 
                  
                  
                     The force of Supernumerary Marines landed from the
                     
Tribune is 6 Officers and 133 Men. Their extra pay has been
                     computed by 
M Irving to amount of £19 a day, or nearly
                     £7,000 per annum. This is far more than the Colony can
                     afford to pay, or than we can well ask Parliament to
                     continue to vote. For
                     the present of course the Marines must have the extra pay
                     promised to them, for which purpose we have the Duke's authority
                     already, but my object in this memo is to submit that we should at
                     the same time renew the orders for the removal of these
                     Soldiers. 
British Columbia is already burthened
                     heavily enough with the Sappers and Miners who were rather
                     hastily sent out from England, unasked, and who would appear
                     from the Governor's accounts of them to be of no great
                     service to the Colony.
                     
They
                     
                     They cause an item of about £11,000
                     per annum on the Parliamentary Estimate for 
British Columbia.
                     
                     Last year we advised the 
War Office on the 
9
                        of July (and repeated the advice to the 
Admiralty on the
                     
11 of August) to bring these Supernumerary Marines
                     home. The 
Admiralty, I have ascertained, did send
                     out such orders in 
July, but (probably owing to the 
San Juan
                     "difficulty") they have not yet been executed. Circumstances
                     however have greatly changed. The affair has for the
                     present been compromised with the Americans; a small
                     joint force occupies the Island; a large British
                     
Naval
                     
                     Naval force
                     is on the spot, and 
Vancouver Island will continue, as is
                     generally understood, our principal Naval rendezvous in the Pacific.
                     
                     The Governor, it is worth remarking, did not know
                     what to do with these Marines when they arrived, and was
                     obliged to send them to 
British Columbia to get them out of the way.
                     
                     Such being the case, I would strongly recommend that
                     this extra force of Marines, in so anomolous a position,
                     be at once recalled. They will have the benefit of their
                     extra Colonial Pay to the day of their departure and will
                     have made a profitable transaction, even though
                     

                     the
                     unauthorized promise of grants of land cannot be executed.