No. 3
I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your despatch No 4,
of the
20th of August 1852, conveying your approval of the measures
which were adopted for the protection of the Roman Catholic Priest, who
had commenced a Missionary Settlement in the
Cowegin Country, and it is
satisfactory to observe that you also concur in the propriety of the
views, entertained by this Government in respect to discouraging the
formation of Missionary stations beyond the limits of the settlements.
Mr
Mr Demers a native of the British Province of Canada, who is
invested with the Title of Roman Catholic Bishop of
Vancouver's Island,
arrived in this Colony some months ago, accompanied by several other
Priests of the same religious persuasion, with the object of
establishing Missions among the native Tribes of
Vancouver's Island.
These gentlemen have not yet made much progress, nor in fact made
any decided attempt to convert the Natives; except in the vicinity of
Victoria and even here, their intercourse with them is not general; the
greater part of their time being more usefully devoted to the
instruction of the French Canadian Settlers, and their families, a class
with which they possess a great and most salutary influence, which is
happily directed to the elevation of the moral character of the Members
of their Church, and to the encouragement of industry, sobriety, and
obedience to the Laws.
I have the honour to be Sir
Your most obed
t Servant
James Douglas
Governor
The Right Honorable
Sir John S Packington Bar
t
Her Majestys principal Secretary of State
For the Colonial Department