 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     M Duncan's report contained an account of a massacre arising
                     out of a drunken quarrel between some Indians "which ended in 5 men
                     being shot" (on the 
28 of April. Vide 
Adm Hastings letter in 7943).
                     
 
                  
                  
                     A tribe to which one of the shot men belonged

 rushed down "to
                     vent their savage fire on the handful of peaceful & unsuspecting
                     settlers at the 
Kincolitt Mission. On their way they met &
                     murdered two Interior Indians. But with unabated fury 6
                     of them proceeded on for the 
Mission" & [on] their way met with &
                     butchered 2 men & a boy.
                     
                     A copy of the despatch was sent to the 
Admiralty as it was
                     considered a matter of great moment that these

 infant
                     Settlements of Christian Natives should not be destroyed.
                     
                     Admiral Hastings in reporting this to the 
Admiralty (see 7943/
16
                        June) stated that it was a matter requiring due consideration
                     and investigation & that the murderers ought to be brought to
                     justice—that as it was matter specially for the Governor's
                     cognizance he had written to him that he was ready to cooperate
                     with him & to place one of HM's Ships

 at his disposal—that he
                     was assured by 
M Duncan "that should this case be proceeded
                     with & the matter kept secret, the Murderers could be obtained
                     at 
Fort Simpson with little difficulty"—that he had 
rec no
                     reply but was quite ready to send the 
Sparrowhawk to 
Fort
                        Simpson to secure the Murderers if possible.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     In answering the Governor's despatch the 
Duke of Buckingham
                     therefore wrote that he trusted

 that he should shortly learn
                     that the measures the 
Gov had taken in concert with the
                     Admiral had been successful.
                     
                     Governor Seymour's despatch now 
rec is anything but
                     satisfactory nor does he appear to be of opinion that there is
                     any pressing necessity for endeavoring to capture & punish the
                     Murderers—nor do I understand what he means by saying "that
                     the matter was

 almost entirely taken out of my hands"—nor is
                     there anything to shew whether he took any or what notice
                     of 
Admiral Hastings' offer of assistance to which I have referred.
                     
M Duncan may be a little fanatical but I cannot imagine
                     
M Seymour not being able to find some one he could have
                     trusted to accompany the 
Sparrowhawk. His minute of 
14 Nov &
                     his last letter to 
M Duncan
 treat the matter, if it is not
                     as appears to me, a light one, in a very abrupt &
                     unsatisfactory manner. At the same time I have seen but little
                     in regard to the way of dealing with Indians.
                     
 
                  
                  
                   
                  
                  
                     M Monsell
                     I agree entirely with 
M Cox. Pray read 
M Seymours account
                     of 
Metlakahtla (the parent mission station of 
Kincolitt) in
                     11759/1867 in order to realize the true importance of this
                     affair. The question seems to be whether these Christianized
                     Indians are to have the protection of Law or not.
 M Duncan
 M Duncan
                     no doubt is an ardent partizan—but
                     his statements are clear
                     consistent and uncontradicted and as ag the 
Gov who
                     forwards them must be taken as true.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     By them it 
w seem that the Magistrates sent to investigate
                     simply pooh poohed the affair—adopting apparently the view of
                     their interpreter 
M Blenkinsop who thought that missionaries
                     were not to trouble themselves about the murder of Indians but
                     to keep to "their business"—(what on earth that business is if
                     it is not to civilize & stand up for those who cannot civilize or
                     plead for themselves I do not know) and in this view of a missionaries
                     duty 
M Seymour appears to me contemptuously to acquiesce and he
                     seems to consider it sufficient to say to 
M Duncan & the S. of
                     State that the matter was "entirely taken out of his

 hands."
                     
                     This is the first place, I do not understand—looking to 
Adm
                        H's offer of assistance—and to the fact that the magistrates
                     employed are under the Gov orders in diff degrees.
                     
                     Next, if the matter was taken out of his hands, it was not
                     the duty of the Gov to acquiesce—but to resume his proper
                     relation to the administration of the country & to set right
                     what had gone wrong.
                     
                  
                  
                     This I 
sh be disposed to notice in times of
                     dissatisfaction—adverting also to the doctrines expressed
                     (or alleged to be so) by 
M Blenkinsop
 whose report seems to
                     have satisfied 
Gov Seymour.
                     
                     And I 
w observe that the inaction of the 
Gov in the
                     present instance contrasted strongly with the stirring and
                     expensive operations 
w were set on foot and which terminated
                     in the destruction or dispersion of an Indian Tribe, when an
                     outrage was committed—certainly not with less provocation—on
                     European subjects of HM, who—I 
w observe are not more
                     entitled to rely on the 
Gov for redress of injuries than
                     those Indians who have forsaken their savage

 mode of life &
                     placed themselves under what they suppose to be the protection
                     of British Law.