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TO THE
CAN
I O 39.5
.HIT
On the sul
Halifax has lal
Council, and tc
tend to justify
is accustomed 1
slanders of son
tent that numl:
and whose jud
be3leard, have
which bears up
is mor^ particu
Origin of th
Nine or ten ^
cussed the prop
City Court Hoi
venience to the
improvement w
that the questic
should be mad
money to erect
live or six year;
to the Legislati
in the House c
debate and div
tlio rules of the
ruary 1872, wh
plan of a City 1
Seeton moved a
the Imperial ai
City Hall. Thi
the sam(} montl
tioii ibr estabiifc
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TO THE
RATE-PAYERS OF HALIFAX.
On the subject of the proposed City Hall the Press of
Halifax hgis laboured assiduously to misrepresent the City
Council, and to conceal from the public all the facts which
tend to justify the resolutions of that body. The Council
is accustomed to misrepresentation, but in this instance the
slanders of some of the City papers have been so persis-
tent that numbers of citizens, whose opinions wc respect;
and whose judgment is in suspense [until both sides shall
be^leard, have requested us to publish all the information
which bears upon the subject. To such citizens this paper
is more^ particularly addressed.
Origin of the scheme for a City Hall in Halifax.
Nino or ten years ago", the City Council of that period dis-
cussed the propriety of altering the whole interior of the
City Court House, with a view to giving more room and con-
venience to the City departments. 'The necessity for such an
improvement was felt on all sides, but it was finally agreed
that the question should be postponed, and that application
should be made to the Legislature for power to bon'ow
money to erect a City Hall. The subject then dropped, but
live (jr six years ago the Council took it up again and sent
to the Legislature a bill for the purpose. The bill was lost
in the House of Assembly — not, (its friends assert), upon
debate and division— but by another process imknown to
the rules of the House. The project was next revived in Feb-
ruary 1872, when a committee Avere instructed to have a
plan of a City Hall prepared. In the following month Aid.
Seeton moved a resolution having in view the purchase from
the Imperial authorities of the Fuel Yard, as a site for a
City Hall. This proposal was not carried out, but during
the same month Aid. Nisbet submitted a plan and resolu*
tiofi for establishing a City Hall by remodelling ,
— 2—
The Market House.
This proposition was rejected by a vote of 7 to 4 — the prin-
cipal objection being to the site. Some citizens have lately
advocated that site on the grourd that it is almost unused
as a market and would cost the city nothing. The facts are
these. There is a debt on the Market House property of
about $10,000, being a balance due on the cost of the build-
ing. This sum is secured by debentures which form a
charge on the property, and muct therefore be paid off if the
the property is to be used for any other purposes, and the
law i)rovides that they shall be paid off by the accumula-
tion of the rents of the building. We begin then with
the fact that the Market House site would cost $10,000.
The public have been told that the property is entirely
unproductive in its present shape, but the fact is that the
Market House now yields in rents $1,200 per annum,
and that on the day when the Legislature allows the
main building to be used for other than market purposes it
will yield in rents at least $2,200 per annum. But before
an inch of that property can be used for City Hall purposes
an act of the Legislature must be obtained to sanction the
change. Those who know best the feeling of the Legisla-
tuxc on such questions, believe that the application would
be futile. Some years ago the City Council made repeated
efforts to get an Act passed to put down the nuisance caused
by hay and other country produce being vended in the
streets, and the bills were indignantly thrown out, find the
Council were told — not that the market property could be
sold or used for other purposes, but that the scantiness of
market itccommodation of all kinds was discreditable to the
city, and that the present market property should be impro-
ved and added to as quickly as possible, as a matter of jus-
tice to the country people, whose representatives had the
controlling voice in the Legislature. So strong has the feel-
ing been in the Legislature on this question, that the Coun-
cil has not ventured to ask leave to hii'e out the main build-
ing, although by having such power they could add at least
$1,000 a year to the City revenues. The plan of Aid. Nisbet
was further stated to be objectionable, because it proposed
to raise and enlarge the present building, which had been
pronounced on examination by competent architects imable
to support the added weight which would thus be placed on
its walls. Another suggestion made in connection with this
site is that the present City building should be torn down,
the remainder of tlie triangle on which it stands be puicha-
1
m
—3—
A'
seel, the building on that part likewise destroyed, and the
whole block kept as an open square. However desirable
these improvements might seem under some circumstances
the fact that an outlay of about $70,000 must be entailed
before the first stone of the City Hall could be laid, would
seem to be rather a strong objection to the scheme. So
much for the Market House site and the action of the Coun-
cil on that proposition in 1872.
