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St. Mary's river, appropriations for excavating
channel of, to be expended on such channel
as the Secretary of War shall deem best, 584
Storekeepers-see Military Storekeepers.
Streets in Washington, certain, to be kept free
from obstructions...
...570
penalty for obstructing.
...570

not to be opened, &c., through Washington
cemetery....
......559
Superintendents of Indian affairs, appropriations
for......
.....554

Surgeon General, appropriations for the office
of......
........563

Surveyors of customs, pay of, and deputies, not
to exceed, &c..
..574
Surveyors general, appropriations for...553, 563
Surveys of lands, appropriations for. ..569
of coast, appropriations for......
Sutlers, lien of, on soldiers' pay, &c..

T.

...

...568
.574

....572

Ta-ra-da-ka-wa, payment to....
Tayon, Charles, land title confirmed....560, 561
Tennessee, post roads in.......
...580
Territories, appropriations for....... .....564
Texas-see Volunteers.

appropriation for Indian service in........572
President to cause the boundary line between
the United States Territories and Texas,
to be run, in conjunction with Texas, 565
boundaries....
.565, 566
...566
...566
those employed by Texas to be paid by
her.....
.....566

landmarks to be established....
appropriations therefor...

United States to employ only commissioner,
and persons necessary to make the obser-
vations and surveys...

terms of Federal district court in..
saving of writs, &c., pending...
post roads in........

.566
..567
.567
.580

Indian superintendent and agents in agency of,

how appointed and confirmed....... .581
Texas Indians, appropriations for the.......572
Third Auditor, appropriations for office of..562
Topographical Engineers, appropriations for of-
fice of.....
......563
Treasurer, appropriations for office of.......562
Treasury Department, appropriations for....562
Treasury extension, appropriation for.......570
Treasury notes, act authorizing the issue of, 549
not to exceed $20,000,000, at any time....549
denominations of, not less than $100 each, 549
payable at the Treasury of the United States,
in one year from date..
.549

to bear interest from date of not over six per
.549

Treasury notes-Continued.
form and signature of notes.

..549
separate accounts to be kept of each note, 549
such accounts to be carefully preserved, 549
Treasurer to account quarterly for all notes re-
ceived....
.549

to be issued in payment of public creditors, or
for loans....
.549
Secretary of Treasury may borrow such sums
thereon as the President may deem expe-
dient.....

.549
not to be disposed of in any way for less than
the principal and interest due thereon...549
transferable by indorsement and delivery, 549
receivable by public officers for all dues to the
United States.....
....549
receipts to be taken by officers, and credits
allowed...
..549

Secretary to issue instructions to public
officers as to the custody, &c., of said

notes....

may purchase such notes at par.
must pay them when due.......
appropriation for payment of.....

.549
.549

.549

.549

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.....

no compensation to any salaried officer there-
for...
.550
forging, &c., such notes, or passing or attempt-
ing to pass, such forged, &c., notes, made
a felony..
..550
punishable by fine and imprisonment...550
engraving, or possessing, &c., an engraved
plate, or blank notes, or paper for making
such notes, with intent, &c., punishable by
fine and imprisonment....
.....550
Secretary of Treasury to publish monthly
statements of the notes issued, redeemed,
and outstanding........
.....550
Treasury, Secretary of, appropriations for office
of..
....562

U.

Umpquas, appropriations for the...554, 557, 571
Utah, appropriation for government of......564
Indian service in.....
..572
volunteers in....
...573

....

Volunteers-Continued.

if as infantry, to be constituted, paid, &c.,
as present infantry regiments.
to be subject to rules of war..

.551

.551

not to be accepted in bodies of less than one
regiment..
...551

to be officered as the laws of State, &c.,
whence taken, require.....
.551
quartermaster and commissaries to be de-
tailed from the regular Army........551
pay due when received into service.....551
to have one day's pay for every twenty miles
travel from residence to place of muster, 551
W.

