12 Sepr.M Hawes
                     It is scarcely possible to determine what are the limits of the
                     Territory of the 
Hudson's Bay Company. But I suppose it to be
                     quite clear that 
Van Couver's Island and our part of the 
Oregon
                        territory are not within those limits. The Company have no
                     proprietary or other rights there, save only the right which
                     they derive under the License of the year 
1838 for 21 years
                     to trade exclusively with the Indians and to carry on the Fur
                     Trade. But that License expressly reserves to The Crown the
                     right of founding Colonies & of Establishing any form of Civil
                     
Gov within the Territory comprized
                     in the License. Consequently the Company have no right, in
                     strictness of Law, so far as I can perceive, to any Land in
                     
Van Couvers' Island or elsewhere, westward of the 
Rocky Mountains,
                     and there may be serious difficulty in assenting to the
                     application they now make. It 
w., I think, be hardly consistent
                     with the terms of their Charter. It 
w. be very unusual to
                     grant Lands to any Company or indeed to any one else in the
                     vague and comprehensive manner here suggested and without any
                     previous Enquiry. Probably also the United States' 
Gov.
                     
w. object to such an Act. The Company at the date of the
                     Treaty of Washington has no Proprietary or other rights in the
                     
Oregon Territory save only under the License of 1838 which
                     License must expire in 
1859. Now the Treaty which gave 

to
                     British Subjects the right of 
Nav Navigating 
the Columbia in order
                     to trade with the Company, and which declared the Navigation of
                     
the River free to the Company must, I presume, be understood as having been made with full
                     knowledge of the fact that the Company's rights Westward of the 
Rocky Mountains will expire in 
1859. Now to give to that Com
pany a new interest & title in Lands in those regions 
w be said to be an attempt to 
prolong beyond 
1859 the right of Navigation. Whether this objection 
w
                     be well-founded I do not undertake to say. All I 
w. suggest is
                     that caution 
sh be used in laying any ground for it.
 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                   
               
               
               
               
                  
                  
                  
                  
                      
                     
                     1074
                     
                     Hudsons. Bay C
                     L Grey
                     In consequence of the Settlement of the Boundary between the U.
                     States & G. Britain by the T of Washington, the Hudsons
                     Bay Company now apply to learn the intentions of the 
Gov.
                     
                     
                        - As to the acquisition of Lands in the promotion of Settlements
                           north of the 49 para.
- Whether they will be confirmed in the possession of
                           Lands in the southern part of Vancouvers Island & whether they add to their possessions there.
 
                  
                  
                  I imagine whatever the grant originally to the 
H.B. Company — it could not be considered to extend to any portion of the 
Oregon territory or to 
Vancouvers Island — which was only disc long after the original grant. And I therefore agree
                     with 
M Stephen that the Company under either their Charter or their License could not acquire any
                     proprietary rights in these parts.
Within therefore the now known Boundaries of Brit. Territ
                     north of the 49 it will be for the Crown, in any future of
                     that territory westward of the 
Rocky Mountains 
                     including 
Vancouvers Island to grant or Sell, or confirm holdings or occupations of, Lands at its discretion.
For this purpose the Company must I apprehend make a formal
                     application to 
Ld. Grey — stating what 
the require for the purpose of their Trade under their License. Till that is done no
                     answer can be returned to their present Letter. They moreover must shew what they
                     alledge they possess —& their title to it. I do not doubt, any
                     application they make will be fairly & liberally considered. But South
                     of the Boundary, I imagine as the Company indeed does, 
Ld. Grey can
                     neither grant nor confirm anything. All such possessions & claims appear
                     to be provided for by the 3. Article of the Treaty & must be brought
                     under the consideration of the 
Foreign Office. But there is one portion
                     of 
M Stephens minute which implies of it to not express an opinion, in which I cannot 

