I beg to enclose you a copy of my last letter, 
April 8. 1850, since
               which time no opportunity has occurred of dispatching letters with any
               degree of certainty. 
               
                  Copy to Hudsons Bay Compy for informn 21 Sept/50.
                     Ackd 23 Oct /50 No 5
                Nothing of importance has since occurred in the
               colony, no settlers or immigrants have arrived nor have any land sales
               been effected. Coal has not yet been discovered, though the miners have
               not yet, I am happy to say, abandoned all hope.
An American Company have commenced running a line of Mail steam
               packets between 
San Francisco and Oregon, they have not yet decided what
               port in Oregon will be their terminus, Could coal have been supplied
               from 
Vancouvers Island they would have chosen 
Nisqually in 
Pugets Sound,
               which would have greatly facilitated the communication between
               
Vancouvers Island and England, but as it cannot be obtained, they will
               probably select 
Portland on the 
Columbia river. The Hudsons Bay Company
               have commenced a survey of the land reserved to themselves, which is
               bounded by a line drawn nearly due North from the head of 
Victoria
               harbour to a hill 

marked on the charts as 
Cedar Hill, or 
Mount Douglas,
               and thence running due East to the 
Canal de Arro. The extent is
               estimated at about ten miles (square). A tract adjoining, of similar
               extent is reserved for the Puget Sound Agricultural Association, the
               Hudson Bay company under another name, for the Association has no real
               existence, this last contains the harbour of 
Esquimalt, the only harbour
               in the southern part of 
the Island worthy of notice, as it is of large extent, has good anchorage, is easy of access
               at all times and in all
               weather, is well watered and in many places the water is of sufficient
               depth to allow ships anchoring along shore. 
Victoria Harbour where the
               Hudson's Bay Companys settlement is established, is very small the
               entrance is narrow, tortuous, and shallow, no vessels can enter except
               at high tide with favourable wind and weather, and there is no water
               near, the water required for the servants of the Hudson's Bay Company is
               brought from a distance of two miles, and during summer and autumn they
               are kept on allowance as at sea.
I have recieved news from Oregon, of the discovery of very rich
               gold mines on the 
Spokan River the whole population of that territory
               are flocking to the spot; should the favourable accounts of these mines
               prove correct, I fear that it will draw away all the Hudson's Bay
               Company's servants from 
Vancouvers Island, and at present they 

form the
               entire population.