I have received a communication from the Governor & Directors of
               the Hudsons bay Company 
               
                  Copy to Hudson's Bay Compy for considr 3 Sept/51
                stating, that they and the Puget Sound Company
               are about to occupy some land in 
this Island and that the sum of Four thousand pounds is to be expended on public buildings, under
               my
               
direction, subject to the 
approval, and sanction of their Agent, and
               further indicating the neighbourhood of their own posts as the place
               where such buildings are to be erected.
Unless the colony is intended to be merely an enlarged depot of
               the Hudsons bay company which I do not conceive was the intention of Her
               Majesty's Government in making the grant of 
the Island, it will be a
               waste of public money to expend it in the way they indicate, as the
               public buildings will then be surrounded by thei
r Reserves 
which
which they
               are neither prepared to use or sell.
The Large tract of land called their Reserves, of about thirty
               square miles in extent includes the only part of 
the Island, in the
               
Straights of Fuca, in 
the any way adapted for the first settlement, there
               are other large tracts on the 
Canal de Arro, and 
the gulf of Georgia but
               they are at present so inaccessible that their settlement and occupation
               must be gradual. The quantity of land at 
Soke is too small to make it
               of any importance and the rest of the coast is one mass of rock without
               harbours. The Hudson's bay company does not profess to require all
               these Reserves, either for its own purposes or those of the Puget Sound
               Company, but say they cannot tell what portions of them they may require
               till surveys have been sent to them in England. These surveys they have
               taken no steps at all to obtain, they have never even engaged a
               surveyor. A 
Mr Grant, who had studied for a short time at the
               Military College at Sandhurst, commenced a survey of part of the
               Companys land last summer, but it was discontinued and has never been
               resumed. The Agent here tells me that he expects a surveyor from Canada
               in the autumn if one can be engaged, supposing that he does come, the
               winter rains will prevent any operations till the following spring,
               which will 
bring it
bring it far into the fourth year of the Hudson's bay
               Company's possession of 
the Island. In the meantime these Reserves effectually prevent any bona fide colonists from
               settling.
No site for a Town has ever been mentioned, and indeed till the
               question of the Reserves is settled it would be useless to select one,
               for by refusing to sell the land around it, taking it as their own and
               setting an extravagant price on it, as they have already done near
               
Victoria they will completely isolate and prevent the occupation of any such town. When a
               Town site shall be selected, that will be the place
               for the public buildings not in the vicinity of the Companys posts
               where there is no probability of a population ever gathering beyond a
               few of their own servants. Until such site be selected and the
               adjoining land brought into the market fairly, I do not think it will be
               expedient or even just to the future prospects of the colony to expend
               the produce of the land sales on buildings,
               I have the honor to be
               
               Your Lordships Most Obedient Servant
               
               
Richard Blanshard G
overnor
               
               Minutes by CO staff
 
               
               
                  
                  Mr Merivale
                     I apprehend that the 
Govt has no power to prevent the Hudson's Bay C
o spending it's own money in the erection of buildings on the Lands
                     granted to it by the Crown, which expenditure, it may allege, is conducive to the
                     settlement of 
the Island. But the inconvenience of an ill judged expenditure will probably be felt when the
                     
Govt resumes, if it shall ever do so, possession of 
the Island, & has to pay the C
o
                     the value of it's property.
 
                  
                  
                  
                   
               
               
               
                  
                  Mr Hawes
                     I have detained this some time in the expectation of farther accounts.
                     It seems to me that inasmuch as Government is bound to repay the Company
                     (in a certain event) the value of its improvements, Government has an
                     implied right to inspect & control the buildings &c which are
                     undertaken: nor do I see anything in the grant to contradict this. The
                     difficulty is that as the Governor does not forward copies of the
                     "communications" he receives from the Company, we cannot judge whether
                     they are accurately represented. Forward this for explanation to the
                     Company, at the same time observing as above? Although the new Governor
                     is a servant of the Company, still the fact of its being a duty imposed
                     on him by Government to control this kind of expenditure will be some
                     check on him.
 
                  
                  
                  
                   
               
               
               
                  
                  
                  A 14 This requires some consideration. Has the Cy ansd the last enquiry as to their proceedings in fulfilment of the conditions of the Charter?
                  
                  
                  
                   
               
               
               
                
            
            
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
 
               
               
                  
                  
                     Draft, Colonial Office to 
Pelly, 
3
                        September 1851, forwarding copy of the despatch and stating that government has the implied right
                     to "exercise some controul and inspection over the Public Works to be undertaken."