December 7, 1835
Washington, DC
Fellow Citizens of the Senate and House of Representatives:
In the discharge of my official duty the again devolves upon
me of communicating with a new Congress. The reflection that the representation
of the Union has been recently renewed, and that the constitutional term
of its service will expire with my own, heightens the solicitude with
which I shall attempt to lay before it the state of our national concerns
and the devout hope which I cherish that its labors to improve them may
be crowned with success.
You are assembled at a period of profound interest to the American
patriot. The unexampled growth and prosperity of our country having given
us a rank in the scale of nations which removes all apprehension of danger
to our integrity and independence from external foes, the career of freedom
is before us, with an earnest from the past that if true to ourselves
there can be no formidable obstacle in the future to its peaceful and
uninterrupted pursuit. Yet, in proportion to the disappearance of those
apprehensions which attended our weakness, as once contrasted with the
power of some of the States of the Old World, should we now be solicitous
as to those which belong to the conviction that it is to our own conduct
we must look for the preservation of those causes on which depend the
excellence and the duration of our happy system of government.
In the example of other systems founded on the will of the people
we trace to internal dissension the influences which have so often blasted
the hopes of the friends of freedom. The social elements, which were strong
and successful when united against external danger, failed in the more
difficult task of properly adjusting their own internal organization,
and thus gave way the great principle of self-government. Let us trust
that this admonition will never be forgotten by the Government or the
people of the United States, and that the testimony which our experience
thus far holds out to the great human family of the practicability and
the blessings of free government will be confirmed in all time to come.
We have but to look at the state of our agriculture, manufactures,
and commerce and the unexampled increase of our population to feel the
magnitude of the trust committed to us. Never in any former period of
our history have we had greater reason than we now have to be thankful
to Divine Providence for the blessings fo health and general prosperity.
Every branch of labor we see crowned with the most abundant rewards. In
every element of national resources and wealth and of individual comfort
we witness the most rapid and solid improvements. With no interruptions
to this pleasing prospect at home which will not yield to the spirit of
harmony and good will that so strikingly pervades the mass of the people
in every quarter, amidst all the diversity of interest and pursuits to
which they are attached, and with no cause of solicitude in regard to
our external affairs which will not, it is hoped, disappear before the
principles of simple justice and the forbearance that mark our intercourse
with foreign powers, we have every reason to feel proud of our beloved
country.
The general state of our foreign relations has not materially
changed since my last annual message .
In the settlement of the question of the North Eastern boundary
little progress has been made. Great Britain has declined acceding to
the proposition of the United States, presented in accordance with the
resolution of the Senate, unless certain preliminary conditions were admitted,
which I deemed incompatible with a satisfactory and rightful adjustment
of the controversy. Waiting for some distinct proposal from the Government
of Great Britain, which has been invited, I can only repeat the expression
of my confidence that, with the strong mutual disposition which I believe
exists to make a just arrangement, this perplexing question can be settled
with a due regard to the well-founded pretensions and pac ific policy
of all the parties to it. Events are frequently occurring on the North
Eastern frontier of a character to impress upon all the necessity of a
speedy and definitive termination of the dispute. This consideration,
added to the desire common to both to relieve the liberal and friendly
relations so happily existing between the two countries from all embarrassment,
will no doubt have its just influence upon both.
Our diplomatic intercourse with Portugal has been renewed, and
it is expected that the claims of our citizens, partially paid, will be
fully satisfied as soon as the condition of the Queen's Government will
permit the proper attention to the subject of them. That Government has,
I am happy to inform you, manifested a determination to act upon the liberal
principles which have marked our commercial policy. The happiest effects
upon the future trade between the United States and Portugal are anticipated
from it, and the time is not thought to be remote when a system of perfect
reciprocity will be established.
The installments due under the convention with the King of the
Two Sicilies have been paid with that scrupulous fidelity by which his
whole conduct has been characterized, and the hope is indulged that the
adjustment of the vexed question of our claims will be followed by a more
extended and mutually beneficial intercourse between the two countries.
The internal contest still continues in Spain. Distinguished
as this struggle has unhappily been by incidents of the most sanguinary
character, the obligations of the late treaty of indemnification with
us have been, never the less, faithfully executed by the Spanish Government.
No provision having been made at the last session of Congress
for the ascertainment of the claims to be paid and the apportionment of
the funds under the convention made with Spain, I invite your early attention
to the subject. The public evidences of the debt have, according to the
terms of the convention and in the forms prescribed by it, been placed
in the possession of the United States, and the interest as it fell due
has been regularly paid upon them. Our commercial intercourse with Cuba
stands as regulated by the act of Congress. No recent information has
been received as to the disposition of the Government of Madrid, and the
lamented death of our recently appointed minister on his way to Spain,
with the pressure of their affairs at home, renders it scarcely probable
that any change is to be looked for during the coming year.
Further portions of the Florida archives have been sent to the
United States, although the death of one of the commissioners at a critical
moment embarrassed the progress of the delivery of them. The higher officers
of the local government have recently shown an anxious desire, in compliance
with the orders from the parent Government, to facilitate the selection
and delivery of all we have a right to claim.
Negotiations have been opened at Madrid for the establishment
of a lasting peace between Spain and such of the Spanish American Governments
of this hemisphere as have availed themselves of the intimation given
to all of them of the disposition of Spain to treat upon the basis of
their entire independence. It is to be regretted that simultaneous appointments
by all of ministers to negotiate with Spain had not been made. The negotiation
itself would have been simplified, and this long-standing dispute, spreading
over a large portion of the world, would have been brought to a more speedy
conclusion.