In the early part of the present year at the instance of
Aid. Seeton, a biU was prepared an«l sent to the Legislature
to authorize the trection of a City Hall. It was supported
by a large majority of the Council, and a committee was
sent to take charge of the bill and give information in its
})assage through the Legislature. That committee attended
at numerous debates before committees of both Houses,
which debates were attended, and partly conducted, by out-
si le citizens, who took an interest in the question. Secresy
was avoided, the discussions were reported, examination was
invited, and members of the Council were- anxious that the
public should not only have full information on the subject
but should make known their views clearly before the Council
should come to take the important steps of borrowing the
money, selecting a site, and proceeding with the work. At
this point we take the opportunity of st«ifcing succinctly
The Demands for a City Hall.
The present City Building was originally the County
Court House of Halifax. It was occupied by the County,
as well as the City officials, until the Court House on Spring
Garden Read was erected. It has been at least fifty years
in use. Its repairs cost the city a large sum periodically.
The accommodations for the City Clerk, who (is one ofthe
principal officers of the Corporation, are so inadequate that
the Aldermen, find it very inconvenient to get their business
transacted with his department — the Mayor's office is unsuit-
able and inconvenient, and the whole building, in a sanitary
point of view, is so unfit for constant .occupation, that the
health of some of the City officials has been seriously im-
paired, and competent and impartial physicians have pro-
nounced it totally 'unfit for public offices. This testimony
was given by Doctors Moren, Farrel, and Wickwire before a
committee of the Legislative Council. Add to these cir-
cumstances the following facts : The City building gives no
accommodation for the Board of Works, who have to hold
about seventy meetings in course of a year and require a
4—
place of meeting, in whicli their officers are within call, and
where their plans and correspondence will ha accessible. It
lias no room for thy City Engineer, the Foreman of Works,
the Clerk of Works, the Assistant Clerk of Works, or the
two Health Inspectors. The Board of Works and all these
officers are, excepting the Engineer, now huddled up in an
old house in Argyle Street, for which the City pays a rent
of five hundred dollars per annum. The Engineer occupies
an office, (or what might more properly be called an old
woodhouae), in the backyard, and in that ' office" alone are
deposited plans and records which have cost the citizens of
Halifax thousands of dollar?*, every one of which plans and
records must in all human probability be destroyed in case
of fire breaking out in the vicinity. The City building has
no room for the Commissioners (;f Schools, their >Secrotar}-
or Supervisor, who have all to be provided for in a building
in George Street, at a cost to the City of tw-o hundred and
forty dollars per annum. It has no accomm )dation for the
Gastester, who used to have an office in the basement, but
who had to remove to make room for })olice cells and who
has now to be provided for outside, at a cost in rent of a
hundred dollars per annum. It has no room for the Citi-
zens' Free Library, for which apartments have to be fur-
nished outside at a cost of thi'ee hundred dollars per annum.
It has no room for the City Auditor, who is soon to be ap-
pointed — an officer who should at all times be at headquar-
ters, but must find offices outside at a probable cost of two
hundred dollars per annum. It wiU, in a few days, have no
room for the Recorder, as the Treasurer's department will
shortly require the office now used by him, and here is
another office to be found, probably at a cost of two hun-
dred dollars more per annum, to say nothing of the incon-
venience of having located outside of the building an officer
who is frequently wanted for consultation at a moment's no-
tice by the Mayor, the Committees, and the City Officers.
