December
3, 1833
Washington, DC
Fellow Citizens of the Senate and House of Representatives:
On your assembling to perform the high trusts which the people
of the United States have confided to you, of legislating for their common
welfare, it gives me pleasure to congratulate you upon the happy condition
of our beloved country. By the favor of Divine Providence health is again
restored to us, peace reigns within our borders, abundance crowns the
labors of our fields, commerce and domestic industry flourish and increase,
and individual happiness rewards the private virtue and enterprise of
our citizens.
Our condition abroad is no less honorable than it is prosperous
at home. Seeking nothing that is not right and determined to submit to
nothing that is wrong, but desiring honest friendships and liberal intercourse
with all nations, the United States have gained throughout the world the
confidence and respect which are due to a policy so just and so congenial
to the character of the American people and to the spirit of their institutions.
In bringing to your notice the particular state of our foreign
affairs, it affords me high gratification to inform you that they are
in a condition which promises the continuance of friendship with all nations.
With Great Britain the interesting question of our North East
boundary remains still undecided. A negotiation, however, upon that subject
has been renewed since the close of the last Congress, and a proposition
has been submitted to the British Government with the view of establishing,
in conformity with the resolution of the Senate, the line designated by
the treaty of 1783. Though no definitive answer has been received, it
may be daily looked for, and I entertain a hope that the overture may
ultimately lead to a satisfactory adjustment of this important matter.
I have the satisfaction to inform you that a negotiation which,
by desire of the House of Representatives, was opened some years ago with
the British Government, for the erection of light houses on the Bahamas,
has been successful. Those works, when completed, together with those
which the United States have constructed on the western side of the Gulf
of Florida, will contribute essentially to the safety of navigation in
that sea. This joint participation in establishments interesting to humanity
and beneficial to commerce is worthy of two enlightened nations, and indicates
feelings which can not fail to have a happy influence upon their political
relations. It is gratifying to the friends of both to perceive that the
intercourse between the two people is becoming daily more extensive, and
that sentiments of mutual good will have grown up befitting their common
origin and justifying the hope that by wise counsels on each side not
only unsettled questions may be satisfactorily terminated, but new causes
of misunderstanding prevented.
Not withstanding that I continue to receive the most amicable
assurances from the Government of France, and that in all other respects
the most friendly relations exist between the United States and that Government,
it is to be regretted that the stipulations of the convention concluded
on July 7, 1831 remain in some important parts unfulfilled.
By the second article of that convention it was stipulated that
the sum payable to the United States should be paid at Paris, in 6 annual
installments, into the hands of such person or persons as should be authorized
by the Government of the United States to receive it, and by the same
article the first installment was payable on February 2, 1833. By the
act of Congress of July 13, 1832 it was made the duty of the Secretary
of the Treasury to cause the several installments, with the interest thereon,
to be received from the French Government and transferred to the United
States in such manner as he may deem best; and by the same act of Congress
the stipulations on the part of the United States in the convention were
in all respects fulfilled. Not doubting that a treaty thus made and ratified
by the two Governments, and faithfully executed by the United States,
would be promptly complied with by the other party, and desiring to avoid
the risk and expense of intermediate agencies, the Secretary of the Treasury
deemed it advisable to receive and transfer the first installment by means
of a draft upon the French minister of finance.
A draft for this purpose was accordingly drawn in favor of the
cashier of the Bank of the United States for the amount accruing to the
United States out of the first installment, and the interest payable with
it. This bill was not drawn at Washington until 5 days after the installment
was payable at Paris, and was accompanied by a special authority from
the President authorizing the cashier or his assigns to receive the amount.
The mode thus adopted of receiving the installment was officially made
known to the French Government by the American chargé d'affaires
at Paris, pursuant to instructions from the Department of State. The bill,
however, though not presented for payment until March 23, 1833 was not
paid, and for the reason assigned by the French minister of finance that
no appropriation had been made by the French Chambers. It is not known
to me that up to that period any appropriation had been required of the
Chambers, and although a communication was subsequently made to the Chambers
by direction of the King, recommending that the necessary provision should
be made for carrying the convention into effect, it was at an advanced
period of the session, and the subject was finally postponed until the
next meeting of the Chambers.
