In one of the Dispatches—N
o 6—which I addressed to you last
month
it was mentioned that the Detachment of Royal Engineers which Her
Majesty's Government considered advisable to send to
British Columbia
would be maintained at the imperial Cost for only a limited period, and
that if it continued afterwards the Colony would have to defray the
expence thereof.
I can scarcely doubt that you will have noticed that when I wrote
that Dispatch, I had not received those Reports from you,
nor nor was the
public in possession of that general information, which ascribe to the
Colony the prospect of raising a large and early Revenue. This more
recent intelligence has necessarily caused an alteration in my views
with respect to the first charge for the Engineer party. I desire
therefore to state that as the Dispatch to which I have above alluded
was written before I was aware of the great prospects of the Colony, Her
Majesty's Government having since become apprized of that fact, I feel
that it would be impossible to impose on this Country the charge for the
Engineers which, under other circumstances it might have been proper
it should have assumed. It is therefore imperatively necessary for me
to repeat, what indeed has been very frequently mentioned,
thatthat Her
Majesty's Government expect that
British Columbia shall be self
supporting, and that the first charge upon the Land Sales must be that
of defraying all the expences which this Engineer party shall occasion.
Any expenditure which the British Treasury shall have incurred on this
account will have to be reimbursed by the Colony, as soon as its
circumstances permit, and for which I have now to instruct you to make
suitable provision.