Our political and commercial relations with Austria, Prussia,
Sweden, and Denmark stand on the usual favorable bases. One of the articles
of our treaty with Russia in relation to the trade on the North-West coast
of America having expired, instructions have been given to our minister
at St. Petersburg to negotiate a renewal of it. The long and unbroken
amity between the two Governments gives every reason for supposing the
article will be renewed, if stronger motives do not exist to prevent it
than with our view of the subject can be anticipated here. I ask your
attention to the message
of my predecessor at the opening of the second session fo the 19th Congress,
relative to our commercial intercourse with Holland, and to the documents
connected with that subject, communicated to the House of Representatives
on the 10th of January, 1825, and 18th of January, 1827.
Coinciding in the opinion of my predecessor that Holland is not, under
the regulations of her present system, entitled to have her vessels and
their cargoes received into the United States on the footing of American
vessels and cargoes as regards duties of tonnage and impost, a respect
for his reference of it to the Legislature has alone prevented me from
acting on the subject. I should still have waited without comment for
the action of Congress, but recently a claim has been made by Belgian
subjects to admission into our ports for their ships and cargoes on the
same footing as American, with the allegation we could not dispute that
our vessels received in their ports the identical treatment shewn to them
in the ports of Holland, upon whose vessels no discrimination is made
in the ports of the United States.
Given the same privileges the Belgians expected the same benefits
-- benefits that were, in fact, enjoyed when Belgium and Holland were
united under one Government. Satisfied with the justice of their pretension
to be placed on the same footing with Holland, I could not, never the
less, without disregard to the principle of our laws, admit their claim
to be treated as Americans, and at the same time a respect for Congress,
to whom the subject had long since been referred, has prevented me from
producing a just equality by taking from the vessels of Holland privileges
conditionally granted by acts of Congress, although the condition upon
which the grant was made has, in my judgment, failed since 1822. I recommend,
therefore, a review of the act of 1824, and such modification of it as
will produce an equality on such terms as Congress shall think best comports
with our settled policy and the obligations of justice to two friendly
powers.
With the Sublime Porte and all the Governments on the coast
of Barbary our relations continue to be friendly. The proper steps have
been taken to renew our treaty with Morocco.
The Argentine Republic has again promised to send within the
current year a minister to the United States.
A convention with Mexico for extending the time for the appointment
of commissioners to run the boundary line has been concluded and will
be submitted to the Senate. Recent events in that country have awakened
the liveliest solicitude in the United States. Aware of the strong temptations
existing and powerful inducements held out to the citizens of the United
States to mingle in the dissensions of our immediate neighbors, instructions
have been given to the district attorneys of the United States where indications
warranted it to prosecute without respect to persons all who might attempt
to violate the obligations of our neutrality, while at the same time it
has been thought necessary to apprise the Government of Mexico that we
should require the integrity of our territory to be scrupulously respected
by both parties.
From our diplomatic agents in Brazil, Chile, Peru, Central America,
Venezuela, and New Granada constant assurances are received of the continued
good understanding with the Governments to which they are severally accredited.
With those Governments upon which our citizens have valid and accumulating
claims, scarcely an advance toward a settlement of them is made, owing
mainly to their distracted state or to the pressure of imperative domestic
questions. Our patience has been and will probably be still further severely
tried, but our fellow citizens whose interests are involved may confide
in the determination of the Government to obtain for them eventually ample
retribution.
Unfortunately, many of the nations of this hemisphere are still
self-tormented by domestic dissensions. Revolution succeeds revolution;
injuries are committed upon foreigners engaged in lawful pursuits; much
time el apses before a government sufficiently stable is erected to justify
expectation of redress; ministers are sent and received, and before the
discussions of past injuries are fairly begun fresh troubles arise; but
too frequently new injuries are added to the old, to be discussed together
with the existing government after it has proved its ability to sustain
the assaults made upon it, or with its successor if overthrown. If this
unhappy condition of things continues much longer, other nations will
be under the painful necessity of deciding whether justice to their suffering
citizens does not require a prompt redress of injuries by their own power,
without waiting for the establishment of a government competent and enduring
enough to discuss and to make satisfaction for them.
Since the last session of Congress the validity of our claims
upon France, as liquidated by the treaty of 1831, has been acknowledged
by both branches of her legislature, and the money has been appropriated
for their discharge; but the payment is, I regret to inform you, still
withheld.
A brief recapitulation of the most important incidents in this
protracted controversy will shew how utterly untenable are the grounds
upon which this course is attempted to be justified.
On entering upon the duties of my station I found the United
States an unsuccessful applicant to the justice of France for the satisfaction
of claims the validity of which was never questionable, and has now been
most solemnly admitted by France herself. The antiquity of these claims,
their high justice, and the aggravating circumstances out of which they
arose are too familiar to the American people to require description.
It is sufficient to say that for a period of 10 years and upward our commerce
was, with but little interruption, the subject of constant aggression
on the part of France -- aggressions the ordinary features of which were
condemnations of vessels and cargoes under arbitrary decrees, adopted
in contravention as well of the laws of nations as of treaty stipulations,
burnings on the high seas, and seizures and confiscations under special
imperial rescripts in the ports of other nations occupied by the armies
or under the control of France. Such it is now conceded is the character
of the wrongs we suffered -- wrongs in many cases so flagrant that even
their authors never denied our right to reparation. Of the extent of these
injuries some conception may be formed from the fact that after the burning
of a large amount at sea and the necessary deterioration in other cases
by long detention the American property so seized and sacrificed at forced
sales, excluding what was adjudged to privateers before or without condemnation,
brought into the French treasury upward of 24,000,000 francs, besides
large custom house duties.
The subject had already been an affair of 20 years' uninterrupted
negotiation, except for a short time when France was overwhelmed by the
military power of united Europe. During this period, whilst other nations
were extorting from her payment of their claims at the point of the bayonet,
the United States intermitted their demand for justice out of respect
to the oppressed condition of a gallant people to whom they felt under
obligations for fraternal assistance in their own days of suffering and
peril. The bad effects of these protracted and unavailing discussions,
were obvious, and the line of duty was to my mind equally so.