Not withstanding it has been supposed by the French ministry
that the financial stipulations of the treaty can not be carried into
effect without an appropriation by the Chambers, it appears to me to be
not only consistent with the character of France, but due to the character
of both Governments, as well as to the rights of our citizens, to treat
the convention, made and ratified in proper form, as pledging the good
faith of the French Government for its execution, and as imposing upon
each department an obligation to fulfill it; and I have received assurances
through our chargé d'affaires at Paris and the French minister
plenipotentiary at Washington, and more recently through the minister
of the United States at Paris, that the delay has not proceeded from any
indisposition on the part of the King and his ministers to fulfill their
treaty, and that measures will be presented at the next meeting of the
Chambers, and with a reasonable hope of success, to obtain the necessary
appropriation.
It is necessary to state, however, that the documents, except
certain lists of vessels captured, condemned, or burnt at sea, proper
to facilitate the examination and liquidation of the reclamations comprised
in the stipulations of the convention, and which by the 6th article France
engaged to communicate to the United States by the intermediary of the
legation, though repeatedly applied for by the American chargé
d'affaires under instructions from this Government, have not yet been
communicated; and this delay, it is apprehended, will necessarily prevent
the completion of the duties assigned to the commissioners within the
time at present prescribed by law.
The reasons for delaying to communicate these documents have
not been explicitly stated, and this is the more to be regretted as it
is not understood that the interposition of the Chambers is in any manner
required for the delivery of those papers.
Under these circumstances, in a case so important to the interests
of our citizens and to the character of our country, and under disappointments
so unexpected, I deemed it my duty, however I might respect the general
assurances to which I have adverted, no longer to delay the appointment
of a minister plenipotentiary to Paris, but to dispatch him in season
to communicate the result of his application to the French Government
at an early period of your session. I accordingly appointed a distinguished
citizen for this purpose, who proceeded on his mission in August last
and was presented to the King early in the month of October. He is particularly
instructed as to all matters connected with the present posture of affairs,
and I indulge the hope that with the representations he is instructed
to make, and from the disposition manifested by the King and his ministers
in their recent assurances to our minister at Paris, the subject will
be early considered, and satisfactorily disposed of at the next meeting
of the Chambers.
As this subject involves important interests and has attracted
a considerable share of the public attention, I have deemed it proper
to make this explicit statement of its actual condition, and should I
be disappointed in the hope now entertained the subject will be again
brought to the notice of Congress in such manner as the occasion may require.
The friendly relations which have always been maintained between
the United States and Russia have been further extended and strengthened
by the treaty of navigation and commerce concluded on December 6, 1832
and sanctioned by the Senate before the close of its last session. The
ratifications having been since exchanged, the liberal provisions of the
treaty are now in full force, and under the encouragement which they have
secured a flourishing and increasing commerce, yielding its benefits to
the enterprise of both nations, affords to each the just recompense of
wise measures, and adds new motives for that mutual friendship which the
two countries have hitherto cherished toward each other.
It affords me peculiar satisfaction to state that the Government
of Spain has at length yielded to the justice of the claims which have
been so long urged in behalf of our citizens, and has expressed a willingness
to provide an indemnification as soon as the proper amount can be agreed
upon. Upon this latter point it is probable an understanding had taken
place between the minister of the United States and the Spanish Government
before the decease of the late King of Spain; and, unless that event may
have delayed its completion, there is reason to hope that it may be in
my power to announce to you early in your present session the conclusion
of a convention upon terms not less favorable than those entered into
for similar objects with other nations. That act of justice would well
accord with the character of Spain, and is due to the United States from
their ancient friend. It could not fail to strengthen the sentiments of
amity and good will between the two nations which it is so much the wish
of the United States to cherish and so truly the interest of both to maintain.
By the first section of an act of Congress passed on July 13,
1832 the tonnage duty on Spanish ships arriving from the ports of Spain
previous to October 20, 1817 being 5 cents per ton. That act was intended
to give effect on our side to an arrangement made with the Spanish Government
by which discriminating duties of tonnage were to be abolished in the
ports of the United States and Spain on he vessels of the two nations.
Pursuant to that arrangement, which was carried into effect on the part
of Spain on May 20, 1832 by a royal order dated April 29, 1832 American
vessels in the ports of Spain have paid 5 cents per ton, which rate of
duty is also paid in those ports by Spanish ships; but as American vessels
pay no tonnage duty in the ports of the United States, the duty of 5 cents
payable in our ports by Spanish vessels under the act above mentioned
is really a discriminating duty, operating to the disadvantage of Spain.
