To Benjamin Hawes Esq
e Secretary
               
               
               
               
               Sir,
               I have the honour to inform you that I am a British
               subject, being born in Canada, and that on the 
seventeenth day of July
                  one thousand eight hundred and forty six I was nominated and since have
               been consacrated Roman Catholic Bishop of 
Vancouver's Island.
I have the happiness to be one of the two first Missionaries sent out to 
Oregon where I have performed the 
               
sacred duties of the Ministry among the French 
Canadians and the Natives of that country for ten years.
No doubt but you know that a certain 
number of Canadians, after
               leaving the Hudson's Bay 
Company's service have been settling with their
               families in the 
Wallamet Valley which now belongs to the United States.
               On my leaving 
Oregon some of them were 
telling me they would willingly
               go and settle on 
Vancouver's   Island
Island, would the Company allow them to do
               so. I have great reason to believe that the establishment of a Catholic
               Mission on 
the Island will cause many of them, as well as those that
               will be let free, to settle on it: which they would not do if they had
               no prospect of having Clergymen amongst them.
The state of things being so I will now take the liberty to expose
               to you my present situation: in the whole territory committed to my
               care their are about fifty thousands of Indians, of whom I may say four
               thousands are already enrolled under the sacred banner of Christianity.
            
            
            Having not a single Missionery to help me I saw the necessity of
               coming over to Europe to find the means to bring a certain number of
               Clergymen that would devote themselves and follow me; a passage for each
               one of them will cost me seventy five pounds. Nothing is done yet, I
               have got no house, no place of worship put up . . .
               
            
            
            These informations may lead you to the object I have in view in
               giving them: I am aware 

that several Roman Catholic Bishops in the
               British possessions are allowed a yearly some of money by Her Gracious
               Majesty's Government; a motive that 
encourages me in asking for the same favour, and I am in hopes that it will be extended to the
               poor Mission
               of 
Vancouver's Island, where nothing shall be spared of what can promote
               the welfare, both spiritual and temporal of Her Majesty's subjects in
               that remoted part of Her 
Dominions.
Please lay this letter before His Lordship the Minister of the
               Colonies.
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
               Minutes by CO staff
 
               
               
                  
                  Mr Elliot
                     
                     I think the writer should be informed that Parliament has made no
                     provision for the maintenance of a R.C. Bishop at 
VanCouver's Island, & that it is necessary that he should address himself on topics
                     relating to the interests of that Settlement 
on this object to the Chairman of the
                     Hudson's Bay Company, as the management of it's affairs belong to that
                     body.
 
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                     (He was mentioned to me formally by 
Mr Quillin, a respectable old Priest from Canada.)
                     
 
                
            
            
            
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
                
                  
                  Draft, Colonial Office to 
Demers, 
12 September 1850, advising that he should address his request to the chairman of the Hudson's Bay
                     Company.