Nor is there any accommodation at all for the Inspectors of
Weights and Measures, the Measurers of Coal, the Weighers
of Flour, and other Inspectors who are frequently required
at a moment's notice, and who must now be sought at their
houses or on the streets. It may further be urged that if
accommodation could be found in a City Hall for all these
departments, the buildings which the City now hires for
them would become at once subject to taxation, from which
they are now exempt, and would yield to the city in iaxea
about a hundred and fifty dollars per amium which is now
lost to the Treasury^ It is only fair to add to these figures
I
pjiother hnndrod and fifty dollars per annum, paid for the
use of Teni])«Manct! Hall and the Rink, year alter yt'ar for
public meetings and school exhibitions, — this outlay would
l)e saved by having a public hall in the new City building,
as lias been contemplated. The friends of the project were
sanguine enough t(j believe that when to these figures were
added the j)!()l»abh receipts to be derived from the })ublic
hall or concert room, to say nothing of rents which might
or might not be derived from other portions of the Imilding,
a saving would be eft'ected (piite ecpial to the annual inter-
est on the cost of the undertaking. If such a jn'ediction l)e
too sanguine every one must at least admit that such (Ic-
mands as we have stated for a City Hall could hardly exist
in any other city (m the continent without the w(U'k of
construction being speedily undertaken.
These vie^vs were presented to the Legislature, and members
of that body examined the buildings now used for municipal
purposes. A strict examination was given to the whole subject,
the bill finally passed, but with an amendment preventing its
erection on
The Parade.
This amendment was strongly resisted by the Aldermen, a
majority of whom were anxious that the south end of the Parade
should be chosen as the site . They looked upon that as a com-
manding situation and one that would cost the city nothing. In
the Legist"** j Council however this view was strongly opposed
on the folio ng grounds : It was s*"ated that the title of the
City to this property was more than (juestionable, also that
when St. Paul's Street was laid off to its present width, a piece
of property owned by the Parish of St. Paul's, was given up on
the understanding that the Parade property should always be
kept open, and further that a City Hall erected on that site would
be an annoyance to the congregation of St. Paul's. These objec-
tions probably had weight with the Legislature, but independent-
ly of these views the Upper House was influenced by the great
consideration that the public health of the City, and above all
its safety in case of conflagration, required that every public
space now established should be kept open for all time to come.
These views are favored by many of our citizens, — they are to
some extent supported by the press, and it is impossible to con-
ceive any ground upon which the Legislature can be expected
to stultify itself by reversing this deliberate decision afc its next
session, when not a single argument can be advanced on either
side that has not been already fully weighed, and when the op-
— 6—
position to the choice of that site has been largely increased
rather than lessened.
The Committee.
■ .
The Bill to authorize the erection of a City Hall hav'ng thus
become law, tlie City Council after some weeks notice had been
given ot a resolution for that purpose, appointed a Committee
of one Alderman from each Ward to select a site for the Hall,
and to report thereon to the Council. The Committee consisted of
Aldermen Fraser, (Ward 1), Coombes, (Ward 2), Forsyth,
(Ward 3), Seeton, (Ward 4), Thompson, (Ward 5), a^id
Roomo, (Ward 0.) Aid. Coombes was appointed Chairman.
The Committee, according to the Chairman's statement to the
Council, held a number of meetings and considered carefully
the merits of every available site, whether actually offered to
the committee or not. In a matter of such importance the com-
mittee refrained from making any definite selection or reporting
positively in favor of any particular site. They merely sugges-
ted to the Council in their report that of all the sites which
had come under tlieir observation the most eligible were — the
site oft'ercd by B. W. Cochran, known as the Carlton
House property, the site offered by Jas. Farquhar,
known as tlie Board of Works property in Argylo Street, and
that offered by J. K. Jcnnctt, being the site subseijuently
chosen. About a week previous to this report being presen-
ted the Chairman was interrogated in Council as to the date at
which the committee would probably report, for instead of being
hasty in coming to a conclusion, ' their fellow members of
Council were inclined to think them tardy. The Chairman in
answer to this question foreshadowed the report fully, and an-
nounced that he would report finally at the following meeting.
