Walcott to Rogers (Permanent Under-Secretary)
               
            
            
               
               
                     Emigration Board
                     
                  
               7th October 1864
               
               Sir
                
            
            
            
            
               2.  
Mr Youngs letter is in reply to a communication addressed to him
               by direction of 
Mr Cardwell for the purpose of obtaining an
               explanation

 of the circumstances under which the sale and conveyance
               of 
Fisguard Island took place.
               
               3.  It will be remembered that 
Governor Kennedy in his despatch of
               the 
21st June last mentioned that he had made enquiries on the
               subject, of the Treasurer, the Acting Colonial Secretary, the
               Attorney General, and the Surveyor General, that they had
               respectively disclaimed all knowledge of the execution or existence
               of the Deed—and that there was no record of it in the Colonial
               Secretary's Office.  The only circum

stance which appeared to be known
               was that £150 had been paid to 
Mr Young nearly four years and a half
               before the execution of the conveyance.
               
               4.  
Mr Young's present explanation gives a different complexion to
               the case.  He states in effect that in 
1859 Fishguard
                  
                  Island, then the property of his wife, having been selected by a
               Board of Naval Officers as a site for a Lighthouse, 
Mr Pemberton the
               Surveyor General applied to him to name a sum for its purchase by the
               Colonial Government—that looking at his

 official position he
               declined to give a price, but stated his willingness to accept such
               sum as might be settled by competent authority—and suggested to the
               Surveyor General to consult with the Governor on the subject—that
               shortly afterwards the Surveyor General named £150 which 
Mr Young
               accepted although at the time he considered it under the value of the
               property—that 
Mr Pemberton or his Assistant 
Mr Pearse shortly
               afterwards presented to him a Purchase Deed to be executed by

 himself
               and his Wife—that he personally submitted this Deed to the Attorney
               General—that he attended with his wife before the Chief Justice in
               order to go through the formalities necessary for passing a married
               woman's Estate—that for the lack of certain Certificates the
               transaction could not then be completed—that he instantly applied,
               but without success, to the Attorney General for the required
               Certificates—that on failing in several subsequent applications both
               to the Attorney General and Chief Justice to get the matter
               completed, he allowed it to stand over, and did not in fact execute
               the
the
 Deed until the eve of his departure from the Colony.  
Mr Young
               adds that the Draft of the deed and the plan of the property attached
               to it was actually prepared in the Surveyor General's Office—and he
               denies that the purchase money was paid to him by the Surveyor General
               upon his order as Colonial Secretary.  He explains however that
               although his name appeared on the requisition authorizing the
               expenditure, in common with other items, this conveyed no authority
               from him individually, but merely certified according to established

               custom, that the Documents having been laid before the Governor, the
               outlay had been by him approved and the Treasurer authorized to pass
               it.  
Mr Young concludes by stating the readiness of himself and his
               Wife to do what may be necessary for perfecting the Conveyance; and
               without making a direct claim he appeals to the Secretary of State
               against the inadequacy of the price he received for 
Fisguard Island,
               which, had it been sold by auction would, he considers, have realized
               not less than $5000 or about £1000.
               
 
            
            
               5. In justice to 
Mr Young I would suggest that a copy of his letter
               should be forwarded for the information of the Governor as it is
               difficult to reconcile its statements with those of some of the
               officers he consulted.
               
               6.  The practical step which remains to be taken is to obtain from
               
Mr Young and his Wife a fresh conveyance of the fee simple of
               
Fisguard Island as suggested in my report of the 
8th ultimo.  The
               form of this Conveyance—to whom it should me made—and whether 
Mr Pemberton
               Pemberton
               Pemberton should be a party to it are matters which 
Mr Cardwell will
               doubtless wish to have referred for the consideration of the
               Solicitor of the Treasury.
               
               7.  With regard to 
Mr Young's implied claim for additional
               compensation for parting with the Property, I may remark that
               
Governor Kennedy considers that the intrinsic value of 
Fisguard Island is "merely nominal" and that 
Mr Richards, the Hydrographer to
               the Admiralty, who was consulted on this matter, states in his letter
               to 
Mr Elliot of the 
20th August last
 last, that although the Island is
               very small and of no intrinsic value, yet looking to parallel cases
               he did not conceive that the remuneration paid to 
Mr Young was
               unreasonable.  I should presume that 
Mr Young's appeal on this point
               will not be entertained.
               
               I have the honor to be
               Sir
               Your obedient
 
               Humble Servant
               
S. Walcott
               
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
               
               
               
                  
                  
                     Proceed as proposed requesting the Solicitors advice as to the steps
                     if any 
wh shd be taken to convey property to the 
Govt of
                     
V.C.I. & to frame the requisite deeds.
                     
 
               
               
                
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
               
                  
                  
                  
                     Minutes by CO staff
                     
                     
                        
                        
                           It occurs to me on considering this case that the consideration how
                           this deed 
shd be framed belongs to the 
Govr of 
V.C.I. and to the
                           Colonial Office.  There may be laws or practices in 
V.C.I. wh render
                           a particular form of conveyance applicable or inapplicable in such a
                           case—and duly of little consequence.
                           
 
                      
                   
               
                
            
            
               
                  People in this document
                  
                        Blackwood, Arthur Johnstone
                  
                        Cardwell, Edward
                  
                        Elliot, Thomas Frederick
                  
                        Kennedy, Arthur
                  
                        Pearse,  Benjamin W.
                        
                  Pemberton, Joseph Despard
                  Richards, Captain George Henry
                  Rogers, Baron Blachford Frederic
                  
                        Victoria, Queen Alexandrina
                        
                  Walcott, Stephen
                  
                        Young, Cecilia E.
                  Young, William Alexander George
                
               
                  Places in this document
                  Fisgard Island
                  Vancouver Island