This was either to insist upon the adjustment of our claims
within a reasonable period or to abandon them altogether. I could not
doubt that by this course the interests and honor of both countries would
be best consulted. Instructions were therefore given in this spirit to
the minister who was sent out once more to demand reparation.
Upon the meeting of Congress in December, 1829, I felt it my
duty to speak of these claims and the delays of France in terms calculated
to call the serious attention of both countries to the subject. The then
French ministry took exception to the message
on the ground of its conataining a menace, under it was not agreeable
to the French Government to negotiate. The American minister of his own
accord refuted the construction which was attempted to be put upon the
message and at the
same time called to the recollection of the French ministry that the President's
message was a communication
addressed, not to foreign governments, but to the Congress of the United
States, in which it was enjoined upon him by the Constitution to lay before
that body information of the state of the Union, comprehending its foreign
as well as its domestic relations, and that if in the discharge of this
duty he felt it indumbent upon him to summon the attention of Congress
in due time to what might be the possible consequences of existing difficulties
with any foreign government, he might fairly be supposed to do so under
a sense of his own Government, and not from any intention of holding a
menace over a foreign power.
The views taken by him received my approbation, the French Government
was satisfied, and the negotiation was continued. It terminated in the
treaty of July 4, recognizing the justice of our claims in part and promising
payment to the amount of 25,000,000 francs in 6 annual
installments.
The ratifications of this treaty were exchanged at Washington
on the second of February, 1832, and in 5 days thereafter it was laid
before Congress, who immediately passed the acts necessary on our part
to secure to France the commercial advantages conceded to her in the compact.
The treaty had previously been solemnly ratified by the King of the French
in terms which are certainly not mere matters of form, and of which the
translation is as follows:
WE, approving the above convention in all and each
of the dispositions which are contained in it, do declare, by ourselves
as well as by our heirs and successors, that it is accepted, approved,
ratified, and confirmed, and by these presents, signed by our hand, we
do accept, approve, ratify, and confirm it; promising, on the faith and
word of a king, to observe it and to cause it to be observed inviolably,
without ever contravening it or suffering it to be contravened, directly
or indirectly, for any cause or under any pretense whatsoever.
Official information of the exchange of ratifications in the
United States reached Paris whilst the Chambers were in session. The extraordinary
and to us injurious delays of the French Government in their action upon
the subject of its fulfillment have been heretofore stated to Congress,
and I have no disposition to enlarge upon them here. It is sufficient to
observe that the then pending session was allowed to expire without even
an effort to obtain the necessary appropriations; that the two succeeding
ones were also suffered to pass away without anything like a serious attempt
to obtain a decision upon the subject, and that it was not until the fourth
session, almost three years after the conclusion of the treaty and more
than two years after the exchange of ratifications, that the bill for the
execution of the treaty was pressed to a vote and rejected.
In the mean time the Government of the United States, having
full confidence that a treaty entered into and so solemnly ratified by
the French King would be executed in good faith, and not doubting that
provision would be made for the payment of the first installment which
was to become due on the second day of February, 1833, negotiated a draft
for the amount through the Bank of the United States. When this draft
was presented by the holder with the credentials required by the treaty
to authorize him to receive the money, the Government of France allowed
it to be protested. In addition to the injury in the nonpayment of the
money by France, conformably to her engagement, the United States were
exposed to a heavy claim on the part of the bank under pretense of damages,
in satisfaction of which that institution seized upon and still retains
an equal amount of the public money.
Congress was in session when the decision of the Chambers reached
Washington, and an immediate communication of this apparently final decision
of France not to fulfill the stipulation of the treaty was the course
naturally to be expected from the President. The deep tone of dissatisfaction
which pervaded the public mind and the correspondent excitement produced
in Congress by only a general knowledge of the result rendered it more
than probable that a resort to immediate measures of redress would be
the consequence of calling the attention of that body to the subject.
Sincerely desirous of preserving the pacific relations which had so long
existed between the two countries, I was anxious to avoid this course
if I could be satisfied that by so neither the interests nor the honor
of my country would be compromitted. Without the fullest assurances on
that point, I could not hope to acquit myself of the responsibility to
be incurred in suffering Congress to adjourn without laying the subject
before them. Those received by me were believed to be of that character.
That the feelings produced in the United States by the news
of the rejection of the appropriation would be such as I have described
them to have been was foreseen by the French Government, and prompt measures
were taken by it to prevent the consequence. The King in person expressed
through our minister at Paris his profound regret at the decision of the
Chambers, and promised to send forthwith a ship with dispatches to his
miniter here authorizing him to give such assurances as would satisfy
the Government and people of the United States that the treaty would yet
be faithfully executed by France.
The national ship arrived, and the minister received his instructions.
Claiming to act under the authority derived from them, he gave to this
government in the name of his the most solemn assurances that as soon
after the new elections as the charter would permit the French Chambers
would be convened and the attempt to procure the necessary appropriations
renewed; that all the constitutional powers of the King and his ministers
should be put in requisition to accomplish the object, and he was understood,
and so expressly informed by this Government at the time, to engage that
the question should be pressed to a decision at a period sufficiently
early to permit information of the result to be communicated to Congress
at the commencement of their next session. Relying upon these assurances,
I incurred the responsibility, great as I regarded it to be, of suffering
Congress to separate without communicating with them upon the subject.
The expectations justly founded upon the promises thus solemnly
made to this Government by that of France were not realized. The French
Chambers met on the thirty-first of July, 1834, soon after the election,
and although our minister in Paris urged the French ministry to bring
the subject before them, they declined doing so. He next insisted that
the Chambers, of prorogued without acting on the subject, should be reassembled
at a period so early that their action on the treaty might be known in
Washington prior to the meeting of Congress.