This announcement gave the citizens an opportunity of knowing
that the business of selecting a site would be before the Council
at its next, meeting. .If the press did not give prominence to
the announcement, the Council can hardly be blamed for this
lack of interest — exhibited as it is on many other important
questions. It gave the Aldermen likewise an opportunity to
examine and consider the merits of the respective sites.
Selection op a Site.
On 15th July the Council met, and among the first papers
handed in was the report of the committee just referred to,
(See Appendix ). The opponents of the Council have made
a handle of the fact that at this meeting the subject was not on
iU
increased
av'ng tlius
! had been
!!ommitto0
the Hall,
msisted of
Forsjth,
•'>), ai.d J
liairman .
3nt to the '.
carefully ,
offered to
the com- ,
'eporting
' sugges-
58 which
ere — the
Carlton
anjuhar,
ject, and '
(juentlj
prescn-
date at
'f being
lers of
'man in
nd an-
|eeting.
lowing
'ouncil
I nee to
(or this
prtant
itj to
ipers
Mto,
lade
)t on
the order of the day. Tlic best answer to such an argument is
to state what the invariable practice of the Council has been for
years past. After the reading of the minutes, and before the
order of the day is taken up, papers arc handed in by the vari-
ous Aldermen — being petitions, resolutions and reports. Ihe pe-
titions are read and referred to the various committees, the
resolutions and reports are read, and if their subject matter is
urgent, or if there is no serious difference of opinion on them
among members of Council, they are discussed and voted on at
once, and before the Council goes to the order of the day. Only
such matters arc deferred, to take their place on the future order
of the day, as arc likely to cause a protracted discussion. The
order of the day is proceeded with when these new papers have
all been either despatched or laid over. On this occasion the re-
port was read and the (question arose whether it should be voted
on or deferred. The attention of the Council was called to the
fact that the Queen Street^appraisement had that day to be con-
firmed or rejected, and it was urged that as persons had been
summoned to attend the Council on that business, the appraise-
ment should be disposed of before anv other matter was con-
sidered. Accordingly a vote was aaopted to the elFect " that
this matter" (being the report of the City Hall Committee), "be
taken up next after the Queen Street appraisement." The ap-
praisement having been confirmed the report was again read,
and the question arose — should it be adopted or deferred? Ac-
cording to the established rule just stated, the report should have
been then voted on, unless a conflict of opinion on its merits ex-
isted. To settle the question Aid. Coombes moved " that the
report be adopted and that the Council do noAv proceed to select
one of the sites." He prefaced his motion Avith a most energetic
address, in which he stated it to be his desire to shew the oppo-
nents of the Hall that they could not defeat the project by crea-
ting a division of option as to the selection of a site, asserting
emphatically, that instead of having any intention of being fac-
tious in his opposition, in the event of his favorite site not being
selected, he would cordially co-operate with the majority and
would be glad to have "the first sod turned," or the first stone
of the building laid, "to-morrow, on any site that the Council
might choose." Aid. Power recommended delay, in order that
the whole Council might go and examine the sites in a body. To
this it was answered that that duty had been referred to a com-
mittee, and that the report embodied the results of their en-
([uiry — also that nearly all the members of Council had already
examined the several sites reported on. Aid. Seeton spoke for
delay — not on his own account, because he was a member of the
committee that had made tho examination and report, but in
— 8—
case other inombera of Council wore not ac((uainted with the
sites. As no one, however, expressed a wish to avail himself of
this offer of delay, or professed to be uninformed on the business
in hand, the objection was not pressed, and Aid. Coombes' mo-
tion was carried without dissent. The choice then lay in the
three properties mentioned. Mr. Cochran asked for his proper-
ty $42,000. 1 1 was an irregular block containing about 8600
square feet of land, measuring about 75 feet on Argyle Street,
141 i feet on Prince Street and 42 feet on Barrington Street.
