Captain Gossett [Gosset] was appointed Treasurer of
British
Columbia, & Commissariat Officer to the R. Engineers. The arrangement
for the 2 offices was made on the recommendation of
Colonel Moody. On
reaching
Van Couver Island—for none of the public Officers took
up their quarters in
B. Columbia—and no money finding its way
into the pockets of
Govt from the gold fields or elsewhere,
Capn G. had literally nothing to do, except the Commissariat
business for this handful of Engineers. More recently he has had
to subsist a few supernumerary marines who have been sent on shore.
This being the case the Governor, finding
Gossett a very clever
energetic person, has appointed him Acting Treasurer of
V. Couver Island—which
the
Duke of N. has disapproved, ordering the Governor
not to employ B.C. Officials on
V.C. Island affairs, & directing (on
a preceding occasion) that all the B.C. Officers
shd repair to
their own Colony & set an example of settlement. I guess (I do not
know,) that the Governor is employing
Captain Gossett in ways other
than are mentioned, the result of which is that
Capn G. is taken
away from his own proper duties, and
Colonel Moody, finding the
inconvenience thereof, is obliged to profer this request. If I am
right in my premises, and if H.M.
Govt have no intention of adding
to the Military force, already in
B. Columbia—wh
h Colonel Moody
implies must almost immediately be done—then I cannot perceive
why an Engineer soldier—or a Clerk acting of course with and under
Captain Gossett—should not perform all the duties of subsisting
the small body of men now stationed in the Colony. Should Her
M
s Govt contemplate sending a Reg
t or more to
V.C. Island
a Commissariat Officer
wd, in such case, necessarily accompany
the force—
Captain Gossett's duties requiring him in
B. Columbia.