Abstract
                  
                  Public Offices document. 
                     Minutes (3), Enclosures (untranscribed) (1), Other documents (2).
                  
                  
                     Berens forwards to 
Lytton a copy of Reverend 
Cridge’s letter on renewing his position as colonial chaplain, and observes that since “the
                     grant of 
Vancouver's Island has been withdrawn from the Hudson's Bay Company,” the question of 
Cridge’s renewal is a government matter. 
Berens then endorses 
Cridge’s renewal.
 
                  
                  In the minutes, 
Blackwood suggests that 
Berens’s letter be sent to “the Governor” of 
Vancouver Island, 
Douglas at the time, to direct him to pay for 
Cridge’s renewal from his own funds, or through the House of Assembly. 
Merivale argues that to have the Governor pay for 
Cridge “is in fact to initiate a ‘State Church,’” something he notes as “most unpopular
                     to North Americans,” and he recommends the decision be deferred to “the Legislature
                     of 
Vanc. I.” 
Carnarvon agrees with 
Merivale and notes 
Cridge’s entitlement “to a passage home,” should the Legislature decline 
Cridge’s renewal.
The first of the three documents included in the file is a draft reply, from 
Lytton to 
Douglas, which asks that the matter of 
Cridge’s reappointment as chaplain be “the decision of the Legislature of 
the Island;” second is a draft letter, from 
Merivale to 
Berens, advising that the question of 
Cridge’s renewal be decided by the Vancouver Island legislature; third is a copy of a letter,
                     from 
Cridge to 
Douglas, that expresses 
Cridge’s desire “to enter into a fresh Agreement” as chaplain.