Ilia otter was considered out of the (juestion, because on the day
when the report was presented tho wing wliich fronted on Bar-
rington Street had been disposed of, and the otter could not be
carried out even if accepted. The property ottered by James
Fari^uhar consisted of tAvo blocks of land : The Mott property
in Argyle Street 80 by 60 feet or thereabout, and the Grant
property in Argyle and Grafton streets 40 feet on Argyle
street, 86 feet or thereabouts on Grafton, street and 120 feet
deep. These two blocks Avere put in at $16,000 and $15,-
000 respectively, and contained about 11,440 st^uarc feet.
One peculiarity about this property was that tho block
offered to the City at $15,000, the City had under a lease,
with the right of purchasing at $10,000. The property was
entirely unsuitable, firstbecauseof its inconvenient shape, which
would make a very awkward style of building, next because it
was situated near a very large manufactory which caused an al-
most constant noise and vibration and increased .the risk of fire.
Aid. Coombes moved that Mr. Farquhar's oflfer be accepted ,
but the motion was not seconded. The property ottered by Mr.
Jennett was really the only one on which the choice could fall,
and it was then unanimously accepted by the following
resolution, written at the table,and moved by Aid. Vaux — not
carefully prepared before-hand and drawn from his pocket, as
has been asserted by the inventors of the bogus stories about
"rings" and "jobs:" "Resolved that the City Council accept
the proposition of J. 11. Jennett, Esq., ottering his premises on
Lockman Street Extension and Poplar Grove for the sum of
$35,000, and that His Worship the Mayor be authorised to have
debentures issued, bearing interest at six per centum per an-
num for the purchase of the same, and that on the necessary
documents being completed such debentures be handed to J. R.
Jennett,
Esq.
The Jennett Site.
We ask the attention of the public now to a. few facts about
this site. It is a block ot land nearly square, containing nearly
P"
WKKS
C(I with the
1 himself of
I'o business
ombes' mo-
Jay ill the
"3 proper -
bout 8G00
'la Street,
on Street.
)n the day
(i on liar-
Id not be
^y James
property
be Grant
Argylo
120 feet
ul 115,-
rc feet.
J block
a lease,
"i'ty was
3, which
cause it
d an al-
: of fire,
ccpted,
by Mr.
lid fall,
llowing
X — not
ket, as
about
accept
ses on
am of
) have
3r an-
sssary
ibout
larly
— 9—
18000 square feet fronting on Lockman Street Extension I24i-
feet — on Poplar Grove loO feet and extending in depth, between
the two about 150 feet. The price per foot of the three proper-
ties stood thus :
The Jonnett property about i*l .90 per foot.
TheFanjuhar " $2.70
The Cochran " $4.88 ''
The price per foot was less than half what was realized for
some properties a short distance to the southward not long be-
fore, and was no greater than the price asked and given for
properties half a mile farther north. The property was within
a hundred and sixty feet of Water Street, within two hundred
and ilfty feet of Jacob Street, and within forty feet of Temperance
Hall, which has generally been considered pretty central. It
was, as regards North and South, in the centre of the City as
nearly as that centre could be arrived at. The public have been
told that a building should not be located according to its distance
from " imaginary Hues," but it is something new to be told that
the boundaries of Halifax, are imaginary lines. They are the
natural, plainly defined limits of the Peninsula and the man who
•would locate such an edifice regardless of those limits — regard-
less of the northward and westward growth of the City, and
with a view only to the business centre of to-day, must be blind
to the evidence of the senses, and must forget that Halifax is to
have a future. Even as regards the present business centre, the
location is not inconvenient, nor farther removed than many of
the public buildings in other cities, although the public have
been told stories about the miraculously short space of time in
which some persons have, (according to their own account),
travelled between those buildings in American, ! Canadian and
English cities. If the argument should prevail that all the offices
of the Dominion and Local Governments, the Banks, the Mark-
ets, the Hotels, Telegraph office and City departments should
be concentrated within a stone's throw of each other, why should
they not all be collected in a single block V Or why is it that
such a rule has been discovered to be sound in Halifax alone ? It
is moreover something new to hear that the City building has any
necessary connection with the institutions just named, and ye<"
such are the objections invoked against the selection made by
the Council. Another objection is that the locality is obscure.
