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James K.
Polk's 3rd Annual Message
Washington, December 7, 1847 |
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Fellow - Citizens of the Senate and of the House of
Representatives:
The annual meeting of Congress is always an interesting event.
The representatives of the States and of the people come fresh
from their constituents to take counsel together for the common
good.
After an existence of near three-fourths of a century as a free
and independent Republic, the problem no longer remains to be
solved whether man is capable of self-government. The success of
our admirable system is a conclusive refutation of the theories
of those in other countries who maintain that a "favored few"
are born to rule and that the mass of mankind must be governed
by force. Subject to no arbitrary or hereditary authority, the
people are the only sovereigns recognized by our Constitution.
Numerous emigrants, of every lineage and language, attracted by
the civil and religious freedom we enjoy and by our happy
condition, annually crowd to our shores, and transfer their
heart, not less than their allegiance to the country whose
dominion belongs alone to the people. No country has been so
much favored, or should acknowledge with deeper reverence the
manifestations of the divine protection. An all wise Creator
directed and guarded us in our infant struggle for freedom and
has constantly watched over our surprising progress until we
have become one of the great nations of the earth.
It is in a country thus favored, and under a Government in which
the executive and legislative branches hold their authority
limited periods alike from the people, and where all are
responsible to their respective constituencies, that it is again
my duty to communicate with Congress upon the state of the Union
and the present condition of public affairs.
During the past year the most gratifying proofs are presented
that our country has been blessed with a widespread and
universal prosperity. There has been no period since the
Government was founded when all the industrial pursuits of our
people have been more successful or when labor in all branches
of business has received a fairer or better reward. From our
abundance we have been enabled to perform the pleasing duty of
furnishing food for the starving millions of less favored
countries.
In the enjoyment of the bounties of Providence at home such as
have rarely fallen to the lot of any people, it is cause of
congratulation that our intercourse with all the powers of the
earth except Mexico continues to be of an amicable character.
It has ever been our cherished policy to cultivate peace and
good will with all nations, and this policy has been steadily
pursued by me.
No change has taken place in our relations with Mexico since the
adjournment of the last Congress. the war in which the United
States were forced to engage with the Government of that country
still continues.
I deem it unnecessary, after the full exposition of them
contained in my message of the 11th of May, 1846, and in my
annual message at the commencement of the session of Congress in
December last, to reiterate the serious causes of complaint
which we had against Mexico before she commenced hostilities.
It is sufficient on the present occasion to say that the wanton
violation of the rights of person and property of our citizens
committed by Mexico, her repeated acts of bad faith through a
long series of years, and her disregard of solemn treaties
stipulating for indemnity to our injured citizens not only
constituted ample cause of war on our part, but were of such an
aggravated character as would have justified us before the whole
world in resorting to this extreme remedy. With an anxious
desire to avoid a rupture between the two countries, we forbore
for years to assert our clear rights by force, and continued to
seek redress for the wrongs we had suffered by amicable
negotiation in the hope that Mexico might yield to pacific
counsels and the demands of justice. In this hope we were
disappointed. Our minister of peace sent to Mexico was
insultingly rejected. The Mexican Government refused even to
hear the terms of adjustment which he was authorized to propose,
and finally, under wholly unjustifiable pretexts, involved the
two countries in war by invading the territory of the State of
Texas, striking the first blow, and shedding the blood of our
citizens on our own soil...
I am persuaded that the best means of vindicating the national
honor and interest and of bringing the war to an honorable close
will be to prosecute it with increased energy and power in the
vital parts of the enemy's country.
In my annual message to Congress of December last I declared
that -
The war has not been waged with a view to conquest, but, having
been commenced by Mexico, it has been carried into the enemy's
country and will be vigorously prosecuted there with a view to
obtain an honorable peace, and thereby secure ample indemnity
for the expenses of the war, as well as to our much-injured
citizens, who hold large pecuniary demands against Mexico.
Such, in my judgment, continues to be our true policy; indeed,
the only policy which will probably secure a permanent peace.
It has never been contemplated by me, as an object of the war,
to make a permanent conquest of the Republic of Mexico or to
annihilate her separate existence as an independent nation. On
the contrary, it has ever been my desire that she should
maintain her nationality, and under a good government adapted to
her condition be a free, independent, and prosperous Republic.
The United States were the first among the nations to recognize
her independence, and have always desired to be on terms of
amity and good neighborhood with her. This she would not suffer.
