Mr Fortescue
                     Attached to this you will find an extremely clear and concise
                     statement of the case by 
Mr Ebden.  I think that with reference to
                     the Governor's despatch N
o 2, we should inform him that the project
                     of sending a Regiment to 
Vancouver's Island has for the present been
                     dropped, but that there can be no doubt that it is proper to reserve
                     a fit site for the future erection of Barracks for any of H.M's
                     Troops who may be stationed in the Colony, and that adverting to the
                     large extent of the lands recovered to the Crown under the recent
                     agreement with the Hudson's Bay Company, the 
Duke of Newcastle
                     confidently expects that the Governor will be able, with 
Coll Moody's
                     assistance, to select a fitting spot for the purpose on ground
                     belonging to the 
Govt.  It would be highly unbecoming, I should
                     add, that in a Colony which has been so recently formed, and which
                     owes so much to the protection afforded by the Mother Country, there
                     should be a question of the necessity of buying the land required to
                     provide accommodation for 
the Queen's Troops.