No. 7
               
            
            
            
            
               I have received your predecessor's despatch No. 14 of the 
4th
                  ultimo accompanied by three Ordinances of the Legislature of 
British
                  Columbia including No. 9 of 
1864 intituled
               
               An Ordinance to encourage the
               construction of a telegraph line connecting 
British Columbia with
the
 the
               telegraph lines of the United States and for other purposes.
               
               
               I observe that by the 5th clause of this Ordinance there is secured
               to the California State Telegraph Company, for a period of twenty years
               after the completion of a certain telegraph line, the exclusive right of
               sending and receiving
messages
 messages between any place within the Colony of
               
British Columbia and any other place within the territory of the United
               States of America to the West of the 
Rocky Mountains.
               
               From the Parliamentary Paper noted in the margin
               
               
               
               
               of which a copy is enclosed you will learn (what from the correspondence
               between this department and 
Mr.Collins Collins
 Collins, respecting the construction of
               a telegraph line to 
British Columbia across the North of Asia, which
               correspondence was communicated to you on the 
10th of February last, you
               will already have inferred) that Her Majesty's Government are unable to
               sanction the establishment of any exclusive
privileges
 privileges in regard to
               telegraphic communication, and you cannot fail to see that the strict
               enforcement of this principle is peculiarly indispensable in 
British
                  Columbia through which Her Majesty's Government may have to communicate
               in very critical times and on very important matters with Her Majesty's
Naval
               Naval Forces on the Pacific.  It will therefore be impossible that the
               5th clause of the Ordinance under consideration should be allowed to
               remain in operation, and the California State Telegraph Company should
               be at once so informed.
               
               I have hesitated to recommend the immediate disallowance of this
               Ordinance
because
 because it appears to me that by allowing it for the present
               to remain in operation I shall facilitate those negotiations between the
               Government and the Company which will be necessary to provide either for
               the continuance or for the abandonment of the enterprise.
               
               I hope that you
will
 will be able to make arrangements under which the
               understanding may proceed, but it must be clearly understood that the
               exclusive right of telegraphic communication can under no circumstances
               be allowed, and that if the clause giving that right be not repealed I
               shall have no other alternative left than
that
 that of advising Her Majesty
               to disallow the whole Ordinance.
               
               Other documents included in the file
               
                
                  
                  
                  
                     18 June 1858, Schedules and extracts of correspondence between the Secretary of State and North
                     American colonies on the subject of "giving an Exclusive Right to the Establishment
                     of Telegraphic Communication between this Country and North America to one Company."