THE CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY, IN 1866. THE OUTBREAK OF THE LIFE-LONG FEUD BETWEEN THE TWO GREAT STATESMEN, ROSCOE CONKLING AND JAMES G. BLAINE. JAMES B. FRY, Brevet Major-General, U. S. A. [Retired.] PRESS OF A. G. Sherwood & Co., 47 Lafayme Place, New York. 1898. JBJpIEASED ^ ^^ »- ' ' WHEN MEN CEASE TO C0MPL.4JN OF INJUSTICE IT IS AS IF THEY SULLENLY CONFESSED THAT GOD IS DEAD." PREFACE. It is not to be expected that men of the present time will be interested in an account of contentions in 1866 between Mr. Conkling and an army officer, or even between Mr. Conkling and Mr. Blaine ; but they are concerned in knowing how far investigating com- mittees sometimes go in assumption of power, in failing to duly weigh testimony, in admission of partiality, and in violation of justice. " The judicial power," says the Constitution, " shall be vested in one Supreme Court, and in sucli inferior courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish." " No person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law." There is no pretense that " the Congress " has ever ordained or established investigating committees of the House of Representatives, or the House itself, as part of the " judicial power " of the United States, or as a power of any kind, through which persons may be deprived of life, liberty or property. When our Government was formed, the British House of Com- mons had pronounced " that whatever is enacted or declared for law by the Commons in Parliament as- sembled hath the force of law, and all the people of this nation are concluded thereby, although the con- sent and concurrence of the King or House of Peers be not had thereto." The framers of our Constitution purposely withheld from the House of Representatives 5 6 PREFACE. the extraordinary power declared by the House of Commons, and also the power exercised by the Com- mons, to confiscate property, imprison Judges, cut off men's noses and ears, and commit other like atrocities. Such acts formed precedents to be shunned, not fol- lowed. Under our system, every offense calling for loss of life, liberty or property, comes within the jurisdiction of one court or another, ordained and established by or under the Constitution. For a legislative body, by virtue of its so-called "privilege " to punish a citizen without law, judge or jury is in- consistent with the principles of freedom and justice imbedded in, and essential to, our governmental sys- tem. Nevertheless, our House of Representatives, by its own dictum, deprives persons of their liberty and good name. That this unauthorized and irre- sponsible mode of punishment ought to be curbed, there can be no reasonable doubt. As the action and power of the House of Repre- sentatives are discussed in some detail in the following pages, I deem it proper to say that T have the pro- foundest respect for Congress, and I intend by these pages no breach of privilege and no discourtesy to any department or institution of the Government. So, too, with individuals upon whose parts I com- ment, it is not my purpose to injure or offend anyone. My object is to present a plain and correct account of a public matter in which I was misjudged and wronged. In doing that I must hew to the line, let the chips fly where they will. A committee of the House in the 39th Congress was appointed April 30, 1866, "to investigate the PREFACE. statements and charges made by Hon. Roscoe Conk- ling in his place last week against Provost Marshal General Fry and his Bureau, whether any frauds have been jDerpetrated in his office in connection with the recruiting service ; also to examine into the state- ments made by General Fry in his communication to Hon. Mr. Blaine, read in the House this day." This committee failed to investigate the state ments and charges made by Mr. Conkling against me, but made a so-called examination into the statements made in my communication to Mr. Blaine and reported that my letter, which at Mr. Blaine's instance was read at the Clerk's desk by permission of the House, was a breach of privilege by me, and pronounced the state- ments in it entirely without foundation in truth. The House adopted the committee's report. From such a finding by the people's representa- tives there is no appeal, except to the people them- selves. It therefore seems incumbent upon me to lay before that high tribunal proof that the state- ments made by me in 1866 in a letter to Mr. Blaine concernino; a contention in the House between him and Mr. Conkling are true. This forces me to examine in detail the committee's record and ijndings, and is my apology for asking my readers to go, as patiently as they can, through my long and somewhat tedious " Review of the Committee's Report," Chapter V. J. B. F. Chapter I. INTRODUCTORY. • ... The so-called Conkling and Blaine-Fry affair oc- curred in 1 866, a quartei- of a century ago. It has passed almost beyond the domain of feeling with me. I think I can treat it without passion or prejudice. The first time I remember meeting Mr. Conkling was in 1865, when he visited Washington upon the recruiting busi- ness in his District. 1 had no real personal acquaint- ance with him, and I have not a particle of animosity towards him. We met again in General Grant's parlor in 1883 soon after the General's financial troubles, I. was standing near Mrs. Grant when Mr. Conkling ap- proached. She introduced us, and we shook hands. When taking my leave a little later, I walked lip to Mr. Conkling where he sat talking to General Grant, and calling him by name, bade him good night, offer- ing him my hand, which he took, making a polite re- sponse. We were then, so to speak, both on the retired list of public service. That was th6 only time I met him after 1866, and no communication or mes- sage ever passed between us after that date. I made Mr. Blaine's acquaintance in Washington in 1863. We were soon upon friendly, even intimate terms. Since 1866 our paths have been far apart ; we have seldom met, and have had but little corre- spondence, none that I recall of importance concerning the old fracas. In gallantly repulsing Mr. Conkling's assault upon 9 10 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. me in tlie House, Mr. Blaine was moved by a sense of justice and fair play. He was under no obligation to espouse my cause then or guard ray interests subsequent- ly. He was continuously in public life and deserved the prestige of victory in the debate which he enjoyed. It has been said that this quarrel created a hos- tility between Mr. Blaine and Mr. Conkling which prevented the former and perhaps the latter from being elected to the Presidency. " Politics makes strange bed fellows," but I believe there would have been a rupture between Mr. Blaine and Mr. Conkling if this affair had never occurred. The debate upon the occasion shows feelings and traits which promised anything but harmonious political work. The " with- ering sarcasm " which these distinguished men hurled at each other in that debate manifested bad feelino; so intense, firmly rooted, and so well grown as to be sure of fruitage sooner or later. A split with lasting con- sequences between these two Republican members of the House of Representatives, it seems to me, was in- evitable. Nevertheless, it is certain that the enmity between Mr. Conkling and Mr. Blaine was an impor- tant factor in the affairs of the Republican party, hav- ing a marked effect in the convention of 1876, before which both were strongly supported, with the result that Mr. Hayes was chosen, and in the convention of 1880, which nominated General Garfield, who was elected. President Garfield appointed Mr. Blaine Secretary of State, and it is probable that the old feud had much to do with Mr. Conkling's resignation as Senator, his failure to secure a re-election, and his dis- appearance from public life. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 11 In 1884, Mr. Blaine was the Republican nominee for the Presidency, and there is good reason to believ that he would have been elected if he had received th earnest suppoi-t of Mr. Conkling. /i A committee of the House, the tribunal chosen pj Mr. Conkling to investigate, reported fully and uh-. equivocally in his favor, condemning me directly and ^^ ^ Mr. Blaine indirectly. Nevertheless, friends of Mr.*"^^ Conkling have from time to time come before the public to prove that he was victorious or to defend him against the conse(|uences of his victory. More than once, the report against me by the investigating committee has been shown in the most highly colored light, not so much, I imagine, to injure me, as to reach Mr, Blaine, whose censure by the committee and the House was comparatively indirect. When the committee's report was made public in 1866, I was advised to apply for a military Court of Inquiry, and Mr. Blaine himself at the time thought such a tribunal desirable, lest the Senate should regard the action of the House as a reason for refusing to confirm my nomination for promotion or appointment in the future.* * It did not turn out so. All the appointments conferred upon me were confirmed, and commissions were issued to me as follows: Major- General by brevet, July 17, 1866, " for faithful, meritorious, and distinguished services in the Provost Marshal-General's department." Brigadier-General by brevet, Jime 10. 1868, " for gallant and meri- torious services in the battles of Shiloh, Tennessee, and Perryville, Ken- tucky." Colonel by brevet, "for gallant and meritorious services in the battle of Bull Run [1st.], Virginia." Colonel in the Adjutant Gen3rars department, March 12, 1875. In all these cases my appointments were confirmed by the Senate. When part of them were acted upon, Mr. Conkling was a member of the Senate ; and he was a member of the House when the others were con- sidered 12 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. But I maintained that it was not for me to seek or avoid investigation, I felt that I had performed my duties honestly and efficiently, and that time would bring me Justice. That belief and the condi- tion of public affairs induced me to remain silent. The desperate, protracted and exhausting civil war was over. The great armies which I had much to do in raising had been mustered out, and their com- ponents had returned to civil pursuits. The whole country was rejoicing over the return of peace, and the Government and people were concentrating their thoughts and energies upon the reconstruction of the States lately in rebellion, and upon the establishment of harmony and good feeling. I was unwilling to thrust myself forward for a vindication which I felt time would bring. While waiting for the verdict of time, my grievance has become old and dry, and I have hesitated to ask the public to touch it, though others from time to time have bi'ought it up to my detriment. The New York Herald of June 4, 1888, gave place to an elaborate and able article by Mr. George C. Gorham, with the caption in large letters, " Justice to Mr. Conkling." Mr. Gorham says in his opening : " I should be recreant to the strongest ties of friend- ship which bound me to him, and false to the promises I made him, if I failed to give his explanation of the two matters concerning which he felt he had been mis- Judged. In doing this, censure must fall on some, for the truths that alone can set him right convict others of outrage and wrong." One of the two matters concerning which Mr. Gorham gives Mr. Conkling's " explanation " is the Conkling and Blaine-Fry matter. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 13 Mr. Gorham's account of it is incomplete and un- just to me, I noticed the article in a letter wliicli was published as follows in the Herald of June 10, 1888: To THE Editor of the Herald : — I do not suppose that in his article, published in the Herald of the 4tli inst., Mr. George C. Gorham gave a thought tome. No doubt his only purpose in quoting the report made against me by a commit- tee of the United States House of Representatives in 1866 was to sus- tain his contention that Mr. Conkling got the better of Mr. Blaine in an acrimonious debate in which the former attacked and the latter de- fended me in the House of Representatives. But I feel called upon to say a few words. It is true that a committee of the House, after a so- called investigation, reported, and the House adopted, a resolution saying that statements made by me in a letter conceining Mr. Conkling were "wholly without foundation in truth," and that they ''origi- nated in no misapprehension of facts," but " in the resentment and passion of the author." Mr. Gorham shows the great injustice done to Mr. Conkling by politicians, and he closes his article by citing in Mr. Conkling' s favor the sentiment, to which I fully accede, that "the strength of a man's character is better shown by what he endures than by what he per- forms. ' ' I make no charge of corruption, conspiracy or malice, either in the committee or House, but I am prepared to show as clearly as Mr. Gorham has shown for Mr Conkling that I was deeply wronged. But I cannot ask the public to listen to my desiccated grievances. Instead of that, however, possibly your readf^rs will permit me to say that I have been an officer of the army more than forty -one years, having entered at the age of twenty. During all that time 1 have never been plaintiff or defendant in a suit, have never been called before a court martial or court of inquiry, have never been under charges or under arrest, and, so far as I remember, have never received from civil or military authority an order or letter conveying censure or reproof. Accepting Mr. Gorham' s statements as correct, he shows that, with envy, hatred and malice in their hearts, a host of Republican politicians, among them editors. Senators, Cabinet Ministers and the President of the United States, conspired to humiliate and destroy so good and great a man as Roscoe Conkling ; and that, in spite of Mr. Conkling' s ability, purity, strength and courage, the conspiracy drove him from public life in a state of disgust that attended him to the 14 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. grave, and with a reputation that Mr. Gorham thought called for de- fence in some particulars at his hands. In the light of Mr. Gorham' s demonstration concerning this great man, it is not worth while to trouble the public with an account of how a comparatively obscure army officer, the head of a military bureau, which necessarily bore heavily upon the political affairs of every Congressional district, got injured when the two leading politicians of the party Mr. Gorham brings to attention, fought over him. Personally I knew Mr. Conk- ling only as a " good hater" ; but I venture the assertion in all candor that he did not need the defence Mr. Gorham has made for him -the defence of a zealous friend and an accomplished writer, but a defence which places in a despicable light many of the politicians and methods of the party of which Mr. Conkliug was an able and conspicuous member. JAMES B. FRY. New York City. My letter, so far as I know, elicited no response or inqiiii'}', and I let the subject drop. In an article in the New York Sun of June 14, 1891, Mr. George Alfred Townsend says: " In 1869 Mr. Blaine said to me, Conkling is as smart as he can be," and Mr. Townsend adds : " Fry appears to have left Blaine without evidence." I think the following pages prove that I did not leave Mr. Blaine without evidence. Recently, moreover, a life of Roscoe Conkling, by his nephew, Mr. Alfred Conkling, has appeared. The subject, and perhaps the treatment of it, entitles this work to a place in history. The formal presentation by such high authority as Mr. Gorham, Mr. Townsend and Mr. Alfred Conkling of a case in which I have long been deeply concerned makes it proper, I think, to give my account of the matter. I may add that an editorial article in the New York Evening Sun of Jan- uary 21, 1890, entitled, "The Truth of History re- specting Hoscoe Conkling and J. G. Blaine," makes CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 15 some erroneous and unjust mention of me, saying: ^'It is not generally known that Mr. Conkling intended to prosecute General Fry for criminal libel, but some one betrayed Mr. Conkling's purpose, and General Fry went to California, beyond the reach of criminal proc- ess." Friends in all quarters of the country liave brought to my notice reprints of this article in local papers. The substance of the article will be covered by the general remarks to follow, but I may say here that 1 never heard of any intention on Mr. Conkling's part to prosecute me, that I distinctly invited charges more than once, and that 1 remained on duty in Washing- ton from the close of the investigation in July until I was relieved from duty there in the following Novem- ber ; that I then went to California, my regular mili- tary station, not of my own volition, but in 'pursuance of regular military orders. When the time came for closing the Bureau of the Provost Marshal-General, I addressed to the Secretary of War a letter as follows : ' ' In closing this office, as required by law, and transferring the records and unfinished business to another Bureau, in accordance with your orders, I beg leave respectfully to urge that, in case of any charges or allegations of improper official conduct on my part, I may be allowed access to the records of this office, and an opportunity for explanation, and that a full investigation be had of everything which the Department may deem worthy of official notice." So far as I know no charges against me ever reached the War Department, and nothing in the nature of accusations is to be found there. Chapter II. THE OUTBREAK IN THE HOUSE. In the House of Representatives, on the 24tb day of April, 1866, a bill providing for tlie reorganization of the army being under consideration— the 20th sec- tion of which provided for the permanent establish- ment of the Bureau of the Provost Marshal General, and giving him the rank of Brigadier-General — Hon. Boscoe Conlding said :^ ' ' I move to strike out section 20 of that bill. My objection to this section is that it creates an unnecessary office for an undeserving public servant ; I have never heard any serious attempt to justify by argument the permanent continuance of an officer whose administra- tion during th*e war has had in it so little to commend, and so much to condemn. ' ' I protest against any promotion or reward for the officer whose in- terests are involved in this section. He holds already the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel in the Staff Department. " Indeed, by accident, if the pending billsliall pass, he will be ele- vated to a yet higher grade ; but as he stands now, his pay amounts to $3 500, or thereabouts. ' ' I think that, for the present, is enough for him. He has suf- fered nothing, and lost nothing, in the war, that I ever heard of, and I protest, in the name of my people, and in the name of the people of the Western Di\ ision of New York, against perpetuating a power under which they have suffered beyond the capacity of any man adequately to state in the time allotted to me. '• Central and Western New York have a right to feel, and do feel deeply on this subject. My constituents remember, and other con- stituencies remember, wrongs done them too great for forgetfulness, and almost for belief, by the creatures of this Bureau, and by its head. " We in the Western Division of New York had sent to rule over us as Assistant Provost Marshal General an officer of the Veteran Re- * For debate in full, see Appendix A. 16 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 17 serve Corps*; a man who never saw a battle, who never received a scratch, or suffered a day's sickness in the military service. ' ' I could not I'emam silent when I know that in my own district and elsewhere men who stood up honestly and attempted to ' resist bounty jumpers' and thieves were stricken down and trodden under foot by General Fry. ' ' I affirm that the only way to acquit him of venality is to con- vict him of the most incredible incompetency." When Mr. Conkling began the foregoing speech, Mr. Blaine was talking to a friend in the diplomatic gallery of the House, but his quick ear caught the tenor of the remarks, and he hurried to his seat, and getting the floor replied as follows : ' ' I am in a very weakly condition of health to make the brief ex- planation due to the Military Committee. But I wish to state why the Committee reported this section of the bill in regard to which the gentleman from New York shows so much feeling. I believe that among the earliest acts of the gentleman from New York at this session of Congi-ess was the introduction of a resolution which was adopted by this House, directing the War Department to report uj)on the expediency of abolishing the office of Provost Marshal General. In the routine of business the answer of the Secretary of War came to the Military Com- mittee, and among the papers was a letter from Lieutenant-General Grant; there was also an elaborate paper from Genei'al Townsend. They were referred to a Sub-Committee. The Committee, upon a full re- view of the papers, and especially of the letter of Lieutenant-General Grant, reported this section. " Mr. Blaine had read at the clerk's desk Gen. Grant's letter dated Dec. 14, 1865, as follows : " Sir : — In reply to your letter of the 13th, in reference to deser- tions, I would make the following remarks : I do not think the present method of recruiting as carried out sufficient to fill up the regular army to the force required, or to keep it full when once filled. The duty is an important one, and demands, I think, the exclusive attention of an officer of the "War Department aided by a well organized system extending over the country. I think the officer best fitted for that posi- tion by his exj^erience during the present war is General Fry, and would recommend that the whole subject of recruiting be put in his hands. He should also have charge of the apprehension of deserters. ' ' * This offer was assigned by me at request of the Secretary of State, W. H. Seward. 18 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. After the reading of this letter from Gen. Grant, Mr, Blaine added : "The House will observe that the Committee upon Military Atfairs acted precisely in accordance with the recommendations of the Lieu- tenant-General as contained in the letter which has just been read. The Committee's report was made in express conformity with the recom- mendations of that officer' s letter, which came officially before the Com- mittee, and which was not smuggled in in the manner in which the letter read by the gentleman from New York comes before us. That is not an official letter, it is an unofficial note. The letter just read by the clerk is an official note communicated to this House by the Secretary of War on a regular call, and referred by the House to the Committee on Military Affairs. "Mr. Speaker, I do not supi^ose that the House of Representatives cares anything more than the Committee on Military Affairs about the great recruiting frauds in New York or tlie quarrels of the gentleman from New York with Gen. Fry, in which quarrel it is generally un- derstood the gentleman came out second best at the War Department. I do not think chat such questions ought to be obtruded here. Though the gentleman from New York has had some difference with Gen. Fry, yet I take pleasure in saying that, as 1 believe, there is not in the American army a more honorable or high-toned officer than General Fry. That officer, I doubt not, is ready to meet the gentleman from New York or anybody else in the proper forum. ' ' I must say that I do not think it is a very creditable proceeding for the gentleman from New York here in his place to traduce General Fry as a military officer where lie has no opportunity to be heard. I do not consider such a proceeding the highest specimen of chivalry that could be exhibited. The gentleman from New York has had his issues with General Fry at the War Department. They have been adjudicated upon by the Secretary of War, and I leave it for the gentleman to say whether he came out first best. I do not know the particulars, the gentleman can inform the House. All I have to say ,is, and in this I believe I speak the sentiment of a majority of the members of the House, that James B. Fry is a most efficient officer, a high-toned gentleman, whose char- acter is without spot or blemish, a gentleman who stands second to no officer in the American army, and he is ready to meet the gentleman from New York and all other accusers anywhere and everywhere. And, Sir, when I hear the gentleman from New York rehearse in the House, as an impeachment to General Fry, all the details of the frauds in New York which General Fry used his best energies to repress with CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 19 iron hand, a sense of indignation carries me beyond my personal strength, and impels me to denounce such a course of proceedings." To this Mr. Conkliiig replied : " Mr. Speaker, if General Fry is reduced to depending for vindica- tion upon the gentleman from Maine, he is to be commiserated certainly. If I have fallen to the neces-ity of taking lessons from that gentleman in the rules of propriety or of right or wrong. God help me. I say to him further that I mean to take no advantage, such as he attributes, of the privilege of this place or the absence of General Fry. On the con- trary, I am ready to avow what I have here declared anywhere. I have stated facts for which I am willing to be held responsible at all times and places. I say further that the statements made by the gentleman from Maine with regard to myself personally, and my quarrels with General Fry and their result are false. ' ' "What," asked Mr. Blaine, " does the gentleman mean to say was false?" "Imean, " replied Mr. Conkling, "to say that the statement made by the gentleman from Maine was false." Mr. Conkliiig's flat contradiction of Mr. Blaine's statement concerning quarrels with me put before the House and the country an issue of fact between the two. The debate, which was continued upon that oc- casion, is given in full, in Appendix A. As soon as I learned what had been said in the House on the 24th of April (which I think was from the newspapers next morning), I began a letter * to Mr. Blaine, completed and dated April 27, thanking him for defending me, and confirming the correctness of what he said concerning Mr. Conkling's hostility to me. * For letter in full see Appendix B. Two or three personal friends were consulted in the preparation of the letter, and a rough draft was shown to Mr. Blaine, by whose advice some of the expressions were sharpened. When completed, the letter was shown to General E. C. Schenck, then Chairman of the House Mil- itary Committee. By none of these persons was it even hinted to me, so far as I remember, that the letter might or could be treated by the House as a breach of privilege. 20 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. I did not pi-epare the letter to be read in the House, had no power to have it read there, and did not ask the House to have it read there. But I intended Mr. Blaine to use it as he thous-ht best, to have the benefit of all there was in it in his favor, and intended also in some way to get it before the public in vindication of myself against Mr. Conk- ling's unexpected, unjust and violent attack upon me personally and officially. I wrote the letter, as I thought I had a right to do, in defence of myself against defamatory statements made to the world, through the U.S. House of Repre- sentatives, and I had no intention of committing a breach of privilege. Among the rules of the House there was one to the effect that a member who read as a part of his speech a letter which violated the privileges of the House was himself responsible, but if he had the same letter read from the clerk's desk, and made it a part of his speech, the responsibility did not rest upon the member, but upon the House itself which permitted the reading. Mr. Blaine had my letter read from the clerk's desk and escaped technical responsibility for breach of privilege by virtue of the nice rule just mentioned. The House, however, was determined to assert its high privilege, and being unable or unwilling to blame itself for the alleged breach it had permitted, and also being stopped by its own rules from holding the mem- ber who introduced and used the letter, fell back upon the writer of the letter. As I have always admitted my responsibility for the letter, I do not desire to CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 21 make use of this attitude of the House, but I am will- ing that others should judge its fairness and con- sistency. On the 30th of April, Mr. Blaine arose in his place in the House upon the issue of fact already mentioned between him and Mr. Conkling, and said : ' ' I hold in my hand a letter from Provost Marshal-General Fry, which I ask to have read at the clerk' s desk for the double purpose of vin- dicating myself from the charge of having stated in debate last v^eek what was false, and also for the purpose, which I am sure will com- mend itself to the House, of allowing fair_play to an honorable man in the same forum in which he has been assailed. I wish further to say that if on investigation I had found I was in error in the state- ment I have made touching the member from the Utica district of New York [Mr. Conkling], and Provost Marshal-General Fry, I would, mor- tifying as it would have been, have apologized to the House. Whether I was in error or not, I leave to those who hear the letter of the Provost Marshal-General. ' ' Thus it is made plain that the issue before the House was between Mr. Conkling and Mr. Blaine, and that the House admitted my letter presented by the latter as testimony upon his side of, the case. The House, however, took no action upon the issue before it, but proceeded against me for furnishing the testi- mony which one of its members offered, and which the House admitted without a dissenting voice. In my letter, which is given in full with accom- panying documents in Appendix B, I thanked Mr. Blaine for having defended me, and said to him: "Your assertions touching Mr. Conkling's difficulties with this Bureau are amply and completely justified by the facts which this letter will disclose." I then gave a sum- mary of the facts referred to. I went further, how- ever, than furnishing evidence of the truth of Mr. 22 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. Blaine's statement, and entered upon a defence of my- self, ^vhich, as I viewed the subject, required a some- what vigorous attack upon Mr. Conkling. Among other things I said : ' ' My Bureau is a subordinate branch of the War Department, and I wish here to point out clearly the fact that my business has been conducted under the constant supervision and direction of the Secretary of War, and those authorized to act in his name. It ought not to be necessary for me to remind Mr. Conkling or tlie people that Mr. Stan- ton has never been unwilling to make exaoii nations into the conduct of his subordinates, nor slow to act upon the result of them. " This of itself is a sufficient reply to Mr. Conkling' s abuse of me, especially as it is a fact that every request, complaint, or accusation of any importance made by him to or afifecting this Bureau, has been laid before the Secretary of War, and passed upon by him. It is true that the result has in nearly every instance been unfavorable to Mr. Conk- ling; and assuming that these were the differences or quarrels which were referred to in the debate as those in which Mr. Conkling came out second best, he asserted what was not true when he denied them. Mr. Conkling says that he may hereafter inform Congress what number of all the men who received bounty reached the front, intimating that the proportion was small. I, for one, should be glad to obtain that in- formation . The duty of sending men to the front rested with the Ad- jutant-General of the army, not with me. He also hints that he may hereafter make a damaging expose of the operations of my Bureau. Whatever he may adduce in this connection, he probably will not be able to disprove that it raised more than a million of men for the army, that it arrested and returned to the service over 76,000 deserters, and raised by its own operations in conformity to laws over twenty-six millions of dollars, which sum has been properly disposed of. That there were frauds in my branch of the service I admit ; but that they prevailed to a greater degree in it than in others, or that earnest and zealous efforts were not made by me to pursvie, correct, and punish them, no man dare have the hardihood to assert. The frauds and malpractices which did occur were almost entirely in connection with the local bounties which could not be cor trolled by the United States, and wliich corrupted some of the officers of the Bureau, but more of the people at large, including supervisors, agents, etc., selected by the people to disburse the funds which they so lavishly bestowed. The general management of my business has received the approval of all dispassionate parties u ho have had an opportunity to judge of it, in- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 23 eluding the late President and that superior officer to whom I have been directly responsible, whose vigor and whose capacity and oppor- tunity to judge are beyond dispute, and it will not be forgotten that complaints and accusations have been spread with great industry be- fore the high officials last referred to. I have been at all times amen- able to the severest form of law, the Military Code, liable at any moment to summary arrest, court martial, and extreme punishment in case of any dereliction of official duty. No one knew or knows this fact better than Mr. Conkling, and if, while acting as Judge Advocate under the extraordinary inquisitorial powers bestowed upon him, he came into the possession of any fact impugning or impeaching my in- tegrity as a public officer, he was guilty of great public wrong and un- faithfulness, if he did not instantly file formal charges against me with the Secretary of War. He can, therefore, only escape the charge of delib- erate and malignant falsehood as a Member of Congress by confessing an unpardonable breach of duty as Judge Advocate. ' ' I also said in the letter, speaking of Mr. Conk- ling's service as special Jnclge Advocate : ' ' For his services in this connection Mr. Conkling received on the 9th November last, from the United States, the modest fee ot $3,000," and I charged that • ' he was as zealous in preventing prosecu- tions at Utica, as he was in making them at Elmira, " adding " whether his action in exercising the functions of Judge Advocate, and receiving pay therefor from the United States to the amount of $3,000, while receiving his compensation as a Member of Congress, was a violation of the letter, or the spirit, or both, of Ai-ticle one, section two, of the Constitution, I leave others to decide. ' ' After the reading of the letter Mr, Conkling made a speech (see Appendix B), in which he said : • ' I did not file in the War Department long ago information in reference to widespread frauds in recruiting in the State of New York, in Avhich extensive combinations of active men were banded together in office and out : I did not act as counsel for the Government in un- earthing and breaking up the combinations, and exposing the actors; I did not devote upwards of four months of patient labor in an attempt to arrest the enormous robberies and wrongs which prevailed in the State of New York; nor did I make an assault upon this Bureau here without counting the cost, and knowing the consequences. I was pre- pared for all calumnies, and all the responsibility that he must take who strikes at the thieves, marauders and miscreants who have fattened 24 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. upon the necessities and needs of their country. I knew the resources and desperation of the men who have made wealth out of the public woe. I did not forget, nor did I desire to avoid, the responsibility of being asked to make good by proof the accusations I made. Of course I expected, by despatches to newspapers instigated by General Fry and his satellites, by every mode, secret and open, of influencing the public judgment and diverting the attention from the objects of accusation, to be vilified, and I hope to be permitted, if not invited, to point out to some authority competent to receive and act upon it, the evidence on which I relied. That opportunity will be oflEered if a Committee shall be appointed." A Committee was appointed in due course. Be- fore the day's debate closed Mr. Blaine answered Mr. Conkling [see Appendix B], saying: '' As to the gentleman's cruel sarcasm, I hope he will not be too severe. Contempt of that large-minded gentleman is so wilting, his haughty disdain, his grandiloquent swell, his majestic super-emi- nent overpowering turkey-gobbler strut, has been so crushing to myself and all the members of this House, that I know it was an act of the greatest temerity for me to ventui-e upon a controversy with him. But, Sir. I know who is responsible for all this. I know that within the last five weeks, as members of the House will recollect, an extra strut has characterized the gentleman's bearing. It is not his fault. It is the fault of another. That gifted and satirical writer, Theodore Tilton of the New York Independent, spent some weeks recently in this city. His letter published in that paper embraced, with many serious state- ments, a little jocose satire, a part of which was the statement that the mantle of the late Winter Davis had fallen upon the member from New York. ' The gentleman took it seriously, and it has given his strut ad- ditional pomposity. The resemblance is great. It is striking, Hyperion to a Satyr, Thersites to Hercules, mud to marble, dunghill to diamond, a singed cat to a Bengal tiger, a whining puppy to a roaring lion. Shade of the mighty Davis, forgive the almost profanation of that jocose satire. ' ' I shall not undertake to trace the effect this notable contention, known as the Conkling and Blaine- Fry affair, had upon tlie political lives of Mr. Blaine and Mr. Conkling. The issue squarely joined between them was soon CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 25 converted by the House and its Committee of Investi- gation into a trial of me for alleged breach of privi- lege in a letter to one of the contestants. The failure of the Committee to investigate the issue between Mr. Conkling and Mr. Blaine, no doubt was satisfactory at the time to the former, otherwise he would have called for investigation when he was before the Committee with power to do so. Although the Committee did not touch that point, the cori-ectness of Mr. Blaine's assertion was sustained by the facts read to the House from m}' letter, and Mr. Blaine was left victor in the public judgment upon the issue between him and Mr. Conkling, and so remained. Hence, j^lainly enough, there has been no special necessity on Mr. Blaine's own account for hira to speak upon the sub- ject. Mr. Conkling, notwithstanding the verdict he se- cured against me for the proof I furnished to Mr. Bhiine, directly or through his friends, took the defensive. Chapter III. THE COMMITTEE AND ITS PROCEEDINGS. The House, without charging that a breach of privilege had been committed either by the writing or reading of my letter to Mr. Blaine, exercised jurisdic- tion in the matters at issue between Mr. Conkling and me, and Resolved, That a select Committee of five members of this House be appointed to investigate the statements and charges made by Hon. Eoscoe Conkling in his place last week against Provost Marshal -Gen- eral Fry and his bureau ; whether any frauds have been perpetrated in his oflSce in connection with the recruiting service ; also to examine into the statements made by Gen. Fry in his communication to Hon. Mr. Blaine, read in the House this day, with power to send for persons and papers. The Speaker appointed the following named members to constitute said Conamitiee : Mr. Samuel Shellabarger, of Ohio ; Mr. William Windom, of Minnesota ; Mr. Benjamin M. Boyer, of Pennsylvania ; Mr. Burton C. Cook, of Illinois ; Mr. Samuel L. Warner, of Connecticut. Never in the history of the Government has Con- gress,- the supreme power, been more aggressive or more sensitive concerning its privileges than when this Committee was appointed, investigated and reported. For four years the fate of the nation had been at stake upon the sword, and though Congress had done its duty promptly, faithfully and efficiently, its part had been thrown into the shade by the brilliancy and im- portance of military operations. But the military sun had set, and the civil power had emerged from the shade in full splendor. The business of getting armies was replaced by getting rid of them. The soldier's 26 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 27 day had passed, and the Congressmen's day was shin- ing. If I may be permitted for a historical purpose to connect a great matter with a small one, I may add that the same House (39th Congress) which censured me in its first session, unsuccessfully impeached the President of the United States during its second ses- sion. The members of the investigating Committee, Mr. Conkling, my opponent, and Mr. Hotchkiss, his counsel, all members of that House, were drawn to- gether by their daily duties, ties and associations, and by common interest, which at that period was particu- larly strong. I, on the othe]' hand, was not only a mere soldier, one of the class whose day was over, but was the head of an obnoxious military bureau. I allege no corrup- tion o]" unfair purpose, but assume merely that the ordinary traits of human nature were at work. It was in the case that I was at disadvantage. The Com- mittee probably started without any plan of proceed- ing or any definite conception of the nature, scope or duration of the investigation. The first notice I re- ceived from the Committee w^as on the 2d of May. I at once replied to the Chairman as follows: " Yours of yesterday was received this morning, saying there will be a meeting, af 10 this morning, upon the matter of charges between Mr. Conkling and myself, at which meeting you invite me to make any statement I may desire as to the kind and extent of the evi- dence I may be inclined to have submitted, and the number and resi- dence of the witnesses. ' ' In reply, I would respectfully state, after knowing the pro- gramme of the Committee, or the charges made by and against me, which the Committee desire evidence upon, I will be able to make a moi'e specific statement on the subject. ' ' I should, however, like to know, at the initial point of the in- 28 CONKLING AND BLAINB-FRY CONTROVERSY. vestigation (which I am heartily glad has been ordered) , whether it is the design of your honorable Committee to extend their inquiries into the frauds that have been perpetrated on my Bureau by parties having no official connection therewith; or whether it is designed simply to inquire into alleged frauds, or malpractices, on the part of myself, or any one officially connected with me, or whether both these subjects are to be investigated. The distinction between frauds on my Bureau, and frauds in it, is of course an important one. If the scope of your in- quiry shall embrace the former class, I shall be able to afford you a vast amount of information from the files of this office, indicating the extent to which these fraudulent prat;tices were carried on, and the measures pursued by this Bureau to detect, expo e and punish them. ' ' In regard to the latter class of offenses, I shall be equally ready to tender you all personal and official information in my possession, giving the names, the offenses, and the punishments of those officers and employees of the bureau who were found to be corrupt. " It is my earnest desire to contribute in every possible way to the thoroughness and impai-tiality of the investigation." I received do answer to this letter. What effect, if any, it had upon the Committee I never heard,, but there was no meeting on May 3, and none until May 7, when, as the record of the Committee shows, there were present all the members and also " Honor- able Roscoe Conkling, and Honorable Giles W. Hotch- kiss. Counsel, and Major General James B, Fry, and Brig. General N. L. Jeffries, Counsel." There is nothing in the record, nor within my knowledge, to show that the Committee was sworn, and as appears by the rec- ord it was only at the first meeting (May 7) and the last (June 26) which was to hear argument of counsel, that all the members of the Committee were present. Often not more than two were present, sometimes only one, the members apparently taking turns in attend- ing, so that neither the Committee nor any member heard all the testimony. At the first meeting (May 7) the record says, " ordered that the Committee pro- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 29 ceed first to the latter braiicli of investigation directed by the resolution of the House, viz. : " '' To examine into the statements made by General Fry in his commu- nication to Mr. Blaine, read in the House this (April 30)." This action of the Committee reversed the order of proceeding prescribed by the House, and the natural order of business. In my letter to the Committee of May 3, 1 assumed that the affairs of my bureau were to be investigated, and asked for the charges, but I received no answer and heard nothing upon the subject, until the Com- mittee announced its order just cited, that it would " proceed first " to examine the statements made by me against Mr. Conkling, and it may be stated here that having done that (in an imperfect way as I main- tained) and vindicated Mr. Conkling, it never took up the other branch of the subject. I did not make the issue, or invite it. It originated in Mr. Conkling's speech in the House on the 24tli April, assailing my personal and official character. As I was the head of an important bureau of the Government, and entrusted with great powers and onerous duties, the issue, as it affected the integrity of that part of the public service confided to me, was of great public importance, and of importance to me, personally. The Committee, it seems to me, was bound, if it believed in any degree the statements of Mr. Conkling concerning the Pro- vost Marshal-General's bureau, to make a finding upon that subject. My allegations against Mr. Conk- ling were manifestly of secondary public importance, and my letter to Mr. Blaine was only an incident in a contention which I did not begin, and for which I was so CONKLING AND BLAINE-FBY CONTROVERSY. not responsible. Nor would the regular order of pro- ceeding prescribed by the House have been unjust to Mr. Conkling. If, pursuing that order, the investiga- tion should show that I had been an accomplice in the frauds perpetrated upon the Government through my bureau, certainly nothing I had said about Mr. Conk- ling could have injured him, and no better method of vindicating him could have been devised than to let him prove the frauds he alleged, and establish the fact that I, his accuser, was a guilty party. But the Committee reversed the natural and prescribed order of proceedings. After the order of proceedings had been read at the first meeting (May 7), the Chairman laid my letter before the Committee, and it was read. Ignorant as I was of the plan and scope of the proposed inves- tigation, I took with me to this meeting certain letters and papers from the files of the War Department, having connected them together in a narrative form, which I wanted to submit as proofs of the truth of what I had said in my letter to Mr. Blaine, and I asked that the document mio-ht be I'ead. The record shows that " Mr. Conkling objected to any statement of General Fry being read, desired whatever testimony he adduced to be under the sanction of an oath, and that he [General Fry] should be subject to cross-examination as other witnesses." The Committee sustained the ob- jection, and directed that each paper as presented " should be first shown to Mr. Conklino; and his coun- sel, if they desired, before being read." " General Fry was then duly sworn by the Chairman." This action of Ml'. Conkling and the Committee gave a technical CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 31 legal form to the proceedings, and the investigation was conducted according to sharp rules of evidence, with which Mr, Conkling and his counsel, an able brother Congressman, Mr. Hotchkiss, were well ac- quainted. My assistant GeneralJeffries, an able lawyer, who acted as my counsel, was not overmatched, but as the case proceeded he became overworked, and on the 29th of May, I presented A. G. Kiddle, Esq., as additional counsel, and the case was thenceforth left in my counsel's hands. The proceedings continued through May, and until late in June. The weather was hot, the adjourn- ment of Congress was at hand, and the Committee ap- peared to be heartily sick of its work. At its meeting on the 19th of June, testimony was taken as usual, and there was more to come, but at the close of the session, the Committee adjourned to meet on call of the Chairman, and that was the end of the investigation, the next meeting being on the 26th of June to hear argument of counsel. I desired the Committee to per- mit written arguments, and to wait for them, but that was declined, and it was decided that oral pleas should be made on the evenino; of June 26th. When this fact came to my knowledge on the 25th of June, the fol- lowing review or brief of the case in the form of a letter to my counsel was prepared : A. G. Riddle, Attorney, etc. Dear Sir : — As you well know, from the time the Congressional Investigation into the charges brought by myself against Hon. Roscoe Conkling took the form of rigid legal proceedings, I have left the con- duct of the matter in the hands of yourself and my assistant (General Jeffries), as my counsellors and advisers. I have been present very little during the protracted sessions in which this case has been consid- 32 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. ered ; content to leave it, as presented by you, to the just judgment of the honorable members composing the Committee. 1 deem it proper, however, on the eve of closing that branch of the case which directly affects Mr. Conkling, to make a brief review of it, as some aid to you in the task of summing it up before the Committee. Had the Commit- tee been pleased to allow written pleas, I should have been glad to state my views in extenso ; but, as this has been refused, and as the oral plea has to be made to-morrow, I am compelled to make a rapid and con- densed resume of the points of the case in a note to you, — hoping that, however hastily thrown off, it may aid you somewhat in the elaborate review of the testimony which it vt^ill be your duty to make as my counsel. I am compelled to do this under the disadvantage of not knowing the precise terms of the testimony adduced before the com- mittee, and relying on the running notes kept by General Jeffries during the examination of the witnesses. I formally applied to the Committee for a copy of the record, the testimony having been phono- graphically reported, and offered to pay the expense of transcribing ; but this v^as refused. The reason for refusing is unknown to me, and I do not mention it now as a complaint, but simply to explain the disa- bility under which I labor in the review vphich I am now hurriedly undertaking. The origin of the difficulty which produced this investigation, as you will remember, was a speech made by Mr. Conkling in the House of Representatives, on the 25th of April, assailing my character person- ally and officially. The occasion which called forth the attack was the report by the Military Committee of a section of the Army Bill continu- ing the Provost Marshal-General's bureau as a part of the military peace establishment. Mr. Conkling's assault, unprovoked and uncalled for, was repelled with warmth by a member of the Military Committee, Mr. Blaine, of Maine, who very generously defended my character. The assault was so virulent in its tone that I felt compelled to notice it, and I accordingly addressed a letter to Mr. Blaine, thanking him for his timely and effective defense, and reviewing, with some plainness of speech, the personal and official relations between Mr. Conkling and myself. This letter was a private one, though I designed to have it made public in some form. It was deemed proper by Mr. Blaine, how- ever, to cause the letter to be read in the House, as a part of a speech he made on the 30th of April, in vindication of himself against the charge made by Mr. Conkling, in the first debate between them, of his having stated what was false. It was not in my power to have the letter read in the House — it was originally prepared with no such in- tention — and I presume the honorable member who procured its read- ing there has no desire to evade any of the responsibility properly per- CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 33 taining to the act. In that letter I made the charges which have, since its reading in the House, been the subject of investigation, — an investi- gation called for by Mr. Conkling, and neither sought for nor avoided by me. I did not consider my personal or official reputation so dam- aged by anything Mr. Conkling could say as to demand or need an investigation by Congress or any other branch of the Government. Mr. Conkling thought differently of the case, however, from his stand- point ; and, at his earnest and urgent request, a Committee of Investi- gation was granted by the House, and five honorable gentlemen ap- pointed to conduct it. At the first meeting of the Committee, I submitted a statement, in writing, designed to make the investigation as brief, compact, and direct as possible ; but Mr. Conkling objected, and insisted on having everything conducted by sharp rules of evidence, taking advantage of every turn, and proceeding in a manner which rendered legal advice necessary to me. I accordingly solicited your aid, since which time, as already remarked, I have left the case to yourself and General Jeffries. The charges brought by me against Mr. Conkling were substan- tially three ; though some subordinate and inferential ones might be in- cluded in my letter. I. The first was, that, while a member of Congress, he had taken the position of Judge Advocate of a General Court Martial, performed the duties thereof, and received pay ($3,000) for the same. I may re- mark here that the $3,000, as appears in evidence, was besides his ex- penses, he having been paid $280 in addition, under that head. It is shown in evidence that by an official order in due form from the Secre- tary of War, he was appointed Judge Advocate of the Court ; he was duly sworn in as such ; he performed all the duties of the office ; he certified the proceedings ; he certified the vouchers on which the ex- penses of witnesses were paid from the Treasury of the United States ; he summoned and swore the witnesses ; and, in short, did everything which a Judge Advocate could do by virtue of his office. When the Court was cleared for deliberation and all counsel excluded, he remained as official adviser of the Court. Finally, by his official management as Judge Advocate, the Court was commenced, and, having been sworn as such, the trial was had, conviction wrought, the sentence executed. The duties were performed between April 3 and November 9, 1865; and, at the latter date, he was paid for his services $3 000, besides ex- penses, as already stated. Three weeks later, on the first Monday in December. 1865, Mr. Conkling was admitted to his seat in Congress, for the term beginning March 4, 1865, and drew his pay, at the rate of $8,000 a year, exclusive of mileage, stretching back to March 4, and covering the whole time he was employed and paid as Judge Advocate. 34 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. All this is in evidence of the most ample and cumulative character ; and, therefore, my first charge against him is fully sustained. I said in my letter, that 1 left others to decide whether his taking pay for two offices at the same time was a violation of the letter or the spirit of the Constitution. That decision rests primarily with the Committee and ultimately with the representative body of which Mr. Conkling is a member. But I trust you will not fail to call the attention of the Com- mittee to the numerous precedents applicable to the case, — precedents which have been growing in number and strength from the foundation of the Government, and all of them adverse to Mr. Conkling's right to take pay for the two offices, or for discharging the duties of the two for the same period of time. Mr. Conkling, as you will remember, introduced the Hon. Secre- tary of War to prove that he had a right to be employed as Judge Ad- vocate, and to discharge the duties and draw the pay. I hope you will not dispute this. Indeed, Mr. Conkling might have taken this point for granted ; for the question at issue seems to be, not whether Mr. Conk- ling had the right to take pay for the duties of Judge Advocate, but whether he had the right afterwards to take pay for the same period of time as a Member of Congress. The House of Representatives decided,' during the Thirty-eighth Congress, that Benjamin F. Loan and Green Clay Smith, having been paid as Brigadier Generals after March 4, when theirs Congressional term began, could not be paid for the same time as Representatives. The logic is not apparent that would deny the pay to a Brigadier Gen- eral and accord it to a Judge Advocate, or the person discharging the duties of one. Since Mr. Conkling has sought to justify himself in accepting double pay for the same time, I trust you will bring to the attention of the Com- mittee the very many points of law bearing on the case, — the numerous statutes that forbid it, — the great public policy that discountenances it, — and the opinion of many eminent men, especially Attorney- General Wirt, in condemnation and denunciation of it. I but suggest these points, leaving your more fruitful knowledge of the law to give them appropriate illustration and enforcement. Mr. Conkling showed extreme sensitiveness at my having referred, in a tone of irony, to the $3,000 as a ^'modest fee" for the services he performed as Judge Advocate. To justify himself, he invoked the testi- mony of such eminent counsellors as Edwin M. Stanton and Reverdy Johnson as to the reasonableness of the charge, and he offered to bring Caleb Gushing and Charles O'Connor to prove the same. It was freely admitted that the fee would be, at any time, very reasonable and very moderate for any one of the distinguished counsel named. Gentlemen CONKLING AND BLAINB-FRY CONTROVERSY. 35 of their great professional eminence are justly expected to receive large fees for their time and their counsel, and it is certainly an amusing, if not suggestive, illustration of Mr. Conkling's weakness, to see him coolly rate himself as the professional peer of the four eminent jurists named. II. The second charge against Mr. Conkling contained in my letter was, that he was as zealous in "preventing prosecutions at Utica as he was in making them at Elmira," and that "I wanted exposure at both places, while he wanted concealment at one." In proof of this you will find a connected and, I think, irrefragable series of facts in the official papers sent by me to the Committee, many of which, I learn, Mr. Conkling strove to have excluded from the record, and I am not specifically advised as to the extent of his success in that effort. My suggestions to you are on the basis that those official papers are the most legitimate and pertinent testimony, necessarily reliable and beyond the charge or suspicion or possibility of being made up, as oral testimony may be, for the occasion. In Mr .Conkling's original letter of appointment, dated April 3, issued by order of the Secretary of War, he was authorized " to investi- gate ALL CASES of fraud in the Provost Marshal's Department of the Western Division of New York, and all misdemeanors connected with recruiting." His authority was, therefore, plenary, positively without limit, except by the geographical bounds of the Western Division of New York. Utica was included in this Division, and the very day Mr. Conkling was appointed, his attention was directed to the alleged mis- demeanors on the part of the Enrolment Board of the Utica District, in consequence of which the Board had been suspended from duty a few weeks before. It is in evidence that Mr. Conkling was made acquainted with the report of Major Luddington of an inspection of that office, which report cited : "I respectfully recommend that every member of the Board of Enrolment of the Twenty-first District of New York be dismissed the service, and that the money in possession of Captain Crandall (Provost Marshal) be seized." Also, with the report of the commander of the sub- rendezvous at Auburn, in which that officer, in speaking of the recruiting service in the Twenty-first District of New York, says: — " Men rotten with venereal disease, totally unfit for any duty, are passed by the surgeon and sent here for duty. Nine- tenths of the recruits sent here from that office, are the most worthless set of scoundrels you ever put your eyes upon." Also, with the protest of Colonel N. G. Axtell, 192d Regiment N. Y. Volunteers, against the receipt of men recruited at Utica, in which he says that the recruits mustered at Utica "are, without doubt, bounty- jumpers and should not have been mustered by any intelligent mustering officer." This evi- dence placed in the hands of Mr, Conkling would, it is to be supposed. 