The obvious answer is that the main front of the building would
be on the greatest thoroughfare in Halifax, extending as it
does from end to end of the City, and travelled by almost every
person who comes by rail, or steamer to Halifax. It is true
that the Extension has not been rapidly built up since its open-
ing, but tliat is perhaps another reason why such a site should
11
— 10—
bo chosen. The street costs the City for interest about $8000'
per annum, and it is desirable that the properties along its line
should be l3uilt up, in order that the Treasury may have a set-
off in the shape of rates and taxes. As regards the price of
the property, it has been stated that a year ago or more, it was
offered to a company at 5:^16,000. This is true only of a frac-
tion oi' the property — the site accepted by the City was never
offered in a single block before. While Mr. Jennett is the only
person known by the Council in the bargain, the Committee and
other members of Council, were aware that it embraced these
properties, viz. :
Mr. Jennett's original property which had cost
him about S?22,000
Mr. Tv. M. Harrington's property included in
Mr. Jennett's offer and which cost Mr.
Jennett $6,000
A portion of Mr. Jno. Woodill's property, cost-
ing Mr. Jennett -HOOO
A portion of Dr. Curran's property costing $2,000
.S34,000
Mr. Jennett further represented, that to obtain immediate pos-
session of all the houses let to tenants on these properties, would
require a considerable additional outlay.
This property having been accepted by the resolution above
given, the Mayor on his own responsibihty, caused the following
letter to be sent next day to Mr. Jennett, enclosing Aldermaa
Vaux's resolution :
*' Halifax, 16th July, 1874.
Sir, —
I have the honor to enclose you a copy of a resolution which
passed at a meeting of the City Council, held yesterday in ref-
erence to the purchase of property for a site for the new City
Hall. •! am Sir,
Your obedient servant,
(Signed.) THOS. RHIND, City Clerk."
To J. E. Jennett, Esq."
It may here be added that by agreeing to pay for the prooer-
ty in debentures at par, bearing six per cent, interest, whilethe
Act aiithorised seven per cent, to be paid, the City was avoid-
ing anv losses by discount, brokerages, or high rates of interest
on this $35,000.
h
—11—
Opposition to the Action of the Council.
On the clay following the action of the Council, the press
commenced to animadvert on the proceedings. The vote
was declared hasty — the site was pronounced useless — the
public were told that this matter had been sprung upon them—
several papers declared that the v/hole transaction Avas a job
in which the Aldermen had sold their votes, although the
writers and publishers knew in eveiy case, that these were
malicious slanders, and one of the papers afterwards gave, as a
tit-bit for its readers, (native invention having been exhaus-
ted), a story about the corruption of the Council which
appeared in a paper in another Province, although every per-
son connected with the paper copying it, knew that every
line and word of the story was false and made ou<^ of whole
cloth. The scandalous charges which have been made are
perhaps too base to notice, but once for all we make the
assertion — and challenge the slightest proof to the contrary
— that not a single member of the Council was interested
directly or indirectly to the extent of a single dollar in the
selection of the Jennett site. In a few days however, the
excitement fomented by the press took the shape of a requis-
ition to the Mayor, asking that a public meeting be convened
to test public opinion upon the "unanimous vote of the Coun-
cil in selecting the site for the City Hall." Although this
was a matter that immediately concerned his Council and
involved perhaps a censure on their proceedings, the Mayor
appointed and advertised the time and place of the meeting
at the instance of their opponents and without consulting a
single alderman. After the advertisement appeared soine of
the Aldermen were given to understand that the Mayor
would decline to preside at the Meeting, and thinking that
it was his duty to take the chair, and that the maintenance
of order and free discussion would probably depend on his
doing so, two of the Aldermen waited on him and request-
ed that he would call an informal meeting of the Aldermen
to consult upon this and other points, preparatory to the
meeting. Instead of doing so he summoned an ordinary
meeting of the City Council to be held on the day of the
meeting, the notice adding " in the Committee-room," but as
the law declares that the meetings of the Council shall be
public and as any secret action of the corporate body would
not only be unprecedented, but would be highly improper
at such a time, and be the subject of justly severe comment,
the Aldermen remained absent with two exceptions. They
attended the meeting however, in the evening, without being
!
