Copy of a Minute by me on defences of
Vancouver.
Duplicate (the original being in too small writing, not
convenient for reading).
This subject is new to me, as I was absent on leave when the
suggestion arrived. And the original Papers being mislaid, and
only copies obtainable, I have not the advantage of seeing any
Minute which
Lord Carnarvon may have made. It is therefore with
diffidence that, on a subject involving large questions of national
policy
policy, I will note what occurs to me.
Admiral Denman seems to me to have no more than done his duty in
pointing out that unless
Vancouver can be well defended, the Naval
Depôt there should not be increased beyond the ordinary wants of a
time of peace. Of course Stores should not be accumulated where
they are likely to fall into the hands of an enemy. He also justly
observes that if the permanent retention of the Country is
doubtful, our interests there should
not not be needlessly extended,
nor any special encouragement held out to Emigrants (which in fact
is not done). These remarks are correct; but they point, it will
be observed, not to a single conclusion, but to a choice between
two alternatives.
Vancouver is for practical purposes probably the most inaccessible
to Great Britain of any settled part of the Globe. At the time of
the
Trent crisis, we were at our wits ends to get a Despatch safely
conveyed across the
Isthmus of Panama. Troops and Stores
must must go
round
Cape Horn by a voyage of, I should conjecture, about four
months. The place is about twice as far in time as the Antipodes.
If we were to fortify
Vancouver there would be:
1 The cost of the Batteries and of their Armament (no mean Item
in modern days).
2 The expense of a Garrison, for we could not plant Works and
Guns without a defensive force; and the inhabitants are too few,
too busy, and of too lukewarm an attachment to us, to be employed
for
for the purpose.
3 When all is done, we should in the immediate neighbourhood
of the overwhelming population of California, be attempting with a
scanty, mixed, and not universally well-affected population, at a
distance of three or four months from England, what is considered
difficult in Canada with a population of Millions, thoroughly
well-disposed to the connexion, and within some ten or twelve days
steaming of our shores.
Whilst agreeing therefore in the dilemma put by
AdmiralDenman Denman,
there seems to be much to be said for letting things alone, and
awaiting the course of events. The
War Office it will be seen, are
not disposed to undertake a Defensive Work. For my part I would
shrink from no expenditure of lives or Treasure on any object dear
to England; but I cannot help doubting whether it would be worth
while to do so in order to provide a Government for the Americans
who, I suspect, must in the long run form the majority of the
inhabitants of
Vancouver and
British Columbia.
The defence of
V.C.I. in time of war is, as far as I can see
hopelessly difficult—and whatever sums one might expend upon
military works & garrison they
w only be taken & the island
over-run before reinforcements (at an enormus expense) c reach
the place of action. I c not with a view to war recommend any
expenditure.
The only question is whether it may not be desirable with a view to
many contingencies
w are quite possible if not probable in the
U.S. to remove the feeling of discontent,
w from many quarters we
are told exists in
V.C.I., by some local changes & commissions
provided that they do not involve a large or permanent expenditure
on this country.
As regards the dock the expense
w probably be considerable & the
value—except commercially, in
w case it ought to be
constructed
as a private undertaking—slight. But I s wish to have some
information as to the cost of making
Esquimalt a packet station.
Admiral Denman speaks of it as trifling. We know from other
sources that it
w be viewed as a great boon by the Colony. A
Private communication to
the Treasury or Post Office
w be
the best means of ascertaining this.
Something may perhaps be done on the spot by preserving to
Victoria
some of the advantages of a capital. But
Gov Seymour will be
best able to speak on this point.
I shall be glad to be informed on the point I have noted above.
Admiral Denman suggests two measures the creation of a Dock at
Esquimalt and the establishment of a Packet Station there, which he
says might be effected at a very small expense on the present
contracts.
I have placed myself in communication with the late Governor of
Vancouver Island,
Captain Kennedy, with
Captain Richards, R.N. the
Hydrographer of the
Admiralty, who was on the North Pacific Station
for 7 years, and with
M W.J. Page, one of the Chief Clerks at the
General Post Office whose business is to superintend Colonial Post
Office questions. Adding my own information
to to theirs on these
subjects the result is as follows: On the whole of the N. American
side of the N. Pacific there is not a single Dock belonging to
Great Britain where Vessels of War or Merchantmen can repair their
disasters. They are obliged to go to
San Francisco for that
purpose, and are consequently entirely dependent on the courtesy of
the Americans to enable them to refit.
