APPENDIX I.

(See [p. 295].)

PLAN FOR THE ACCELERATION OF THE CHINA MAILS (i. e. THEIR CONVEYANCE FROM SUEZ, viâ CEYLON TO HONG KONG DIRECT)

SUBMITTED BY MR. HENRY WISE TO HER MAJESTY'S GOVERNMENT SEPT. 14, 1843, ADOPTED JUNE 20, 1845, AND NOW IN ACTIVE AND SUCCESSFUL OPERATION.

Proposed Route from Hong Kong to London, and vice versâ.Course.Dist. Miles.Av. Rate per Hour, Miles.Interval und. weigh.Interval at Anchor.Total Interval.Duties at Anchor.
Days.Hrs.Days.Hrs.Days.Hrs.
HONG KONGTOPULO LABUANS. 2° .18' E.100976112712To receive Coal.[B]
PULO LABUANTOSINGAPORES. 69° .23' W. 707"4 612418To receive Coal, land & receive Mails.
SINGAPORETOMALACCA S. 64° .48' W. 19 122"18 61To land & receive Mails.
N. 51° .41' W. 103
MALACCATOPENANGN. 30° .37' W. 222"1 8162To receive Coal, land & receive Mails.
PENANGTOCEYLON[A] N. 82° .24' W. 303 1219"7 6112818Ditto. Ditto.
S. 89° .45' W. 916
CEYLONTOADENAs now performed by the Peninsula & Oriental SteamNavigation Company, detention of 2 days included.11
ADENTOSUEZ2 8
SUEZTOALEX­ANDRIAall stoppages3
ALEX­ANDRIATOMALTA 4
MALTATOMARSEILLESH.M. Post-Office Packets4
MARSEILLESTOLONDONRegular course of Post5
Total interval from HONG KONG to LONDON,and vice versâ, by the proposed RouteDays59
Average interval of transmission of ChinaCorrespondence, viâ Calcutta and Bombay, during the last TwentyOverland Mails, viz. from the 10th October 1841, to 6th May 1843 89
Difference of Time in Favour ofProposed RouteDays30

[A] Receiving at Ceylon, the Outward Overland Mail from England, and returning therewith to China.

[B] The Borneo Coal Mines would also serve to keep the Hong-Kong, Singapore, and Penang Stations supplied with Fuel for Steam Vessels carrying the Mails between Hong Kong and Suez direct.

Mem.—I have adopted an average rate of seven miles per hour as a fair estimate of the speed that well-appointed Steam Vessels, of moderate size and power, will be enabled to accomplish and maintain, throughout the proposed route, at all seasons of the year; for, during the whole distance from Penang to Aden, and vice versâ, neither monsoon, from the course steered, becomes at any period a directly adverse wind; an advantage which the route hitherto observed does not possess. Assuming that the Honourable East-India Company continue the management of the Bombay line, and that the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company are encouraged to render their operations more comprehensive, by the establishment of Branch Steamers between Ceylon and Singapore, to which latter Port Her Majesty's Steam Vessels on the China Station could convey the Mails from Hong Kong, this all-important object might, without difficulty, be attained. The advantages to the Straits' Settlements, consequent on the adoption of improved arrangements, require no comment; and the practicability of effecting a very considerable acceleration of the communication with China, is evident from the simple fact, that the average interval which has occurred in the transmission of letters from China, by the last twenty Overland Mails, (irrespective of the unfortunate July Mail from Bombay,) exceeds the period occasionally occupied by fast-sailing ships, in accomplishing the voyage viâ the Cape of Good Hope.

Henry Wise.