36 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. have enabled him to prosecute to a speedy termination the charges made against the Utica office, he having been invested with full power touching the investigation of frauds and misdemeanors in that and every other district in the Western Division of New York. On the day of his appointment, April 3, after " carefully reading" all this evidence, Mr. Conkling filed in the War Department a letter, as follows : "War Department, " Washington City, April 3, 1865. "Having been authorized and requested by the Secretary of War to examine certain transactions in the Bureau of the Provost Marshal-General, relating to the Western Division of the State of New York, I have the honor to state that I have carefully read all the papers furnished me as on file, touchine: the Provost Marshal of the Twenty-first District, and, having done so, from the contents of said papers, as -well as from my knowledge of the facts, and of the men connected with them, I advise and recommend that the order suspending Captain Peter B. Crandall and the other members of the Enrolling Board bo revoked. and that said Board be reinstated. (Signed) " Roscoe Conkling." Mr. Conkling, by taking cognizance of the Ucica case, and giving it an official examination and making an official recommendation in relation thereto, is certainly estopped from alleging, as he has since at- tempted, that he had no jurisdiction of the case. Not only was his authority ample and plenary in his original appointment, — which was never revoked, annulled, or in any way limited, while he held the posi- tion, — but he actually took official cognizance of the case and exer- cised authority over it. His recommendation to restore Captain Crandall was not approved, and he remained suspended ; and Mr. Conkling, with all these facts before him, does not pretend that he ever attempted to do anything towards initiating proceedings against the Utica officials who were resting under the charges heretofore enumerated. The case was wholly under his cognizance, he, and he alone, under the circumstances, could prosecute or prevent prosecution, and he did not prosecute ; hence my charge, that he was as zealous in preventing prosecutions " at Utica as he was in making them at Elmira," and that " I wanted exposure at both places, while he wanted concealment at one." I submit that the official papers sustain my allegation. If he did not wish to prevent prosecutions at Utica, why did he not make them ? That is for him to show. I have shown that he was amply empowered to prosecute, that the Utica case was especially and emphatically brought to his notice, and that he refused or failed to institute prosecution. Mr, Conkling's explanation, in his speech of April 30, reported in the Qlobe (which I understand is in evidence), was that the Elmira case absorbed so much of his time that, when it was through, he " declined to go further" (not for want of authority, but because he thought his poor share was done), and that these long investigations were interfering with his CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 37 private business ; but not being entirely satisfied with this apology, he afterwards, before the Committee, took the ground that his appointment was only to prosecute the Haddock case at Elmira, in the face of the fact that the very wording of his appointment authorized him to "in- vestigate all cases of frauds in the Provost Marshal's Department of Western New York," and in the face of the additional fact that he actually did take cognizance of the Utica case and founded official recom- mendations thereon. In support of his last taken position, that he was only authorized to prosecute the Haddock case at Elmira, he introduced Secretary Stanton and the late Assistant Secretary Dana. Both these gentlemen, I be- lieve, stated that it was their understanding that Mr. Conkling was only to prosecute the case of Major Haddock. Their recollections — especially that of Secretary Stanton — were not distinct or specific on the point; but they spoke rather of their impressions being that way. Such an impression would not be at all extraordinary under the circum- stances, in view of the fact that Mr. Conkling did confine his efforts very zealously to the Elmira case ; that he failed to prosecute the al- leged frauds at Utica and elsewhere in his Division. Indeed, the Elmira case was so magnified and placed in such prominence by Mr. Conkling, that the Secretary of War, who could not be expected to remember the details of official papers in all the bureau, would very naturally come to havfe the impression that the prosecution of Haddock was the sole purpose of Mr. Conkling's appointment. And I submit that the crea- tion of 'this impression is but a striking proof, in a striking form, of how completely Mr. Conkling succeeded in making prosecutions at Elmira and preventing them at Utica. In this hurried glance at the facts sustaining my second charge, I am compelled to omit many points of force and pertinence. You will doubtless know where to refer to them in the official papers submitted ; and I beg that you will amplify them in the manner that best com- mends itself to your judgment. Upon a full review of all the facts, I think my charge is sustained by evidence of the most comprehensive and incontrovertible character. Mr. Conkling's original cognizance of the Utica case ; his admitted knowledge of the charges against the En- rolment Board ; his failure to do anything in the way of prosecution at that point ; his putting forward one excuse for this failure in his speech in the House, and his assuming an entirely different ground be- fore the Committee, are suggestive points, which you will readily group together and expose. III. The third and only remaining charge contained in my letter was, that there had been quarrels between Mr. Conkling and myself. I do not propose to spend much time, nor do I wish you to engross 38 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. much of the Committee's attention in jjroving that to be true. I think it will be admitted that the state of feeling between Mr. Conkling and myself for some time past has not been cordial ; and that the Commit- tee will hardly desire to spend time in searching out how the differ- ences began, how they ripened into ill-feeling, and how they finally became so bitter on^Mr. Conkling's part as to lead him to make an extraor- dinary assault on my character from his place in the House of Repre- sentatives. I believe courts are justified in assuming certain conclu- sions without asking proof in detail ; and I think one of the safe conclusions for this honorable Committee to adopt is, that since I in- sisted on removing one of the provost marshals in Mr. Conkling's district, on charge of fraud, and suspending another for alleged mis- demeanors, and refused to restore either on his application, Mr. Conk- ling has been my enemy, intent on injuring me, and wielding his power and influence to that end. The correspondence in evidence is presumed to be ample on this point ; how far it may be necessary to refer the Committee to that correspondence, I leave to your better judgment. Having disposed of the three j^finciiml assertions in my letter, you may deem it worth while to glance at the minor and incidental charges, to which I will very briefly allude. I referred to a rumor that Mr. Conkling had received $5,000 from his district for his services in the Elmira case ; but I did not state it as a fact within my knowledge. I also stated, in substance, that Mr. Conkling, — if he spoke truly against me in the House of Representatives, — had been false to duty as Judge Advocate, in not preferring charges against me, I simply repeat my position on this point. My charge was an alternative one, involving a matter of opinion touching official duty, rather than any specific fact, and I do not see that it is important one way or the other. So far as testimony could be introduced, bearing on such a point, it would have to be made up largely of the rules, practices, and moral convictions of military officers, situated as Mr. Conkling was while acting as Judge Advocate. I do not hesitate to express the opinion that the vast ma- jority of officers would have deemed it their imperative duty to file charges against me, had they come into possession of the facts impeach- ing my official integrity, as Mr. Conkling alleges he did. And with the testimony of Mr. Stanton in support of this view and that of Mr. Dana against iti I leave the case. You will necessarily refer to the testimony of Mr. Dana, late As- sistant Secretary, of War. I wish you to treat it as irrelevant. He took issue with me on certain statements of an immaterial nature ; and, without stopping to analyze his testimony, I simply pass it over as not pertinent to the inquiry submitted by the House to the Committee. I stated that Mr. Dana had vested Mr. Conkling, without Mr. Stanton's CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 39 sanction, with extraordinary powers. Mr. Stanton states that he had given Mr. Dana power to confer all necessary authority ; but did not, it seems, until afterwards, learn that he had issued authority which ^' enabled" &n overhauling of telegrams in various offices, not specifi- cally designated. Mr. Stanton states that he subsequently approved the action taken, and would have given more authority if necessary ; but, as it was done without his direct hwwledge, I was certainly sus- tained in my assertion, that it was without his "sanction." Sanction is not to be presumed, nor is it properly subsequent in its nature. It is specific and precedent. But I do not care to have you go into this at any length ; for Mr. Dana is not on trial before this Committee, and the charge does not affect Mr. Conkling, and it is in regard to Mr. Conk- ling that the Committee is now conducting the investigation. Neither is it necessary to spend any time on the discrepancy between statements in my letter and those made by Mr. Dana, touching the interview I had with Mr. Conkling. The affair is trivial in its nature and unimportant in its bearings ; and, I take it, the Committee will not wish to spend time on such points. I state one thing and Mr. Dana a different thing, on points of no importance, relating to an interview that occurred a year and a half ago. Let it stand in that way. I have thus briefly reviewed the charges contained in my letter. Of the principal charges, I maintain and reassert, not only the substantial, but literal, correctness. Touching some of the minor and inferential statements, some discrepancy appears in the testimony ; but this affects only points of an immaterial nature, all of which I might readily yield, without injuriously affecting my position. And I remark, in closing this branch of the subject, that Mr. Conkling seems not so much to have questioned the substantial truth of my letter, as to have challenged my ability to prove my assertions by the sharpest technical rules of evi- dence, which he favored before the Committee as the line of proceeding. Having disposed of all the points involved in my letter, I desire you to treat at length the transaction generally known as the HoboJcen case. There is no fact connected with it which I do not wish set forth fully and unreservedly. Mr. Conkling has introduced that case with the view of proving that I had been actuated by bad motives towards him, and that the animus of my letter is to be inferred from certain alleged facts in connection with that case, which he has industriously striven, but completely failed, to establish. I do not wish you to be satisfied with simply repelling what Mr. Conkling has sought to prove against me in this affair, but I trust you will turn that case, as it should be turned, against him, showing that he has striven to wound my reputation by testimony of a disgracefully unreliable character, and that his whole superstructure of attempted proof rests on the assertions 40 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. of one Theodore Allen, who is proved, not only by all the circumstances of the case, but by the testimony of honorable witnesses, to be totally unworthy of credit.* The full history of the Hoboken affair is contained in the official documents submitted to the Committee, and it may be of service to you for me to recapitulate the points of the case as concisely and yet as clearly as I can. I will remark, in advance, that the facts of this case have been fully passed upon by my superior officers. In the winter of 1864-5, especially during the months of January, February and March, bounty -jumping had become an evil of such mag- nitude as to threaten the efficiency of the recruiting system. Our armies stood on the eve of what was felt by all to be the de- cisive campaign of the great civil war, and it was of the first importance that our ability to reinforce them should not be impaired. This was the point of great solicitude with Mr. Lincoln and the Secretary of War, as well as of all our commanders in the field. My bureau was charged with the weighty task of responding to this demand, and I found that the system of lavish local bounties was leading to widespread corruption, and that States, counties, cities and towns were paying enormous sums of money for men, and the army was not receiving a corresponding increase of strength ; that, in short, the bounty-jumping system was becoming one of immense magnitude and perfect organization, and that some special and extraordinary efforts were absolutely necessary to check it. The city of New York, and the cities and towns adjacent thereto, was the field in which this pernicious system of villainy was most formidable, and here it was determined to make the first attack upon it. To this end, I, on the 16th day of January, 1865, addressed a letter to the Secretary of War, which was promptly ap- proved, asking that Colonel L. C. Baker, Chief Detective of the War Department, be put under my control for the purpose of exposing and checking the evils in question, and that the expenses of this undertak- ing be paid from the appropriation in my charge. Colonel Baker, with his detective force, entered at once on this duty and established himself in New York city about the 20th of January. As a part of his opera- tions, he, with his subordinates, devised and submitted to me a plan for arresting a large number of the most notorious of these bounty-jumpers, by which it was hoped to cripple, if not end, the corrupt system, by the alarm which would be created among its participants. The details of the plan were wholly of the devising of Colonel Baker and his em- ployees, and its execution was entrusted to them, aided by General * This subject is further treated in Chapter V., Eeview of the Com- inittee's Report. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 41 Hinks, acting AsBistant Provost Marshal-General, in New York city. The scheme had my approval, and I issued, or procured such orders as Colonel Baker deemed essential to his plan of operations. It was de- termined by him to open a recruiting office in Hoboken, New Jersey, and Brevet Lieut. -Col. Ilges, of the regular army, then on recruiting duty in New York city, was detailed by the Adjutant General of the army to superintend the recruiting station in Hoboken, in addition to his regular duties in New York city ; and Captain Mills, at Newark, the Provost Marshal of the Fifth District of New Jersey, in which Hoboken is situated, was directed by me to credit such enlistments and musters as might be certified to him by Colonel Ilges. Colonel Ilges, without any order from me to that effect, — but following, I presume, the practice he had been pursuing in New York city, under the rules for recruiting the regular army, prescribed by another bureau, — required a deposit of $300 of the local bounty of each recruit, as a guarantee of the good faith of the enlistment, to be retained until the recruit was receipted for at General Rendezvous. Among the employees whom Colonel Baker called to his aid, in pur- suing his detective schemes, was one Theodore Allen, of New York, of whom I had never heard up to that time, and who figured in the affair, as was subsequently disclosed, in two capacities, viz. : as aid to Colonel Baker, in detecting and arresting the scoundrels who were swindling the people, the Government, and the recruits, and at the same time- participating, as a substitute broker, in the business which Colonel Baker's efforts were directed to expose and prevent. For, no sooner had the Hoboken recruiting office accomplished its purpose of securing the arrest by Colonel Baker of a large number of the most notorious bounty- jumpers, than the bounty-brokering firm of Allen, Hughes & Riley, doing business in New York city (Theodore Allen, senior partner), made the fictitious enlistment of these deserters for the purpose of their arrest the means of a fraud more stupendous than any single one previously detected. The bounty-jumpers in question — 183 in number — were en- listed by Colonel Ilges and arrested by Colonel Baker on the 10th of March, and were lodged in prison at Fort Lafayette on the night of the 11th of March. Colonel Baker reported to me in person on the 13th of March, as shown by his letter of the 16th, in evidence. He then men- tioned the subject of crediting these men. I took the ground (see his letter of 16th), from which I never deviated, that such credit could not be made ; but the subject being only before me in a conversational and informal way, and constituting at that interview what seemed to be a very subordinate and unimportant part of the business going on, I took no further official action at that time relating to it, than to give Colonel Baker my views as expressed above. After his return to New York, 42 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. Col. Baker wrote me two letters, under date of March 16 (in evi- dence), received on the 17th, from which I learned that Col. Ilges had credited these men on the quota of Jersey City. It was then necessary for me to act further in the premises, and I adopted the principle, as in other cases, that these bounty-jumpers, being held to the service of the United States by previous enlistments, could not be credited to any locality as new recruits, and thus deprive the army of men to the ex- tent of their number. I had ordered that the men be held as deserters, and I accordingly directed that they should not be credited to any locality, and as an inevitable consequence, I ordered that any money deposited for them with the recruiting officer be returned to the parties advancing it. This order I directed to be issued as soon as I received Colonel Baker's letters on the 17th, and the records in evidence show that it was in regular routine published, by one of my assistants, on the 19th. The action taken in this matter was determined upon by me be- fore I saw Allen on the 18th, and neither by his presence or otherwise, did he in any manner influence it. Having thus disposed of the sub- ject, I discharged it from my mind, and when subsequently brought up, merely directed, as hereafter shown, a repetition of my orders. On the 18th, as shown by one of my telegrams, Theodore Allen appeared in my office. He urgently requested that the men be credited, and stated that he would be subjected to great trouble and probable loss unless it was done. He entered into a con versatim regarding enlistment frauds gen- erally and was particularly severe on the frauds of the Utica district, denominating that place ' ' a perfect walk, ' ' in the cant phrase of the bounty-jumping fraternity. I told him that numerous reports received by me, through Colonel Baker and from other sources, stated the same thing; but that the Hon. Roscoe Conkling, the M. C. for that district, stoutly denied the existence of any frauds there, and maintained that the Pro- vost Marshal and Enrolment Board were entirely honest. Allen still asseverated his convictions of great frauds there, and said he knew Aaron Richardson, the broker there, and could easily find out all about it by going to Utica. At this time I was in the midst of pei-plexity about this district, the Board of Enrolment being under suspension. As Allen was still in the detective service of the bureau under Colonel Baker, I suggested to him that he should at once proceed to Utica, and get any facts available relating to the frauds or malpractices alleged to prevail there in the business of this bureau. I said nothing to him about connecting Roscoe Conkling with fraud, nor anything else about that person than what is herein before stated. Allen then left my office, and whether he went to Utica or not, I never knew, for he never re- ported anything to me ; and the only evidence I have that he ever visited that city is his incidental mention of the fact in his telegram of March CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 43 24, and the statement wliich I do not remember to have heard until lately, that he was one of Colonel Baker's employees, who took part in the attempt to arrest Aaron Richardson, ttie bounty broker at Utica, which failed through the intervention of Mr. Roscoe Conkling. I never, to my knowledge, saw Allen after he left my office on the 18th of March, until he appeared here as a witness. There was some delay by Colonel Ilges in complying with my order, to leturn the money to the parties who advanced it, arising, as it was said, from a mistake in the date of the enlistments as slated in my order. This was brought to my notice by Allen's telegram of March 24. which I treated, as I would have done a similar report from any other person, that an order had not been obeyed, ^namely, repeated the order to the senior officer present — Colonel Baker ; gave the name of Theodore Allen for the I'eported faiJure to obey orders, and directed the senior officer (Colonel Baker) to see that the original order was com- plied with. The order, as repeated, was in specific terms, and almost verbatim each time, directing that the money deposited with Colonel Ilges for the recruits be returned to the parties advancing it. I did not know who those parties were, nor did I take pains to ascertain. I was overwhehned with other business, and this affair had then no special importance. Colonel Ilges, having received the money, was of course competent to decide to whom it should be paid under the order. I left that point to be decided without dictation or interference on my part. The money was paid back, on the 24th of March, to Allen, Hughes & Riley, they being the parties who advanced it. It is but just, however, to Colonel Ilges and myself, in this connection, to state that a letter addressed by him, under date of March 31, to Captain Wesley Owens, of my office, suggested the point that, if the money in question — $54,000 — were paid back to the parties advancing it, injustice might be done to the cities and towns that had really furnished the money, which Allen, Hughes & Riley had advanced. This letter is shown to have been received by Captain Owens on the 28d of March, and, if it was submitted to me at all, it was, as all such correspondence at that time was, by brief or endorsement, for instructions as to how it should be answered. The official brief or endorsement showed only that it re- ferred to the same subject on which I had already promulgated a con- clusive order, and the answer, dated March 23, of Captain Owens to this communication merely repeats the order already given. I have no recollection of this letter having been submitted to me at all when re- ceived; but. if submitted, it was by its brief, which is as follows : " New York City, March 21, 1865. " GuiDO Ilges, Recruiting Officer, etc. " In reference to 183 men, mustered on the 10th of March, 1865, and credited to Jersey City. Done by order of Colonel L. C. Baker." 44 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. As my official correspondence at that time was exceedingly volu- minous, covering hundreds of letters daily, and as every energy of my Bureau was strained to provide for anticipated need of men, which happily the foi'tunes of war relieved us from sending forward, it is quite obvious that it was impossible for me to read more than the briefest outline of the subject of each letter, and in many instances, not to read them at all, but trust them to be answered by some of the numerous well trained and efficient assistants whom the business of my office required to be on duty. I think it highly probable that Cap- tain Owens answered this letter without even troubling me with read- ing the endorsement. Such would have been proper on his part, an order on the subject having already been issued. But this point is im- material. On the 29th of March, however, the full force of Colonel Ilges' letter was brought to my attention by a personal interview with Hon. O. Cleveland, Mayor of Jersey City, who stated that the money paid back to Allen, Hughes & Riley, belonged in reality to Jersey City, and that such payment had imperiled, if not forfeited, the rights of that city. He urged me. therefore, with all the argument and entreaty which an earnest man could iise, to allow these men to be credited, in- sisting that, even if they were bounty-jumpers, Jersey City had paid for them in good faith through the money advanced by Allen. Hughes & Riley, and that, as by my decision the money had been returned to those men, I ought, in equity, to allow tlie credit, so as to relieve Jersey City. It seemed impossible for me, under the law, to allow these credits. The men were already in the military service, and my plain duty was to hold them as deserters. I did not hold my office as in any way responsible for the dealings between cities and bounty- brokers, and could not undertake to act as umpire in disputes of that character, arising so numerously throughout the loyal States; yet, having discussed these points with Mayor Cleveland, I told him that, owing to the peculiar circumstances surrounding this case, and espe- cially in view of the fact that the pressure of official engagements had prevented my appreciation of the suggestion in Colonel Ilges' letter of March 21st, I would use all the power of my Bureau in aiding him to recover the money from the hands of Allen, Hughes & Riley. I was the more ready and anxious to do this, because the facts narrated to me by Mayor Cleveland disclosed to me very clearly, for the first time, that Theodore Allen was acting a double part in the whole transac- tion. That, having been employed by Colonel Baker to induce a lot of bounty jumjjers to enlist, with a view to their arrest, he had, while playing this part with Colonel Baker, assumed an entirely different role with Mayor Cleveland, and had, as a bounty-broker, sold to him CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 45 as legitimate recruits, the very same men whom, as a detective, lie had induced to enlist, to be entrapped as deserters. I learned further from Mayor Cleveland that the |300 for each recruit that was deposited with Colonel Ilges was not even a moiety of what he had paid to Allen & Riley; that he had paid them about .|700 per man, and that they had in all in their possession $126,000 of money belonging to Jersey City. These facts being revealed to me, I wrote to Colonel Baker immediately (March 29, see the letter in evidence) , instructing him to demand of Allen & Co. the restitution of the money to Jersey City — holding that, the men not being (;redited. it was wrong to take money in payment for them as recruits. Colonel Baker made this demand of Allen & Co., and they refused to restore the money. As soon as their re- fusal was known to me, I issued orders (by telegraph and letter, dated April 6, in evidence t for their arrest and confinement in the Old Capital Prison until the money was restored. Colonel Baker was charged with the execvition of this order; btit Allen and his partners, scenting danger, fled to Canada, and remained as fugitives until near the close of the year — my order for their arrest being all the time sus- pended over them and preventing their return to their homes. The men who thus held the money of Jersey City being beyond reach, the only alternative to be pursued by the mayor to adjust his accounts w^as to procure an order to allow these bounty-jumpers to be credited to Jersey City, and thus legalize the payment of the money, and as a repugnant, but necessary consequence, confirm the $126,000 in the possession of Allen and his partners in this ti*ansaction. Very great efforts were made from time to time to induce me to allow the credits, and while! appreciated the hardship which the train of circumstances had inflicted on Jersey City, I did not consider myself empowered with the discretion which would enable me to comply with the re- quest. I accordingly refused to do so, and stated the grounds of my refusal in an official report to the Secretary of War, dated October 25, 1865 (in evidence). The case thus passed from my jurisdiction into the hands of my superior officer, who, in pursuance of the larger power which he could exercise in the premises, directed some months afterwards, in an or- der (in evidence) , that the credits be allowed to Jersey City. This might well have appeared to the Secretary as the only available mode of adjusting the matter and relieving the corporation of Jersey City from a difficulty in which it had become unfortunately, and I presume innocently, involved. As a Bureau officer, though I might have or- dered the credits without a question from anyone, I did not consider myself empowered with the authority in the matter which might be rightfully exercised by the Secretary of War. His authority in the 46 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. case was absolute aud unquestioned, and at the time it was exercised it did not interfere in the least with the efficiency of the recruiting sys- tem. The credits bein^ thus allowed by the Secretary of War, my order for the arrest of Allen thereby fell to the ground, and I supposed I never should hear of the matter again. But Theodore Allen, smarting under the punishment I had inflicted on him, by making him a fugitive from justice and an absentee from his country for the better part of a year, appears here, at Mr. Conkling' s instance, as a witness against me, and swears that I agreed to release to him the $54,000, provided he would go to Utica and hunt up accusations that would, at all hazards, connect Mr. Conkling" s name with the recruiting frauds alleged to be going on at that point, — that 1 made this infamous proposition to him in my office, having sent my confidential clerk out of the room and put my hands upon his shoulders in a familiar way, and urged him to this course in the most persuasive manner. At the time Allen alleges this extraordinary proposition to have been made, let it be remembered that I had never seen him but once before, and had never heard of him until a few weeks previous. Let the probability of such a procedure on my part speak for itself, and let me recall the fact that my confidential clerk at that time, Mr. M. L. De Coursey, of Philadelphia, swears that he was on duty in my office on that day, where he was habitually stationed, and swears further that I never, on any occasion, asked him to leave the room for the pur- pose of holding a conversation with anyone, — his business being really to stay by and hear conversations and take note of anything worthy of record. He swore further, that if I had put my hands upon anyone he could not have failed to observe such an extraordinary proceeding. Allen does not pretend that he did report anything to me against Mr. Conkling, and on the hypothesis of his own wicked invention, he leaves me in the silly attitude of having agreed to release him the $54,000 on condition of hunting up something scandalous against Mr. Conkling, and then stupidly paying the money without getting what I bargained for. Even conceding that I was base enough to tender the $54,000 for defamatory accusations against Mr. Conkling, 1 submit that I was hardly weak enough to let the money go without getting something in return. Mr. Allen never subsequently reported anything to me about Utica, or about Mr. Conkling, or about anything else, and does not even pretend that he did ; he does not allege any reason for failing to report against Mr. Conkling, nor for any failure on my part to keep the agi'eement which he says I made. I am at a loss which to be most astonished at, the character of Allen's testimony, or the hardihood manifested in introducing him as a witne.ss. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 47 Allen's whole statement is sufficiently disproved by the circum- stances and by the bald impossibilitv of such a reckless transaction on my part, and that, too, with one who was well-nigh a total stranger to me. The extravagance of the amount which Allen says, or intimates, was to be released to him on condition that he would defame Mr. Conkling at " all hazards.''' is another strong point against the truth of his allegation. Men who are depraved enough to do what Allen swears he was to do, can usually be hired for a small percentage of $54,000. And, in this connection, from a different standpoint, I may remark, that Mr. Conkling exaggerates his own importance when he imagines that anyone could afford $54,000 to hunt up accusations, either true or false, against him. He will have attained far more consequence than he has yet reached in public life, before a tithe of that sum could be profitably invested, even by a reckless and wicked enemy, in detracting from his reputation. It must be noted in examining Allen's testimony, that at the time he alleges I made this infamous bargain with him, I had never seen Mr. Conkling, — I had seen Allen but once before, — and Allen had never seen Mr. Conkling. We have Allen, then, in the attitude of a man on the stand swearing that, with a view to a pecuniary considera- tion, he had agreed to hunt up scandalous charges against one to whom he was a total stranger, — a confession which should at once discredit his testimony on all points. But the most extraordinary feature of this whole transaction is the fact that the very man whom he swears he agreed to defame " at all hazards," appears here as his patron, and asks the Committee to accept him as a credible witness, with whose testimony the reputation of another might be blackened. I have dwelt thus at length on this Hoboken affair and on the character of Theodore Allen, judged simply by the circumstances sur- rounding the case, and on the basis of his own testimony. I leave you to make a proper array of the weighty direct evidence affecting Allen's credibility as a witness. I will allude, however, to the following facts : 1st. Colonel Wright Rives, U. S. Army, now acting as private secretary to the President of the United States, and serving on the staff of Major-General John A. Dix, in New York City, during the war, testified that he knew Theodore Allen, and that his reputation for ti'uth and veracity was bad, that he would not believe him under oath, and that he had heard Allen's character spoken of as bad by General Dix and by Colonel Van Buren and Major Joline, of General Dix's staff, and also by John A. Kennedy, Superintendent of Police in New York City. Mr. Kennedy's opinion of Allen is also contained in an official letter to General Dix, dated February 17, 1864, in which Mr. 48 CONKLING AND BLAINB-FRY CONTROVERSY. Kennedy says : ' ' Theodore Allen has been known to the police of this city for at least ten years ; his reputation in the force is that of a thief. ' ' I send you an official copy of this letter, and if it has not been admitted as evidence, its pertinence will certainly insure it due weight before the Committee. Mr. Daniel Carpenjter, Inspector of Police in the City of New York, next in rank to Superintendent Kennedy, testified that Allen's reputa- tion was bad, and that he would not believe him under oath ; and Petty, Captain of Police, testified to the same thing, basing his testi- mony on a thorough know^ledge of Allen. Hotchkiss, a constable in the city of Washington, formerly a deputy sheriff in the City of New York, testified to knowing Allen, and that he would not believe him under oath. Testimony on this point, as you well know, could have been pro- duced for an indefinite period of time by the summoning of other witnesses; but, having secxired the testimony of gentlemen of the highest official rank and character, connected with the Police of New York, and others, I conceived it to be of no advantage to multiply witnesses on the same point, Mr. Conkling inti'oduced respectable witnesses, who swore that they would believe Allen under oath, a species of testimony not very conclusive as to the real character of the man and by no means an offset to the evidence against him, by men who are professionally enabled to know facts about such men as Allen, Indeed the bulk of the testimony inti'oduced by Mr. Conkling, to sustain Allen, only went to show that Allen's character was — among the most favorable — a subject of discussion, and that his real reputation and record with the Police were not so generally and widely known as to discredit him with everybody. Please urge upon the Committee, with the view of having it yet admitted in evidence, if that be possible, that Allen was convicted on his plea of guilty, of larceny (pocket picking) in the coiirt of Gereral Sessions in New York City, on the 4th of Febrviary, 1858, and tliat he was sentenced for this misdenaeanor to four months" imprisonment in the city prison of New York, A fully authenticated copy of the record of the trial and conviction of Allen, as above, was offered, but was ruled out by the Committee, because, as I understand, his general character was not in issue. Allen's own testimony respecting himself, elicited on cross-exami- nation, was simply this — that he was originally a butcher, became a dining-room employee, then kept a drinking shop, then kept a gam- bling house, and then entered upon the business of bounty brokerage. He admitted that during the time he was engaged in the bounty broker- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 49 age. lie was confined several months in Fort Lafayette by order of Gen- eral Dix. You will please notice in your plea the allusions which Mr. Conk- ling has made to the fact that I have not offered myself for examina- tion as a witness in my own behalf. Why should I have done so, or how. with propriety and self-respect, could I have done so? My accu- sations against Mr. Conkling were specifically set forth in my letter, duly subscribed by me ; I did not consider that I should have added to the force of those accusations bj* offering to ^wear to their truth. I sought to prove their entire correctness by the evidence of official papers, and I think I have succeeded. I took the same ground, in effect, with regard to the testimony of Theodore Allen. I was not disposed from choice to place myself in the attitude of bandying contradictions with such a man as he. and I accordingly pursued the method of dis- proving his testimony by iwoducing official recoi'ds in refutation and. in addition thereto, proving that he was not to be believed on oath. You will not forget that the Committee was fully empowered to send for persons and papers, and could have called me on to the witness stand, had they desired my testimony in the investigation, ivMch they were directed by the House to make ; and you will further remember that you reminded Mr. Conkling of his power to call me at any time, and of my readiness to respond to his call or that of the Committee. I desire that you will urge upon the Committee the propriety of furnishing me w'^th the sj)ecific charges against me, which Mr. Conk- ling proposes to have investigated. I have been rigidly confined to the text of ray letter in the accusations 1 brought against Mr. Conkling ; and it is but fair that he should be made to specify, with distinctness, what he proposes to prove against me. Up to this time I have been favored only with general denunciation from that gentleman, and with high-sounding phrases about the ' ' carnival of corrupt disorder ' ' which prevailed in my Bureau in Western New York. He has not come to a specific charge against me, except in the Hoboken affair, and in this his whole case rests on the uncorroborated and fully impeached testi- mony of Theodore Allen. Obvious as the fact is. I desire you to press it on the attention of the Committee with earnestness, for 1 wish it to be made clearly manifest that Mr. Conkling has made himself the ally of Theodore Allen in this extraordinary affair. My request for a speci- fication of charges is respectfully urged, either in the event of this Committee continuing the investigation, or in the event of that labor being transferred to another tribunal. In either event, it is my i^lain right to know whereof I am accused. Mr. Coixkling avows that the accusations he has against me came to his knowledge nearly a year and a half ago, and had he then, while acting as Judge Advocate, or at any 50 CONKLINGAND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. subsequent time, filed charges against me with the Secretary of War, that high official, with his known zeal for the purity of the public ser- vice, would undoubtedly have had them promptly investigated. That line of manly proceeding is still open to Mr. Conkling. He has the right as an American citizen to file charges against me as an officer of the army, and if the charges are not wholly frivolous and groundless, he well knows that an official inquiry would at once be made into their truth. You will not represent me to the Committee as in the least degree desirous that the investigation should no longer be prosecuted by them, for I have no desire to avoid a scrutiny which I am sure would be hon- orable and impartial, neither will you represent me as asking a Court of Inquiry, for, as I have already stated, no charges made by Mr. Conk- ling are deemed by me sufficiently grave to render this step on my part either necessary or desirable. It must be very obvious to every one, and yet I hope you will call it to the attention of the Committee, that it is easy to bring charges and ' ' railing accusations ' ' against a Bureau entrusted with duties so weighty and delicate, and in many respects so obnoxious as were those pertaining to my office. I was charged with the very difficult task of recruiting one of the largest, if not the very largest army ever marshalled by a Christian nation, and when voluntary enlistments were insufficient, it was my official duty to enforce a rigid conscrip- tion, and accompany these duties with the summary arrest of all de- serters from the ranks, and of all who sought to avoid the draft at home. These duties brought me into contact with the noblest of my countrymen and with the vilest also, and as a necessary consequence I received the ill will of the evilly disposed throughout the land: officers who were dismissed or otherwise punished for neglect of duty ; bounty- brokers imprisoned for cheating recruits; thieves and swindlers, ar- rested and punished tlu'ough my efforts, are, by their very natures, my enemies to-day. Theodore Aliens by scores, and possibly by hun- dreds, can be summoned to the witness stand by Mr. Conkling to swear to accusations as base and as gi'oundless as that to which Allen has made oath ; but I feel well assured that the clear records of my office will efifectually bear me out in good faith, and sustain the honor of my official character at all points. But, in addition to these records, I have the testimony of those highest in authority throughout the loyal States, and in no way under my control, certifying to the zeal, fidelity and ability with which I have discharged my responsible duties. This testimony, flattering in its terms, could only be referred to by me when forced to allude to unjustifiable assaults on my official reputation. In a conference with President Lincoln, at one of the trying and CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 51 difficult crises of the war, when a draft was feared as a signal for riot in some places, I ventvired to complain to him of the obloquy which was sought to be attached to my name as the mere administrator of the law. • ' That is necessarily the case for the present, ' ' he replied ; " but it will be all right in the end. ' ' In that confidence I rest to-day, almost, if not quite, indifferent to the attacks which Hon. Roscoe Conkling or Mr. Theodore Allen, jointly or singly, may make upon me. I am, sir, very respectfully, Your obedient servant, JAMES B. FRY. Washington, D. C, June 25, 1866. My counsel, Mr. Riddle, had to make bis oral argu- ment the next evening, and all of the next day my letter was in the hands of the printer, so that Mr. Riddle had no opportunity to use it if he had desired to do so. I hoped that the letter would prove of ad- vantage to me with members of Congress to whom I sent it as soon as it was in print, but in this I was mistaken. So far as appeared the effect was decidedly unfavorable to me. The point that was uppermost in the minds of Congressmen in this affair seemed to be that the privilege of the House had been violated by my letter to Mr. Blaine in a way that deserved rebuke, and this letter to my counsel was regarded as repeat- ing or aggravating the offense, and as canvassing against the Committee in the House, and their indig- nation was heightened in proportion. No objection, however, was heard to the canvassing against me by Mr. Conkling and his counsel, Mr. Hotchkiss, both members of the House, possessing power not only to canvass, but to vote upon the case in which they were parties in interest. Though I felt some disappointment at the result of the letter, I did not regret having issued it, regarding it 52 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. as sound and just if not politic. For two or three years I bad been under the pressure of great official labor, care and responsibility. The protracted and technical course of the investigation added to my burden, and it is literally true that when Mr. Conk- ling introduced Theodore Allen* as a witness upon the branch of the subject to which his testimony, if admissable at all, did not relate and could only injure me, and the Committee received the testimony, I, con- scious of my rectitude, and perhaps overestimating my strength, ceased to care much what conclusion the Committee reached. The Committee heard counsel * Allen's career has been consistent and remarkable. His latest ad- ventui-e is announced by the N. Y. Evening Post, July 10, 1891, from which the following abstract is made: "The" Allen, the gambler, dive- keeper and politician, who was stabbed in the back early this morning, is lying at his home, No. 246 West Forty-third Street, in a dangerous condition. The stabbing was in the "dive" at the south-west corner of Bleecker Street and South Fifth Avenue. Allen has long been one of the most notorious men in the city. He formerly kept the " Mabille," in Bleecker Street, near police head- quarters. Twelve or fifteen years ago, when he ran a faro bank at No. 6 LI Broadway, he shot and killed his friend, Edward Molloy, who was a private detective, but niore of a gambler. The N. Y. -Sun of July 11, 1891, in an account of this affair says: ' ' The ' ' Allen was the eldest of five brothers, sons of a reputable busi- ness man of the Eighth ward. All five have made unenviable reputa- tions. John, the second in age, is the only one of the family who has never heard a prison door closed behind him. " The" Allen has been in prison several times on minor charges. Once he was in the Tombs on an indictment for burglary. The complainant failed to appear and he was discharged. Again he was indicted for murder in the first degree for shooting" Eddie Molloy, a private detective and gambler. He was re- leased on bail and was never tried. The indictment is still pending. Martin Allen is now in Sing Sing serving a sentence imposed three years ago for pocket picking. Jesse Allen was killed by jumpingfrom a train in attempting to escape from custody. Wesley Allen, easily to be recog- nized by the patch that conceals the loss of his left eye, gouged out in a street fight, ssrved a term in the penitentiary for assault. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 53 on the 26th of June, 1866. My counsel's argument was oral, as required, Mr. Conkling, as shown by the record, reading an argument instead of making an oral plea. Chapter IV. THE committee's REPORT. When the Committee reported, July 19, 1866, the House was in the frame of mind described by Justice Story, in his work on the Constitution, in which he says: " Public bodies, like private persons, are occasionally under the do- minion of strong passions and excitements ; impatient, irritable and impetuous. The habit of acting together produces a strong tendency to what, for the want of a better word, may be called the corporation spirit, or what is so happily expressed in a foreign phrase, V esprit de corps. Certain popular leaders often acquire an extraordinary ascendency over the body by their talents, their eloquence, their intrigues, or their cunning. "A legislative body is not prdinarily apt to mistrust its own powers, and far less the temperate exercise of those powers. As it prescribes its own rules for its own deliberations, it easily relaxes them whenever any pressure is made for an immediate decision. If it feels no check but its own will, it rarely has the firmness to insist upon holding a ques- tion long enough under its own view to see and mark it in all its bear- ings," etc. Mr.Thaddeus Stevens was leader or overseer of the House. He was a radical politician of bitter speech. The Congressman's privilege of saying what he pleases without accountability suited him exactly. He regarded my letter repelling the outrageous attack Mr. Conk- ling had made upon me as " causeless." The fact was before him that the charges against me had not been investigated. Nevertheless he contributed to the malign spirit of the occasion by saying : " All I have to say is I do not know that a more causeless, gross at- tack has ever been made upon a member of the House either here or elsewhere than that contained in that letter. I had hoped, however, that the Committee would go a little further in reference to the trans- 54 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 55 action mentioned in the report in which some hundreds of thousands: of dollars were absorbed by somebody. There were, if the evidence is to be believed, three parties implicated. Two of them, I believe, are now in the penitentiary. The third is General Fry. "Why is it that some steps have not been taken by the Committee to send him there ?'* Upon the same occasion, when denouncing my let- ter to Mr. Blaine, Mr. Stevens said : "I must do the gentleman from Maine, now absent, the justice to suppose that he^was entirely uninformed of the contents of the letter or he never would have presented it to the House." This is a sample of the "justice" members of the House may do each other on questions between them and outsiders. Mr. Blaine having presented my letter as his proof that he was not guilty, as charged by Mr. Conkling, of having made a "false" statement, Mr. Stevens does Mr. Blaine the "justice" to suppose that Mr. Blaine was entirely uninformed of the terms and force of the proof which he presented in his own de- fence. This is about the same as if the leader of the House had said that if necessary to transfer blame from Mr. Blaine to me, he would assume that his fel- low-member, one of the smartest men the country has ever produced, was a fool. Such was " the corpora- tion spirit," or Vesprit de corps^ of the House men- tioned by Justice Story. Speaking of the letter to niy counsel, heretofore given, Mr. Shellabarger said on the floor of the House : "And there is another statement here that is equally singular, consid- ering all the circumstances of the case. He [General Fry] says : ' I formally applied to the Committee for a copy of the record, the testi- mony having been phonographically reported, and offered to pay the expenses of transcribing it, but was refused. ' Now it will occur to every member of the House," continued the Chairman, " that it would be a very singular request to make of a Committee of the House, whose proceedings are confidential and not to be disclosed except by leave of 56 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. the House, that it should be required to let its evidence go out into the town, into the offices of lawyers, and to be hawked about the streets. I am surx)rised that a statement of the character read should be made, under all the circumstances, by General Fry." In the same debate a member defined me as " the person on trial." In the feeling and judgment of the House, the request of the person on trial for a copy of the record of his case was a matter for reprobation. My counsel failed in his efforts to get an important and respectful petition before the House (see Appen- dix C) relating to letters which he said "are most material to a right understanding of that part of the case, and these are two of a series of some twenty- three papers, all offered, as will be shown in evidence on the part of General Fry, and all competent and im- portant evidence. It will be found difficult to cor- rectly judge of material portions of the Conkling-Fry case in the absence of these papers, as they contain the whole of General Fry's evidence on the points they refer to," and which letters the Committee denied ever having seen, though they had been duly laid be- fore it. In the condition indicated by the foregoing re- marks, the House heard the Committee's report, but knew nothing of the testimony. In the first debate (April 24) Mr. Blaine said he was " in a very weakly condition." His health did not improve, and a day or two before the Committee reported to the House, he was forced, by sickness, to go to his home in Maine. In his absence there was no one in the House to make a stand against the Com mittee's report. Mr. Pike defended Mr. Blaine, his colleague, as well as he could, but he did not defend CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 5T rue.* On the contrary, he said, speaking of me, " I do not propose to defend him. I only speak of the part my colleague had in the transaction. He generously defended Gen. Fry as he would any friend he deemed unjustly assailed, and Gen. Fry furnished him the letter expressly to be read in the House." Mr. Went- worth said, " Have you seen Gen. Fry ? " Mr. Pike re- plied, " I have not ; I have had no communication v^ith him." The " breach of privilege," as shown by the de- bate, was then the point at issue, and Mr. Pike directed his efforts to transferring the responsibility for it to me. He confessed that he had not been in communi- cation with rne concerning the letter, and I assume his statements were without Mr. Blaine's authority or knowledge, for Mr. Blaine never denied, so far as I know, that he, not I, was responsible for the reading of the letter in the House. But the point success- fully made by Mr. Pike was, that as the letter was read fi-oni the Clerk's desk, Mr. Blaine was not guilty of breach of privilege. He said, " The House can judge whether there was any invasion of its dignity when all the members consented to have the letter read to them ; certainly my colleague did nothing but vrhat was fair and manly. The House cannot com- plain if they failed to object to the reading of what they desired to hear." The action of the House was a practical if not formal adoption of Mr. Pike's point, that the House itself was responsible for the breach of priv- ilege. It being true, as Mr. Pike said, that "the House cannot comj)lain if they failed to object to the reading of what they wanted to hear," is it not equally true * The debate is given in full. Appendix D. 58 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. that the House could not consistently complain of the writing of the thing which, according to Mr. Pike and the action of the House, they wanted to hear read ? In this debate in the House, aside from Mr. Pike's defence of Mr. Blaine, the point at issue was not the difficulty between Mr. Conkling and Mr. Blaine, but was whether I had violated the privileges of the House. The Committee, as the Chairman stated, had considered the " important question of the privileges of the House, and of a member of it." The Chairman said in the House : " The Committee,. as has already been noticed, have confined their investigation to the question of privilege affecting the rights of the gen- tleman from New York (Mr. Conkling). The Committee, so confining its investigations, deemed it fair and proper that the gentleman from New York should control the matter of the introduction of testimony affecting his personal privilege, subject of course to the right of the Committee to take care of the right and the privileges of the House." Mr. Davis said : " The question, Mr. Speaker, is one of grave importance, affecting the right of a member of this House to utter his sentiments and opin- ions without being confronted by a libel upon his private or public character, read at the Clerk' s desk at the suggestion of a member upon the floor. " "I repeat, ' ' said the Chairman of the Committee, ' ' what has been said in the report, that a more careful and moi'e malicious and wanton violation of the privileges of the House, and of its mem- bers, has not been brought to the notice of any member of the Com- naittee. ' ' The Committee's report was unanimous, and no one present in the House, except the Committee, Mr. Conkling and his counsel, Mr. Hotchkiss, had knowledge of the testimony on which it was based, or of the way that testimony had been understood and construed. Mr. Blaine was the only one in my inter- est who had information, and he was absent, sick. The CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 59 report was adopted by the House almost unanimously, the vote being, yeas 96, noes, 4. As the occasion was an exciting one, and the House was well filled, it is note- worthy that the record shows "not voting 82." Mr. Conkling did not vote, but Mr. Hotchkiss, his counsel, voted for the adoption of the Committee's report. The report of the Committee is given in full in Appendix D. It completely exonerates Mr. Conk- ling, pronounces the statements I made against him to be wholly without foundation, palliation, or excuse, and says that I, in writing the letter to Mr. Blaine, was guilty of a gross violation of Mr. Conkling's privi- leges as a member of the House. It will be remembered that Mr. Blaine allegred in the House, in explanation of Mr. Conkling's attack upon me, that there wei'e differences between Mr.Conk- ling and me, in which Mr. Conkling came out second best, and Mr. Conkling pronounced the statement " false." That was the open issue between them. In the next debate, Mr. Blaine had my letter read in the House as proof (and he offered no other proof) that his statement, which Mr. Conkling had pronounced " false," was true. Notwithstanding the logic of the situation, the House did nothing to Mr. Blaine upon his apparent conviction. If the statements in my let- ter are without foundation, as reported by the Com- mittee, Mr. Conkling's victory over both Mr. Blaine and me is complete. But the Committee's finding is erroneous and unjust. Their record shows that they investigated only my statements against Mr. Conkling. No allegation was made of breach of privilege, but as it turned out 60 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. I was convicted of that offence, and sentenced witliout knowing that I was being tried. Like the Court martial which tried a private for desertion, and found the Captain who preferred the charge guilty of stealing a pack saddle, the Committee tried Mr. Conk- ling on my charge concerning his rights, duties and services as a special army Judge Advocate, and found me guilty of breach of privilege of the House of Kepresentatives. My letter to Mr. Blaine was founded upon and was accompanied by a sei'ies of official documents. As these documents were read in the House, and pub- lished with the letter in the Congressional Glohe, they were before the Committee in the same way that the letter to which they belonged was. Yet the Commit, tee, omitting them from their report and failing, so far as appears, to notice the official documents upon which my letter was founded, report the letter as " wholly without foundation in truth." That this finding is erroneous and unjust I shall now proceed to show by an examination in detail of the Committee's record and report. Chapter V. THE COMMITT My letter is given in full in Appendix B. It is free from ambiguity or hidden significance. With its accompanying documents it affords sufficient evidence of its own substantial truth if taken in its plain mean- ing. The Committee, however, attributed to state- ments made by me a meaning which I never intended, or even thought of, and pronounce the statements un- true in that meaning. This action of the Committee makes a minute examination of their report necessary ; and I, therefore, take up the important paragraphs in order from beginning to end. The Committee say : ' ' The first statement of the letter of General Fry to be investigated under the rule adopted by the Committee is as follows: " 'In the summer of 1863 Mr. ConMing made a case for himself by telegi-aphing to the War Department that the Provost Marshal of his district required legal advice, which he was hereupon empowered to give.' "The Committee understand this charge to be that Mr. Conlding secured his own employment pi;ofessionally by the Department, by tele- graphing that the Provost Marshal of his district required legal ad- vice, and that his motive and object in transmitting the dispatch was to secure such employment. Unless this is the meaning of the words of the letter, there is no significance at all attached to th.em, in the con- nection in which they are used. ' ' In the phrase above quoted, there is no hidden meaning. It was immediately preceded by the remark that, in consequence of the difficulty between Mr. ConMing and myself, I proposed to give an account in detail of Mr. C's connection with my bureau. I, there- . 61 62 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. fore, naturally began with the circumstances stated as the first of any importance in that history. ' What right has the Committee to " understand " that I charged that Mr. Conlding'8 ^^ motive and olyjecV in transmitting a dispatch was to secure for himself pro- fessional employment, and then to pronounce that I have falsified because they find no such motive on Mr. Conhling''s part? Now, without any reference to the understanding of the Committee as to what was meant, let us see whether the proof does or does not sustain the state- ment, which is the thing the Committee was ordered by the House to examine into. What occasioned the employment of Mr. Conhling as counsel in that case ? Simply the fact that he tele- graphed to the War Department that an attachment had been issued against the Provost Marshal of his dis- trict for refusing to obey a writ of liaheas corpus, and asks, " What shall we do ? " the District Attorney and his assistant are absent. The writ of habeas corpus, he says, was issued "in the absence of all of us who coidd aid him profession- ally.'''' All this is said after at least one " who could aid him professionally " had returned, for Mr. Conk- ling''s dispatch is sent by him from Utica (but the law officers of the government ai-e still absent), and he says, " What shall we do f " Here is the entire dispatch : ' ' In the absence of all of us who could aid him professionally, the Provost Marshal here was served with a haheas corpus to produce a deserter ; (he obeyed the order not to produce), and so returned. The judge held this insufficient, and issued attachment. He telegraphed the District Attorney and his assistant, ' ' they are absent and engaged — what shall we do ? " (Signed) ' ' R. CONKLING. ' ' CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 63 Now, how did the Secretary of War understand that dispatch ? As it was addressed in the line of his official duty to the Secretary, an able lawyer, it is presumed he understood its meaning. Here is his reply : "Circular No. 36, from this office, of July 1, in regard to desert- ers, must be sustained. The Secretary of War desires you to act as coun- sel in behalf of the United States, in case of litigation growing out of the action of the Provost Marshal at Utica, as iweaented in your dispatch of this date. " Please show this dispatch to the Provost Marshal. (Signed) "JAMES B. FRY, •' Pro. Mar. Oeneral.'''' Let any sound and candid mind say whether or not this sustains the statement that, in the summer of 1863, Mr. Conhling telegraphed to the Department that the Provost Marshal of his district required legal advice, and that he was empowered to give it, and that thereby he made a case for himself. The Com- mittee seek his motives — I did not. Upon the foregoing statement of facts, the Com- mittee remark as follows : ' ' Tt will be observed that the dispatch does not inform the Secre- tary of War that the Provost Marshal required legal advice, but was a succinct statement of the actual state of facts, and a request that the Secretary should dii'ect what should be done in an emergency which excited the apprehensions of the friends of the government. In the opinion of the Committee, Mr. ConUing did only what he was fully justified in doing in this matter, and there is no evidence tending, however remotely, to show that in sending the dispatch he was influ- enced by any merely personal motive. ' ' This extraordinary commentary is of importance here only as indicating the system of reasoning which enabled the Committee to arrive at the conclusions they have reached on other and more important points in this controversy, and for this purpose it is noticed. 64 CONKLING AND BLAINK-PRY CONTROVERSY. The Committee say " the dispatch does not in- form the Secretary of War that the Pi'ovost Marshal required legal advice." It is true, however, that the Secretary of War so understood it, and in consequence of it, and upon the instant, furnished " legal advice." It does say, substantially, that in the absence of " all of us " who could aid the Provost Marshal pro- fessionally (that is, give him legal advice, the neces- sity for which must be presumed), the Provost Mar- shal was served with a writ of habeas coipus. The inference is, that if the persons meant by "«// of ns^^ had not been absent, the writ woukl not have issued ; or, if it had issued, some one or more of " all of us " would have rendered professional assistance — that is, given needed legal advice. But now one of us has re- turned ; the case has become more important than be- fore, because, having had no counsel to advise him, the Provost Marshal disobeyed the writ, and an attach- ment having issued against his person, he now needs legal advice more than ever. The District Attorney and his assistant are both absent. I, a lawyer, one "who could aid him professionally," as you will see by this dispatch, am here on the spot. " What shall we do ? " The Secretary of War understood this language^ and I, in fact, merely adopted the Secretary's con- struction, wdiich construction Mr. ConkUng, by accept- ing the retainer and performing the duties it enjoined, adopted, corroborated and confirmed. The Committee say, " Mr. ConkUng did only what he was fully ' Justified in doing,' " and then proceed to defend his motive in sending the dispatch. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 65 As before said, I had not questioned either the right or propriety of Mr. OoiiMing to use all honorable means to procure professional employment, and had in no way assailed his motives in this particular instance. The offensive phrase is " that he made a case for himself." Does the Committee pretend that anybody understood the meaning to be that Mr. Conkling manu- factured the case for the sake of receiving employ- ment? Certainly not. Even Mr. ConMinrfs argu- ment does not claim that. All that is said, and all that is meant is, that a case having arisen, he notified the person who was authorized to employ counsel, on account of which notification he was employed, and thus '^ made a case for himself," and in no other sense can this phi'aseology, which the Committee style the charge^ be construed. The next statement of the Committee's Heport is as follows : ''In April, 1865, Mr. Chnrhs A. Dana, then Assistant Secretary of War. without notifying me, had Mr. Conl'ling appointed to investi- gate all frauds in enlistments in western New York, with the stipula- tion that he should be commissioned Judge Advocate for the prosecu- tion of any cases brought to trial, and he was appointed to prosecute before a General Court Martial Major J. A . Haddock. ' ' Mr. Dana vested him, by several orders issued in the name of the Secretary of War, without the sanction of Mr. btanton, with the most exti'aordinary powers. Among these was the right to examine the dispatches in all the telegraph offices in the western division of New York, which enabled a violation of the sanctity of personal and business correspondence. ' ' In another part of the letter Mr. Dana is spoken of as the friend of Mr. ConMing ; and the Committee understand the imputation of this portion of the letter to be, that Mr. Dana, of his own motion, without notice to General Fr-y, and without the sanction of the Secretary of War, and by some management or understanding between Mr. Dana and Mr. ConMing, appointed Mr. ConMing to investigate frauds in en- 66 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. listments in western New York, and vested him with extraordinary powers." Here aofain tlie Committee substitute their under- standing for the statements actually made. The Resolution of the House raising the Commit- tee, directs them " to inquire into the ' statements ' of General Fry's letter." The Committee did not do this ; if they had, the statements would have been found substantially correct. But they attributed to the statements a meaning never intended by me, and not justified by the language used, and then pro- nounced the statements false, because, as they say, the testimony does not prove this meaning. As the House ordered the " statements " them- selves to be inquired into, the Committee's under- standing need be neither admitted nor denied ; but if, upon examination of the " statements," the proof sustains them, the fact that the Committee understand me to say something else, does not make it necessary for me to prove what I never said. I did say that : " In April, 1865, Mr. Charles A, Dana, then Assistant Sec- retary of War, without notifying me, had Mr. ConMing appointed to investigate all frauds in enlistments in western New York, with the stipulation that he should be commissioned Judge Advo- cate for the prosecution of any cases brought to trial, and he was so appointed to prosecute before a General Court Martial Major J. A. Hadclod'. Mr. Dana vested him (Mr. Conhling) by several orders issued in the name of the Secretary of War, without the sanction of Mr. Stanton, with the most extraordinary powers. Among these was the right to examine the dispatches in all the telegraph offices in the west- ern division of New York, which enabled a violation of the sanctity of personal and business correspondence." Is the statement true ? Now, as to the first point, did Mr. Dana have Mr. