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State for the Colonies at the same time as the letter of appointment. This document clearly laid down the course to be followed in establishing the new settlement, and has such an important bearing upon the genesis of the State that we reprint the full text of it:—
It having been determined by His Majesty’s Government to occupy the post on the western coast of New Holland, at the mouth of the river called "Swan River," with the adjacent territory, for the purpose of forming a settlement there, His Majesty has been pleased to approve the selection of yourself to have the command of the expedition appointed for that service, and the superintendence of the proposed settlement.
You will accordingly repair, with all practicable dispatch, to the place of your destination, on board the vessel which has been provided for that purpose.
As Swan River and the adjacent territory are not within the limits of any existing colony, difficulties may easily be anticipated in the course of your proceedings, from the absence of all civil institutions, legislative, judicial, or financial.
Until provision can be made in due form of law for the Government of the projected colony the difficulties to which I refer must be combated, and will, I trust, be overcome by your own firmness and discretion.
You will assume the title of Lieutenant-Governor, and in that character will correspond with this department respecting your proceedings and the wants and prospects of the settlement you are to form.
Amongst your earliest duties will be that of determining the most convenient site for a town to be erected as the future seat of government.
You will be called upon to weigh maturely the advantages which may arise from placing it on so secure a situation as may be afforded on various points of the Swan River, against those which may follow from establishing it on so fine a port for the reception of shipping as Cockburn Sound is represented to be; and more effectually to guard against the evils to be apprehended from an improvident disposal of the land in the immediate vicinity of the town, you will take care that a square of three miles for one thousand nine hundred and twenty acres) is reserved for its future extensions; and that the land within this space is not granted away (as in ordinary cases), but shall be held upon leases from the Crown, for a term not exceeding twenty-one years. You will, from the commencement of the undertaking, be observant of the necessity of making out and reserving, for public purposes, all those peculiar positions within or in the vicinity of the projected town which, from natural advantages or otherwise, will probably be essential to the future welfare of the settlement. In laying the foundations of any such town care must be taken to proceed upon a regular plan, leaving all vacant places which will in future times be required for thoroughfares and as the sites of churches, cemeteries, and other public works of utility and general convenience.
You will cause it to be understood that His Majesty has granted to you the power of making all necessary locations of land. For your guidance in this respect ample instructions will, at a future period, be prepared. In the meantime I enclose a copy of the instructions of the Governor of New South Wales on this subject, to which you will adhere as closely as circumstances will admit.
You will bear in mind that in all locations of territory a due proportion must be reserved for the Crown, as well as for the maintenance of the clergy, support of establishments for the purposes of religion, and the education of youth; concerning which objects more particulars will be transmitted to you hereafter.
I think it necessary also to caution you thus early (as land on the sea or river side will naturally be the first to be located) that you must be careful not to grant more than a due proportion of sea or river frontage to any settler. The great advantages to be derived from an easy water communication will, of course, not escape your consideration, and this advantage should be divided amongst as many settlers as can conveniently benefit by their position in the vicinity.
In regard to the surveys and explorations of the country, which you may think it right to set on foot, it is perhaps premature to give you any instructions upon a point when so much must be left to your own discretion and intelligence as to the nature of the soil and of the country which you may obtain on the spot; looking, however, to the future prospects of the settlement and the advantages of its local position I should be inclined to think that it will be expedient to make the country south of Swan River the scene of your labours, rather than the tract of country north of that stream, and that you will do well to invite the settlers to locate themselves according to this suggestion.
You will endeavour to settle, with the consent of the parties concerned, a court of arbitration for the decision of such questions of civil rights as may arise between the early settlers, and until a more regular form of administering justice can be organized.
You will recommend, by your counsels and example, the habitual observance of Sunday as a day of rest and public worship, as far as may be compatible with the circumstances in which you may be placed.
With these few and general instructions for your guidance, assisted by the oral and written communications which have taken place between yourself and this department, you will, I trust, be able to surmount the difficulties to which you may be exposed at the outset, enhanced as they will be by the want of any regular commission for administering the Government.
An instrument of that nature, accompanied with all the requisite instructions, will be transmitted to you as soon as the indispensable form of proceeding in such cases will allow.
Upon receipt of these instructions Captain Stirling at once set about the preparations for inaugurating the settlement. Stores and other requirements of value in the undertaking were rapidly got together and the civil officers necessary for the control and government were chosen and appointed. These on the whole were admirably suited for the task of colonization. The Colonial Secretary, Mr. Peter Brown, was a man who already possessed administrative experience; the duties of harbourmaster were entrusted to Commander M. J. Currie, a naval officer of long standing; Dr. Charles Simmons was the medical officer, Mr. James Drummond the botanist and naturalist, and Mr. James Morgan the storekeeper, a position of no little moment in the new settlement. The most important office after that of Lieutenant-Governor was unquestionably that of Surveyor-General. This was conferred upon Lieutenant (afterwards Captain) John Septimus Roe, who had previously gained an intimate knowledge of the Western Australian coastline during the expeditions of