War Department, appropriations for........563
Washington, equestrian statue of, advance to
Clark Mills for.
..571
Washington aqueduct, appropriation for....569
act for acquiring lands needed for........551
United States may purchase such lands, 551
if owners do not agree on the price thereof,
&c., a jury may be summoned and assess
damages.....

proceedings in such case..

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no street, canal, &c., to be laid through, ex-
cepi, &c...
.559
to be always free from taxation... .559
..553 Washington parish, vestry of, may inclose cer-
tain streets to enlarge the cemetery.....559
must first become owner of lots abutting there-
..559
may not sell any part of streets thus inclosed,
559

.557

pay of surveyor general of..
Utahs, appropriations for the.
V.
Vallee, John Baptiste, land title confirmed,560,561
Vermont, terms of Federal courts in........... .554
post roads in....
..580
Vessels, register, enrollment, and license of, re-
peal of act of 1825, chapter ninety-nine, sec-
tion five......
..566
Virginia, post roads in...
..580, 581
Volunteers, one regiment of Texas mounted, to
be received into the service of the United
States....
...550, 551
to be raised and organized by Texas, to protect
her frontier...
.551
to continue in service eighteen months, unless
sooner discharged......
.551
what regimental officers, field and staff....551
company officers, and number of privates, 551
officers below rank of major, and men, to sup-
ply themselves with horses and equip.

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to receive for use thereof forty cents a day,
additional to his pay, &c............551
pay of soldier when horse is carelessly lost, and
loss not supplied in ten days, &c.......551
officers and privates to be subject to the rules,
&c., of war.
.....551

pay and allowances of, what, and when
due......
.....551
two regiments to be accepted to quell disturb-
ances in Utah, to protect emigrant trains,
and suppress Indian hostilities.......551
to have seven hundred and forty" privates
each...
.551

to be organized into mounted regiments or
infantry...
..551

on..

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ments...

if received as mounted men, to be consti-
tuted, paid, &c., as the Texas mounted
regiment..
..551

Allen, William, life pension to.....

..591
.586
Antisell, Dr. Thomas, payment to, for services
as assistant surgeon....
..589

Attica, owners of the bark, repayment to, of tonnage duty......

accounts

..584

.590

B. Babbitt, E. B., allowed credit in settlement of ....587 Bard, J. S.,(Keep, Bard & Co.,) judgment against, satisfied... Barnard, Christine, pension of, continued...586 Bean, Alexander S., life pension to.........590 Benton, James G., allowed credit in settlement of accounts.. ...587 Bingham, W., and Company, accounts of, to be audited and paid. .590 Biscoe, George W., indemnification for capture of the Speedwell........ Body, Isaac, may enter quarter section of land,588 Bradford, William S., pension increased....591 Brewster, B. S., to be paid as inspector of hulls,

&c...

.588

..590

Broadwell, Lewis W., payment to, for carrying

mails..

.....

.588 .588

Brooks, Micajah, pension to..... Brooks, O. A., and Company, accounts of, to be audited and paid.... ..590 Broussard, Pierre, heirs, &c., of, confirmed in title to land in Louisiana ...585 Bruce, David, extension of his patent.... ..589 C. Carlton, C. C., account of, to be audited and paid...

....590

Carpenter, Isaac, life pension to... ...586
Caulfield, J., judgment against, satisfied.....590
Chase, Shove, life pension to..
...589
Churchill, Brigadier General Sylvester, payment
to, while out of the service..
Close, Elijah, life pension to...
Colby, Alonzo, payment to, of balance due on

contract

..591

.590

...589

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H. Hamilton, John, payment to, for time and services .........584 Hamilton, Mary C., widow of Fowler Hamilton, pension continued to... ........587 Hand, John B., heirs of, payment to.......586 Hasam, Thomas, to be paid as inspector of hulls, .......590

&c..

........589

Hay, Daniel, percentage on disbursements allowed to.... Heifner, Cureton, Smith, and, representatives of, payment to, for title of, to land.........587 Heine, William, payment to, as artist of Japan ..589 expedition.... Herndon, Commander William Lewis, United States Navy, payment of three years pay to widow of...

