I do myself the honor to inform you that the Dett of R. Engineers
under my command arrived at Colon on the morning of the 9th inst and
through the courtesy & assistance of Captn Hole of the R.M.S.P.
Medway1
and the agents of the CoMessrs
Hurtado,
2
was enabled to cross the Isthmus with the men & stores by the 8 1/2
am train.
We reached Panama at 1 o'c, when I immediately called
upon the acting Consul Mr Bidwell and arranged withhim him for
quartering the men for the night & with his assistance & through
the prompt attention of Commander Priser of H.M.S.
Alert3
I was enabled to embark them on board his ship at 8 a.m. the following
morning.
The American Mail Steamer is not expected to leave for San
Francisco before the 17th and I am thankful that during this
period the men will be under proper restraint & kept out of harm's way.
I beg to express my sense of the great zeal and assistance
afforded by the gentlemen I have named, and which enabled me
without trouble to take measures to save expense and ensure as
far as possible the health & discipline of the men.
I have the honor to be Sir
Your most obedient Servant
J. Grant Cap. RE
The Right Honble
The Secretary of State for the Colonies
The Royal Mail Steam Packet Company's Medway was a wooden paddle
ship, 1,895 tons (gross). Source?
Hurtado y Hermanos [brothers?] were the largest mule owners on the
Isthmus and in 1853 entered into a contract with the Pacific Mail
Steamship Company to convey passengers and baggage through to the
Pacific side at a fixed rate. Kemble,
The Panama Route 1848-1869, p. 173. Cf. Parsons to Lytton, 27 September 1858, 11022, CO 60/3, p. 496.
Bio Dir??
The HMS Alert was built in 1856 at Pembroke for the Royal Navy.
It had nineteen guns and was powered with an auxiliary engine
installed horizontally below the water line, an unusual construction
feature designed to protect the ship from damage by ice. In 1858 it
travelled around Cape Horn to Esquimalt and remained at this station
surveying the northern coast and Vancouver Island from 1865 to 1869.
The Alert was later used in the British Polar Expedition in 1875
and travelled to the Arctic and to Hudson Bay.