 
                  
                  
                     Mr Fortescue
                     These extra allowances to our Army and Navy in different parts of the
                     World, depending on no fixed rule either as to their amount or as to
                     the places where they are to be given or withheld, constitute an
                     anomaly of recent growth, and one which may sooner or later prove
                     very inconvenient.  You are familiar with the subject on account of
                     your researches in the Committee of last Session.  In India the
                     Troops always had double pay.  In the Colonies (except Ceylon so
                     close as it is to India) neither Soldiers nor Sailors, so far as I am
                     aware, had any extra pay until the Gold discoveries in Australia.
                     Those created a demand which it was impossible to resist for
                     additional allowances.  They were not only just in themselves, but
                     had they been refused, our forces might have melted away by
                     desertion.  Afterwards the Troops got extra pay at the 
Cape, and they have
it
 it likewise in some of the other Colonies.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     As to the Navy they receive extra allowances from Colonial sources in
                     Australia, but I fear that we have no very clear account of their
                     rate, and I cannot at present remember an instance of extra allowances
                     to the Navy in other Colonies.  In India I believe that they have
                     Batta as the Army has, and possibly in China during the War.  But on
                     the subject of India I speak without accurate information.
                     
                  
                  
                     If the Navy are to have extra allowances in any other Colonies
                     besides Australia, I suppose that the gold-producing regions of
                     
British Columbia & 
Vancouver's Island would have the best claim to
                     such an advantage, but you are aware that the public revenues of
                     those Colonies are small; and on the other hand I should hardly think
                     that Parliament could be asked to vote different rates of pay from
                     England for 
the Queen's Forces afloat, being as
those
 those Forces are by
                     their very nature erratic and liable to be constantly moved from one
                     part of the world to another.
                     
                     The more I think of it, the greater appear to me the general objections
                     to establishing extra allowances to the Navy.  The plea in the case
                     of Soldiers was the extra expense of living in certain colonies.  But
                     in the case of Sailors, victuals, clothes, even luxuries, are carried
                     about in the same ship with them, the first issuable as rations, the
                     other saleable to them at a fixed price:  they have nothing to do
                     with their money on shore except to spend it, as unhappily the poor
                     fellows do, in boundless riot and extravagance.  Local dearness
                     therefore does not affect Sailors as it does Soldiers.
                     
                  
                  
                     I may also add that in an excellent report which I have seen of a
                     Departmental Committee, it is shown that the high price of living in
                     some Colonies compared with others has been greatly exaggerated.
                     
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     Duke of Newcastle
                     The question must I think, be decided by the Admiralty.  It must,
                     however,

 be admitted that 
V. Id at this moment affords the strongest
                     case, probably, that can be made out in any Colony for extra
                     allowances—and if the Admiralty sh[ould] think that they are
                     necessary, or tell us that the Gunboats cannot be kept at 
V. Id
                     without them, I would give them, rather than deprive the two Colonies
                     of the invaluable services of these little vessels.