..591

..591

Holland, John, life pension to....
Holmes, A. F., accounts to be audited and
paid....
..590
Hovey, Oliver P., payment for printing "Kear-
ny code".
..588
...591

Howell, William, life pension to..
Hugill, Edmund, assignment of land warrant to
George M. Gordon, recognized.........587
J.

Jehu, the barque, late the Naiad Queen, register to issue to... .. . . . .584 Jenkins, J. Wilcox, allowed pay of purser, 587 Jewett, Luther, credited in settlement with one thousand dollars lost in transit.........585

Jones, Brevet Major John, life pension to...589 Jones, Mary A. M., widow of Brevet Major General Roger Jones, pension to, during life or widowhood....

K.

...591

Keep, E. S., (Keep, Bard & Co.,) judgment against, satisfied.. ....590 Keller, Jonas P., payment for services as watch......586

man...

Kendrick, Brevet Major H. L., allowed a credit

in settlement of accounts

Kinny, Michael, life pension to..

L.

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Maglenen, James, administratrix of, payment to, .....587 Malines, Maria, (born Rillieux,) representatives of, confirmed in title to lands in Louisiana, 586 Maxwell, Doctor Charles D., payment to, for services as surgeon.. .584 McAtee, Benjamin L., payment for carrying ...588 extra mail matter. McBrier, Elizabeth, child, &c., of Colonel Archibald Loughry, land scrip to issue to....588 McCall, Jennett H., payment to, as child of Captain James McCall... .....591 McClure, David, administrator of Joseph McClure, refunding to, of money paid for in...589

terest......

McClure, Joseph, estate of, refunding to, of ..589 money paid for interest.... McDonough, John, representatives of, confirmed in title to land in Louisiana, and patent to issue... ...589 McIntosh, James Mac, payment to.. ......585 McIntyre, James, assignment of land warrant to

George M. Gordon recognized... ...587 Millaudon, Laurent, confirmed in title to land in Alabama... ....587 Miller, Doctor Ferdinand O., payment for services as assistant surgeon.. .....590 Mortimer, Paul E., (Joseph Landis and Company,) judgment against, as surety, satisfied,590 Murphy, G. B., accounts of, to be audited and settled.... .....590

N.

.586 Nott, Judith, pension to, during widowhood, 589

.587

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Broussard, Pierre, heirs of...

Landis, Joseph, and Company, judgment against, as sureties, satisfied... ....590 Lands, public, acts concerning, in favor of— Body, Isaac... .588 ...585

De Lannoy, Sarah J.....

Cureton, Smith, and Heifner, representatives of.... ....587 ..586

Devidrine, Jean Babtiste, representives

Allen, William...

.....586

of....

....589

Barnard, Christine.

.....586

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Bean, Alexander S.

....590

Fleming, Samuel

.....588

Bradford, William S..

....591

Gagnon, Pierre.

.....585

Brooks, Micajah..

..588

Gordon, George M

......587

Carpenter, Isaac..

..586

Heifner, Cureton, and Smith, representatives of.....

Chase, Shove...

..589

...587

Close, Elijah....

..590

Hugill, Edmund.

...587

Davenport, Michael A.

..590

Lawrence, James, representatives of....584
Loisel, Regis, representatives of........585
Loughry, Colonel Archibald, child of...588
Malines, Maria, (born Rillieux)
McBrier, Elizabeth...

Fellows, Stephen.

..590

Fugate, James..

..590

Griffith, Wyatt..

..590

.....587

Hamilton, Mary C..

..587

....588

Holland, John....

..591

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APPENDIX

TO THE CONGRESSIONAL GLOBE.

35TH CONG.... 1ST SESS.

MESSAGE

OF THE

PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES.
Fellow-Citizens of the Senate

and House of Representatives:

In obedience to the command of the Constitution, it has now become my duty" to give to Congress information of the state of the Union, and recommend to their consideration such measures" as I judge to be "necessary and expedient."