concur. But I may have misunderstood him.
I quite agree from such inspection of the Charter & License as I
                     have been able to give it — that the Company has no proprietary rights
                     & could have none, West
w of the 
Rocky Mountains, 
Vancouvers Island
                     included. But I do not agree that they can acquire none if the Crown
                     see fit now to grant them. Neither do I see any thing in the Treaty to
                     restrict the power of the Crown if it see fit to extend the License of
                     the Company. Now I understand 
M Stephen to be of opinion that to
                     give the Company "a 
new interest & title in Land in these 
regions would be said to be an attempt 
to prolong beyond 1859" (when the present
                     license expires) "the right of" the free navigation of 
the
                        Columbia:— because the right of freely navigating 
the
                        Columbia
                     was conceded to the 
Hudsons Bay Company "with the full knowledge 
of the
                     fact that the Company's rights West
w of the 
Rocky Mountains expired
                     in 
1859."

 Now I imagine it is not by what was understood by the
                     Negotiators (if indeed anything was understood on this point) but by
                     the Treaty we must abide. By the 2 Article the great north Branch
                     of 
the
                        Columbia was to be "free 
& open to the Hudsons Bay Comp &
                     all 
British Subjects trading with the same" This Company has existed
                     under Charter & Licence since 
1670 to the present time — & so long as
                     the Crown continues the Charter or License — so long the Hudsons Bay
                     Company &c can claim the free navigation of 
this River, subject to the provisions of the Treaty.
I see nothing in the Treaty to justify the extinction of the
                     Company or its Charter in 1859. Nor can I think this was contemplated — 
                     though I fully expect from the language of the Treaty American
                     diplomatists will well contend for it.
                  
                  
                  The Province of Canada lost the free navigation of the Mississippi
                        by a  geographical blunder. The Hudsons Bay C &
                        the subjects of England trading with it may lose the free navigation of
                        the Columbia by diplomatic omission of a clear and express reservation
                        of rights.
geographical blunder. The Hudsons Bay C &
                        the subjects of England trading with it may lose the free navigation of
                        the Columbia by diplomatic omission of a clear and express reservation
                        of rights. 
                  
                  
                  The greatest of Modern Statesmen have attached the greatest
                     importance to the free navigation of Rivers, forming the Boundary of
                     States, or running through successive independent States & that opinion
                     is recorded in a very remarkable article in the Treaty of Vienna in 1815.
                     England has clear rights under that Treaty regarding the Navigation of
                     the Rhine, which in these days of free trade — it may be well in some
                     future occasion to recall to mind.
                  
                  
                  However, I conclude by venturing to express an opinion that the
                     Crown may consistently with the T of Washington renew if it see
                     fit the Hudsons Bay 
C.'s License & thus secure & perpetuate the free navigation of 
the Columbia, be it worth much or little.
I imagine therefore 

that the answer to the Company's Letter must
                     be that 
Lord Grey is at present advised that the 
C have any
                     Proprietory rights westward of the 
Rocky Mountains Vancouvers Island included. That without further consideration he cannot give any
                     answer to the present application, especially without having from the
                     Company the nature of their alledged title to lands within these
                     regions, which under their Charter or their License it does not appear
                     they could acquire.
That as to any future disposition in which a grant of Land within
                     the now ascertained territory of G Britain in these regions — that
                     must be reserved also for further consideration (I merely add — that it
                     may not be quite certain whether though 

the Boundary between the United States & G Britain is settled — that the Russian Boundary between England & Russian possessions
                     is necessarily settled)
 
               
               
               
               
                  
                  
                  
                      24 Sepr
                     M Hawes
                     24 Sepr
                     M Hawes
                     I make for your concurrence or correction, and for 
Lord Grey's
                     information, the following note of what occurred, when in pursuance of
                     his Lordship's direct, you and I met 
Sir John Pelly at this Office yesterday.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  It appeared from his answers to the questions proposed to him —
                  