By her own conduct we have been compelled to engage in the
present war. In its prosecution we seek not her overthrow as a
nation, but in vindicating our national honor we seek to obtain
redress for the wrongs she has done us and indemnity for our
just demands against her. We demand an honorable peace, and that
peace must bring with it indemnity for the past and security for
the future. Hitherto Mexico has refused all accommodation by
which such a peace could be obtained.
Whilst our armies have advanced from victory to victory from the
commencement of the war, it has always been with the olive
branch of peace in their hands, and it has been in the power of
Mexico at every step to arrest hostilities by accepting it.
One great obstacle to the attainment of peace has undoubtedly
arisen from the fact that Mexico has been so long held in
subjection by one faction or military usurper after another, and
such has been the condition of insecurity in which their
successive governments have been placed that each has been
deterred from making peace lest for this very cause a rival
faction might expel it from power. Such was the fate of
President Herrera's administration in 1845 for being disposed
even to listen to the overtures of the United States to prevent
the war, as is fully confirmed by an official correspondence
which took place in the month of August last between him and his
Government, a copy of which is here with communicated. "For this
cause alone the revolution which displaced him from power was
set on foot" by General Parades. Such may be the condition of
insecurity of the present Government.
There can be no doubt that the peaceable and well-disposed
inhabitants of Mexico are convinced that it is the true interest
of their country to conclude an honorable peace with the United
States, but the apprehension of becoming the victims of some
military faction or usurper may have prevented them from
manifesting their feelings by any public act. The removal of any
such apprehension would probably cause them to speak their
sentiments freely and to adopt the measures necessary for the
restoration of peace. With a people distracted and divided by
contending factions and a Government subject to constant changes
by successive revolutions, the continued successes of our arms
may fail to secure a satisfactory peace. In such event it may
become proper for our commanding generals in the field to give
encouragement and assurances of protection to the friends of
peace in Mexico in the establishment and maintenance of a free
republican government of their own choice, able and willing to
conclude a peace which would be just to them and secure to us
the indemnity we demand. This may become the only mode of
obtaining such a peace. Should such be the result, the war which
Mexico has forced upon us would thus be converted into an
enduring blessing to herself. After finding her torn and
distracted by factions, and ruled by military usurpers, we
should then leave her with a republican government in the
enjoyment of real independence and domestic peace and
prosperity, performing all her relative duties in the great
family of nations and promoting her own happiness by wise laws
and their faithful execution.
If, after affording this encouragement and protection, and after
all the persevering and sincere efforts we have made from the
moment Mexico commenced the war, and prior to that time, to
adjust our differences with her, we shall ultimately fail, then
we shall have exhausted all honorable means in pursuit of peace,
and must continue to occupy her country with our troops, taking
the full measure of indemnity into our own hands, and must
enforce the terms which our honor demands...
In prosecuting the war with Mexico, whilst the utmost care has
been taken to avoid every just cause of complaint on the part of
neutral nations, and none has been given, liberal privileges
have been granted to their commerce in the ports of the enemy in
our military occupation.
The difficulty with the Brazilian Government, which at one time
threatened to interrupt the friendly relations between the two
countries, will, I trust, be speedily adjusted. I have received
information that an envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary to the United States will shortly be appointed
by His Imperial Majesty, and it is hoped that he will come
instructed and prepared to adjust all remaining differences
between the two Governments in a manner acceptable and honorable
to both. In the meantime, I have every reason to believe that
nothing will occur to interrupt our amicable relations with
Brazil.
It has been my constant effort to maintain and cultivate the
most intimate relations of friendship with all the independent
powers of South America, and this policy has been attended with
the happiest results. It is true that the settlement and payment
of many just claims of American citizens against these nations
have been long delayed. The peculiar position in which they have
been placed and the desire on the part of my predecessors as
well as myself to grant them the utmost indulgence have hitherto
prevented these claims from being urged in a manner demanded by
strict justice. The time has arrived when they ought to be
finally adjusted and liquidated, and efforts are now making for
that purpose.
It is proper to inform you that the Government of Peru has in
good faith paid the first two installments of the indemnity of
$30,000 each, and the greater portion of the interest due
thereon, in execution of the convention between that Government
and the United States the ratifications of which were exchanged
at Lima on the 31st of October, 1846. The Attorney-General of
the United States early in August last completed the
adjudication of the claims under this convention, and made his
report thereon in pursuance of the act of the 8th of August,
1846. The sums to which the claimants are respectively entitled
will be paid on demand at the Treasury.