But first, and above all, our thanks are due to Almighty God for the numerous benefits which He has bestowed upon this people; and our united prayers ought to ascend to Him that He would continue to bless our great Republic in time to come as He has blessed it in time past. Since the adjournment of the last Congress our constituents have enjoyed an unusual degree of health. The earth has yielded her fruits abundantly, and has bountifully rewarded the toil of the husbandman. Our great staples have commanded high prices, and, up till within a brief period, our manufacturing, mineral, and mechanical occupations have largely partaken of the general prosperity. We have possessed all the elements of material wealth in rich abundance, and yet, notwithstanding all these advantages, our country, in its monetary interests, is at the present moment in a deplorable condition. In the midst of unsurpassed plenty in all the productions of agriculture and in all the elements of national wealth, we find our manufactures suspended, our public works retarded, our private enterprises of different kinds abandoned, and thousands of useful laborers thrown out of employment and reduced to want. The revenue of the Government, which is chiefly derived from duties on imports from abroad, has been greatly reduced, whilst the appropriations made by Congress at its last session for the current fiscal year are very large in amount.

Under these circumstances a loan may be required before the close of your present session; but this, although deeply to be regretted, would prove to be only a slight misfortune when compared with the suffering and distress prevailing among the people. With this the Government cannot fail deeply to sympathize, though it may be without the power to extend relief.

It is our duty to inquire what has produced such unfortunate results, and whether their recurrence can be prevented? In all former revulsions the blame might have been fairly attributed to a variety of cooperating causes; but not so upon the present occasion. It is apparent that our existing misfortunes have proceeded solely from our extravagant and vicious system of paper currency and bank credits, exciting the people to wild speculations and gambling in stocks. These revulsions must continue to recur at successive intervals so long as the amount of the paper currency and bank loans and discounts of the country shall be left to the discretion of fourteen hundred irresponsible banking institutions, which, from the NEW SERIES-No. 1.

Message of the President.

very law of their nature, will consult the interest of the stockholders rather than the public welfare.

The framers of the Constitution, when they gave to Congress the power "to coin money and to regulate the value thereof," and prohibited the States from coining money, emitting bills of cred- || it, or making anything but gold and silver coin a tender in payment of debts, supposed they had protected the people against the evils of an excessive and irredeemable paper currency. They are not responsible for the existing anomaly, that a Government endowed with the sovereign attribute of coining money and regulating the value thereof, should have no power to prevent others from driving this coin out of the country and filling up the channels of circulation with paper which does not represent gold and silver.

It is one of the highest and most responsible duties of Government to insure to the people a sound circulating medium, the amount of which ought to be adapted with the utmost possible wisdom and skill to the wants of internal trade and foreign exchanges. If this be either greatly above or greatly below the proper standard, the marketable value of every man's property is increased or diminished in the same proportion, and injustice to individuals, as well as incalculable evils to the community, are the consequence.

Unfortunately, under the construction of the Federal Constitution, which has now prevailed too long to be changed, this important and delicate duty has been dissevered from the coining power, and virtually transferred to more than fourteen hundred State banks, acting independently of each other, and regulating their paper issues almost exclusively by a regard to the pres. ent interest of their stockholders. Exercising the sovereign power of providing a paper currency, instead of coin, for the country, the first duty which these banks owe to the public is to keep in their vaults a sufficient amount of gold and silver to insure the convertibility of their notes into coin at all times and under all circumstances. No bank ought ever to be chartered without such restrictions on its business as to secure this result. All other restrictions are comparatively vain. This is the only true touchstone, the only efficient regulator of a paper currency-the only one which can guard the public against over-issues and bank suspensions. As a collateral and eventual security it is doubtless wise, and in all cases ought to be required, that banks shall hold an amount of United States or State securities equal to their notes in circulation, and pledged for their redemption. This, however, furnishes no adequate security against over-issues. On the contrary, it may be perverted to inflate the currency. Indeed, it is possible by this means to convert all the debts of the United States and State governments into bank notes, without reference to the specie required to redeem them. However valuable these securities may be in themselves, they cannot be converted into gold and silver at the moment of pressure, as our experience teaches, in sufficient time to prevent bank suspensions and the depreciation of bank notes. In England, which is to a considerable extent a paper-money country, though vastly behind our own in this respect, it

