I have laid before the Secretary of State for War your
               letter of the 
15 Instant with its enclosures from the Governor
               of 
British Columbia relative to an application from 
Serjeant
                  MColl of the Royal Engineers

 for the remission of the whole
               or part of the Sum (£105) charged for the conveyance of his
               wife and children from this country to that Colony.
               
               In reply I am to request that you will remind the 
Duke
                  of Newcastle that when the detachment of Royal Engineers
               first proceeded to the Colony in 
1858, accom

modation was,
               at the instance of the Secretary of State for the Colonies,
               provided in the Transport for 35 women with their children,
               being considerably in excess of the regulated number. It
               may be true, as urged by 
Serjeant MColl, that had it not been
               [for] the state of his wife's health at the time, she would have
               accompanied

 him. But this in itself affords no sufficient
               ground for a compliance with the present request; for had
               
M MColl and her children been taken out free, it
               could only have been to the exclusion of the family of some other man.
               
               It appears however that the expenses of the passage of
               
M MColl and her children

 and the two other women
               who accompanied them were paid over to the Emigration
               Commissioners, by whom the service was conducted, by the
               Paymaster General acting, not on behalf of this department,
               but on behalf of 
the Treasury.