Gosset to Fortescue (Parliamentary Under-Secretary)
               
            
            
               
               
                     58 Gloster Crescent
                     
                  
                     Hyde Park
                     
                  
               July 27 1863
               
               Sir,
                
            
            
               I have just returned to Town. Your communication of
               the 21st followed me in the country which will account
               for my delay in acknowledging it.
               
            
            
               2.  To comply with its command, to repair to 
British
                  Columbia by 
August the 31st, (could I start this instant),
               would be an impossibility,  the journey outwards being one
               of seven weeks, but as I deemed it my duty to make no
secret
 secret
               at the Colonial Office of not wishing to return to 
B. Colbia
               in the position of Treasurer, it was perhaps termed with a
               view to elicit my intentions in official form.
               
               3.  Permit me to assure you, that in due deference to
               your right to the earliest information, such official
               intimation would have been furnished by me many months since,
               had I not understood that my presence in England was deemed
               useful to the Colony, and I could not have ensured it, had
               I once
placed
 placed myself at the command of another Department.
               
               4.  I make these observations to remove the impression,
               somewhat indicated by your letter, that I have hitherto
               protracted my stay under equivocal pretences.
               
            
            
               5.  There can however be offered no better evidence of
               the sincerity of my previous observation, that extended leave
               was but (pro forma) sought under the supposition of my
               attendance in 
London being still required by His Grace the
               
Duke of Newcastle, than that, now informed to the contrary,
               I hasten respectfully to tender the
resignation
 resignation of my
               appointment.
               
               6.  It is with unfeigned regret that I contemplate a
               severance of my connection with the Colonial Office; and, I
               should seem ungracious were I not to state the circumstances
               which lead towards it.
               
            
            
               7.  By revised Treasury regulations, I am (as a second
               Officer of Royal Engineers) compelled, ere two years more
               expire, to elect between, either return to my Corps, or
               resignation of my military prospects: and, my
present
 present
               appointment in 
British Columbia would not enable me to
               incur the unavoidable expense of a journey out & back within
               that time (an outlay of 800£ to 1000£ for a family), still
               less justify me in relinquishing the rights of nearly 25
               years service under Her Majesty.
               
               8.  I may have lately been persuaded by friends, that with
               my knowledge of 
British Columbia & 
Vancouver Island, I might
               have hoped, in some higher position than my present one,
               to have made my adhesion to the Colonial service, permanent;
               and that, my experience of the Ceylon model of
Government,
 Government,
               now to be adopted in 
British Columbia, might have proved
               useful to a colony, in whose progress, as one of it's early
               pioneers through four rough years of hardships, I cannot but
               be interested, and whose development, under the form of
               Government suggested by me in a despatch to 
Governor Douglas
               so long back as 
1859 and lately pressed upon your notice,
               I may, not unnaturally, have entertained a desire to influence.
               
               9.  As in Ceylon, where such conduct was encouraged and
               approved by its experienced Governor 
Sir Henry Ward,
whose
 whose
               good opinion it was my great fortune to gain, and hold to
               the day of death; so, in 
British Columbia, I have always
               always endeavoured faithfully, and without fear of consequences
               to myself, to perform my official duties, and, which is not
               without its influence in a distant colony where the incorporation
               of English customs has a powerful value not always appreciated,
               to fill my position as a Government Officer—socially, avoiding
               indecent greed or undignified speculations & relying only upon
               the Public Service for reward—I trust therefore that my
               services abroad have not merited the disapprobation of Her
               Majesty's Secretary of State for the Colonies.
               
 
            
            
               10.  In lately expressing my reflections upon the affairs
               of 
British Columbia & 
Vancouver Island, although not insensible
               to the fact that in doing so I may have been deemed troublesome
               and pragmatical, I have acted solely from a conviction that it
               was my duty to give your Department information, and, in pursuit
               of desired ends I have sought only access to your (i.e. Col
               Office) ear and declined the proffered aid of Members, in
               Parliament—careful, as I trust I showed myself even in my
               communications to you, to stir up as little dirt as possible
               in remedying evils.
               
 
            
            
               11. So much egotism it has been repugnant to me to utter,
               but some explanation seemed due to myself, in case I may
               have been misrepresented or misunderstood, for, if I am to
               quit the Colonial Service, I should desire to do so, not under
               a cloud, but carrying with me an agreeable impression of the
               light in which my conduct may have been regarded.
               