SENATE & HO. OF REPS.

was deemed advisable, anterior to the act of Parliament of 1844, which wisely separated the issue of notes from the banking department, for the Bank of England always to keep on hand gold and silver equal to one third of its combined circulation and deposits. If this proportion was no more than sufficient to secure the convertibility of its notes, with the whole of Great Britain, and to some extent the continent of Europe, as a field of its circulation, rendering it almost impossible that a sudden and immediate run to a dangerous amount should be made upon it, the same proportion would certainly be insufficient under our banking system. Each of our fourteen hundred banks has but a limited circumference for its circulation, and in the course of a very few days the depositors and note-holders might demand from such a bank a sufficient amount in specie to compel it to suspend, even although it had coin in its vaults equal to one third of its immediate liabilities. And yet I am not aware, with the exception of the banks of Louisiana, that any State bank throughout the Union has been required by its charter to keep this or any other proportion of gold and silver compared with the amount of its combined circulation and deposits. What has been the consequence? In a recent report made by the Treasury Department on the condition of the banks throughout the different States, according to returns dated nearest to January, 1857, the aggregate amount of actual specie in their vaults is $58,349,838; of their circulation, $214,778,822; and of their deposits, $230,351,352. Thus it appears that these banks, in the aggregate, have considerably less than one dollar in seven of gold and silver, compared with their circulation and deposits. It was palpable, therefore, that the very first pressure must drive them to suspension, and deprive the people of a convertible currency, with all its disastrous consequences. It is truly wonderful that they should have so long continued to preserve their credit, when a demand for the payment of one seventh of their immediate liabilities would have driven them into insolvency. And this is the condition of the banks, notwithstanding that four hundred millions of gold from California have flowed in upon us within the last eight years, and the tide still continues to flow. Indeed, such has been the extravagance of bank credits that the banks now hold a considerable less amount of specie, either in proportion to their capital or to their circulation and deposits combined, than they did before the discovery of gold in California. Whilst in the year 1848 their specie in proportion to their capital was more than equal to one dollar for four and a half, in 1857 it does not amount to one dollar for every six dollars and thirty-three cents of their capital. In the year 1848 the specie was equal, within a very small fraction, to one dollar in five of their circulation and deposits; in 1857 it is not equal to one dollar in seven and a half of their circulation and deposits.

From this statement it is easy to account for our financial history for the last forty years. It has been a history of extravagant expansions in the business of the country, followed by ruinous contractions. At successive intervals the best

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35TH CONG....1ST SESS.

and most enterprising men have been tempted to their ruin by excessive bank loans of mere paper credit, exciting them to extravagant importations of foreign goods, wild speculations, and ruinous and demoralizing stock gambling. When the crisis arrives, as arrive it must, the banks can extend no relief to the people. In a vain struggle to redeem their liabilities in specie, they are compelled to contract their loans and their issues; and at last, in the hour of distress, when their assistance is most needed, they and their debtors together sink into insolvency.

It is this paper system of extravagant expansion, raising the nominal price of every article far beyond its real value, when compared with the cost of similar articles in countries whose circulation is wisely regulated, which has prevented us from competing in our own markets with foreign manufacturers, has produced extravagant importations, and has counteracted the effect of the large incidental protection afforded to our domestic manufactures by the present revenue tariff. But for this the branches of our manufactures composed of raw materials, the production of our own country-such as cotton, iron, and woolen fabrics-would not only have acquired almost exclusive possession of the home market, but would have created for themselves a foreign market throughout the world.

Deplorable, however, as may be our present financial condition, we may yet indulge in bright hopes for the future. No other nation has ever existed which could have endured such violent expansions and contractions of paper credits without lasting injury; yet the buoyancy of youth, the energies of our population, and the spirit which never quails before difficulties, will enable us soon to recover from our present financial embarrassments, and may even occasion us speedily to forget the lesson which they have taught.