This reasonable request was not only declined, but the Chambers
were prorogued to the 29th of December, a day so late that their decision,
however urgently pressed, could not in all probability be obtained in
time to reach Washington before the necessary adjournment of Congress
by the Constitution. The reasons given by the ministry for refusing to
convoke the Chambers at an earlier period were afterwards shewn not to
be insuperable by their actual convocation on the first of December under
a special call for domestic purposes, which fact, however, did not become
known to this Government until after the commencement of the last session
of Congress.
Thus disappointed in our just expectations, it became my imperative
duty to consult with Congress in regard to the expediency of a resort
to retaliatory measures in case the stipulations of the treaty should
not be speedily complied with, and to recommend such as in my judgment
the occasion c alled for. To this end an unreserved communication of the
case in all its aspects became indispensable. To have shrunk in making
it from saying all that was necessary to its correct understanding, and
that the truth would justify, for fear of giving offense to others, would
have been unworthy of us. To have gone, on the other hand, a single step
further for the purpose of wounding the pride of a Government and people
with whom we had so many motives for cultivating relations of amity and
reciprocal advantage would have been unwise and improper.
Admonished by the past of the difficulty of making even the
simplest statement of our wrongs without disturbing the sensibilities
of those who had by their position become responsible for their redress,
and earnestly desirous of preventing further obstacles from that source,
I went out of my way to preclude a construction of the message
by which the recommendation that was made to Congress might be regarded
as a menace to France in not only disavowing such a design, but in declaring
that her pride and her power were too well known to expect anything from
her fears. The message
did not reach Paris until more than a month after the Chambers had been
in session, and such was the insensibility of the ministry to our rightful
claims and just expectations that our minister had been informed that
the matter when introduced would not be pressed as a cabinet measure.
Although the message
was not officially communicated to the French Government, and not withstanding
the declaration to the contrary which it contained, the French minstry
decided to consider the conditional recommendation of reprisals a menace
and an insult which the honor of the nation made it incumbent on them
to resent. The measures resorted to by them to evince their sense of the
supposed indignity were the immediate recall of their minister at Washington,
the offer of passports to the American minister at Paris, and a public
notice to the legislative Chambers that all diplomatic intercourse with
the United States had been suspended.
Having in this manner vindicated the dignity of France, they
next proceeded to illustrate her justice. To this end a bill was immediately
introduced into the Chamber of Deputies proposing to make the appropriations
necessary to carry into effect the treaty. As this bill subsequently passed
into a law, the provisions of which now constitute the main subject of
difficulty between the two nations, it becomes my duty, in order to place
the subject before you in a clear light, to trace the history of its passage
and to refer with some particularity to the proceedings and discussions
in regard to it.
The minister of finance in his opening speech alluded to the
measures which had been adopted to resent the supposed indignity, and
recommended the execution of the treaty as a measure required by the honor
and justice of France. He as the organ of the ministry declared the message ,
so long as it had not received the sanction of Congress, a mere expression
of the personal opinion of the President, for which neither the Government
nor people of the United States were responsible, and that an engagement
had been entered into for the fulfillment of which the honor of France
was pledged. Entertaining these views, the single condition which the
French ministry proposed to annex to the payment of the money was that
it should not be made until it was ascertained that the Government of
the United States had done nothing to injure the interests of France,
or, in other words, that no steps had been authorized by Congress of a
hostile character toward France.
What the disposition of action of Congress might be was then
unknown to the French cabinet; but on the 14th day of January the Senate
resolved that it was at that time inexpedient to adopt any legislative
measures in regard to the state of affairs between the United States and
France, and no action on the subject had occurred in the House of Representatives.
These facts were known in Paris prior to the 28th of March, 1835, when
the committee to whom the bill of indemnification had been referred reported
it to the Chamber of Deputies. That committee substantially re-echoed
the sentiments of the ministry, declared that Congress had set aside the
proposition of the President, and recommended the passage of the bill
without any other restriction than that originally proposed. Thus was
it known to the French ministry and Chambers that if the position assumed
by them, and which had been so frequently and solemnly announced as the
only one compatible with the honor of France, was maintained and the bill
passed as originally proposed, the money would be paid and there would
be an end of this unfortunate controversy.
But this cheering prospect was soon destroyed by an amendment
introduced into the bill at the moment of its passage, providing that
the money should not be paid until the French Government had received
satisfactory explanations of the President's message
of the second December, 1834, and, what is still more extraordinary, the
president of the council of ministers adopted this amendment and consented
to its incorporation in the bill. In regard to a supposed insult which
had been formally resented by the recall of their minister and the offer
of passports to ours, they now for the first time proposed to ask explanations.
Sentiments and propositions which they had declared could not justly be
imputed to the Government or people of the United States are set up as
obstacles to the performance of an act of conceded justice to that Government
and people. They had declared that the honor of France required the fulfillment
of the engagement into which the King had entered, unless Congress adopted
the recommendations of the message .
They ascertained that Congress did not adopt them, and yet that fulfillment
is refused unless they first obtain from the President explanations of
an opinion characterized by themselves as personal and inoperative.
The conception that it was my intention to menace or insult
the Government of France is as unfounded as the attempt to extort from
the fears of that nation what her sense of justice may deny would be vain
and ridiculous. But the Constitution of the United States imposes on the
President the duty of laying before Congress the condition of the country
in its foreign and domestic relations, and of recommending such measures
as may in his opinion be required by its interests. From the performance
of this duty he can not be deterred by the fear of wounding the sensibilities
of the people or government of whom it may become necessary to speak;
and the American people are incapble of submitting to an interference
by any government on earth, however powerful, with the free performance
of the domestic duties which the Constitution has imposed on their public
functionaries.
The discussions which intervene between the several departments
of our Government being to ourselves, and for anything said in them our
public servants are only responsible to their own constituents and to
each other. If in the course of their consultations facts are erroneously
stated or unjust deductions are made, they require no other inducement
to correct them, however informed of their error, than their love of justice
and what is due to their own character; but they can never submit to be
interrogated upon the subject as a matter of right by a foreign power.
