1. Douglas to Moody, 11 November 1863
I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your letter
of the 8th Inst detailing the number of Officers and Men
who will return to England under your Command.
2. I have to acquaint you that I have recommended
Captain H.R.
Luard to the Secretary of State for appointment as Chief
Commissioner of Lands and Works in this Colony. Of course at
the present moment I am not aware whether
Captain Luard will be
appointed: as the Secretary of State may have made other
arrangements prior to the receipt of my recommendation; but as
it is highly desirable that the Lands and Works Department
should not remain inactive—which it must do under the only
arrangement which at present it is within my power to make—by
employing a non-professional man in charge of the Dep
t.
I have to request that you will authorize
Captain Luard to
delay his departure for England until I can receive an answer
from the Secretary of State—so that in the meantime I can
usefully employ
him him in the Service of the Colony.
3. I do not apprehend that any inconvenience can arise from
this arrangement. The orders from home for the withdrawal of the
Detachment give the end of the year as the period, and I therefore
submit that by permitting
Captain Luard to remain until that
date, when I shall probably either have received an answer to my
application; or a Successor to yourself may have arrived, you
will not be infringing even the letter of those instructions,
but will be acting in their spirit by enabling the Lands and Works
Dept to be carried until the close of the year. I further
notice that if
Captain Luard does not return with you, you
will still have with you 3 Officers and 8 Non Commissioned
Officers while the number of Sappers is only 8.
4. I shall not fail to explain to the Secretary of State,
this requisition upon you, in such manner as to relieve you
of the responsibility of having deferred the departure of
Captain Luard.
2. Moody to Douglas, 13 November 1863
I have had the honour to receive your letter of yesterday's
date.
Your Excellency informs me you have recommended
Captain
Luard to the Secretary of State for the Office of Chief
Commissioner of Lands and Works.
For
Captain Luard I have a very high regard. My good opinion
of him and friendship towards him are of long standing and well
known, but I know also the exact nature of his qualifications and
it becomes my duty to state (your Excellency's letter alone obliges
it) that valuable as they are, among them are not comprised what
are indispensable at all times for the Office of Chief Commissioner
of Lands and Works and in a most marked degree requisite in the
Colony of
British Columbia.
I can scarcely suppose
Captain Luard himself has applied for
the office.
Your Your Excellency's letter at this moment places me in
a position very embarrassing and most repugnant to my disposition and
to all my desires.
I wish sincerely you had consulted with me prior to recommending
Captain Luard to the Secretary of State for this Office in particular.
Had I been aware at a sufficiently early period you desired an
Officer of Royal Engineers I could have officially named for
recommendation others to you well qualified, and available and I
might have had the gratification of seconding your desire to aid
Captain Luard in some other way advantageous to the Public Service.
When consulting with you as the steps to be taken—after I
received orders closing our Service in
British Columbia, and
directing distinctly (naming each one in the order) that all were
to return to England, I submitted proposals to you and among
others we considered
Mr Trutch a civil Engineer well known to
your Excellency and myself and a Resident in
this this Colony, to be
peculiarly well fitted for the office; considering however the
close of the Season and the notification to your Excellency that
a successor would be forthwith appointed from England you finally
decided on a temporary arrangement and selected
Mr Brew to take
over temporary charge—retaining a few of the well qualified
subordinates for current work and to supply what information
Mr
Brew might require.
This arrangement has been effected. I have given over
charge. We have entirely broken up, and left the Colony. The
Admiral has arranged for the passages of all of us, and at
this late hour—the Mail Steamer by which we depart being expected
tomorrow—my orders clear and explicit, I do not well see at
present how I can take on myself to leave an officer behind for
a re-delivery and to resume charge.
I would also with the greatest respect beg your Excellency
to remember my
responsibility responsibility to the Commander in Chief in a
matter so important as discriminating the duties and recognizing
the relative claims and fitness of Officers placed under my
immediate command.
I have the honour to be
Y
r Excellency's most obedient humble Servant
R.C. Moody
Col RE Com
y
His Excellency the Governor
P.S. I trust sincerely nothing whatsoever in the above may be
taken as reflecting on
Captain Luard's value to the Service.
I would gladly use any language that would guard against an
impression of that kind.
3. Moody to Douglas, 14 November 1863
Your Excellency will have received my letter of yesterday's
date, and if after considering what I have therein ventured to
lay before you—you should deem it indispensable for an Officer
of Royal Engineers to remain and to resume charge of the Lands
and Works Department in
British Columbia from
Mr Brew, I will
take the responsibility of giving the necessary orders, selecting
one qualified for any matter you may at present desire and for
anything that may arise, but I would press you not to require
it unless indispensable.
An early answer will greatly oblige me as the Steamer by
which we depart is expected tonight.
I have the honour to be
Y
r Excellency's most obedient humble Ser
t
R.C. Moody
Col RE Com
y
His Excellency the Governor
4. Douglas to Moody, 14 November 1863
I have the honor to acknowledge receipt of your letter of
the
13th Inst acquainting me, in reply to my request,
that
Captain Luard might be instructed to delay his departure
from the Colony so that I could provisionally place him in
charge of the Lands and Works Department, that, as your "orders"
are clear and explicit, you do not well see how you can take
on yourself to leave an Officer behind.
2. I have also received your further letter of this date
in which you offer—if I consider it indispensable—to select an
Officer of Royal Engineers to remain behind in charge of the Lands
and Works Dt but you urge me not to require it unless indispensable.
3. I should be sorry to ask you to take any step that
might conflict with the orders you have received. My object
in begging you to cause
Captn Luard to postpone his departure
was simply to forward the Public Service. If the Secretary of
State approves my recommendation, and makes arrangement for
the appointment of
Captn Luard, not only—if
Captain Luardnow now
proceeds to England—will additional cost be incurred for his
return passage, but the Colony will be the longer deprived of
a professional head to the
Dt of Lands and Works. If
the Secretary of State does not appoint him, after you have
left him behind, the only inconvenience, in a military point
of view that I can see is, that
Captain Luard may arrive in
England a month or so after the rest of the Detachment. No
additional expense would be incurred, and the Colony in the
meantime would receive the benefit of his Services; and so
far as the Military question is concerned I venture to think
the arrangements of the War Office and Horse Guards will not
be impinged, as these arrangements distinctly contemplate
the withdrawal of the Troops at the end of the year.
I have the honour to be Sir,
Your most obedient Ser
t
James Douglas