Though no complaint has yet been made on the part of Spain, we
are not the less bound by the obligations of good faith to remove the
discrimination, and I recommend that the act be amended accordingly. As
the royal order above alluded to includes the ports of the Balearic and
Canary islands as well as those of Spain, it would seem that the provisions
of the act of Congress should be equally extensive, and that for the repayments
of such duties as may have been improperly received an addition should
be made to the sum appropriated at the last session of Congress for refunding
discriminating duties.
As the arrangement referred to, however, did not embrace the
islands of Cuba and Puerto Rico, discriminating duties to the prejudice
of American shipping continue to be levied there. From the extent of the
commerce carried on between the United States and those islands, particularly
the former, this discrimination causes serious injury to one of those
great national interests which it has been considered an essential part
of our policy to cherish, and has given rise to complaints on the part
of our merchants. Under instructions given to our minister at Madrid,
earnest representations have been made by him to the Spanish Government
upon this subject, and there is reason to expect, from the friendly disposition
which is entertained toward this country, that a beneficial change will
be produced.
The disadvantage, however, to which our shipping is subjected
by the operation of these discriminating duties requires that they be
met by suitable countervailing duties during your present session, power
being at the same time vested in the President to modify or discontinue
them as the discriminating duties on American vessels or their cargoes
may be modified or discontinued at those islands. Intimations have been
given to the Spanish Government that the United States may be obliged
to resort to such measures as are of necessary self-defense, and there
is no reason to apprehend that it would be unfavorably received. The proposed
proceeding if adopted would not be permitted, however, in any degree to
induce a relaxation in the efforts of our minister to effect a repeal
of this irregularity by friendly negotiation, and it might serve to give
force to his representations by showing the dangers to which that valuable
trade is exposed by the obstructions and burdens which a system of discriminating
and countervailing duties necessarily produces.
The selection and preparation of the Florida archives for the
purpose of being delivered over to the United States, in conformity with
the royal order as mentioned in my last annual message, though in progress,
has not yet been completed. This delay has been produced partly by causes
which were unavoidable, particularly the prevalence of the cholera at
Havana; but measures have been taken which it is believed will expedite
the delivery of those important records.
Congress were informed at the opening of the last session that
"owing, as was alleged, to embarrassments in the finances of Portugal,
consequent upon the civil war in which that nation was engaged", payment
had been made of only one installment of the amount which the Portuguese
Government had stipulated to pay for indemnifying our citizens for property
illegally captured in the blockade of Terceira. Since that time a postponement
for two years, with interest, of the 2 remaining installments was requested
by the Portuguese Government, and as a consideration it offered to stipulate
that rice of the United States should be admitted into Portugal at the
same duties as Brazilian rice. Being satisfied that no better arrangement
could be made, my consent was given, and a royal order of the King of
Portugal was accordingly issued on February 4, 1833 for the reduction
of the duty on rice of the United States. It would give me great pleasure
if in speaking of that country, in whose prosperity the United States
are so much interested, and with whom a long-subsisting, extensive, and
mutually advantageous commercial intercourse has strengthened the relation
of friendship, I could announce to you the restoration of its internal
tranquillity.
Subsequently to the commencement of the last session of Congress
the final installment payable by Denmark under the convention of March
28, 1830 was received. The commissioners for examining the claims have
since terminated their labors, and their awards have been paid at the
Treasury as they have been called for. The justice rendered to our citizens
by that Government is thus completed, and a pledge is thereby afforded
for the maintenance of that friendly intercourse becoming the relations
that the two nations mutually bear to each other.
It is satisfactory to inform you that the Danish Government have
recently issued an ordinance by which the commerce with the island of
St. Croix is placed on a more liberal footing than heretofore. This change
can not fail to prove beneficial to the trade between the United States
and that colony, and the advantages likely to flow from it may lead to
greater relaxations in the colonial systems of other nations.
The ratifications of the convention with the King of the two
Sicilies have been duly exchanged, and the commissioners appointed for
examining the claims under it have entered upon the duties assigned to
them by law. The friendship that the interests of the two nations require
of them being now established, it may be hoped that each will enjoy the
benefits which a liberal commerce should yield to both.
