Hudson's Bay House
                     
                  
               January 27th 1852
               
               My Lord,
                
            
            
            
               I have to acknowledge the receipt of a letter from 
Mr Under
                  Secretary Peel transmitting to me a Copy of a letter from the Secretary
               of the Aborigines Society with a petition from certain Indians and half
               castes located in the 
Red River Settlement and stating that your
               Lordship will be happy to receive any observations I may have to make on
               that Petition.
               
 
            
            
            
               The Petition, from which the 4th paragraph appears to have been
               omitted, embraces the following allegations, namely
               
               
               1st  That two individuals have been imprisoned.
               
               2nd  That the principal trade of the Settlement is
               monopolized by the Hudson's Bay Company.
               
               3rd  That a certain Petition has been got up by
               unjustifiable means.
               
               4th  That the Members of Council are unduly influenced
               by the Company.
               
               
            
            
            
               With respect to the first of 
these
these allegations I have only to
               observe that it is to be presumed that the proceedings adopted in the
               cases alluded to were in due course of law, the contrary not being
               alleged by the Petitioners.
               
 
            
            
            
               To the allegation that the Company monopolize the principal trade
               of the Colony I give the most positive contradiction. So far indeed is
               this from being true, that the sole object the Company had in view in
               opening a Sale Store in the Settlement was to benefit the Settlers who
               would otherwise have been at the mercy of the private dealers as to the
               prices of all imported goods. There is no restriction whatever either
               on the importation or sale of British goods.
               
            
            
            
               The trade in furs secured by Charter is the only exclusive trade
               carried on by the Company, and it is one of the conditions under which
               land has been granted to Settlers that they shall not interfere in the
               Fur Trade with Indians.
               
            
            
            
               In regard to the Petition stated to have been got up for the
               benefit of the Company to which signatures are said to have been
               
fraudulently
fraudulently appended the Directors have never till now heard of such a
               Petition nor are they aware either of its nature or objects. All
               therefore that I can say is that enquiry will be made respecting it.
               
 
            
            
            
               On the subject of the influence exercised by the Company over
               Members of Council I have to remark that the circumstance of two or
               three of the Council holding Municipal Offices, the expence of which
               ought to fall upon the Settlers but from which they are relieved by the
               Company, affords no justification for the charge of corruption so
               wantonly brought against them by the Petitioners. In the appointment of
               Councillors the Company have had solely in view the good government of
               the Colony and have always selected the best educated and most
               respectable members of the community—Men whom intelligence and stake in
               the country pointed them out as fittest for the Office, and my firm
               belief is that although they may not have satisfied the unreasonable
               demands of that portion of the population who have 
suffered
suffered themselves
               to have been misled by turbulent demagogues, they have done their duty
               conscientiously and uprightly.
               
 
            
            
            
               Having thus noticed the particular points adverted to in the
               Petition I have only to observe that if the Petitioners suffer evils as
               they state in the preamble to their Petition, the evils are of their own
               creation and not owing to the Government of the Hudson's Bay Company;
               and that the remedy does not lie in the Municipal changes which they
               demand, but in a change in their own habits and in the Institution of
               regular industry for the precarious returns of the chase of the Buffalo
               and the desultory mode of life to which they have addicted themselves.
               
            
            
            
               Were it necessary for me to vindicate the Government of the
               Hudson's Bay Company from the charge of oppression I would refer to the
               parliamentary papers contained in the Return to an Address of the House
               of Commons dated 
Feby 9th 1849; but I shall content myself with
               the following quotation from the letter of 
Colonel Crofton to 
Mr
                  Under Secretary Hawes at page 101.
               
 
            
            
            
               "I unhesitatingly assert, that the Government of the Hudsons Bay
               
Company
Company is mild and protective, and admirably adapted in my opinion, for
               the state of society existing in 
Prince Rupert's Land, where Indians, half-breeds and Europeans are happily governed, and live protected
               by
               laws which I know were mercifully and impartially administered by 
Mr
                  Thorn the Recorder and by the Magistrates of the land."
               
 
            
            
               I have the honour to be
               
               My Lord
               
               Your Lordship's mo. obed
t humble Servant
               
               
J.H. Pelly
               
               
               
                
            
            
            
            
            
               Minutes by CO staff
               
               
                  
                  
                     Mr Merivale
                     The omission of the paragraph in the copy sent to 
Sir John Pelly was no
                     doubt accidental. It refers to the administration of 
Major Caldwell,
                     the late Governor of the 
Red River Settlement. The Petition is
                     addressed to The Queen & will therefore I presume require a formal
                     acknowledgment?
                     
 
                  
                  
                   
               
               
               
                  
                  
                     Stating that HLp has not thought fit to give any direction
                     thereupon. Or making any more particular answer to the Aborigines
                     Protection Society?
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
               
                  
                  
                     This society is not one entitled to any peculiar considerat
n &
                     having chosen to adopt the very irregular course of trying to submit the
                     petit
n through 
Colonel Phipps have no right to expect an answer. Put
                     by.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                   
                
            
            
               
                  People in this document
                  
                        Caldwell, Major William Bletterman
                        
                  
                        Crofton, Lieutenant Colonel John
                        
                  
                        Grey, Right Honorable, Second Baronet, Sir George
                        
                  
                        Grey, Third Earl,  Henry George 
                  
                        Hawes, Benjamin
                  
                        Hornby, Sir Admiral Phipps
                        
                  Jadis, Vane
                  Merivale, Herman
                  
                        Peel, Sir Frederick
                        
                  
                        Pelly, Sir John Henry
                        
                  
                        Thorn, Adam
                        
                
               
                  Places in this document
                  Red River Settlement
                  Rupert's Land