No. 207
               
            
            
            
            
               Having been much occupied of late with the affairs of
               
Vancouver's Island, I have not, in my last Despatches, adverted
               to the state of 
British Columbia.  That Colony is making
               satisfactory progress.
               
               2.  The great enterprise 
of
of the season, the Wagon Road from
               
Douglas through the valley of the 
Harrison River to the upper
               
Fraser, beyond the mountains, has been necessarily retarded by
               the withdrawal of the Royal Marines for service on the 
Island
                  of San Juan, but the work is still being prosecuted by a
               Detachment of Royal Engineers under the command of 
Captain
                  Grant. That force is however insufficient to make much impression
               this season, on a work of such magnitude; winter will in all
               probability find us unprepared, and we shall 
have
have again to
               encounter the arduous task of feeding the mining population of
               the interior, by packing provisions on mules, over the present
               road, a process so expensive as materially to add to the cost
               of living and consequently notwithstanding their large earnings,
               the miners are, from positive inability to live, compelled in
               great numbers to abandon the country.
               
               3.  Money is greatly wanted for carrying on that indispensable
               work, which might be completed for the sum of Thirty Thousand pounds
               (£30,000).
               
               
                  
                     
                     The export duty, as soon as it can be imposed, will help the revenue.
                     
                  
                
               
               4.  That sum I have 
no
no doubt could be easily raised by way
               of loan either in England, or in this Country, provided its
               repayment were guaranteed by Parliament, and I would beg to draw
               the attention of Her Majesty's Government to that subject in
               order to procure the necessary aid for accomplishing an enterprise
               worthy of our Country, and removing the great impediment to the
               development of the Mining Regions of 
British Columbia. Its
               influence in promoting the prosperity of the Country would be
               incalculably great, and it would lead to so large 
an
an increase of
               the public Revenue as soon to repay the preliminary outlay.
               
               5.  On the contrary without such facilities of access, the
               Country will have to struggle on amidst the discouragements of
               poverty and distress.
               
            
            
               6.  The Mule Road from 
Fort Hope to 
Boston Bar has been recently
               completed, and will be of great advantage to that district of the
               Country.
               
               7.  Much is also required to be done in improving the road from
               
Fort Yale by the passes of 
Frasers River; in short on all sides
               is the helping hand of Government urgently 
required
required in opening
               a free access into a Country whose resources are probably greater
               than our most sanguine speculations ever contemplated.  Every
               step in advance confirms that opinion, and reveals more distinctly
               the auriferous wealth of the Country.
               
               8.  My advices from 
Fort Yale are up to the 
17th of August.
               
Mr Commissioner Sanders reports that the miners are almost
               without exception, doing exceedingly well, and in the newly
               discovered diggings at 
Quesnel's River, are making on the average
               one ounce of gold to a man per diem.
               
               9.  Those accounts are confirmed by numberless letters from
               persons in the interior to their former partners or friends 
in
in
               the 
Fort Yale District, exhausting all their powers of persuasion
               to induce them to join them at 
Alexandria.
               
               10.  
Mr. Cox a Revenue Officer employed in the District of
               
Thompson's River, reports that the miners in that part of the
               Country are making very large wages, and mentions that one
               company of five men were procurring by Sluices an aggregate
               return of from
               
Two Hundred and 
Fifty ($250), to 
Three Hundred Dollars ($300) a
               
day; and others with the cradle were averaging each from
               
Ten ($10) to 
Twelve Dollars ($12) a day.
               
               11.  The newly explored tract of mining country 
about
about
               
Alexandria and 
Quesnel's River is reported to have more of
               the general features of a Gold country than any yet known part
               of 
British Columbia.  The miners appear fully satisfied on that
               point, and of the auriferous character of the soil in the valley
               of 
Frasers River.  Already are Hydraulic Mining Associations
               forming, who expect to derive considerable profit by that process,
               from Benches and flats which cannot at present be worked to
               advantage for want of water.
               
               12.  The Miners on 
Frasers River have been much delayed this
               Season by the high state of the water, which has now 
Subsided
Subsided,
               and they have resumed work with great spirit.
               
               13.  Ditch owners, on the other hand have already felt the
               want of water, and complain that the streams from which they draw can
               hardly supply one fourth of the usual and requisite quantity of water.
               
            
            
               14.  Much anxiety has been expressed by the miners generally
               on the subject of Banks of Deposit, which are greatly needed
               in every District of 
British Columbia.  The Miners' only alternative
               at present being to bury his gold dust for security, which is
               known to be the general practice in 
Frasers River; but were
               Banks of Deposit established, they would willingly pay a monthly
               
per centage
per centage on any sums they might deposit.
               
               15.  I have long been convinced of the value and importance
               of such institutions.  But without the assistance of men of tried
               integrity and business habits, no such scheme could be carried
               out with advantage to individuals or to the public.
               
            
            
               16.  The Country is everywhere in a perfectly tranquil state.
               
            
            
               17.  A body of nearly one hundred gold miners sailed from
               this place on the 
27th July to explore the gold fields of
               
Queen Charlotte's island, and I trust this 
little
little band of
               Pioneers will meet with the success their enterprise deserves.
               The expedition was equipped entirely at their own expense.  I
               promised however to exempt the party from all taxes for six
               months to come, and to allow them certain privileges in respect
               to quartz claims, not inconsistent however, with the provisions
               of the general mining regulations which I propose shortly to issue.
               
