CO129-307 - Governor Sir Blake - 1901 [10-12] — Page 588

CO129 Colonial Office Hong Kong Records 理藩院香港檔案 All AI Reviewed

He

"

12.

584

As illustrating the difficulties that present themselves in the local settlement of this matter, on the 31st of May last, with a view to ascertaining the full extent of Military claims, and because I had noticed on a Military plan of Saiwan Hill a large area marked "Military Reservation" around the Lyemoon Barracks, I addressed a letter, of which I enclose a copy, to the Major-General Commanding the Troops, but up to the present time my request has not been complied with. I also enclose copies of my letter 225/0 of the 31st October, 1901, and of the reply of 8th November instant. I shall be glad if you will move the Secretary of State for War to give instructions that my request be acceded to, as until this is done this Government cannot know the full particulars of the claims of the Military Authorities as regards Military Lands.

13.

In connection with the claim of the War Department to consider Military Reserve Lands as a valuable asset exchangeable for other lands, I would add that if the War Department had originally yielded up any War Department Land in exchange for the restriction which this Government placed on lands afterwards styled Military Reserve Lands, the present pretensions of the War Office might have some solid basis.

14.

The points submitted to you in my Despatch No.194 of the 23rd May last involve questions seriously affecting the welfare of the Colony, which is rapidly expanding, and of which land is the most valuable asset. While I acknowledge to the fullest extent the duty of the Colony to

Edit History

2026-06-01 03:01:40 · NVIDIA / meta/llama-4-maverick-17b-128e-instruct
Live
View comparison
AI Proofread
He " 12. 584 As illustrating the difficulties that present themselves in the local settlement of this matter, on the 31st of May last, with a view to ascertaining the full extent of Military claims, and because I had noticed on a Military plan of Saiwan Hill a large area marked "Military Reservation" around the Lyemoon Barracks, I addressed a letter, of which I enclose a copy, to the Major-General Commanding the Troops, but up to the present time my request has not been complied with. I also enclose copies of my letter 225/0 of the 31st October, 1901, and of the reply of 8th November instant. I shall be glad if you will move the Secretary of State for War to give instructions that my request be acceded to, as until this is done this Government cannot know the full particulars of the claims of the Military Authorities as regards Military Lands. 13. In connection with the claim of the War Department to consider Military Reserve Lands as a valuable asset exchangeable for other lands, I would add that if the War Department had originally yielded up any War Department Land in exchange for the restriction which this Government placed on lands afterwards styled Military Reserve Lands, the present pretensions of the War Office might have some solid basis. 14. The points submitted to you in my Despatch No.194 of the 23rd May last involve questions seriously affecting the welfare of the Colony, which is rapidly expanding, and of which land is the most valuable asset. While I acknowledge to the fullest extent the duty of the Colony to
Baseline (Original)
Me He 3 " 12. 584 As illustrating the difficulties that present themselves in the local settlement of this matter,, on the 31st. of May last, with a view to ascertaining the full extent of Military claims, and because I had noticed en a Military plan of Saiwan Hill a large area marked "Military Reservation" around the Lyemoon Barracks, I addressed a letter, of which I enclose a copy, to the Major-General Cem- manding the Troops, but up to the present time my request has not been complied with. I also enclose copies of my letter 225/0 of the 31st. October, 1901, and of the reply of 8th. November instant. I shall be glad if you will move the Secretary of State for War to give instructions that ny re- quest be acceded to, as until this is done this Goverment cannot know the full particulars of the claims of the Military Authorities as regards Military Lands. 13. In connection with the claim of the War Department to consider Military Reserve Lands as a valuable asset exchangeable for other lands, I would add that if the War Department had originally yielded up any War Department Land in exchange for the restriction which this Goverment placed on lands afterwards styled Military Reserve Lands the present pretensions of the War Office might have some selid basis. 14. The points submitted to you in my Des- patch No. 194 of the 23rd. May last involve questions serious- ly affecting the welfare of the Colony, which is rapidly ex- panding, and of which land is the most valuable asset. While I acknowledge to the fullest extent the duty of the Colony to
2026-06-01 03:01:40 · Baseline
View content

Me

He 3

"

12.

584

As illustrating the difficulties that

present themselves in the local settlement of this matter,,

on the 31st. of May last, with a view to ascertaining the

full extent of Military claims, and because I had noticed en

a Military plan of Saiwan Hill a large area marked "Military

Reservation" around the Lyemoon Barracks, I addressed a

letter, of which I enclose a copy, to the Major-General Cem-

manding the Troops, but up to the present time my request has

not been complied with. I also enclose copies of my letter

225/0 of the 31st. October, 1901, and of the reply of 8th.

November instant. I shall be glad if you will move the

Secretary of State for War to give instructions that ny re-

quest be acceded to, as until this is done this Goverment

cannot know the full particulars of the claims of the Military

Authorities as regards Military Lands.

13.

In connection with the claim of the War

Department to consider Military Reserve Lands as a valuable

asset exchangeable for other lands, I would add that if the

War Department had originally yielded up any War Department

Land in exchange for the restriction which this Goverment

placed on lands afterwards styled Military Reserve Lands the

present pretensions of the War Office might have some selid

basis.

14.

The points submitted to you in my Des-

patch No. 194 of the 23rd. May last involve questions serious-

ly affecting the welfare of the Colony, which is rapidly ex- panding, and of which land is the most valuable asset. While

I acknowledge to the fullest extent the duty of the Colony

to

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.