Captain Richards' ship,
during the critical time of the "
Trent" difficulty, was actually in
dock at
San Francisco and might have been impounded if war had
occurred. The want of a dock has been felt to
be be a most serious
evil—but the
Admiralty have not thought proper to remedy it. An
attempt was made by a commercial company to make a dock but it fell
through, and at the present time there is little probability of any
renewal of it from that source: But are there not grounds for the
work being undertaken by the British Government?
Vancouver Island
and
B. Columbia cannot be defended by Forts and Garrisons. Their
only protection is by the means of a naval force. We have on the
Station now 13 Vessels of war of different
sizes sizes, numbering 191
guns. These ships must occasionally require repairs. It would be
worth while to know what these repairs annually cost the
Admiralty
in a foreign port. If we must have a squadron on the station we
surely ought to possess in a British port facilities for repairing
them, and not be beholden to any foreign country for such
convenience which may be withheld at pleasure.
Captain Richards, on
a rough estimate, thinks £80,000 would probably suffice for the
work. But I fear this sum would not be enough; for the land about
Esquimaltis is in the hands of private parties, and would have to be
purchased. The
Admiralty have a very small bit of ground there.
The
harbor of Esquimalt is one of the finest in the world. The
objection may be raised that if the Imperial
Gov makes this dock
we might only be making if for the Americans. But ought this
objection to prevail? We have these Colonies, and are bound to
protect them as long as we can. And can we do so, in time of war,
without a dock of our own?
If
Lord Carnarvon should at all agree in the view I have faintly
sketched a letter
might might be written to the
Admiralty
referring to
Admiral Denman's suggestion as to the dock, desiring
to know whether, in consideration of the duty imposed on this
country of affording protection to these Colonies by the means of a
Naval Squadron, their Lordship's consider that a dock can any
longer be dispensed with. That representations have, it is
understood, been addressed at different times [to] H.M.
Gov on
this subject, and that
Lord Carnarvon is of opinion that the
suggestion made by
Admiral Denman deserves the early and serious
attention of
the
Admiralty.
2.
Packet Station
When the Colony of
British Columbia was established
Lord Lytton
pressed very strongly for a postal subsidy. But it could not be
granted. In
1863 M Childers revived the subject with no better
success.
See annexed copy of a Letter from the G.P.O. to the T-y d. 14
Nov/63.
The two Colonies were therefore compelled to get their
correspondence conveyed in the best way they could, which has been
by the means of the American Steamers.
At
At the present moment the English line, in the direction of
Vancouver Island and
British Columbia, ceases at
Colon, and is
thence carried in American Steamers to
San Francisco, whence the
Mail is conveyed by an American Steamer, subsidized by the Colonies
(one in 21 days) at a cost of £300 to each Colony for each trip.
There is no book post and the American postage is, in amount
prohibitory. It would doubtless be a great help to
B. Columbia and
Vancouver Island to get a British subsidy to their Mails, or to
have a packet station made for
them them.
Admiral Denman says that a
station at
Esquimalt for the steam vessels running between
Panama
and Australia might be effected at a very small increase on the
cost of the present contracts under which the English Mails taken
to
San Francisco in American Vessels are now brought up from thence
to
Esquimalt.
What
Admiral Denman means, I suppose, is not that any mail service
should be grafted on the Australian New Zealand and
Panama
Line—which receives a subsidy from those Colonies of £70,000 a
year, and who would never consent to a diversion of 10,000 miles
out
of of the direct route—but that a station should be built at
Esquimalt for a mail service between
B. Columbia and
Vancouver Island to
San Francisco, which Mail service should receive an
English subsidy for that duty.
M Page is of opinion that even if the
Panama and N. Zealand C
w agree to call at
Esquimalt it
w
only give a communication with England once in each Calendar month,
& even by that communication the time occupied
w exceed that in
wh. Letters are now generally carried vi'
a New York, & overland to
San Francisco.
The distance between
San Francisco and
Vancouver Island is 700 miles. Between
Panama and
Vanc: Island it is nearly
5000 miles. But before building a packet station we must have
packets, and those ought to be British not American. Supposing
that a subsidy be granted for the mail service to
San Francisco we
shall still be entirely at the mercy
of of the Americans for the
conveyance of the correspondence and of passengers from
San Francisco to
Panama: and the Americans will use every exertion, as
they are doing now, to extend their commercial and other influences
in the North Pacific and maintain their ascendancy in that quarter
over Great Britain: I fear myself that neither a packet station nor
a dock at
Vancouver Island will be an equipoise to the pushing
vigor of the Americans of California and Oregon, but
the Treasury
might be fairly asked whether, now that
B. Columbia and
Vanc: Islandhave have become one great Dependency of the Crown, and that
their postal system is so imperfectly conducted, the time had not
arrived for giving that Colony some assistance in the shape of a
postal subsidy.