When our discussions terminate in acts, our responsibility to foreign
powers commences, not as individuals, but as a nation. The principle which
calls in question the President for the language of his message
would equally justify a foreign power in demanding explanations of the
language used in the report of a committee or by a member in debate.
This is not the first time that the Government of France has
taken exception to the messages of American Presidents. President Washington
and the first President Adams in the performance of their duties to the
American people fell under the animadversions of the French Directory.
The objection taken by the ministry of Charles 10, and removed by the
explanation made by our minister upon the spot, has already been adverted
to. When it was understood that the ministry of the present King took
exception to my message of last year, putting a construction upon it which
was disavowed on its face, our late minister at Paris, in answer to the
note which first announced a dissatisfaction with the language used in
the message , made a communication to the French Government under date
of the 29th of January, 1835, calculated to remove all impressions which
an unreasonable susceptibility had created. He repeated and called the
attention of the French Government to the disavowal contained in the message
itself of any intention to intimidate by menace; he truly declared that
it contained and was intended to contain no charge of ill faith against
the King of the French, and properly distinguished between the right to
complain in unexceptionable terms of the omission to execute an agreement
and an accusation of bad motives in withholding such execution, and demonstrated
that the necessary use of that right ought not to be considered as an
offensive imputation.
Although this communication was made without instructions and
entirely on the minister's own responsibility, yet it was afterwards made
the act of this Government by my full approbation, and that approbation
was officially made known on the 25th of April, 1835, to the French Government.
It, however, failed to have any effect. The law, after this friendly explanation,
passed with the obnoxious amendment, supported by the King's ministers,
and was finally approved by the King.
The people of the United States are justly attached to a pacific
system in their intercourse with foreign nations. It is proper, therefore,
that they should know whether their Government has adhered to it. In the
present instance it has been carried to the utmost extent that was consistent
with a becoming self-respect. The note of the 29th of January, to which
I have before alluded, was not the only one which our minister took upon
himself the responsibility of presenting on the same subject and in the
same spirit.
Finding that it was intended to make the payment of a just debt
dependent on the performance of a condition which he knew could never
be complied with, he thought it a duty to make another attempt to convince
the French Government that whilst self-respect and regard to the dignity
of other nations would always prevent us from using any language that
ought to give offense, yet we could never admit a right in any foreign
government to ask explanations of or to interfere in any manner in the
communications which one branch of our public councils made with another;
that in the present case no such language had been used, and that this
had in a former note been fully and voluntarily state, before it was contemplated
to make the explantion a condition; and that there might be no misapprehension
he stated the terms used in that note, and he officially informed them
that it had been approved by the President, and that therefore every explanation
which could reasonably be asked or honorably given had been already made;
that the contemplated measure had been anticipated by a voluntary and
friendly declaration, and was therefore not only useless, but might be
deemed offensive, and certainly would not be complied with if annexed
as a condition.
When this latter communication, to which I especially invite
the attention of Congress, was laid before me, I entertained the hope
that the means it was obviously intended to afford of an honorable and
speedy adjustment of the difficulties between the two nations would have
been accepted, and I therefore did not hesitate to give it my sanction
and full approbation. This was due to the minister who had made himself
responsible for the act, and it was published to the people of the United
States and is now laid before their representatives to shew hos far their
Executive has gone in its endeavors to restore a good understanding betwe
en the two countries. It would have been at any time communicated to the
Government of France had it been officially requested.
The French Government having received all the explanation which
honor and principle permitted, and which could in reason be asked, it
was hoped it would no longer hesitate to pay the installments now due.
The agent authorized to receive the money was instructed to inform the
French minister of his readiness to do so. In reply to this notice he
was told that the money could not then be paid, because the formalities
required by the act of the Chambers had not been arranged.
Not having received any official information of the intentions
of the French Government, and anxious to bring, as far as practicable,
this unpleasant affair to a close before the meeting of Congress, that
you might have the whole subject before you, I caused our charge' d'affaires
at Paris to be instructed to ask for the final determination of the French
Government, and in the event of their refusal to pay the installments
now due, without further explanations to return to the United States.
The result of this last application has not yet reached us,
but is daily expected. That it may be favorable is my sincere wish. France
having now, through all the branches of her Government, acknowledged the
validity of our claims and the obligation of the treaty of 1831, and there
really existing no adequate cause for further delay, will at length, it
may be hoped, adopt the course which the interests of both nations, not
less than the principles of justice, so imperiously require. The treaty
being once executed on her part, little will remain to disturb the friendly
relations of the two countries -- nothing, indeed, which will not yield
to the suggestions of a pacific and enlightened policy and to the influence
of that mutual good will and of those generous recollections which we
may confidently expect will then be revived in all their ancient force.
In any event, however, the principle involved in the new aspect
which has been given to the controversy is so vitally important to the
independent administration of the Government that it can neither be surrendered
nor compromitted without national degradation. I hope it is unnecessary
for me to say that such a sacrifice will not be made through any agency
of mine. The honor of my country shall never be stained by an apology
from me for the statement of truth and the performance of duty; nor can
I give any explanation of my official acts except such as is due to integrity
and justice and consistent with the principles on which our institutions
have been framed. This determination will, I am confident, be approved
by my constituents. I have, indeed, studied their character to but little
purpose if the sum of 25,000,000 francs will have the weight of a feather
in the estimation of what appertains to their national independence, and
if, unhappily, a different impression should at any time obtain in any
quarter, they will, I am sure, rally round the Government of their choice
with alacrity and unanimity, and silence for ever the degrading imputation.
Having thus frankly presented to you the circumstances which
since the last session of Congress have occurred in this interesting and
important matter, with the views of the Executive in regard to them, it
is at this time only necessary to add that when ever the advices now daily
expected from our chargyyé d'affaires shall have been received
they will be made the subject of a special communication.
The condition of the public finances was never more flattering
than at the present period.