A treaty of amity and commerce between the United States and
Belgium was concluded during the last winter and received the sanction
of the Senate, but the exchange of the ratifications has been hitherto
delayed, in consequence, in the first instance, of some delay in the reception
of the treaty at Brussels, and, subsequently, of the absence of the Belgian
minister of foreign affairs at the important conferences in which his
Government is engaged at London. That treaty does but embody those enlarged
principles of friendly policy which it is sincerely hoped will always
regulate the conduct of the two nations having such strong motives to
maintain amicable relations toward each other and so sincerely desirous
to cherish them.
With all the other European powers with whom the United States
have formed diplomatic relations and with the Sublime Porte the best understanding
prevails. From all I continue to receive assurances of good will toward
the United States -- assurances which it gives me no less pleasure to
reciprocate than to receive. With all, the engagements which have been
entered into are fulfilled with good faith on both sides. Measures have
also been taken to enlarge our friendly relations and extend our commercial
intercourse with other States. The system we have pursued of aiming at
no exclusive advantages, of dealing with all on terms of fair and equal
reciprocity, and of adhering scrupulously to all our engagements is well
calculated to give success to efforts intended to be mutually beneficial.
The wars of which the southern part of this continent was so
long the theater, and which were carried on either by the mother country
against the States which had formerly been her colonies or by the States
against each other, having terminated, and their civil dissensions having
so far subsided as with few exceptions no longer to disturb the public
tranquillity, it is earnestly hoped those States will be able to employ
themselves without interruption in perfecting their institutions, cultivating
the arts of peace, and promoting by wise councils and able exertions the
public and private prosperity which their patriotic struggles so well
entitle them to enjoy.
With those States our relations have under-gone but little change
during the present year. No reunion having yet taken place between the
States which composed the Republic of Colombia, our chargé d'affaires
at Bogota has been accredited to the Government of New Grenada, and we
have, therefore, no diplomatic relations with Venezuela and Equator, except
as they may be included in those heretofore formed with the Colombian
Republic.
It is understood that representatives from the three stattes
were about to assemble at Bogota to confer on the subject of their mutual
interests, particularly that of their union, and if the result should
render it necessary, measures will be taken on our part to preserve with
each that friendship and those liberal commercial connections which it
has been the constant desire of the United States to cultivate with their
sister Republics of this hemisphere. Until the important question of reunion
shall be settled, however, the different matters which have been under
discussion between the United States and the Republic of Colombia, or
either of the States which composed it, are not likely to be brought to
a satisfactory issue.
In consequence of the illness of the chargé d'affaires
appointed to Central America at the last session of Congress, he was prevented
from proceeding on his mission until the month of October. It is hoped,
however, that he is by this time at his post, and that the official intercourse,
unfortunately so long interrupted, has been thus renewed on the part of
the two nations so amicably and advantageously connected by engagements
founded on the most enlarged principles of commercial reciprocity.
It is gratifying to state that since my last annual message some
of the most important claims of our fellow citizens upon the Government
of Brazil have been satisfactorily adjusted, and a reliance is placed
on the friendly dispositions manifested by it that justice will also be
done in others. No new causes of complaint have arisen, and the trade
between the two countries flourishes under the encouragement secured to
it by the liberal provisions of the treaty.
It is cause of regret that, owing, probably, to the civil dissensions
which have occupied the attention of the Mexican Government, the time
fixed by the treaty of limits with the United States for the meeting of
the commissioners to define the boundaries between the two nations has
been suffered to expire without the appointment of any commissioners on
the part of that Government. While the true boundary remains in doubt
by either party it is difficult to give effect to those measures which
are necessary to the protection and quiet of our numerous citizens residing
near that frontier. The subject is one of great solicitude to the United
States, and will not fail to receive my earnest attention.
The treaty concluded with Chili and approved by the Senate at
its last session was also ratified by the Chilian Government, but with
certain additional and explanatory articles of a nature to have required
it to be again submitted to the Senate. The time limited for the exchange
of the ratification, however, having since expired, the action of both
Governments on the treaty will again become necessary.
The negotiations commenced with the Argentine Republic relative
to the outrages committed on our vessels engaged in the fisheries at the
Falkland Islands by persons acting under the color of its authority, as
well as the other matters in controversy between the two Governments,
have been suspended by the departure of the chargé d'affaires of
the United States from Buenos Ayres. It is understood, however, that a
minister was subsequently appointed by that Government to renew the negotiation
in the United States, but though daily expected he has not yet arrived
in this country.
