The date of the first Land Committee is 26th March, 1842, their appointment is 29th instructions being "to finally define and mark off the limits of all locations that had yet been sold or granted." This committee interfered with the land so far as to give addition of 10 feet in and direction, (making it 105 x 115 feet square), which they did at Fr. Young's request, conveyed to the Committee by Lt. Sedgwick, and which Stake a recognition of Dr. Young's claim to have been a valid claim to the ground.

Sir Henry Pottinger and Lt. John Davis seem both to have founded their objections to my claim on this entry in the Land Office, and submits that, if it is proved to your satisfaction that the entry is erroneous, their decisions ought to be recommended to be reversed, particularly as the "Report" itself was entirely out of the reach of inhabitants of the Colony, until printed by order of the Committee of House of Commons.

That the proceedings of the Committee here were unfair cannot be doubted; no explanations were asked to supply deficiencies at the Land Office, and although our interests were so nearly affected, we were compelled to submit to its deliverance without knowing how it had been arrived at.

After I had been informed that difficulties existing in regard to this lot, I was informed by Mr. Cleverly at an accidental meeting, that if I chose to pay the average of lots similarly coloured on the map at the Land sale of January 22nd, I might retain the lot, but that otherwise it would be put up to auction. I did nothing for it at that time, but was to submit; the sales were to take place in two days; it most undoubtedly would...

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