I beg to acknowledge the receipt of
Copy to Gov Hudson's Bay Compy for r 3 Sept/51 for consid
your Lordships despatch No 3,
of
29 June 1850 transmitting the public seal of the colony of
Vancouvers Island, and Her Majesty's warrant and sign manual authorizing and
directing its use.
I have also to acknowledge the receipt of your Lordships despatch
No 4 of
16 July 1850 approving of my reasons for deferring the
nomination of a council for the present and pointing out the expediency
of establishing the council and other prescribed institutions without
any
unnecessaryunnecessary delay —
I can assure your Lordship that I am deeply impressed with a sense
of the expediency of the prescribed measures, but I regret to add that
there is at present a total want of the necessary materials either for a
council or for any other legislative, or executive appointments, The
whole tendency of the system pursued by the Hudson's bay Company being
to exclude free settlers, and reserve
the Island either as an enlarged post of their own, or a desert.
I have received a communication from the Hudsons bay Company
stating that no salaries are to be paid out of the proceeds of the land
sales, but must be raised in
the Island either by taxes on imports, or otherwise. This is in fact repudiating the clause
in their grant which
binds them to provide, at their own expense, all necessary civil and
military establishments,
their own arrangements tend to prevent a tax paying population settling here, and
that the harbours shall be open to
all nations for the purposes of trade is prominently put forward in the
prospectus they have published.
Reports are current of gold having been found by the Cowitchin
Indians, in the
Arro Canal, but they are so vague as scarcely to
deserve notice,
Minutes by CO staff
Mr Merivale
The
Charter Grant provides that the Company shall defray the entire expense of any Civil and
Military Establishments, but it neither authorizes nor
forbids the imposition of taxes.
It also devotes all the fund arising from land sales (except 10 per
cent) to the "colonization & improvement of the island." It is not very
clear whether these words would include the expenses of civil government
or not. In the present instance however the Governor, by not annexing
the "communication" he has received from the Company, has made it
impossible to take any definite steps: we do not know what salaries are
in question. Probably this desp. had better be referred to the Company
for explanation?
Other documents included in the file
Draft, Colonial Office to
Pelly,
3 September 1851, forwarding copy of
Blanshard's despatch for observation.