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 67 ConMing appointed ? A series of letters from Mr. Conhling to Mr. Dana, touching the Utica office, is in evidence. All papers relating to Mr. ConMing were signed by Mr. Dana. Mr. Dana was present in . person at the Haddock Court Martial, and when I was called by Mr. Dana to his office in Washington in ref- erence to the frauds, I found Mr. ConMing present. On Sunday, Mr. Dana and Mr. ConMing wqyq consulting in Mr. Dana\ office. Mr. ConMing was writing to Mr. Dana — not to the Secretary of War — his opinion of me, and the well-known intimate personal and political relations existing between Mr. ConMing and Mr. Dana produced the impression on my mind that Mr. Dana had exerted himself to secure the appointment of Mr. ConMing to investigate the frauds in western New York, particularly as the officers appointed on Mr. ConMing''s recommendation were implicated in these frauds, and Mr. ConMing was seeking the restoration of officers who had been suspended from duty. Now, as to the second point in the statement, did I have notice of Mr. ConMing s appointment to inves- tigate all frauds in enlistment in western New York ? The Committee say (page 5*) that it appears from the testimony of Dana that I did ; but, on referring to Dana 8 testimony, it will be seen that he states (page 107) as follows: " General Fry was informed by me that the Secretary of War had employed Mr. Conhling to prosecute Major Haddock. ' ' There is no statement in the testimony of Dana, * The page references throughout this review of the Committee's Ee- port are to the Pub. Doc. , House of Eep. , Thirty-ninth Congress, First Ses- sion 68 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. or any other witness, that I was notified that Coiihling had been appointed " to investigate all cases of fraud zn loestern New Yorh and all misdemeanors connected ^uitli recruiting,'''' nor that he was authorized, in the language of tlie Committee (page 5), ''to prefer charges or proofs against others besides Majoi' Had- dochy All that Dana testifies to, on this point, is, that he informed me that Conkling had been author- ized to prosecute Haddoch. He does not pretend that he notified me that Conkling had been appointed to investigate all cases of fraud and misdemeanor in western New York. And his answer, when ques- tioned on that point, shows that I was not notified of that appointment, for he says: "Thei'e was never any occasion to make it known '; I gave General Fry the Secretary's orders to him; there was no occasion to inform General Fry what other orders the Seci'etary had directed me to give" (page 117). Nor do I state that Conkling was appointed to prosecute Haddock without notice to ms, but my language is, " without notifying me, Mr. Conkling was appointed to investi- gate all frauds in enlistments in western New York." (See written authority of April 3, page 3.) It was this general authority to investigate the affairs of my bureau in western New York which I said was conferred without notifying me. I did not deny being informed "that the Secretary of War had employed Conkling to prosecute Mcijor Haddock^ That appointment was announced in printed orders and was known to all concerned. The very ]3oint which made the case peculiar, was, that I was notified that Mr. Conkling was to prosecute Haddock, but was CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 69 left in ignorance of the much greater power conferred upon hini to investigate all frauds, etc., in western New York. The next point in this statement is, that the appointment contained " a stipulation that ConJding should be commissioned Judge Advocate for the prosecution of any cases brought to trial, and he was appointed to prosecute before a General Court Mar- tial Major (I. A. Haddock I'"' It is believed that this portion of the letter is not disputed by the Committee. Its truth is appar- ■ent from an inspection of the written appointment itself, and Mr. Stanton set out a copy of the appoint- ment in his testimony (page 124), yet the Committee branded my statement as false in that part of their re- port in which they say none of the charges have any foundation in truth. The next point in my statement is, that Mr. Dana vested Mr. Oonhling, "by several orders issued in the. name of tlie Secretary of War, without the sanction •of Mr. Stanton, with the most extraordinary powers," and the followino- are referred to : "WAR DEPARTMENT, "Washington City, April 3, 1865. " Hon. Bosroe Conkling having been appointed by the Secretary of War to investigate transactions connected with recruiting in the west- ern division of New York, all telegraph companies and operators are re- spectfully requested to afford him access to any dispatches which he may require for the purpose of detecting frauds and bringing criminals to trial. ' ' By order of the Secretary op War : (Signed) " C. A. DANA, ^^ Assistant Secretary of War. ^^ The Committee say I had no foundation in truth 70 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. for saying that these powers were extraordinary, and were conferred without the sanction of the Secretary of War. The Committee have decided that the whole of Mr. Conkling\ duty was to act as Judge Advocate in the trial of Major Haddock.^ This was while the war was still going on, at a period when the telegraph was controlled by the Government, and when a re- quest in relation to it from the War Department was intended and received as an order, just as a request would be for an engine or a train on a railroad of which the Government had taken possession. Would the request in either case be refused ? Mr. Stantoii, the Secretary of War, says (page 123) : ^^ If the appli- cation had been necessary^ I should have given him an order authorizing him to seize wpon any information or dispatches that would have enabled him to detect the frauds in recruiting, the 'bounty jumping, etc., that were depleting our army." That is to say, if Mr. Stanton had thought more authority " necessary," he would have granted it. But the Committee construed this written au- thority to be simply " an authority to request " (page 118), from which it must follow that, if Mr. Conhling had not received it, he would have had no right to re- quest the telegraph operators to show him dispatches ; but, having received it, he was clothed with authority that empowered him to ask a favor, which the party asked was at liberty to refuse. This is sheer nonsense. The War Department did not resort to dodges of that sort. Could not he have ^^ requested,^'' in that meaning of the term, as well without the authority as with it ? f But Mr. Conkling^s services as Special Judge Advocate were ren- dered after the war had closed. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 71 But was it extraordinary, or was it the ordinary,, authority given to a Judge Advocate ? I termed it " extraordinary," and the Committee say my statement is false. I did not deem it necessary to bring proof before the Committee on this 23oint, but the assertion is ven- tured that the records of the War Department do not show a similar delegation of authority to any person. But suppose this all to be untrue, and that it had been the rule of Mr. Stanton to delegate this author- ity, would it not still be an extraordinary power, so far as it related to everybody else, and only justifiable, if at all, by the condition of the country at that period ? And was it not truthfully styled " extraor- dinary "? Is it claimed that the. people of the loyal state of New York, remote from the seat of war, protected by the provision of the Constitution of the United States, which guarantees that " the right of the peo- ple to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures^ shall not be violated," are liable to have their pi-ivate correspondence examined and confidential messages read by the agents of the War Department, except, if at all, upon " extraordinary " occasions, or for some " extraordinary " cause ? Does not the observation of every man teach him that this power is most extraor- dinary, even if it had been exercised habitually by Mr. Stanton, or any other officer durins; his official career ? The Committee say I falsified in saying this was "without the sanction of Mr. Stanton^ The only tes- 72 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. timony on this point is Mr. Sta?itoii's, as follows (page 123): "In regard to tlie two other papers —one in relation to telegraph companies, and the other in re- gard to Provost Marshals —those are authorities which I do not remember to have seen, until I saw them in this publication." — (^Daily Glohe^ May 1, 1866.) If, then, Mr. Stanton did not even see these orders for more than a year after their issue, although he may have subsequently approved them, is it not true that they were issued without Mr. StaMon^s sanction, just as I stated ? But my statements, and the Committee's under- standing of them, are very different things. At the beginning of the investigation, I knew what " the statements " were, but the Committee did not, until its report was published, favor me with their under- standing of them ; and the subtile and unusual char- acter of that understanding will justify me in not hav- ing anticipated it. Such proofs, therefore, as I intro- duced were directed to the statements, and not to the construction the Committee put upon them after the investigation closed. But as to the construction just quoted. The Committee say (page 3): " In another part of the letter Mr. Dana is spoken of as the friend of Mr. ConMiiig ' and the Committee tinder stand the imputation of this portion of the letter to be, that Mr. Dana, of his own motion, without notice to General Fry^ and without the sanction of the Secretary of War, and by some management or understanding between Mr. Dana and Mr. ConMing, appointed Mr. Qonkling to investigate CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 73 frauds in enlistments in western New York, and vested him with extraordinary powers." An examination of the letter itself is the true test of its meanino;. In the entire letter there is no word, phrase, or sentence that can be tortured into such interpretation as the Committee, in the exercise of their understanding, have seen fit to adopt, and on which they base an allegation of untruthfulness on my part. The letter does not state that "Mr. Dana ap- pointed Mr. ConMing on his own motion," nor is it susceptible of that construction ; nor does it state, in terms or by implication, that " Mr. Dana, without the sanction of the Secretary of War, appointed Mr. ConMing.'''' On the other hand, the language of the letter is, that " Mr. Dana had him appointed,^^ that is, through the representations and ministrations of Mr. Dana, the Secretary of War appointed Xnir. If 1 had intended to convey the meaning which the Committee state as their understanding, I would have used language to that effect. If I had meant to say that " Mr. Dana appointed Mr. ConMing,'''' I would not have said, " Mr. Dana had Mr. (7(9??X&^ appointed," which means that some one else appointed him. If I had meant to say that "Mr. Dana appointed Mr. ConMing,'^ I would not have accompanied the statement with a copy of the appointment itself, bearing on its face the fact that the Secretary of War appointed Mr. ConMing. Yet the Committee understand that I said, " Mr. Dana, on his own motion, and without the sanction of the Secretary of War, appointed Mr. ConMing,''^ and 74 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. because I did not anticipate this understanding ^ and at- tempt to prove it true, they decide that I failed to prove what I did say, and then they proceed to char- acterize " the conduct of an officer in sending a letter to be read in the House which reflects upon an honor- able member." In the paragraph of the letter in which it is al- leged that "Mr. Dana had Mr. Conkling appointed," I did say tliat " Mr. Dana vested Mr. Conkling with ex- traordinary powers," and that this was done " without the sanction of the Secretary of War," and the testi- mony fully sustains this statement, but I never said that ''^Datia^ on his own motion," or " without the sanc- tion of the Secretary of War," or " by some manage- ment or understanding between Mr. Dana and Mr. ConMing^'' appointed Mr. Conhling to investigate frauds in western New York ; and the language used does not admit of any such meaning or interpretation. The Committee next proceed to discuss that para- graph of the letter in which it is stated that Mr. Conk- ling "was as zealous in preventing prosecutions at Utica as in making them at Elmira." As " specifica- tions " to this charge, the Committee assume three statements made in the letter. It is not strange that the Committee should deem an explanation of this assumption necessary, and they try to put it in the form of an argument by saying, " the words, as here- after shown, as they appear in connection in General Fry^s letter, that Mr. Conkling was as zealous in pre- venting prosecutions at Utica as in making them at Elmira, must refer to the three specifications above given, because, unless shown in one or the other of these CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 75 specifications, it is not shown at all in General Fry*s letter," etc. The truth is, that the facts contained in the three statements referred to formed a jpart of the evidence on which the charge of zeal in preventing prosecutions was made ; but they were not shaped in the letter to support that charge, and had weight in doing so only so far as they might be considered in connection with other facts, especially the documents which accom- panied my letter, as was shown to the Committee dur- ing the investigation, and by the summing up of coun- sel. The manner in which the Committee weighed them will be noticed further on ; but here let us no- tice these specifications as they were used in the letter. Here they are, with the statements which immediately precede and follow them : " As to the animus of Mr. Co/iZ/iw/z's calumnious assault on me, it is true, notwithstanding his assertion that he had no personal quarrel with me, that the differences between him and myself arose altogether from my unwillingness to gratify him in certain matters in which he had a strong personal interest. It is true, also, that he was foiled in his efforts to obtain undue concessions from my Bureau, and to dis- credit me in the eyes of my superiors. ' ' There have been three main issues between Mr, ConMing and myself. The first arose in consequence of the removal of Captain Bich- ardson, (the first Provost Marshal of Mr. OoiiHing^s district), upon a report of Judge Advocate Turner that the proofs in his case disclosed a reckless persistence in fraudulent practices. Mr. ConUing complained of my action, both to the President and War Department, hut failed to procure any mod iji cation of my course, ''The second issue was, as to the restoring of Captain Crandall (the second Provost Marshal of the district), after I had secured his re- moval from duty, on the recommendation of Major Luddington, who thoroughly inspected the district, and reported that, though not legally guilty, he had morally perpetrated a most glaring and inexcusable fraud on the government he was sworn to serve, and that he had quieted 76 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. his conscience by casuistry, and regulated his actions by the counsel of unscrupulous legal advisers. Mr. GonMing failed to get Captain Crandall restored and the officer selected hy ine continued in charge of the business until the office was closed. ' ' The third issue was as to the government employing counsel to defend Captain Crandall, after he had been relieved and Kad carried away with him, in violation of the orders of the Department, some twenty thousand dollars local bounty, deposited with him in behalf of recruits, and in regard to which he had got into litigation. In this Mr. ConMing failed. Counsel has not, to my knowledge, been employed, nor have any lawyers been paid by the governmont in that suit. ' ' In support of his denial of differences with me which influenced his action, Mr. ConMing states the fact that we had but one personal interview. That is true ; but it proves the reverse of what Mr. Conk- ling asserts, etc. ' ' Notwithstanding Mr. Conliing's denial in the House, his own letters, as well as the foregoing staUments, show that there were differences^ and that he was worsted.^' No fair-minded man can read my letter, from which the above quotation of consecutive parts is made, and not admit I enumerate in it the " foregoing statements" in support of my assertion, that Mr. ConMing and I had had differences in ivhich he, Mr, Coiikling, did not succeed. Besides being thus mani- fest on the face of the paper, the fact appeared in the investigation, and was dwelt upon by my counsel in his summing up. Yet the Committee not only fail to apply these statements to the charge of differences, which was the issue in th^ House between Mr. Blaine and Mr. ConMing., but misapply them as the sole proof of another charge, and then pronounce that charge false. The Committee admitted testimony upon, and fyass over that charge in support of which they were offered; and while they did not, and could not, deny the truth of the statements them- selves, or that they sustained that charge, they have CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 77 diverted them from it and applied them as the sole support of another charge, and then say, "the specifications signally fail to bear out that charge," and report that they have " fully and carefully " ex- amined them, and are of opinion that none of the charges in General Fry's letter "have any foundation in truth." And this passed for logic and fair dealing in the House of Kepresentatives, and censure was based upon it. But let us pass on to an examination in moi'e de- tail of this part of the Report based on the Commit- tee's premises. The charge is, that "Mr. ConMlng prevented prosecutions at Utica." How could this be proved ? It had first to be shown that there were frauds or misdemeanors committed there which were subjects for prosecution. By reference to the Keport (page 154) it will be seen that T was only permitted by the Committee to prove such frauds as came to the hnowledge of Mr. Conkling and had not been re]?orted to the War Depart- ment. Consequently proof of all the frauds which had been reported to me officially was ruled out. Continuing with the Report, it is stated by the Committee that " the prosecution of Captain Richard- son was a matter with which Mr. Conhling had noth- ing to do." Captain Richardson had been dismissed in ac- cordance with the following recommendation from the Judge Advocate General's Office : "WAR DEPARTMENT, Washington City, December 2\, 1864. General : — I have the honor to return to you the papers in the case of Captain 78 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. Richardson Provost Marshal Twenty-First District, New York, and re- spectfully recommend that said Richardson be at once arrested and held in custody for trial by Court Martial. The proofs in this case disclose a reckless persistency in fraudulent practices that not only demand his arrest and trial, but also a complete renovation in the oflBce of said dis- I am, General, very respectfully, Your obedient servant, (Signed) L. C. TURNER, Judge Advocate. Brigadier General, James B. Fey, Provost Marshal General.'''' Whereupon Mr. ConMlng wrote to the President the letter, found on page 46 of the Report, complain- ing of my action in dismissing Richardson. On the subject of this letter the Committee say (page 7) : " No complaint is made in the letter against General Fry 'by name, or ty special reference. " The letter states (page 146) that "the Provost Marshal {Ricliardsoii) received an order through Ma- jor Haddock from General Fry^ informing him that, by order of the President, he had been dismissed the service," and then goes on to say, "the point I want to submit is, his being thus summarily disgraced without knowledge of the ground, and without being heard," thus complaining directly of " General Fry^^ and naming him. How, then, can the Committee say, " no complaint is made in the letter against General Fry by name, or by special reference " ? It will be remembered that this was during the time the case was undergoing examination with a view to the trial of Michardson, and without Mr. Conhling's opinion being solicited, he very frankly assured the President that, " in common with others, I (Mr. Conic- ling) have kept a pretty close watch upon Captain CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY, 79 Michardson, and I have never discovered any corrupt practice in himy Richardsoii was not tried by Court Martial. The case was sent to the District Attorney, and, in a writ- ten order from the War Department, after being au- thorized to investigate all cases of fraud in the western division of New York, Mr. ConMing was invested with the following : " You will also appear in behalf of the Department m any case that it may be deemed more expedient to bring before the civil tribunals." (See page 154.) Thus much has been said in reply to what the Cominittee liave reported in reference to the first of the three specifications, or the one referring to Ricliardson, Now, what I actually said was — in referring to the issues I had had with Mr. ConMing — "the first arose in consequence of the removal of Captain Rich- ardson (the ^first Provost Marshal of Mr. ConMing^s district), upon a report of Judge Advocate Turner, that the proofs in his cases disclosed a reckless persist- ence in fraudulent practices. Mr. ConMing com-^AsiinQdi of my action, both to the President and War Depart- ment, but failed to procure any modification of my course." The only question of fact here is, did Mr. Conh- ling complain to the President and to the War Depart- ment because of the removal of Richardson, and did he fail to procure a modification of the course pursued by me in that particular case ? These questions are clearly determined in the affirmative by the evidence. But referring to the Committee's Report, and to my charge that Mr. ConMing was zealous in prevent- 80 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. ing prosecutions at Utica, if he did not desire to pre- vent a ^prosecution of Mlchardsou, he certainly does not, in this letter to the President, recommend any trial or other investigation ; nor does he say one word that can be interpreted to mean that he, in any man- ner, desired the trial of the party on whom he had " kept a pretty close watch." Yet the commentary on that letter by the Committee (page 7) contains the fol- lowing : " The main object of the letter seems to have been to ash an investigationy It is by this system of reasoning, interpretation and misconstruction that Mr. CouMing is justified by the Committee in all he has said and done, while I I'e- ceive its opprobrium and censure under all circum- stances. The next " specification," as the Committee term it, relates to Captain Orandall^ and is in these words : "The second issue was as to the restoring of Captain Crai idall, aiier I had secured his removal from duty, on the recommendation of Major JJuddington, who thoroughly inspected the district and reported that, though not legally guilty, he had morally perpetrated most glaring and inexcusable frauds on the government, and that he had quieted his con- science by casuistry, and regulated his actions by the counsel of unscru- pulous legal advisers. "Mr. CoTi Hi'?? f/ failed to get Captain CrawdZaZZ restored." The only facts contained in this statement, except those which purported to have been reported by Major Luddington., are as follows : 1st. — That there was an issue between Mr. Conk- ling and me as to Captain OrandaWs restoration to office. 2d. — That Mr. Conhling "failed to get Captain Crandcdl restored." Now if any part of this " specification " be false, CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 81 as the Committee say, it is either —first — as to what Meijor I/uddingioriYeported, or — second — as to whether Mr. Conkling desired CrandaWs restoration and failed. Luddingto)^ 8 report is published on pages 155 and 156. The followino^ extracts show there can be no question as to the truth of my statement regarding what Luddingtoii reported : "I respectfully recommend that every member of the Board of Eorolment for Tsveaty-First District of New York be dismissed the service, and that the money in possession of Captain Crandall be seized. And because of the disgraceful prejudice existing among the demoral- ized people of that district against filling their quota with decent men, thus preventing one of their own citizens from doing his duty to his country, as well as his county, that an officer of the army be detailed as Provost Marshal of that district. I do not regard the conduct of the Board legally guilty, but morally they have perpetrated a most glaring and inexcusable fraud on the government they were sworn to serve. They quieted their consciences by casuistry, and regulated their actions by the counsel of unscrupulous legal advisers." In his letter to the War Department, dated April 3, 1865 (page 44), Mr. Oonhliiig uses the following lano-uaofe : "I advise and recommend that the order suspending Captain Peter B. Crandall^ and the other members of the Enrolling Board, be revoked, and that said Board be reinstated." And see, also, his letter to Mr. Dana, of March 13 (page 48). This proves that Mr. Qoiikliiig desired the restoration of Captain Crandall, and is further evidence in support of my charge concerning Mr. Qonkling's zeal in preventing prosecutions at Utica. Mr. CoiihUiufs failure to secure the restoration of Captain Crandall is fully shown by the testimony of Major Beadle, who succeeded him as Provost Marshal, and continued as such until the office was closed. (See page 63.) 82 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. It therefore appears from the evidence that Mr. Coiikling did desire the restoration of Captain Crmi- dall ; that he failed to get him restored; and that an officer (Major Beadle) selected by me " continued in charge of the business until the office was closed," just as stated in my letter. This is clear. My statement, the truth of which the Committee were directed to inquire into, is proven to be true, and here the point might rest, but the purpose is to review what the Com- mittee say, and to show the error and injustice of their report. In disposing of this second specification, the Com- mittee commence by saying : " In relation to Captain Grandall, no concealment was possible, for the reason that a full report had been made by Major Luddington hefore Mr. Conhling is shown to have had anything to say or do in reference to him.^^ Let US see if this is correct. Luddington s report was made on the 31st of March. On the 13th of March Captain Grandall had written a defense of his conduct, which he delivered to Mr. ConMing^ who had it printed and circulated. See ConMing''s testimony, page 150. The letter itself is printed on page 256. (Also, see his letter, page 49.) On the 29th day of March, Mr. ConJding had an inter- view with Major Liiddington at Utica, while the in- spection was being made, in which, he testifies, he told Luddington " that I thought the fullest investigation would prove that Crandall and his associates were honest." On the same day he wrote to me protesting against the suspension of Crandall (page 49). On the 13th of March, more than two weeks previous to Luddington's inspection, Mr. Conlding forwarded his CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 83 semi-confidential, but indignant, remonstrance to Mr. Dana^ denouncing me for suspending Crandall — vouch- ing for the latter's integrity, and. saying : '* I will be personally responsible for him (^CrandalT). The charges you refer to are infamously false."(See page 48.) With all this testimony before the Committee, and published in their Report, they say: " In relation to Captain Crandall, no concealment was possible, for the reason that a full report had been made by Major Luddingtoii before Mr. Conkli:n^g is shown to have HAD ANYTHING TO SAY OR DO IN REFERENCE TO HIM." The Committee further say : " Surely Mr. Conlc- Img could not be in fault for not prosecuting Crandall, when, as stated in Ltiddington'' s report, he h^d incun-ed no legal guilt." The logic of this reasoning is, that it made no difference to what extent an investigation would ex- pose the guilt of Crandall, he was protected by Lud- dingtoii s report that he was not legally guilty though he was so morally. Mr. ConMing was directed to " investigate all cases of frauds " in this and every other district in the western division. If, in the course of that investiga- tion (if he had made one), he had discovered frauds and misdemeanors, for which Crandall should have been tried and convicted, the Committee would lead us to suppose that,because such facts as came to the knowl- edge of Luddington did not, in his opinion, constitute '' legal guilt',' such opinion was a perfect defense for Crandall, and should defeat any prosecution that might be instituted. If the Committee do not mean this, why do they say : " Surely Mr. ConMing could not 84 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY be in fault for Dot prosecuting him, when, as stated in Major Ludding toil's I'eport, he had incurred no legal guilt " ? * This remarkable corollary is immediately followed by another no more logical, to wit : " Consequently, it is not shown by any evidence in relation to Captain Crandall that Mr. Oonhluig was zealous in preventing prosecutions at Utica, or desired concealment of any frauds there." (Page 7.) But the Committee were directed by the House to make this investigation. What action does the Report show them to have taken in regard to allega- tions against Captain Crandall, and the action of Mr. ConMing in preventing their prosecution ? On page 152 it appears that the Committee re- quired me to state what I could prove on this point. Whereupon a full and distinct statement of proof was offered. See Appendix E. And thereupon (page 154) the Committee ruled as follows : " The Committee will hear evidence of any frauds or misdemeanors of Provost Marshal Crandall, of which the War Department did not have notice, providing Mr. Oonkling is shown to have had knowledge thereof. The committee will hold that the War Department did have such notice of all alleged frauds and misdemeanors as are set forth in the papers from the files of the War Department, which have been given in evidence in this case. " This evidence is admitted on the ground that, if after Mr. Conh- * In referring to the reports made to me concerning Captain Crandall, and in reviewing the Report of the Committee, I disclaim making any charge of dishonesty or dishonorable conduct against Captain Crandall. Probably his trouble arose partly if not wholly from representing inter- ests that were more or less conflicting; as Provost Marshal he represented the interest of the United States, and as Clerk of the Board of Super- visors he represented another interest. COXKLING AND BLAINE-FRY COXTROVERSY. 85 ling had received his instructions from the War Department, such offenses are shown to have come to his knowledge, and were never communicated to the War Department, nor prosecuted by him, it may have some tendency to show omission of duty on the part of Mr. Conh- ling, provided the Committee should find Mr. Conhling had any author- ity to prosecute Captain Orandnll, the last being a matter upon which the Committee does not now decide. The Committee, upon the same principle, will not go into evidence touching the alleged frauds or mis- demeanors of Crandall, when the said papers from the War Department show that that department had notice, during or before the time of Mr. (Jonhling's service, of such alleged frauds or misdemeanors. This, upon the ground that Mr. Conkling could not have been bound to re- port facts already known to the War Department, and that he could not prosecute military offenses, for the trial of which the War Depart- ment had omitted to order any competent tribunal ; but the exclusion of evidence against Mr. ConMing's conduct will exclude evidence in his favor as to the same conduct." Thus the Committee ruled out the testimony offei'ecl, and in the face of this, they say (page 8): "iVo evidence was offered 'before the Committee showing or tending to shoic that Mr. Crandall hadheen guilty of any fraud or dishonest practice which ever came to the knoirledge of Mr. ConHing.'' That is, they say, having excluded the proof which would establish, or tend to establish, frauds, we are of opinion, not only that no frauds have been proved, but that no proof of frauds was offered. The next statement of the Report (page 7) is in reference to the appointment of Captain Crandall as Provost Marshal of the Utica district. The Commit- tee say, "Mr. (hnA-Iinr/ vehised to have anything to do with the selection or designation of any individual for that position." On page 47, the Committee insert a letter written by Mr. ConlJiixj to the President, dated January 11, 1865, which is as follows : " Utica, New Torh, January 11, 1865. Sir: — \fter much consultation among our leading citizens in ref. 86 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. erence to a suitable person to be appointed Provost Marshal of this (the twenty-first) district, in case it is or has been determined to appoint a successor to Captain Richardson, the prevailing opinion points to Peter B. Crandall for the place. He is a thoroughly honest man, and { con- cur in recommending his appointment. I have the honor to be, your obed't servant. The President. (Signed) ROSCOE CONKLING." Mr. Crandall was appointed on the 14th of the same month, and immediately entered upon the dis- charire of his duties. In the letter of Captain (kandall^ which Mr. Coiiklmg^ in his letter to me, dated March 29, 1865, thus refers to : "I have the honor to hand you, here- with, letters from Captain (Jraitdall and Commissioner Monroe, addressed to me, wliicli I have caused to be 'printed, etc." the following statement is made (page 256) : " On the 28d day of January, 1865, 1 received a commission, bearing date January 14, appointing me Provost Marshal of the Twenty-Fii'st District of the State of New York. Tliis appointment I owe to your hindness, and to the favorahle opinion entertained of me hy yourself, etc^ Thus, having before them the letter of Mr. Conic- ling, the Member of Congress of the District, to the President, recommending Mr. Crandall, dated January 11, and the evidence of Captain Crandall that he was appointed on the 14th of the same month, with the further statement that he was indebted to Mr. ConMing for such appointment, the Committee are of opinion that Mr. ConMing refused to have " anything to do with the selection or designation of any individ- ual for that position." The next statement is as follows : "The Committee are of the opinion that the evidence does not CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 87 show that Mr. Conkling was guilty of any impropriety in recommend- ing the restoration of Captain Crandall after Major Luddington's report, but on the contrary, it does appear that his action was limited to a simple expression of opinion, which opinion was concurred in very gen- erally by the citizens of that district, and supported by the report of the detective selected by General Fry to investigate the acts of Captain Crandall. It has not been shown to the Committee that General Fry or any other person believed that Captain Crandall should have been pros- ecuted. Mr. Dana testifies to the statement of General Fry that he knew nothing which Captain Crandall had done or omitted which he should not have done or omitted." Major Luddington reported as follows : " I respectfully recommend that every member of the Board of Enrolment for Twenty-First District of New York, be dismissed the ser- vice, and that the money in possession of Captain Crandall be seized. ***** Morally they have perpetrated a most glaring and inexcusable fraud on the government they were sworn to serve. They quieted their consciences by casuistry, and regulated their actions by the counsel of unscrupulous legal advisers." Mr, ConliiiKj, on the day that he first saw this report, wrote to the War Department as follows : * * * * " I advise ami recommend that the order suspending Captain Peter B. Crandall and the other members of the Enrolment Board be revoked, and that said Board be reinstated." The Committee say this was only the " simple ex- pression of an opinion." Let us see. Mr. CouMing had been appointed, on the 3d day of April, " to investi- gate all cases of fraud in the Provost Marshal's Bu- reau, in the western division of New York." On the same day he entered upon his duties, and the very paper which the Committee say is a " simple expres- sion of opinion," is an official report to the War De- partment of his investigation of the Utica district. Here is what he says : " Having been authorized and requested by the Secretary of War to examine certain transactions in, the Bureau of the Provost Marshal 88 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. General relatliv) to the western division of the State of New York I have the honor J"^ etc., and then goes on with his report, and closes with the recommendation quoted. Let it be noted here, by way of parenthesis, that Mr. Conhling, on this occasion, when all the facts and circumstances attending his appointment were fresh in his memory, was not of the opinion that his appointment was simply to prosecute Major Haddoc\ for he did then understand that it embraced the Utica office, or, in other words, that the written appointment meant Just what it said. But the Committee say that this "simple opin- ion " of Mr. ConhUng " was concurred in very gener- ally hy the citizens of that district^ There is no foun- dation for this conclusion, for it does not appear from the testimony that the general population, or even a majority of the citizens of the district, were called to the witness stand, and the Report (page 56) shows that the Committee expressly excluded proof as to the reputation of CrandaJl and his office. See their Re- port (page 66) as follows : " The Chairman : All that portion of the offer of evidence, to be es- tablished by general reputation, is rejected as inadmissible." How, then, could the Committee, sitting as a court, have learned the fact that Mi*. ConMing\'^ opin- ion ^^tvas concurred in very generally hy the citizens of that district " f Without reference, however, to the means by which the Committee obtained evidence which they themselves ruled was improper and inadmissible, there COXKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 80 is one important point necessary in determining the value of that opinion, and that is, whether the parties who expressed it, or "concurred in the simple opinion " of Mr. ConMing, possessed any hnowledge of the facts upon ivliich the charges against Crandall were predi- cated. On this point there is no light. The information to which attention has been directed, namely, that Mr. ConMing s opinion of Cap- tain Crandall " was concurred in very generally by the citizens of the district," is found, not in evidence, but in Mr. Conlding's argument, (See page 304.) It is there stated Inj Mr. ConMing., in stronger terms than those employed by the Committee, and in justice to him it is asked why it is that, if the Com- mittee adopted y, as to what, if anything, he (Fry) would have done differently from what Captain Crandall did, if he had been there acting in Crandall s place? ' '^ Ayiswer. ' The charge against Captain Crandall ■v^&s ihdki he had enlisted men for less bounty than that which was regularly paid, and that was regarded as an irregularity on the part of Captain Crandall. I remember Mr. Conkling's asking General Fry questions about it. One of these questions was, what he would have done had he been in Cap- tain CrandaV'ft place, if the men had come to him proposing to enlist, taking a less amount of bounty? and General Fry said he did not know. And I think Mr. Conkllng asked him what he would have advised Cap- tain Crandall to do. He said again lie did not know.'' " By referring to page 152 it will be seen that I enumerated the charges against Crandall which I proposed to prove. The charges were of a serious nature, and constituted several separate and distinct offenses. A subject relating to one of these charges was brought to my attention in the presence of Mr. Dana., CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 91 as he says, or rather a hypothetical case was stated to me for my opinion, which I refused to give, and stated that I did not know what I should do, or ad- vise Crandall to do, in such a case. The offenses with which Captain Crandall was charged were not referred to, unless it be claimed that the conversation had reference to the charo;e of muster- ing men without bounty. No other charge was al- luded to or discussed. On this point Mr. Dana testi- fied only that I said I did not know what I would have done, or what I would have advised Captain Crandall to do in a certain case. And yet the Committee say (page 8) that "Mr. Dana testifies to the statement of General Fry, that he hnew nothing ivhich Captain Cran- dall had done or omitted which he should not have done or omittedy That Mr. Dana never intended to authorize this perversion of his words and meaning, is apparent from what he tells us on his cross-examination. On page 115 he says that I had called his atten- tion to the condition of affairs in the Twenty-First Dis- trict ; that he had conversations with me about the Utica district, etc., and sent detectives to Utica ; that I told him that the desertions at Utica exceeded those else- where, etc. This being true, would it not be remarka- ble that I (who had requested the Secretary of War to dismiss Crandall from the service, as recommended by Major Laddington, to which request the Secretary had acceded), should take back all I had charged against Crandall, and affirm that he had done or omitted nothing but ^vhat he should have done or omitted ? On the other hand, does not Mr. Dana's testimony on 92 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. this point substantiate the truth of that part of the letter wherein I say that I declined to discuss this matter with Mr. ConMing ? I did, as Mr. Dana testi- fies, reply, and repeat it, to Mr. ConhlUig's questions as to what I would have done, etc., that I did not hnow ; and this in pursuance of the ground 1 had taken not to discuss the subject verbally with Mr. ConMiixj. The Committee next proceed to state : '•General Fry, in his letter of Kcv. 6. published in the Glolie, says that Captain Crandall was suspended fi-om duty for refusing to turn over the $20,000 bonds to a disbursing officer, an act for which he deserved no censui'e, in the oj^inion of the Committee, for the reasons herein stated. The letter of General Fri/ to Mr. Blaine states that Captain Crandall was discharged on the re.^'ommendat ion of Major Luddington, who reported that, though not legally guilty, he had mor- ally perpetrated a most glaring and inexcusable fraud on the govern- ment he was sworn to serve. The Committee have not found in the evidence before them any evidence of such moral fraud on the part of Captain Crandall, and certainly no facts have been shown to be within the knowledge of Mr. Conhling, in relation to Captain Crandall, which would have rendered it improper for Mr. ConMing to have recommended his restoration to office." My letter of November 6, referred to by the Committee, is not in evidence. On this account alone, the example of the Committee is departed from, and the subject of its contents is not discussed. It will be only remarked that, when I state that I suspended Captain Crandall, on account of the facts disclosed by Luddingtons report, and which report informed me that Captain Crandall had refused to turn over the money and bonds in question, the difference between the two statements made by me of the same fact is so finely drawn that it cannot be seen with the naked eye. Here is the proposition : First. General Fry states that he suspended Captain Crandall for refusing to turn over $20,000. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 93 Second. General Fry states that he suspended Captain Crandall upon the report of Major Ludding- ton, in which report he is informed that Crandall had refused to turn over the $20,000. The Committee next give it as their opinion that they had not found in the evidence " such moral fraud on the part of Captain Crandall^'' and certainly not within the knowledge of Mr. ConMing^ as made it im- proper for Ml". Conlding to recommend his restoration to office. It has already been stated that the Committee refused to admit proof of frauds on the part of Cap- tain Crandall or his office, and hence of coui'se such proofs were not in evidence before them. Allusion has ah-eady been made to that portion of the report (page 7) in which the Committee express their opinion that, because Luddington had failed to find what he considered legal guilt, therefore his opin- ion would be a complete defense of Captain Crandall in the event that a trial had been ordered. The lan- guage of the Committee (page 7) is, '^ surely Mr. Conh- ling could not be in fault foi' not prosecuting him, when, as stated in Major Luddington's rej)ort, he had incurred no legal guilt." It will not escape the observation of the reader, that the estimation in which the Committee held the opinion of Major Luddington depended entirely on the question as to whether or not it agreed with that ex- pressed by Mr. Conlding in his argument, for when Major Luddington states that he failed to discern legal guilt, the Committee say that is an end of the matter; but when Major Luddington says that, in his 94 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. opinion, " Orandall ought to be dismissed the service," — " that the money in his possession should be imme- diately seized," — that "morally he has perpetrated a most glaring and inexcusable fraud," etc., the Com- mittee immediately take issue with the report, and Justify Mr. ConMing, who had seriously asked the War Department to reinstate Captain Orandall^m the face of this report ; and the Committee give it as their oj^inion that they found nothing in the evidence that rendered "Mr. ConMinod>/ had proposed to make dis- closures on the subject. Therefore, it is not true, as reported by the Committee, that Richardson. \vas re- leased because he ^^ had made disclosures to the gov- <3rnment," for the simple reason that the governmeni had no information on the subject until after the re- lease. Mr. ConMing was not appointed to investigate frauds, or tiy HaddocJc, until the 3d of April follow- ing that transaction, and does not even claim to have had authority })rior to that time to receive disclosures or represent the War Department in any respect what- ever. The next statement is, that Richardson Avas a witness in the prosecution of HaddocJc. 98 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. This, as an independent proposition, not connected with the subject under discussion, is certainly true ; but this admitted truth is so used by the Committee as to produce error, for it will not be denied that the statement of the Committee that ^^ Ii/chardso7i was a witness in the prosecution of Haddock^'' was intended, in some way, to exculpate Mr. Conhling for securing the release of Richardson, that beinoj the point then under the consideration of the Committee. And as the proof shows that Haddock's trial commenced in the latter part of May, it is obv^ious that RicliardsoiiS testimony had no connection with events that occurred in the March preceding. The Committee then add : " The acts of Mr. Conlllng in relation to the witness were fully known to, and approved by, the Secretary of War " If this statement means the acts of Mr. Conk- ling, by which Ilichardsoii was released from ar- rest, then it is wholly without foundation, and un- less it is intended to mean tliat, it is without meaning. That it is calculated to convey that which shall be presently demonstrated to be erroneous is evident from the subject-matter to which it relates, and its connection with the charge which it attempts to ex- plain away. The charge is, that Mr. Conklhuj secured the re- lease of Aaron Richardson. In justification of Mr. Conkling's conduct, the Committee state two proposi- tions as facts : 1st, That Richardson had mile important dis- closures to the government ; and 2nd, that the acts of Mr. Conkling in relation to Richardson were known to, and approved by, the Secretary of War. There- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 99 fore, no blame is to be attached to Mr. Conhlmg for releasing Richardson. The present question, then, is simply this : " Were the acts of Mr. Conhling in i-eleasing liichardsoii from arrest, known to, and appi'oved by, the Secretary of War?" It has been stated that Richardson's arrest and release occurred in March. On the second day of April following^ Mr. ConMing had an interview with Mr. Stanton (see testimony of Mr. Stanton, page 122), in which interview Mr. ConMing brought to the at- tention of the Secretary the fact that Richardson was willing to give information to the government, if the government would guarantee that such information would not be used against himself; whereupon the Secretary informed Mr. ConMing that he " would not give any guarantee of that character." Here is the testimony (page 127) : ^'■QHextion ' Will you state whether Mr. Conklmg brought to your knowledge, when here on the occasion spoken of, the fact that there was a person who held no office, but had been engaged in recruiting, and who was willing to furnish evidence to the government, if it would not be used against himself V ' "■Answer. 'I remember that Mr. Cow W///^^; mentioned there was a person who could give evidence material to the government, provided he was himself secured atjainst prosecution. I refused to give any guarantee of that character, but told Mr. ConkHng that if this person was cognizant of any of the matters of which he had the investigation, it was competent for him to u?-e that person as a witness ; and if he was satisfied that he testified fairly and truly, the practice of the Depart- ment never was to prosecute such persons.' From this, it appears that the Secretary of War was not informed that Richardson had made impor- tant disclosures, but that, on certain conditions, he would be willing to give evidence material to the gov. 100 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. ernment; and tliis is all the information he had on the subject. The statement, therefore, that " the acts of Mr. ConMlng relating to the release of Richardson were fully known to, and approved by, the Secretary of Wai'," is not correct. The next point discussed by the Committee relates to the employment of counsel to defend a suit brought by Aaron Richardson against Captain Crandall, to recover $20,000 in bonds belonging to the United States, which Orandall had been ordered in vain to turn over to the government. To understand the histor}^ of this transaction, we will go back to the 11th day of March, 1865, and hear what Captain Crandall had to say on the subject of these bonds. In his letter to the Provost Marshal General, of that date, which his attorney. Judge Hunt, says was written by his advice and suggestion (see page 92), he says : ' ' I have in my hands, left irith me hy recruits, in the manner stated, money to the amount of $11,395, and county honds to the amount of $20,000. The testimony shows that Captain Crandall was ordered by his superior officer. Major Haddoch, to turn these bonds over to Special Officer Hoard, and that he disobeyed the order (page 94). That he was next ordered to turn them over to Captain MeredWi, a United Slates disbursing officer, and that he disobeyed (page 9-4). That he was next ordered to tui'n them over to Major Beadle, who relieved him as Provost Marshal, and who was entitled to receive from him money and property which he held as Provost Marshal, and that he disobeyed that order (pages 84 and 202). CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTEOVERSY. 101 That he was next ordered by the Provost Mar- shal General to turn over the same, and again failed (pages 95, 96 and 202). After having disobeyed four different orders, to turn the bonds over to the United States, it seems a suit for their recovery was instituted by Aaron Rich- ardson, which suit was successfully defended by Cran- dall, on the ground that the honds belonged to the United States, although he had refused to surrender them to the United States, and still retained possession of them after he ceased to be an officer of the govern- ment. The Committee say (page 8) : "They (the bonds) either belonged to Richardson, who deposited them, or to the government, for whose security they were deposited." OrandalVs Attorney, Judge Hunt, testifies (page 98) that Captain " Crandall never claimed any personal interest in those bonds ; " that " there was no motive on the part of Crandall but to hold them that the gov- ernment might have the benefit of them, and to compel the proper conduct of Richardson during the Haddoch trial." Again : ' ' Question. ' What became of the bonds eventually ? ' ' ^Ansioer. ' The suit was tried before Judge Bacon and was decided in favor of Captain Crandall, and against the claim of Bichardson. The suit is now, as I understand, appealed to the General Term.' " (Page 98.) Let it not be forgotten that the Committee (page 8) have decided, as a question of law, that these bonds " either belonged to Richardson or to the govern- ment." Judge Hunt, however, informs us (page 99) that ♦' within a few days before the suit was tried, a resolution was passed by the Board of Supervisors of the county of Oneida, in effect request- 102 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. ing Mr. Crandall to ti'ansfer to the county for their benefit, to indem- nify them as far as possible on the subject of recruiting moneys, these bonds of Richardson and any claim he might have in or to the bonds, agi-eeing with him to indemnify him against all loss or damage in con- sequence of so doing, upon any claim that would be made against him, and offering to pay his costs or expenses. A bond was given him which I prepared, and an assignment made transfei-ring all his interest in the claims for the benefit of the county of Oneida — Mr. Crandall made no personal claim of ownership of the bonds at any time." It will be remembered that these bonds were issued by the Supervisors of Oneida county ; that, at the time, Captain Orandall was Cle7'h of the Board of Supervisors, as well as Provost Marshal (see page 65), and that he was one of the principal witnesses in the prosecution of Major Haddock^ of which case Mr. Conhling was Judge Advocate. That, on the 11th of April, he (^Crandall) repre- sented to me (page 92) that he ' ' had in his hands, left with him by recruits, in the manner stated, money to the amount of .$11,395, and county bonds to the amount of $30,000." That, on four different occasions, he was ordered to turn these funds over to the government, all of which orders he failed to obey, on account, as he says, of Richardson s claim. Having obtained possession of these bonds in his official capacity as Provost Marshal, he retained pos- session of them in defiance of repeated orders to turn them over, and having defeated the government in its efforts to obtain them, he defeated the claim of Mich- ardson. No longer in the service, he finds himself a citizen with $20,000 in bonds, which, as he states in his letter, he has " in his hands, left with him by recruits," and which the Committee say (page 8), '' belong un- CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSF. 103 questionably either to Richardson or the government^'' both of which parties he has managed to defeat ; and having thus defeated all 2^ai*ties who, the Committee say, had any right to these bonds, Captain Crandall proceeded to turn them over to the Board of Super- visors, of which he had been, and it is believed was still, the clerk. Yet we are told by the Committee (page 9) that they have " not been able to discover anything improper in the conduct of Captain Crandall in relation to these bonds." For further discussion of this subject see Appendix F. The Committee next proceed to discuss the para- graph of my letter charging Mr. Colliding with neglect of duty in not filing charges against me, if he had dis- covered guilt or official misconduct on my part ; and this statement of mine is declared in the Committee's finding to be without foundation in truth. The Com- mittee say : " Mr. Conhling had nothing to do with filing charges against General Fry^'' and they support this opinion by adding : ' ' Mr. Stanton said, ' Tn the prosecution of Major Iladdoch to final judgment, Mr. ConHing performed all the duty I expected him to per- form,' " The Committee's quotation was part of Mr. Stan- tons testimony in chief, and is general in its terms and application. The record of his cross-examination (page 128) brings his testimony directly to the point in issue, and shows the following question to, and answer from him : " Question. 'If, in the course of that investigation, among per- sons supposed to have been involved in these frauds, it had come to the notice of Mr. Conkling that the Provost Marshal General himself was implicated in these frauds, would it then have been proper for 104 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. him to have notified the head of the War Department of the facts that would implicate the chief of that Bureau ? ' ' ^Answer. ' If facts, affecting the honesty and integrity of the Provost Marshal General, or his proper administration of the office, had come to the knowledge of Mr. ConHing, I think it loould hwe Iteen his duty to report them to the Secretary of War for his action.' " Here the witness, in answer to a question bearing directly on the point in issue, in unmistakable lan- guage, states, as I stated in my letter, that if Mr. Coiik- ling learned facts affecting my honesty or integrity, it was his duty to have reported them to the War De- partment for action ; and this fact appears on the record, and was pointedly set out by my counsel in his argument. Yet the Committee ignore it, and make an extract from the testimony in chief of this witness, and then quote him as authority for their statement that Mr. ConMing had nothing to do with filing charges against General Fry. In relation to the powers and duties imposed upon Mr. ConMing by the appointment of April 3, "to in- vestigate all cases of fraud in the Provost Marshal's Department of the Western Division of New York, and all misdemeanors connected with recruiting," Mr. Stanton said in his testimony, " the authority upon its face speaks for itself." Further comment seems un- necessary, but in exhibiting the unsoundness of the Committee's judgment upon this point, it is proper to make admission that Mr. ConMing'' s letter of appoint- ment was not intended by the Secretary of War to empower Mi\ ConMing to investigate my conduct, nor was it so understood by Mr. ConMing. The point I made is, that if, while per forming the plain duty which he assumed under the appointment, Mr. ConMing came CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 105 into possession of facts which justified his attack upon me in the House, then he was bound by the situation in which he found himself to file charges against me in the War Department long before his speech was made. That the condition of public affairs called for that action is shown by the Committee, where they say (page 3) : ' ' On the 2d of April Mr. ConlTing came to Washington and had an interview with the Secretary of War, who then ui-ged him to take charge of the investigation referred to, stating, at tlie same time, that he considered a diligent ami vigorous investigation as ahsolutehj neces- sary to the safety of the country; that we were at that time engaged in the midst of a draft; that General Grant had commenced his move- ments; and that everything depended on keeping the army up ; and the means of keeping the arnay up was the diligent and vigorous recruiting which was then going on." Notwithstanding all this, it would have been " evi- dently improper," in the oinnioii of the Conunittee, for Mr. ConMing to have reported or " filed any charges" against me, if he had discovered that I was at the bot- tom of the frauds which he was appointed to investi- gate, and the suppression of which the Secretary of War regarded as "absolutely necessary to the safety of the country." ' ' All Mr. Conhling could do in respect to other persons than Major IladdocTc woidd te to prefer charges or proofs against others besides Major Haddocl, and then it would require the order of the Department detail- ing this or some other court of which he might or might not be a mem- ber as Judge Advocate, for the purpose of bringing those cases to trial. ' ' (Pages.) The Committee here admit that it was Mr. Conk- ling^ s duty to J) refer charges or proofs against persons other than Major Haddock. Yet they (page 10) say that " he (^ConMing') had nothing whatever to do with filing charges against General Fry.'''' 106 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. But aside from all of this, if Mr. ConMing had acted in no official capacity whatever, was he not, as stated in my letter, guilty of grave public wrong, as a good citizen, in not filing charges against a high gov- ernment officer, if he came into possession of facts im- pugning or impeaching the integrity of that officer, in a matter in which the welfare of the nation was thought to be involved ? For a report of a Committee, which ought to have been impartial, there is at least sufficient indignation expressed in their opinion of the statement in my letter touching a report that Mr. ConMing had received addi- tional fees from the people of his district for his ser- vices in the Haddock case. It is not, however, proposed to discuss the temper of this part of the Report, but to deal with its findings as contrasted with its own record of the case. Here the Committee again group together differ- ent paragraphs of my letter, which have no possible relation to each other, and proceed to comment upon them, as if they had been connected and intended to convey the meaning which the Committee profess was designed by the writer. The Committee then proceed to say that they can find " not even the existence of the report as to the $5,000 ; " that the accusation of the existence of the report " is not only utterly false in fact, but false in each particular," etc. At this point it is asked. Upon wdiat proof do the Committee base this statement ? The record of the testimony does not justify it, as the only witnesses who testified on this point were Mr. ConMing himself and his wit- ness, Mr. Roberts, and their testimony was only that coNkling and blaine-fry controversy. 