               18.  I also promised to protect them in the prosecution of
               their enterprise as far as the means at my disposal allow, and
               in fulfilment of that promise I have made a requisition on Rear
               Admiral 
Rear
                  Admiral Rear
               Admiral 
Baynes Baynes
Baynes, for the assistance of a Ship of War to visit the
               place where they intend to form their settlement.
               
               19.  If that attempt proves successful the result will be
               highly important for the Colony, and 
Queen Charlotte's Island,
               which abounds in minerals, and its coasts with fish, will soon
               become the resort of many flourishing settlements.
               
               20.  I am looking forward with great anxiety for the arrival
               of the two Gun Boats
               
               
                  
                     
                     Ask the Admy if they are gone.  I do not recollect hearing that
                     they had.
                     
                  
                
               which Her Majesty's Government announced in
               your Despatch N
o 30 
of the
of the 
10th March, it was intended to place
               them at my disposal for the defence and protection of this Colony.
               
               21.  Those vessels would be of incalculable advantage to the
               Country; its coasts might then be explored, settlements formed
               and protected from Indian violence, in a manner which with my
               present means is simply impossible.
               
            
            
               22.  The late numbers of the Victoria Gazette
               
               
                  
                     
                     Nos 8 to 26 of the Victoria Gazette. July 12 to Augt 23.
                     
                  
                
               are herewith transmitted 
for
for your information.
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  
                     Mr Merivale
                     This report is highly satisfactory.  I trust it is not too
                     good to be correct.  The 
Govr wants much help from this
                     Country, but will it not be better to let him distinctly know
                     that with such advantages as the Colony possesses, the Community
                     must rely on it's own vigor to achieve success.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     Shall any enquiry be proposed to the Admy abt the
                     Gunboats?
                     
                  
                  
                   
                  
                  
                     Duke of Newcastle
                     I have noted in the newspapers attached, some points not
                     adverted to by the Governor, & which may be of interest, now
                     that public attention is directed to this question.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     1.  Country land is now selling in 
Vanc. I. at the upset
                     price of a dollar (4
s2
d).  I was not aware of this lowering.
                     
                     
                     
                        Inferior Land only under special arrangement.  Reported by the
                           Governor.
                           
                        
                      
                     
                     The newspapers had better go to the Land & Em. Office for
                     information on this & other points.
                     
                     2.  The mining "population" of 
Fraser River, i.e. the balance
                     of those who stay against those who return, estimated in 
June at 4000.
                     
                     3.  Meteorological journals give a most favorable idea of the
                     climate.  It is clear that the summer in 
Vanc. I. & the coast of B. Col.
                     instead of being the dripping season we had imagined, is much drier than
                     in England.
                     
                     4.  They have got up a "Reform Association" at 
Queensborough.
                     I have always wondered, & thought it rather a singular sign of
                     the times, that 
Sir E. Lytton's bold measure in starting this
                     Colony without any political rights whatever had hitherto
                     engendered so little opposition.
                     
                     5.  The question of incorporation between 
V.I. & 
Brit.
                        C. is being much discussed, 

and "Cassandra" writes furious letters
                     against it; one of her reasons being the extensively practical
                     one, that 
Vanc. I. now gets much of its business done by 
B.
                        Columbian officials whom it does not pay.
                     
                     6.  In N
o 24 of the Victoria Gazette is a letter signed
                     "Amor de Justicia" which gives a notion of the American view of
                     the treaty question as to 
S. Juan.
                     
                  
                  
                     These newspapers are very interesting.  It is strange that
                     the 
Govr has given no intimation of the reduction of the price
                     of land, the E. Com
rs may perhaps be able to explain it.
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     I think an answer in the sense indicated by 
Mr Blackwood is
                     required.
                     
 
                
            
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
                
                  
                  
                     Draft, 
Merivale to Emigration Commissioners, 
9 November 1859,
                     forwarding a copy of the despatch and draft reply for information.
                     
                  
                  
                  
                     Minutes by CO staff
                     
                     
                        
                        
                        
                        
                           It is desirable to let the Governor know the state of the case.
                           
                        
                        
                         
                      
                   
               
                
            
            
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
               
                  *
               
               
                
            
            
            
               Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
               
                
                  
                  
                     Note in file:  "Folios 897-106v not photographed,
                     Victoria Gazette, No. 8, 12 July, to No. 14, 26 July; No. 24,
                     18 August and No. 26, 23 August 1859;
                     Steamer Victoria Gazette, 20 August 1859."
                     
                     
                   
            
            
            
            
            
               
                  People in this document
                  Baynes, Rear Admiral Robert Lambert
                  
                        Blackwood, Arthur Johnstone
                  
                        Cox, William George
                  
                        Douglas, Sir James
                  
                        Grant, Captain John Marshall
                  Irving, Henry Turner
                  Lytton, Sir Edward George Earle Bulwer
                  Merivale, Herman
                  Pelham-Clinton, 5th Duke of Newcastle Henry Pelham Fiennes
                  Sanders, Edward Howard
                  Sargeaunt, William Charles
                
               
                  Places in this document
                  Alexandria
                  Boston Bar
                  British Columbia
                  Fraser River
                  Haida Gwaii
                  Harrison River
                  Hope
                  New Westminster
                  Port Douglas
                  Quesnel River
                  San Juan Island
                  Thompson River
                  Vancouver Island
                  Victoria
                  Yale