No. 150
               
            
            
            
            
               1.  The latest advices from 
British Columbia, report
               satisfactorily as to the peace and good order which reigns
               in the colony; the confidence of the people in its auriferous
               wealth, notwithstanding occasional fits of panic is unbounded;
               but there is a general outcry for better roads into the interior,
               the difficulty of access still forming the great impediment to
               the development of its mineral 
resources
resources.
               
               2.  The cost of transport enhances the price of food, and
               of all other necessaries of life, from 
Lytton upwards; to an
               extent which absorbs nearly the whole of the miners earnings,
               large as they occasionally are.  The production of food by the
               cultivation of the soil in the mining districts and the
               improvement of the 
Harrison river route into a waggon road,
               and otherwise opening the great commercial thoroughfares of
               the country, are measures of relief to which I have urgently
               directed the attention of the commissioner of Lands and Works.
               
               3.  The extensive plains on the "
Pitt," "
Sumas," and
               "
Chilwhayook" Rivers, are to be hurriedly surveyed, and thrown
               into 80 acre sections for immediate occupation for the purpose
               of raising food 
and
and retaining a permanent population in the country.
               
               5.  The Customs House Receipts for the last fortnight, amount
               to something over £773, Sterling, and will rapidly increase with
               the growth and expansion of the country.
               
            
            
               6.  The Mining Districts yield hardly Revenue enough to pay
               their own police expenses, in consequence of the difficulty of
               collecting the License Fee on Miners, who will pay no tax except
               through the force of compulsion.
               
            
            
               7.  We must, I think, adopt 
some
some other system of taxation
               pressing less directly upon the individual miner.  The Miners
               right, and the export duty on gold; features of the Australian
               system, recommend themselves from the ease and simplicity of their
               collection, and having already the machinery and staff required
               for that purpose.  The state of the country is however hardly
               ripe as yet, for the imposition of an export duty on gold, but
               the day is probably not far distant when the gold will be
               exchanged in the Country and exported in large quantities by
               Banking and Commercial Houses, when the difficulty of collecting
               the duty will cease.
               
               8.  Many reasons induce me to try another plan which under firm
               management would 
I
I think work well. By remodelling the whole system
               of mining regulations in 
British Columbia and instead of levying
               mining fees which would, in that case, be abolished, I would propose
               to treat the gold fields simply as crown land, and letting it out
               in large or small allotments, on leases, at a fixed rent, to any
               persons disposed to work the soil.  The revenue would thus be
               derived from a land rent, and not be levied under the name of an
               obnoxious tax, and tenants would be ejected at will on their
               failure to pay the stipulated rent.
               
               I will have more I hope to communicate on those subjects by
               the next mail.
               
            
            
               9. 
Captain Richards is now 
engaged
engaged in Her Majesty's Surveying
               Ship "
Plumper", in making a survey of the lower part of 
Fraser's
                  River, and 
Lieut Mayne has been detached to make a reconnaisance
               of the river to the 
Fountain, with instructions to return by
               
Harrison River for the same purpose, I anticipate much valuable
               information from the report of that officer, which I will forward
               to you when received.
               
               The numbers of the Victoria Gazette mentioned in the margin
               
               
                  
                     
                     7 Numbers, April 26 to 10th May.
                     
                
               are herewith forwarded.
               
P.S.
               The largest nugget of Gold yet found in 
British Columbia arrived
arrived at
               
Victoria a few days since.  It weighs 7 oz., 13 pwt., 7 g
r, and was
               found near the Head waters of 
Thompson's River, and as it is a fine
               specimen, I forward it herewith for the inspection of Her Majesty's
               Government.
               
James Douglas
               
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  
                     [Minutes have all been crossed out:]
                     
                  
                  
                  
                     Mr Merivale
                     Though he does not confess it, I 
shd judge
                     from this Despatch that the 
Govr finds himself at fault for
                     the last mode of raising revenue.  You remember that this
                     Office has supplied him with every information as to the steps
                     taken in the Australian gold Colonies for obtaining a revenue,
                     and that it has been left entirely to his discretion to decide
                     as to the course wh
h he prefers adopting in
                     
B. Columbia. I do not know that we can improve on that plan.
                     We shall shortly hear from the T-y their further opinion
                     as to a Mint & an Assay Office.  If the T-y is favorable
                     thereto we may find a way of taxing the gold, which shall be
                     profitable to the Colony, & not objected to by the inhabitants.
                     This 
wd be a vast addition to the Governor's resources.  Under
                     these circes, I think we can afford to wait the
                     Governor's further views on his project (I fear a questionable
                     one) of getting rent out of the Crown Lands.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     If the preceding ideas are concurred in  this despatch
                     might be "put by" for a short time.
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                     It might perhaps be sent to the Treasury as furnishing
                     additional argument in favour of the "assay" experiment.
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
                
                  
                  
                     Draft, 
Merivale to 
G.A. Hamilton, Treasury, 
9 July 1859, forwarding
                     copy of the despatch for consideration.
                     
 
            
            
            
               
                  People in this document
                  
                        Blackwood, Arthur Johnstone
                  
                        Douglas, Sir James
                  
                        Fortescue, 1st Baron Carlingford Chichester
                  Hamilton, George Alexander
                  Lytton, Sir Edward George Earle Bulwer
                  Mayne, Lieutenant Richard Charles
                  Merivale, Herman
                  Pelham-Clinton, 5th Duke of Newcastle Henry Pelham Fiennes
                  Richards, Captain George Henry
                
               
                  Vessels in this document
                  HMS Plumper, 1848-1865
                
               
                  Places in this document
                  British Columbia
                  Chilliwack River
                  Fountain
                  Fraser River
                  Harrison River
                  Hope
                  Lytton
                  New Westminster
                  Pitt River
                  Port Douglas
                  Sumas River
                  Thompson River
                  Vancouver Island
                  Victoria
                  Yale