No. 71, Financial
11 November 1861
I have had the honor to receive Your Grace's Despatch of the
9th
September last N
o 71 upon the subject of the difficulty experienced
in identifying the Bills, drawn by me from time to time, with the
sums and services mentioned in my Despatches
to to the Secretary of State.
2. Your Grace may rest assured that I will endeavor to avoid a
recurrence of this difficulty; but I trust that it has already ceased
to exist, for since the receipt of your Despatch, No 59 of the 12th
June, upon the same subject, we have always been careful to note upon
the Bills themselves the particular service upon which each might be
drawn.
3. The fact of my signing the Bills drawn upon the Paymaster General
from two separate Colonies might perhaps have led to confusion,
but but
with the view of avoiding this, and in order to render the Bills from
each Colony easily distinguishable, the Bill Forms for
Vancouver's Island were printed in
red ink, and those for
British Columbia in
black ink, and each form has the name of the Colony to which it
pertains conspicuously printed at its head.
4. With respect to the different services upon which Bills upon the
Paymaster General have been drawn by me, they are as under
.of 25 From
Vancouver Island To defray Expenses connected with
Military occupation of
San Juan.
.of 25
From
From
British Columbia 1. For Colonial Pay and Expenses of
maintenance of Royal Services.
.of 25
2. For Regimental Pay of Royal
Engineers. The Bills drawn for Regimental Pay have a distinct
series of numbers from those drawn for Colonial Pay &c.
5. Upon every separate occasion of a Bill having been drawn a Letter
of Advice has invariably been forwarded to the Paymaster General
furnishing the N
o, Date, and amount of the Bill, together with the
name of the Payee, and the nature of the service upon which it was
drawn; and indeed such care has always been
taken taken to prevent
inconvenience or confusion that I regret to find our desires to that
end have not been fulfilled.
6. I have in previous Despatches explained the difficulty which
exists in obtaining Coin for Bills. A good market is not yet to be
found here. Frequently weeks elapse before a favorable, or indeed
any offer is made, and then the Bill has generally to be drawn for
the sum particularly wanted by the purchaser. Under such
circumstances it is out of my
power power, when advising Your Grace of
having authorized a certain Sum to be drawn, to give at the same time
the particulars of the Bills which will Eventually make up the
amount; but if Your Grace should desire it I can afterwards from time
to time acquaint you as the Bills may be negociated, although I
venture to submit that the concurrent advice to the Paymaster General
should have the practical effect of rendering the Bills
easy easy of
recognition.
I have the honor to be
My Lord Duke,
Your Grace's most obedient
and humble Servant
James Douglas
Minutes by CO staff
Mr Elliot
Send to the Treasury for information—see 410.
Other documents included in the file
Elliot to
G.A. Hamilton, Treasury,
22 January 1862, forwarding copy
of the despatch for information.