Murdoch to Elliot (Assistant Under-Secretary)
               
            
            
               
               
                     Emigration Office
                     
                  
               8 May 1860
               
               Sir
                
            
            
               I have to acknowledge 
Mr Merivale's letter of 
23rd
                  ultimo, enclosing a Despatch from 
Governor Douglas on the subject
               of the grant of endowments in Land to the Clergy of the principal
               Christian Communities established in 
British Columbia.
               
               2. 
Governor Douglas states that although he had no authority
               to apply any part of the public Revenue to the aid or support
               of Churches he 
               
has
               
               has not hesitated to grant to the Clergy of the
               Church of England and the "Methodist Episcopal Church" sites for
               a Church, School and Dwelling House, forming a Block of 4
               building Lots—or about one acre—in all Towns where they
               resided.  The Towns in which these grants have been made are
               
Yale, 
Hope, 
Derby, 
Douglas and 
New Westminster.  He further
               requests authority to make similar grants in all other Towns
               of 
British Columbia where ordained Ministers of the Gospel
               may take up their residence, and he likewise proposes that free
               

               grants of 100 acres of rural land should be made in aid of
               every cure established in 
British Columbia and not otherwise
               supported at the public expense—where there is a resident
               Clergyman and a place of public worship—restricting these
               grants, however, to the Churches of England and Rome—the
               Presbyterian and Methodist Churches.
               
               3.  As regards the grants already made 
Governor Douglas'
               proceedings should, I think, be approved, but he will of
               course take care that the Land shall be appropriated strictly
               

               to the purposes for which it was intended—and that it shall
               be so conveyed as to be secure against the possibility of
               misapplication in future years.  Nor do I see any objection
               to his making similar grants in other Towns wherever a
               Clergyman and a Congregation may be established and require
               such assistance.
               
               4.  In respect to the proposed grants of 100 acres of rural
               land to such cures as may be hereafter established the experience
               of other Colonies is not encouraging.  It 
               

               has been found that
               where a Clergyman in a new Colony had to depend on his Land
               for his principal means of subsistence, he must, to make it
               answer, devote to it so much of his time as seriously to
               interfere with his usefulness.  Unless he does this the
               endowment becomes only an apparent, not a real, provision
               for him.  He cannot let it, because Land in a new Colony
               is never, except under very peculiar circumstances, taken on
               lease—and to employ hired labor would generally be beyond
               the means of a Clergyman so situated.  
               

               For these reasons the
               practice of making grants of Land as endowments to living
               in the Colonies has, I believe, been generally discontinued
               for many years—and great caution should be used in
               returning to it in 
British Columbia.  It may be doubted
               whether it is not better for a Clergyman to depend entirely
               on the liberality of his congregation than to be provided
               with an endowment which, though no substantial assistance
               to him, may be an excuse to such of his Congregation as are
               disposed to withhold their aid.
               
               5. 
Governor Douglas as I have 
               

               stated proposes to
               restrict these grants to four principal Christian communities.
               Looking, however, to the number of different communities of
               Christians in the United States and Upper Canada he would
               probably not be able to carry out such a restriction.
               This is another motive for caution.  Under any circumstances
               he should not make grants of this description until he has
               satisfied himself, in addition to there being a resident
               Clergyman and a place of Worship 
               

               that there is also a
               settled population of the community to whose Clergyman
               the grant is to be made in its immediate vicinity.
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  Mr Elliot
                     Approve 
the Governors proceeding:  and send him
                     extracts, or perhaps embody 
Mr Murdoch's
                     observations in Paragraphs 4 and 5 of this report—with which
                     it is desirable that the Governor should be acquainted.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     I think he should be instructed in the spirit of
                     those pars., but in rather more decided terms.  These
                     endowments appear plausible, but have been a great
                     source of discontent and abuse, as well as of sectarian
                     jealousy, in other Colonies.
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
               
                
                  
                  
                     I would approve the one-acre grants—applicable to all
                     Religious Sects—but disapprove the scheme of grants of
                     100 acres of Rural Land for the reasons given in 
Mr
                        Murdoch's Report.