107 THEY had never heai'd the rumor. It will not do to say that I did not bring affirmativ^e proof to show its existence. If it was a subject of sufficient importance to arouse the indignation of the Committee, and con- stitute a prominent feature of the Report, it must be presumed that it was of sufficient interest to them to make some investisration as to the truth of its exist- ence, for it must not be forgotten that the Committee were directed to investigate ; and they were not ex- pected to fold their arms and wait for testimony to oifer itself ; especially as at the outset of the investi- gation the Committee failed to inform me, in answer to my inquiry, on what points they desired evidence to be presented. The Committee next allege that the letter con- taining the charge was " written out and sent to Congress to be read in the presence of the nation," etc. This is simply a gratuity, which has already been noticed. Whoever had read the letter, or heard it read, knew well that it was not sent " to Congress" but to a member, and that to him primarily, and to the House which permitted its reading, are we in- debted for the fact of its beino; read in the House. The Committee next proceed to eulogize the con- duct of Mr. Colliding for the part he took in the trial of Major Haddock. Listen : " He accepted the service with reluctance, and upon the mo.jt pressing and repeated solicitations of the Secretary of War. He took it at the sacrifice of other professional business of equal value, or of, per- haps, greater value to him than he realized for this. He took it at a 108 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. time when it was almost vital to the interest of the military service in New York that it should be rendered. ' ' Mr. Colliding was appointed Judge Advocate in the Haddock case by the Secretary of War, by Special Orders No. 227, dated Adjutant General's Office, May 18, 1865, a copy of which is in evidence. Richmond was evacuated on the 2d day of April, 1865. Mr. Dana and Mr. ConMing went to the capital of the so-called Confederacy, then in our possession, and after return- ing Mr. Conhling received the authority in question. Lee surrendered April 9, 1865, and the war was over. Orders went out on the 13th day of April, 1865, to stop drafting and recruiting. During the summer fol- lowing, Mr. ConMing convicted Major Haddock, and yet we are gravely told by the Committee that the services were undertaken at a time almost vital to the interests of the military service in New York. The Committee next proceed to discuss the ques- tion of the right of Mr. Oonkling to receive compensa- tion as a member of Congress and Judge Advocate for the same period. It is certain that Mr. ConMing was a member of Congress and was paid as such from March 4, 1865, to March 4, 1867, and that between those dates he acted as Judge Advocate of the Haddock court-martial, and for that received from the government the sum of $3,000. I did not assert that it was unlawful for Mr. ConMing to receive both payments, but the Committee, after a long argument, decide that the double payment was lawful. Upon that decision I shall only remark that, as Judge Advocate, Mr. ConMing eiihev performed the duties of an office, or he, being at the time a member CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 109 of Congress, was employed and paid by the govern- ment as a lawyer. It is, I believe, conceded that the incumbent of one office is not entitled to pay for i)er- forming the duties of another office ; and, though lightly pushed aside by the Committee, the Act of 1808, as interpreted by Attorney-General Wirt, forbids the gov- ernment from employing a member of Congress as a lawyer. That the reader may judge for himself the letter and spirit of the Act of 1808, and the Attorney- General's official construction of it, I give them in full. Art of April 2Ut 1808, Section 4=. '•If any officer of the United States, on behalf of the United States, shall, directly or indirectly, make or enter into any contract, bargain or agreement, in writing or otherwise, other than such as herein ex- cepted, with any member of Congress, such officer, so offending on conviction thereof, shall be deemed and taken to be guilty of a high misdemeanor, and be fined in a sum of three thousand dollars." Contracts with Members of Congress. Although the employment of members of Con- gress as assistant counsel to the District Attorneys of the United States was not within the view of Congress at the passage of the Act of 21st of Api'il, 1808, it for- bids all contracts between officers of the government and members of Congress. The policy of the law is to prevent the exercise of executive inHuence over the members of Congress by means of contracts ; and whether the contract be for the services of a lawyer, a physician, a mail-carrier, or a purveyor, it is e(|ually witJiin the mischief to he 23revented. "ATTOENEY GENERAL'S OFFICE, '•July 18, 1836. ' ' Sir : The question which you submit for my opinion is, whether your employment of members of Congress, as assistant counsel to the 110 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. District Attorneys of the United States, be within the prohibitions of the Act of ^Ist April, 1808, ' concerning public coiitracts ' ? "I am entirely satisfied that this sort of engagements was not within the view of Congress when the act was passed ; but that the species of contracts which led to its passage were of a different char- acter, as stated in the report of a select committee of the 29th March, 1833, upon the subject of the employment of a Senator of the United States in the examination of certain land offices in Ohio, &c. The practice, too, in several instances stated in that report,, seems to have limited the construction of the act to the specific species of con- ti'acts which were known to have led to its enactment. But yet, the language of the law is so broad and so explicit, not only in its positive enactments, but in its exceptions ; and its policy, too, is so broad and general, that I cannot discover any satisfactory distinction by which the contracts in question can be withdrawn from its operation. " Tlie 1st section forbids all contracts between officers of the gov- ernment and members of Congress. It is true that the language of this section seems, for the most part, to be applicable only to the kind of contracts which produced the law; and had the question rested on this section only, there would have been good ground for confining the operation of the act to thos-e kinds of contracts to which it owes its origin. But tlie 2d reflects a larger construction on tiie 1st, by excepting from its action a species of contract as far removed from the natural sense of the 1st section as the kind of engagements now in question — to wit, the purchase of bills of exchange from members of Congress. The exception proves that Congress intended, by the 1st section, to use language broad enough to cover the excepted cases; and that hence it was necessary to introduce the positive exception. Now if. as is thus implied by the Legislature itself, the 1st section is broad enough to comprehend the sale of bills of exchange, I see not ichy it is not Irroad enough to comprehend the sale ofprofessional services, or any other species of worJc and lahor in any other art, mystery, or science, as well as that of law. And again : if the prohibitions do not extend to engagements for professional services with gentlemen of the law, do they extend to engagements with gentlemen of the medical faculty ? If not, a mem- ber of Congress might be stationed as a surgeon at a military post, on an annual stipend, without any violation of the law. "But let us pursue the inquiry one step further. The 2d section of the act having expressly excepted from the operation of the law two cases only — to wit. contracts with corporations, and the purchase of bills of exchange — the 4th section uses the following pointed and com- prehensive terms : ' that if any officer of the United States, in behalf of the United States, shall, directly or indirectly, make, or enter into CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTHOVERSY. Ill any contract, bargain, or agreement, in writing or otherwise, othei- than such as are herein excepted, with any member of Congress, such officer so offending,' &c., &c. Now, 1 think it cannot be denied that an en- gagement with a gentleman of the bar, tchereby, for a valuable considera- tion, he is to render his professional services in a given case, is a contract, a bargain, an agreement, in the legal sense of these terms (and in none other are they to be regarded) ; and it is a bargain, contract, or agreement, other than the two which had been previously excepted by the act. It is, therefore, a contract forbidden expressly by the fourth section of the act. ' ' Should it be objected that this is sticking in the letter of the law, to the disregard of its policy, I cannot accede to the objection. "The policy of the law is to prevent the exercise of executive influence over the members of Congress by the means of contracts ; and whether the contract be for the service of a lawyer, a physician, or a mail carrier, an army purveyor, or a turnpike-road maker, it seems to me to be equally within the policy and mischief of the law. The only difference is in the permanency of the engagement; but a succession of single engagements is quite as mischievous as a contract in solido ; and if the distinction is to be allowed, the law might easily be evaded. ' ' Finally, even if the construction of the law were dvibious, yet, as executive officers, it would become us to remember that it is a reme- dial law, enacted as a bar to executive influence ; that, in the construc- tion of all such laws, the rule is to give them a large construction for the advancement of the remedy and the suppression of the mischief; and that it is much safer to err on the side of forbearance, than on that of possible encroachment. (Signed) " WM. WIRT. " To the Postmaster General.'''' Hobokeii, t Before entering upon a, discussion of that part of the Keport of the Committee relative to the Hoboken question, it will not be improper to recall a few col- lateral facts w^hich the history of the case discloses. The Committee were directed to investigate two distinct subjects : First. Mr. Conhling's charges against me; and, Second. '^ To examine into the statements made f A concise account of the Hoboken affair has been given, Chap. III. 112 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. by General Fry in his communication to Hon. Mr. Blaine r It appears from the journal of the Committee (page 35) that at their first meeting^they ordered that my charges against Mr. (S<9/iHw^^ should be first ex- amined ; and it also appears from their Report (page 31) that the Committee did not enter upon the investi- gation of Mr. Ooiiklin Conkling had my integrity been assailed. My accounts have all been passed upon by the accounting officers and found to be correct. The records of the War Department show an honorable service for more than forty years, including my administration of the Provost Marshal General's Office. During the whole period of my official service, I have had the approval of my military superiors. My only accuser was Mr. Conkling, who felt aggrieved — I having caused to be dismissed from office certain 124 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 125 officials of his district who were, I believe, his friends this justice to my friend from New York \^Mr. CottHing], a justice he is entitled to, etc." One would suppose after reading the Chairman's commentary on my letter, delivered ex cathedra as the judgment of the Chairman of the Committee — the chief judge of the tribunal that had tried the issue between Mr. Conkling and me — that the letter had * A stronger case is that of Preston S. Brooks. While a member of the House, in 185G, he went to the Senate Chamber where Senator Sum- ner sat quietly at his desk, and for words spoken in debate, struck him ou the head with a cane, felling him to the floor, and there beat him nearly to death. Brooks was not punished by either House or Senate. A resolution for his expulsion was offered in the House, but failed to pass. Brooks resigned and was re elected. 128 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. done irreparable mischief to Mr. Conkling, and struck a fatal blow at the "dignity of the character of the representatives of the American people." But after a careful perusal of the letter it will be discovered that it is chiefly devoted to a refutation of the accusations made by Mr. Conkling on the floor of the House, where I had no right or opportunity to be heard. An examination of the letter will show that the only cJiarges preferred against Mr. Conkling are : First, "That as hereafter shown, he, Mr, Conk- ling, was as zealous in preventing prosecutions at Utica as he was in making them at Elmira ; and the main ground of the difiiculty between Mr. Conkling and myself has been that I wanted exposure at both places, while he wanted concealment at one." Second, " Whether his [Mr. Conkling's] action in exercising the functions of Judge Advocate and receiv- ing pay therefor from the United States to the amount of $3000, while receiving his compensation as a mem- ber of Congress, was a violation of the letter or spirit, or both, of Article T., Section 2, of the Constitution, I leave others to decide." In reference to these charges, it is enough I think to recall the facts that Mr. Conkling zealously prose- cuted the Elmira frauds, but made no effort to prose- cute the Utica frauds. On the otlier hand, he used his influence and power at the War Department in behalf of the ac- cused parties at Utica. Mr. Conkling was appointed a Special Judge Advocate by the Secretary of War on the 3d day of April, 1865, and directed "to investi- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 129 gate all cases of fraud in the Provost Marshal's De- partment of the Western Division of New York, and all misdemeanors connected with reci'uiting" The -first Provost Marshal of the Disti-ict, Rich- ardson, had been dismissed, and the second Provost: Marshal and members of the Board of Enrollment of the Utica District in the Western Division of New York, had been suspended from office for malfeasance on the recommendation of Major Luddington, Assistant Inspector General, U. S. A., who had been sent to Utica by the War Department to investigate the man- agement of that office. After a thoi-ough examination, Major Luddington made a report concluding with the following : " I re- spectfully recommend that every member of the Board of Enrollment for the twenty-first [Utica] District of New York be dismissed the service, and that the money in possession of Captain Crandallbe seized." On the 4th of February previous, Col. N. G. Ax- tell, 192d New York Volunteers, stationed at Albany, protested to the Adjutant General of the Army, in which he said : " The recruits mustered at Utica are, without doubt, bounty jumpers, and should not have been mustered by an intelligent mustering officer." Lieutenant Lott^ commanding subrendezvous at Auburn, reported March 4th, " nine-tenths of tlie re- cruits sent here from that [Utica] office are the most worthless set of scoundrels you ever put your eyes on;" and on the 20th of February the present, 1891, Sec- retary of the Navy, Hon. B. F. Tracy then command- ing the rendezvous at Elmira, made a report to the office of the Adjutant General in which he said : " The 130 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. [Utica] district is filling its quota with bounty jump- ers. Fifteen deserted from Auburn in one squad. This is giving to the District an undue advantage over the other Districts. There is a rush of bounty jump- ers from Utica." All this evidence, together with the fact that the Provost Marshal of the Utica District had in his pos- session over twenty-six thousand dollars, belonging to recruits, and bounty brokers, which he had refused to turn over, although repeatedly ordered by his superior officer so to do, was placed in Mr. Conkling's hands, on the day [April 3], he was appointed Special Judge Advocate to " investigate all cases of fraud in the Provost Marshal's Department of the Western Division of New York, and all misdemeanors connected with recruiting." Instead of making any investigation of the Utica office he at once, before leaving the War Department, on the day of his appointment to investigate all cases of fraud in the Western Division of New York, in which Division Utica was included, wi'ote a letter to the Secretary of War, in which he said, ' ' Having been authorized and requested by the Secretary of War, to examine certain transactions in the Bureau of the Provost Marshal General relating to the Western Division of the State of New York, I advise and recommend that the order suspending Captain Peter B. Crandall and the members of the Enrolling Board be revoked and that said Board be reinstated," thus showing that he knew his appointment covered the alleged Utica frauds, and taking jurisdiction of them, but moving at once to prevent prosecutions in- stead of to make them. Mr. Conklinfi: made no investio-ation of the Utica CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 131 fmuds, there were no arrests, no prosecution, and no trial there, while he devoted his services to the value of S3000, to the prosecution of Major Haddock who was tried by court-martial at Elmira ; and the fact that he had been appointed to prosecute all cases of fraud in the Division which included both Elmira and Utica, and did zealously prosecute in Elmira and did not prosecute in Utica, but on the contrary, appealed to the Seci-etary of War in behalf of the accused pai'ties, was the reason why I stated that Mr, Conk- ling " as hereafter shown, was as zealous in preventing prosecutions at Utica as he was in making them at Elmira." As already stated the letter was chiefly devoted to a refutation of the charges made by Mi'. Conkling on the floor of the House. It also pointed out the fact that fi'auds had been perpetrated in the Utica District, and that Mr. Conkling had been appointed a Special Judge Advocate to investigate them. That the Utica frauds havinc: been brouo;ht to Mr. Conk- ling's attention, and he having failed to investigate or prosecute them, I stated in the letter that, " as here- after shown, ]Mi'. Conkling was as zealous in prevent- ing prosecutions at Utica as he was in making them at Elmira," and accompanied the letter with authenticated copies of the AVar Department records, upon which the letter was founded, showing the existence of the Utica frauds, and showing also that instead of investi- gating or prosecuting them, Mr, Conkling on the day he was appointed Special Judge Advocate, and before leaving the War Department advised the Secretary of Wai', in writing, to revoke the order suspending from 132 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. office the delinquent officers at Utica, and recom- mended tlieir reinstatement. It was upon the official records that I based my assertion as to Mr. Conkling's failure to investigate the Utica frauds, for I preface that assertion with the words, " as hereafter shown "—referring to the official records accompanying the letter. The Committee omitted the official documents from their report, and so far as apjiears gave them no consideration, refused to receive the testi- mony which I offered in support of my assertion con- cerning Mr. Conkling's action and inaction in the jDrosecution of frauds, and then pronounced my asser- tion to be entirely without foundation. But even with the assertion thus shorn of the documents upon which I based it and deprived of the testimony I offered in its support, the Committee's view of it is hardly sound. Unbiased minds will, 1 think, admit that my assertion was merely my opinion based upon the documents I gave with it. If the documents sus- tain the assertion then my opinion is sound, if not, then I am mistaken. Whether I am mistaken or not I certainly had the moral riglit to present the docu- mentary facts in my office, under the provocation of Mr. Conkling's accusations. Upon the second charge, there is no dispute as to the facts. It is conceded by the Committee that Mr. Conkling was appointed a Special Judge Advocate to investigate frauds in the Western Division of New York, and that he performed the services of Judge Advocate while he was under pay as a Member of Con- gress from the Utica District; that he received from CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 133 the United States for bis services as Special Judge Advocate $3000. and his salary as a Congressman be- sides; and I believing that was a violation of law, called attention to the facts, but without expressing any opin- ion, adding that the question was one " for others to de- cide," and that is all there is of the second charge. Yet, by far the greater portion of the Committee's report is an ai-gument attempting to show that Mr. Conklino' had not violated the law. The best that could be said of the transaction was the statement by the Chairman of the Committee in reply to Mr. Randoll, of Pennsylvania, viz.: Mr. Randall : ' ' Preliminary to the ' question ' I desire to say a word or two. I have had no time to read this report, nor do I wish in any manner to enter into the personal matters to which it relates, but I want to know of the Chairman whether this Committee in their report justify the taking of employment by a Member of Congress who is in receipt of his salary as a IMember of Congress, and taking payment for such employ- ment in addition to bis emoluments as a Member of Congress. I want to know whether the Committee irrespective of the parties involved in this case, justify that or not." Mv. Shellaharger : ' ' The Committee find in their report that a Member of Congress who is qualified as such shall not hold any office or receive any com- pensation therefor. They find that a Member of Congress, after the 4th of March, the day on which his pay commences under the law, cannot receive the salary of any other office during that time. A Mem- ber of Congress may be employed by the Government as counsel, and such employment may be competently performed, and that is what occurred in this case. ' ' Mi\ Randall : '• Then I understand the gentleman to say that he believed a ]\Iem- ber of Congress, subsequent to the 4th of March, and prior to the ex- piration of his term, can be employed by the Government in another capacity, and receive compensation therefor. ' ' 134 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. Mr. SJiellaharger : " That is what the Committee find on the subject, if the employ- ment is not an ofl3.ce." Mr. RamlaU : ' ' Can he be employed against the Government ?' ' Mr. Shellaharger : "In favor of the Government he may be employed; — against the 6ro»er??»iie« Hie cannot be employed, because there is a statute of 1864 which expressl}^ provides in this identical case of Mr. CorilUng, that is to say — it provides no Member of Congress shall be permitted to be em- ployed by any person in any proceeding before a Court-martial, furnishing a complete Ipgislative determination that he may be employed in that identical case on the other side, because the pro- vision of 1864 in saying that a Member of Congress may not be em- ployed by any other person, would imply that he may be employed in that identical case by the Government itself. ' ' Mr. Handall : ' ' That is a fine distinction, — a distinction without a difference. If it be not a violation of the letter, it is to my mind a violation of its spirit."* * Mr. Randall mijcht have added that while the act of 1864 forbids the employment of members of Congress against the Government, the act of 1808 as interpreted by Attorney General Wii-t distinctly forbids their employment for a valuable consideration bv the Government, and thus the Committee's inference from the act of 1864 is contradicted by the ex- press terms and meaning of the act of 1808 as interpreted by the Attor- ney General [see his opinion in full Chapter V.]. He says : ''The fourth section uses the following pointed and comprehensive terms : 'That if any officer of the United States, in behalf of the United States shall, directly or indirectly, make, or enter into, any contract, bargain or agreement, in writing or otherwise, other than such as are herein ex- cepted, with any Member of Congress, such officer so offending,' &c , &c. Now, I think it cannot be denied that an engagement with a gentleman of the bar, whereby, for a valuable consideration, he is to render his profes- sional services in a given case, is a contract, a bargain, an agreement, in the legal sense of these terms (and in none other are they to be regarded); and it is a bargain, contract, or agreement, other than the two which had been previously excepted by the Act. It is therefore, a contract for- bidden expressly by the fourth section of the Act. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 135 Mr. Randall, however, puts it stroiigei" than the language of my letter, which reads : " Whether his action [Conkling] in exercising the function of Judge Advocate and receiving pay therefor from the United States to the amount of $3000 while receiving his compensation as a member of Congress was a viola- tion of the letter or spirit, or both, of Article L, Section 2, of the Constitution, Heave others to decider This opinion, expressed by Mr. HandaJl, does not seem to have shocked the sensibilities of the House. It did not occur to any of the Members that their ''privileges" or the privileges of the House had been assailed, or its dignity insulted by Mr. Randall. Yet when a less obnoxious presentation of the matter was written down in a letter by me and read at the clerk's desk, by the consent of the House, the Chairman of the Committee appointed to investigate the subject Judicially, having, as he claimed, made an exhaustive examination and report, declared on the floor of the House that "A more careful and more malicious and wanton violation of the privileges of the House, and of its members, has not been brought to the notice of any member of the Committee," and at the close of the debate added : " Should it be objected that this is sticking in the letter oi the law to the disregard of its jjolicy. I cannot accede to the objection. " The policy of the law is to prevent the exercise of executive in- fluence over the Members of Congress by the means of contracts ; and whether the contract be for the service of a lawjer. a physician, or a mail carrier, an army purveyor, or a turnpike road maker, it seems to me to be equally within the policy and mischief of the law. The only difference is in the permanency of the engagement ; but a succession of single engagements is quite as mischievous as a contract in solido ; and if the distinction is to be allowed, the law might be easily evaded." 136 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. " I am unwilling to sit down without saying the House should do this justice to my friend from New York " [Mr. Conkling], but made no reference to his " friend's " assault on my character, which called out the letter under consideration. The resolution directed the Committee " to in- vestigate the statement and charges made by Honora- ble Koscoe Conkling in his place last week against Provost Marshal General Fry, and his bureau : whether any frauds had been perpetrated in his office in con- nection \vitli the recriiitino; service." This was the main object of the resolution. The Provost Marshal General of the United States was a high officer of the government, clothed with extraor- dinary authority by law, and entrusted with the col- lection and disbursement of millions of public money. On his integrity and efficiency depended the success or failure of the recruitment of the armies that w^ere fighting for the maintenance of the government. Being charged by a Member of Congress on the floor of the House with malfeasance in office, and inefficiency, it was not strange that a committee was ordered by the House to investigate, and discover whether these gi'ave charges against a trusted officer of the government, of high rank, whose reputation was hitherto without stain or blemish, who had been honored for gallant conduct in the field, w^as guilty or innocent. For it was important that the House and the country should know whether this public servant had betrayed his trust and brought discredit upon the service and the country, or had been falsely accused. CONKLING AND BLAINE FRY CONTROVERSY. 137 The House directed the Committee " Also to examine into the statements made by Gen. Fry in his communication to Hon. Mr. Blaine, read in the House." It will be seen, therefore, that the main work of the Committee was the investigation of the Conkling charges against the Provost Marshal General, but the Committee confined its labor to the vindication of Mr. Conkling, and paid no attention to the charges which it was especially directed to investigate. The excuse was, in the words of the Committee, ' ' In consideration that the character of a Member of the House of Representatives has been publicly assailed with serious charges in a letter emanating from the head of an important bureau of the govern- ment, addressed to another Member of the House of Representatives, and by him caused to be read to the House, and thus made a part of the published and permanent record of its proceedings, we deem that it was the privilege of the Member thus gravely charged, and due also to the House itself, that your Conamittee should froceed witliout delay to the investigation of at least that branch of the case which relates to the charges preferx-ed by Provost Marshal General Fry against the Hon. Roscoe Conkling ' ' It seems not to have concerned the Committee that the character of an officei* of the army of high rank, " the head of an important bureau of the gov- ernment," had been " publicly assailed with serious charges " in the House, " and thus made a part of the published and permanent record of its proceedings." Furthermore, the Member charged was not ac- cused in his official character as a Member of Congress, but in his official character of an inferior, quasi-military officer — a SpecialJudge Advocate for a temporary and local service. The Committee apparently believed that it was of more importance to the country, at least to the House, that a Committee of the House should 138 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. be able to report the efficient service of the Special Judge Advocate for the Western Division of New York, than to show whether the Provost Marshal General of the United States was corrupt and ineffi- cient, or honest and capable in the management of the great interests which had been placed in his hands. NATURE OF A CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEE. A committee of investigation appointed by the Speaker, pursuant to a resolution of the House, is a tribunal possessing the function of a court of justice. It is clothed with great authority : with the power to send for persons and papers ; to subpoena witnesses ; to administer oaths ; to hold secret sessions ; and is armed with the power of the Government to enforce its mandates, while the public treasury is at its dis- posal for such expenditures as in its discretion are deemed necessary. In an ordinary case, where the controversy is not of a political nature, there seems to be no o'ood reason whv a committee of the House of Representatives, free from bias or prejudice, with none of its members the self-proclaimed "friend" of either party to the controversy to be investigated, should not do justice to all concerned. But where a political advantage is to be achieved as, for instance, in a contested election case, the aver- age Congressman's impartiality cannot wholly resist party fealty, and the contestant is apt to be admitted or rejected according to his political opinions. This fact exhibits the value of a report of a House Com- mittee where the members of the committee are inter- ested personally or politically in the result. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVKRSY. 139 111 the Fifty-first Congress where a committee was appointed to investigate charges preferred against Green B. Raiim, and after several days had been con- sumed, it was discovered that one of the membei'S of the committee was personally and pecuniarily inter- ested in the matter being investigated. AVhen exposure came, the member retired from the committee. Almost contemporaneous with the Conkling-Fry Committee of Investigation was another Committee of the House, which investigated the case of Patrick Wood, who had assaulted a Member of Congress in the city of Norfolk, Va., over two hundred miles dis- tant from the Capitol. The majority of the House and of the Committee, being in political accord with the " Member," the Committee judicially held that the assault of the Member in Norfolk was a breach of the privileges of the House sitting in Washington, and Wood was ari-ested by the Sergeant-at-arms, brought to Washington, and imprisoned for a period of ninety days in the common jail of the District of Columbia. In 1876 an Investigating Committee of the House judicially decided that Hallet Kilbourn, a citizen of AVashington, was guilty of a breach of privilege and in contempt of the Committee and the House, for re- fusing to give to the Committee information in ref- erence to his private business, and, by order of the House, he was imprisoned in the jail of the District of Columbia for a period of forty-five days, when he was discharged on habeas corpus, and in a suit against the Sergeant-at-arms of the House, he recovered judgment for $100,000 for false imprisonment, the Supreme Court of the United States deciding that the Commit- 140 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. tee and the House liad no authority to make the arrest, or inflict any penalty whatever. The investigation in the Kilbourn case was politi- cal, the object being apparently to bring discredit on certain officials of the Administration. A lai'ge majority of the House of Representatives which oi'dered the Conkling ¥rj investigation was in political accord with Mr. Conkling, and was distin- guished for party zeal and its desire to perpetuate political supremacy. The leader of the Republican side was Thaddeus Stevens, of Pennsylvania. Mr. Conklino;, a distino-uished Member • of the House, and Mr. Shellabarger, his political and personal friend, and a few others were eminent in leadership. When therefore a Committee was appointed to inves- tigate this affair it was not remarkable that Mr. Conk- ling's " friend," Mr. Shellabargei", was appointed its Chairman, although he was not the mover of the reso- lution raising the Committee, and his selection for the place was not according to the usages of the House. With a Committee composed as this was with Mr. Conkling's personal friend its Chairman, it is ap- parent that he was well on the way towards a com- plete vindication. PRIVILEGES. With the foregoing history of the case in mind, let us consider the facts and principles of " privileges " which apply to it. The constitution says that "for any speech or de- bate in either House " a member " shall not be ques- tioned in any other place." Mr. Blaine, a member of the House of Representatives, " questioned " Mr. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 141 Conkling on the floor of the House for a speech made there, and in doing so used information furnished by me ; but neither I nor any one else, so far as I know, ever " questioned " Mr. Conkling " in any other place." The letter was read at the Clerk's desk. The consent of the House furnished the oppoi'tunity for Mr. Blaine by using my letter to refute the calumnies with which Mr. Conkling had assailed me befoi'e the body in which these calumnies were uttered, and just when or how the breach of privilege by me occurred is not explained by the Committee, for there is no law that prohibits a citizen who has been accused in the House from being defended in the House, the consent of the House being first obtained. The prohibition is against questioning the member in another place, for words spoken in debate. An assumed intention on my part to have the letter read in the House was brought into the case. There is no evidence that I had such intention and certainly I had no power to enforce the reading. But aside from these facts^ is any human tribunal compe- tent to Judge and punish intentions alone ? At the instance of Mr, Blaine, my letter to him was read at the Clerk's desk, and no member disapproved, indeed Mr. Conkling urged that the reading be completed. Yet I was condemned months afterwards for breach of privilege, and for intending to get the hearing which the House freely granted without application or solici- tation from me. If the privilege of the House was assailed, it was assailed by its own consent. If the House had not consented to the reading of the letter, then the respon- 142 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. sibility would have rested on the member introducing it, and under no aspect of the transaction can it fairly be charged to my account. It is stated by the Committee in its i-eport that . . . " indignities offered to the character or pro- ceeding of the National Legislature by libellous as- saults have been resented and punished both in Eng- land and in the United States as a breach of privi- lege ; and such assaults upon the official character of members have been held punishable as indignities committed ao-ainst the House itself." It will be observed that the Committee over- looked the fact that the so-called charges of my letter against Mr. Conkling are not assaults upon his offi- cial character as a Member of Congress ; but upon his official character as a Special Judge Advocate, a mat- ter with which the House was in no way concerned. It is true, as stated in the report of the Commit- tee (page 34) above quoted, that "breaches of privilege have been resented and punished both in England and in the United States." In England the instances are numerous, but in this country they are rare. The fol- lowing are some of the English precedents that sus- tain the statement of the Committee. In 1810 Sir Francis Burdett having published a letter reflecting on the House of Commons, his house was broken into by the Sergeant-at-arms, and he was committed to the Tower. [14 East, 293.] FloycUs case. FJoyde, for a slight offense, if it were one, against King James I., in speaking of his daughter and son-in-law, was adjudged by the House of Commons to be in contempt, his fortune was con- CONKLIXG AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 143 fiscated, his body tortured, his name degraded, and himself imprisoned foT life. [2 How. State Tr. 1143.] Richard Reynolds and Robert Wriglit^ for arrest- ing a servant of the Earl of Oxford, were ordered to be set on horseback near Westminster Hall, neither of them with cloak or hat, but to have on their breasts and backs papers expressing their fault., viz.: " For contemptuous breach of the privileges of Parlia- ment, aggravated by contemptuous speeches," and so to pass to the Fleet, where they are to be left pris- oners. In Murray^ 8 case. The Commons confined him a close prisoner for a breach of privilege of the House. He was denied pen and paper, or any communication with his friends. His health was suffering, but a physician was not allowed to visit him except upon the order of the House. [I. Wilson, 299.] George Gardner^ "For scandalizing the justice of the House, and for unjustly slandering the Lord Keeper," was ordered to stand in the pillory at AVest- minster, with a paper on his head declaring his offense, and to ride backward with the same paper to the Cross in Cheapside, and so to stand in the pillory there, and so to ride back to the Fleet prison. In tlie case of lay vs. Topliam. The House of Commons ordered the defendant, their Sergeant-at- arms, to arrest and imprison the plaintiff for having dared to exercise the common right of all Englishmen, of presenting a petition to the King, on the state of public affairs, when no Parliament existed. For this imprisonment an action was brought. 144 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. The plea of justification under the warrant of the Speaker was overruled by the Court, for the law, says Lord Denman, was clear, and Lord EUenboi'ough points this out in a most forcible manner. [14 East, 109.] Yet for this righteous judgment Chief Justice Pemberton and one of his brethren were summoned before the House, where they vindicated their conduct by unanswerable reasoning, but were, notwithstanding, committed to the prison of Newgate for the remainder of the session. In BelVs case, where the messenger of the House of Lords had received an umbrella from the owner at the door of the House, and had not returned it, and the owner sued for the value, and recovered, the House summoned both the owner and the Court officer befoi-e them. The plaintiff was discharged on his submis- sion, and the officei's, upon their declaring their igno- rance of the nature of the summons. [59 Lord's Jour- nal 199.] It was adjudged a contempt of the House of Lords to kill Lord Gal way's rabbits ; also to fish in Admiral Grifi&n's pool. [See Lord Denraan's Opinion in Stockdale vs. Hansard, 9 Adolphus and Ellis 109.] Having recited these English precedents relied upon by the Committee, I next refer to the Amei-ican cases : Hallett KilhouTii, a citizen of the District of Columbia, was arrested by order of the House, by its Sergeant-at-arms, and imprisoned for forty-five da3^s in the District jail for a breach of the privileges of the CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 145 House of Representatives, in refusing to disclose his private business to an investigating Committee. In an action for false imprisonment lie recovered a verdict of one hundred thousand dollars' damages against the Sergeant-at-arms, under a decision of the Supreme Court of the United States. [13 Otto, 168.] Patriclc Woods, of Norfolk, Ya., as heretofore stated, was adjudged guilty of a breach of the privi- leges of the House of Representatives for engaging in a personal encounter with a Member of Congress in the streets of Norfolk, more than two hundred miles distant from the Capitol. He was arrested by the Sergeant-at-arms, and by order of the House imprisoned in the jail of the Dis- trict of Columbia for a period of three months. But there is no instance on record, in this country, where the reading of a letter by a member or the Clerk of the House has been adjudged by the House a breach of privilege by the writer of the letter, or by the member introducing it. The Committee states in its report (page 34) : '•Your Coinmittee ddera it proper most earnestly to protest against the practice which has obtained to some extent of causing letters from persons not members of the House to be read as part of a personal explanation, in which the motives of meoibers are criticised, their conduct censured, and they are called to anewer for words spoken in debate.'' It would seem from this that Mr. Blaine, in caus- ing my letter to be read in the House, was only con- forming to the practice which had to some extent obtained in the House of Representatives, but in no 146 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. instance adjudged or regarded as a breach of privi- lege. It is stated in the Report of the Committee, that my letter was a libel on the official and personal char- acter of Mr. Conkling, and that "such libellous assaults have been resented and punished both in Eng- land and in the United States as breaches of privilege; and such assaults upon the official character of members have been punishable as indignities comniitted against the House itself." And it is added: ' ' Your Committee have refrained from making any recommenda- tion as to the proceedings by the House against General Fry for his breach of privilege. The reasons for this are, in part, to be found in the circumstances connected with the introduction of General Fry's letter int o the House by one of its members, ' ' The Committee refrain from stating the nature or degree of the punishment which ought to be inflicted in this instance, but measuring the enormity of the offense by its vehement denunciation by the Commit- tee, it would surely be an instructive lesson had they done so. It may be that the Committee rested on the Eng- lish precedents to which the Chairman so eloquently I'eferred, when parliamentary privileges bore undis- puted sway ; for we are told by the Committee that " such assaults," that is such assaults as my letter, " have been punished in England as breaches of priv- ilege," and the history of England and the law reports tell us how they were punished. The statement of the Committee that '' such as- saults have been resented and punished in the United States as breaches of privilege " is not sustained by history. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 147 POWERS DELEGATED TO THE HOUSE. The powers expressly granted to tlie House of Representatives are : 1st. To judge of the election, returns, and qualifications of its- members. 2d. To compel the attendance of absent members in such manner and under such penalties as it may prescribe. 3d. To determine the rules of its proceedings. 4th. To punish its members for disorderly behavior. 5th. With the concurrence of two-thirds, to expel a member. 6th. The House shall have the sole power of impeachment. PRIVILEGES OF 3IEMBERS OF THE HOUSE. 1st. They shall in all cases, except treason, felony, and breach of the peace, be privileged from arrest during their at- tendance at the session of the House, and in going to and returning from the same. 2d. For any speech or debate in the House they shall not be questioned in any other place. The enumerated powers delegated to the House of Representatives all refer expressly to its control over its own members, except in the case of impeach- ment. There is no other grant of judicial power. The authority " to determine the rules of its pro- ceedings " relates to " proceedings " legally instituted. The House cannot extend its power beyond its con- stitutional limits by any rule, or rules, which it may " determine." The distinction between the powers granted to the House and the privileges conferred upon its mem- bers is clearly defined. The House of Representatives certainly acquires no additional judicial power from the fact that its in- dividual members are exempt from civil process, or from liability to respond in damages for slander uttered on the floor of the House. Section 8, Art. I., of the 148 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. Constitution, enumerates the powers delegated to Con- gress, and then authorizes Congress, not the House separately, " to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers, vested by this Constitu- tion in the government of the United States, or i7i any department or officer thereof T INCIDENTAL POWERS. The express powers delegated to the House, acd which I have enumerated, are accompanied with an implied grant of whatever is essential to make them effectual, not to enlarge their scope or to change their nature or character. The incidental powers relate to the thing granted, so that the specific object may be accomplished. The power of the House to punish is restricted by express grant to the lyunishment of its members; the power to punish a private citizen is not incidental to the power to punish a member of the House. In the convention a proposition was made and referred to the select committee appointed to draft the Constitution giving authority to punish for con- tempt. The committee made no report on the sub- ject. [Journal of Convention, Aug., pp. 263, 264.] CONSTITUTIONAL SAFEGUARDS. When the Constitution was framed, and for many years previous, it was the custom of the House of Commons in England to punish private persons ad- judged to be in contempt of its authority, witli igno- minious penalties, such as fine, imprisonment, branding CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 149 on the cheek, whipping at the cart's tail, or whatever the caprice or passion of the moment dictated. Is it to be presumed that the framers of the Con- stitution intended to invest like power in the House of Representatives ? and, if so, why confer the power to inflict punishment upon its members and limit it to expulsion from the House, when it was customary for the House of Commons, before and afterwards, not only to expel, but to inflict bodily punishment upon its members adjudged in contempt ? Was it intended that the unrestricted power of punishing private citizens at discretion, for real or supposed contempt of its authority, should be silently vested in the House, when it required an express grant to authorize the punishment of its members for disorderly conduct ? On the other hand, the framers of the Constitu- tion took abundant pains to guard the liberty of the citizen, and protect him in the free enjoyment of life and property. It cannot be presumed that they intended that, without passing a law, a man may be punished for doing what he had no means of knowing was an offense; or that, without indictment, information, or aflidavit, charging an offense, he could be arrested, tried, convicted, and sentenced without the interven- tion of a jury, or any of the safeguards which protect personal rights in civilized communities. It is a monstrous doctrine that a man may be ex- posed to a punishment of w^hich he never could have heard until his sentence was pronounced. In a country where the legislature was supreme, 150 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. where the law-maker could alter or abolish the consti- tution, or change the form of government at will ; where the parliament was omnipotent, and where the exclusive power of either of its branches to punish breaches of privilege by infamous punishment was not denied, the right to exercise the power I'ested upon premises wholly inconsistent with the theory of our government. There is no provision of the Constitution that expressly or incidentally empowers the House to pun- ish persons other than its own members. There is no act of Congress that authorizes it. The power, therefore, must be looked for out- side of the Constitution and acts of Congress, which are declared to be the "supreme law of the land." The House alone has no authority to make a law. It may establish rules for its own government, but it has made no rule prescribing a penalty for contempt or breach of privilege. The House having no powder to make a law, and there being no law of Congress prescribing a penalty for contempt of that body, from what source is the power deriv^ed under which the House creates the offense, and determines the penalty at will ? As the offense is not defined, and no penalty is fixed beforehand, the House assumes to create an offense and prescribe the penalty for its violation. Such an act is ex 2^ost fcicto, for it has no existence until after the offense is committed. It is void as law, for the reason that neither House can make a law in its individual capacity. No law being in existence when the act com- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 151 plained of was committed, the act cauuot be in viola- tion of law. There being no law defining " breach of privi- lege," it follows that a citizen punished for contempt would obviously be '' punished without due process of law." Congress having enacted no law declaring what is or is not a contempt of the authority of the House, or a breach of its privileges, the citizen cannot know what is or is not a contempt of that body. In the Kilbourn case the plaintiff denied the right of the House to inquire into his private busi- ness, or to ins^Ject his private papers, and was impris- oned in the common jail by order of the House. If I refuse to take off my hat to a member of the House on the public street, is it a contempt for which I may be imprisoned ? Happily, the Supreme Court in a recent case said that " every man should be able to know with certainty when he is committing a crime." [United States vs. Reese et. al., 2 Otto, 220.] The right of the citizen to be protected from usurpation of power was not overlooked by the fram- ers of the Constitution. I have already adverted to the fact that the fathers were familiar with the abuses and despotic invasion of private rights by the House of Commons, contemporaneous with, and prior to, the adoption of the Constitution. They had not forgotten the infamous punishments, the imprisonments, the mutilations and maimiugs of loyal and honest Englishmen by the House of Com- mons for alleged contempts and breaches of privilege. They remembered that that House had declared 152 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. '' that whatsoever is enacted and declai'ed for law by the Commons in Parliament assembled hath the force of law, and all the people of this nation are concluded thereby, although the consent and concurrence of the King or House of Peers be not had thereunto." [Bl. Com. 160.] They constructed a government of delegated pow- ers, by which the powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people. Instead of recognizing the right of a legislative body to punish a citizen, they provided such abundant safeguards that " he who walks in honesty, walks without fear." So Jealous of the rights and liberties of the citizen were they that the right of inflicting punishment by the House was restricted to the punishment of its own members for disorderly conduct, and that not to ex- tend beyond expulsion ; and only then by a vote of two-thirds of the whole House. The power to punhh does not belong inherently to any legislative body or tribunal. The i-ight of self-defense and self-pi-eservatiou is a natural right, and is inherent in legislative bodies as well as in individuals. Tlie 'poiver to punish is a delegated power. It is surrendered to the government by the whole people, each individual consenting to be deprived of a part of his natural rights whenever he has committed a wrongful act against the people, his fellow members to this compact. " Political, therefore, or civil liberty, which is that CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 153 of members of society, is no other than natural liberty so far restrained by human laws [and no farther] as is necessary and expedient for the general advantage of the public." [Bl. Com. 125.] The power to punish must be derived from the whole body of the people in which alone it originally resided, and from which it can only be acquired by organic, positive law. The right of self-defense or self-preservation is not to be denied. The House may preserve order and decorum, arrest, remove, or restrain intruders, or dis- turbers of its deliberations. It may protect its rights as an individual protects his. It may resist force by force in self-defense, but when the disturbance is ended and oi'der restored, that is the end of the matter unless some law has heen violated, in which event the courts will intervene and justice will be done. I have already stated that the House has not adopted a rule prescribing the penalty for contempt of its authority or breaches of its privilege ; so that, conceding the power to punish, the House has failed to define or declare what constitutes the offense, or the nature or the extent of the penalty. In a free government like this, Avhere the rights and liberties of the people are protected by law, it is difficult to understand how it can happen that the most sacred rights may be disregarded by the servants of the people, upon the pretext that some- thing which they call privilege has been assailed, when no man can possibly know what that privilege is. So far as it has been revealed, it is a shadowy and undefined spirit of pride known to Congressmen only. 154 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. Yet in tlie face of all this, the Chairman of the Committee, in closing the debate on the adoption of his report in behalf of his '' friend," Mr. Conkling, with zeal and earnestness, speaking of my letter said : ' ' I repeat what has been said in the report, that a more careful and more malicious and wanton violation of the privilege of the House and of its members has not been brought to the notice of any member of the Committee." Cong. Globe, July 19, 1866, page 5945. [Ap- pendix D.] Such was the utterance of the Chairman of the Committee appointed to examine judicially the matter at issue, and acting under an oath of office as Con- gressman which required him to do exact justice to the parties in interest. These are the closing words of the Chief Justice of the tribunal that tried the cause : ' ' I am unwilling to consume the time of the House, but I am un- willing to sit down without saying the House should do this justice to my friend from New York [Mr. Conkling'],'^ that is to say, adopt the Committee's report eulogizing Mr. Conkling for the faithful manner in which he had performed the duties of Special Judge Advocate for the Western Division of New York ; which duties, as we have seen, consisted in prosecuting a solitaiy case at Elmira, and for which the government paid him $3000. The chairman's way of putting it is, that his "friend, Mr. Conkling, was not only innocent, but eminently patriotic, and valuable step by step to his government at a time of imminent peril." [Cong. Globe ib.] Who, or what it was that was in peril he does not disclose, nor does it appear how the peril was CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 155 averted by tlie trial of Major Haddock by Court- martial, for Mr. Conkling's military services were rendered after the war was over and the Confederacy had ceased to exist. CONCLUSION. I look for no reparation, but possibly this review of the wrong done me may hereafter save the House from voting censure in ignorance of the testimony, and with no more knowledge of the subject than may be derived from the report of an investigating com- mittee, presented and advocated by the "friend" and cono^ressional associate of one of the contestants. Indeed, though the House might be pleased to take action on its own account, I am not certain that any damage has been done to me. My professional career has been one of unbroken progress. The government has treated me with unwavering consideration and liberality ; and I am in the enjoyment of ample rewards for my services and merits. General Jackson, while President of the United States, addressed a communication to the Senate repel- ling the condemnation of him by that exalted body for official action of his affecting the United States Bank ; and the Senate voted his communication to be a breach of privilege. I, while chief of a military bui'eau, addressed a communication, not to the House, but to a member of it, not touching any action of the House, but support- ing a member in repelling public condemnation of my official action, by another member; and the House voted my communication to be a breach of privilege. Both cases are without j^recedent. The Senate long ago expunged its censure from the records. 156 APPENDIX A. House of Represeinttatives, Tuesday, April 24, 1866. The House met at twelve o'clock, M. Prayer by Rev. Henry W. Bellows. The Journal of yesterday was read and approved. The House resumed the consideration of the bill (H. R , No. 361) entitled "An act to reorganize and establish the Army of the United States." The twentieth section was then read as follows : Sec. 20. And be it further enaetcd, That the Provost Marshal's Bureau hereafter consist of a provost marshal general, with the rank, pay, and emoluments of a brigadier general ; and one assistant provost marshal general, with the rank, pay, and emoluments of a colonel of cavalry ; and all matters relating to the recruitment of the Army and the arrest of deserters shall be placed under the direction and control of this bureau, under such regulations as the Seci'etary of War may pre- scribe. Mr. ConMing. I move to strike out section twenty of the bill. My objection to this section is that it creates an unnecessary office for an undeserving public servant; it fastens as an incubus upon the country a hateful instrument of war, which deserves no place in a fi'ee government in time of peace. I have never heard any very serious attempt to justify by argument the permanent continuance of an officer whose administration durino- the war has had in it so little to commend and so much to condemn. But I have heard an effort made to prove the propriety of this section by charging it to the Lieutenant General of the Army, and by saying that he had found a neces- sity for continuing in time of peace the Bureau of the Provost Marshal General. In order that the House 157 158 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. may see how true this allegation is, I send to the Clerk's desk and ask to have read copies of letters which have been furnished to me, the first a letter addressed to the Lieutenant General by a Senator of the United States. The Clerk read as follows : United States Senate Chamber, Washington, March 17, 1866. General : The House biU for the organization of the Army contains a provision creating a permanent Provost Marshal's Bureau, with a brig- adier general at its head; also placing the recruiting service in its charge. It has been unofficially reported to me that this was done in conse- quence of a recommendation of yours to that effect. I should be pleased to know if such is the case, as I had labored under the impression, from conversation with officers of the Army, that such a step was not a judicious one, and tended only to increase the number of bureaus and officers of the Army with an increase of expendi- ture without any corresponding efficiency or benefit. If my impressions are erroneous I wovild like to have them cox*- rected. I am very respectfully, your obedient servant, J. W. Nesmith. Lieutenant General U. S. Grant, etc. Mr. ConMliig. I now send the answer of the Lieutenant General. The Clerk read as follows : Washington, D.C., March 19, 1866. Dear Sir : Yours of the 17th instant, stating that it had been intimated that I had recommended the continuance of the Provost Marshal Gen- eral's department and the transfer of the recruiting service to it, is received. Some months since a paper was referred to me showing the great number of desertions from the Army, and asking for suggestions to put a stop to them. To that paper I suggested a number of changes in orders governing the recruiting service, and I recommended that the whole matter be put in charge of the Provost Marshal General, who could devote more attention to it than the Adjutant General, with all CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 159 his other duties, could. I am opposed, however, to multiplying bu- reaus, and I think there is no necessity for a Provost Marshal General. In fact, if we had to organize the Army anew, I would not have as many bureaus as we now have. In my opinion, the country would be just as well and much more economically served if the coast survey- ing duties were added to the Engineer Bureau, and the quartermaster, subsistence, and pay departments were merged into one. I would not recommend a change now, however, but would not make any increase of bureaus. Very truly yours, U. S. Grant, Lieutenant General. Hon. J. W. Nesmith, United States Senator. A true copy. George K. Leet, Assistant Adjutant General. Mr. Conhling. The reasons which no doubt the wi'iter of that letter has for deeming the Provost Mar- shal and his bureau an unnecessary appendage to the peace establishment of the countiy appear at consid- erable length in a comnuinication which I have here, but which I will not, unless it becomes necessary, have read. It is a communication from the acting head of the Adjutant General's Office. We all know that during our histoiy thus far we have always managed without a bureau of this kind to recruit the regular Army, and that no need of it has ever been felt in maintaining the usual military establishment. The Provost Marshal's Bureau was a temporary expedient resorted to in an extreme emergency to bring volun- teers hastily to the field. Its mission is ended, and it should be buried out of sight. The communication in my hand shows that if re-established now for the pur- pose of superintending recruiting for the regular Army — and it can be applied to no other purpose — the expense of the recruiting service will be largely in- creased, that no greater efficiency will be attained, that 160 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. a necessity will be created for duplicating records, for a new supply of apartments, of clerks, of agents ; in short, of the various arrangements connected with, recruiting, and that absolutely no good result can be accomplished by it. I state it thus strongly and briefly, and I will cause the details to be read if the reading shall be called for hereafter. There is one thing — I know" of but one — for this bureau to do before leaving the public presence, and that is to close its accounts, so as to allow the War Department and the country to know precisely what has become of the twenty-five million and odd dollars which, under the act of March 18, 1862, went to its credit. Sixteen million and some odd dollai's have been expended, and nine million and odd dollars re- main as a balance to the credit of the fund ; and when- ever the bureau will close its accounts, or will enable them to be closed, as they never will be until the bureau is wound up, it will perform its sole remaining function. If the administration had been ever so able, the time has come when the whole system of provost mar- shals should be numbered with the grievous memories of a bloody and terrible epoch. But there are yet other grounds of objection. I protest against any promotion or reward for the officer whose interests are involved in this section. He holds already the rank of lieutenant colonel in the staff department. Indeed, by accident, if the pending bill shall pass, he will be elevated to a yet higher grade ; but as he stands now, his pay amounts to $3,500, or CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 161 thereabouts. I think that, for the present, is enough for him. He has suffered nothing and lost nothing in war that I ever heard of, and I protest, in the name of my people and in the name of the people of the western division of New York, against perpetuating a power under which they have suffered, beyond the capacity of any man adequately to state in the time allotted to me. "Central and western New York have a right to feel and do feel deeply on this subject. My constit- uents remember, and other constituencies remember, wrongs done them too great for forgetfulness and almost for belief by the creatures of this bureau and by its head. We in the western division of New York had sent to rule over us as assistant provost marshal gen- eral an officer of the Veteran Reserve corps ; a man who never saw a battle, who never received a scratch or suffered a day's sickness in the military service ; a man honored with the especial personal intimacy and confidence of the Provost Marshal General, and who in a marked and ostentatious degree reflected the will and the favor of his chief. He had been for gome time in the office of the Provost Marshal General here in Washington, he was his crony and confidant, and sustained with him, as events proved, relations of great personal intimacy. This spokesman, so trusted and so fortunate, did not come to us alone. There came at the same time other creatures of the head of the bureau at Washington. The western division swarmed with these chosen favorites, and they illustrated to the full the genius and the morale of their mission. 