How it was that
Mr Cooper obtained
Sir E. Lytton's favor,
who recommended him, or what the man had done to entitle him to
any office at all I could never learn. However when
B. Columbia
was formed into a Colony
Mr Cooper, who had been a Captain of
a trading vessel and a resident at
V.C. Id was to have been
made Collector of Customs. The rumour of this appointment having
reached the ears of the Hudson's Bay C
o, they personally and
by Letter represented that
Mr Cooper both had been & then was
in their debt. From the statement of the C
o Mr Coopers
transactions in other respects did not appear in a very favorable
light. He was
called upon for an explanation.
Mr Merivale
fully investigated it, and came to the conclusion that it was
not satisfactory enough to justify an office of pecuniary
trust being conferred on him. So in a short time the Harbor
Master Ship of
B. Columbia (where there really was no harbor
& consequently nothing to do) was created for him. Salary £400 a year.
The Collector's Office is now £650. At first the Collectors
Salary was £400.
Mr Cooper, who resided in
V.C.I. having been
called upon to go & live at
New Westminster with other
B.C. officials,
remonstrated against this order, but was overruled. He has
since that time lived, I suppose, at
N.Wr, holding a perfect
sinecure office. He now complains that he has lost money by
his apptment to the Office of Harbor Master instead of that of
Collector of Customs, & asks for compensation for the money
loss he computes himself to have sustained. He refers to me
as having heard
Sir E. Lytton promise him an appointment of
"equal honor & emolument." If those terms have been used in
the correspondence they
wd be much in favor of
Mr Cooper's
view: I can not say that I recollect the employment by
Sir E.L.
of the expression quoted. If they are not in the correspondence,
which should be looked to, I can only say that, in my opinion,
Mr Cooper has preferred a monstrous claim. But a precis of
the corresp
ce had better be prepared, as I am only writing
from memory.