I invite the early attention of Congress to the present
condition of our citizens in China. Under our treaty with that
power American citizens are withdrawn from the jurisdiction,
whether civil or criminal, of the Chinese Government and placed
under that of our public functionaries in that country. By these
alone can our citizens be tried and punished for the commission
of any crime; by these alone can questions be decided between
them involving the rights of persons and property, and by these
alone can contracts be enforced into which they may have entered
with the citizens or subjects of foreign powers. The merchant
vessels of the United States lying in the waters of the five
ports of China open to foreign commerce are under the exclusive
jurisdiction of officers of their own Government. Until Congress
shall establish competent tribunals to try and punish crimes and
to exercise jurisdiction in civil cases in China, American
citizens there are subject to no law whatever. Crimes may be
committed with impunity and debts may be contracted without any
means to enforce their payment. Inconveniences have already
resulted from the omission of Congress to legislate upon the
subject, and still greater are apprehended. The British
authorities in China have already complained that this
Government has not provided for the punishment of crimes or the
enforcement of contracts against American citizens in that
country, whilst their Government has established tribunals by
which an American citizen can recover debts due from British
subjects.
Accustomed, as the Chinese are, to summary justice, they could
not be made to comprehend why criminals who are citizens of the
United States should escape with impunity, in violation of
treaty obligations, whilst the punishment of a Chinese who had
committed any crime against an American citizen would be
rigorously exacted. Indeed, the consequences might be fatal to
American citizens in China should a flagrant crime be committed
by any one of them upon a Chinese, and should trial and
punishment not follow according to the requisitions of the
treaty. This might disturb, if not destroy, our friendly
relations with that Empire, and cause an interruption of our
valuable commerce. Our treaties with the Sublime Porte, Tripoli,
Tunis, Morocco, and Muscat also require the legislation of
Congress to carry them into execution, though the necessity for
immediate action may not be so urgent as in regard to China.
The Secretary of State has submitted an estimate to defray the
expense of opening diplomatic relations with the Papal States.
The interesting political events now in progress in these
States, as well as a just regard to our commercial interests,
have, in my opinion, rendered such a measure highly expedient.
Estimates have also been submitted for the outfits and salaries
of charges d'affaires to the Republics of Bolivia, Guatemala,
and Ecuador. The manifest importance of cultivating the most
friendly relations with all the independent States upon this
continent has induced me to recommend appropriations necessary
for the maintenance of these missions.
I recommend to Congress that an appropriation be made to be paid
to the Spanish Government for the purpose of distribution among
the claimants in the Amistad case. I entertain the conviction
that this is due to Spain under the treaty of the 20th of
October, 1795, and, moreover, that from the earnest manner in
which the claim continues to be urged so long as it shall remain
unsettled it will be a source of irritation and discord between
the two countries, which may prove highly prejudicial to the
interests of the United States. Good policy, no less than a
faithful compliance with our treaty obligations, requires that
the inconsiderable appropriation demanded should be made.
A detailed statement of the condition of the finances will be
presented in the annual report of the Secretary of the Treasury.
The imports for the last fiscal year, ending on the 30th of
June, 1847, were of the value of $146,545,638, of which the
amount exported was $8,0l1,158, leaving $138,534,480 in the
country for domestic use. The value of the exports for the same
period was $158,648,622, of which $150,637,464 consisted of
domestic productions and $8,0l1,158 of foreign articles.
The receipts into the Treasury for the same period amounted to
$26, 346,790.37, of which there was derived from customs
$23,747,864.66, from sales of public lands $2,498,335.20, and
from incidental and miscellaneous sources $100,570.51. The last
fiscal year, during which this amount was received, embraced
five months under the operation of the tariff act of 1842 and
seven months during which the tariff act of 1846 was in force.
During the five months under the act of 1842 the amount received
from customs was $7,842,306.90, and during the seven months
under the act of 1846 the amount received was $15,905,557.76.
The net revenue from customs during the year ending on the 1st
of December, 1846, being the last year under the operation of
the tariff act of 1842, was $22,971,403.10, and the net revenue
from customs during the year ending on the 1st of December,
1847, being the first year under the operations of the tariff
act of 1846, was about $31,500,000, being an increase of revenue
for the first year under the tariff of 1846 of more than
$8,500,000 over that of the last year under the tariff of 1842.
