No. 61, Miscellaneous
I have the honor to transmit for your information and consideration
copies of a Procalmation under which Crown Lands have been disposed
of in this Colony, and which is still in force subject to the
modifications contained in the accompanying
Gazette Gazette notices dated
29th July 1864 respectively.
I also transmit copies of certain queries which I addressed to a
Board of Officers appointed to inquire into this subject with their
replies thereto, and the opinion of the Acting Attorney General on a
specific question submitted to him.
I have deferred troubling you with this question in the hope that the
local Legislature would
accept accept the management of the Crown Lands of
the Colony on the terms proposed to them in the
Duke of Newcastle's
Separate Despatch dated
15th June 1863, and provide a legal remedy
for the evils which obviously and admittedly exist.
A persusal of the Proclamation with the accompanying documents will I
think disclose evils of no ordinary kind, calculated to effect great
injury to the
future future as it undoubtedly is to the present progress of
the Colony.
The practical working of the Proclamation may be shortly stated as
follows:
1st It has retarded and obstructed the settlement of the Public
Lands of the Colony.
2
nd It has alienated 118,506 acres of the cream of the Public Lands,
for a consideration of $13,805 of which only 23,629 acres are in part
occupied, a large portion of which is
unimproved unimproved and uncultivated.
3rd It enables a pre-emptor of 100 acres to take up any further
quantity of unoccupied land without any conditions of occupation or
improvement whatever.
4th It has encouraged land speculation and discouraged settlement
and locked up the best lands of the Colony in the hands of speculators
who pay neither rent nor taxes for it.
The foregoing are among the
most most obvious evils resulting from this,
in my opinion, very injudicious Proclamation, but innumerable minor
evils flow from it which call for remedies which the existing
complications on the subject of Crown Lands prevent me from applying
while the local Legislature decline to accept the responsibility of
their management.
You will observe from the Gazette notices of the
29th July1864 1864 that
I have limited the operation of the "Land Proclamation
1862" to
certain Districts.
This measure was rendered necessary on the discovery of gold to
prevent further speculation and monopoly of Crown Lands in the
neighbourhood of those discoveries.
I fear that Certificates of Improvement under Section XIX of the
Proclamation have been very loosely issued and upon
wholly wholly
insufficient grounds for the purpose of enabling the original
pre-emptor to "sell, mortgage or lease" his lands under the terms of
Section XX.
There existed a large arrear of purchase money under Section XXI
until a recent period when I enforced payment.
I entertain no doubt that a large portion of the 118,506 acres
pre-empted are forfeited under the conditions of Sections XXVI,
XXVII XXVII
and XXVIII, but I cannot learn that any sufficient steps have been
taken in this direction.
The Legislative Assembly has declined to make any provision for "Land
Recorders" in the Districts or for a Surveyor General, thus limiting
the staff of Surveyors to one Assistant Surveyor General who is
wholly unequal to fulfil the numerous duties properly devolving upon
him.
Connected
Connected with this question there are boundaries unsettled which
will lead to future confusion and litigation and Indian Reserves and
claims undefined and unadjusted, for the doing of which neither
machinery nor means are at my disposal.
Any unauthorized action on my part might possibly under certain
contingencies create more serious complications, than
those those which
already exist, and I therefore think it better to await your
instructions on a subject which requires careful consideration.
I have the honor to be,
Sir,
Your most obedient Servant
A.E. Kennedy
Governor
Minutes by CO staff
It is curious that this Proclamation
shd not have been transmitted
to this Office by the late Governor. It is, however, the fact that
we have no record of it from him; though, I learn, that the Library
here professes a return of the
V.C.I. Laws and Proclamations in which
this Proclamation is contained.
I apprehend that as the waste Lands are still the property of the
Crown & have not been surrendered to the Colony the disposal of them
can
be regulated by Proclamation. And the sooner a good Proclamation
is issued the better it will be for the local interests, for rights
of Land are a futile subject of debate especially in young Colonies.
Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
Printed copy of Proclamation detailing the methods by which land
could be acquired in the colony, issued by
Douglas,
6 September 1862.
Printed copy of notices detailing the areas to be exempt from
the
Vancouver Island Land Proclamation Act of
1862 and those areas
still open for pre-emption, signed by
Henry Wakeford, Acting Colonial
Secretary,
29 July 1864.
Wakeford,
T.L. Wood, Acting Attorney General, and
B.W. Pearse,
Acting Surveyor General, to Acting Colonial Secretary,
23 June 1865, forwarding
their replies to various questions posed by the governor in reference
to the disposition of land in the colony.
Eleven questions and the replies thereto, as noted above, signed
by
Wakeford,
Wood and
Pearse.
Wood to Colonial Secretary,
25 April 1865, commenting upon the
abuses inherent under the Land Proclamation Act of
1862, with
particular reference to the comments of
Mr. Duncan, M.L.A.
Other documents included in the file
Elliot to Emigration Commissioners,
28 September 1865,
forwarding copy of the despatch and enclosures for their observations
and suggestions.
People in this document
Blackwood, Arthur Johnstone
Cardwell, Edward
Douglas, Sir James
Duncan
Elliot, Thomas Frederick
Kennedy, Arthur
Pearse, Benjamin W.
Pelham-Clinton, 5th Duke of Newcastle Henry Pelham Fiennes
Rogers, Baron Blachford Frederic
Wakeford, Henry
Wood, Thomas Lett
Places in this document
Vancouver Island