With Peru no treaty has yet been formed, and with Bolivia no
diplomatic intercourse has yet been established. It will be my endeavor
to encourage those sentiments of amity and that liberal commerce which
belong to the relations in which all the independent States of this continent
stand toward each other.
I deem it proper to recommend to your notice the revision of
our consular system. This has become an important branch of the public
service, in as much as it is intimately connected with the preservation
of our national character abroad, with the interest of our citizens in
foreign countries, with the regulation and care of our commerce, and with
the protection of our sea men. At the close of the last session of Congress
I communicated a report from the Secretary of State upon the subject,
to which I now refer, as containing information which may be useful in
any inquiries that Congress may see fit to institute with a view to a
salutary reform of the system.
It gives me great pleasure to congratulate you upon the prosperous
condition of the finances of the country, as will appear from the report
which the Secretary of the Treasury will in due time lay before you. The
receipts into the Treasury during the present year will amount to more
than $32,000,000. The revenue derived from customs will, it is believed,
be more than $28,000,000, and the public lands will yield about $3,0900,000.
The expenditures within the year for all objects, including $2,572,240.99
on account of the public debt, will not amount to $25,000,000, and a large
balance will remain in the Treasury after satisfying all the appropriations
chargeable on the revenue for the present year.
The measures taken by the Secretary of the Treasury will probably
enable to pay off in the course of the present year the residue of the
exchanged 4.5% stock, redeemable on January 1, 1834. It has therefore
been included in the estimated expenditures of this year, and forms a
part of the sum above stated to have been paid on account of the public
debt. The payment of this stock will reduce the whole debt of the United
States, funded and unfunded, to the sum of $4,760,082.08, and as provision
has already been made for the 4.5% stocks above mentioned, and charged
in the expenses of the present year, the sum last stated is all that now
remains of the national debt; and the revenue of the coming year, together
with the balance now in the Treasury, will be sufficient to discharge
it, after meeting the current expenses of the Government. Under the power
given to the commissioners of the sinking fund, it will, I have no doubt,
be purchased on favorable terms within the year.
From this view of the state of the finances and the public engagements
yet to be fulfilled you will perceive that if Providence permits me to
meet you at another session I shall have the high gratification of announcing
to you that the national debt is extinguished. I can not refrain from
expressing the pleasure I feel at the near approach of that desirable
event. The short period of time within which the public debt will have
been discharged is strong evidence of the abundant resources of the country
and of the prudence and economy with which the Government has heretofore
been administered. We have waged two wars since we became a nation, with
one of the most powerful kingdoms in the world, both of them undertaken
in defense of our dearest rights, been successfully prosecuted and honorably
terminated; and many of those who partook in the first struggle as well
as in the second will have lived to see the last item of the debt incurred
in these necessary but expensive conflicts faithfully and honestly discharged.
And we shall have the proud satisfaction of bequeathing to the public
servants who follow us in the administration of the Government the rare
blessing of a revenue sufficiently abundant, raised without injustice
or oppression to our citizens, and unencumbered with any burdens but what
they themselves shall think proper to impose upon it.
The flourishing state of the finances ought not, however, to
encourage us to indulge in a lavish expenditure of the public treasure.
The receipts of the present year do not furnish the test by which we are
to estimate the income of the next. The changes made in our revenue system
by the acts of Congress of 1832 and 1833, and more especially by the former,
have swelled the receipts of the present year far beyond the amount to
be expected in future years upon the reduced tariff of duties. The shortened
credits on revenue bonds and the cash duties on woolens which were introduced
by the act of 1832, and took effect on March 4, 1832 have brought large
sums into the Treasury in 1833, which, according to the credits formerly
given, would not have been payable until 1834, and would have formed a
part of the income of that year. These causes would of themselves produce
a great diminution of the receipts in the year 1834 as compared with the
present one, and they will be still more diminished by the reduced rates
of duties which take place on January 1, 1834 on some of the most important
and productive articles.
Upon the best estimates that can be made the receipts of the
next year, with the aid of the unappropriated amount now in the Treasury,
will not be much more than sufficient to meet the expenses of the year
and pay the small remnant of the national debt which yet remains unsatisfied.
I can not, therefore, recommend to you any alteration in the present tariff
of duties. The rate as now fixed by law on the various articles was adopted
at the last session of Congress, as a matter of compromise, with unusual
unanimity, and unless it is found to produce more than the necessities
of the Government call for there would seem to be no reason at this time
to justify a change.