162 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. By acts of their own, and by acts done by their superior at Washington, they turned the business of recruiting and di'afting into one carnival of corrupt disorder, into a paradise of coxcombs and thieves. False quotas vi^ere put upon us ; exaggerated tele- grams and orders were sent to our boards of super- visors. We were victimized by constant uncertainty and deception. In my own district, under one call, $438,000 was wrongfully wrung from an outraged and groaning people. Officers of this bureau who sought to stem the tide of fraud were removed without warn- ing, and the whole machinery of the Government was subject to miscreants and robbei's. Communities peti- tioned and remonstrated in vain. The most palpable wrongs were refused redress. Men immeasurably the superiors of Greneral Fry represented and protested, but they were spurned with magnificent disdain. Never was "the insolence of office" more offensively portrayed than it was by this man whom it is pro- posed to decorate and enrich. If there was no design at headquarters to do wrong, there was a capacity to muddle, to befog, to misunderstand facts, and to misread and misstate fig- ures and simple results, which is nearly inconceivable. I was employed by the Government to prosecute some of the frauds to which I have referred ; and I tried this assistant provost marshal general, who had been justified in all the outrages he committed, and in all the acts by which millions were stolen from the peo- ple of New York; who was justified by his superior officer down to the time when the sentence was pub- lished, and afterward, I understand. He was accused CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRy CONTROVERSY. 163 and convicted of the basest forms of official atrocity ; the most monstrous acts of bribery, oppression and wrong were charged against him and proved against him. And although he disgorged some two hundred thousand dollars, I see it stated in a newspaper that the other day he purchased in the city of Philadelphia an establishment for which he paid down $71,000. He was utterly poor when he entered this bureau ; and yet, after all he yielded up, and after paying a fine of $10,000, it seems that still he is rich. And this was not an isolated case ; far from it. On the contrary, I say, and I may endeavor on a future occasion to show in detail, that there never has been in human history a greater mockery and a greater burlescpie upon honest administration than the conduct of this bureau, taking the whole country together. It will turn out that of the seven or eight hundred thousand men for whom, not to whom, because they did not get them, enormous bounties were paid, not to exceed three hundred thousand, and I be- lieve not two hundred thousand, ever i-eached the front. [Here the hammer fell.] Mr. Blaine obtained the floor. Mr. Ward. I hope unanimous consent will be given my colleague [Mr. Conldm(j\ to proceed. Mr. Ross. I object. Mr. Blaine. I am in a very weakly condition of health to make the brief explanation due to the Mili- tary Committee. But I wish to state why the com- mittee reported this section of the bill in regard to which the gentleman from New York shows so much feeling. 164 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. I believe that among the earliest acts of the gen- tleman from New York at this session of Congress was the introduction of a resolution, which was adopted by this House, directing the War Department to report upon the expediency of abolishing the office of Provost Marshal General. In the routine of busi- ness the answer of the Secretary of War came to the Military Committee, and among the papers was a let- ter from Lieutenant General Grant. There was an elaborate paper also from General Townsend. They were referred to a sub-committee. The committee, upon a full review of the papers, and especially of the letter of Lieutenant General Grant, reported this section. The gentleman from New York has read a letter from the Lieutenant General, which practically recalls the recommendations of the letter on which the committee acted ; but I desire the Clerk to read the letter of Lieutenant General Grant, which was the authorization, in the judgment of the commit- tee, for inserting the section. The Clerk read as follows : HEADQUARTERS ARMY OF THE UNITED STATES, " Washington, December 14, 1865. " Sir: — In reply to your letter of the 13th instant, in reference to desertions, I would make the following remarks: I do not think the present method of recruiting, as carried out, sufficient to fill up the regular Army to the force required, or keep it full when once filled. ' • The duty is an important oiie. and demands, I think, the exclu- sive attention of an officer of the War Department, aided by a well- organized system extending over the country. I think the officer best fitted for that position, by his experience during the present war, is General Fry, and would recommend that the whole subject of recruit- ing be put in his hands, and all officers on recruiting duty be directed to report to him. He should also have charge of the apprehension of deserters, should be authorized to offer such rewards as will secure CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 165 their apprehension. When caught they should be tried, and the sen- tence rigidly carried into effect; this would soon stop the presfnt enormous amount of desertion. ' ' I would recommend that the duties heretofore performed by pro- vost marshals be hei-eafter performed by officers detailed for recruiting duty. Very res^Dectfully, "U. S. Grant, ' '■Lieutenant General. " Hon. E. M. Stanton, Secretary of War." Mr. Blaine. The House will observe that the Committee on Military Affairs acted precisely in ac- cordance with the recommendations of the Lieutenant General as contained in the letter which has just been I'ead. The first point which the Lieutenant General makes is that the system of recruiting carried on under the direction of the Adjutant General's Office has not proved efficient, in his judgment, in filling the A imy. In the next place, he suggests that some special officer should be detailed to superintend the business of recruiting, and he names General Fry as the proper officer. In the next place, he states that provost mar- shals throughout the country are not needed, and that their places should be filled by recruiting officers. Provisions in accordance with all these recommen- dations are comprehended in the section which the gentleman from New York would have stricken out. Mr. BoutweU. I desire to state that the facts up to the latest date do not sustain the opinion of the Lieutenant General. From vlast October till April 17, the Adjutant General has recruited between nine- teen and twenty thousand men for the regular Army. Mr. Blaine. We acted only on the information before us. And when the gentleman from New York [Mr. Cotikling] quotes the letter of the Lieutenant 166 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. General in condemnation of the report made by the Committee on Military Affairs, I merely wish the privilege of showing that that report was made in ex- press conformity, verhatim et literatim^ with the recom- mendations of that officer's letter, which came officially before the committee, and which was not smuggled in in the manner in which the letter read by the gentle- man from New York comes before us. That is not an official letter ; it is an unofficial note. The letter just read by the Clerk is an official note, communicated to this House by the Secretary of War on a regular call, and referred by the House to the Committee on Mili- tary Affairs. Mr. Speaker, I do not suppose that the House of Representatives care anything more than the Commit- tee on Military Affairs about the great recruiting frauds in New York, or the quarrels of the gentleman from New York with General Fry, in which quarrels it is generally understood the gentleman came out second best at the War Department. I do not think that such questions ought to be obtruded here. Though the gentleman from New York has had some difference with General Fry, yet I take pleasure in saying that, as I believe, there is not in the Ameri- can Army a more honorable and high-toned officer than General Fry. That officer, I doubt not, is ready to meet the gentleman from New York or anybody else in the proper forum. I must say that I do not think it is any very creditable proceeding for the gen- tleman from New York here in this place to traduce General Fry as a military officer when he has no op- portunity to be heard. I do not consider such a pro- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 1 67 ceeding the highest specimen of cliivaliy that could be exhibited. The gentleman from New York has had his issues witli General Fry at the War Department. They have been adjudicated upon by the Secretary of Wai-, and I leave it foi* the gentleman to say whether he came out first best. I do not know the particulars ; the gentleman can inform the House. All I have to say is — and in this 1 believe I speak the sentiment of a majority of the members of this House — that James B. Fry is a most efficient officer, a high-toned gentleman, whose character is without spot or blemish; a gentleman who stands second to no officer in the American Army ; and he is ready to meet the gentle- man from New York and all other accusers anyw^hei'e and everywhere. And, sir, when I hear the gentleman from New York rehearse in this House, as an impeach- ment of General Fry, all the details of the recruiting frauds in New York, which General Fry used his best energies to repress with iron hand, a sense of indigna- tion carries me beyond my personal strength and im- pels me to denounce such a course of proceeding. Mr. Mercur obtained the floor. Mr. Conhling. I ask the gentleman from Pennsyl- vania [Mr. Mercur'] to yield to me. Mr. Mercur. I yield to the gentleman. Mr. ConMing. Mr. Speaker, if General Fry is re- duced to depending for vindication upon the gentle- man from Maine he is to be commiserated certainly. If I have fallen to the necessity of taking lessons from that gentleman in the rules of propriety, or of right or wrong, God help me. 168 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. I say to him further that I mean to take no ad- vantage such as he attributes of the privileges of this place or of the absence of General Fry. On the con- trary, I am ready to avow what I have here declared anywhere. I have stated facts for which I am willing to be held res2:>onsible at all times and places. I say, further, that the statement made by the gentleman from Maine with regai'd to myself person- ally and my quarrels with General Fry, and their re- sults, is false. He says I can — Mr. Blaine. What does the gentleman mean to say was false ? Mr. Conklhuj. I mean to say that the statement made by the gentleman from Maine is false. Mr. Blaine. What statement ? Mr. ConMmg. Does not the gentleman understand what I mean ? Mr. Blaine. I call the gentleman to order. I de- mand he shall state what was false in what I stated. I have the parliamentary right. I demand the gentle- man shall state what is false in what I said. The Speaker 'pro tempore. The gentleman from Maine will state his point of order. Mr. Blaine. I have already. The gentleman has denounced my statement as false. It is my I'ight to have him state in what particular anything I said or what allegation I made was false. The Sp)eaher pro tempore. The Chair overrules the point of order. The gentleman from New Yoi'k will proceed. Mr. Blaine. One single word more. Mr. Conkling. I do not yield. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 169 Mr. Blaine. Do I understand the Speaker to rule, when a member states that another has stated falsely, that is no point of order ? The Speaker pro tempore. The Chair does not understand that to have been the point of order. Mr. Blaine. Then I raise the point of order that the gentleman stated what was unparliamentary when he said that I stated what was false. I have no ob- jection to his going on to state where it is false. The Speaker pro tempore. The Chair understood the gentleman to say it was out of order to pronounce a statement was false without statins: wherein it is false. The Chair overruled that point of order. If the gentleman has another point of order to raise he will please state it. Mr. Blaine. I raise the point of order that it was not parliamentary for the gentleman to use those words. The Speaker pro tempore. The Chair sustains that point of order. Mr. Blame. I have no objection to his stating wherein it is false. The Speaker pro tempore. The Chaii- is of the oj^in- ion it is not parliamentary to pronounce what has been said by any gentleman in debate here is false. It is not a point of oi'der well taken to require him to state whei'ein it is false. Mr. Corilding. Under the rules the words ob- jected to sliould have been taken down at the time, and the point of order comes now too late. One who makes such points of order sliould be more careful how he makes them. It is not my disposition, Mr. Speaker, to engage 1^0 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. in personal controversy uj^on this floor ; but when any member forgets himself so far as to impute unworthy motives and resentments to me, when my motives and resentments are wholly foreign to the matter before the House, he must expect a rebuff; and when he as- serts offensively that I have had personal quarrels with a person whose administration and public acts are under consideration, and that I have been worsted in these quarrels, and that, too, before the Secretary of War and by the Secretary of War, and when that statement has no foundation in fact, I think the Chair and the House will agree with me that something is to be pardoned to the earnestness of the occasion. 1 said what I felt bound to say, speaking not only for my own constituents, but for other constituencies in New York whose Representatives hear me. I could not remain silent when I know that in my own dis- trict and elsewhere men who stood up honestly and attempted to resist " bounty Jumpers " and thieves were stricken down and trodden under foot by Gen- eral Fry. I affirm that the only way to acquit him of venality is to convict hira of the most incredible in- competency. I am responsible for that, sir, everywhere. I have had no such personal quai-rel with General Fry, however, as has been asserted. I never chanced to see him but once, unless I have forgotten it, and when the gentleman rises here and makes a charge of that kind, with the insinuation by which he accom- panies it, his conduct calls for some plainness of speech. And so, using parliamentary language, I reit- erate, that the statement which was made is errone- ous and destitute of that which it should possess in CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 171 order to render it admissible in debate. I believe that is parliainentaiy, even if the other form was not. Now, si]-, I want to say a word about this letter. Ml'. Mevcur. Mr. Speaker Mr. ConMing. I beg pardon. I thought the gentleman yielded the floor to me altogether. I am very much obliged to him, and will relinquish the floor at once if he wishes to occupy it. I thought he intended to yield to me without qualification, so as to have another fifteen minutes afterward. But I will instantly resign it, and thank him for his courtesy. I ask the gentleman whether I shall go on or not. Mr. Blaine. I wish to make a single statement. Mr. Conhling. I do not understand that any one but the gentleman from Pennsylvania can claim the floor. Mr. Blaine. The gentleman from Pennsylvania [Mr. Mercu)'^^ had the floor. Mr. ConMing. I decline to yield it to the gentle- man from Maine [Mr. Blaine \. The Speaker pro tempore. Does the Chair under- stand the gentleman from Pennsylvania [Mr. Merc'ar'\ to yield the floor entirely to the gentleman from New York [Mr. GonUing'l ? Mr. Mercur. I did not so understand it. The Spealcer pro tempore. Then the gentleman from New York has the riglit to resume the floor only by the consent of the gentleman from Pennsylvania. Mr. ConMing. I ask the gentleman from Penn- sylvania [Mr. Mercur'\ whether he wishes now to re- sume the floor. Mr. Mercur. I designed to resume it after the gentleman, but I will allow him to go on. 172 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. Mr. ConhUng. The letter which has been read, at the instance of the gentleman from Maine, from the Lieutenant Genei'al, has no reference whatever to this section of the bill or to a provision like this. It is a letter written on the 14th of December, when the Pro- vost Marshal General's Bureau was, and was for the time to remain, in existence, and it refers chiefly to what had better be done with deserters, and the state- ment of the Lieutenant General amounts to this : that such an officer being in existence it is his appropriate business to take charge of deserters, and he recom- mends that he should do so, and attend to recruiting besides. That is all. There is no recommendation whatever favoring the retention of this bureau per- manently, or of having any such officer in the standing Army. It comes to the Secretary of War appended to an argument made by General Fry himself, an elab- orate aro:ument made to show that he is essential to the Government. And although it is appended for that purpose, I repeat that it has nothing to do with this subject, but relates wholly to what the Provost Mar- shal's Bureau had better be set to do for the time being. The letter which I have presented from the Lieutenant General was written to a member of the Mil- itary Committee of the Senate, written in answer to a question in refei-ence to this identical section proposed there, and in answer to the specific inquiry whether he was or was not in favor of continuing this bureau. And he says in so many words that in his judgment there is not the slightest occasion for it, that bureaus ought not to be multiplied, and that this one ought to be discontinued. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 173 Therefore, Mr. Speaker, upon the authority not only of the Lieutenant General, but of all the generals who constituted the military council, because this section was omitted in the bill which they appr()verl\ Metreh 4, 1865. Sir: I have the honor to lay befoi'e you the following items ia re- gard to the provost marshal's office at Utica. I learned from two ap- parently reputable men from Utica that the business at that office is conducted in the following manner: the supervisors of the county met and resolved to pay a county bounty of $600 ; they met again and re- solved to add $135 to the $600, making $725 local bounty to be paid by the county; they then resolved themselves into a reciuiting committee to furnish the quota of the county ; they get the men at as low a figure as they can and charge the county the full amount of $725. The pro- vost marshal and the examining surgeon seem to be but the creatures of these supervisors. Men rotten with venereal disease, totally unfit for any duty, are passed by the surgeon and sent here for duty. One old man, just discharged for disability, having the piles badly, before he got to his home was grabbed by these Utica harpies, put through by the officials, with, as he alleges, but $190, somebody pocketing the balance, and sent here. He is utterly worthless as a soldier. Nine- tenths of the recruits sent here from that office are the most worthless set of scoundrels you ever put your eyes upon. I am, very respectfully, your obedient servant, James L. Lott, First Lieutenant \^th T. IL ('., (knnrnandinrj Camp. Major John A. Haddock, Acting Assistant Frowst Marslial General, Western Dimsion JVew Yorh. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 201 HEADQUARTERS 192D RKGIMBNT new YORK VOLUNTEERS, AJliany, FdniKtry 4, 18()5. Colonel: I have the honor most respectfully to protest against the reception of recruits for the one hundred and ninety second regiment New York volunteers, who are mustered by the provost marshal at Utica. The men who have been received at the Veteran Reserve corps barracks from that city are, without doubt, "bounty jumpers," and should not have been nuistered by any intelligent mustering officer. Very respectfully, your obedient servant, N. G. AXTELL, Colonel 192 J liegliuent New York Volunteers. Lieutenant Colonel F. Townsend, Hviicrlnterident Recruitln(j Service. WAR DEPARTMENT, provost marshal general's bureau, Wdshiiigtoit, D. C, Nonnilwr Q, l«6r). Sir : The instructions of this bureau required provost marshals to turn over to the nearest disbursing officer all funds which came into their hands. The bureau having been informed that P. B. Crandall, then provost marshal of the Utica district. New York, had iir his pos- session a large amount of money and bonds, and that he had not turned over the same or reported the fact to this ofHce, he was ordered on the 4th of March, 1805, to turn over the money, which he refused to do. On the 10th of the same month the order was repeated, and again disobeyed, he stating as a reason that he had been advised by counsel of high stand ing that he would be held personally responsible for the money. On the following day the order was repeated, and again disobeyed, with the statement that Ward Hunt, Esq., his counsel, advised him that he could not safely comply with the order. On the 30th of March he was again ordered by telegraph from this office to turn over the money at once, and on the 1st day of April fol- lowing he answered by telegraph that he would immediately comply. It subsequently appeared that instead of turning over the whole amount, $33,995.10, which he had previously stated was in his pos- session, lie had only turned over $8,095. On the 6th day of April his attention was called to that fact. To this a reply, dated April 18, was received on the 21st day of April, in which I was informed that the bonds in question ($20,000) had been seized by a writ of replevin at the suit of Richardson, and in which letter Captain Crandall stated as follows: 202 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. ' ' I respectfully request the Government to take charge of the suit and relieve me from responsibility in regard to it. In the event, how- ever, that no charge is taken of it by the Government, I have placed it under the direction of Messrs. Hunt, Waterman & Hunt, who will appear as my attorneys in the case. ' ' On the 9th day of March, 1865, Captain Crandall was suspended from office, and on the 31st of May, 1865, his services as provost mar- shal were discontinued. No further information on the subject of the $20,000 in county bonds was received from Captain Crandall until the letter dated Sep- tember 15, a copy of which is transmitted by Hon. Eoscoe Conkling. I had never approved of Captain Crandall' s course in relation to turning in these moneys, nor of the intercourse between him and Aaron Richardson, the bounty broker, by which he, Crandall, came in possession of $20,000 county bonds, now under discussion. Having, however, taken these bonds. Captain Crandall was ordered to turn them over to a designated disbursing officer of the Government, which he refused to do. This refusal resulted in his suspension from duty, a correspondence, and a renewal of the orders to turn in the money, in answer to which renewed orders the fact appeared that during the cor- respondence and delay occasioned by Captain Crandall's disobedience, the money was taken out of his hands by a writ of replevin at the suit of Aaron Richardson, tlie bounty broker. It will be observed that in his first report of April 13, on the subject. Captain Crandall asks the Government to take charge of the suit and relieve him from the responsibility in regard to it, but says: " In the event, however, that no charge is taken of it by the Government, I have placed it under the direction of Messrs. Hunt, Waterman & Hunt, who will appear as my counsel." When I received this letter, I did not think, and do not now, that the Government was called upon to relieve him from the responsibility in this matter, and as he contemplated and had provided for the con- tingency of the Government not assuming the suit, and had employed counsel, and placed it under their direction, no action from this office was necessary, and I therefore took none. In his letter of September 15, renewing the subject, he says, " Un- less the Department, therefore, gives instructions to the attorneys for the defense, Hunt, Waterman & Hunt. Ucica, New York, and assumes the responsibility of the ?uit, the defense will be abandoned by me, and Mr. Richardson will be allowed to take a judgment for the recovery of his bonds and to obtain the possession of the same." I did not then, and do not now, consider that the threat to abandon the suit, contained in this quotation, called for any action from this office. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 203 Mr. Ciaudall saw fit as a Government officer to receive these bonds from a bounty broker; he refused to obey the orders of this bureau as to the disposition of them, and permitted them to pass out of his hands, and become the subject of a civil suit; he assumed the suit and employed counsel to conduct it, the same counsel, it may be remarked, under whose advice he refusel to obey the orders of this bureau to turn in the funds. He now (assuming that the within letter speaks for him) again asks the Government to assume the suit, that is, pay the lawyers' bills, Mr. Crandall having employed the lawyers and placed the case under their direction. I do not advise this course; on the contrary, I recom- mend that the responsibility which Mr. Crandall assumed in this mat- ter rest with him. If he adopts the course proposed in his letter of September 15, to abandon the suit and let Richardson have the bonds, it will not, I presume, invalidate the right to proceed against him for the amount if the Government has any good claim to it. I do not deem the insinuation made in the letter of Mr. Conkling, that an opportunity is sought to affront or punish the Union people of his district, worthy of denial or comment, I am, sir, very respectfully, your obedient servant, JAMES B. FRY, Provost Marshal Oeneral. Hon. Edwin M, Stanton, Secretary of War. Before the Clerk had concluded the reading of the above documents, Mr. Bincjlumi asked whether the further reading of the documents coukl not be dispensed with. Mr. Coiikling. I do not wonder at the suggestion of the gentleman from Ohio, but the gentleman will see thei'e is a good deal of this which is personal to me, and whatever there is of that sort I want to heai'. I do not want to burden the House. Mr. Smitlh. I suppose the entire matter read there is official, and consists of communications between that Department and the gentleman from New York, with which he is familiar. It can be printed. Mr. Conhling. I will not trespass upon the attention of the House to have it read. It is all new to me, and 204 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. gentlemen will appreciate my desire in having it read. The Spectker. The reading will soon be finished. The paper was then read through. Mr. Conhling. I appreciate the indifference with which the House must listen to an issue such as this, in its design on one side so personal and individual in its character ; and at this hour of the day I shall not presume so far upon the good-nature or the sense of Justice of my fellow-members as to ask them for any great length of time to hear an explanation or a statement the main object of which must seem to be to repel a purely personal attack. I can, however, assure the House with the uttermost sincerity that for everything in this most extraordinary communi- cation savoring of imputation upon me I am consoled, ay, doubly consoled, by the fact that I shall become the humble instrument of initiating an investigation much needed and good for the people of the whole country, wholesome and cleansing to the future. Before I sit down, Mr, Speaker, I shall yield to some gentleman to move, and I know the House will order it, a committee to investigate a subject which has now ceased to be individual and become public, a subject which concerns the rights and interests not only of that great procession of mourners and cripples which war has left in our land, not only of the tax- payers of the country, but also to those in every walk and avenue of life, because all have a deep interest in preserving the purity of the Government in all its de- partments. Of course, Mr. Speaker, I shall have no part in that committee. I shall not move it, as it would not CONKLINU AND BLAINE FRY CONTROVERSY. 205 be proper for me to move it, but a committee will, I trust, be appoiuted to bring fairly to the public knowl- edge some of the matters whereof I shall briefly speak. Now, Sir, asking the indulgence of the House for a space, I wish to take up some of the matters in this communication of General Fry as I was able to note them in the reading, which point directly, and which are intended to point injuriously, to me. Mr. Speaker, I did not file in the War Department long ago information in reference to widespread frauds in recruiting in the State of New York in which ex- tensive combinations of active men were banded to- gether in office and out ; I did not act as counsel for the Government in unearthing and breaking up these combinations and exposing the actors; I did not de- vote upward of four months of patient labor in an at- tempt to arrest the enormous I'obberies and wrongs which j)revailed in the State of New York, nor did I make an assault upon this bureau here, without count- ing the cost and knowing the consequences. I was prepared for all the calumnies and all the responsibility that he must take who strikes at the thieves, marauders, and miscreants who have fattened upon the necessities and needs of their country. I knew the resources and desperation of the men who have made wealth out of the public woe. I under- stood perfectly that I must be prepared for all comers of this description, and it was to this that I referred in the avowal of my readiness to maintain my allega- tions of wrong in the Provost Marshal Bureau at all times and places. I will not say "elsewhere," for fear of unsettling the nerves of some who hear me ; 206 CONKLTNG AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. but avoiding tbe expression "elsewhere," which is so dreadful, I say that I did not forget, nor did I desire to avoid, the responsibility of being asked to make good by proof the accusations I made ; of course I ex- pected, by dispatches to newspapei's instigated by General Fry and his satellites, by every mode, secret and open, of influencing the public Judgment, and diverting attention from the objects of accusation, to be vilified ; and I hoped to be permitted, if not invited, to point out to some authority competent to receive and act upon it the evidence on which I relied. That opportunity will be afforded if a committee shall be raised ; and now I wish to call attention to three or four things contained in the letter of Genei'al Fry, and I will not go further on this occasion. It is stated by this officer, as the House has heard, that upon a certain occasion I telegraphed to the Secretary of War, in the language of the communica- tion, as I caught it, in order " to make a case for my- self ; " that is, to procure my own professional em- ployment. It was said that my dispatch was to the eifect that the provost marshal of my district wanted advice. Let me state that transaction, all of it being- matter of record in the War Department, so that it can be unmistakably verified or challenged. An alleged deserter was arrested by the provost marshal of my district without the process of any court. A writ of habeas corpus was sued out of the supreme court of the State of New York. Acting upon a decision which had been made years before in a western case, and an opinion, or rather a charge, given a grand jury by Mr. Justice Nelson, of the CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSV. 207 8 ;prerae Coui't of tlie Uuited States, the officer made a return, in substance, that although no process of law had been issued for the arrest, he, as a military officer of t!ie United States, held his prisoner and refused to obe}' the mandate of the writ. An attachment was issu"d and we were on the point of collision between the civil and the military authorities. I telegraphed the Secretaiy of War nothing except the facts, and my recommendation that he should direct the officer what to do. There was need of this. It was in 1863; a time in the State of New York when my colleagues well remember that it would only have been necessary that a collision should have occurred between the civil authority of the State and the military authority of the nation upon the issue of the habeas corpus and the effect would have been like drawing a match in a magazine of powder. The Secretary of War telegraphed that the pro- vost marshal must hold his prisoner at all events. I do not now profess to give the precise language, but it was that he must hold him and stand by his posi- tion, and the dispatch requested me to appear as his counsel, to take an appeal, and to argue the question between the military authorities of the United States and the judicial authority of New York. I did appear ; I did argue the case, and although that is neither here nor there, the decision was reversed, and reversed by one of the purest patriots and one of the most honored judges that ever graced New York's bench, and the decision stands as a monument of learn- inoj raised at a most critical and disordered time. An appeal was taken to the court in hanc. And 208 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. there again I was requested by the Secretary of War, and I think the Attorney General upon the applica- tion of the district attorney of the United States, to act as counsel, and I did so. The decision was not re- versed, and it performed a v^ery useful part at a very important Juncture. That, Mr. Speakei', was my connection with that transaction, and that was all of it ; and upon this, an officer at the head of a bureau has dared to send here a letter on pretense of defending himself, containing a groundless libel, deliberately written to stab the repu- tation of a Representative in retaliation for discharging his duty here. I do not mean to be led into much zeal over the matter ; but it is a bad plan for a man unjustly accused to resort to this sort of counter assault. Again, this writer states that I was appointed, if I understand it aright, without the knowledge or assent of the Secretary of War, but by the Assistant Secretary of War, Mr. Dana, judge advocate for a cer- tain purpose. Let me state briefly that transaction. During the period referred to, or before, detectives were sent by the War Department into the State of New York, to endeavor to ferret out, if possible, and put a stop to frauds in i-ecruiting. These detectives, it seems, had been directed by the authorities to apply to me, among others, for advice and information as to persons in various localities whose statements could be relied on. They came, several of them, and repeatedly, to me. They came in the night as well as in the day, and communicated to me various fragments and bits of evidence which they collected, showing rather the ex- OONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 209 tent of the evil, and the difficulty of getting at the bottom of it than anything else. Weeks elapsed, and very little information was gathered or, as they expressed it, although they could get moral evidence enough, they could get no legal evi- dence. At length I promised that when I should be relieved of engagements in the courts which were then pressing, I would investigate, as far as I could, various things which they and I suspected. I did so ; and I sent to the War Department such information as I gathered, and some very pregnant disclosures which were made. Having done this, acting as a citizen, I supposed my connection with it was to cease. But afterward — I cannot state the date precisely; it was in April, a year ago— I received in the city of Syracuse, fifty-three miles from my home, while I was there pro- fessionally engaged, an ui'gent telegram from the Secretary of War, asking me to come to Washington. As soon as I could release myself I took the cars, and, riding night and day, reached here in ignorance of the purpose for which I was summoned. Arriving here in the morning, I went to the War Department, and there had an interview with Mr. Stanton, the Secretary of War. He explained his sending for me, and stated to me certain facts, and I stated to him other facts relative to the subject of frauds and maladministia- tion ; and he proposed that, as counsel for the Govern- ment, I should investigate and prosecute, until the enormities discovered should be ferreted out and the guilty convicted. I at first declined, for reasons con- nected with my other professional engagements, know- ing that pre[>aratory to leaving home for the present 210 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. session of Congress I should need all my time and strength in my ordinary business. In my place, I suggested to the Secretary a gen- tleman, whose name I need not mention here, but it is one of the best and purest names in the State of New York, a gentleman of very high standing at the bar, and whom I hoped might be able to give the matter his attention, and I advised that to him rather than to me the retainer should be given. The answer of the Sec- retary was in effect, No, I know you, and I want you to do this, believing you will do it with activity and vigor, or some like remark of confidence. I took some little time to consider it, debating with myself. Upon reflection, I assented, and the Secretary himself directed in person and in my presence to be drawn up and presented to me a retainer, which I believe has been read among these papers. That, sir, was the origin of that engagement, and of that transaction. Yet, the author of the remarkable production on the table ven- tures to insinuate, if he does not state, that I sought this employment, and obtained it, not from the Secre- tary of War, but from Mr. Dana, and that without the authority or assent, and I think without the knowl- edge, of the Secretary. I went to my home, disregard- ing and neglecting, as some persons who now hear me know, professional employments vastly more profitable to me, and devoted more than four months of most un- tiring, faithful labor to this investigation. I threw up numerous other retainers and gave undivided attention to this. I gave to it an effort which, although anybody else might have made it, and which did me no credit in tlie world, I stop to say, brought into the Treasury CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 211 of the United States several hundred thousand dollars, and checked a most heady tide of swindling. The investigation led, aaiong other things, to the trial of this assistant provost marshal general, of whom General Fry says so much, and yet so little ; a trial which alone consumed about eight weeks, at places distant from my home. When at last it was over, I de- clined to go further, thinking my poor share had been done, and finding it destructive to my regular business to engage in trials so interminable and absorbing, and r made report to the War Department and to the dis- trict attorney of the United States of the results which had been reached. Some time after this I received, as other acting counsel do, I believe, a suggestion that I should present my bill. I made out and sent to the War Department an account of the precise sum I had actually advanced in money, as travelling and other necessary expenses, rendering the amount to a farthing, and I made out no other account and no other charge. But I stated to the Secretary that I preferred not to do so, but to leave him to fix the amount ; that the service was un- usual to me, and that he better than I could judge of its value. I declined to fix any charge, but left it to him to fix such sum, whatever it might be, as he deemed the service worth ; this I deemed at least fair to the (Tovernment, more than fair, for had I wished extrava- gant pay I should have taken another course. In reply I received from the Secretary of War a letter, in which he stated his opinion, and his opinion as a lawyer and as Secretary of War is a tolerably 212 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. good one. Perhaps it will not be considered a remark too much aside, considering the intimations we have heard, if I pause, and render to the Secretary of War my personal thanks, and my testimony to the thanks which I believe the nation owes him for the integrity, the courage, and the manhood which he has given at the expense of his health to the American people dur- ing the darkest passage in their life. The Secretary of War, in reply to my letter, wrote to me, saying that he deemed $8,000 a moderate sum for the labor which had been performed, and if that should be satisfactory to me, it would be very satisfactory to him. I re- turned an answer that it was entirely satisfactory, as I may say any other sum he might have fixed would have been, as I did not consider it an occasion out of which profit was to be made, or in which even such a charge might be made as any lawyer fi.t to conduct such a prosecution would have expected from a private client. Mr. jRoss. If it will not discompose the gentle- man too much, I would ask him to state whether that was during the time he was drawing pay as a member of Congress. Mr. Conklmg. I do not quite understand the pertinence of the question of the gentleman from Illinois, [Mr. lioss']. But I will endeavor to enlighten him. He probably knows, for I presume that infor- mation has extended to him, that the term of members of Congress commences on the 4th of March. And as the retainer whicli I have spoken of was in April, which, I will inform the gentleman, is a month that comes after March in the calendar, he will very likely CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 213 be able, by the rale of three, or by some otlier rule with wliich he is familiar, to ciplier out whether I was a member of Congress at the time or not. I suppose the gentleman put his (piestion all in the way of good- nature ; and I give my explanation to him in the same way. I should be sorry to suppose that the member from Illinois, or any other member of this House™ in- deed, I should be sorry as an American to suppose that the standard of intelligence anywhere in the country is so low, that any human being, unless it be that distinguished mathematician and warrior, Provost Marshal General Fry, believes there is the slightest impropriety in a man who is a member of Congress practising his profession as counsel in courts, or accept- ing from the Grovernment of the United States or from any other client a retainer for such professional services. It would be very extraordinary, indeed, if some distinguished gentlemen, whom I will not name, who have recently performed most conspicuous profes- sional sei' vices for Government while they were mem- bers of Congress, had subjected themselves to the criticism of the gentleman from Illinois, or of anybody whatever, always excepting, of course. Provost Marshal Genei'al Fry. So much for that part of this bundle of papers given to a pretended statement of the circumstance of my acting as counsel for the United States. I come to the next point which occurs to me. There is a statement, if I apprehended it aright, that some effort was made by me to have " conceal- ment " — T think that was the word — in regard to the 214 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. twenty-first congressional district. That is mere as- sertion. No circumstances are stated upon which it could be founded, therefore I cannot dissect it, but I pronounce the statement utterly and absolutely ground- less — nothing whatever of truth can be found in it. On the contrary, in the investigation which took place before the court-martial to which reference has been made, everything that could be investigated pertaining to the twenty-first congressional district was investi- gated. The matter of recruiting there was held up, that the light might shine through and through it ; and nothing in that statement amazes me more than that the Provost Marshal General or anybody else should dare, even in so daring a document, to put on record an assertion so utterly baseless. So far I have noticed only some of the more far- fetched libels in these papers. I come now to the (question which was made by the member who caused this letter to be read, the pretense that it in some way bolstered up the assertions made by him the other day. This letter was read in part, we were told, to show that I was not warranted in pronouncing untrue the statement that I had had personal " quarrels " witli the Provost Marshal General. I beg leave, Mr. Speaker, to remind gentlemen of the precise statement which on that occasion I pronounced untrue. The member from Maine said — I read from the Globe — " I do not suppose that the House of Eepresentatives care anything more than the Committee on Military Affairs about the great recruit- ing frauds of New York or the quarrels of the gentleman from New York with General Fry, in which quarrels, it is generally understood, the gentleman came out second best at the War Department. ' ' I will not stop to read furtliei' (although I pro- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 215 pose to have all I have marked inserted in my remarks) the various forms in which the statement was made that I had had personal quari'els with Provost Mar- shal General Fry. Mr. Blaine. I hope the gentleman will read the whole. Tf he will show me the word " personal " in the speech to which he is replying, I will reward him. He cannot do it. He is putting his own interpi'eta- tion upon it. Let the gentleman read all that he is going to print. Mr. ConMing. Mr. Speaker, I hope the active member from Maine w^ill preserve himself as free from agitation as possible. Mr. Blaine. I demand that whatever the gentle- man puts in the Globe he shall read. The 8j)ealier. Does the gentleman from New^ York yield to the gentleman from Maine ? Mr. ConMing. I am not asked to yield. The Chair will see that all this interruption is in defiance of the proprieties of debate. I have no objection to the member from Maine being heard, however, at any length he pleases. Mr. Blaine. I rise to a point of ordei'. The Speaker. The gentleman will state his point of order. Mr. Blaine. My point of order is that the gen- tleman from New York has no i-ight to insert in the (ilobe what is not read either by himself or by the Clerk. I object to his doing so. The Speaher. The gentleman has the right to ob- ject to its being printed in the Globe if it is not read. Mr. ConMing. Mr. Speaker, this is a little epi- 216 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. sode, I suppose, for the amusement and diversion of the House. It is quite unnecessary. The member had better be quiet ; I am entirely disposed to have the whole passage read ; and I will ask to have it read. I intended to send it to the Globe reporters for insertion. I supposed the member knew what liad already been printed in the Globe as coming from him. Mr. Hoss. Will the gentleman from New York yield to me a moment ? Ml'. OonJding. For what purpose ? Mr. Moss. I desire to ask the gentleman whether he was drawing pay as Judge advocate at the same time when he was I'eceiving $3,000 a year fi-om the Government as a member of Congress. Mr. Colliding. I will answer the gentleman's question, Mr. Speaker; and I ask the Clerk to suspend for one moment the reading till I do so, because nothing interests me in connection with this matter more than the laudable curiosity of the gentleman from Illinois [Mr. Iloss\. I beg, Mr. Speaker, to assure the gentleman " con- fidentially," as the gentleman from Pennsylvania [Mr. Stevens\ would say, and I hope he will regard it as a confidential communication, that I never did receive salary as jndge advocate during the period he refers to, or during any other period ; not one penny. In- deed, Mr. Speaker, I found myself very unexpectedly elevated when I saw the announcement in some paper that this retainer which the Government had given me made me acting judge advocate for the purpose of trying a case. It was merely an employment as coun- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 217 sel ; and the counsel fee which was paid is, I beg to assure the gentleman, the only compensation that I ever received for my services. I never received any [)ay as Judge advocate during any period whatever. I now ask the Clerk to read the remarks which I have sent to the desk; all that are marked. They are the I'emarks of the member from Maine. The Clerk read as follows : Mr. Speaker, I do not suppose that the House of Representatives care anything more than the Committee on Military Affairs about the great recruiting frauds in New York, or the quarrels of the gentleman from New York with General Fry, in which quarrels it is generally understood the gentleman came out second best at the War Department. I do not think that such questions ought to be obtruded here. Though the gentleman from New York has had some difference with General Fry, yet I take pleasure in saying that, as I believe, there is not in the American Army a more honorable and high-toned officer than General Fry. That cfilicer, I doubt not, is ready to meet the gen- tleman from New York or anybody else in the proper forum. I must say that I do not think it is any very creditable proceeding for the gen- tleman from New York here in this place to traduce General Fry as a military officer when he has no opportunity to be heard. I do not con- sider such a proceeding the highest specimen of chivalry that could be exhibited. The gentleman from New York has had his issues with General Fry at the War Department. They have been adjudicated upon by the Secretary of War ; and I leave it for the gentleman to say whether he came out first best. I do not know the particulars ; the gentleman can inform the House. All I have to say is — and in this I believe I speak the sentiment of a majority of the members of this House — that James B. Fry is a most efficient officer, a high-toned gentleman, whose char- acter is without spot or blemish ; a gentleman who stands second to no officer in the American Army; and he is ready to meet the gentleman from New York and all other accusers anywhere and everywhere. And, sir, when I hear the gentleman from New York rehearse in this house, as an impeachment of General Fry, all the details of the recruiting frauds in New York, which General Fry used his best energies to repress with iron hand, a sense of indignation carries me beyond my personal strength and compels me to denounce such a course of proceeding. 218 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTKOVERSY. Mr. Blaine. The word "personal" does not occur there. Mr. ConMing. The House will observe I did not say the word " personal " did occur. But that is not here nor there. All gentlemen, all who have the appreciation or instincts of gentlemen, see the point of this passage. It was the assertion that I had had " quarrels " with Provost Marshal Fry, repeating that word more than once, and using other forms of expres- sion ; and that I had had " quarrels " with General Fry in which " quarrels " I had been worsted, in which " quarrels " I had been put down by the Secretary of War ; in which the Secretary of War had taken sides against me. These were the points : first, that there had occurred between General Fry and myself " (piar- rels," and second, that in those " quarrels " I had been worsted, and worsted by the Secretary of War. Now, Mr. Speaker, is there any shadow or founda- tion for that ? I mean, taking the communication of the Provost Marshal General as the only evidence up- on the subject. What does he say ? I had stated, as the House will remember, before the member from Maine injected his statement — I will read that — I had previously stated all about having been employed to prosecute General Fry's friend and assistant. I said : I was employed by the Government to prosecute some of the frauds to which I have referred ; and I tried this assistant provost marshal general, who had been justified in all the outrages he committed, and in all the acts by which millions were stolen from the people of New York ; who was jussified by his superior officer down to the time when the sentence was published, and afterward, I understand. The member from Maine, then, did not mean this prosecution by his statement. Now, what does the CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 219 Provost Mai'slia,! say to give color to tlie statement that, independent of this, anything liad taken place which will help out the assertion of " (|uaiTels," and that I was worsted ? What does he state ? That Cap- tain Kichardson, a provost marshal in ray disti'ict, was removed. So he was. He was removed without notice and without charges. He was removed, as it turned out, on the report of Haddock and tlie accusation of a man who is himself to be tried in a few weeks for such frauds as he charged upon Captain Kichardson. The facts were in part made known to me, and, in common with some of the first citizens of my district, I repre- sented to the War Department and to the President, if that was the form of the petition, that this man had been removed without notice and on secret informa- tion. We thought he should be heard ; that there should be an investigation in regard to it. That is the beginning and end of all I had to say or to do witlj the removal of Captain Joseph P. Richardson. I think it will be hardly said that was a quarrel with General Fry. The next statement is that Captain Peter B. Cran- dall was appointed provost marshal of my district and was afterward j'emoved. So he was, and I take occa- sion to say, in the face of the imputations put upon Captain Crandall by General Fry, if ever I looked in. to the face of an honest man, P, B, Crandall is honest. I take it upon myself to state that a more honest man never broke bread than this man who was trodden un- der foot by bounty jumpers and thieves because he would not submit to them in violation of his duty and of tlie law of the land. There is a place where Peter 220 OONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. B. Crandall is known, where he has been long known ; and fortunately for me, also, in that same place, the twenty-first district of New York, inhabited as it is by as brave, as generous, as patriotic people as were ever represented on this floor, I am known and have been known for twenty years. The people with whom I live, among whom I ex- pect to die, know, better than General Fry can tell them, whether the man who dared to pen the libels we have heard read deserves to be sustained and com- mended, or whether he deserves to be gibbeted at the cross-roads of common contempt. But, Mr. Speaker, I was saying that Peter B. Crandall was appointed provost marshal. He was ap- pointed upon the recommendation of the most honored and trusted of our citizens without my having any part in his selection. I had no part or lot in it. It was made entirely by others. The person whom they selected was chosen because his integrity was and is beyond all question. He was removed after bounty brokers had threatened him that if he did not submit to their behests he would be removed, and after he had defied them to bring the machinery of this great Government to bear upon him for doing his duty. He was removed at the very time when they predicted his downfall, and I say here that he was removed because he did his duty and for no other reason under heaven, whether General Fry knows it or not. Had he been rascal enough to comply with illicit requests, he would never have been touched by the hands which struck him down. I joined with various of the citizens of my dis- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 221 ti'ict in representing to the Secretary of War that a mistake had been made or a wrong had been done in the case of this man ; that if anybody was honest he was, and that it was doing great violence to the 2^iiblic service and to the people of that district to strike down a man who had been selected by some of its best citizens because he was in point of character above reproach. That is all I had to do with it. I united with others in signing these representations. Was that having a personal (_[aarrel with General Fry*? One thing more is referred to in connection with Captain Crandall. He had taken and held, and perse- vered in holding, $20,000 of bonds which were claimed of him by a bounty broker. He said they belonged to the Government of the United States, because the man had deserted for whom these bonds were hy- pothecated, and he would never surrender them to the claimant until he was compelled to do it by law. He was sued, and I wrote several times to the War'De- partment recommending the Secretary of War to look into the facts himself and see whether the bonds might not be held, as I thought they should be held, by the Government. This is all I had to do with that. The case was subsequently tried. 1 had nothing to do with it. The counsel Was a gentleman whose name appears in the papers read, a citizen honored in every walk of life, and Captain Crandall was sus- tained in holding the bonds, the court deciding that he did what should have been done, and that he ought not to have delivered them up. That is the entire of that transaction. 222 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTKOVERSY. Having disposed of these things which General Fry recounts, I ask the House to observe that in no aspect, by no stretch, do they show tliat I quarrelled with General Fry ; at most they only show that recommendations made by me to the War Depart- ment roused his hostility. Having referred to all transactions connecting me with him to which he refers, I come now to the one single interview" which he says took place between us. It was upon the occasion which I referred to when I came here in response to a telegram from the Secre- tary of War. The Provost Marshal General was sent for to come into the room of the Assistant Secretary of War during that day to give information, and he did come, and informed me of various things, among others, that Major Haddock was an estimable and honorable man ; he denied utterly that there was anything to be said aorainst him, althoui^h he had then made the recommendation which he parades, and for which he takes credit now, that he should be suspended ; that he was satisfied Haddock was honest, and would back him anywhere. He said further that the people of my district, all of them, as he understood it, were cow- ards, drunkards, and sneaks ; that that was his infor- mation ; that there was not, he believed, an honest man in that district, and if one could be found and set to discharging the duties of provost marshal, as soon as it was known by others, they would imme- diately debauch him. I was somewhat astounded at language like this, but I had no quarrel with General Fry. I was taught CONKLING AND BLAlNE-FllY CONTBOVEKSY. 223 somewliat early in life that while a man should be careful in his associations, he should be choice in his fighting ; and having received my impression of this man then and previously, I chose to have no con- troversy with him. Nor does he pretend that I had any. I did not call upon him I neither sought nor avoided him. I requested no interview with him. There was nothing of the interview except that he was sent for to give certain information. He gave his information, he made the remarks I stated, and some othei' remarks, and retired upon his laurels. The fact, then, is precisely this : neither in con- versation with General Fry did I ever have any quar- rel with him, nor by letter or correspondence did I ever have any quarrels with him ; and no way what- ever have I ever had a (piarrel, in any definition of that term, with this Provost Marshal General. As I said the other day, I prosecuted his assistant and friend. I knew then that I incurred his ire in doing it. I recommended to the War Department from time to time such things as I deemed it my duty to recommend. This I well know angered him, but I believe I never had occasion to make to the Secretary of War a recommendation relative to matters coming before him, which was not promptly responded to, and promptly approved. Unless I have forgotten some- thing, I believe that throughout this prosecution I never addressed to the Secretary of War a single recommendation in regard to it which he did not ap- prove, and which did not meet with his sanction. The House will see, therefore, with how much truth it was that a statement was made here, first that I had 224 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. had quarrels witli a man whom I never saw but once, and with whom I never quarrelled at all; and in the second place, that in those quarrels I had been worsted, and worsted by the Secretary of War, worsted l)y that distinguished officer, whose friendship and confi- dence it has always been my privilege to enjoy, and •who never on any occasion did toward me anything calculated to awaken any feelings but those of friend- ship and respect, and who has my thanks for many acts of courtesy and kindness. But, Mr. Speaker, I have already gone far beyond my intention in rising, and I trust that those who have listened to me so attentively will pardon some- thing to the extraordinary incident which has been witnessed, of the head of a bureau, a clerk in the War Department, sending here to be read such a pile of rubbish as that, a personal assault upon a member of this House, under the pretense of vindicating him- self in some way or other. This officer longs for vindication, not with regard to these insignificant matters which pertain to me per- sonally, but he longs for vindication with regard to those public matters which concern him in his re- sponsibility to the people of the country. And I beg now to say that, if a committee shall be raised by this House to investigate the doings of the Provost Mar- shal General's Bureau, I will undertake to make good my assertion, that in the western division of New York, composing a large portion of that great State, this bureau, as it was administered, was one carnival of corrupt disorder. I will endeavor to make good that statement ; and then the public shall know CONKLING AND BLAINE FRi' CONTROVERSY. 