Since my last annual
communication all the remains of the public debt have been redeemed, or
money has been placed in deposit for this purpose when ever the creditors
choose to receive it. All the other pecuniary engagements of the Government
have been honorably and promptly fulfilled, and there will be a balance
in the Treasury at the close of the year of about $19,000,000. It is believed
that after meeting all outstanding and unexpended appropriations there
will remain near $11,000,000 to be applied to any new objects which Congress
may designate or to the more rapid execution of the works already in progress.
In aid of these objects, and to satisfy the current expenditures of the
ensuing year, it is estimated that there will be received from various
sources $20,000,000 more in 1836.
Should Congress make new appropriations in conformity with the
estimates which will be submitted from the proper Departments, amounting
to about $24,000,000, still the available surplus at the close of the
next year, after deducting all unexpended appropriations, will probably
not be less than $6,000,000. This sum can, in my judgment, be now usefully
applied to proposed improvements in our navy yards, and to new national
works which are not enumerated in the present estimates or to the more
rapid completion of those already begun. Either would be constitutional
and useful, and would render unnecessary any attempt in our present peculiar
condition to divide the surplus revenue or to reduce it any faster than
will be effected by the existing laws.
In any event, as the annual
report from the Secretary of the Treasury will enter into details, shewing
the probability of some decrease in the revenue during the next 7 years
and a very considerable deduction in 1842, it is not recommended that
Congress should undertake to modify the present tariff so as to disturb
the principles on which the compromise act was passed. Taxation on some
of the articles of general consumption which are not in competition with
our own productions may be no doubt so diminished as to lessen to some
extent the source of this revenue, and the same object can also be assisted
by more liberal provisions for the subjects of public defense, which in
the present state of our prosperity and wealth may be expected to engage
your attention.
If, however, after satisfying all the demands which can arise
from these sources the unexpended balance in the Treasury should still
continue to increase, it would be better to bear with the evil until the
great changes contemplated in our tariff laws have occurred and shall
enable us to revise the system with that care and circumspection which
are due to so delicate and important a subject.
It is certainly our duty to diminish as far as we can the burdens
of taxation and to regard all the restrictions which are imposed on the
trade and navigation of our citizens as evils which we shall mitigate
when ever we are not prevented by the adverse legislation and policy of
foreign nations or those primary duties which the defense and independence
of our country enjoin upon us. That we have accomplished much toward the
relief of our citizens by the changes which have accompanied the payment
of the public debt and the adoption of the present revenue laws is manifest
from the fact that compared to 1833 there is a diminution of near $25,000,000
in the last two years, and that our expenditures, independently of those
for the public debt, have been reduced near $9,000,000 during the same
period. Let us trust that by the continued observance of economy and by
harmonizing the great interests of agriculture, manufactures, and commerce
much more may be accomplished to diminish the burdens of government and
to increase still further the enterprise and the patriotic affection of
all classes of our citizens and all the members of our happy Confederacy.
As the data which the Secretary of the Treasury will lay before you in
regard to our financial resources are full and extended, and will afford
a safe guide in your future calculations, I think it unnecessary to offer
any further observations on that subject here.
Among the evidences of the increasing prosperity of the country,
not the least gratifying is that afforded by the receipts from the sales
of the public lands, which amount in the present year to the unexpected
sum of $11,000,000. This circumstance attests the rapidity with which
agriculture, the first and most important occupation of man, advances
and contributes to the wealth and power of our extended territory. Being
still of the opinion that it is our best policy, as far as we can consistently
with the obligations under which those lands were ceded to the United
States, to promote their speedy settlement, I beg leave to call the attention
of the present Congress to the suggestions I have offered respecting it
in my former messages.
- Here Come the Settlers II
The extraordinary receipts from the sales of the public lands
invite you to consider what improvements the land system, and particularly
the condition of the General Land Office, may require. At the time this
institution was organized, near a quarter century ago, it would probably
have been thought extravagant to anticipate for this period such an addition
to its business as has been produced by the vast increase of those sales
during the past and present years. It may also be observed that since
the year 1812 the land offices and surveying districts have been greatly
multiplied, and that numerous legislative enactments from year to year
since that time have imposed a great amount of new and additional duties
upon that office, while the want of a timely application of force commensurate
with the care and labor required has caused the increasing embarrassment
of accumulated arrears in the different branches of the establishment.
These impediments to the expedition of much duty in the General
Land Office induce me to submit to your judgment whether some modification
of the laws relating to its organization, or an organization of a new
character, be not called for at the present juncture, to enable the office
to accomplish all the ends of its institution with a greater degree of
facility and promptitude than experience has proved to be practicable
under existing regulations. The variety of the concerns and the magnitude
and complexity of the details occupying and dividing the attention of
the Commissioner appear to render it difficult, if not impracticable,
for that officer by any possible assiduity to bestow on all the multifarious
subjects upon which he is called to act the ready and careful attention
due to their respective importance, unless the Legislature shall assist
him by a law providing, or enabling him to provide, for a more regular
and economical distribution of labor, with the incident responsibility
among those employed under his direction. The mere manual operation of
affixing his signature to the vast number of documents issuing from his
office subtracts so largely from the time and attention claimed by the
weighty and complicated subjects daily accumulating in that branch of
the public service as to indicate the strong necessity of revising the
organic law of the establishment. It will be easy for Congress hereafter
to proportion the expenditure on account of this branch of the service
to its real wants by abolishing from time to time the offices which can
be dispensed with.
The extinction of the public debt having taken place, there
is no longer any use for the offices of Commissioners of Loans and of
the Sinking Fund. I recommend, therefore, that they be abolished, and
that proper measures be taken for the transfer to the Treasury Department
of any funds, books, and papers connected with the operations of those
offices, and that the proper power be given to that Department for closing
finally any portion of their business which may remain to be settled.
