No. 23
11th January 1867
My Lord,
I informed Your Lordship in my despatch No. 1 of
20th
of November that I had been received with great coldness in
Victoria, with considerable warmth in
New Westminster.
2. I
2. I considered it advisable to return, shortly after
Union had been effected, to the former town and endeavor to
remove the suspicion with which my assumption of the Government
of the Island was evidently received. Duties too, of a very
important and far from pleasant nature, required my presence
in the Capital of the late Colony of
Vancouver Island. I had
to prepare measures for the amalgamation of the
laws laws of the two
sections of the community. To fuse into one two distinct staffs of
Public Officers and to provide without Legislative assistance
for many difficult details which it would have been impossible
for Your Lordship to have foreseen—No Appropriation Act had been
passed. The conflict of some of the Laws of the two Sections
of the Colony rendered it necessary for me in more than one
instance to take very extraordinary
powers into my
hands hands. These questions will form the subjects
of distinct reports. The despatch which I am now writing has
for its object only to inform you of the improved relations now
subsisting between the inhabitants of
Vancouver Island and myself.
3. I have the honor to forward:
1
st An Address presented to me by the New Mayor of
Victoria
and of my reply.
2
ndly One from the Minister and Manager representing
St. St.
Andrews' church in
Victoria and my reply.
4
thly An Address from the people of
Nanaimo.
This last, it will be seen, from my letter to the Chairman of the
Public Meeting I could not, under peculiar circumstances, receive
in person.
4. Various deputations waited on me in reference to
matters
matters of importance and I hope that the replies I gave were
generally satisfactory.
Victoria presents every aspect of
adversity, yet I think a feeling generally prevails that better
days are before us.
5. The British Columbian Customs Act has been extended
over
Vancouver Island without embarrassment. I have established
in obedience to the instructions of Your Lordship's predecessor
a most liberal system of Bonding.
6. It
6. It may seem perhaps a trifling matter to mention officially
but I would beg leave to state that during my months stay in
Victoria I gave three Balls which were very numerously attended.
I do not believe that a single person invited declined to come
for political reasons.
7. The Island press has become moderate in its tone. The
"Evening Telegraph" which excelled all other periodicals in
invective has ceased to exist.
*. I
8. I enclose as a sample of the distrust which prevailed in
regard to my administration a Memorial respecting the removal
of certain Public Offices together with my reply.
I have the honor to be,
My Lord,
Your most obedient,
humble Servant
Frederick Seymour
Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
Seymour to Mayor and Corporation of the City of
Victoria,
response to address.
Address, Minister and Managers of St. Andrew's Church of Scotland
at
Victoria to
Seymour.
Seymour to Minister and Managers of St. Andrew's Church, response
to address.
Newspaper clipping, unnamed, no date, containing "Address from
Cowichan," and
Seymour's response thereto.
Seymour to Inhabitants of
Nanaimo,
28 December 1866, response to
address.
Seymour to
Dunsmuir,
21 December 1866, apologizing that he had
not been able to receive the address in person due to the inclement
weather.
Dunsmuir to
Seymour,
19 December 1866, forwarding the address
and expressing disappointment that the deputation had not been
received on board the
Sparrowhawk.
Seymour to
Dunsmuir,
28 December 1866, again explaining that the
weather had made boarding the vessel unsafe.
Newspaper clipping, unnamed, no date, containing address from
the citizens of
Victoria on the subject of public offices, and
copy of the governor's response thereto.
Other documents included in the file