But while I forbear to recommend any further reduction of the
duties beyond that already provided for by the existing laws, I must earnestly
and respectfully press upon Congress the importance of abstaining from
all appropriations which are not absolutely required for the public interest
and authorized by the powers clearly delegated to the United States. We
are beginning a new era in our Government. The national debt, which has
so long been a burden on the Treasury, will be finally discharged in the
course of the ensuing year. No more memory will afterwards be needed than
what may be necessary to meet the ordinary expenses of the Government.
Now, then, is the proper moment to fix our system of expenditure on firm
and durable principles, and I can not too strongly urge the necessity
of a rigid economy and an inflexible determination not to enlarge the
income beyond the real necessities of the Government and not to increase
the wants of the Government by unnecessary and profuse expenditures.
If a contrary course should be pursued, it may happen that the
revenue of 1834 will fall short of the demands upon it, and after reducing
the tariff in order to lighten the burdens of the people, and providing
for a still further reduction to take effect hereafter, it would be much
to be deplored if at the end of another year we should find ourselves
obliged to retrace our steps and impose additional taxes to meet unnecessary
expenditures.
It is my duty on this occasion to call your attention to the
destruction of the public building occupied by the Treasury Department,
which happened since the last adjournment of Congress. A thorough inquiry
into the causes of this loss was directed and made at the time, the result
of which will be duly communicated to you. I take pleasure, however, in
stating here that by the laudable exertions of the officers of the Department
and many of the citizens of the District but few papers were lost, and
none that will materially affect the public interest.
The public convenience requires that another building should
be erected as soon as practicable, and in providing for it it will be
advisable to enlarge in some manner the accommodations for the public
officers of the several Departments, and to authorize the erection of
suitable depositories for the safe-keeping of the public documents and
records.
Since the last adjournment of Congress the Secretary of the Treasury
has directed the money of the United States to be deposited in certain
State banks designated by him, and he will immediately lay before you
his reasons for this direction. I concur with him entirely in the view
he has taken on the subject, and some months before the removal I urged
upon the Department the propriety of taking that step. The near approach
of the day on which the charger will expire, as well as the conduct of
the bank, appeared to me to call for this measure upon the high considerations
of public interest and public duty. The extent of its misconduct, however,
although known to be great, was not at that time fully developed by proof.
It was not until late in the month of August that I received from the
Government directors an official report establishing beyond question that
this great and powerful institution had been actively engaged in attempting
to influence the elections of the public officers by means of its money,
and that, in violation of the express provisions of its charter, it had
by a formal resolution placed its funds at the disposition of its president
to be employed in sustaining the political power of the bank. A copy of
this resolution is contained in the report of the Government directors
before referred to, and how ever the object may be disguised by cautious
language, no one can doubt that this money was in truth intended for electioneering
purposes, and the particular uses to which it was proved to have been
applied abundantly show that it was so understood. Not only was the evidence
complete as to the past application of the money and power of the bank
to electioneering purposes, but that the resolution of the board of directors
authorized the same course to be pursued in future.
It being thus established by unquestionable proof that the Bank
of the United States was converted into a permanent electioneering engine,
it appeared to me that the path of duty which the executive department
of the Government ought to pursue was not doubtful. As by the terms of
the bank charter no officer but the Secretary of the Treasury could remove
the deposits, it seemed to me that this authority ought to be at once
exerted to deprive that great corporation of the support and countenance
of the Government in such an use of its and such an exertion of its power.
In this point of the case the question is distinctly presented whether
the people of the United States are to govern through representatives
chosen by their unbiased suffrages or whether the money and power of a
great corporation are to be secretly exerted to influence their judgment
and control their decisions. It must now be determined whether the bank
is to have its candidates for all offices in the country, from the highest
to the lowest, or whether candidates on both sides of political questions
shall be brought forward as heretofore and supported by the usual means.
At this time the efforts of the bank to control public opinion,
through the distresses of some and the fears of others, are equally apparent,
and, if possible, more objectionable. By a curtailment of its accommodations
more rapid than any emergency requires, and even while it retains specie
to an almost unprecedented amount in its vaults, it is attempting to produce
great embarrassment in one portion of the community, while through presses
known to have been sustained by its money it attempts by unfounded alarms
to create a panic in all.