225 whether the head of the bureau was a man incapable of administration — a man incapable of seeing the dif- ference between honest men and thieves — or whether it was administered by a man who had the capacity to do it, and who, but for the want of another quality, would have performed its duties well. And now, Mr. Speaker, I will ask my colleague from the St, Lawrence district [Mr. Hulhurd\ whose position in this House and in the country and in the State of New York will be a sufficient guarantee for the probity and the ability which will be brought to the service — I ask him to move that a committee be ap- pointed by the House to investigate the doings of the Provost Marshal General's Bureau, and let us see wliether a man, however humble he may be, who rises here to denounce what he knows to be a public wrong, is to be shuffled off by newspaper effects, or effects to be produced by sending here to be read such a com- munication as lies before us. If this man and his trusted agents are innocent he and they should have a full and thorough investigation of all the practices of which they stand accused. I now yield the floor to my colleague for the pur- pose I have indicated. Mr. Ilulhurd. I presume I shall meet the sense of the House when I say that it has probably de- voted as much time as it ought to do to this matter between my colleague, the gentleman from Maine, and the Provost Marshal General. I propose to send to the Chair a resolution asking for the appointment of a select Committee of five, because I deem the mat- ter so very grave that it is due to my colleague, due 226 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. to the Provost Marshal General, and due to the coun- try that the subject shall be further investigated. And in view of the complimentary remarks which my colleague has made, I am confirmed in the design of putting in a disclaimei", which I had intended to do, and asking the Chair, if the House shall order tliis committee, not to place me upon it, as parliamentary courtesy might otherwise seem to require. I have a sufficient reason for it in the fact that the House has referred for investigation to the Committee on Public Expenditures, of which I am chairman, various im- portant matters connected with custom houses, and tlie internal revenue service at Boston and elsewhere ; and I feel that we shall have as much as we can possibly do to carry out that resolution. Mr. Thayer. I rise to a point of order. I do not think the indulgence granted by the House extended this far. The gentleman from Maine [Mr. Blaine] asked leave of the House to have a certain letter read fi'om General Fry. Leave was granted, with the tacit understanding that the gentleman from New York [Mr. ConMing] should have leave to reply. That has been done. Now, I do not think this matter should take up any further time of the members of this House, either in this House or in committees. And if I liave the right, I shall object. The Speaher. The Chair overrules the point of order. The ruling has always been that when the House has permitted a personal explanation to be made, whatever legitimately or naturally grows out of it, in the opinion of the majority of the House, is in order. The Chair, of course, has no knowdedge of CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 227 what the resolution is, except from the remarks of the gentleman from New York [Mr. HiilhuriV\ ; but he supposes it relates to the very question which has been brought in controversy between the gentleman from New York [Mr. GonMinfj\ and the gentleman from Maine [Mr. Blaine]. Mr. Blaine. I hope the gentleman from Penn- sylvania [Mr. Ihayer'] will withdraw his objection. Mr. Thayer. Where a gentleman asks by way of personal explanation to have a paper read, with the understanding that another gentleman should be al- lowed to make a similar personal explanation, is it in order for any member of the House to introduce busi- ness, by resolution or otherwise, if it relates to the sub- ject-matter of the personal explanation ? The Speaker. If it relates to that subject it is in order. Therefore the gentleman from Illinois [Mr. Ilos8\ was in order when he submitted the motion, which went to the Committee on Printing under the law, that ten thousand extra copies of the communi- cation from Greneral Fry be printed for the use of this House. The resolution of Mr. Hulhurd was read as fol- lows : RcKolvcd, That a select committee of five members of this House lie appointed to investigate the statements and charges made by Hon. lioHcoe ConhJing in his place last week against Provost Marshal Gen- eral Fry, whether any frauds have been perpetrated in his office in con- nection with recruiting service ; also, to examine into the statements made by General Fry in his communication to Hon. Mr. Blaine, read in the House this day; with power to send for persons and papers. Mr. ConMing. I suggest to my colleague [Mr. Ilulhnrd] to modify his resolution so as to provide 228 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. for the investigation of any charges made against Pro- vost Marshal General Fiy and his bureau. Mr. Hoss. Might it not be well to enlarge the powers of the committee so that they can investigate whether the gentleman from New York [Mr. Coith- ling] has received more pay than he was entitled to receive ? Mr. ConMing. I should like to have tliat done. I hope the committee will report on that whether it is embraced in the resolution or not. Mr. Hidhurd. That is embraced in the resolu- tion now, it being one of the statements contained in the letter of General Fry. Mr. Ross. That will do, then. The question was upon agreeing to the resolution of Mr. IMburd. Mr. Blaine. I do not know that I have anything to say, and I shall not take very long to say it. I do not happen to possess tlie volubility of the gentleman from the Utica district [Mr. Oonhling]. It took him thirty minutes the other day to explain that an alter- ation in the reporter's notes for the Globe was no alter- ation at all ; and I do not think he convinced the House after all. And it has taken him an hour to- day to explain that while he and General Fry have been at swords' points for a year, there has been no difficulty at all between them. He has said that Gen- eral Fry is of no consequence, that he is a mere clerk in the War Department. Yet he is a very sensitive clerk, and when he has been accused of all sorts of fraud, he should have a little chance to be heard. Now, one single word. Tlie gentleman from CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 229 New York [Mr. Conhling'] has attempted to pass off his appearance in this case as simply the appearance of counsel. I want to read again for the information of the House the appointment under which the gen- tleman from New York appeared as the prosecutor on the part of the government. It is as follows : WAR DEPARTiMENT, Washington City, April 3, 1865. Sir : I am instructed by the Secretary of War to authorize you to investigate all cases of fraud in the provost marshal' s department of the westei-n division of New York, and all misdemeanors connected with recruiting. You will fi"om time to time make report to this De- partment of the progress of your labors, and will apply for any special authority for which you may have occasion. The Judge Advocate Gen- eral will be instructed to issue to you an appointment as special judge advocate, for the prosecution of any cases that may be brought to trial befoi'e a military tribunal. You will also appear in behalf of this De- ])artment in any cases that it may be deemed more expedient to bring before the civil tribunals. Very respectfully, your obedient servant, C. A. Dana, Assistant Secretary of War. Hon. ROSCOE CONKLING. Now, sir, I find in Brightly's Digest, page 821, section forty-six, that — "No person who holds or ehall hold any office under the Govern- ment of the United States whose salary or annual compensation shall amount to the sum of $2,500, shall receive compensation for discharg- ing the duties of any other office." Now, sir, I leave it for the House to decide whether the irentleman can c-et off under the tech- nical plea that he was not a judge advocate. He cannot deny that he discharged the duties of Judge advocate under the special commission which I have read, and he was paid for the discharge of those duties. The case falls under the same law as that of the gentle- man from Ohio[Mr. Scliench\ who, V)eing elected a Rep- 230 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. resentative in Congress while yet a major-general, de- clined to receive any pay as a member until he had resigned his office in the Army and had taken his seat in this House. I have no suggestions to make about this, except that I consider the point v^ell taken, and that in my view this committee, if ajDpointed, ought to investigate the matter. I do not believe that the gentleman received the money rightfully, though I will say this much of him, if he will permit me, that I have no doubt he will restore it if convinced he has taken it improperly. Now, Mr. Speaker, all I have to say further in connection with this matter is, that what I stated the other day has, as I conceive, been fully, entirely, and emphatically vindicated by the record. I believe I have shown the members of this House that I am incapable of stating anything here for which I am not responsible — not exactly "here or elsewhere" — but responsible as a gentleman and as a Kepresentative. Mr. Thayer. I move that this resolution be re- ferred to the Committee on Military Affairs. Mr. Conkling. Mr. Speaker, I sought the floor again to say this, which possibly I omitted to state before : that no commission was ever issued to me by the Judge Advocate General. For fear that I omitted to state it, I beg leave to say that no commission, paper, or authority whatever was ever issued to me except the letter of retainer which has been read, em- ploying me to act, according to its language, before military courts and before other tribunals. Mr. Blaine. Mr. Speaker — CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 231 The speaker. Does the gentleman from New York yield to the gentleman from Maine ? Mr. ConMing. No, sir. I do not wish to have anything to do with the member from Maine, not even so much as to yield him the iloor. Mr. Blaine. All right. Mr. ConMing. I only want to say that the only authority under which 1 acted was that which has been read, and that I acted as counsel for the United States ; and the business of counsel in that particular case I tried, as the case was tried before a military tribunal, was, of course, of the same general character that Avould have been done by a judge advocate, had there been a Judge adv^ocate for the court, just as in the trial of the conspirators, the distinguished gentle- man who sits before me [Mr. Blnghaiii] performed the same line of professional employment that a regu- lar judge advocate would have performed had he been there. Now, Mr. Speaker, one thing further : if the mem- Ijer from Maine had the least idea how profoundly in- different I am to his opinion upon the subject which he has been discussing, or upon any other subject personal to me, I think he would hardly take the trouble to rise here and express his opinion. And as it is a matter of entire indifference to me what that opinion may be, I certainly will not detain the House by discussing the question whether it is well or ill- founded, or by noticing what he says. I submit the whole matter to the members of the House, making as I do an apology (for I feel that it is due to the House) for the length of time whicb I have occupied 232 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. in consequence of being drawn into explanations, orig- inally, by an interruption wliich I pronounced the other day ungentlemanly and impertinent, and having nothing whatever to do with the question. Mr. Jioss. I rise to a point of order. I submit that the defense of the gentleman from New York should be made before this committee and not before the House. The Speaker. That is scarcely a point of order. Mr. Blaine. It is hardly worth while to pursue this controversy further ; but still the gentleman from New York cannot get off on the technicality which he has suggested. He says that a commission never was issued to him. I understand him to admit that if a commission had been issued to him he could not have taken pay for both offices. Now, everyone knows that those preliminary authorizations are the things on which half the business arising out of the war has been done. Men have fought at the head of battal- ions and divisions and Army corps without having re- ceived their formal commissions. The gentleman was just as much bound to respect the law under that appointment as though it had been a formal commis- sion with the signature of the Secretary of War. As to the gentleman's cruel sarcasm, I hope he will not be too severe. The contempt of that large- minded gentleman is so wilting ; his haughty disdain, his grandiloquent swell, his majestic, supereminent, overpowering, turkey -gobbler strut has been so crush- ing to myself and all the members of this House that I know it was an act of the greatest temerity for me to venture upon a controversy with him. But, sir, I CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 233 know who is responsible for all this. I know that within the last five weeks, as members of the House will recollect, an extra strut has characterized the gen- tleman's bearing. It is not his fault. It is the fault of another. That gifted and satirical writer, Theo- dore Tilton, of the New York Independent, spent some weeks recently in this city. His letters published in that paper embraced, with many serious statements, a little jocose satire, a part of which was the statement that the mantle of the late Winter Davis had fallen upon the member from New York. The gentleman took it seriously, and it has given his strut additional pomposity. The resemblance is great. It is striking. Hyperion to a satyr, Thersites to Hercules, mud to marl)le, dnnghill to diamond, a singed cat to a Bengal tiger, a whining puppy to a roaring lion. Shade of the uiighty Davis, forgive the almost profanation of that jocose satire ! The Speaker. The Chair will state at the con- clusion of these personal remarks that, as the House liad granted unanimous consent for a personal explan- ation, and it was presumed, of course, personalities would be indulged in, he has refrained from calling- gentlemen to order. If any member had called to order, the Chair would at once have strictly enforced the rule. Mr. Coiikling. I ask the gentleman from Penn- sylvania [Mr. 21iayer~\ to withdraw the motion to refer to the Committee on Military Affairs. Mr. Scheuch. That committee has now as much as it can attend to, and besides that, the gentleman from Maine is on that committee. 234 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. Mr. Blame. I hope tbe gentleman will with- draw his motion. I am a member of the Committee on Military Affairs and the reference would be wholly improper. Mr. Henderson. I move to lay the resolution on the table. The motion was disagreed to. The question then recurred on Mr. Thayer'^s mo- tion to refer to the Committee on Military Affairs; and it was also disagreed to. Mr. Conkling demanded the previous question. The previous question was seconded and the main question ordered ; and under the operation thereof the resolution was adopted. Mr. Conhling moved to reconsider the vote by which the resolution was adopted ; and also moved that the motion to reconsider be laid upon the table. The latter motion was agreed to. APPENDIX C. Memorial oi A, G. Riddle^ counsel for General Fry^ asking that the accompanying papers may be treated by the House as evidence in the Coiikling- Fry case, on the ground that said papers were put in evidence by General Fry before the Com- mittee, are competent and material to the issues, and are regarded hy the Committee as not in the case. To the House of Representatives of the Thirty-Ninth Congress : I respectfully ask permission to submit the following : I acted as counsel for General James B. Fry in the recent investiga- tion before a Committee of the House. It appears by the Report of that Committee that two letters appearing in my argument were not re- garded as in evidence in the case, and are of doubtful authenticity. It will be found that these letters are most material to a right understand- ing of that part of the case, and that they are two of a scries of some ticenty -three papers, all offered, as will be shown in evidence, on the part of General Fry, and all competent and important evidence. And it is for the purpose of relieving the letters referred to from doubt, and also to place in the possession of the House the other papers referred to (as well as to relieve myself of incidental imputation), that this memorial and the accompanying papers are submitted to the House. It will be found difficult, it is submitted, to correctly judge of material portions of the Conliing-Fry case in the absence of these papers, as they contain the whole of General Fry' s evidence on the points they refer to. I ask attention to the letter of General Jeffries, herewith submitted, and marked "A," which, I believe, truly discloses the facts in refer- ence to the offering and receiving the papers in evidence before the Committee. I never heard a doubt of the authenticity of either of these letters, or that the originals of either had been called for, until I saw the report of your Committee, nor did I ever hear a question raised as to whether these papers, or any of them, were in evidence, until, as I think, the Utb or 12th of Julv, instant, ^35 236 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTKOVERSY. From the day of their being offered, as stated by General Jcffric-s, until the 0th instant, they all remained among the papers in the case, and were returned to General Fry by Mr. Boyer, of the court, as I am informed, pursuant to the letter of General Fry of that date, addressed to Mr. Boyer, and herewith submitted, marked " B." The letters contained in my ' ' reply " were among those so returned, copies of all of which are herewith submitted. For convenience, I have arranged these in three groups, and have endorsed on the back of each group the point to which they refer, and the use I made of them. It will at once be seen that groups one and two comprise the entire total of every item of proof offered by General Fry on the important matter of the Hoboken raid, and the court's record must show that he gave no proof on this point if these are not in evidence. I was not present when General Jeffries offered any of these papers in evidence. I saw them several times tied up in a bundle, among the other papers, and I was twice present when General Jeffries proposed to substitute certified copies of the papers for the originals, and I know that nobody at either time pretended that they were not in evidence. The copies so offered are the same heretofore submitted, with the exception of the copies of the two contained in my reply, — those went to the Government Printer, and will be found with the manuscript. No reporter was present at my reply to Mr. C, and, I think, no person except the Committee, Mr. C. and myself. It was made after ten in the evening, after a protracted and exhausting session. The part of it in reference to the Hoboken raid was pursuant to a well-settled mental programme. I had long been familiar with that part of the case. I think the effect not a happy one. I was exhausted, and was conscious of not having the attention of the Committee. I held the copies referred to in my hand. I read none of them, but named them, and urged the Committee to read them, I supposed they had been read when put in evidence. When I referred to the Allen memorial, Mr. Cooh asked me if there was such a paper in evidence, and I told him there was, and to that no reply was made. At the conclusion, I said to the Committee that I must have liberty to collate the papers, make correct copies, and, per- haps, print some of them — to which I heard no objection. At my earliest leisure I wrote a report of my remarks, following my original programme as near as I could remember to have followed it in the oral argument. I omitted much that I said. I could not re- call the language used ; but I am certain that I did not introduce into it any new matter, or new views or arguments. This report I had accurately copied, except the two letters, and for CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 237 those the certified copies, above referred to, were used. This copy, with these certified copies included, I my sell placed in the hands of the Committee, and have never seen it since. Hearing a day or two later that that copy had been sent to the Public Printer by the court, and de- siring to recall the attention of the court to the argument of my reply, I sent the report made by myself (the copies of the two letters being with the Committee's copy) to Mr. Cool, to whom I understood the Committee had committed the labor of writing the report. With it, I sent a note, informing Mr. C. that he would find the originals of the two letters among the papers in the case. On the 10th instant, Mr. Cook informed me that he had not found the letters. I went to the Committee room, and was told that they had been returned to General F., and, on inquiry, I was told that he was absent with the papers in New York City. One or two days following, I, for the first time, heard, and from Mr. Bayer, that the Committee had no recollection that these letters were in proof, nor that I had referred to them in my summing up. I immediately addressed a note to the Chairman, and subsequently for- warded a note of General Jeffrie.^ to him. I was never called upon, nor was anybody else, on the part of General Fry, to furnish these letters or copies, or to make any explanation in reference to them, nor did I know what was the view of the Committee till I saw their report. My argu- ment and reply were printed by the Committee, as I suppose. The only thing I had to do with that was to correct the proof. Nobody, on be- half of General Fry, had anything to do with it. The Superintendent of Public Pi-inting told me I could have some extra copies upon paying for them, and I ordered 100 copies. I applied to the Chairman of the Committee to know whether I might then distribute a part of them. He told me he could see no impropriety in it. On the next day I sent 25 copies to the House, — one for each of the Committee, one for the counsel of Mr. Conirimj, some to my acquaintances of the Ohio delegation, and to others, — the friends of both parties. I also forwarded one to the Tribune, and one to the Utica Herald. I respectfully aek that this memorial may be printed for the infor- mation of the House, and that the evidence herewith submitted may be received and treated as evidence in the case, to the end that if, through the carelessness or inattention of his counsel. General Fri/ has failed to have this evidence received and considered by the Committee, that he may have the benefit of it on the final consideration of the case by the House. Respectfully submitted. (Signed) A. G. RIDDLE. Washington, July 17, 186G. 238 OONKLING AND BLAINE-FllY CONTROVERSY. ''A." LETTER OF GENERAL JEFFRIES. WAR DEPARTMENT, PROVOST MARSHAL GENERAL'S BUREAU, Washington, D.G., July 16, 1866. Hon. a. G. Riddle, Sii': — As I have already stated to you in a former note, there is no question as to the fact that the two letters set out in your printed argument were offered in evidence by me as coun- sel for General Fry, at the same time the other letters on the Hoboken subject were submitted to the Committee, and they were received in evidence in the same manner as the other exhibits relating to that subject. One of these letters, viz. : the one dated March 16, and another letter, contained certain memoranda, in the hand-writing of one of the clerks in this Bureau, and I remarked to the Committee that I desired to make certain proof as to that memorandum, which would require time to bring the witness from the oflSce, when it was remarked that I need not delay on that account, and so it went in with the others. It will be remembered that the exhibits were offered seriatim, until a cer- tain number had been reached — Mr. Conhliiuj stating his objections from time to time as each paper was offered, until at length Mr. Warner de- cided to admit the whole of the "bundle," subject to such objection as might be deemed pertinent, and in that bundle was the letter of the 29th, which you set out in argument. There is no question as to the genuineness of these letters, as the rec- ords of this office and the clerks will testify. The " bundle " of exhibits in the " Hoboken case " comprised the entire correspondence on that subject, and each paper was numbered, the series numbering from one to twenty-three, I think. The letter in dispute, of the IGth, is numbered thirteen. (I have it now before me.) The other of the 29th was left by General Fry in New York, where he was called as a witness on a matter connected with this subject, since the close of the testimony in the case. If these letters are not in evidence, it is because they have been ruled out. If this statement is questioned, I am able to prove its correctness by persons who were present, and distinctly remember the whole trans- action. When the papers were returned again to General Fry by the Committee, these two letters were still in the "bundle." This fact I learn from General Fry, and from the circumstance that one of them is still in the " bundle." But, aside from this, to show that I offered these letters in evidence, CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 239 the clerks of this office will testify that they made copies of all the cor- respondence for General Fry. These copies I presented to the Commit- tee, and re(iuested permission to withdraw the originals, because it was necessary for General Fry to take them with him to New York. Mr. ConMing objected, and the Committee ruled that they would retain them until they had read the evidence and heard the argument, and then de- liver them to General Fry. These copies were duly certified in the same manner as other ad- mitted exhibits, so that the letters were first offered and admitted, and again certified copies were offered. (Signed) N. L. JEFFRIES, Counsel for General Fry. Note. — For action of House upon this petition, see Appendix D. APPENDIX D. PKOVOST MAKSIIAL GENEKAl's BUREAU. Mr. Sliellaharger. I now call up the report of the Select Committee appointed April 30, 1866, to in- vestigate tlie statements and charges made by Hon. Roscoe ConMing, in his place, against Provost Marshal General Fry and his Bureau — whether an}^ frauds have been perpetrated in his office in connection with the recruiting service ; also to examine into tlie state- ments made by General Fry in his communication to Hon. Mr. Blaine^ read in the House. Mr. Ilotchhiss. I ask for the reading of the re- port. Mr. Johnson. I desire to inquire whether there is any minority report in this case, or an objecting re- port of any kind. Mr. Shellahavger. There is no minority report. This is the unanimous re])ort of the Committee. Mr. Jolivson. Unless some one controverts the re- port, I do not think the time should be taken up with reading an elaborate report. Mr. IlotcJihiss. I asked for the reading as I sup- posed it was a matter of right. The Speaker. Any member has the right to have the report read. The Clerk read the report as follows : 240 (50NKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. HON. ROSCOE CONKLTNG AND PROVOST MARSHAL GENERAL FRY 241 July 14, 18G6. — Ordered to be printed. Mr. SiiELLABARGER from the Select Committee to investigate this case, made the following REPORT. Tlie Select Committee, appointed April SO, 1860, to invistigate the state- ments and charges made hy Hon. Rosroe Gonliing, in his j>lace, against Provost Marshal General Fry and his bureau — lohether any frauds have been perpetrated in his office in connexion with the recruiting ser- vice; also to examine into the statements made by General Fry in his communication to lion. Mr. Blaine, read in the House, having com- pleted their labors as to one branch of their investigation, submit the following report: When your committee was about to enter upon the performance of the duties enjoined upon it by the orders of the House, it became appar- ent that a full investigation of all matters embraced within the scope of its authority could not be completed during the present session of Con- gress. In view of the time, labor, and public expense necessarily in- volved in the performance of the work, your committee had under con- sideration the propriety of making a preliminary report to the House, setting forth the magnitude of the task assigned to it, and asking for further instructions in the premises. But in consideration of the fact that the character of a member of the House of Representatives had been publicly assailed with serious charges in a letter emanating from the head of an important bureau of the government, addressed to an- other member of the House of Representatives and by him caused to be read to the House, and thus made a part of the published and perma- nent record of its proceedings, we deemed that it was the privilege of the member thus gravely charged, and due also to the House itself, that your committee should proceed without delay to the investigation of at least that branch of the case which relates to the charges preferred by Provost Marshal General Fry against the Hon. Roscoe Conkling. Your committee did this the more readily, as the member thus charged pleaded and insisted upon his privilege to have an early investigation of that branch of the case, and no objection was interposed by any party to its separate consideration and prompt decision, leaving the remaining branch of the investigation relating to the conduct of the bureau of the Provost Marshal General to the future action of the committee. Your committee, therefore, as will appear in the journal of its pro- 242 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. ceedings, have thus far confined their investigation to the charges against Mr. Conkling contained in the letter of General Fry to Mr. Blaine, and excluded all testimony bearing upon the conduct of Gen- eral Fry as Provost Marshal General, except so far as that was deemed necessary to a full investigation of the charges against Mr. Conkling. The testimony touching the Hoboken credits and the disposal of the $54,000 bounty money arising therefrom was admitted to show, as was alleged, a settled purpose on the part of General Fry to in jure Mr. Conk- ling, dating back long anterior to the Blaine letter, and evinced by his alleged attempt to procure by a corrupt bargain testimony to be used against Mr. Conkling in relation to certain alleged frauds in the Utica district of the State of New York. Your committee deemed it a legiti- mate subject of inquiry to investigate to that extent the motive of Gen- eral Fry, and its connexion, if any, with the animus which prompted the letter to Mr. Blaine. Both parties were, therefore, allowed full op- portunity to introduce testimony relating to that point. The first statement of the letter of General Fry to be investigated under the rule adopted by the committee is as follows : " In the summer of 1803 Mr. Conkling made a case for himself by telegraphing to the War Department that the provost marshal of his dis- trict required legal advice, which he was hereupon [thcreiqwn] em- powered to give. ' ' The committee understand this charge to be, that Mr. Conkling se- cured his own employment professionally, by the department, by tele- graphing that the provost marshal of his district required legal advice, and that his motive and object in transmitting the despatch was to se- cure such employment. Unless this is the meaning of the words of the letter, there is no significance at all to be attached to them, in the con- nexion in which they are used. The evidence shows that, in the latter part of July, 1803, a man named Hobson was arrested in the 21st district of New York as a deserter. A writ of habeas corims was issued by Judge Bacon, justice of the Supreme Court, and placed in the hands of the sherifi" of Oneida county. A return was made by the officer hav- ing the deserter in custody, which return showed that the man was held by the military authorities as a deserter from the military service of the United States. This return was adjudged insufficient by the judge who issued the writ, and a writ of attachment was ordered and issued against the officer for declining to bring the deserter before the judge, in obedience to the writ of habeas corpus. A direct conflict had arisen between the military authorities of the United States and the authorities of the State of New York, in reference to which very great excitement had arisen among the people of the district. The district attorney was absent. Mr. Kernan, the representative from that dis- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 243 trict, had been engaged as counsel against the government, and the dan- ger of a collision between the national and State authorities was imme- diate and palpable. In the emergency, and acting at the request and upon advice of eminent citizens of the district, Mr. Conkling sent to the Secretary of War the following despatch : " In the absence of all of us who could aid him professionally, the provost marshal here was served with a habeas corpus to produce a de- serter ; he obeyed the order not to produce, and so returned. The judge held this insuflacient, and issued attachment. He telegraphed the district attorney and his assistant. They are absent and engaged. What shall we do? R. CONKLING." It will be observed that the despatch does not inform the Secretary of War that the provost marshal required legal advice, but was a suc- cinct statement of the actual state of facts, and a request that the Sec- retary should direct what should be done in an emergency which excited the apprehensions of the friends of the government. In the opinion of the committee, Mr. Conkling did only what he was fully justified in do- ing in this matter, and there is no evidence tending, however remotely, to show that in sending the despatch he was influenced by any merely personal motive. The second statement of General Fry's letter which haselaimed the attention of the committee is as follows : "In April, 1865, Mr. Charles A. Dana, then Assistant Secretary of War, without notifying me, had Mr. Conkling appointed to investigate all frauds in enlistments in western New York, with the stipulation that he should be commissioned judge advocate for the prosecution of any cases brought to trial, and he was appointed to prosecute, before a gen- eral court-martial. Major J. A. Haddock. Mr. Dana vested him, by several orders issued in the name of the Secretary of War, without the sanction of Mr. Stanton, with the most extraordinary powers. Among these was the right to examine the despatches in all [the\ tele- graph offices in the western division of New York, which enabled a violation of the sanctity of personal and business correspondence." In another part of the letter Mr. Dana is spoken of as the friend of Mr. Conkling ; and the committee understand the imputation of this portion of the letter to be, that Mr. Dana, of his own motion, without notice to General Fry, and without the sanction of the Secretary of War, and by some management or understanding between Mr. Dana and Mr. Conkling, appointed Mr. Conkling to investigate frauds in en- listments in western New York, and vested him with extraordinary powers. It has been proved before the committee by the testimony of the 244 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. Secretary of War that about the 30th of March, 18G5, the Secretary of War directed Mr. Dana to telegraph to Mr. Conkling to come to Wash- ington, to consult with the Secretary in relation to certain frauds in western New York, in regard to which a report had been made by Major Luddington, [Ludington] an inspecting oflficer, who had been sent to New York for the purpose of investigation. The Secretary of War testifies that he had himself determined that Mr. Conkling should take charge of the investigation of those frauds, if he would do so, and for that pur- p03e directed the despatch to be sent to Mr. Conkling requesting him to come to Washington. On the 2d of April Mr. Conkling came to Wash- ington, and had an interview with the Secretary of War, who then urged him to take charge of the investigation referred to, stating, at the same time, that " he considered a diligent and rigorous investiga- tion as absolutely necessary to the safety of the country ; that we were at that time engaged in the midst of a draft ; General Grant had com- menced his movements ; and that everything depended upon keeping the army up, and the means of keeping the army up was the diligent and vigorous recruiting which was then going on." That Mr. Conk- ling expressed himself very reluctant to engage in it. The Secretary of War expressed to Mr. Conkling an unqualified opinion that there was nothing in the service which he asked of him incompatible with his position as a member of Congress elect, and gave him reasons at length for that opinion, and insisted that it was as much the duty of Mr. Conkling to use his legal knowledge in aid of the government in carrying on the war as to shoulder a musket to drive the enemy out of this department, and that Mr. Conkling was not at liberty to deny the Secretary of War the benefit of his services. The Secretary of War also testified that, if there was anything wrong in Mr. Conkling's taking that duty at that time, the wrong rests on the shoulders of the Secretary of War, and not on Mr. Conk- ling's. That the Secretary is the person that ought to be responsible, in the public judgment, for forcing upon Mr. Conkling what the Secretary regarded as a public duty ; and that he had no other reason for forcing it upon Mr. Conkling than the facts that he thought it a vital duty, and knew Mr. Conkling to be competent to perform it. The Secretary of War directed Mr. Dana to prepare the papers for Mr. Conkling, in case he should conclude to render the services requir- ed, and the papers prepared and given to Mr. Conkling are in conform- ity with the instructions of the Secretary of War. Mr. Conkling, after consultation with the Judge Advocate General, whose views corre- sponded with those of the Secretary, undertook to render the services required. UONKLING AND BLAINE FRY CONTROVERSY. 2-1:5 It is clear, from the evidence, that, so far from Mr. Conkling's ap- pointment having been made by Mr. Dana, and the povpers with which he was clothed having been vested in him by Mr. Dana, the appoint- ment and the powers accompanying it were conferred upon Mr. Conk- ling by the Secretary of War himself ; that Mr. Dana had nothing to do with the matter except to prepare the papers under the specific di- rection of the Secretary. These powers were specified in the following papers : War Department, Washington City, April 3, 1865. Sir : I am instructed by the Secretary of War to authorize you to in- vestigate all cases of fraud in the provost marshal' s office [t/epfo'tmenf] of the western division of New York, and all misdemeanors connected with recruiting. You will, from time to time, make report to the [fJiis] de- partment of the progress of your labors, and will apply for any special authority for which you may have occasion. The Judge Advocate Gen- eral will be instructed to issue to you an appointment as special judge advocate for the prosecution of any cases ihat may be brought to trial before a military tribunal. You will also appear in behalf of this de- partment in any cases that it may be deemed more expedient to bring before the civil tribunals. Very respectfully, your obedient servant, C. A. DANA, Assistant Secretary of War. Hon. ROSCOE CONKLING, War Department, W'lshington City, Ainil 3, 1805. Hon. Roscoe Conkling having been appointed by the Secretary of War to investigate transactions connected with recruiting in the west- ern division of New York, all telegraph companies and operators are respectfully requested to afford him access to any despatches which he may recjuire, for the purpose of detecting frauds, and bringing criminals to trial. By order of the Secretary of War : C. A. DANA, Assistant Secretary of War. War Department, Washington City, April 3, 1865. Hon. Roscoe Conkling having been appointed by the Secretary of War to investigate transactions connected with recruiting in the western division of New York, all provost marshals and other military officers are hereby directed to give him free access to all their official records and correspondence, and to furnish him certified copies of any papers that he may require. By order of the Secretary of War : C. A. DANA, Assistunt Secretary of War. The committee have failed to discover that any extraordinary powers were conferred upon Mr. Conkling without the sanction of the 'J46 GONKLING AND BLAINEFUY CONTROVERSY. Secretary of War, which enabled him to violate the sanctity of per- sonal business correspondence. It is certain that no complaint that the sanctity of any personal business correspondence has been violated by Mr. Conkling under that authority has been brought to the notice of the committee. Both the Secretary of War and Mr. Dana testify that the powers given to Mr. Conkling were those usually given in such cases, and in regard to this paper the Secretary of War testifies: " I do not understand the paper as giving him any right to make use of private despatches any way, but to be a request only to telegraph of- ficers to afford him facilities for detecting frauds and bringing crim- inals to trial. The other, as to the provost marshals giving him free ac- cess to their records and correspondence, is a general authority which is given in all such cases, and Is necessary for any person engaged in these investigations to exercise.' It appears from the testimony of Mr. Dana that the appointment of Mr. Conkling was not made without notifying General Fry, butthat on the 3d of April, the day of the date of the papers which were given to Mr. Conkling. and the day on which he signified his willingness to undertake the duty, General Fry was informed by Mr. Dana that the Secretary of War had employed Mr. Conkling for this purpose, and had directed that he, Mr. Fry, should put into Mr. Conkling' s hands at once all the papers relating to Major Haddock. The statement of General Fry's letter in relation to the sums re- ceived, or reported to have been received, by Mr. Conkling, being adverted to in another jjlace, the next allegation of the letter is as follows : ' ' But, as hereafter shown, he was as zealous in preventing pros- ecutions at Utica as he was in making them at Elniira, and the main ground of difficulty between Mr. Conkling and myself has been that I wanted exposure at both places, while he wanted concealment at one. ' ' In investigating the charge contained in this paragraph, the com- mittee dii'ected their inquiries first to the question whether Mr. Conk- ling had been zealous to prevent prosecution of persons charged with fraud at Utica in the manner particularly specified in the letter, or in any other manner ; and, second, whether Mr. Conkling had manifested any desire that any frauds upon the government at Utica should be concealed, or any inquiry in relation to them suppressed. In considering these questions it became proper for the committee to determine the extent of the duty which had been imposed upon Mr. Conkling by the Secretary of War, and upon this question the under- standing of the Secretary of War, by whom the appointment was made, is thus given in his testimony: " I do not think that Mr. Conkling was authorized or directed to institute prosecutions against any one dis- CONKLINrt AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVEUSY. 247 coniu'cted with Major Hadflock. Major Haddock was the chief of the department; it was alleged that he had accomplices; that these frauds were the I'esiilt of combinations and conspiracies, official and non official , for the purpose of plundering the public treasury; to confine the power simply to Major Haddock's case would have been ineffectually narrow. The power was therefore given him to investigate everything in con- nexion with that transaction, and it would have been unwise for the government to limit it or confine the investigation within a narrower compass than is expressed in the papers But the assignment of Mr. Conkling on the court-martial determines the quesHon, the order de- •^ailing the court and assigning him to act as judge advocate in the trial of Major Haddock and no other person. All that Mr. Conkling could do in respect to other persons than Major Haddock would be to prefer charges or proofs agairst others besides Major Haddock, and then it would require the order of the department detailing this or some other court of which he might or might not be a member as judge ad\ocate, for the purpose of bringing those cases to trial. Mr. Conkling could put nob(>dy on trial, except by the special order of the department." No evidence was given before the committee tending to show any direct effort on the part of Mr. Conkling to prevent the prosecution of any one in Utica or elsewhere, and the inquiry was therefore narrowed to the question *\-hethpr he had in any manner neglected to communi- cate to the department information which he ought to have given in relation to frauds upon the government, aiid especially whether he had neglected to do so bpcause such information would have been used against particular individuals or persons living in Utica district. In the inquiry ujjon this point the testimony was confined, by the ruling of the committee, to the single fact whether frauds existed which had come to tlie knowledge of Mr Conkling, and which he had not made known to the department. Evidence offered in relation to alleged frauds in the Utica district, of which Mr. Conkling was not shown to have had any knowleJge was not received by the committee; nor was evidence received in relation to matters concerning which full infor- mation had been given to the government; the committee believing tliat it was the duty of the War Department to determine what prose- cutions should be instituted when the facts were within the knowledge of the department, and that Mr. Conkling discharged his whole duty in that behalf when the information which he had himself received had been communicated to the War Department. It is true that considerable evidence has been incorporated in the record which would have been excluded by a strict adherence to the rule adopleil by the committee. This has arisen from the fact that much of the testimony was taken while the House was in session, anil 248 CONKLING AND BLAINB-FRY CONTROVERSY. by diffeieut members of the committee, uut having leave to sit during the sessions of the House and it was consequently impossible for the members of the committee taking the testimony to understand the pre- cise connexion of the testimony offered with tliat which had been taken by some other member of the committee, and it was deemed best to be more careful not to exclude any evidence from the record that might possibly be pertinent to the subject-matter of inquiry, than not to admit any that might be wholly irrelevant. The specifications given in Genei'al Fry's letter, vmder the charge that "as hereafter shown, Mr. Conkling was as zealous in preventing prosecutions atUticaashe was in making them at Elmira, " are as fol- lows : ' ' That Mr. Conkling complained both to the President and to the War Department of the action of General Fry in the removal of Cap- tain Richardson (the first provost marshal of Mr. Conkling" s district), upon a report of Judge Advocate Turner that the proofs in his case dis- closed a reckless persistence in fraudulent practices. ''The second issue was as to the testimony [redorhu/] of Captain Crandall, after I had secured his removal from duty on the recommen- dation of Major Luddington, [Lydiiu/ton] who thoroughly inspected the district, and reported that, though not legally guilty, he had morally perpetrated [a] most glaring, [and] inexcusable fraud on the govern- ment, [he vx(.s sioorn to serve] and that he had quieted his conscience by casuistry and regulated his actions by the counsel of unscrupulous legal advisers. Mr. Conkling failed to get Captain Crandall restored. " The third issue was as to the govermnenfs employing counsel to defend Captain Crandall after he had been relieved, and had carried with him, in violation of the orders of the department, some twenty thousand dollars local bounty deposited with him in behalf of recruits, and in regard to which he got into litigation. In this Mr. Conkling failed." The words ' ' as hereafter shown, ' ' as the3=' appear in connexion in General Fry's letter, that Mr. Conkling was as zealous "in preventing prosecutions at Utica as in making them at Elmira," must refer to the three specifications above given, because, unless shown in one or the other of those specifications, it is not shown at all in General Fry's letter that Mr. Conkling was zealous "in preventing prosecutions at Utica," or that " he wanted concealment there." It was contended before the committee that these words, " as hereafter shown," limited the charges against Mr. Conkling to the three specifications above given. If this be so, the specifications signally fail to bear out the charge made. In the case of Captain Richardson it was not the duty of Mr. Conkling to have reported his case to the government, for the reason CONKLING AND BLAINE-FUY CONTROVERSY. 2-l:'.> thai the government already had a full I'eport of the case from Judge Advocate Turner, and it was for the department, and not Mr. Conk- ling, to determine what action should be taken thereon, and because, several months before the appointment of Mr, Conkling to investigate frauds in the western division of New York, this matter had been placed in the hands of William A. Dart, the United States district attoi'ney, who had charge of the case when Mr, Conkling received his api^ointment. Mr, Conkling manifestly did not attempt to prevent the prosecution of Caj^tain Richardson by neglecting to furnish information which was within his knowledge and not within the knowledge of the government, nor by neglecting to institute proceedings against Rich- ardson, because that was a matter with which he had nothing to do. Did he attempt to prevent prosecutions at Ulica by complaining of the action of General Fry in the removal of Captain Richardson? The facts are as follows : December 30, 1864, Mr, Conkling addressed a letter to the President of the United States, in which the fact of the removal of Captain Rich- ardson is stated, and the belief cif the writer that it had been accom- plished by the efforts of Major Haddock, in whom the loyal people had no confidence, and who was suspected of fraudulent practices (which suspicion was afterwards sworn to have been well founded). The let- ter refers to a rumor that charges had been made against Captain Rich- ardson, based, as the letter stales, upon affidavits prepared by those whose character does not raise a presumption in favor of their motives. And then the writer says : "Of course I have nothing to say as to the truth of the charges, if there are charges, as 1 do not know what they are. I ought, however, to say that in common with others I have kept a pretty close watch upon Captain Richardson, and that I have never discovered any corrupt practices in him. But the point I wish to sub- mit is his being thus summarily disgraced without knowledge of the ground and without his being heard. ' ' The letter states that the super- visors through whom the men have been raised had signed and lodged with tlie writer an earnest protest against the proceedings. No com- plaint is made in the Utter against General Fry by name, or by special reference. The letter referred to was written by Mr. Conkling, and the concurrence of the following eminent citizens of that district was indorsed thereon: Hon. W, J. Bacon, Ellis H. Roberts, Hon. Ward Hunt, Erastus Clark. T, R. Walker, ^and C. H. Hopkins. The com- mittee have failed to discover any evidence of any unworthy or im- proper motive on the part of Mr. Conkling, or the other gentlemen con- curring in that letter, nor can thf committee pei'ceive how it is possible to imagine that the letter affords any indication, however remote, that Mr. Conkling was zealous to prevent the pi-osecution of Mr, Richardson, 250 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. or desirous of concealing his acts from scrutiny. Indeed, the main ob- ject of the letter seems to have been to ask an investigation. In relation to Captain Crandall no concealment was possible, for the reason that a full report had been made by Major Luddington[A;/(Z/7ij/^o;/] before Mr Conkling is shown to have had anything to say or do in refer- ence to him ; and surely Mr. Conkling could not be in fault for not prose- cuting him, when, as stated in Major Luddington's[i;»?iH,c//oH] report, he had incurred no legal guilt ; consequently it is not shown by any evidence in relation to Captain Crandall that Mr. Conkling was zealous in prevent- ing prosecutions at Utica, or desired concealment of any frauds there. And here the committee might leave this matter of Captain Crandall, but it is considered but just to Mr. Conkling that a true statement of his connexion with matters relating to Captain Crandall should be given. It appears from the evidence of Hon. Ward Hunt that Mr. Crandall was selected and recommended as a proper person to su.cceed Captain Richardson by said Hunt, Judge Bacon, and other citizens of the dis- trict; that Mr. Conkling refused to have anything to do with the selec- tion or designation of any individual for that position. Judge Hunt testifies that " Mr. Crandall was selected as being an eminently honest and upright man, and a man of the best reputation and character. It was believed by every one that if there was to be found in the county one honest man, he was the one, and that the judgiuent of the citizens of Oneida county is unanimous as to the integrity of Captain Crandall." Tliis statement is corroborated by several other witnesses. No evidence was offered before the committee showing, or tending to show, that Mr. Crandall had been guilty of any fraud or dishonest practice which ever came to the knowledge of Mr. Conkling; and the inquiry in this partic- ular was confined to that limit. The committee are of opinion that tlie evidence does not show that Mr. Conkling was guilty of any impropriety in recommending the restoration of Captain Crandall after Major Lud- dington's {LmUivjton'] report, but on the contrary, it does appear tliat his action was limited to a simple expression of opinion, which opinion was concurred in very generally by the citizens of that district, and suiaported by the report of the detective selected by General Fry to investigate the acts of Captain Crandall. It has not been shown to the committee that General Fry, or any other person believed that Captain Crandall should have been prosecuted. Mr. Dana testifies to the statement of General Fry that he knew nothing which.Captain Crandall had done or omitted which he should not have done or omitted. General Fry, in his letter of November 6, published in the Globe, says that Captain Crandall was suspended from duty for refusing to turn over the $20,000 bonds to a disbursing officer, an act for which he deserved no t;ensure in the opinion of the conunittee, for the reasons herein stated. The letter of General Fry CONKLINC AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 251 t(i Mr. Blaine .states that Captain Crandall was discharged on the recom- mendation of Major Luddington, [/juliiif/foii] who reported that, though not legally guilty, he had morally perpetrated a most glaring.' and inex- cusable fraud on the government he was sworn to serve. The committee have not found in the evidence before them any evidence of such moral fraud on the part of Captain Crandall, and certainly no facts had been shown to be within the knowledge of Mr. Conkling, in relation to Cap- tain Crandall, which would have rendered it improper for Mr. Conkling to have recommended his restoration to office. An attempt was made to show, by the testimony of Patrick J. Kin- ney, that when Aaron Richardson was arrested at Utica he was set at liberty by the officers having him in custody, after an interview which lie had at his own request with Mr. Conkling. In relation to this mat- ter it is only necessary to say that Mr. Richardson had made important disclosures to the government; was a witness in the prosecvition of Had- dock; that the acts of Mr. Conkling in relation to the witness were fully known to and approved by the Secretary of War. In relation to the third specification above stated, the facts are as follows: Captain Crandall required Aaron Richardson, a bounty broker, to deposit security with him that certain men furnished by said Richard- son, and enlisted, should go forward to the front and be there receipted, and the sum of $20,000 in bonds of Oneida county was deposited as such security. Some men that were furnished by Richardson refused to receive any local bounty whatever, insisting that all they claimed or desired was the bounty that government paid others ; they took fifty dollars and would take no more. In all of those cases the right of the recruit to receive the local bounty was fully explained to him by Cap- tain Crandall. But as a precaution against desertion, Captain Crandall required Richardson to deposit five hundred and fifty dollars for each man, as security for receipt of the recruit at the general rendezvous. After depositing the bonds, Richardson claimed that Provost Marshal Crandall had no legal authority to require security for the appearance of the recruit, and demanded that the bonds should be refunded to him. Of the men furnished by Richardson, thirty-one deserted before reach- ing the fi"ont, seven of whom were retaken. These bonds were not ' ' local bounty, ' ' nor were they ' ' deposited in behalf of recruits," as stated in General Fry's letter. They either belonged to Richardson, who deposited them, or to the government, for whose security they were deposited. Hon. Ward Hunt testifies that ' ' about $13,000 would have been forfeited under the contract, about that amount of men having deserted. About $7, 000 no one would have any claim to as against Aaron Richardson. ' ' 252 OONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTUOVBRSY. On the 4th of March, 1865, Major Haddock directed Captain Cran- dall to turn over those bonds to S. Floyd Hoard, special agent. Cap- tain Crandall sought the advice of distinguished and able counsel, and was told he could not safely turn over these bonds to Major Had- dock without risk of being held personally responsible for the amount ; and it also appears that Captain Crandall and his advisers had grave ap- prehensions, since shown to have been well founded, that it would be un- safe to have placed the bonds in the possession of Major Haddock. After taking counsel on the lltli of March, Captain Crandall stated the whole matter in relation to those bonds fully in a letter to General Fry, and asks General Fry to advise him what to do, as follows : ' ' Major Haddock calls ujion me to forward the money and securities to him ; counsel of high standing advise me that I cannot safely do so, but that I am re- sponsible to the parties entitled to it. The money and securities are now on hand, and I wish nothing so much as to pay them over. Can I safely pay this money to Major Haddock, and will the government protect me against the pei-sons who claim it? Be pleased to instruct me on this point. ' ' No answer was made by General Fry so far as the committee can discover. On the 30th of March, 1865, General Fry oi'dered Captain Crandall to turn over to Major Lee all moneys, bonds, and other evi- dences of indebtedness in his possession ' ' belonging to enlisted men ' ' who had deserted either before or after arriving at the general rendez- vous, and all moneys, bonds, and other evidences of indebtedness in his possession belonging to enlisted men other than deserters to the United States paymaster stationed at Elmira. It will be seen that this order did not include the $30,000 of bonds, which were not claimed to belong to enlisted men, whether deserters or others. It does appear clearly that Captain Crandall never claimed any right to hold these bonds on his own account; that he was anxious to be rid of them, and only sought to protect himself from liability; that he deposited the bonds in a bank in Utica, and that when suit was brought against him for the bonds, he advised General Fry of the fact, stating that he had no interest in defending the suit, and asking that the government should defend its right to the bonds. The government never having done this, the county of Oneida has given to Captain Crandall proper security to indemnify him, and assumed the defence of the suit. These bonds belonged unquestionably either to Aaron Richardson or to the government. If they belonged to Richardson, it is not easy to see why the complaint should be made that Captain Crandftll had violated the orders of the department in not turning over the bonds to Major Had- dock or Major Lee, leaving himself liable to Richardson for this amount. If they belonged to the government, it is still more difficult CONKLING AND BLAIXE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 253 to see why the government should not have employed counsel and pro- tected its right to them. The defence of that suit was in no sense a defence of Captain Crandall, but simply the maintenance by the gov- ernment of its right to the bonds. Captain Crandall having been re- moved from office, and having no interest in the question, it seems absurd to require or expect him to defend, at his own expense, a suit which could not benefit or haim him. however it might be de- cided. The committee regard the action of Mr. Conkling, in directing the attention of the department to the condition of this fund and the mani- fest danger of its loss to the government, as highly commendable. Nor have the committee been able to discover anything improper in the conduct of Captain Crandall in relation to these bonds. There is one other statement in the letter of General Fry that comes within the limit of the present investigation, (to wit, the charges against Mr. Conk- ling;) that statment is as follows: " If while acting as judge advo- cate under the extraordinary inquisitorial powers bestowed upon him by his friend, Mr. Dana, he came into [the] possession of any fact impugning [or impenclimrj'] my integrity as a public officer, he was guilty of gross [grave] juiblic wrong and unfaithfulness if he did not instantly file formal charges against me with the Sec- retary of War. He can therefore only escape the charges [charge] of Jeliberate and malignant falsehood as a member of Congress by coiifessing an unpardonable breach of duty as judge advocate." No powers whatever, ' ' extraordinary and inquisitorial ' ' or other- wise, were bestowed upon Mr. Conkling by Mr. Dana ; whatever pow- ers he had were given him by the Secretary of War. and not at the sug- gestion of Mr. Dana. ]\Ir. Conkling was discharging the duties of judge advocate only in the prosecution of Major Haddock. He had nothing whatever to do with filing charges against General Fry. To this point the committee cite the testimony of the Seci'etary of War as follows: ' ' In the prosecution of Major Haddock to final judgment, Mr. Conkling performed all the duty I expected him to perform;" and also the testimony of Mr. Dana, as follows : "I never knew of any authority given to Mr. Conkling in any form, directly or indirectly, at any time, to investigate the acts of General Fry, or to file charges against him. It would have been evidently improper for him to file charges against General Fry, according to the usages of the department. ' ' ACCUSATIONS AS TO DOUBLE OFFICES AND IMPROPER FEES. Another of the statements of General Fry's letter which the com- mittee are directed to inquire into is in these words : '• For his services in this connexion, Mr. Conkling received, on the 254 CONKLING AND BLAINK-FRY CONTROVERSY. 9th of November last, from the United States the modest fee of $3,000. Whether he received, as it has been reported, from his district $5,000 more for the same service, and whether he received additional fees from guilty parties for opposing proceedings at Utica, I am unable now to say." This is asserted in connexion with and after the statement that " In the summer of 1863 Mr. Conkling made a case for himself by tel- egraphing to the War Department that the provost marshal of his dis- trict required legal advice, which he was thereupon empowered to give." The effect of this statement is an insinuation that the employment of Mr. Conkling in this prosecution was by him improperly secured ; that the amount of his compensation by the government was excessive, and that there was some reason to believe that his district had paid him, besides the fee from the government, for the same service, five thousand dollars; and, besides this, that he had been compensated by guilty men for corrupt services which he had rendered them in opposing the prosecutions which he had been employed to make. The charge is not mitigated in its severity by the fact that it only insinuates, and seeks for its author the cover of alleged report. These features only give to it the enhanced capacity for mischief which grows out of the increased difficulty of disproving what is only vaguely charged, instead of being stated with definiteness as to time, place, and circumstances. The committee can find, in all that has come to their knowledge, absolutely nothing which can fiirnish a pre- text for that part of this charge which relates to the five thousand dol- lars and the fee from guilty parties — not even the existence of any such repoit as the charge alludes to. The accusation insinuated is not only utterly false in fact, false in each particular, both as to the five thou- sand dollars from the district, and that from guilty parties, but, so far as proof could be found, it was false in the most insufficient apology for its utterance, to wit, the existence of an alleged report giving it cre- dence. No accusation can well be conceived more intensely hurtful than the last part of this one is. To say of any one that he is sordid or voracious in his methods of getting gain, is to deny to him most of the qualities of a gentleman. To add to this that he gets money by ordinary frauds, is to exclude him from all just title to the common rights of civil and social life. To add, again, that his frauds were as- sociated with compounding of felonies, and his gains the price of their concealment, is to stamp the accused with an ineffable infamy. But if to all this you add that he who is charged with taking the price of the suppressed crime is one of the members elect of his government, and as such charged with its safety ; that, in addition, lie had assumed CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 255 special duties as to the prosecution of the very crimes for the alleged suppi-ession of wliich he has taken pay ; and that the crime suppressed was at least a moral treason against the government of which he was an officer elect, and a treason, too, committed at a time when his gov- ernment's existence was in deepest peril; when, we say, all these ele- ments combine in the accusation, the guilt charged assumes a depth of turpitude which can hardly find a parallel. That such a charge should, without any shadow of cause, be made, in any 'icm/, seems almost in- credible. But that it should be carefully couched in the forms of in- sinuation, showing timidity and solicitude in the author to avoid re- sponsibility, and should then be written out and sent into Congress, to be read in the presence of the nation, and preserved against the accused and his children in the history of Congress, presents, as a libel, a case almost new— certainly singular — for its bad eminence as a wanton and inexcusable violation of the rights of a citizen and member of the gov- ernment. The use that was made in the House of that part of this charge re- lating to the fee of |3,000 makes it due to Mr. Conkling that it s^hould be determined whether his being a member elect of this house rendered it improper or illegal for him to take the employment or its compensa- tion; and the insinuation contained in this statement that the fee was excessive renders it proper to inquire whether it was such. As to the latter point, the committee had no hesitation in coming to the. conclu- sion that Mr. Conkling' s compensation for services rendered to the government was a reasonable one. He had nothing to do with fixing its amount. That was left wholly to the government. He accepted the service with reluctance, and upon the most pressing and repeated solicitations of the Secretary of War. He took it at the sacrifice of other professional business of equal value, or of perhaps greater value to him than he realized for this. He took it at a time when it was almost vital to the interests of the military service in New York that they should be rendered. The committee are of opinion that the Sec- retary of War rightly judged that no one could be found more emi- nently qualified on all accounts for the efficient discharge of that pecul- iar service, under the peculiar circumstances in which it was under- taken and rendered. The duties he assumed were discharged with consummate ability, and with integrity, diligence, and complete suc- cess. They went through about five months. They involved the examin- ation of a large field of complicated facts ; a labyrinth of frauds and vil- lanies. The record of the trial makes some fifteen hundred pages of matter, and resulted not only in discovering and punishing these crimes against the government, but also in the conviction and punishment of the acting provost marshal general of western New York, IVIajor Haddock, 256 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. and in the recovery from him of a fine of $10,000, paid into the United States treasury, besides the further sum of over $300,000, which he was constrained to pay over after the commencement of the prosecution. The committee have come unanimously to the conclusion that the conduct of Mr. Conkling, in entering upon that service, and in its management throughout, was not only free from any improper, selfish, or unpatriotic motives, and from all just grounds of reproach, but his services were singularly able, faithful, and in results valuable to the government. THE LAW. The only other question touching this part of the matter referred to ' the committee to be considered is, whether there was any legal imped- iment in the way of Mr. Conkling, he being a member elect of the 39th Congress, assuming the relation he did assume to the prosecution of Haddock. The committee have sought cax-efully to inquire whether there was any such legal impediment. RIGHT OF DEPARTMENTS TO EMPLOY AND PAY AGENTS. In determining upon this question, it seems perfectly safe to as- sume that what is said by the Supreme Court of the United States, in Gratiot vs. United States, 15 Peters, 371, is the settled law applicable to this class of cases, to wit, that • ' a department charged with the ex- ecution of particular authority, business, or duty, has always been deemed incidentally to possess the right to employ the proper persons to perform the same." * 4= 1= " And also the right, when the service or duty is an extra service or duty, to allow the person so employed a suitable compen.sation." "'This doctrine is not new," says the Su- preme Court, "but is fully expounded in the cases of The United States vs. Riley, 7 Peters 18, and The United States vs. Fillebrown, 7 Peters, 28. " And the court adds : ' ' that in order to justify a refusal to allow such compensation, it is indispensable to show that there is some law which positively prohibits, or by just implication denies, any al- lowance of such compensation." This was said by the court in a case where it was an ofiicer of the United States who was claiming the compensation for services outside of his salary. THE PROHIBITIONS. We assume, then, that there is nothing in the general relations of a member elect of Congress to his government, nor in the general princi- ples of the law growing out of that relation, which would forbid Mr. ■ Conkling becoming the agent or attorney of the government, and re- ceiving compensation therefor; and that if his relations to the Had- dock trial were illegal, it must be owing to some express provision of CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 257 the Constitution or of the law. Is there any such legal prohibition? The legal provisions which have been brought to the attention of the committee, and which are supposed to have some bearing upon the question of the legality of Mr. Conkling's relations to the Haddock trial, and his compensation therefor, .are the following: 1. The Constitution (Art. 1, Sec. VI.) declares that "No person holding an office under the United States shall be a member of either House during his continuance in office." 