                  
                  1. That the 
Hudson's Bay Company are not able to define the extent of their Territory otherwise than by stating it
                     to comprize all the Lands watered by the Rivers falling into Hudson's Bay
2. That they have no rights whatever in the Countries west of
                     the 
Rocky Mountains, save only such rights as they derive, First — from
                     their general powers of Trading with all Indians in North America and,
                     Secondly, from their Special License to carry on, till the year 
1859,
                     an exclusive Trade in the 
Oregon Territory — 
Thirdly3. That it is very doubtful whether the Act of Parliam,
                     under 
wh: that License was granted &. the Company's acceptance of that
                     License, and the transactions of The Crown with the 
North West Company
                     have not reduced the rights of the Hudson's Bay 

Company within, what
                     may now be called, 
British Oregon, to the Single foundation of the Act
                     of Parliam and the consequent License — so, that, after the Year
                     
1859, the Company 
w have no rights at all in any British Territory
                     West of the 
Rocky Mountains, 
save only such rights as save only such rights, if any, as may now,
                     or hereafter, be conferred upon them
4 That the 
Hudson's Bay Company have certainly no right to
                     the Soil in the British Territory West of the 
Rocky Mountains, or to
                     any part, however inconsiderable, of that Soil.
5. That it is very doubtful whether consistently with their
                     Charter, the Company could accept a grant of any such Lands —
                  
                  
                  6 That, therefore, it 
w be better that whatever may be granted, 
sh be so granted, not to the Company, but to a Subordinate
                     Association which 
the some Members of the Company have formed in their personal and independent characters,
                     & to 
wh: Association really belong all the Possessions of the Company in 
American Oregon.
7 That the real object and wish of the Company is not to
                     have any grant of Land 

either to themselves or to the Association, but
                     merely to have an Assurance that if 
Vancouver's Island shall,
                     hereafter, be brought within, and under, any Colonial 
Gov; and if
                     the Company or the Association shall then appear to possess the
                     requisite Legal competency to acquire and hold lands within the limits
                     of any such 
Gov, then a Grant shall be made to them of the Lands
                     they have already occupied, and, further, that they shall not, in the
                     interval, be disturbed in the occupation of them.
8 To this is to be added that the Company have no Map or
                     other means of showing what the Lands which they have so occupied are,
                     nor what the exact extent of them may be, though it is not supposed to
                     exceed 1,000 acres.
                  
                  
                  9 
Sir John Pelly had no definite plan for Colonizing the
                     Country, but expressed his readiness to concur with any other persons
                     who might be interesting themselves on the subject in devising such a
                     plan.
From these Statements it may, I think, be concluded that the right
                     answer to the present application from the Company is that their first
                     step must be to specify, with greater distinctness, what is the
                     particular Territory to which their 
application
 refers, and to state whether they are of opinion that the 
Hudson's Bay Company are legally capable of becoming owners of those or of any other Lands in H.M's Dominions
                     west of the 
Rocky Mountains. This last enquiry will lead to
                     a statemn regarding the Association of which Body we have, as yet, no
                     knowledge, save only as far as it is derived from 
Sir John Pelly's
                     conversation.
Am I right in supposing that the Company's letter is with you?
                  
                  
                  
                  
                   
               
               
               
                  
                  
                  
                     Sep 24
                     L Grey
                     I join in 
M Stephens Statement which exactly gives you an
                     account of all that passed at the Interview. Outside the
                     immediate subject of discussion one or two points arose which
                     are of sufficient general importance to be recorded.
 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  2.  That they grow & export corn 

& wool & had supplied the American settlements in the Willamette & as I understand
                     had contemplated
                     supplying the French settlements in the Pacific. The Company at one Farm
                     had 10,000 Sheep & a large number of Cattle.
3.  That the C had sent out Ag Implements ploughs &c and had advanced the Capital necessary for the Settlers & was
                     willing to advance more.
                  
                  
                  4   That the harbour of 
Vancouvers Island was capacious — that
                     Coal had been found in 
the Island — & that it presented many advantages
                     for a Naval Station. This he considered of great importance in the
                     event of the U. States acquiring the harbour of 
San Francisco.