In the mean time, it is the duty of the Government, by all proper means within its power, to aid in alleviating the sufferings of the people occasioned by the suspensions of the banks, and to provide against a recurrence of the same calamity. Unfortunately, in either aspect of the case, it can do but little. Thanks to the Independent Treasury, the Government has not suspended payment, as it was compelled to do by the failure of the banks in 1837. It will continue to discharge its liabilities to the people in gold and silver. Its disbursements in coin will pass into circulation, and materially assist in restoring a sound currency. From its high credit, should we be compelled to make a temporary loan, it can be effected on advantageous terms. This, however, shall, if possible, be avoided; but if not, then the amount shall be limited to the lowest practicable sum.

I have therefore determined that whilst no useful Government works already in progress shall be suspended, new works, not already commenced, will be postponed, if this can be done without injury to the country. Those necessary for its defense shall proceed as though there had been no crisis in our monetary affairs.

But the Federal Government cannot do much to provide against a recurrence of existing evils. Even if insurmountable constitutional objections did not exist against the creation of a national bank, this would furnish no adequate preventive security. The history of the last Bank of the United States abundantly proves the truth of this assertion. Such a bank could not, if it would, regulate the issues and credits of fourteen hundred State banks in such a manner as to prevent the ruinous expansions and contractions in our currency which afflicted the country throughout the existence of the late bank, or secure us against future suspensions. In 1825 an effort was made by the Bank of England to curtail the issues of the country banks under the most favorable circumstances. The paper currency had been expanded to a ruinous extent, and the bank put forth all its power to contract it, in order to reduce prices, and restore the equilibrium of the foreign exchanges. It accordingly commenced a system of curtailment of its loans and issues, in the vain hope that the joint-stock and private banks of the kingdom would be compelled to follow its example. It found, however, that as it contracted they expanded, and at the end of the

Message of the President.

process, to employ the language of a very high official authority, "whatever reduction of the paper circulation was effected by the Bank of England [in 1825] was more than made up by the issues of the country banks."

But a bank of the United States would not, if it could, restrain the issues and loans of the State banks, because its duty as a regulator of the currency must often be in direct conflict with the immediate interest of its stockholders. If we expect one agent to restrain or control another, their interests must, at least in some degree, be antagonistic. But the directors of a bank of the United States would feel the same interest and the same inclination with the directors of the State banks to expand the currency, to accommodate their favorites and friends with loans, and to declare large dividends. Such has been our experience in regard to the last bank.

SENATE & HO. OF REPS.

or exercise any dominion" over, any part of Central America, it is contended by the British Government that the true construction of this language has left them in the rightful possession of all that portion of Central America which was in their occupancy at the date of the treaty; in fact, that the treaty is a virtual recognition on the part of the United States of the right of Great Britain, either as owner or protector, to the whole extensive coast of Central America, sweeping round from the Rio Hondo to the port and harbor of San Juan de Nicaragua, together with the adjacent Bay Islands, except the comparatively small portion of this between the Sarstoon and Cape Honduras. According to their construction, the treaty does no more than simply prohibit them from extending their possessions in Central America beyond the present limits. It is not too much to assert, that if in the United States the treaty After all, we must mainly rely upon the pa- had been considered susceptible of such a contriotism and wisdom of the States for the preven-struction, it never would have been negotiated tion and redress of the evil. If they will afford us a real specie basis for our paper circulation by increasing the denomination of bank notes, first to twenty, and afterwards to fifty dollars; if they will require that the banks shall at all times keep on hand at least one dollar of gold and silver for every three dollars of their circulation and deposits; and if they will provide, by a self-executing enactment which nothing can arrest, that the moment they suspend they shall go into liquidation, I believe that such provisions, with a weekly publication by each bank of a statement of its condition, would go far to secure us against future suspensions of specie payments.

Congress, in my opinion, possess the power to pass a uniform bankrupt law applicable to all banking institutions throughout the United States, and I strongly recommend its exercise. This would make it the irreversible organic law of each bank's existence, that a suspension of specie payments shall produce its civil death. The instinct of self-preservation would then compel it to perform its duties in such a manner as to escape the penalty and preserve its life.

