Confidential
Downing Street
24 March 1859
Sir,
I have had occasion since the date of my despatch of the
15th
February last to refer again to your despatch
N
o 49 of
the
11th December
in which you report that you had appointed a Harbor Master and Pilot for
Victoria; and as although you have reported to me the arrival of
Mr
Cooper whom I had previously appointed Master at
Esquimalt for
British
Columbia, you have not yet informed me that he has assumed his office.
I think it necessary to address you on the subject of the position of
that gentleman.
If the appointment which you have made shall have provided
sufficiently for all the duties of Harbor Master for the two Colonies at
a smaller expense than the salary of £400 assigned to
Mr Cooper, I
refer to the discretion given you by my despatch of the
2nd September
either to combine his services at
Esquimalt with some other office in
British Columbia, or to alter the title of his office, with which view I
abstained from sending you a warrant for his appointment.
But I must acquaint you
that I consider that in sending out
Mr
Cooper, the faith of the government is pledged to his appointment to an
office of the value promised, and that from the circumstances that
Mr
Cooper's evidence of the capabilities of the country contributed much to
its erection into a Colony, any delay or obstruction to his appointment
would be regarded as owing to the hostility he may have provoked from
the Hudson's Bay Company, and would lead to difficulties and enquiries
which it might be desirable to avoid. The great desire you have
expressed that the officers appointed from England might be strangers to
the Colony would afford us grounds for the now appointment of
Mr
Cooper, and I trust by the next Mail to hear that he has been appointed
to some place for which he may be fitted.