—12—
aware of what resolutions were to be moved against them —
what speakers were to occupy the platform, what limit would
be set to the speaking, or whether any but the opponents of
the Council would be allowed to speak. The meeting, as far
as its organization and arrangements went, was therefore in
the hands of our opponents, and the only wonder is that
greater unanimity did Hot exist among the speakers, and
prevail among the audience, who wei'e specially summoned
to condemn the City Council. The proceedings of the
meeting having been pretty accurately reported, it is un-
necessary for us to detail what was said and done. Suffice
it to say that the speakers o])posed to the action of the
Council, were almost Avithout a single exception, men who
were the declared opponents of any and every City Hall
scheme.
Those opinions evidently had a numerical preponderence in
the meeting, and, as a consequence, the only observations ad-
dressed to the real subject in hand — the choice of a site
and against the resolution of the City Council — consis-
ted in a few jocularities which would have been equal-
ly pleasing and successful if applied to any other locality in
the city. The principal objection urged then and since was
as to the "haste" of the Council in taking action. We have
already examined that question as viewed in the light o^
the established practice of the Council. Let us now con-
sider whether the vote was hasty as regards the citizens at
large. The public had notice four months previous that the
Council had resolved to build a Hall. Step by step the
bill passed through that body, it was published in extenso,
it went to the House of Assembly, was debated there in
committee and in the House, it went to the Legislative
Council and was debated there still more carefully, it be-
came law and the Council acted on it by appointing a Com-
mittee to select a site, after a resolution which had laid on
the table for weeks. The Committee deliberated for nearly a
month, they announced that they would report at an early
day. All these proceedings were taken and were published
to the world in course of that four months, and not a single
man of the numbers who afterwards declared themselves
opposed to the City Hall project, raised his voice against
the scheme to protest against its being carried further or
took the trouble to send a petition to the Council or to the
Legislature to stivy action. A moderate editorial appeared
in one of the papers against '.t, but the article awakened no
response in the community, excepting a favorable one to the
project from another journal. The mouths of those who
^mm
them —
b would
lents of
^, as far
3fore in
is that
rs, and
inioned
of the
is un-
Suffice
of the
n who
ty Hall
rence in
ions ad-
a site
-consis-
equal-
ality in
nee was
Ve have
light o^
ow eon-
iizens at
that the
step the
cxtenso,
there in
^islative
y, it be-
: a Corn-
laid on
nearly a
an early
iiblished
a single
3mselves
against
rther or
)r to the
ippeared
^ened no
ae to the
lose who
—13—
opposed the building of a Hall should therefore be forever
closed on the subject of "hasty action." Those who object
to the selection of the site, and to that alone, have been ans-
wered by the remarks already made, which shew that in
our judgment the site was a good one, and that to have
selected either of the other two v.ould have been madness.
Of course there are some citizens who have joined the out-
cry against the Council from motives of self-interest more
or less direct — some having sites to offer, some having friends
with sites to offer, others anxious to see the City Hall near
their own properties, and if the Council, after the convic-
tions of every one of its members had been satisfied as to
the action which should be taken, and after having waited
four or five months t