The existence of banks and the circulation of bank paper are so identified with the habits of our people, that they cannot at this day be suddenly abolished without much immediate injury to the country. If we could confine them to their appropriate sphere, and prevent them from administering to the spirit of wild and reckless speculation by extravagant loans and issues, they might be continued with advantage to the public.

under the authority of the President, nor would it have received the approbation of the Senate. The universal conviction in the United States was, that when our Government consented to violate its traditional and time-honored policy, and to stipulate with a foreign Government never to occupy or acquire territory in the Central American portion of our own continent, the consideration for this sacrifice was that Great Britain should, in this respect at least, be placed in the same position with ourselves. Whilst we have no right to doubt the sincerity of the British Government in their construction of the treaty, it is at the same time my deliberate conviction that this construction is in opposition both to its letter and its spirit.

Under the late Administration negotiations were instituted between the two Governments for the purpose, if possible, of removing these difficulties; and a treaty having this laudable object in view was signed at London on the 17th of October, 1856, and was submitted by the President to the Senate on the following 10th of December. Whether this treaty, either in its original or amended form, would have accomplished the object intended without giving birth to new and embarrassing complications between the two Governments, may perhaps be well questioned. Certain it is, however, it was rendered much less objectionable by the different amendments made to it by the Senate. The treaty, as amended, was ratified by me on the 12th March, 1857, and was transmitted to London for ratification by the But this I say, after long and much reflection: British Government. That Government exif experience shall prove it to be impossible to pressed its willingness to concur in all the amendenjoy the facilities which well-regulated banks ments made by the Senate, with the single exmight afford, without at the same time suffering ception of the clause relating to Roatan and the the calamities which the excesses of the banks other islands in the Bay of Honduras. The arhave hitherto inflicted upon the country, it would ticle in the original treaty, as submitted to the then be far the lesser evil to deprive them alto- Senate, after reciting that these islands and their gether of the power to issue a paper currency and inhabitants "having been by a convention bearconfine them to the functions of banks of depositing date the 27th day of August, 1856, between and discount.

Our relations with foreign Governments are, upon the whole, in a satisfactory condition.

The diplomatic difficulties which existed between the Government of the United States and that of Great Britain at the adjournment of the last Congress have been happily terminated by the appointment of a British Minister to this country, who has been cordially received.

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her Britannic Majesty and the Republic of Honduras, constituted and declared a free territory, under the sovereignty of the said Republic of Honduras," stipulated that "the two contracting parties do hereby mutually engage to recognize and respect, in all future time, the independence and rights of the said free territory as a part of the Republic of Honduras."

Upon an examination of this convention beWhilst it is greatly to the interest, as I am con- tween Great Britain and Honduras of the 27th vinced it is the sincere desire, of the Governments August, 1856, it was found that, whilst declaring and people of the two countries to be on terms of the Bay Islands to be "a free territory under the intimate friendship with each other, it has been Sovereignty of the Republic of Honduras," it deour misfortune almost always to have some irri-prived that Republic of rights without which its tating, if not dangerous, outstanding question with Great Britain.

Since the origin of the Government we have been employed in negotiating treaties with that Power, and afterwards in discussing their true intent and meaning. In this respect, the convention of April 19, 1850, commonly called the Clayton and Bulwer treaty, has been the most unfortunate of all; because the two Governments place directly opposite and contradictory constructions upon its first and most important article. Whilst, in the United States, we believed that this treaty would place both Powers upon an exact equality by the stipulation that neither will ever occupy, or fortify, or colonize, or assume

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sovereignty over them could scarcely be said to exist. It divided them from the remainder of Honduras, and gave to their inhabitants a separate government of their own, with legislative, executive, and judicial officers, clected by themselves. It deprived the Government of Honduras of the taxing power in every form, and exempted the people of the islands from the performance of military duty except for their own exclusive defense. It also prohibited that Republic from erecting fortifications upon them for their protection-thus leaving them open to invasion from any quarter; and, finally, it provided "that slavery shall not at any time hereafter be permitted to exist therein."

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