2. The 18th section of the act of 31st August, 1852 (1 Bright- ly, 821), provides that " No person hereafter who holds or shall hold any office under the government of the United States, whose salary or annual compensation shall amount to the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars, shall receive compensation for discharging the duty of any other office." 3. The 3d section of the act of 3d March, 1839 (5 United States Stat- utes, 349, and 1 Brightly, 820), which reads as follows: *No officer in any branch of the public service, or any other person, whose salaries, or whose pay or emoluments is or are fixed by law or regulations, shall receive any extra allowance or compensation in any form whatever for the disbursements of public money or the performance of any other ser- vice, unless the said extra allowance or compensation be authorized by law. ' ' 4. The 2d section of the act of 23d August. 1842 (5 United States Statutes, 510, and 1 Brightly, 820), which reads as follows: "No ofii- cer in any branch of the public service, or any other person, whose salary, pay, or emoluments is or are fixed by law or regulations, shall receive any additional pay, extra allowance or compensation in any form whatever for the disbursements of public money or other service or duty whatever, unless the same shall be authorized by law, and the appropriation therefor explicitly set forth that it is for such addi- tional pay, extra allowance, or compensation." 5. The 12thsectionof the act of 26th August, 1842 (1 Brightly, 821, 5 United States Statutes, 525), which reads as follows : "No allowance or compensation shall be made to any clerk or other ofiicer by reason of the discharge of the duties which belong to any other clerk or officer in the same or any other department ; and no allowance or compensation shall be made for any extra service whatever which any clerk or other officer may be required to perform." 6. The 1st section of the act of 30th of September, 1850 (1 Brightly, 821, 9 United States Statutes, 542), which reads as follows: "The proper accounting officer of the treasury, or other pay officers of the United States, shall in no case allow or pay to one individual the sal- aries of two different offices on account of having performed the duties 258 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. thereof at the same time. But this prohibition shall not extend to the superintendents of the public buildings." 7. The 1st section of the act of April 21, 1808 (1 Brightly, 190, and 2 United States Statutes, 484), which reads as follows: " No member of Congress shall, directly or indirectly, himself, or by any other per- son whatsoever in trust for him. or for his use or benefit, or on his ac- count, undertake, execute, hold, or enjoy, in whole or in part, any con- tract or agreement hereafter to be made or entered into with any officer of the United States in their behalf, or with any person authorized to make contracts on the part of the United States; and if any member of Congress shall, directly or indirectly, himself, or by any other per- son whatsoever in trust for him, or for his use or benefit, or on his ac- count, enter into, accept, or agree for or undertalce or execute a)iy such con- tract or agreement, in whole or in part, every member so offending shall, for every such offence, upon conviction thereof before any court of the United States or the Territories thereof having cognizance of such offence, be adjudged guilty of a high misdemeanor and shall be fined three thousand dollars; and every such contract or agreement as •aforesaid shall moreover be absolutely void and of no effect." 8. The 1st section of the act of June 11, 1864 (2 Brightly, 105, and 13 United States Statutes, 123), which reads as follows: " No member of the Senate or House of Representatives shall, after his election and during his continuance in office, nor shall any head of a department, head of a bureau, clerk, or other officer of the government, receive or agree to receive any compensation whatsoever, directly or indirectly, for any services rendered or to be rendered, after the passage of this act, to any person, either by himself or another, in relation to any pro- ceeding, contract, claim, controversy, charge, accusation, arrest, or other matter or thing in which the United States is a party, or directly or indirectly interested, before any department, court-martial, bureau, officer, or any civil, military, or naval commission whatever; and any person offending against the provisions of this act shall, on conviction thereof, be deemed guilty of a misdeameanor, and be punished by a fine not exceeding ten thousand dollars, and by imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years, at the discretion of the court trying the same, and shall be forever thereafter incapable of holding any office of honor or trust or profit under the government of the United States." THE CONSTITUTIONAL PROHIBITION. These are all of the existing laws which have come to the attention of the committee, and which are supposed to contain anything bearing, either nearly or remotely, upon the matter of this service of Mr, Conk- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 259 ling being prohibited by law. There are other laws which bear upon other points in this inquiry, which will be alluded to. With these provisions of the Constitution and law before us, and assuming as law that which we have above stated from the case of Gratiot rs. The United States (15 Peters, 371', we inquire whether any of these provisions of express law do away with that general principle as applicable to the matter before the committee; or whether either of these provisions prohibit or render illegal what was done by Mr. Conk- ling in the Haddock trial, he being a member elect of the 39th Con- gress. To avoid, if we can, confusion, we first consider this without ref- erence to the question whether Mr. Conkling should be paid, as a mem- ber of the 39th Congress, for the same time covered by his service in the Haddock trial, and for which time it is suggested he was paid by the fee of thi'ee thousand dollars, and let the inquiry be first disposed of whether it was illegal for Mr. Conkling to assume that service and to take compensation therefor. And, in disposing of this inquiry, let it first be granted that Mr. Conkling, in what occurred in that service, became and was a "judge advocate, ' ' in the strictest sense, and that he was thereby made an officer of the' United States, and was not a mere agent and counsel of the government. In entering upon this inquiry, the committee do not forget the tnith nor the supreme importance of that principle of our government which was pressed upon the attention of the committee in the argu- ment of this case, and which received, during the 38th Congress, the sanction of this House in its approval of the report in the cases of Rob- ert C. Schenck and of Francis P. Blair. The jirinciple to which we allude is thus stated in that report: *' Nothing is plainer in the theory and plan of this government than the distinct and separate organization of the executive, judi.cial, and legislative departments, and the sedulous care with which each has been clothed and guarded in the exercise of duties entirely in- dependent of the others. Yet the attempt to invest the same person with two offices, one legislative and the other executive, and require of him at the same time the discharge of the duties of both, is, whether they be conflicting or not, a commingling of the duties of the executive and legislative departments. It is bringing the Executive himself into the very halls of Congress, and if persisted in, might ultimately prove as pernicious as if he had a seat therein, and as many votes as be had commissions. If one representative in Congress may at the same time hold under the Executive the office of major general, so may another, and another may as well be a brigadier general, or hold any other offi- 260 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. cial position in the military service under the Executive and command- er-in-chief, and bound to obey him. By such process the House may at any time be put under the control and become the pliant instrument of the Executive to any end. Its members would cease to be the rep- resentatives of the people, and become only the agents of the Execu- tive." The framers of the Constitution saw this so clearly, and felt the in- dependence of the legislative over the executive department was so es- sential and vital that they deemed the inhibition worthy of an express constitutional enactment, that " no person holding any office under the United States shall be a member of either House during his continuance in office. ' ' (Art. 1 , sec. VI. ) Still, in view of this important principle, the committee have not been able to see how the acceptance and discharge of the duties of the office of judge advocate by Mr. Conkling, the duties, tenure, and exist- ence of which office (if such it was in him) were in their nature such as would most likely be, and were in fact, wholly ended and gone be- fore he was, by law or the Constitution, required to qualify as a mem- ber of Congress, or to enter upon, assume, or discharge any Guty as such, conflicting with these principles. Upon this subject-matter the committee deem the following two propositions to be entirely settled in our government: 1. "The acceptance by a member of any office under the United States, after he has been elected to, and has taken his seat in Congress, operates as a forfeiture of his seat. ' ' (See Van Ness case, CI. and Hall, 122; Schenck and Blair case, 38th Congress, &c.) 2. " Continuing to execute the duties of an office under the United States after one is elected to Congress, but before he takes his seat, is not a dis- qualification, such office being resigned or extinct prior to the taking of the seat." (See Hammond vs. Herrick, CI. and Hall, 287; Earl's case, ibid., 314; Munford'scase, ibid., 316; Schenck and Blair's case, 38th Congress, &c.) The committee agree with the reasoning and conclusions of the re- port, from which we have already (quoted, that the continuance to hold another office after the time when the law and Constitution n quires the member elect to qualify and enter upon the discharge of his duties as a member, is, in legal contemplation, an act of election by him to vacate his office as a member ; and such continuance to hold the other of- fice is equivalent, in its legal significance, to the act of acceptiiKj and entering upon an office tendered after the member was qualified. Both alike vacate the legislative office. The act, therefore, of Mr. Conkling in acceptimj an office not previously held, which, from its nature, would terminate before he would be required to assume any duty as a mem- ber, had no more nor less effect in depriving him of his right to enter CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 261 upon his ollice as a member of Congress than the act of continuing, after he was elected, to exercise the duties of an office which he had previously entered upon would have. Neither operates to vacate his seat in this house, the first office being such as must be and was wholly ended or abandoned before the time comes when he is required to enter upon his duties as a legislator. The act of acceptance of such a tem- porary office at such a time did not, in its nature, indicate any election or purpose to abandon or resign the membership in Congress. " The object of the constitutional prohibition upon an officer becoming a member of Congress is attained, so far as it can be, by this provision, if the inhibition attaches the moment the member enters upon the dis- charge of his duties as such, and nothing is gained by an earlier appli- cation of it." There was, therefore, no constitutional objection to Mr. Conkling's accepting this office of judge advocate, if he did become such oflScer. PROHIBITORY STATUTES. The acts of Congress above referred to, of the dates, respectively, of March 3, 1839, and of the 23d and 26th of AugU8t,1842, are, as is said by the Attorney General of the United States (5 Opins., 768), "the same in their sense and meaning ' ' ; and as to all of these acts, includ- ing that of September 30, 1850, above cited, he says: "They do not for- bid a person from holding two compatible offices at the same time. They were intended to prevent arbitrary extra allowances in each par- ticular case, but do not apply to distinct employments with salaries af- fixed to each by law or regulations." (See also 6 Opins., 80 and 825.) If the committee were left to their own construction of these stat- utes of 1839, 1842, and 1850, we would have attained the same conclusion at which the Attorney General arrived in these opinions. But when there is added to the force of these and several other equiva- lent opinions by the Attorney General of this government, the weight of the fact that all these statutes were in force when most of the very numerous decisions by this House were made, determining that there was nothing either illegdl or unconstitutional in a member of Congress elect (but not (lualified) holding an office under the United States gov- ernment, provided he did not hold it after the time came when the Constitution required him to assume his duties as a legislator, the com- mittee could not hesitate in coming to the conclusion that neither the Constitution nor either of these statutes alluded to in the opinion of the Attorney General, were violated when Mr. Conkling became (if he did) special judge advocate, and took compensation therefor. We say " took compensation therefor," because in all the cases we have cited the member elect, as the committee understand the history of the cases, 262 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. received hia compensation for his first office during the time he held it, but not his compensation as a member for the same time. THE STATUTE AGAINST JOBBING. Although not quite in proper order, it may perhaps as well be said here as anywhere else that the committee do not see what the statute of April 21, 1808, has to do with this inquiry. That act renders it a crime for any member of Congress to "undertake, execute, hold or enjoy, in whole or in part, any contract or agreement, hereafter to be made or entered into, with any officer of the United States, in their behalf, or with any person authorized to make contracts on the part of the United States." No "contract " or "agreement" has been proved in this case between Mr. Conkling and any other person, coming within what is the obvious meaning of these words in the act of 1808, The design of that statute is what is expressed by the Attorney General of the United States (4 Opins., 48) when he says, "The object of the statute is only to prevent jobbing between members of the legislature and the Executive for the primary advantage of the former." Surely the prac- tice which has been general and uninterrupted, as must be within the personal knowledge of every intelligent citizen, of members of Congress acting as the attorneys of their government, has not subjected all such attorneys to indictment and fine of three thousand dollars. No one has suggested that such is the law, and the committee would have made no allusion to it but for the fact that it is presented to our consideration in the brief of Mr. Conkling. THE ACT PROHIBITING MEMBERS BECOMING CL.MM AGENTS, ETC. The act of June 11, 1864, cited above, renders it a high crime for any member of Congress, at any time after his election, " to receive or agree to receive any compensation for any services rendered to any person in relation to any proceeding, contract, claim, controversy, charge, accusation, arrest, or other matter or thing in which the United States is a party, or interested directly or indirectly, before any depart- ment, court-martial, bureau, officer, or any civil, military, or naval commissioner whatever." This statute would have been directly in point had Mr. Conkling received compensation for being the counsel for Haddock in this court- martial. The fact that this recent statute, passed in full and thorough- ly intelligent view of all the important questions of law, which your committee is required to consider, carefully confines its prohibitions to preventing members elect from taking compensation for services ren- dered before courts-martial, &c., " to any person" and against the gov- ernment, and does not prohibit such compensation being paid by the government, nor prohibit such service being rendered in its favor; and CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERST. 263 this, too, in the identical case before the committee, is one of the strong- est possible legislative determinations of the very question we consider. Here is a law which comes up squarely, face to face, in front of that exact question we consider, to wit, whether a member elect to Congress ought to be permitted to receive compensation for services rendered to either of the parties to a trial before a court-martial. And the Con- gress said it should not be lawful for him to take compensation for ser- vices rendered to one side — " any person " — and now shall we be told that Congress meant to declare that it was equally illegal to take com- pensation for services rendered to the other side, to wit, for services in favor of the United States ? On the other hand, is this not a conclu- sive legislative determination that a member elect might be compen- sated for services rendered to that other non-prohibited side of the case? It so seems to the committee. ACT OF 1852. This disposes of all the alleged legal prohibitions upon Mr. Conk- ling's entering upon the service, unless it be (and we think including) that supposed to be contained in the 18th section of the act of 2l8t of July, 1852, already cited, (1 Brightly, 821,) and which is as follows: " No person hereafter who holds or shall hold any office under the gov- ernment of the United States, whose salary or annual compensation shall amount to the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars, shall re- ceive compensation for discharging the duties of any other office. ' ' It was suggested in the debates in the House, and earnestly urged elsewhere, that this section, even if it did not render Mr. Conkling's services upon the Haddock trial illegal, does render it illegal for him to receive compensation for his services upon that trial. The committee is not quite certain that the order of the House directing it to inquire into the charges against Mr. Conkling contained in the letter of General Fry to Mr. Blaine admits of the committee's examining the question whether Mr. Conkling was entitled to take that compensation of $8,000. That letter does not charge that the taking of any fee was illegal, but only insinuates that it was excessive. Still, after what occurred touch- ing this double compensation in the debates of the House, the commit- tee deem it proper to examine this question also. If it be outside of the duties of the committee, an easy way of preventing mischief from this part of the report will be to disregard it. The determination of the question whether this act of 1852 renders it illegal for Mr. Conkling to receive, in addition to his salary as a mem- ber of Congress, this $3,000, requires the committee to determine one or more of the following questions : 1. Is one who has been elected to Congress, but who has not yet 264 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. taken the cath of office, nor in any way entered upon the discharge of the duties of hia office, and prior to the time when, by law, he is required to enter upon these duties, " a person who holds any office " ? 2. Granting that he is, in the case stated in the preceding ques- tion, a person holding an office, then does he hold an office *' under the government of the United States " within the just sense of this section ? 3. If he, as a member elect, is an officer " under the government of the United States," then did Mr. Conkling, in what he did in the Haddock service, become an officer of the United States ? 4. If he did not become an officer of the United States, did he, in that Haddock trial, discharge " the .duties of any other office " and re- ceive compensation therefor? IS A MEMBER ELECT ONE HOLDING OFFICE? The first of these inquiries is, in the judgment of the committee, answered so far as is necessary in deciding upon the effect of the act of 1853, by the cases of Hammond, of Earl, of Munford, of Schenck, and others, which we have already cited. These cases, as we have seen, all determine that, prior to the time when the Constitution requires the member elect to commence the duties of his legislative office, and before he has assumed these duties and taken the oath of office, he may receive compensation for discharging the duties of another office. As we have already said, these cases do not determine that he may also be compensated as a member of Congress for the same time for which he was compensated in the other office. But they do determine that being a member elect of Congress does not make him an " officer " in such sense as to bring him within the prohibition of the act of 1853. This question, in substance, received the careful attention of the House in the 38th Congress, upon an able report of one of its commit- tees. The committee and House came to what your committee deem a just conclusion, when it determined that one merely elected to Con- gress, but who had not entered upon his duties nor been qualified, was not a member of this House, that is, did not hold an office so as to pre - vent him from continuing to hold another office and receive compensa- tion therefor. The committee, in concluding their argument showing that one merely elected to Congress was not a member of the House, and not, as such, amenable to its jurisdiction, say: "The committee are not aware of any attempt to punish a representative elect, and of but one instance of an attempt to expel one. A resolution was adopted by the last House, under the previous question, to expel a person who was a representative elect, but had never signified his acceptance of the office, nor qualified, nor even appeared in Washington for the purpose of taking his seat." CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 265 In that case the House determined, in efifect, that the act of 1852 did not prohibit General Schenck, while a member elect of Congress, from receiving the pay of another office, to wit, that of major general of volunteers. This is the last case in which this question came before the House. But the same question received, in the 15th Congress, in the case of Hammond vs. Herrick, (Clark and Hall, Contested Elections, 293, 294,) a still more elaborate and exhaustive consideration. In the report in that case (which also received the sanction of the House) this doctrine was explicitly stated, and was affirmed after a thorough review of the Eoglish and American cases touching it. The case held the rule which was stated by the committee in these words : " Neither do election and return constitute morahership. " * * * " Our rule in this particular is different from that of the House of Commons. It is also better, for it makes our theory conform to what is fact in both countries — that the act of becoming in reality a memlier of the House depends wholly upon the person elected and returned. Election does not of itself constitute membership, although the period may have arrived at which the con- gressional term commences," This House has again and again determined that men elected to it, who do not appear in the body and assume the constitutional oath of office, are not to be reckoned as members of the House in determining the number required to make a majority or quorum of the body. FRANKINa PRIVILEGE, ETC. The committee, in coming to this conclusion, have not overlooked the fact that members elect, but not qualified, are by the laws accorded certain privileges and salary. The effect of this right to enjoy these privileges before becoming qualitied as a member of the legislative body has received the fullest attention both in this House and in the English Parliament. The result attained is, that these special privileges are not necessarily indicia of actual official authority or station, and may by law as well be attached to one's person before and after he is an officer and during his official tenure. The representatives after the expiration of their terms, the Presidents of the United States after such expira- tion, and the widows of certain ex-Presidents, all have the franking privilege, and these are not then officers of the government in any sense. The assumption of office in this country, as well as its relin- quishment, is voluntary, and one elected to Congress is at perfect liber- ty to refuse to assume the office. His exercise of the franking privi- lege, with the knowledge that he never would enter upon the duties of the office, would be an act of bad faith towards his government ; but that would not render him a member of Congress, nor would the 266 CONKLINft AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. exercise prevent him, should failure of health or other cause render it improper to enter upon his office, from rightly refusing ever to take the office. . Other and perhaps more conclusive considerations bearing upon this important inquiry might be given ; but it is not deemed best to pursue it further. The committee are entirely satisfied that the law of this House is fully and rightly settled as to this point, and that he is not a memher of Congress, nor one who " holds any office under the govern- ment of the United States," who has only been elected to this House, but who has never taken any oath of office nor entered upon the duties of that position. Mr. Conkling was not prohibited by the act of 1852 from receiving compensation as he did for his services in the Haddock trial, even if his duties on that trial were official. We have not yet reached the ques- tion of his right to be also paid his salary as a member of this House for the same time covered by the Haddock service. IS AN ACTING MEMBER OF CONGRESS AN OFFICER OF OR UNDER THE GOVERNMENT ? The next proposition the committee were called to consider and de- cide is thus stated by Mr. Conkling : "A representative in Congress is not at all within the words ^person tcho holds an office under the government of the United States.'' Senators and representatives do not hold offices under the government of the United States. They are part of the government, and therefore not afl!ected one way or the other by these provisions." If the committee were sustained in the views they have taken of other propositions in this inquiry, then the consideration of this one would not be necessary to the determination of what is before the com- mittee. But as the committee may not be sustained in the other prop- ositions which dispose of the case, they have i^elt impelled carefully to consider this one. The proposition that a member of Congress who has been sworn into office is not an officer under the government of the United States, within the sense of the act of 1852, is supported by an appeal to au- thorities expounding the sense of these words as used in the Constitu- tion. These or similar words are found in the Constitution in the follow- ing clauses : 1. That prohibiting senators and representatives during the term for which they are elected from being appointed to "any civil office under the authority of the United States" which was created or its emol- uments increased during such time. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 267 2. That prohibiting a person " holding any qtfice iinder the United States from being a member of either House of Congress. ' ' 3. That giving Congress the power to make all laws necessary to carry into effect the powers vested by the Constitution in "ajiy officer of the (jdeernment of the United States." 4. That prohibiting every " person holding an// office of prof t or trust under the United ^States from accepting any present, office, &c., from any king, prince or foreign state without the consent of Con- gress. ' ' 5. That prohibiting every senator, representative, and person " holding an office of trust or profit under the United States''' from being appointed an elector for President, &c. 6. That providing that the President shall commission " all officers of the United States.'''' 7. That providing that " all civil officers of the United States shaXl be removed from office on impeachment. ' ' 8. That prohibiting any one who has suffered a judgment of im- peachment from holding or enjoying ''any office of honor, trust, oi' pjrofit under the United States.''' The proposition stated, and which the committee are atked to af- firm, is, that a member of Congress and his office are not included in the scope or meaning of the words of the Constitution, "officer under the United States," or "civil office under the authority of the United States. " It is said that he is part of the government and is not under it. It seems to be indicated that he may, in the sense of the Constitution, be an officer of the government, but not under the gov- ernment. In the impeachment of Blount (Wharton's State Trials, 268, &c.) this argument is presented by Mr. Bayard, but he (p. 269) makes the very proper remark as to such an argument that he was " unwilling to place any confidence upon an argument derived from mere verbal criticism. In construing the charter of a government, our views should comprehend all its parts, and our aim should be to execute it ac- cording to its general and true design." No method of attaining the sense of the Constitution is more unsafe than this one of " sticking" in sharp verbal criticism. But a little consideration of this matter will show that " officers of " and " officers under " the United States are (as said by Mr. Dallas, in this Blount case, p. 277) "indiscriminately used in the Constitution." Take that clause as to who may be impeached. The Constitution says that "the President, Vice-President, and all civil officers of the United States shall be removed from office on impeach- ment for and conviction of treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors." Now, then, if officers of the United States do not in- clude officers under the United States, (that is, officers appointed by 268 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. the President, such as judges, &c.,) then you cannot impeach anybody except the President, Vice-President, and, perhaps, the members of Congress, if the latter are to be deemed officers of the government. Again: the judgment of impeachment diequalifies the convict from holding " any office of trust or profit under the United States," and not from holding the offices of the United States. You can only impeach them who are officers of the United States, and then, when impeached, they are only prohibited from holding offices under the United States — that is, they can hold the same offices from which they were excluded by impeachment, but cannot hold the inferior executive offices under those from which the impeachment does not perpetually exclude them. Again : the Constitution provides that *' the President shall appoint all officers <)/'the United States." Are not the judges, ministers, heads of departments, postmasters, &c., officers under the United States? If so, they are also officers of the United States, because the Constitution only authorizes him to appoint officers of the United States. It is irresistibly evident that no argument can be based on the dif- ferent sense of the words " o/"" and " under, ^' as used in these clauses of the Constitution, and we must approach this question as to whether a member of Congress is an officer " under " the United States, with the knowledge that if we find him to be eitltei- an officer " of " the United States, or one " under " the government of the United States, in either case he has been brought within the constitutional meaning of these words, as used in the act of 1852, because they are made by the Con- stitution equivalent and interchangeable. All we have to do, therefore, is to find out whether the Constitution anywhere (not everyichcre) uses these expressions " officers of " or "of- ficers under the United States ' ' in such sense as must include mem- bers of Congress. If the Constitution once so uses either of these equiv- alent expressions, then all argument as to the sense of these words in the act of 1852, so far as that argument is derived from their meaning in the Constitution, is destroyed, because if the Constitution once uses these words in a sense which includes members of Congress, then so may the act of 1852 so use them. Now, let us see whether there is any clause where one or other of these phrases, " officers of " or " officers under the government of the United States," must include members of Congress. Take the clause above cited as to receiving presents, &c., from any king, &c There the prohibition is that " no person holding any office of profit or trust under the United States shall," &c. Now, will it do to hold that a clerk in the post-office shall not be permitted to receive of- fices, &c., from a king, &c., without the assent of Congress, and yet CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 269 every member of the S9nate or of the House be permitted to be "plied," in the interests of a foreign government, with bribes, in the shape of presents, offices, emoluments, and titles ? May the King of England make the American Senate a British House of Lords? He may, unless the position of a senator and representative is an " officer under the United States," because there is no other clause prohibiting such bestowals ! Again : take the clause containing the requirement that no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any of- fice or public trust uiuler the United States. Now, shall it be held that a member of Congress may be required to have some religion, or a par- ticular religion, by the establishment of a religious test as to his office, and yet all the other offices of the government be kept open to the in- fidels? And yet this is the law of the government, unless a member of Congress be one holding an office or public trust under the United States ; for there is no other prohibition than this one upon requiring such religious tests. Or take the clause, already cited, as to the effect of judgments of impeachment. If a member of Congress does not bold any office of trust or profit under the United States, then his is an office into which one may immediately and freely enter who has, by impeachment, just been convicted of treason, bribery, or other high crime. This is be- cause the only places into which an impeached felon cannot enter are " offices of honor, trust, or profit under the United States." The convicted traitor may not enter the office of " deputy United States assessor of internal revenue, " but he may become United States sena- tor! We might increase theae examples, but surely it is not necessary. Surely it cannot be that the Constitution contains elements so repugnant to all just or safe principles of government. But we are referred to authorities to establish this proposition that a member of Congress is not an officer "of" or "under" the United States ; and the leading case relied on is the impeachment of William Blount, a United States senator from Tennessee. The case is found fully reported in Wharton's State Trials, 250. Justice Story (1 Const., section 793) says this case decides that a United States senator is not a civil officer of the United States. This remark of the learned author is obviously an incautious one, and not fully authorized by what occurred in that case. The same author in the same section expressly declares that the ' ' reasoning by which the decision was sustained does not ap- pear, the deliberations having been private." He adds that " it was in-ohaWj held that civil officers of the United States " meant such as de- rived their appointment from and under the national government, &c. The defences of Mr. Blount (see page 3G0) were various. His main 270 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. ones were : First, that the oflFences charged were cognizable in the civil courts and not on impeachment, they not relating to his official duties. Second, that he had been expelled from the Senate before the trial of the impeachment, and that he was therefore not an officer of the United States and not amenable to the Senate. As to what this case does decide, Whartoa (page 317) justly says : " In a legal point of view, all that this case decides is, that a senator of the United States -who has heen expelled from his seat is not. (ifter such ex- 2ndsion, subject to impeachment ; and 2^^'''haps from this the broader proposition may be drawn that none are liable to impeachment except officers of the government in the technical sense, excluding thereby members of the national legislature. ' ' Judge Story further says of this decision that it was one on " which the Senate was greatly divided," (14 to 11,) and which " seems not to have been quite satisfactory to the minds of some learned commenta- tors." (4 Tuck. Black. Com. App,, 57, 58; Rawle on Const., ch. 23» pp. 213, 214, 218, 219.) Without, therefore, designing to determine that the case of Blount did not decide that a member of Congress was not a civil officer of the United States " in some technical sense," the committee are wholly unable to come to the conclusion that the members of the national Con- gress are not, in the enlarged and general sense of the Constitution, officers of their government. The committee do not believe that any authority is to be found holding that they are not. It by no means follows, because a member of Congress may not be tried by impeach- ment, that he is not a " civil officer of the United States " in the sense we now consider. There are other clauses and principles of the Con- stitution which affect the question of the right to impeach a senator, be- sides that single one as to who are included in the just sense of the words "civil officers of the United States." Such is that one provid- ing a method for the expulsion of members ; also those as to the sepa- rate and independent action of the two Houses touching their own members, &c. These and like considerations may well be held to con- trol and qualify the words of the clause of the Constitution as to who may be impeached. No one can read the singularly able and exhaus- tive argument in the case of Blount and not realize that the other principles and terms of the Constitution ought to and did control the sense of the words " all civil officers of the United States,*' as used in this clause. The committee decline to find that an acting member of Congress is not an officer of this government within the sense of at least some of the clauses of the Constitution. The committee here leave this important question made in this case. The effort of the committee, so far as this single point is concerned, has been to bring to the attention CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 271 of the House the leading considerations which must form the basis of its determination by the House, should its determination be found necessary. In the opinion of the committee, the determination of this point is not necessary to the right determination of all that is before the committee, and this is not, perhaps, a proper case in which to make a precedent upon so vital a constitutional question. ACT OF 1852 INCLUDES ACTING MEMBERS IN THE WORD "OFFICE." But suppose it be granted that the constihitional sense of the words " officer of the United States," or " office under the United States," be what is insisted by Mr. Conkling, does it follow that they are used in so limited a sense in the act of 1852 ? Having regard to the mischief meant to be prevented by it, the committee have been wholly unable to find adequate reasons why a member of Congress who has taken his seat should not be deemed an officer "of" or "under" the govern- ment in such sense as that he should not be permitted to draw the sala- ries of two offices at the same time, though holding but one. To hold that a member of Congress is as free as other men from human infirm- ities, and as little liable to fall into temptation, is, probably, according to him, as high a grade of virtue as would be accorded to him either by the truth or by the judgment of his fellow-men. But if you look to the nature and powers of his office, and the absolutely vital importance of having him removed as far as possible from the bad influences of corruption and avarice, such as he would be liable to encounter, could he become entitled to the pay of many offices at the same time, the propriety of holding that this act of 1852 meant to preclude members of Congress from receiving double salaries becomes quite irresistible. We therefore conclude that whatever may be the meaning of the words " office under the United States," as used in the Constitution, they, in the act of 1852, ought to be held to, and do, preclude an acting member of Congress from receiving compensation for the duties of any other office. WAS MR. CONKLING, AS ACTING JUDGE ADVOCATE, AN OFFICER? We are now brought to the question whether Mr. Conkling, in what occurred in this prosecution of Haddock, became an officer of the United States. That he did not we think is most readily ascertained. An office is a particular duty, charge, or trust, conferred h/ pulnlie au- thorit'y, and for a public purpose, with a right usually attached to re- ceive a fixed compensation for such service. Nothing can be plainer than that no office of this government can be created or conferred ex- cept by some public authority authorized by law to confer it. Upon this very question Chief Justice Marshall, in the case of Maurice, (2 Brock., 101,) says: "It is too clear, I think, for controversy, that ap- 272 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. pointments to office can be made by heads of departments in those cases only which Congress has authorized by law ; and I know of no law which authorizes the Secretary of War to make this appointment. ' ' And in that case it was decided that Maurice did not become an officer, and that his contract with the government, on which the suit was brought, was good only by reason of the fact that the United States is a government, and as such can, at common law, make a valid contract with its agents as to matters of government. The Constitution (art. 2, sec. 2, clause 2) provides that " the Presi- dent shall nominate, and, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, shall appoint " * * * "all officers of the United States whose appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which shall be established by law. But the Congress may by law vest the appointment of such inferior officers as they think proper in the President alone, in the courts of law, or in the heads of departments. ' * This clause covers every possible office under or in the government. Aside from the Presi- dent, Vice-President, and members of Congress (these being the offices included under the above words, "appointment herein provided for,'') there are but three repositories in which can be placed the power to be- stow any office, to wit : the President, (the Senate assenting,) the courts of law, and the heads of departments. There was, in April, 1865, no law giving to any court or any head of any department any power whatever to confer upon any person any office of general or special judge advocate, as an ojfieer of the government. The 6th section of the act of July 17, 1862, (2 Brightly, 25,) author- izing the President, with the assent of the Senate, to appoint a judge advocate, with rank and pay of a major of cavalry for each army ; and the 6th section of the act of June 20, 1864, (2 Brightly, 26 ) authorizing the President, with assent of Senate, to appoint a judge advocate gen- eral, with rank of brigadier general, and an assistant, with rank of colonel of cavalry, are the only laws then in force, so far as the com- mittee find, permitting the appointment of any judge advocate as such. Counsel in their briefs have treated the 49th section of the articles of war of April 10, 1806, (1 Brightly, 79,) as being also in force, which the committee assume, on their authority, it was. This last permitted the jvdge adcocate or the general or officer commanding the army, detach- ment, or garrison to ^^ depute some jjerson to prosecute in the name of the United iStates''' milit&ry oSenceB, If there are any other laws bearing upon these appointments, they have escaped the attention of the com- mittee. The same section last named provides that " the judge advo- cate, or person officiating as such,'''' shall take a certain oath to keep secret the doings of the court. (1 Brightly, 86.) The 25th section of the act of 3d March, 1863. (2 Brightly, 26,) authorizes the judge advocate to CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 273 issue process for witnesses. This oath and these duties Mr. Conkling took and performed in the Haddock trial. He had no other appoint- ment or commission than that shown by the letters of April 3 by Mr. Dana, set forth in the letter of General Fry to Mr. Blaine. He was not required to, nor did he take the usual oath of all officers of the United States, nor did he take the oath required by the act of July 2, 1862. (2 Brightly, 348.) Without taking that oath he could not enter upon or take compensation for the duties of any office whatever, except the office of President. There is no law anywhere authorizing Mr. Stanton to appoint any one to the office of judge advocate. In the let- ter of Mr. Dana above quoted, it was said that " The Judge Advocate Gen- eral will be instructed to issue to you an appointment as special judge advocate for the prosecution of any cases that may be brought to trial before a military tribunal." But even this was not done. Under this state of law and fact the committee do not think that Mr. Conkling either did or could become an "officer" of the United States. Under these laws a judge advocate, or a general or officer, might, under the Constitution, '-depute" Mr. Conkling as agmt, but could not give him an office, because the Constitution does not permit these men to be au- thorized to appoint to otHce. "DUTIES OF ANY OTHER OFFICE." The only remaining question is, whether his being paid 13,000 for five months' service, from April 3, 1865, was such a compensation for " discharging the duties of any other office," as to require Mr. Conk- ling, in justice or legal propriety, to either pay back what he has re- ceived for those services, or else not to draw his salary as a member of Congress for that time. The committee submit to the House the following propositions as conclusions at which they have arrived as to this point : 1. When a member elect of Congress has drawn the salary or pay for any other office, for any time after the 4th of March preceding his entering upon his duties as a member of Congress, he should not re- ceive any compensation as a member of Congress for that same time. 2. The act of 31st August, 1852, (1 Brightly, 821,) which is relied on as prohibiting Mr. Conkling from receiving the $3,000, does not apply to " duties" or services for which there was no officer provided by law whose duty it was to discharge them, and which duties were, in their nature and in law, such that " some other person" than an officer might legally discharge them, 3. The duties discharged by Mr. Conkling were duties for the doing of which the law had not provided, nor paid any other officer, and charged such officer, as part of his official duty at that time and 274 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. place, to enter upon and do. But, on the other hand, they are services which, in their nature and under existing law, (1 Brightly, 79 and 80,) some other person than a judge advocate could do. The law expressly permitted some person not a judge advocate, and " detailed by him " and " officiating as such," to discharge them, 4. The law, or military regulations in pursuance of law, may con- fer upon private individual^, not officers, powers similar to those usually exercised by officers, such as that of issuing subpoenas, swearing wit- nesses, &c. Such is common in regulations touching elections, special commissions, the duties in some of the States of attorneys, of grand jurors, and the like. These conferments of such temporary or limited powers do not, in the sense of the Constitution and laws of the United States, necessarily constitute the recipients of them "officers, " nor make their duties those of "any office." 5. Mr. Conkling's services in the Haddock trial were not " the duties of any other office," within the meaning of the act of 1852, and he was entitled to compensation therefor, the same as for any private service rendered by him in his profession. His having, therefore, re- ceived this money as the ordinary earnings of his profession, its receipt no more requires him to decline to draw his salary for that time than the collection of any of his other earnings during that time requires it. THE ANIMUS OF THE BLAINE LETTER. In the month of February, A.D. 1SG5, General Fry entered into an arrangement with Colonel L. C. Baker, chief of the United States de- tective force, and the firm of Allen, Riley & Hughes, then notorious bounty brokers in the city of New York, having for its object the arrest of bounty- jumpers and deserters who then, as was supposed, infested the vicinity of that city. The arrangement was first made between Colonel Baker and Allen, Riley & Hughes, in the city of New York, but subsequently the plan was communicated to General Fry, and by him approved. The plan was as follows : Lieutenant Colonel Ilges, of the 14th United States infantry, was to be detailed, with orders to open an enrolling and enlisting office at Hoboken, New Jersey. Facilities were to be given all the known bounty- jumpers and deserters in the vicinity to enlist and desert with impunity until the facility for such desertion should become known to all other bounty- j umpers in the neighborhood, which was supposed to be a sufficient inducement to secure, upon a day fixed, the enrolment and enlistment of a large number, who were to be arrested by a detach- ment of United States soldiers to be detailed for that purpose. By a general order of the War Department at that time the head CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 275 of each board of enrolment was required to detain and hold in his hands the local bounty allowed to each recruit, which, at this point, was three hundred dollars. The object of this was to secure the arrival of the recruit at the point of rendezvous, at which time the money was to be paid to the recruit. Messrs. Allen, Riley & Hughes were to provide all the cash necessary for this purpose. In consideration of such advance- ments, and the effect the enterprise might have upon the subsequent business of Allen, Riley & Hughes, all bounty- jumpers and deserters enlisted were credited regularly upon the books of the office, certificates of regular enlistments were made and signed by the proper officer of the board, and the same delivered to said Allen, Riley & Hughes, who were allowed to sell them to persons desiring substitutes, or to the authorities of towns, cities, or counties in the vicinity ; and when such certificates were thus sold, such person or corporation were accredited therewith as though such enlistment had been made in good faith. Oa the first day of March, 1865, in pursuance of the foregoing arrangements. Colonel Ilges opened an office at Hoboken, and com- menced taking recruits. On the fourth of the same month he received, through Captain H. J. Mills, the following instructions : "Washington, D. C, March 4,, 1865. " Until otherwise ordered, you are directed to allow credits for such men as Lieutenant Colonel Ilges, captain 14th United States in- fantry, certifies to you as enlisted by him. He is recruiting at Hoboken, Inform Colonel Ilges of this order. This command is qiecial and confi- dential. "JAMES B. FRY, '■'■ Provost Marshal General, '•Captain H. J. Mills, " Provost Marshal Fifth District Neic Jersey." Between the first and ninth days of March Colonel Ilges received and mustered in fifty-four recruits. Of these, only three were enlisted with the understanding that they were ever to enter the service. The re- maining fifty-one were enlisted with the knowledge that they were notorious " bounty -jumpers," and as soon as enlisted suffered to escape by passing out of a back room in the office. Certificates, regular in form, were, from time to time, issued by Colonel Ilges, on account of such enlistments and muster, and delivered to Allen, Riley and Hughes, and by them sold to the authorities of Jersey City, which city received credit for the same. On the 10 th of March arrangements were made, in pursuance of the original plan, to arrest as bounty-jumpers all who might apply for en- listment or who might enlist at that office on that day. It was ex- pected that a large number — at least one thousand — might be thus 276 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. secured. But the plot was discovered by the bounty- jum]3er8 in time to prevent its consummation to the extent anticipated, and only one hundred and eighty-three persons were thus arrested and secured. Upon these enlistments being made, Colonel Ilges, in pursuance of said orders from General Fry, issued certificates of their regular enlistments, delivered the same to Allen, Riley and Hughes, which they sold to the authorities of Jersey City, to be credited upon its quota. For these certificates of credit or enlistment the authorities of Jersey City paid Allen, Riley and Hughes $126,000. Of this sum, however, Colonel Ilges required, in conformity to the aforesaid "general order," the sum of |300 of the bounty money of each recruit to be deposited with him. In the cases of three out of 183 eo-called bounty- jumpers this was neg- lected. As respects all the others it was complied with, so as to leave from this source in the hands of Colonel Ilges the sum of $54,000. This money was at once deposited by Colonel Ilges in the Broadway National Bank, to await, as he says, the further order of the Provost Marshal General. The money was immediately claimed by Messrs. Allen, Riley and Hughes, under an alleged contract with General Fry. Colonel Ilges, however, did not assent to their claim. But in view of the fact that the men enlisted were then known to have been incarcerated at Fort La- fayette, and that no steps were likely to be taken to prove them deserters. Colonel Ilges claimed that if the men were held for service without being convicted of any desertion it should then go to them ; but if the men were proved to be deserters the United States treasury should receive the money, or, in case the credits should be disallowed, that the money ought to be refunded to the local authorities, who had paid it in good faith, and who would otherwise be defrauded by the act of the government itself. Colonel Ilges states that on his application to Messrs. Allen, Riley and Hughes to pay the balance of the $900 which they had failed to deposit, they told him it was unnecessary to do eo, as the whole amount in his hands ($54,000) would be paid back to them within a few days by order of the Provost Marshal General. On the 18th of March, 1865, while the payment of the fifty-four thousand dollars was suspended, and the question as to who was en- titled to receive it was pending, Theodore Allen, of the firm of Allen, Riley and Hughes, had an interview with General Fry, at the office of the latter, in the city of Washington. The account which Allen gives of the conversation which trans- pired at that interview, which your committee prefer to incorporate in the words of the witness, is as follows : " I sent in my card into the War Department. I first saw the CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 277 messenger, who told me that General Fry could not be seen, as it was past the hour for receiving anybody. I told him it was very impor- tant that I should see General Fry, and if General Fry knew I was there he would see me. He took my card. I then saw General Fry and told him I had come in response to a letter or telegram from him to Colonel Baker, requesting me to come to Washington and call upon him. "Question. What did General Fry answer to that? Answer. He said ' yes ' ; that he had telegraphed to Colonel Baker that he wished to see me ; that he understood we had not been quite as successful in the Hoboken raid as we had expected. He then asked what had become of the money that had been received. I told him that I had it all, or the firm had it, with the exception of |54,000 that Colonel Ilges had re- tained. He asked me if Colonel Baker had ever asked me for any part of that money. I told him no, he had not, and that Colonel Ilges held 154,000 of that money, and that I considered I was entitled to it through the agreement between General Fry, myself, and Colonel Baker, and that Colonel Ilges held it and would not pay it over till he was ordered to do so by General Fry, on the ground that the general order would not allow him to do so, unless General Fry ordered him to do so. He then said, ' That is all well ; we shall see about it. ' Said he, the matter I wanted to see you most about was with reference to recruiting affairs at Utica. I told him I was acquainted with a party named Burke and another named Richardson, who were doing recruiting business at Utica, and thought I could get all the information possible. He said he thought so too, and that he thought I was just the person to get all the information, and for that reason he had sent for me, because he would not trust any of Colonel Baker's officers. He said there appeared to be in Utica enormous frauds in the provost marshal's department as it was conducted by Captain Crandall, and that he wanted to get at these frauds ; that he had tried and had not been successful, and that he wished me to go to Utica. I told him I thought from what I had known of recruiting in Utica, and from what I had heard, that if he had found out any frauds in Utica I did not think they would implicate Captain Crandall, but would point more directly to Major Haddock. He said he did not want any evidence against Major Haddock, but against Captain Crandall, and he also wanted evidence that would implicate Mr. Conkling in the frauds, because he had set himself in opposition to him (General Fry) as the champion for Captain Crandall, and that he wished me to proceed immediately to Utica and get that evidence. He said he wished me to go to Utica and get evidence that would implicate Mr. Conkling in the frauds with Captain Crandall, at all hazards ; and while I was gone that he would order this money that Colonel Ilges held to be paid over to me. I told him it was better that it be paid to Riley, 278 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. as he was the treasurer. He said the order should be made. That closed the conversation. I then left and went back to New York." On the 18th of March the following telegram was sent by General Fry to Colonel Baker : " War Department, Provost Marshal General's Bureau, "Washington, D. C, March 18, 1865. " Allen is here, and tells me he can provide information about the Utica district. I have told him to do so. He starts back to New York to-night, and will see you. Produce all the facts in that case. "JAMES B. FRY, ' ' Provost Marshal General. " Colonel L. C. Baker, "■No. 12 Vesey street, New Yorlc'^ Colonel Ilges states that, having deposited the $54,000 in the bank on the loth of March, he proceeded, on the 17th of March, to Washing- ton city, and, in person, related to Provost Marshal General Fry all the details connected with the office at Hoboken, the capture of the 183 so- called bounty -jumpers, and the amount of money in his hands, asking, at the same time, for instructions in regard to the disposal of the money. To which General Fry replied that further orders would be sent by mail ; that he (Colonel Ilges) then expressed to General Fry his fear that, at some future day he might be called upon for explanations why he had, at his office at Hoboken, acted contrary to existing orders and regulations governing the mustering service, and that he intended to ask for a court of inquiry, when Provost Marshal General Fry assured him that he had done his duty well, and only obeyed orders. On the 19th of March he received the following despatch : " War Department, Provost Marshal Generals Office, " Washington, D. C, March 19, 1865. " Colonel: I am directed by the Provost Marshal General to in- form you that the credits of the men mustered by you March 11, 1865, at Hoboken, New Jersey, and credited to Jersey City at large, are disal- lowed, and that you will refund the money to the parties who ad- vanced it. " I am, colonel, very respectfully, your obedient servant, •« W. OWENS, " Captain Gth United States Cavalry, A. A. A. O. "Brevet Lieut. Col. Gumo Ilges, U. S. A., "Mustering Orficer, IIohoTcen, Neto Jersey.'''' On the 2l3t of March the following communication was sent by Colonel Ilges to the Provost Marshal General : CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 279 " Recruiting Service 14th Infantry, " 1G3 Jiester street, New York city, March 21, 18G5. " Captain : I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your communication of March 19, 1865, informing me that the credits of men mustered by me March 11, 1865, at Hoboken, New Jersey, and credited to Jersey City at large, are disallowed, and instructing me to refund this money to the parties who advanced it. " I beg leave to state that no men were mustered by me on the aforesaid date, but I infer that this communication meant to say the 10th instead of the 11th of March, 18G3. " I would respectfully state that on the said day four regulars were mustered by me, and that if their credits are not to be effected [affected] they should be excluded in the order. I mustered on the 10th day of March one hundred and eighty-three volunteers for three years, so-called bounty-jumpers, and they were credited to Jersey City at large, with the exception of fifteen recruits that were credited to Clinton township, Essex county, fourth congressional district, New Jersey. "I would further state that I have at my disposal $300 local bounty for each of these one hundred and eighty-three recruits, and that I received this amount from Allen, Riley & Co., who had contracted with the counties for these credits; and I would, therefore, respectfully request that you inform me whether or not I urn to refund this money to these parties, or to the proper rej)resenti dives of the classes who received the credits. "These one hundred and eighty- three recruits were properly mustered into the service by me, and I credited them according to in- structions and orders regulating the mustering service. None of these recruits have as yet been proven to have been credited before ; and when I gave these credits I did so as a United States officer, believing that I was doing my duty, and advancing the interests of the plan of Colonel Baker, sanctioned by the Provost Marshal General. I am in- formed that the county representatives who received these credits paid a large amount of premiums to Messrs. Allen, Riley & Co., besides the $300 local bounty ; and as they have done so after having been informed by me of the correctness of these credits, I would respectfully call your attention to the fact that when these credits are disallowed the said local- ities will lose a large amount of money paid out by them in good faith. I am not aware what amount of money was paid to Messrs. Allen, Riley & Co. for each recruit, and cannot even give a probable guess, as I only collected the usual amount from them — $300 for each recruit, this being the amount of bounty paid to a recruit enlisted at Hoboken, New Jersey. " I would here add that Messrs. Allen, Riley & Co. are the parties 280 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. who carried out the plan above referred to, and I only allowed them to be present in my office, and to contract for these credits contrary to ex- isting orders, after I had been assured by Colonel L. C. Baker, special agent of the War Department, that the whole proceeding was sanc- tioned by the Provost Marshal General United States Army. " I therefore respectfully request that you inform me, at your earliest convenience, what disposition I am to make of the money re- ferred to. "I remain, captain, very respectfully, your obedient servant, "GUIDOILGES " Capt. litli Infantry, Brevet Lieut, Col. Vols., Recruiting Officer. "Captain W. Owens, " 5tli U. S. Gai-alry, A. A. A. G., Washington, D. (7." In reply to this letter of the 31st, Colonel Ilges received on the 24th of the same month the following reply : " War Department, Provost Marshal General's Bureau, " Washington, D. C, March 23, 1865. " Colonel: I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your communication of the 21st instant, and, in reply, would state that the communication of the 19 th instant, referred to, was intended to cover the cases of the 183 so-called bounty-jumpers, and that the amount which you received for the purpose of paying bounties to these 183 so- called bounty- jumpers the Provost Marshal directs to be refunded to the parties who advanced it.'