No. 25
               
            
            
            
            
               In reply to your Despatch N
o 14 of the 2
nd of September 
               
               
                  Print for Parlt immediately with other correspondence.    
                  
                
               
               
               transmitting copy of a letter which you addressed to 
Colonel Moody on the
               subject of granting land, on certain conditions to the Non Commissioned
               Officers and
men
 men of the Royal Engineers who are to be employed in 
British 
                  Columbia, and instructing me to report to you my opinion whether it would
               be desirable to grant
               remissions
               
               on the purchase of land—to retired Officers of the Army and Navy, as was
               formerly the custom in many of the British Colonies—I have the honor to
               state, that without having had opportunities of acquiring information on
               the subject of your Despatch, I am strongly biased in favor of extending
               the system of locating retired Officers of the Army and Navy in 
British 
                  Columbia, and of making grants to the men of the Royal
Engineers
 Engineers, of
               small portions of agricultural land, on condition of residence and
               military service within the Colony, if called upon.
               
               2.  I think it especially desirable to introduce the remission
               system into 
British Columbia, for the purpose of adding a respectable
               British element to the population, and thereby infusing and encouraging
               sentiments of attachment and loyalty to the Crown.  I think the
               advantages greatly outweigh any inconvenience that may in future arise to
               the Colony from the introduction of the system, seeing as suggested in
               your Despatch, that the privilege of granting remissions on the purchase
               of land to
retired
 retired officers, might for a time be secured to Military
               settlers, even should the Crown lands be hereafter made over to the
               Colony.
               
               3.  I now submit a list of the officers for civil situations
               immediately required in the New Colony—feeling assured however, that
               circumstances will soon render it necessary to allow a complete civil
               staff.
               
            
            
               4.  
Mr Begbie will as you have so kindly arranged lend his
               general aid for the compilation of the necessary laws and other legal
               business, properly coming within the range of duties discharged by the
               Attorney General, but as he cannot engage in conducting
suits
 suits on the part
               of the Crown; it is obvious that the appointment of a Law Officer for the
               Crown is immediately required.  I would thus suggest the following
               appointments
               
               
               An Attorney General
               
               A Colonial Secretary
               
               A    "
               Treasurer
               
               
               
               
               
               A    "
               Accountant
               
               
               
               
               
               The pay of those officers must necessarily be regulated by the expense of
               living in the Colony.  A gentleman may live in England on an income of
               £1000 a year, with far more comfort than an income of £1800 would command
               in this Country.
               
               5.  As the Attorney General and Colonial Secretary will
               hold offices which should be
filled
 filled by gentlemen of the best
               education and ability, I think that such men may not be disposed
               to accept of a less valuable appointment and perhaps the
               Treasurer,
               
               
               
               
               who will have to find heavy securities, may be included in the
               same category.
               
               6.  The pay of the Accountant may be regulated by the pay
               allowed to the higher appointments, and probably about
               £700 a year, may be considered a fair compensation for that official.
               
            
            
               7.  I will take the liberty of addressing you further
               on the wants of the Colony as they occur.
               
            The
             
            
            
               8.  The want of efficient assistance, the multiplicity of the duties
               devolving on me, and the journeys I have been compelled to make into the
               gold regions—for the enforcement of law and order—must plead my excuse
               for not addressing you more frequently on the affairs of the Colony,
               though the reports of my two journeys to 
Fraser's River, embody almost
               the whole amount of reliable information that can yet be given in respect
               to the value and extent of the gold fields.
               
               I will however hereafter prepare a brief
report
 report on that subject by
               every mail.
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  Mr Merivale
                     I presume that so much of this Desp: as relates to the remission on the
                     price of land purchased by Military & Naval Settlers should be referred
                     to the Emigration Commissrs?  In the latter portion of the Desp: the
                     
Govr suggests two or three new appointments.
                     
 
                  
                  
                   
                  
                  Mr Merivale
                     I think that you have overlooked this desp. but before
                     passing it on to 
Sir E. Lytton I s
d be glad to have your opinion.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     1.  On the remission system—of wh the Colonial Office
                     has had experience.
                     
                  
                  
                     2.  The propriety of affording 
Govr Douglas some additional
                     assistance for the discharge of his duties.  I am, as I think you know,
                     persuaded of the necessity of giving this assistance so far as he is
                     
personally concerned but this desp. raises the important question of
                     a large accession to the civil 
Govt of the Colony.
                     