            
            
               12. I avail myself of this, perhaps my last opportunity,
               gratefully to acknowledge the courtesy & kindness with which
               I have been treated by the Colonial Office ever since I
               accepted service under it in 
August 1855, and I request that
               you
will
 will do me the favor of laying this letter before His
               Grace the 
Duke of Newcastle to whom I feel indebted for many
               evidences of his consideration, and whom I would in conclusion
               most respectfully thank.
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  Mr Elliot
                     Accept the resignation.  The inference to be drawn from
                     this Letter is that 
Capn G. would like a complimentary Letter
                     to be addressed to him in answer; but on a careful & fair
                     review of his services in 
B.C. as known to the S.S. I do not
                     know that we have any ground for such a communication. Inform
the
                     the Governor? It 
wd be better for the Colony, I think, if
                     the 
Duke of Newcastle were to select some body on his List
                     of Candidates to succeed 
Major Gossett: instead of leaving
                     the choice to the Governor.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     The salary of the Office is £750 per annum.
                     
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     I fear that the opening Pars. of this letter cannot be
                     considered very frank or straightforward.  After all that
                     cloud of words and arguments, the fact remains that 
                     
Major Gosset had remained on leave and did his best to get it
                     extended, without any real intention of going back to his
                     Office.  It is not however worth further notice.
                     
                     As to his official career all that I remember is that
                     his accounts as Treasurer were sadly in arrear and formed the
                     subject of repeated complaints on that ground from the Audit
                     Office, but on the other hand I quite admit that ample
                     allowance should be made for the probable difficulties of
                     enforcing regularity, and of getting competent aid, in the
                     infancy of a Colony.  He as it were challenges a verdict.
                     I do not think that he is entitled to force an expression of
                     approval.  Would some such answer as follows suit the case?
                     
                  
                  
                     In reply to his letter
accept
 accept his resignation of his
                     office of Treasurer in 
B. Columbia.  With reference to the
                     remarks in the latter part of his letter, assure him that
                     the Duke has no wish to intimate any disapprobation of his
                     conduct in his office, which His Grace does not doubt that
                     he discharged to the best of his power in the midst of the
                     difficulties of a new Colony.
                     
 
               
               
                  
                  
                     Major Gossett evidently expected to have been made
                     Comm
r of Land & Works, or Governor, of 
B. Columbia, and
                     is disappointed.  But that is no reason why we sh. not make
                     his retirement from the Colonial Service as satisfactory to
                     him as we properly can.  I would convey to him the Duke's
                     thanks for the valuable information with respect to the
                     affairs of 
B.C., with wh. his experience had enabled him to
                     furnish His Grace—and assure him that the fact, to wh. H.G.
                     understands him to allude, of some other appointment in
                     that Colony not having been offered to him, implies no
                     misunderstanding of his conduct, either in the Colony or at
                     the C.O., nor any disapprobation on the part of the Sec. of
                     State of his services to the Colonial Department.
                     
 
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                     Do not lay on praise or thanks too thick.  We should always
                     keep a reserve of those articles for first-rate Officers.
                     I have not a high opinion of 
Captn G.
                      
                
            
            
            
            
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                     Having received my cong£
e from the Col Office this morng I marched
                     to the Horse Guards to report myself, when I was

 told that your
                     notification to the War 
Dt of having dispensed with my Services
                     may be requisite to enable the Military Authorities to receive me.
                     As matters of pay & promotion hang upon

 this, will you add to the
                     many favors I have had at y
r hands, by getting this attended to at
                     your early convenience.
                     
 
            
            
            
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                     Minutes by CO staff
                     
                     
                        
                        
                           Mr Fortescue
                           See the 
Duke of Newcastle's minute.  This draft follows the topic of
                           your Minute, but somewhat abridged, in order to conform at the same
                           time to the Duke's remark.
                           
 
                        
                        
                         
                      
                   
               
               
                
            
            
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                        Colonial Office to Under-Secretary of State for War, 
13 August 1863, advising of 
Gosset's resignation.
                        
 
               
                
            
            
            
            
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                     Minutes by CO staff
                     
                     
                        
                        
                           Mr Elliot
                           I suppose the 
Govr should be told this. The last sentence is
                           inserted for consideration.