Letter from William Jones, Esqre., to Richard Penn, Esqre.. Letter from Lord Charles Somerset to T. P. Courtenay, Esqre. Letter from Mr. William Parker to Ralph Rogerson, Esqre. Letter from Earl Bathurst to Lord Charles Somerset Letter from Mr. Thomas Willson to Earl Bathurst 4 March. Letter from Captain J. W. Roberts to Rear Admiral Lambert Letter from Mr. William Parker to Lieutenant Colonel Bird. Letter from Lord Charles Somerset to Henry Goulburn, Esqre. Letter from Sir Rufane Donkin to Earl Bathurst Letter from Rear Admiral Lambert to J. W. Croker, Esqre. Letter from Colonel Claughton, M.P., to Earl Bathurst Letter from R. Lushington, Esqre., to Henry Goulburn, Esqre. Letter from Mr. William Parker to Earl Bathurst Letter from Messrs. Claringbould and Darby to Earl Letter from Captain Hugh Pigot to Earl Bathurst 21 March. Letter from the Reverend George Thom to Henry Goulburn, Letter from Henry Goulburn, Esqre., to C. Griffith, Esqre. PAGE Letter from the Navy Board to Henry Goulburn, Esqre. 13 April. Letter from Lord Charles Somerset to Henry Goulburn, 21 April. Letter from Sir Rufane Donkin to Earl Bathurst Resolution of the Burgher Senate Letter from Mr. Thomas Willson to Earl Bathurst 22 April. Letter from Sir Rufane Donkin to Earl Bathurst Letter from Mr. Thomas Pringle to the Colonial Secretary 25 April. Letter from Henry Goulburn, Esqre., to Lord Charles Letter from the Reverend M. Pennington to Earl Bathurst DATE PAGE Letter from the Colonial Secretary to the Military Secretary 481 Letter from the Commissioner of the Roman Catholic Church 482 482 Letter from Lieut. Col. Willshire to Captain M. J. Sparks Letter from Sir Rufane Donkin to Captain Trappes RECORDS OF THE CAPE COLONY. [Original.] Letter from MR. RICHARD WATSON to EARL BATHURST. WESLEYAN MISSION House, 77 Hatton Garden, January 20th 1820. MY LORD,-I am directed by the Committee of the Wesleyan Missionary Society, to represent to Your Lordship, that they are about to send out an additional married Missionary among the Little Namacqua Hottentots, on the North West border of the Cape Colony, where three of their Missionaries under the sanction and encouragement of Lord Charles Somerset have been for some time settled, and have introduced agriculture and the useful arts among the people of those tribes. The Committee had prepared to send out the new Missionary to the Namacquas, and his wife (Mr. and Mrs. Kay,) by a private vessel; but understanding that a company of the settlers, chiefly members of the Methodist Society, are going out in the Brilliant, Transport, who will have no minister among them during their voyage (their own Minister being on board the Aurora,) they take the liberty to solicit from Your Lordship that Mr. and Mrs. Kay may be allowed to proceed to the Cape in the Brilliant, in order that the Settlers who are going out in this vessel, may not be without a person regularly to perform divine service during the voyage. The Committee being anxious that as these persons are members of the same religious body with themselves, and many of them young persons, that they should be kept under the influence of religious sentiments, and go with an unspotted character into the new Colony. I have &c. XIII. (Signed) RICHARD WATSON, Secretary. B |