These are the means by which it seems to expect that it can force
a restoration of the deposits, and as a necessary consequence extort from
Congress a renewal of its charter. I am happy to know that through the
good sense of our people the effort to get up a panic has hitherto failed,
and that through the increased accommodations which the State banks have
been enabled to afford, no public distress has followed the exertions
of the bank, and it can not be doubted that the exercise of its power
and the expenditure of its money, as well as its efforts to spread groundless
alarm, will be met and rebuked as they deserve. In my own sphere of duty
I should feel myself called on by the facts disclosed to order a scire
facias against the bank, with a view to put an end to the chartered rights
it has so palpably violated, were it not that the charter itself will
expire as soon as a decision would probably be obtained from the court
of last resort.
I called the attention of Congress to this subject in my last
annual message, and informed them that such measures as were within the
reach of the Secretary of the Treasury had been taken to enable him to
judge whether the public deposits in the Bank of the United States were
entirely safe; but that as his single powers might be inadequate to the
object, I recommended the subject to Congress as worthy of their serious
investigation, declaring it as my opinion that an inquiry into the transactions
of that institution, embracing the branches as well as the principal bank,
was called for by the credit which was given throughout the country to
many serious charges impeaching their character, and which, if true, might
justly excite the apprehension that they were no longer a safe depository
for the public money. The extent to which the examination thus recommended
was gone into is spread upon your journals, and is too well known to require
to be stated. Such as was made resulted in a report from a majority of
the Committee of Ways and Means touching certain specified points only,
concluding with a resolution that the Government deposits might safely
be continued in the Bank of the United States. This resolution was adopted
at the close of the session by the vote of a majority of the House of
Representatives.
Although I may not always be able to concur in the views of the
public interest or the duties of its agents which may be taken by the
other departments of the Government or either of its branches, I am, not
withstanding, wholly incapable of receiving otherwise than with the most
sincere respect all opinions or suggestions proceeding from such a source,
and in respect to none am I more inclined to do so than to the House of
Representatives. But it will be seen from the brief views at this time
taken of the subject by myself, as well as the more ample ones presented
by the Secretary of the Treasury, that the change in the deposits which
has been ordered has been deemed to be called for by considerations which
are not affected by the proceedings referred to, and which, if correctly
viewed by that Department, rendered its act a matter of imperious duty.
Coming as you do, for the most part, immediately from the people
and the States by election, and possessing the fullest opportunity to
know their sentiments, the present Congress will be sincerely solicitous
to carry into full and fair effect the will of their constituents in regard
to this institution. It will be for those in whose behalf we all act to
decide whether the executive department of the Government, in the steps
which it has taken on this subject, has been found in the line of its
duty.
The accompanying report of the Secretary of War, with the documents
annexed to it, exhibits the operations of the War Department for the past
year and the condition of the various subjects intrusted to its administration.
It will be seen from them that the Army maintains the character
it has heretofore acquired for efficiency and military knowledge. Nothing
has occurred since your last session to require its services beyond the
ordinary routine duties which upon the sea-board and the in-land frontier
devolve upon it in a time of peace. The system so wisely adopted and so
long pursued of constructing fortifications at exposed points and of preparing
and collecting the supplies necessary for the military defense of the
country, and thus providently furnishing in peace the means of defense
in war, has been continued with the usual results. I recommend to your
consideration the various subjects suggested in the report of the Secretary
of War. Their adoption would promote the public service and meliorate
the condition of the Army.
- Sac and Fox Removed
Our relations with the various Indian tribes have been undisturbed
since the termination of the difficulties growing out of the hostile aggressions
of the Sac and Fox Indians. Several treaties have been formed for the
relinquishment of territory to the United States and for the migration
of the occupants of the region assigned for their residence West of the
Mississippi. Should these treaties be ratified by the Senate, provision
will have been made for the removal of almost all the tribes remaining
E of that river and for the termination of many difficult and embarrassing
questions arising out of their anomalous political condition.
- Inferior Race
It is to be hoped that those portions of two of the Southern
tribes, which in that event will present the only remaining difficulties,
will realize the necessity of emigration, and will speedily resort to
it. My original convictions upon this subject have been confirmed by the
course of events for several years, and experience is every day adding
to their strength. That those tribes can not exist surrounded by our settlements
and in continual contact with our citizens is certain. They have neither
the intelligence, the industry, the moral habits, nor the desire of improvement
which are essential to any favorable change in their condition. Established
in the midst of another and a superior race, and without appreciating
the causes of their inferiority or seeking to control them, they must
necessarily yield to the force of circumstances and ere long disappear.