The expenditures during the fiscal year ending on the 30th of
June last were $59,451,177.65, of which $3,522,082.37 was on
account of payment of principal and interest of the public debt,
including Treasury notes redeemed and not funded. The
expenditures exclusive of payment of public debt were
$55,929,095.28
It is estimated that the receipts into the Treasury for the
fiscal year ending on the 30th of June, 1848, including the
balance in the Treasury on the 1st of July last, will amount to
$42,886,545.80, of which $3l,000,000, it is estimated, will be
derived from customs, $3,500,000 from the sale of the public
lands, $400,000 from incidental sources, including sales made by
the Solicitor of the Treasury, and $6,285,294.55 from loans
already authorized by law, which, together with the balance in
the Treasury on the 1st of July last, make the sum estimated.
The expenditures for the same period, if peace with Mexico shall
not be concluded and the Army shall be increased as is proposed,
will amount, including the necessary payments on account of
principal and interest of the public debt and Treasury notes, to
$58,615,660.07.
On the 1st of the present month the amount of the public debt
actually incurred, including Treasury notes, was
$545,659,659.40. The public debt due on the 4th of March, 1845,
including Treasury notes, was $17,788,799.62, and consequently
the addition made to the public debt since that time is
$27,870,859.78...
The act of the 30th of July, 1846, "reducing the duties on
imports," has been in force since the 1st of December last, and
I am gratified to state that all the beneficial effects which
were anticipated from its operation have been fully realized.
The public revenue derived from customs during the year ending
on the 1st of December, 1847, exceeds by more than $8,000,000
the amount received in the preceding year under the operation of
the act of 1842, which was superseded and repealed by it. Its
effects are visible in the great and almost unexampled
prosperity which prevails in every branch of business.
While the repeal of the prohibitory and restrictive duties of
the act of 1842 and the substitution in their place of
reasonable revenue rates levied on articles imported according
to their actual value has increased the revenue and augmented
our foreign trade, all the great interests of the country have
been advanced and promoted...
So successful have been all branches of our industry that a
foreign war, which generally diminishes the resources of a
nation, has in no essential degree retarded our onward progress
or checked our general prosperity.
With such gratifying evidences of prosperity and of the
successful operation of the revenue act of 1846, every
consideration of public policy recommends that it shall remain
unchanged. It is hoped that the system of impost duties which it
established may be regarded as the permanent policy of the
country, and that the great interests affected by it may not
again be subject to be injuriously disturbed, as they have
heretofore been, by frequent and sometimes sudden changes.
For the purpose of increasing the revenue, and without changing
or modifying the rates imposed by the act of 1846 on the
dutiable articles embraced by its provisions, I again recommend
to your favorable consideration the expediency of levying a
revenue duty on tea and coffee. The policy which exempted these
articles from duty during peace, and which the revenue to be
derived from them was not needed, ceases to exist when the
country is engaged in war and requires the use of all of its
available resources. It is a tax which would be so generally
diffused among the people that it would be felt oppressively by
none and be complained of by none. It is believed that there are
not in the list of imported articles any which are more properly
the subject of war duties than tea and coffee...
During the past year the coinage at the Mint and its branches
has exceeded $20,000,000. This has consisted chiefly in
converting the coins of foreign countries into American coin.
The largest amount of foreign coin imported has been received at
New York, and if a branch mint were established at that city all
the foreign coin received at that port could at once be
converted into our own coin without the expense, risk, and delay
of transporting it to the Mint for that purpose, and the amount
recoined would be much larger.
Experience has proved that foreign coin, and especially foreign
gold coin, will not circulate extensively as a currency among
the people. The important measure of extending our specie
circulation, both of gold and silver, and of diffusing it among
the people can only be effected by converting such foreign coin
into American coin. I repeat the recommendation contained in my
last annual message for the establishment of a branch of the
Mint of the United States at the city of New York.
All the public lands which had been surveyed and were ready for
market have been proclaimed for sale during the past year. The
quantity offered and to be offered for sale under proclamations
issued since the 1st of January last amounts to 9,l38,531 acres.
The prosperity of the Western States and Territories in which
these lands lie will be advanced by their speedy sale. By
withholding them from market their growth and increase of
population would be retarded, while thousands of our
enterprising and meritorious frontier population would be
deprived of the opportunity of securing freeholds for themselves
and their families. But in addition to the general
considerations which rendered the early sale of these lands
proper, it was a leading object at this time to derive as large
a sum as possible from this source, and thus diminish by that
amount the public loan rendered necessary by the existence of a
foreign war.
