I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of
Mr Merivale's
Letter, dated Downing Street,
31st March 1858, transmitting a
copy of a letter from the Secretary to the Admiralty respecting
the sale to a private individual of certain property which had
been used by the Naval Authorities, and also copies of your
Lordship's reply thereto and of a Despatch which your Lordship
has addressed to
Governor Douglas upon the subject.
In reply I beg to express my regret that the Colonial Surveyor,
Mr Pemberton, should have taken upon himself to dispose of the
small Island in question, without consulting
Governor Douglas.
Had he done so I have no doubt that the sale would not have
been
been
effected, in as much as in consequence of a communication
received from the
Rt Honble Henry Labouchere, then Secretary
of State for the Colonies, under date the
14th Novemr 1855,
instructions were sent by the Hudson's Bay Company to
Governor Douglas, on the
10th December of that year, to make no sales of
land in the vicinity of
Esquimalt Harbour.
Under these circumstances I beg to state for your Lordship's
information that the Committee of the Hudson's Bay Company will
decline to complete the Sale, and the Island in question will be
reserved for the use of the Naval authorities.