I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of Mr C. Fortescue's
letter of the 24th ultimo transmitting extracts from a Despatch
addressed to your Grace by the Governor of Vancouvers Island on the
subject of the land in Victoria surrendered by this Company to the
Crown under the Agreement of the 3rd February 1862 in which Mr
Fortescue announces that if the Hudsons Bay Company are prepared to
surrender the portion of the GovernmentReserve Reserve marked 3 in Mr
Mactavish's Plan and the Lots marked 1605 and 1607 with the adjoining
Lot 1603 upon which the Post Office is built your Grace will consent
to give up the Lot reserved to the Crown at the foot of Fort Street
on which the Company have buildings in exchange for a Lot of the same
extent at the foot of Broughton Street.
I beg to assure your Grace that the Directors of this Company have no
wish to throw any obstacles in the way of a settlement of the
questions remaining unsettled with respect to the retransfer of
Vancouvers Island. On the contrary they are most anxious to secondYour
Your Grace's wishes in that respect to the utmost of their power.
It is with great pleasure therefore that I have to acquaint your
Grace that my Colleagues and myself are quite ready to do all in our
power to settle the unadjusted matters on the terms suggested in Mr
Fortescue's letter. On the part of the Hudsons Bay Company we are
ready to surrender any right or title the Company may have in the
Lots marked in Mr Mactavish's plan with the letter 3 as well as the
Lot 1603 on which the Post Office is built and the two Lots adjoining
thereto marked 1605 and 1607. We are also ready to surrender the Lot
atthe the foot of Broughton Street in exchange for the Lot at the foot
of Fort Street on which it was originally intended that the Harbour
Masters house should be built. In making these concessions however
it must be understood that the Hudsons Bay Company surrender only the
rights which they actually possess and that the arrangement is made
subject to and saving the rights of third parties (if any) to whom
the Lots in question may have been already conveyed.
As this is, as far as the Directors of this Company are aware, the
only question which remained to beadjusted adjusted between the Crown and
this Company we see no reason why steps should not be at once taken
for preparing the Deed of Reconveyance of Vancouvers Island to the
Crown.
I have the honor to be,
My Lord Duke,
Your Grace's most obedient
Servant, Edmund Head