I have the honour to acknowledge the receipt of
Mr Merivale's letter, dated the
31st Ultimo, transmitting an Extract of a letter from
Dr O'Brien of
Port Townsend,
Washington Territory, in which he alleges that the Miners proceeding to the Gold diggings on
Fraser's River are refused a passage up the river until they purchase all their mining implements
from the Hudson's Bay Company.
In compliance with your request that we should communicate any information on this
subject that it may be in our power to afford, I have merely to state that we are
without any information whatsoever that could lead
us to believe that there is the slightest foundation for the charge alleged against
our Officers. In our accounts from that district we do not find a word which could
guide us as to the origin of the story, and we feel confident that, on investigation,
it will turn out to be one of those exaggerations or misrepresentations which may
be expected from a country agitated and distracted, as
British Columbia is at the present moment, from the sudden influx of strangers into the territory.
The Extract from
Dr O'Briens letter had been previously communicated to us by the
Earl of Malmesbury, together with a copy of a Despatch from
Lord Napier, in which his Lordship stated that the letter was addressed to
Mr Nugent, the United States Commissioner to the Pacific frontier, and communicated by that
gentleman to his Lordship; and it
appears from
Lord Napier's statement that he at once treated the charge as an exaggeration or altogether untrue.
I have every confidence that his Lordship's opinion on that respect will be fully
confirmed by our next accounts from the Colony, and in the meantime I have to repeat
what I stated in reply to the
Earl of Malmesbury, that we have lost no time in referring the matter to
Governor Douglas, with instructions which, if there should have been ever a shadow of ground for the
charge, will certainly prevent its recurrence.