In the letter which I had the honour to address to Your Lordship
under the date of the
*
9th Instant, I confined myself to
answering your communication of the 4
th. I now beg leave to
draw your Lordship's attention to your letter of the
†31
st July,
in which you state that you would direct the draft of a
commission and instructions for the Governor of the proposed
settlement in
Vancouver's Island to be prepared without delay and communicated to me, intimating at the same time
that you
would be glad to receive
from me an expression of my opinion as
to the person who may most properly be recommended to Her
Majesty for the office of Governor.
In accordance with your Lordship's wish, I take the liberty of
recommending
Mr James Douglas, the gentleman whose Report on
Vancouver's Island appears among the papers relating to that Island laid before Parliament.
Mr Douglas is a man of property, a Chief Factor of the Hudson's
Bay Company, and a member of the Board at
Fort Vancouver for Managing
the Company's affairs in the country westward of the
Rocky Mountains.
I do not propose this as a permanent appointment, but merely as a
temporary expedient until the colony can afford to pay a Governor
unconnected with the Hudson's Bay Company.