Correspondence (private letter).
Other documents (1), Marginalia (1).
Seymour to Elliot (Assistant Under-Secretary)
London
28 April 1866
Sir,
I have had the honor to receive your letter of this date
forwarding for my perusal a communication from the Lords of the
Treasury on the subject of the financial arrangements of British Columbia, and likewise the draft of a despatch which the Secretary
of State proposes to address to the Administrator of the Government
when forwardingit it.
I feel that it would be hardly safe for me, separated from the
official records of the colony, to attempt a minute explanation of
the irregularities alluded to in Mr Childers' letter. I have no
doubt however that much light will be thrown on the matter by the
proposed reference to Mr Birch. I would however now venture to
mention that it is almost impossible to calculate with certainty the
amount of revenue which the year just commenced will produce when the
estimates are laid before the Council in January. Everything depends
upon the number of miners who may be attracted to the gold mines
during the summer. The fixed population is, I regret to say, still
very small.
The accounts in their Newspapers are not encouraging.
As regards the estimated expenditure, votes for the outside limit
of the cost of all public works are generally taken. It does not at
all follow that because a certain sum has been placed at the disposal
of the Governor by the Legislative Council that therefore it will be
expended.
Gigantic public works have been completed in 1865 and the whole
proceeds of the loan lately raised in England have been spent in
permanent improvements; with two exceptions, however, we have had to
pay £10,000 to the Imperial Treasury for the huts left by the
Detachment of the Royal Engineers which are valueless to the Colony,
and locally, about £17,000 in the suppression of an Indian outbreak.
I fully concur in the prudence of the caution about to be given
to the Administrator of the Government, but I am aware, from private
letters which have passed between us, that Mr Birch will use
every exertion to place the finances of the colony in a satisfactory
position.
I have the honor to be Sir
Your most obedient humble Servant
Frederick Seymour