- Reiterating Removal
Such has been their fate heretofore, and if it is to be averted
-- and it is -- it can only be done by a general removal beyond our boundary
and by the reorganization of their political system upon principles adapted
to the new relations in which they will be placed. The experiment which
has been recently made has so far proved successful. The emigrants generally
are represented to be prosperous and contented, the country suitable to
their wants and habits, and the essential articles of subsistence easily
procured. When the report of the commissioners now engaged in investigating
the condition and prospects of these Indians and in devising a plan for
their intercourse and government is received, I trust ample means of information
will be in possession of the Government for adjusting all the unsettled
questions connected with this interesting subject.
The operations of the Navy during the year and its present condition
are fully exhibited in the annual report from the Navy Department.
Suggestions are made by the Secretary of various improvements,
which deserve careful consideration, and most of which, if adopted, bid
fair to promote the efficiency of this important branch of the public
service. Among these are the new organization of the Navy Board, the revision
of the pay to officers, and a change in the period of time or in the manner
of making the annual appropriations, to which I beg leave to call your
particular attention.
The views which are presented on almost every portion of our
naval concerns, and especially on the amount of force and the number of
officers, and the general course of policy appropriate in the present
state of our country for securing the great and useful purposes of naval
protection in peace and due preparation for the contingencies of war,
meet with my entire approbation.
It will be perceived from the report referred to that the fiscal
concerns of the establishment are in an excellent condition, and it is
hoped that Congress may feel disposed to make promptly every suitable
provision desired either for preserving or improving the system.
The general Post Office Department has continued, upon the strength
of its own resources, to facilitate the means of communication between
the various portions of the Union with increased activity. The method,
however, in which the accounts of the transportation of the mail have
always been kept appears to have presented an imperfect view of its expenses.
It has recently been discovered that from the earliest records of the
Department the annual statements have been calculated to exhibit an amount
considerably short of the actual expense incurred for that service. These
illusory statements, together with the expense of carrying into effect
the law of the last session of Congress establishing new mail routes,
and a disposition on the part of the head of the Department to gratify
the wishes of the public in the extension of mail facilities, have induced
him to incur responsibilities for their improvement beyond what the current
resources of the Department would sustain. As soon as he had discovered
the imperfection of the method he caused an investigation to be made of
its results and applied the proper remedy to correct the evil. It became
necessary for him to withdraw some of the improvements which he had made
to bring the expenses of the Department within its own resources. These
expenses were incurred for the public good, and the public have enjoyed
their benefit. They are now but partially suspended, and that where they
may be discontinued with the least inconvenience to the country.
The progressive increase in the income from postages has equaled
the highest expectations, and it affords demonstrative evidence of the
growing importance and great utility of this Department. The details are
exhibited in the accompanying report of the PostMaster General.
The many distressing accidents which have of late occurred in
that portion of our navigation carried on by the use of steam power deserve
the immediate and unremitting attention of the constituted authorities
of the country. The fact that the number of those fatal disasters is constantly
increasing, not withstanding the great improvements which are every where
made in the machinery employed and in the rapid advances which have made
in that branch of science, shows very clearly that they are in a great
degree the result of criminal negligence on the part of those by whom
the vessels are navigated and to whose care and attention the lives and
property of our citizens are so extensively intrusted.
That these evils may be greatly lessened, if not substantially
removed, by means of precautionary and penal legislation seems to be highly
probably. So far, therefore, as the subject can be regarded as within
the constitutional purview of Congress I earnestly recommend it to your
prompt and serious consideration.
I would also call your attention to the views I have heretofore
expressed of the propriety of amending the Constitution in relation to
the mode of electing the President and the Vice-President of the United
States. Regarding it as all important to the future quiet and harmony
of the people that every intermediate agency in the election of these
officers should be removed and that their eligibility should be limited
to one term of either 4 or 6 years, I can not too earnestly invite your
consideration of the subject.
Trusting that your deliberations on all the topics of general
interest to which I have adverted, and such others as your more extensive
knowledge of the wants of our beloved country may suggest, may be crowned
with success, I tender you in conclusion the cooperation which it may
be in my power to afford them.
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President Andrew Jackson
Fifth Annual Message to Congress
December 3, 1833 |