It is also incumbent on Congress in guarding the pecuniary interests
of the country to discontinue by such a law as was passed in 1812 the
receipt of the bills of the Bank of the United States in payment of the
public revenue, and to provide for the designation of an agent whose duty
it shall be to take charge of the books and stock of the United States
in that institution, and to close all connection with it after the 3d
of March, 1836 1836-03-03, when its charter expires. In making provision
in regard to the disposition of this stock it will be essential to define
clearly and strictly the duties and powers of the officer charged with
that branch of the public service. It will be seen from the correspondence which the Secretary of the Treasury
will lay before you that not withstanding the large amount of the stock
which the United States hold in that institution no information has yet
been communicated which will enable the Government to anticipate when
it can receive any dividends or derive any benefit from it.
Connected with the condition of the finances and the flourishing
state of the country in all its branches of industry, it is pleasing to
witness the advantages which have been already derived from the recent
laws regulating the value of the gold coinage. These advantages will be
more apparent in the course of the next year, when the branch mints authorized
to be established in North Carolina, Georgia, and Louisiana shall have
gone into operation. Aided, as it is hoped they will be, by further reforms
in the banking systems of the States and by judicious regulations on the
part of Congress in relation to the custody of the public moneys, it may
be confidently anticipated that the use of gold and silver as circulating
medium will become general in the ordinary transactions connected with
the labor of the country.
The great desideratum in modern times is an efficient check
upon the power of banks, preventing that excessive issue of paper whence
arise those fluctuations in the standard of value which render uncertain
the rewards of labor. It was supposed by those who established the Bank
of the United States that from the credit given to it by the custody of
the public moneys and other privileges and the precautions taken to guard
against the evils which the country had suffered in the bankruptcy of
many of the State institutions of that period we should derive from that
institution all the security and benefits of a sound currency and every
good end that was attainable under the provision of the Constitution which
authorizes Congress alone to coin money and regulate the value thereof.
But it is scarcely necessary now to say that these anticipations have
not been realized.
After the extensive embarrassment and distress recently produced
by the Bank of the United States, from which the country is now recovering,
aggravated as they were by pretensions to power which defied the public
authority, and which if acquiesced in by the people would have changed
the whole character of our Government, every candid and intelligent individual
must admit that for the attainment of the great advantages of a sound
currency we must look to a course of legislation radically different from
that which created such an institution.
In considering the means of obtaining so important an end we
must set aside all calculations of temporary convenience, and be influenced
by those only which are in harmony with the true character and the permanent
interests of the Republic. We must recur to first principles and see what
it is that has prevented the legislation of Congress and the States on
the subject of currency from satisfying the public expectation and realizing
results corresponding to those which have attended the action of our system
when truly consistent with the great principle of equality upon which
it rests, and with that spirit of forbearance and mutual concession and
generous patriotism which was originally, and must ever continue to be,
the vital element of our Union.
On this subject I am sure that I can not be mistaken in ascribing
our want of success to the undue countenance which has been afforded to
the spirit of monopoly. All the serious dangers which our system has yet
encountered may be traced to the resort to implied powers and the use
of corporations clothed with privileges, the effect of which is to advance
the interests of the few at the expense of the many.
We have felt but one class of these dangers exhibited in the
contest waged by the Bank of the United States against the Government
for the last four years. Happily they have been obviated for the present
by the indignant resistance of the people, but we should recollect that
the principle whence they sprung is an ever-active one, which will not
fail to renew its effo rts in the same and in other forms so long as there
is a hope of success, founded either on the inattention of the people
or the treachery of their representatives to the subtle progress of its
influence.
The bank is, in fact, but one of the fruits of a system at war
with the genius of all our institutions -- a system founded upon a political
creed the fundamental principle of which is a distrust of the popular
will as a safe regulator of political power, and whose great ultimate
object and inevitable result, should it prevail, is the consolidation
of all power in our system in one central government. Lavish public disbursements
and corporations with exclusive privileges would be its substitutes for
the original and as yet sound checks and balances of the Constitution
-- the means by whose silent and secret operation a control would be exercised
by the few over the political conduct of the many by first acquiring that
control over the labor and earnings of the great body of the people. Wherever
this spirit has effected an alliance with political power, tyranny and
despotism have been the fruit. If it is ever used for the ends of government,
it has to be incessantly watched, or it corrupts the sources of the public
virtue and agitates the country with questions unfavorable to the harmonious
and steady pursuit of its true interests.
We are now to see whether, in the present favorable condition
of the country, we can not take an effectual stand against thei spirit
of monopoly, and practically prove in respect to the currency as well
as other important interests that ther is no necessity for so extensive
a resort to it as that which has been heretofore practiced. The experience
of another year has confirmed the utter fallacy of the idea that the Bank
of the United States was necessary as a fiscal agent of the Government.
Without its aid as such, indeed, in despite of all the embarrassment it
was in its power to create, the revenue has been paid with punctuality
by our citizens, the business of exchange, both foreign and domestic,
has been conducted with convenience, and the circulating medium has been
greatly improved.
By the use of the State banks, which do not derive their charters
from the General Government and are not controlled by its authority, it
is ascertained that the moneys of the United States can be collected and
disbursed without loss or inconvenience, and that all the wants of the
community in relation to exchange and currency are supplied as well as
they have ever been before. If under circumstances the most unfavorable
to the steadiness of the money market it has been found that the considerations
on which the Bank of the United States rested its claims to the public
favor were imaginary and groundless, it can not be doubted that the experience
of the future will be more decisive against them.
It has been seen that without the agency of a great moneyed
monopoly the revenue can be collected and conveniently and safely applied
to all the purposes of the public expenditure. It is also ascertained
that instead of being necessarily made to promote the evils of an unchecked
paper system, the management of the revenue can be made auxiliary to the
reform which the legislatures of several of the States have already commenced
in regard to the suppression of small bills, and which has only to be
fostered by proper regulations on the part of Congress to secure a practical
return to the extent required for the security of the currency to the
constitutional medium.
