M Fortescue
This is an application from the Assembly of
Vancouver Island for the
erection of Military Works. Although there will probably be little
doubt what the answer should be, the question involves all the most
general considerations of colonial defence.
You are well aware how much attention has been given in the last few
years to Colonial Military expenditure. First, there sat in
1860 a
Government Committee composed of a permanent member of
the Treasury,
the War Department, and the
Colonial Office. In
1861 the subject was
reported on by a Committee of the House of Commons. In
1862 the
Defence Committee attended by a Representative of the
War Office and
of this Office reviewed the whole subject of Colonial Fortifications.
[Marginal note: Their report was made in
Jany 1863, but has not been
published.]
The conclusions, as might be expected on so wide and various a field,
were not very precise, but their tendency was sufficiently plain.
The small Committee of Government Officials, the subsequent
Committee Committee
of the House of Commons and the Defence Committee all evidently
agreed in thinking that too much in the way of military aid had been
done for the Colonies previously, and that less ought to be done in
future.
The two things to be considered in respect of defence are Troops and
Works. No Troops have ever been sent to
Vancouver. On the formation
of
British Columbia,
Sir E. Lytton sent to it a Company of Royal
Engineers, in order that they might answer the twofold object of
making roads and doing other useful works, and at the same time
filling the part of Troops. They never did act as Soldiers, and
there is reason to believe that their work was very costly; and they
have been recalled with the unanimous consent of all parties.
On the occurrence of the difficulty at
San Juan, the required English
detachment was
furnished furnished by a party of 100 Royal Marines. When
Lord
Russell was told that these men had been detained so long that their
relief was called for in the ordinary course of service, His Lordship
at once said that as the War in China was over, a Regiment of the
Line ought to be brought from thence to
Vancouver. The Military
Authorities did not actually resist but they strongly protested
against sending a single Regiment so far from all support; and as the
Army was kept longer than expected in China, the subject was tacitly
allowed to drop.
I have recapitulated these facts, because on the subject's first
coming before
M Cardwell, he may wish to know it in all it's
bearings. But the present application is limited to the object of
getting one or more Forts or Batteries. The Commons' Committee, in
Par. 18 of their Report, give a decided opinion against multiplying
Fortifications. The Defence Committee made a
distinction distinction between
places in which Forts are wanted for some general object of National
policy and those where they are wanted, if at all, for local defence.
They confined their suggestions to Stations of the former kind; and
only recommended the maintenance of works at
Imperial cost in positions where they involve an
Imperial interest.
The following are examples of such places:
Commanding positions on the Globe, such as Malta, Gibraltar, Bermuda
and
Halifax.
Places important to Maritime traffic and for Eastern Trade and
Eastern Empire, such as the
Cape, Mauritius and Hong Kong.
Points of Rendezvous for any National Force employed in time of war
in the protection of large tracts of British dominions, such as
Jamaica in the West Indies.
Do the twin Colonies of
Vancouver I and
British Columbia come under
any of these descriptons? It seems to me very doubtful.
They They may
indeed give a great command over the North Pacific, but we have no
English Trade and interests in that Ocean such as those of India,
China and Australia. What we do in these two Colonies therefore must
be, it may be argued, for their own sake and not for that of anything
lying beyond them. If
British Columbia turns out a grand gold
producing Colony such as those in Australia, it ought to be able to
pay for it's own Forts as they do, and so ought
Vancouver as sharing
it's prosperity. If
British Columbia does not so turn out, it cannot
yield so large a commerce as would give a reason for defending it
with Imperial money for the sake of an Imperial interest.
On the other hand
Vancouver seems to afford the best Harbor open to
the British Navy on the Pacific shore of either North or South
America; and it may possibly be worth while, on purely Naval grounds,
to protect that
Harbor Harbor by Works on shore. But this would be a ground
lying beyond our province.
If therefore I were desired to suggest a course, it would be as
follows: I should forward a copy of this despatch to the
Admiralty
and to the
War Office. I should say that
M Cardwell does not find
sufficient reason to recommend the construction of Fortifications at
Vancouver Island on Colonial grounds or for mere purposes of local
defence. But the further question whether some Fortifications at the
two chief Harbors of
Vancouver are required for the convenience and
safety of Her Majesty's Navy, and are so desirable that they ought to
be provided for on Army or Navy Estimates
as general objects of national policy, is a matter of which the
judgment belongs more immediately to the Secretary of State for War
and the Lords Com[missione]rs of the
Admiralty,
and and which therefore
M Cardwell can only forward for their consideration.
M Cardwell
An application such as this must, I think, be judged upon its own
merits, that is, by the character of the place & of the interests to
be protected, rather than upon general principles. It is in its
character of a Naval Station for the Pacific (taking the place of
Valparaiso), a depôt
of naval stores, a place for the repair of the Queen's ships, that
Vancouver I w have a claim, if any, upon the Imp.
Gov & Parl
for the creation of works of defence. I think it highly probable
that this claim will increase in force, and will have to be
recognized. But it may be staved off for the present.
Victoria is the commercial Harbour,
and any works for its
defense ought to be made & paid for by the Colony or Colonies
concerned.
Esquimalt is the Naval Harbour—and there, sooner or
later, the Home
Gov may be expected to assist. It may also be well
to remember that the Governors lately sent out to
V.I &
B. Columbia
have been instructed to use their best endeavours to bring about a
union of the two Colonies; because works of this kind, at what wd.
then be the common Capital, wd. be far more easily paid for out of
the common exchequer than from the scanty revenue of
Vancouver. Upon
the whole, I think it will be very proper to send this to the
W.O.
and
Admiralty, with the observations proposed by
M Elliot.