No. 64, Miscellaneous
Complaints made by "Schooner-men" or coasting traders against various
tribes of Indians on the coast of this Island having lately
accumulated, I deemed it necessary to visit the Indian villages and
settlements of white men around the Island.
With this view the Senior
Officer Officer on the station placed Her Majesty's
Ship "
Scout" at my disposal.
I embarked in this vessel on the
8th August and made the tour of the
Island arriving at
Victoria on the
20th.
During this tour I landed and had personal intercourse with almost
every tribe on the coast and the whole of the white settlements.
I found the Indians friendly and in almost every instance desirous of
having a white man resident among them to protect them from whiskey
traders who are the
great great disturbers on the coast.
As I shall have occasion to address you on this important subject at
an early period I will now confine myself to forwarding a newspaper
outline of my proceedings.
I have given
Captain Price commanding Her Majesty's Ship "
Scout," the
usual certificate to recover the regulated allowance for the
Entertainment of myself and one servant.
I have the honor to be,
Sir,
Your most obedient Servant
A.E. Kennedy
Governor
Minutes by CO staff
Sir F. Rogers
I think that this service—purely colonial—ought to be defrayed by
the local not the Imperial Treasury. We are gradually throwing off
such claims on the taxpayers of this Kingdom.
I suppose so. But this question will arise when the Claim is put
forward.
Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
Newspaper clipping,
Colonist and Chronicle,
21 August 1866, describing the
governor's expedition around
Vancouver Island, as per despatch.