                     3.  We cannot obtain good men; unless we give them sufficient
                     salaries:  but our scale of salary has been I think so low as yet (with
                     perhaps the exception of 
Col. Moody) that large salaries to new officials
                     will disturb the existing proportions & involve a remodelling of the
                     whole system.  How is this to be dealt with?
                     
 
                  
                  Lord Carnarvon
                     1.  The application of the remission system for officers & location
                     system for men form a question on which the L
d & Em. board are
                     peculiarly qualified to advise.  As far as my own experience goes, I
                     agree with the Governor that the remission system is on the whole
                     desirable.  The 
location of men on small lots is much more
                     doubtful in my opinion.  Old soldiers make very bad and very grumbling
                     colonists.  But there is no doubt that sappers & miners are better
                     qualified for this purpose than other soldiers, & the advantages of the
                     scheme may counterbalance the costs.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     2.  As to civil assistance, I think the Governor
                     peculiarly & urgently requires the help of a private Secy
                     with a salary of, say £300 per annum.
                     
                   
                  
                  
                     2.  An Attorney General ought in my opinion to be content
                     with  £400 or 500 per annum and practice.  I know the
                     objections to the latter: but it is a choice of evils.
                     
                  
                  
                     3.  I think one man should combine the functions of
                     Colonial Secretary, and of what the Governor calls accountant,
                     by which I suppose he mean[s] an auditor.  Salary about 800 per annum.
                     
                  
                  
                     But I do not see any way to appointing these officers without
                     securing them salary for one or two years on the Parl
y estimates.
                     It seems to me quite uncertain what revenue 
B. Columbia may afford.
                     
                     If we are resolved on the cheap system, then there is nothing for it
                     but to do what, I apprehend, the Americans would do:  tell the Governor
                     that he may have the assistance of civil officers, if he can find them
                     and pay them.
                     
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  Sir Edward Lytton
                     You will best know what can be done with regard to this

 last point.  If
                     it be possible to secure part at least of the Salary of the Colonial Sec.
                     and the Attorney 
Genl on the parliamentary vote it is undoubtedly
                     advisable in as much as the efficient administration of these
                     offices—but under present circumstances particularly that of Col.
                     
Secy—is of the deepest importance to the Colony and may save us many
                     future difficulties.  Cheap functionaries, like most other cheap
                     articles, entail so many indirect expenses that in the long run they
                     become very costly.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     As regards the private 
Secy—unless we can send out
                     
Douglas some efficient man, and no such person is likely to
                     go only on the trust of Colonial payment—it 
wd I think
                     be right to authorise him to obtain the best assistant he
                     can on the spot at a salary not exceeding £300 but to be
                     defrayed from local revenues. This I think due to the 
Govr;
                     and at the same time is good policy for the peace & prosperity
                     of the Colony clearly depend upon his personal life and I do not
                     believe
                     
                     
 
               
                
                  
                  
                     [First part of this minute missing] must also consider that all
                     charges for roads, public works & build
gs must be found out of Col.
                     funds, & that all which I do not authorize as charged for in estimates he
                     must provide for or do without till he gets a revenue. 
Mr M. would
                     sneer less at the economical system if he had to fight Estimates thru'
                     the H of C. & Estimates which as yet have had no parl
y sanction.
                     
 
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
                
                  
                  Merivale to Emigration Commissioners, 
14 February 1859,
                     forwarding extract of the despatch for observations.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     Minutes by CO staff
                     
                     
                        
                        Sir E. Lytton
                           I am informed that you have settled with 
Mr Elliot to apply to
                           Parl
t for a vote for certain public Officers of 
B. Columbia,
                           amongst whom, I presume, will be the Attorney General.
                           
 
                        
                        
                         
                     
                     
                     
                        
                        
                           I minuted on a desp. from B.C. several days
                           ago,
                           
                           that such an appointment seemed required.
                           
                        
                        
                         
                      
                   
               
               
                
            
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
               
               
               
                
            
            
            
            
            
            
               
               
                  People in this document
                  Begbie, Matthew Baillie
                  
                        Blackwood, Arthur Johnstone
                  
                        Cairns, Hugh MacCalmont
                  
                        Carnarvon, Earl
                  
                        Douglas, Sir James
                  
                        Elliot, Thomas Frederick
                  
                        Gosset, Captain William Driscoll
                  Jadis, Vane
                  Lytton, Sir Edward George Earle Bulwer
                  Merivale, Herman
                  
                        Moody, Colonel Richard Clement
                
               
                  Places in this document
                  British Columbia
                  Fraser River
                  Vancouver Island
                  Victoria