Severed from the Government as political engines, and not susceptible
of dangerous extension and combination, the State banks will not be tempted,
nor will they have teh power, which we have seen exercised, to divert
the public funds from the legitimate purposes of the Government. The collection
and custody of the revenue, being, on the contrary, a source of credit
to them, will increase the security which the States provide for a faithful
execution of their trusts by multiplying the scrutinies to which their
operations and accounts will be subjected. Thus disposed, as well from
interest as the obligations of their charters, it can not be doubted that
such conditions as Congress may see fit to adopt respecting the deposits
in these institutions, with a view to the gradual disuse, of the small
bills will be cheerfully complied with, and that we shall soon gain in
place of the Bank of the United States a practical reform in the whole
paper system of the country. If by this policy we can ultimately witness
the suppression of all bank bills below $20, it is apparent that gold
and silver will take their place and become the principal circulating
medium in the common business of the farmers and mechanics of the country.
The attainment of such a result will form an era in the history of our
country which will be dwelt upon with delight by every true friend of
its liberty and independence. It will lighten the great tax which our
paper system has so long collected from the earnings of labor, and do
more to revive and perpetuate those habits of economy and simplicity which
are so congenial to the character of republicans than all the legislation
which has yet been attempted.
To this subject I feel that I can not too earnestly invite the
special attention of Congress, without the exercise of whose authority
the opportunity to accomplish so much public good must pass unimproved.
Deeply impressed with its vital importance, the Executive has taken all
the steps within his constitutional power to guard the public revenue
and defeat the expectation which the Bank of the United States indulged
of renewing and perpetuating its monopoly on the ground of its necessity
as a fiscal agent and as affording a sounder currency than could be obtained
without such an institution.
In the performance of this duty much responsibility was incurred
which would have been gladly avoided if the stake which the public had
in the question could have been otherwise preserved. Although clothed
with the legal authority and supported by precedent, I was aware that
there was in the act of the removal of the deposits a liability to excite
that sensitiveness to Executive power which it is characteristic and the
duty of free men to indulge; but I relied on this feeling also, directed
by patriotism and intelligence, to vindicate the conduct which in the
end would appear to have been called for by the interests of my country.
The apprehensions natural to this feeling that there may have been a desire,
through the instrumentality of that measure, to extend the Executive influence,
or that it may have been prompted by motives not sufficiently free from
ambition, were not over-looked. Under the operation of our institutions
the public servant who is called on to take a step of high responsibility
should feel in the freedom which gives rise to such apprehensions his
highest security. When unfounded the attention which they arouse and the
discussions they excite deprive those who indulge them of the power to
do harm; when just they but hasten the certainty with which the great
body of our citizens never fail to repel an attempt to procure the sanction
to any exercise of power inconsistent with the jealous maintenance of
their rights.
Under such convictions, and entertaining no doubt that my constitutional
obligations demanded the steps which were taken inreference to the removal
of the deposits, it was impossible for me to be deterred from the path
of duty by a fear that my motives could be misjudged or that political
prejudices could defeat the just consideration of the merits of my conduct.
The result has shewn how safe is this reliance upon the patriotic temper
and enlightened discernment of the people. That measure has now been before
them and has stood the test of all the severe analysis which its general
importance, the interests it affected, and the apprehensions it excited
were calculated to produce, and it now remains for Congress to consider
what legislation has become necessary in consequence.
I need only add to what I have on former occasions said on this
subject general ly that in the regulations which Congress may prescribe
respecting the custody of the public moneys it is desirable that as little
discretion as may be deemed consistent with their safe-keeping should
be given to the executive agents. No one can be more deeply impressed
than I am with the soundness of the doctrine which restrains and limits,
by specific provisions, executive discretion, as far as it can be done
consistently with the preservation of its constitutional character. In
respect to the control over the public money this doctrine is peculiarly
applicable, and is in harmony with the great principle which I felt I
was sustaining in the controversy with the Bank of the United States,
which has resulted in severing to some extent a dangerous connection between
a moneyed and political power. The duty of the Legislature to define,
by clear and positive enactments, the nature and extent of the action
which it belongs to the Executive to superintend springs out of a policy
analogous to that which enjoins upon all branches of the Federal Government
an abstinence from the exercise of powers not clearly granted.
In such a Government, possessing only limited and specific powers,
the spirit of its general administration can not be wise or just when
it opposes the reference of all doubtful points to the great source of
authority, the States and the people, whose number and diversified relations
securing them against the influences and excitements which may mis-lead
their agents, make them the safest depository of power. In its application
to the Executive, with reference to the legislative branch of the Government,
the same rule of action should make the President ever anxious to avoid
the exercise of any discretionary authority which can be regulated by
Congress. The biases which may operate upon him will not be so likely
to extend to the representatives of the people in that body.
In my former messages to Congress I have repeatedly urged the
propriety of lessening the discretionary authority lodged in the various
Departments, but it has produced no effect as yet, except the discontinuance
of extra allowances in the Army and Navy and the substitution of fixed
salaries in the latter. It is believed that the same principles could
be advantageously applied in all cases, and would promote the efficiency
and economy of the public service, at the same tiem that greater satisfaction
and more equal justice would be secured to the public officers generally.
The accompanying report of the Secretary of War will put you
in possession of the operations of the Department confided to his care
in all its diversified relations during the past year.
I am gratified in being able to inform you that no occurrence
has required any movement of the military force, except such as is common
to a state of peace. The services of the Army have been limited to their
usual duties at the various garrisons upon the Atlantic and in-land frontier,
with the exceptions states by the Secretary of War. Our small military
establishment appears to be adequate to the purposes for which it is maintained,
and it forms a nucleus around which any additional force may be collected
should the public exigencies unfortunately require any increase of our
military means.
|
|
President Andrew Jackson
Seventh Annual Message to Congress
December 7, 1835 |