I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of
Mr Under Secretary
Merivales letter of the
24th ulto. accompanied by Copies of a
Correspondence between him and the Secretary of the Admiralty and
requesting this Company to take such steps as may be in their power
to forward the wishes of the Lords of the Admiralty.
In answer I beg to state that
Thetis Island was included in a Sale
made by
Governor Douglas early in 1856 before he was in receipt of
the Communications addressed to him by this Company desiring that no
further sales should be made of Land in the
Esquimalt District. The
SaleSale in question was of 24 acres including
the Island and produced
£24—which sum is included in the return of Sales made by the Company
to the Colonial Office.
According [to?] the Returns here the [cut off file] Lot
of 24 [acres?] in the
Esquimalt District [was?] to the H.B.C.
The Sale by Auction which is referred to in the letter of the
Secretary of the Admiralty to
Mr Merivale of the
17th ulto. was not
made by this Company or any one acting for them but must have taken
place in connection with the purchase made in the early part of 1856
before referred to.
We are aware that in the correspondence
that has taken place on this subject it has been stated that the
Government or those representing them had been in actual possession
of
Thetis Island for a considerable time before the grant to this
Company—but it is clear that
Mr Douglas had no knowledge of such
occupancy or he would not have disposed of it and it is equally clear
that this
CompanyCompany was unrestricted as to the Sale of any Land
included in the grant to them except what was required for Public
purposes or for Naval establishments but then as suggested by
Mr
Merivale's Letter to the Secretary of the Admiralty of the
31st
March last it was incumbent upon the proper authorities to give
notice to this Company that any portion of the Land was so required
and till such Notice was given the authority of the Company to sell
was without restriction.
I regret very much that the intimation given to this Company to that
effect by
Mr Merivale's letter of the
14th November 1855 was not
received in time to have enabled them to have prevented the Sale of
the Land in question. They at one time had supposed that the object
had been attained, but their subsequent Communications with
Mr
Douglas have put it beyond all doubt that the Island in question had
been sold
beforebefore he had received the instructions of the Directors of
this Company to abstain from any more Sales in the
Esquimalt
District.
Minutes by CO staff
I am afraid the Admiralty have lost a valuable site by their own
neglect in this matter, and that we cannot help them. But a query
suggested by
Mr Jadis seems to me worth following up farther, & I
propose a draft accordingly.
Other documents included in the file
Draft,
Merivale to
Berens,
24 February 1859, requesting further
clarification respecting the initial sale of the island.