It is estimated that not less than 10,000,000 acres of the
public lands will be surveyed and be in a condition to be
proclaimed for sale during the year 1848.
In my last annual message I presented the reasons which in my
judgment rendered it proper to graduate and reduce the price of
such of the public lands as have remained unsold for long
periods after they had been offered for sale at public auction.
Many millions of acres of public lands lying within the limits
of several of the Western States have been offered in the market
and been subject to sale at private entry for more than twenty
years and large quantities for more than thirty years at the
lowest price prescribed by the existing laws, and it has been
found that they will not command that price. They must remain
unsold and uncultivated for an indefinite period unless the
price demanded for them by the Government shall be reduced. No
satisfactory reason is perceived why they should be longer held
at rates above their real value. At the present period an
additional reason exists for adopting the measure recommended.
When the country is engaged in a foreign war, and we must
necessarily resort to loans, it would seem to be the dictate of
wisdom that we should avail ourselves of all our resources and
thus limit the amount of the public indebtedness to the lowest
possible sum...
Pacific relations continue to exist with the various Indian
tribes, and most of them manifest a strong friendship for the
United States. Some depredations were committed during the past
year upon our trains transporting supplies for the Army, on the
road between the western border of Missouri and Santa Fe. These
depredations, which are supposed to have been committed by bands
from the region of New Mexico, have been arrested by the
presence of a military force ordered out for that purpose. Some
outrages have been perpetrated by a portion of the north western
bands upon the weaker and comparatively defenseless neighboring
tribes. Prompt measures were taken to prevent such occurrences
in future.
Between 1,000 and 2,000 Indians, belonging to several tribes,
have been removed during the year from the east of the
Mississippi to the country allotted to them west of that river
as their permanent home, and arrangements have been made for
others to follow.
Since the treaty of 1846 with the Cherokees the feuds among them
appear to have subsided, and they have become more united and
contented than they have been for many years past. The
commissioners appointed in pursuance of the act of June 27,
1846, to settle claims arising under the treaty of 1835-36 with
that tribe have executed their duties, and after a patient
investigation and a full and fair examination of all the cases
brought before them closed their labors in the month of July
last. This is the fourth board of commissioners which has been
organized under this treaty. Ample opportunity has been afforded
to all those interested to bring forward their claims. No doubt
is entertained that impartial justice has been done by the late
board, and that all valid claims embraced by the treaty have
been considered and allowed. This result and the final
settlement to be made with this tribe under the treaty of 1846,
which will be completed and laid before you during your session,
will adjust all questions of controversy between them and the
United States and produce a state of relations with them simple,
well defined, and satisfactory...
In view of the existing state of our country, I trust it may not
be inappropriate, in closing this communication, to call to mind
the words of wisdom and admonition of the first and most
illustrious of my predecessors in his Farewell Address to his
countrymen.
That greatest and best of men, who served his country so long
and loved it so much, foresaw with "serious concern" the danger
to our Union of "characterizing parties by geographical
discriminations - Northern and Southern, Atlantic and Western -
whence designing men may endeavor to excite a belief that there
is a real difference of local interests and views," and warned
his countrymen against it.
So deep and solemn was his conviction of the importance of the
Union and of preserving harmony between its different parts,
that he declared to his countrymen in that address:
It is of infinite moment that you should properly estimate the
immense value of your national union to your collective and
individual happiness; that you should cherish a cordial,
habitual, and immovable attachment to it; accustoming yourselves
to think and speak of it as of the palladium of your political
safety and prosperity; watching for its preservation with
jealous anxiety; discountenancing whatever may suggest even a
suspicion that it can in any event be abandoned, and indignantly
frowning upon the first dawning of every attempt to alienate any
portion of our country from the rest or to enfeeble the sacred
ties which now link together the various parts.
After the lapse of half a century these admonitions of
Washington fall upon us with all the force of truth. It is
difficult to estimate the " immense value" of our glorious Union
of confederated States, to which we are so much indebted for our
growth in population and wealth and for all that constitutes us
a great and a happy nation. How unimportant are all our
differences of opinion upon minor questions of public policy
compared with its preservation, and how scrupulously should we
avoid all agitating topics which may tend to distract and divide
us into contending parties, separated by geographical lines,
whereby it may be weakened or endangered.
Invoking the blessing of the Almighty Ruler of the Universe upon
your deliberations, it will be my highest duty, no less than my
sincere pleasure, to cooperate with you in all measures which
may tend to promote the honor and enduring welfare of our common
country. |
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