—but who
were not included in the List of men to whom I was authorized
to grant
free discharges and who would be entitled to grant
of 30 acres of Land under certain conditions wh. accompanied
y letter
of of
21 Sept: 1861.
It has recently come incidentally to my knowledge that some
of the men alluded to who were discharged on the ordinary terms
of the Pension Warrant as reported to you, in Letter of
17 June
1862 have made enquiries of
Colonel Moody whether any such
indulgences have been extended to them. On enquiring at your
and the
War Offices I learn that the question lapsed on the
removal of the commission from the colonies which would have
prevented my acting upon or even receiving any instructions on
the subject. I have now the honor to request that the Secretary
for War may be moved to consider and decide upon it, that an
authoritative reply may be given to future enquirers.
As
As the men wished to remain in the Colonies, and elected to
purchase their discharges on the chance of any further indulgence
being accorded to them, & as so long a time has elapsed since
they left the service, I am not now prepared to recommend the
remission of any part of the purchase money. Indeed I should
not have done so at any time, or have suggested that the men
should be discharged on any other terms than those of the
Pension warrant, but that I wished them to receive similar
advantages to those already promised to the British Columbian detachment.
With regard however to grants of land as in a letter from
the Colonial
Office to the War dept: of the
7 Aug 1861 His
Grace the S of State for the Colonies shewed the utmost
willingness to meet the views of the S of S for War on this
point. I have great hopes that if
Earl de Grey should see fit
to recommend such grants to the men in question—lists of whom
accompanied my letter to you N 21 and to the
Sec of State for
War N 122 of
17 June 1862—the recommendation would be at once
acceded to. Certain conditions as to residence and military
service
w probably be attached to the confirmation of the
grants, and such settlers cannot be but valuable in new and
distant Colonies to wh. the beneficial occupation of even
small portions of the vast extent of waste land must be of
considerable importance.