I have the honour to acknowledge the receipt of 
Mr Merivale's letter
               of the 
24th ulto in which he acquaints me that before communicating
               to the Admiralty my letter of the 
10th ulto on the subject of the
               Sale of 
Thetis Island you would be glad to have some further
               explanation on one point. 
Mr Merivale then observes that by the
               return forwarded with 
Captain Shepherd's letter of 
July 15th 1858,
               the only lot of 24 acres sold at 
Esquimalt is stated to have been
               sold to the Hudson's Bay Company, and he adds
               "that as the subsequent sale by Auction, was not made by the Company
               or any one acting for them" he infers that, "the lot must have passed
               into the hands of some intermediate possessors."
               
               In answer I beg to state that 
Thetis Island is a portion of the lot
               of 24 acres on 
Esquimalt Bay
Bay which appears in 
Captain Shepherd's
               return as having been sold to "The Hudson's Bay Company".  But the
               entry in the return in question is a mistake which seems to have
               originated with the Colony Surveyor who in reporting the sale used
               the words "Hudson's Bay Company" in place of the words "
James Douglas
               and 
John Work as Trustees for the Fur Trade" which is a subordinate
               branch of the Hudson's Bay Company.
               
               The history of the transaction is this.  In 
1856 it was felt by
               
Governor Douglas that one of the great impediments to the
               Colonization of 
Vancouver's Island was the rule laid down by the
               Government when the Grant of the Island was made to the Hudson's Bay
               Company, by which they were prohibited from disposing of inappropriated
               land to Settlers in lots of less than 20 acres.  To obviate this
               inconvenience 
Mr Douglas suggested that he and 
Mr Work another head
               Officer of the Hudson's Bay Company in the Island should as Trustees
               for the Fur Trade branch of the Company purchase one or more lots of
               public land for the purpose of disposing of them afterwards at the
               original cost, in small allotments to working people desirous of
               
becoming
becoming Settlers but unable to purchase larger lots.  Accordingly
               two or three lots were purchased for the purpose by "The Fur Trade"
               and among them Lot 53 (of which 
Thetis Island is a part) and which
               was sold in 5 acre lots with the exception of 
Thetis Island itself
               (which consists of only one acre) and which was sold separately to a
               person of the name of 
Jeremiah Nagle as may be seen by the return
               made by the Governor of this Company to the Government on the 
23rd
                  January 1858 where it figures under the head of "Suburban Lots N
o
               35" with the price paid namely "£1:0:10.  Herewith I have the honour of
               enclosing extracts from letters addressed by 
Governor Douglas to the
               Secretary of this Company in which the whole course of the affair
               is traced.  In the first (dated 
March 5th 1856) is set forth an
               account of the purchase of the 24 acres in question and the object of
               the purchase; in the second (dated 
4th June 1857) an account is
               given of the subsequent purchase of a still larger lot with similar
               views; and the third, dated 
July 9, 1858 gives the latest account we
               
have
have received from the Island as to the position of the affair.
               These Extracts make the object of all parties so clear that it is
               unnecessary for me to add a word.
               
               With respect to the subsequent sale by Auction all that has come to
               our knowledge is the fact that 
Mr Jeremiah Nagle the purchaser of
               
Thetis Island having afterwards got into difficulties had made over
               that and other property to his Creditors, and as it appears from the
               letter from the Secretary of the Admiralty to 
Mr Merivale which you
               did me the honor to transmit to me that a Sale by Auction of the
               Island had taken place as late as the 
16th of January of the present
               year, we have inferred that the Sale must have been made at the
               instance of 
Mr Nagle's Creditors.