Murdoch to Elliot (Assistant Under-Secretary)
Emigration Office
22 July 1863
Sir
I have to acknowledge your letter of
11th instant,
with an extract of a Despatch from the Governor of
British
Columbia, enclosing a Proclamation to repeal the Proclamation
granting privileges to Military and Naval Officers in the
acquisition of Lands and to substitute other regulations
for those contained in it.
2. When the price of Land was fixed in
British Columbia
at £1 an acre a remission in money was granted to Military
and Naval Officers calculated
with reference to that price.
When the price was reduced to 4
s/2
d an Acre that remission
was practically increased fivefold. To prevent the evils
which would thus be caused the present proclamation
substitutes for a remission in money a grant of a fixed
extent—commencing with 600 Acres to a Field Officer of 25
years Service and ending with 200 to a Subaltern of 7 years.
The Proclamation requires that persons taking advantage of
it shall be actually resident on their Land for two years
before they can obtain a grant—it excludes Town and
suburban Lots
from selection—and it requires the Settler
to stake out and record with the nearest Magistrate the
Land which he claims to occupy. In other respects the
Proclamation is with a few unimportant verbal alterations
identical with the Proclamation which it repeals.
3. As a general rule it is more convenient to give
Military and Naval Officers a remission in money rather
than a fixed quantity of Land, because a remission allows
them to become purchasers at Sales by Auction when the
price may be run up beyond the upset price. But in a
Colony where the price is in an unsettled
state, as at
present in
B. Columbia, there is no doubt a difficulty in
fixing what the remission should be without the risk of
having to alter it so frequently as to introduce confusion
and uncertainty into the system. In such a case a fixed
quantity is more convenient both to the Government and the
Settler. I would accordingly recommend that this alteration
of the system should be sanctioned, and that the Proclamation now
transmitted by
Governor Douglas should be approved in the usual manner.
I have the honor to be
Sir
Your obedient
Humble Servant
T.W.C. Murdoch
Minutes by CO staff
Mr Elliot
If the
Duke of Newcastle decides on confirming this
Proclamation the War Office—H. Guards—& the Adm
y shd
receive notice of the change made.
Other documents included in the file
Elliot to Under-Secretary of State for War and Secretary to the
Admiralty,
30 July 1863, forwarding copy of the proclamation, with
explanation.