Peel to Fortescue (Parliamentary Under-Secretary)
Treasury Chambers
16 June 1862
Immediate
I am commanded by the Lords Commissioners of Her Majesty's
Treasury to acquaint you for the information of the
Duke of
Newcastle that Their Lordships have had under Their attentive
consideration the measures proposed in your letters noted in
the margin
22 March, 21 April, 22 April, 22 April.
for the adjustment of the financial difficulties
of
British Columbia.
Their Lordships fully recognize the obligation of co-operating
with His Grace, as far as is consistent with Their duty to the
Public in this Country for this purpose, and in endeavouring to
place the affairs of that Colony on a sound and satisfactory footing.
With this view My Lords deem it advisable to re-state the
position of
the the Colony in its financial relation to the
Imperial Government for the years
1859 and
1860.
In these years Parliament having voted £38,000 for the
maintenance of the Royal Engineers on service in
British Columbia,
the Bills drawn by the Governor on account of the Engineers
amounted to £60,026, leaving a debt as against the Colony,
under this head, for these two years, of no less a sum than
£22,026, as adverted to in your letter of
22 April. There is
also the sum of £6,900 due to Her Majesty's Government for
the Silver Specie sent out in
1860, and for which their was an
engagement on the part of the Governor that a corresponding
amount of the Parliamentary Grant should be undrawn
and and there
are the following sums chargeable to the Colony, viz
t
£152. 3.8 for the Assay Office
34. 6. Passages of
35. 7. the Bishop
£221.16.8
With regard to the £22,026, the
Duke of Newcastle in
Sir F. Rogers' letter of
22nd March urges that a portion of this
excess (amounting so far as can be at present ascertained to
£11,322) being for the extra cost of the Supplies necessary
for the use of the Royal Engineers should be defrayed from
Imperial resources, while His Grace admits that the remainder,
viz
t £10,704 incurred in connection with the employment
of the Corps on Public Works, Roads, Bridges, and Surveys is
properly chargeable against the Colony as a debt.
Assuming this calculation to be correct, My Lords are
prepared to accede to His Grace's proposition in this respect
upon the
clear understanding that this sum of £10,704 shall be
repaid by the Colony in the year
1863.
With regard to the £6,900 and the £221.16.8, My Lords
are under the necessity of requiring that they shall be repaid
during the present year.
My Lords admit the importance of developing the resources
of the Colony by Roads and other public works, and although
the Colonial Revenue for the present year does not seem over
estimated at £90,000, yet after deducting the fixed charges
together with the repayment of £7,121.16.8 to Her Majesty's
Government as already referred to, and the share which the
Colony will have to bear this year of the cost of the Royal
Engineers, a less sum perhaps will remain available for
Public Works
and and Roads than it may be for the interest of
the Colony to expend in that manner.
My Lords will therefore not object to the necessary steps
being taken to raise a Loan not exceeding £50,000 with a
provision for a Sinking Fund.
The Proclamation already issued by the Governor for
raising a Loan being defective in several particulars, Their
Lordships annex a Memorandum with reference to the Roads
Loan Act of
1861, shewing the amendments necessary for enabling
the Agents to raise money in this Country, also a draft clause
relating to provision for a Sinking Fund, with a form of
Debenture, and They request that the
Duke of Newcastle will
convey the necessary instructions to the Governor to pass an
amended Proclamation accordingly.
With
With regard to the year 1861, My Lords observe that the
Bills drawn by the Governor for the Colonial Pay for the
Royal Engineers amount to £11,000, which is the sum provided
in the Votes of Parliament for the year 1861-62. My Lords
therefore observe that no overdrafts have been made by the
Governor in respect of the past year.
During the current year the Governor has already drawn to the extent
of £4,000 against the sum of £7,200 provided in the Estimates.
These Bills appear to have been drawn previously to the
receipt of His Grace's instructions of February last, limiting
the amount of the Parliamentary Grant for the Colonial Pay of
the Royal Engineers to £7,200.
My
My Lords cannot conclude this communication without
conveying to the
Duke of Newcastle Their dissatisfaction at
the course taken by the Governor in drawing upon the Imperial
Government apparently without regard to the sums voted by
Parliament, and for his omitting to pay for the Specie
according to his instructions, and the promise made in his
Despatch of
8 Febry 1861.
My Lords make it a condition of Their assent to the course
recommended by the
Duke of Newcastle that the Governor shall for the
future keep strictly within the limits of the sums
voted by Parliament.
His Grace has already warned him that if His Grace's
instructions on this head shall be again disregarded, he
must be prepared to be held personally responsible for the
consequences, and it
will will be Their Lordship's duty, in future,
whatever may be the inconvenience to the Colony, to refuse
payment of any Bills in excess of the Grants to the credit of the Colony.
I am,
Sir,
Your obedient Servant,
F. Peel
Minutes by CO staff
Transmit copy by Mail of today.
Other documents included in the file
Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
Report, "Observations on the British Columbia Roads Loan
Act of 1861," no signature, 14 June 1862.
Extract, "Sinking Fund Clause," no signature, no date.
Government Debenture,
British Columbia, No. 500, for £100 on account of "Loan Act of
1862, £50,000," signed by Crown Agents.