. " I am, colonel, very respectfully, your obedient servant, «'W. OWENS, " Captain 5th JJ. S. Cavalry, A. A. A. G. " Brevet Lieut. Colonel Gumo Ilges, ' * United States Army, Hester street, iV. 7." The suspicions of Allen, as he alleges, had been somewhat excited by the course of General Fry in the transaction between them, and he resolved, if possible, as he says, to circumvent him, and accordingly he communicated the result of his interview with General Fry to various parties at New York, and resolved not to go to Utica, but to wait at New York a sufficient time to induce in General Fry's mind a belief that he had in fact complied with his agreement, and then sent to him the following despatch : " No. 51. American Telegraph Company, " March 24, 1865. " Brigadier General Fry, " Provost Marshal General, Washington, I). C: " I have just returned from Utica, and Colonel Ilges refuses to de- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 281 liver the money received from me because your order is dated the 11th instead of 10th of March. Please answer through Colonel Baker. "THEO. ALLEN. " Please write your address under your signature." On the same day the following telegram was sent by General Fry to Colonel Baker : [Original by telegraph.] " War Department, Provost Marshal General's Bureau, ''Washington, I). C, March 24, 1865. " Colonel L. C. Baker, No. 12 Vesey street, IVew Torh city: " I have been informed by Theo. Allen, of New York, that Colonel Ilges declines to turn over the money received from the bounty-jump- ers on the 11th instant. I wish you to see Colonel Ilges and have him turn over this money as directed. "JAMES B. fry, i' Provost Marshal General.'''' On the 24th of March Messrs. Allen, Riley and Hughes, in company with a Mr. Stanley, called upon Colonel Ilges, demanded of him the $54,000, and upon his refusing to give up the money to them until he could see Colonel L. C. Baker and ask his advice in the matter, they threatened immediate legal proceedings to compel the delivery of the money. Colonel Ilges then called upon Colonel Baker at his office, but being unable to see him at that time, he proceeded to the office of the United States district attorney, D. L, Smith, esq., No, 12 Chambers street, and laid the case before one of the attorneys in his office, who advised him not to give up the money until he had further orders from Washington. He also consulted with several officers of the regular army then in the city, and was by them advised to the same effect. On the 25th of March, 18G1, Colonel Ilges was again sent for by Colonel L. C. Baker, and upon his arrival at Colonel Baker's office a telegraphic despatch was shown him by Colonel Baker from the Provost Marshal General, directing him to order Colonel Ilges to turn over the amount of money ($54,000) held by him as bounty for the 183 so-called bounty- jumpers to Messrs. Allen, Riley, & Co. After some hesitation Colonel Ilges then proceeded to the National Broadway Bank, accom- panied by Messrs. Allen, Riley, Hughes and Stanley, and there drew the following check : " No. 34. New York, March 25, 1865. " National Broadway Bank, fay to Messrs. Peter Riley Sc to., or leav- er, ffty-four thousand dollars. " $54,000. " GUIDO ILGES, ''Capt. Utk U. S. Inf., Bet. Lt. Col. U. S. A., Recruiting Officer.' ' 282 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. This check was then handed to Peter Riley in the presence of the others, and he presented it to the paying teller of the said bank, and re- ceived the $54,000 in payment of the same. On the 25 th of March General Fry sent the following despatch to Colonel Baker : " Provost Marshal General's Bureau, "Washington, D. C, March 25, 1865. " Colonel L. C. Baker, New Tori:.: " You must prepare all the facts in the case of the Utica district, without reference to Major Luddington's report. It is absolutely nec- essary for me to have them, whether Major Luddington has been able to obtain them or not. See Allen and let him make it bis business to straighten this matter out. "JAMES B. FRY, " Provost Marshal General.''^ It was charged against General Fry, by Mr. Conkling, that the mo- tives of the former in his action in regard to the Utica district were to be found in his relations with Major John A. Haddock, who was en- gaged in fraudulent practices at Elmira, from which it suited the policy of General Fry to divert public attention by the prosecution of the al- leged frauds at Utica. It appeared from the evidence before your com- mittee that, some time prior to the transactions at Hoboken referred to. Major John A. Haddock, acting assistant provost marshal for the west- ern district of New York, had been suspected of the most flagrant and corrupt violations of official duty. Detailed reports of specific acts of official dishonesty committed by him had been made to General Fry in writing on several occasions. One by Edward Meloy, dated February 3, 1865, and another by Peter A. La France, dated February 28, 1865. Two of the alleged accomplices of Haddock in the fraudulent practices reported, named Webell and Dalton, were arrested and afterwards sent to the penitentiary. Haddock himself, however, was not then arrested nor relieved from duty. But on the 15th day of March, 1865, Colonel L. C. Baker telegraphed to Provost Marshal General Fry to the effect that he had discovered most astounding enlistment frauds at Elmira, with which Major Haddock was connected. Soon afterwards Major Haddock was arrested by order of the Secretary of War, a court-mar- tial was convened in his case, and Hon. Roscoe Conkling authorized by the War Department to represent the government at his trial. If there be any circumstances in the testimony which are suscep- tible of further explanation, either by General Fry or Colonel Baker, (to both of whom many of the statements relate, ) your committee have not had the benefit of their knowledge, as neither appeared as a witness in the case. As your committee have already explained, their investi- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 283 gation of the matters with which they have been charged by the order of the House has thus far been confined to that branch of the case re- lating to the charges made by General Fry against the honorable Roscoe Conkling, leaving tlie other branch of the case relating to the charges made by the honorable Roscoe Conkling against the Provost Marshal General untouched. Whatever evidence there may be con- tained in the report of jour committee which may raise a question touching the management of the Provost Marshal General's bureau has been admitted solely on account of its supposed relation to the motives of General Fry in the publication of his charges against Mr. Conkling, as has already been explained. So far, therefore, as the committee have deemed it pertinent for that purpose they have heard and con- sidered it, and for no other. It would be premature and might work injustice if your committee at this stage of their investigation were to pronounce afJirmatively in advance uiDon a branch of the case only collaterally introduced, and still further to be heard and considered. Your committee therefore refrain altogether from expressing their judg- ment upon the guilt or innocence of General Fry on the charge of the alleged coiTupt bargain with Allen and his connexion with the Hobo- ken enlistments. They refrain also from any expression of their opinion as to the credit to be attached to the testimony of Tlieodore Allen, (a witness sought to be impeached by the party against whom he was called,) nor does your committee undertake to say at this time how far the testi- mony of the said Allen is corroborated and sustained by the other testi- mony in the case. So far, however, as any of the evidence before your committee bears upon the point for the illustration of which it was ad- mitted they have not failed fully to consider it. Whatever relative weight has been attached by your committee to the various testimony in the cause which brought them to their conclusion in reference to the motives of General Fry in writing the Blaine letter, it cannot be im- portant at this time to announce, since their conclusion on that point is not equivocal, and is the unanimous judgment of the committee. The following copies of what purport to be two letters— one by Colonel L. C. Baker, and the other by General Fry — appear in a printed argument by Hon. A. G. Riddle, which has been laid upon the tables of the members of this House : ' ' Office Special Agency War Department, "iVf'W Yorlc, March 16. 1865. "Sir: Since the capture of the bounty -jumpers at Hoboken, re- peated applications have been made to me to have said jumpers credited to the State of New Jersey. Colonel Ilges, the mustering officer, ap- 284 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. plied to me, before going to Washington last week, to make applica- tion to you to have said jumpers so credited. I informed him that I did not think these men could or would be credited, advising him (Colonel Ilges) to apply to you for the lequired instructions or per- mission. "On Tuesday last, while in Washington, and after my conversa- tion with you on the subject referred to above, I received a telegram from Colonel Uges, requesting me to obtaui permission to make these credits. This telegram I made no reply to. On my return to New York yesterday morning I heard that Colonel Ilges had made the credits. I sent for him and asked him by whose order or direction he had done so. He referred me to your telegram of March 5, addressed to Captain H. J. Mills, provost marshal at Newark, New Jersey, for his authority. I informed him (Colonel Ilges) that I did not think that you intended, by the telegram referred to, to convey any order or airthority to Captain Mills to credit bounty- jumpers and deserters; that your telegram was intended to only authorize the crediting of such men as were regularly and legitimately enlisted previous to the Friday on which it was un- derstood that none but jumpers and deserters were to be enlisted. I have advised Colonel Ilges to go to Washington to-night, and to make such explanations in reference to this matter as you may require. These ex- planations I trust will be satisfactory. ' ' I am, general, very respectfully yours, " L. C. BAKER, ' ' Colonel ami Special Agent War Department, " Brig. Gen. James B. Fry, '■'■ Provost Marshal General JJ. S., Washington, D. C, A true copy : ' ' GEO. E. SCOTT, ^^ Brevet Lieutenant Colonel, U. S. Volunteers.^ ^ " War Department, Provost Marshal General' s Bureau, " Washington, D. C, March 29, 1865. ' ' Colonel : By the course of things in reference to bounty- jumj)- ers taken at Hoboken, Mayor Cleveland, of Newark, is placed in a very unfortunate position. If possible, he should be relieved from it. Under date of March 23 I directed Colonel Ilges to retvrrTi the money in his possession to the parities who advanced it as bounties for these men, the credits for them being disallowed, and the money still in his posses- sion. It seems that under this order, reported by telegraph to you on the 34th of March, Colonel Ilges has delivered the money in whole or part to Theodore Allen, broker, and perhaps to some other brokers, and that Mayor Cleveland is unable to regain possession of it. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 285 ' ' The proper method of disposing of this business has all the time seemed to me plain enough; it is this: to allow no credits for the bounty -jumpers, men who have already been enlisted and credited several times over, but to credit any, if there be any, who are honajicle recruits, and not jumpers. To return to the town authorities all the money they advanced on account of men whom we do not credit. " I intended my order to carry out the above view, but it seems that the money advanced by Newark has been returned to Allen, the broker; perhaps it Avas turned over to Colonel llges, through Allen, and on this account he returns it in the same way. However that may be, Allen should return the money to Newark, and I desire you to see Allen and tell him so. Neither he nor any one else has any right to profit in the matter. All necessary expenses connected with the arrest of these jumpers, and the enlistment of such as are proper recruits, must be paid by the United States, so that there is no loss for individ- uals in the case. '• Please report to me as soon as practicable on the adjustment of this affair. ' ' You had better send for Mayor Cleveland also. ' ' Very respectfully, your obedient servant, ' ' JAMES B. FRY, " Provoit Marslial General. "Colonel L. C. Baker, " iVc. 12 Vesey street, New York city. A true copy : " GEORGE E. SCOTT, "■ Brevet Lieutenant Colonel U. S. I'wZs." The opening argument in the summing up before the committee was made orally on behalf of General Fry by Mr. Riddle, and was re- ported by one of the reporters of the House. To this Mr. Conkling re- plied. ]\Ir. Riddle rejoined in an oral argument, but which was not reported, and he had leave of the committee to reduce to writing this rejoinder, confining it to the argument actually delivered, this to be reported to the Ilduse along with the other arguments in the case. No member of the committee has any recollection of either of these two letters being either given in evidence in the case, or alluded to in any part of the argument ; and no member of the committee has any recollection of ever seeing the original of either of these letters, and neither of them has yet been furnished to the committee. The first knowledge which any member of the committee had, so far as can be recollected, of either letter, was after writing the foregoing part of this report, and upon seeing the printed argument of Mr. Riddle. The committee understand it to be now claimed by the counsel for Mr. Conkling that these letters were not offered in evidence, nor alluded to 286 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. in the argument, and doubts are expressed to the committee as to the authenticity of one or both. General Fry's counsel insist that these letters were given in evidence and commented upon. Since the com- mittee's attention has thus been called to them, their effect in the case (treating them as authentic) has been, by your committee, carefully considered, and they do not change any conclusions submitted in this report to which your committee had come befoi-e they were seen. These letters never having been in the possession of any member of the committee, the committee cannot, of course, make any decision what- ever as to whether these alleged copies are copies of genuine letters of the dates they bear; but the committee submit these alleged copies with this explanation, that the House and all parties may have the benefit of them. Your committee report to the House the argument of Mr. Riddle, as jjrinted by him, with the above statement, as to its correspondence with the argument made to the committee. They do this because the committee are not willing to deprive General Fry of any fact or argu- ment in his defence which he may desire to bring to the attention of the House to influence its action, although it may not have been sub- mitted to the committee during its deliberations. No injustice, so far as the results of the committee's action is concerned, can be done to Mr. Conkling by this course as the committee came to no conclusion as to the subject-matter of these letters which is adverse to him. Your committee have refrained frcnn making any recommenda- tion as to proceedings by the House against General Fry for this breach of its privileges. The reasons for this are in part to be found in the circumstances connected with the introduction of General Fry's letter into this house by one of its members. The committee doubted whether the House would be inclined, or ought to adopt, any further proceed- ings against General Fry touching this violation of its privileges, ex- cept in connexion with the examination of Mr. Blaine's relations to this matter. The latter is wholly outside of the powers of your com- mittee. Besides, all of the facts, and also the conclusions of law and fact derived therefi'om which bear upon the question of the propriety of any further proceedings touching this breach of its privileges, are by your committee here submitted to the House; and hence the House will have no difficulty in deciding what its action should be in this regard,, and would not be assisted by any mere opinion or recommendation of the committee upon a question lying so peculiarly within the limits of the discretion of the House, and to be determined by its sense of fit- ness. The execution of that part of the order of the House in relation to CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 287 the charges against General Fry and his bureau will involve an enor- mous amount of labor and of expense, and can be properly performed only by a committee having a competent clerk and phonographic re- porter, and having leave to sit at the places where the witnesses reside, and during the sessions of the House, and also during the recess of Congress. Whether, now that the war is over, the public good to be attained by these investigations will compensate for the large expense they will involve, is a consideration which should receive the attention of the House. Your committee, having fully and carefully considered the charges against the Hon. Roscoe Conkling contained in the letter of General Fry, are unanimously of opinion that none of the charges in the letter, whether made directly and openly, or indirectly and covertly, have any foundation in truth, and that the conduct of Mr. Conkling in re- lation to each of the matters investigated by the committee has been above reproach, and that no circumstances sufficient to excite reasona- ble suspicion have arisen which could justify or excuse the attack made upon him in the letter of General Fry. The several charges against the Hon. Roscoe Conkling, contained in the letter of General Fry, being unsupported by the testimony in any one material particular, although ample opportunity was afforded, at the cost of much time and expense, to enable the wi-iter of that letter to furnish his proofs, the committee ought not to refrain from the ex- pression of their condemnation ot the deliberate act of a public func- tionary in traducing the official as well as the personal character of a member of the House of Representatives of the United States by the pub- lication of a libel which he was so illy prepared to sustain. Indignities offered to the character or proceedings of the national legislature by li- bellous assaults have been resented and punished both in England and the United States as breaches of privilege ; and such assaults upon the official character of members have been held punishable as indignities committed against the House itself. The reason for this rests upon the same gi-ound as that which justifies the exercise of similar authority to punish for attempts by personal violence, menaces, or bribes, to in- fluence the conduct of members in their official capacity. Your committee deem it proper most earnestly to protest against the practice which has obtained, to some extent, of causing letters from persons not members of the House to be read as a part of a per- sonal explanation, in which the motives of members are criticised, their conduct censured, and they are called to answer for words spoken in debate. Such attacks upon members, made in the House itself, and published in its proceedings, and scattered broadcast to the world at the expense of the government, are, in the opinion of your commit- 288 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. tee. an improper check upon the freedom of debate, a violation of the privileges, and an infraction of the dignity of the House. Your committee submit, for the consideration of tlie House, the following resolutions, and recommend their adoption : Resohed, That all the statements contained in the letter of General James B. Fry to Hon. James G. Blaine, a member of this House, bear- ing date the 27th of April, A.D. 1866, and which was read in this House on the 30th of April, A.D. 1866, in so far as such statements impute to the Hon. Roscoe Conkling, a member of this House, any criminal, illegal, unpatriotic, or otherwise improper conduct or mo- tives, either as to the matter of his procuring himself to be employed by the government of the United States in the prosecution of military offences in the state of New York, in the management of such prose- cutions, in taking compensation therefor, or in any other charge, are wholly without foundation in truth; and for their publication there were, in the judgment of this House, no facts connected with said pros- ecutions furnishing either a palliation or an excuse. Hesolved, That General Fry, an officer of the government of the United States, and head of one of its military bureaus, in writing and publishing these accusations named in the preceding resolution, and which, owing to the crimes and wrongs which they impute to a mem- ber of this body, are of a nature deeply injurious to the official and personal character, influence, and privileges of such member, and their publication originating, as in the judgment of the House they did, in no misapprehension of facts, but in the respntment and passion of their author, was guilty of a gross violation of the privileges of such mem- ber and of tliis House, and his conduct in that regard merits and re- ceives its unqualified disapprobation. SAMUEL SHELLABARGER, Chairman, W. WINDOM. B. M. BOYER. B. C. COOK. samuel l. warner. Provost Marshal's Bureau — again. Mr. Spalding. By the indulgence of the chair man of the committee, I beg leave to present to the House the memorial of Mr. Riddle, counsel for General Fry, together with a portion of the evidence which he claims was oifered to the committee by General Fry, CONKLIXG AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 289 wliicli he asks may be made a part of the record in the case. The Speaker. Unanimous consent is necessary. Mr. Hale. I object. Mr. Stevens. I certainly object. It would be outside of all precedent. Mr. Spalding. Very well ; I have discharged my duty. Mr. Shellaharger. I will make a statement to the House in regard to those papers. Since the committee made its report to the House its attention has been invited to the papers which have been referred to by my colleague, and they have received the attention of the committee. Although the papers are not before the House, I desire, in justice to the committee, to make a statement in reference to the matter. These papers relate in the main to the Hoboken matter, a matter upon which the committee has not passed in its findings, except so far as it might throw light upon the animus of the letter to Mr. Blaine. The introduc- tion and consideration of those papers, therefore, could not affect any conclusion to which the committee came, except in regard to the motives for writing that letter. There is, outside of these papers, what the committee deemed abundant evidence to settle the question of the animus of the letter and to brine; the committee unani- mously to the conclusion which it attained as to the motives which prompted the writing of that letter ; so that, while the committee's attention was not drawn to these papers, they thus considered the matter of their contents, and determined nothing contained in them in any possible view of this case affecting any conclusion to which the committee came. 290 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. Another statement I Lave to make is, that those letters, if they are of value to General Fry, will be available for his defense in the further prosecution of this matter, should the House deem any further prose- cution proper under the resolution already adopted. So that it seems to me in no view can any prejudice be worked to General Fry by the exclusion for the present of these letters. Another statement I desire here to make is, that the two letters deemed most material by the counsel for General Fry, the only two, if I remember correctly, which he deemed of value enough to insert in his printed argument, are now introduced into the report of the committee, perhaps irregularly, but introduced in extreme solicitude that nothing should be excluded that could be of service to General Fry. That matter is fully explained in the report of the committee. As I have said, the two principal letters contained in this memorial now appear in the report of the committee. Now, Mr. Speaker, the House has heard, or had an opportunity of hearing, a large portion of this re- port. The committee felt forced to make it volumi- nous, as it is, on account of the impossibility of making it less voluminous and yet presenting fairly and justly the facts bearing on this important question of the privileges of the House, and of a member of it. I trust, Mr. Speaker, I will not be deemed in doing what I am about to do as neglecting the execution of the duties which I owe to this important question of privilege in omitting to detain the House in again pre- senting what has been fully represented in the report of the committee. I say I will refrain from the dis- CONKLING AND BLAIXE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 291 cussion of this question at this time. Unless some- thing shall be said by other members of the House requiring notice I shall content myself by yielding the floor and permitting any other gentleman who may wish to do so to speak to this question. I shall ask the House to second the previous question so that we shall fix the time for closing debate, disposing of the case to-day. If there be no member who desires to be heard, I ask the House at once to order the main question. Mr. Davis. I ask the gentleman to yield to me. Mr. Shellaharger. For whatever time the gentle- man wants. Mr. Davis. Mr. Speaker, I shall occupy but a few moments in submitting to the House one or two considerations connected with the subject before us. I shall not enlarge upon the evidence, or upon the clear, able, and conclusive report founded upon it, ex- onerating completely and entirely the reputation of my colleague [Mr. Conldhicj\ from the gross aspersions cast upon it in the communication which the com- mittee have with entire unanimity pronounced a false and malicious libel. The question, Mr. Speaker, is one of grave im- portance, affecting the right of a member of this House to utter his sentiments and opinions in respect to the action of any public officer or the administration of any Department of the Government, legitimately be- fore the House, without being confronted by a libel upon his private or public character, read at the Clerk's desk at the suggestion of a member upon the floor. I am happy this investigation has been ordered by the 292 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. House, anc] I trust the report of tlie committee has had a due effect on the House, and that the action of the committee in reference to the assault against the character of my honorable colleague [Mr. ConMing\ will meet with its unanimous approval. I know not why this House should listen with any other feelings than those of perfect indignation at the attempt made by an officer of the Government to assail the character of a member of this House for commenting on the manner in which that officer discharged his public duties. What is the history of the matter ? In legitimate debate on the section of the Army bill relating to the Provost Marshal's Bureau, the honorable member from New York [Mr. ConMing'] made some remarks to which the Provost Marshal General took exceptions. In answer, not by way of legitimate argument on the subject before the House, the gentleman from Maine had a letter from General Fiy read at the desk con- taining the grossest charges against the honorable member from New York [Mr. ConMing'] involving personal turpitude and corruption, as well as mal- feasance in office. These charges were such as, if true, would subject my colleague [Mr. Conhling'] to de- served reproach, and to the loss of public or private confidence. They have been carefully and patiently investigated by the committee ; abundant time was offered to establish their truth, and yet the author of these grave charges failed signally either to prove or even attempt to prove that he was sustained by one single fact in justification. The important inquiry arises, Mr. Speaker, CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 293 whether members are thus to be assailed by persons outside of the House for words uttered in legitimate debate in the House, affecting the action of any public officer or the administration of any department or bureau of the Government. If such a precedent shall be established, I see no end to these libellous attacks springing from what any member may deem it his duty to utter in regard to the action of any public officer. But I wish to call attention to anothei' considera- tion connected with this subject. The letter of Gen- eral Fry was addressed to a member of this House, and at the instance of that member it was read at the Clerk's desk in vindication of remarks before made by him upon the relations existing between Mr. Conkling and General Fry. I do not believe that any member of the House has the right for any such purpose to send up to the Clerk's desk a letter from a third party containing libellous matter affecting another member, and to ask that it be read to the House and circulated, through the Globe, over the country. If this be not a breach of privilege, I am unable to say what is. If it be not, any party designing it may pub- lish the most offensive and impi'oper matter in respect to a member and yet screen himself from liability on the ground that he was using information im- parted by another and incorporating into his speech, and thus spreading a libel upon the permanent records of the country. If we admit that principle, then, as I said before, there is no end to the libels which may be read here against members for the expression of their opinions in this Hall. !94 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. Mr. Woodhridge. I desire to ask my frieud whether he thinks it quite proper or dignified for any member of this House, in discussing a public question, to bring into discredit the name of a public officei", when that officer has no chance upon the fl^oor of the House to defend himself. Mr. Davis. I will answer my friend. For the very reason that the parties are public officers, that they are charged with the duties of official administra- tion, that they are servants of the Government, and that Congress has not only the right, but is bound to examine into their action, I aver that a member may rightfully criticise it. I say it involves no breach of privilege, and no discourtesy, for any member of this House to speak in regard to the conduct of a public officer of this Government legitimately -before it for consideration in such terms as he may think proper. If charges were made by my colleague against the admiuisti'ation by General Fvy of the affairs of the Provost Marshal's Bureau, he, as an officer of the Army, charged with malfeasance in a military duty, had a right to demand from the War Department a court of inquiry to investigate his conduct. He has here a perfect redress ; or he might have appealed to this House, demanding that a committee be charged with the examination of the alleged malfeasance, and that the author of the charges be required to substan- tiate them or retract them. Sir, the very necessities of the public service I'equire that the Representatives of the people shall be untrammelled upon this floor in their criticisms upon the actions of the public servants; and if the lips of members are to be sealed in respect CONKLING AND BLAINE-FBY CONTROVERSY 295 to official administration, 1 know not in what way the public are to be informed on subjects of the deep- est general interest, in connection with which indi- vidual agents and officers may merit either censure or praise. But, sir, my object is not to enter into detail upon the facts of this case so abundantly reported, but rather to ascertain, by some appropriate mode of in- quiry, what are the restrictions which should be al- lowed or imposed upon this practice of presenting letters containing libellous matter to be read as part of debate in this House. Therefore, at a proper time, now or hereafter, I will offer a resolution simply ask- ing an investigation by the same committee as to the fact whether any breach of privilege has been com- mitted by any acts of this kind in the introduction of any such letter by any person. And I am induced to do that more from the consideration that I believe we must put our foot upon this practice or we must be involved in these interminable difficulties and personal explanations. I wish to say that I do this without any sort of disrespect to any member upon this floor, without any personal feeling whatever, but from a sole desire to preserve that order and decorum in this House which should belong to its deliberations. Mr. Hale. Mr. Speaker, I do not propose to dis- cuss the report of this committee or the resolutions submitted by them, but I simply seek the floor in con- sequence of my colleague [Mr. Davi8\ having intimated that he would move a resolution of reference as to the rights of the House, and the rights of members of the House, in regard to the publication of libels like that 296 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. reported upon by the committee ; and I rise for the purpose of suggesting to my colleague that when he offers that resolution he make it a little more compre- hensive, so as to cover another branch of this case, which has come to my knowledge within the last two days. The report of the committee has been exhaus- tive of the subject committed to it so far as affects the charges brought against my colleague in the libellous letter which was read at the Clerk's desk. Since the hearing before the committee was tei^m- inated and since their report was made to the House, I have received through the mail, and I understand other members have received the same document, a pamphlet bearing the printed signature of James B. Fry, whom I understand to be this same Provost Mar- shal General Fry, purporting to be instructions by Mr. Fry to his counsel for his defense before this commit- tee. It strikes me as a little singular that the private in- structions of the person on trial to his counsel for the defense should be printed and circulated among the body which was to pass upon the subject after the counsel had been heard in full before the committee, and his argument printed for the benefit of the House. In that pamphlet I find this very remarkable language, which I think involves, if possible, a higher breach of privilege even than the original one. For bear in mind that this is printed, or at least circulated, after the report of the committee, falsifying the original charge. This pamphlet says : " Of the principal charges [contained in my letter] I maintain and reassert not only the substantial but the literal correctness. ' ' CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 297 111 other words, after a fair trial and examination before a committee, with every opportunity afforded him to maintain his original charges, and utterly fail- ing to produce any evidence whatever to maintain them, a pamphlet is here circulated in which the orig- inal libel is reasserted in its full length and breadth, and in all its details. I submit that there is a ques- tion of privilege for the examination, consideration, and action of this House. Another word in regard to this document. It states by way of preface that this was a letter of in- structions which was addressed by General Fry to his counsel, Hon. A. G. Riddle, made in compliance with the requirements of the committee. If that were so truthfully, of course these instructions would be privi- leged, as long as confined to their pi'oper and legiti- mate use, but not when published for the reading of anybody besides the counsel. But most singularly Mr. Riddle, in his argument as the counsel for General Fry, states to the committee that he has had no oppor- tunity of consulting with his client and has received no instructions from him, oral or written, except upon a single point, while these instructions cover the whole case. If rhe counsel told the truth in his statement to the committee, it would appear that this officer of the Army of the United States was not only guilty of publishing a libel, and a pronounced libel, on a mem- ber of the House, but was guilty of doing it on the false pretense that it was originally prepared and sent forth as instructions to counsel when it was not the fact, and when no such instructions had been issued. I therefore ask my colleague [Mr. Davis,^ when 298 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. he introduces his resolution to inquire into the rights of members, to include the question whether the House shall submit to such publications as that con- tained in the pamphlet which I hold in my hand. Mr. Shellaharger. The gentleman from New York has brought to the attention of the House this letter of General Fry, and it seems to be proper that I should allude to his statements contained in that letter. The first is a statement that a request was made by General Fry to the investigating committee for the privilege of preparing and submitting by him- self or by his counsel a written plea, which request was not granted. Now, I really cannot conceive what it is that that statement refers to unless it be this : that at the time we began to examine this case, on the first morning of our meeting. General Fry applied to be permitted to make a written statement to the committee, introduc- ing his case and his evidence, the written statement to be unsworn. He was met by a statement that any evidence that was to be considered by the committee must come in the usual way as clearly and properly authenticated papers or the sworn testimony of wit- nesses, and that he would be required to present any showing against a member of the House in that way. Nothing else occurred excluding General Fry from the very largest latitude in presenting all the views of his counsel and of himself upon every possible question. Excluding myself from the compliment, I may say that the committee was a miracle of patience in the way of admitting and hearing arguments and testimony on both sides. CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 299 And there is another statement here that is equally singular, considering all the circumstances of the case. It is on the first page of this pamphlet. He says : "I formally applied to the committee for a copy of the record, the testimony having been phonographically reported, and offered to pay the expenses of transcribing it, but was refused." Now it will occur to every member of the House that it would be a very singular request to make of a committee of this House, whose proceedings are con- fidential and not to be disclosed except by the leave of the House, that it should be required to permit its evidence to go out into the town, into the oflices of lawyers, and to be hawked about the streets. Of course the committee would not permit the evidence to be taken from the custody of the committee or of its clerk. The request was made to be permitted to take copies of the evidence. The request was met by a statement that the evidence could not be taken from the control of the committee or the custody of its clerk ; but the very fullest opportunity should be had at all times to use the evidence in the committee room, and under the supervision and care of the clerk, he seeing to it that the proper orders and directions of the House were observed in that regard. And I am surprised that a statement of the character I have read should be made, under all the circumstances, by General Fry. Mr. Stevens. As the evidence has not been read, I desire to know whether I understand the purport of it. I desire to inquire whether, when General Fry was offered to be examined, he or his counsel insisted 300 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. that lie should be called by the committee, so that he could not be prosecuted. Mr. Shellaharger. In reply to the inquiry of the gentleman from Pennsylvania [Mr. Stevens\ I will state this : The committee, as has already been noticed, have confined their investigations for the present to the question of privilege affecting the rights of the gentleman from New York [Mr. Conkling']. The committee so confining its investigations deemed it fair and propei' that the gentleman from New York should be permitted to control the matter of the intro- duction of testimony affecting his personal privileges, subject, of course, to the right of the committee to take care of the rights and privileges of the House. Taking that view of the matter, the committee did not feel at liberty to call, as they might have done, General Fry upon the motion of the committee itself. They declined to do that for the reason that they deemed it just and proper to the gentleman from New York, this being a question so personal to himself, to allow him to control the introduction or the non- introduction of the testimony of General Fry. That was the position of the committee. Of course the committee might have called, upon its own motion. General Fry as a witness. It did not do so for the reason I have stated. Then the committee had this question before them : The recjuest was formally made and put upon the record that the gentleman from New York should be permitted to cross-examine General Fry. An appeal was made to the committee that it should put General Fry in the position of a witness for cross-examination, CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 301 and not have liim made the witness of the gentleman from New York, the gentleman from New York stat- ing distinctly that he declined to put himself in the position of calling General Fry, so as that thereby he should be precluded from contradicting or impeaching any evidence he might give. After that appeal was thus formally made to the committee, and the commit- tee had refused to permit General Fry to be cross- examined, requiring Mr. Conkling, if he desired to use the testimony of General Fry, to call him, and put him in the position of a witness called by himself, then an appeal was made to the other side to know whether General Fry was to be examined ; and an invitation that he should be examined as a witness for the other side was repeatedly made. But that invitation was all the time declined, and Mr. Conkling was deprived of the benefit of the examina- tion of General Fry unless he would call him as his own witness. Mr. Stevens. Did the counsel of General Fry join in declining? Mr. Shellaharger. That is my understanding of the matter. Mr. Stevens. The explanations made by the com- mittee are ample ; they require no further vindication, if any was necessary, of their course. It was, perhaps, unfortunate that this letter was not addressed at once to the House, instead of coming; throucrh a member of the House, for then I suppose it would have become a part of the records of the House. I understand that the letter is not now on the Joui'nal of the House. 302 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. If that be so, it will preclude the motion which I would otherwise be disposed to make. The Speaker. It is in the Globe, but not on the Journal, Mr. Stevens. The inquiry instituted, the appoint- ment of this committee, did not bring the letter upon the Journal ? The Speaker. It did not. Mr. Stevens. Then I cannot make the motion I would have made. All I have to say is that I do not know that a more causeless, gross attack has ever been made upon a member of this House, either here or elsewhere, than that contained in that letter. I must do the gentleman from Maine [Mr. JBlaine~\, now absent, the justice to suppose that he was entirely uninformed of the contents of the letter or he would never have presented it to the House. I had hope, however, that the committee would go a little further. In reference to one of the transac- tions mentioned in the report — the Hoboken matter; I believe — in which some hundreds of thousands of dol- lars were absorbed by somebody, there were, if the evidence is to be believed, three parties implicated. Two of them, I believe, are now in the jDenitentiary. The third is General Fry. Why is it that some steps have not been taken by the committee to send him there ? It is possible that the committee had not the power. But after the exposure which has been made it seems to me that it is the duty of the law officers of the Government to prosecute him ; and un- less the evidence contained in this book can be dis- proved he should be convicted and confined in the CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 303 penitentiary. I cannot conceive any reason why there should not be at once instituted a proceeding for the prosecution of General Fry. This would give him an opportunity to vindicate himself in some other way than by posthumous letters. I suppose, however, the committee did not feel themselves authorized to take action with a view to the prosecution of General Fry. Mr. Raymond. I would like to make a sugges- tion to the gentleman from Pennsylvania. In referring to the case in which two of the parties implicated are now in the penitentiary, the gentleman spoke of it as the Hoboken matter. T believe it was the Elmira case. Mr. Stevens. I believe the gentleman is correct. I happened to see the name of the other case here and was misled by it. The case I meant to refer to was the Elmira fraud. Mr. Shellaharger. Mr. Speaker, I will state to the House — I would not have stated it but for the inquiry just presented by the gentleman from Pennsylvania — why the committee, after having found a flagrant vio- lation of the privileges of a member of the House and of the House itself, stopped without recommending any proceeding by the House against the culprit. The inquiry is very pertinent, one which would naturally occur to every mind, and one which received the care- ful attention of the committee. The committee did not deem it outside of the powers conferred upon it by the resolution to recom- mend such proceedings against General Fry as the House might deem to be due in the premises. The committee reports to the House its reason for omitting 804 OONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. to present any formal resolution upon that subject. I will state those reasons. The first, which is not stated in the report, is this : General Fry being con- nected with the Gov^ernment and a member of the Executive Department thereof, any proceeding by this House would be communicated to the President of the United States, laying the facts before him. At any rate this is the judgment of a majority of the commit- tee. Now, sir, a communication to the President of the United States, laying before him the facts in re- gard to this matter, might now be made by the House. The committee has said in the report that this is a matter resting so peculiarly within the discretion of the House, a matter so peculiarly proper to be de- cided by its sense of fitness, that a mere recommenda- tion or opinion of the committee would not be useful to the House. The committee has done everything else than simply express its opinion ; I mean that it has done everything in its power toward aiding the House in coming to a just conclusion as to what it should do. The committee has reported all the facts; it has reported all the law bearing upon the facts ;but it has refrained from making any recommendation as to the institution of further proceedings against Gen- eral Fry. Then there was another reason — the most potent of all — that operated upon the mind of the committee in omitting to present any further resolution. It is that the breach of the privileges of the House was com- mitted so entirely in conjunction with the action of a member of this House that the two acts cannot be sep- arated. The letter is written containing upon its face CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 305 the evidence that it was meant to be used somewhere, and was not designed simply for the information of the gentleman from Maine [Mr. JBlcdne\ to whom it was addressed. There were other facts which came to the knowl- edge of the committee. It was stated to the commit- tee, for instance, that no complaint was made by Gen- eral Fry that Mr. Blaine had violated his confidence or wishes in presenting it to the House. These con- siderations induced the committee to believe his letter was written to be used in the House in the manner in which it was used by a member of the House. There- fore, sir, the committee was brought clearly up to the question, whether further proceedings could be taken against General Fry except as connected with those against a member of the House, one of them having violated the privileges of the House, and we deemed it fair and just the proceedings should be a unit against both. That, I believe, answers the inquiry of the gen- tleman from Pennsylvania. I do not wish to detain the House longer. I re- peat what has been said in the report, that a more careful and more malicious and wanton violation of the privileges of the House and of its members has not been brought to the notice of any member of the committee. There is not to be found any more hurt- ful libel upon any member of this body in the history of its proceedings. It is due to ourselves, it is due to this body, if we are to preserve the dignity of the character of a Representative of American people, that such indignities should cease. My unwillingness to detain the House at this late period in the session does 30G CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. not grow out of any belief on my part that this is not an important matter. Greutlemen of the House of Representatives, it is time steps were taken to stop this parade of plantation manners and ruffianism here at the centre and heart of the nation where the laws are made, and where law is esteemed to be sublime and sacred in its sway. I have not spoken, because the matter has been brought so eloquently and fully to the attention of the House, on the question of priv- ilege just disposed of. It has fully been brought to the attention of the House by the report of the com- mittee. I am unwilling to consume the time of the House, but I am unwilling to sit down without say- ing the House should do this justice to my friend from New York, [Mr. Conhling,~] a justice he is entitled to, having been in all this matter in reference to which he was assailed, not only innocent, but eminently patriotic and valuable step by step to his Government at a time of imminent peril. It is due to him and the House we should call the yeas and nays expressing the judgment of the House in condemnation of this act of indignity which one of its members suffered. Unless some gentleman desires to address the House, I shall now demand the previous question. Mr. Wentworili. I ask the gentleman to yield to me for five minutes. Mr. Shellaharger. Certainly. Mr. Wentworth. Mr. Speakei', it appears to me that we are trying the wrong man. If I remember the origin of this case, a member of this body rose in violation of the rules of this House and of parliamen- tary courtesy and assailed the motives of the gentle- CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 307 man from New York, [Mr. Conkling,'] and in justifi- cation of that assault, a few days afterward, be intro- duced, under the pretense of a personal explanation, a letter which he sent to the Clerk to be read. Mr. Pihe. I do not wish to mix in this general exculpation of the gentleman from New York. But I want to say to the gentleman from Illinois, in be- half of m}^ colleague, now absent on account of sick- ness, that he did not bring this letter before the House in any surreptitious way. Mr. Wentwortlh. I did not so charge. If I re- member correctly, he asked to make a personal ex- planation. Mr. Filce. He did not. I presume the gentle- man does not mean to do my colleague injustice. Mr. Wentworth. I would not do anyone injustice. Mr. Fihe, My colleague told the House that he had such a letter, and asked to have it read. He did not rise to a personal explanation and then have this letter read. Mr. Wentworth. He rose to a personal explana- tion. Mr. Pihe. The record of the Globe will show that I am right. The House was fully advised by my colleague of the character of the letter when he offered it, and no objection was made to its being read. The committee seem to have fallen into the same error as the gentleman from Illinois, and thereupon censure the practice of introducing letters under the permission for personal explanation. The fact was that my col- league rose stating that he held in his hand a letter from General Fry who he considered to have been un- 308 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. Justly assailed in a previous debate in the House. He asked that the letter should be read as a matter of fair play. No objection was made. The gentleman from New York consented, if he could have an opportunity to reply. Mr. Conkling. The gentleman from Maine so far as he refers to me is mistaken. I said, simply infer- ring that the letter had some reference to me, al- though ignorant of its contents, that I would make no objection for myself, if I could have leave to reply if anything needingreply should appear. I gave no con- sent. I had no knowledge of what the letter was, nor was I in any respect in privity with the outrage and indecency of its being read. I simply refrained from objecting as I was, as I supposed, in some way referred to, and did not therefore choose to interpose objection if others did not. Mr. Pike. When the Speaker asked if anyone objected to the introduction of the letter— and he put it twice clearly to the House — the gentleman from New York rose in his place and said he should not object. Mr. Conkling. I simply refrained from objecting; I did not assent. Mr, Pike. If the gentleman makes a distinction between assenting and not objecting, he is entitled to the benefit of the distinction. I desire merely simply to state the position of my colleague in introducing the letter. Mr. Wentworth. Mr. Speaker, what I want to say is this : the chairman of the committee alluded to plantation manners. Now plantation manners are not CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 309 generally located in the North. At least it is not so generally understood. General Fry is a native of my state, and the gentleman who brought his letter be- fore the House knew what it contained ; he knew it contained an attack upon one of his fellow members, and one of his coequals in the House ; and in sending it to the Clerk's desk to be read he did it for the ex- press purpose of responding to the gentleman from New York. And now my friend calls this plantation manners. Why, sir, these manners are up in the boreal regions — the northern part of Maine and the northern part of Illinois. General Fry was one of the first graduates of West Point from my Congressional Dis- trict. I take an interest in his character, and my whole State has an interest in it, not only personally, but on account of the services of his family. His father, when the war broke out, differing politically from the Administration, raised a regiment, and though he was between sixty and seventy years of age he went into the field and fought in some of the severest battles that took place during the war. His friends are numerous in our State, and as one of the Represen- tatives of the State I would not feel justified in allow- ing this thing to be done, which it seems to be the in- tention of the House to do, without saying this much. And yet I feel that I am under no obligation to defend General Fry, although he was my own cadet, because he should have shown me that letter. I understand that he exhibited the letter to no member of the Illinois delegation. There is not a member from Illinois who would not have advised him to have kept it to himself. 310 CONKLING AND BLAINK-FKY CONTROVERriY. But, Mr. Speaker, to revert to the original point, it does not screen a man when lie wants to attack some fellow-member of the House to go to the Department, sret a letter and send it to the Clerk's desk to be read. And here this report is brought in censuring him. As for the gentleman from New York [M]\ CbnMing'] I am free to say, as I presume every member of the House is, that there is nothing in his conduct that is not entirely to his ci-edit, and he has won laurels by the investigation. The Speciker. The gentleman's five minutes have expired. Mr. Shellaharger. I am willing to give the gen- tleman five minutes more. Mr. We7itivorth. Now, Mr. Speaker, we are pass- ing by this subject, we are passing by the gentleman who introduced this letter to censure him. Does any one suppose that the gentleman from Maine when he introduced it did not know for what purpose it was written ? What testimony is before the committee that General Fry himself knew it was to come here ? But so far as he is concerned that does not affect the odium attached to him for sending it here, or to others who gave it to tke gentleman from Maine. But the point I object to is, that the gentleman from New York should bring down \\\)on the head of this officer whose character has stood up to this time without re- proach, one of the most gallant men we ever had in the Army, whose integrity and honor have always been sustained until this committee made this report ; and now the whole of the odium of sending a letter here is to be attributed to him, when I think it belongs some- where else. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 311 I have several times during this session felt it to be my duty to call gentlemen to order for impugning the motives of other members. I always differed in this respect with the Chair. It would make an easy berth for the Speaker, according to his decision, that a member who had consent to make a personal explana- tion could go on and say what he pleased, and we would have to sit here and watch him. I am satisfied, since the Speaker delivered his recent opinion, that he is right in a parliamentary point of view. Hereafter, if anybody on this floor undertakes to make a personal attack on another, I shall feel bound to call him to order at once. Had we done this when the gentleman from Maine imputed bad motives to the gentleman from New York, we would have saved ourselves in the House all this trouble and mortification. When such a contest has once begun, it is the bounden duty of some one member to rise upon the floor and demand that it shall be stopped. I hope, Mr. Speaker, that some one will feel it to be his duty, if he knows anything against General Fry, to prefer the charges and let him be tried by the proper tribunal. If he sent that letter here, if he de- signed it to be sent here against a member of this House, I am willing to go as far as any other member of the House, to fix the proper censure upon him. Should it appear, however, that he did not intend to have that letter presented to the House, then, so far as the prerogatives of the House are concerned, it alters the case very materially. I agree with the gen- tleman from Pennsylvania [Mr. Stevens], if there be anything against General Fry, let charges be filed 312 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. against him, and let him be tried by a military tribunal. He is out of the House ; there is no one here to advo- cate his cause. No one knows what he has to say. We have no explanation why he sent that letter here. As he did not send the letter here, I am willing, to that extent, to agree to the report of the committee. But then there is the member who had the letter read from the Clerk's desk. When he sent it up to be read he virtually indorsed it. What are we to do with him ? Mr. Sliellaharger. I demand the previous question. Mr. Pihe. I want to say a word in behalf of my colleague. Mr. Sliellaharger. I will yield out of my time after the previous question has been seconded. The previous question was seconded and the main question ordered. The Speaher stated that the gentleman from Ohio [Mr. Shellaharger'] was entitled to an hour in which to close the debate. Mr. Sliellaharger. I yield five minutes to the gentleman from Maine. Mr. Pike. Mr. Speaker, the gentleman from Il- linois makes a valiant defense — I suppose he means it to be such — of his yrotegd^ General Fry, by attempting to shift the whole responsibility upon my colleague. Mr. Wentwortli. I do not make any defense of General Fry. Mr. Pike. The gentleman insinuates that my colleague by some wily art induced General Fry to send that letter to be read in this House. Mr. Wentwortli. I beg the gentleman's pardon. I did not say so. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 313 Mr. Pike. Is the gentleman authorized by Gen- eral Fry or any one else to say that my colleague in- duced him to send this letter to this House ? Mr. Wentworth. I do not charge the gentleman's colleague with having done so. Mr. Pike. I am glad that tlie gentleman with- draws the charge. Mr. Wentworth. I do not charge any colleague of mine in this House with anything. Mr. Pihe. I understood the gentleman to say that my colleague induced General Fry to send this letter here. Mr. Wentworth. I said I did not know what in- ducements were brought to bear upon General Fry to have him send this letter here. Mr. Pihe. I can say to the gentleman, if he does not know, and I speak from a general knowledge of my colleague's character and not from having had any communication with him on the subject — I can tell him that if he investigates the subject and learns the truth, he will find that his insinuations against my col- league have no foundation. He generously defended General Fry, as he would any friend he deemed un- justly assailed, and General Fry furnished him this letter expressly to be read in this House as corroborat- ing his statements in his behalf. Ml'. Wentivorth. Have you seen General Fry ? Mr. Pihe. I have not. I have had no commun- ication with him. I do not propose to defend him. I only speak of the part my colleague had in this transaction. As to the breach of privilege which is spoken of by some gentlemen, the House knows of 31-4: CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. the debate that occurred. My colleague had his say ; the gentleman from New York had his say; which got the better of it the record will show. The gentleman from Illinois said my colleague rose for a personal explanation and then introduced the letter, acting under pretense of his privileges. I corrected him ; and now I have the Globe, which will show who was right, and it will show, too, that my colleague is not subject to the implied censure of the committee, if they mean it as a censure, when in their report they condemn the practice of members coming in here, under the color of personal explanations, and bringing in letters from other persons. Now let me read from the Globe containing the report of the proceedings and debates of the House of the 30th of April : Mr. Blaine. Will the gentleman from Massachusetts [Mr. Bliof] yield to me a moment? Mr. Eliot. Yes, sir. Mr. Blaine. I hold in my hand a letter from Provost Marshal Gen- eral Fry, which I ask to have read at the Clerk's desk for the double purpose of vindicating myself from the charge of having stated in de- bate last week what was false, and also for the purpose, which I am sure will commend itself to the House, of allowing fair play to an hon- orable man in the same forum in which he has been assailed. The Speaker, It requires unanimous consent to have it read. Is there objection? Mr. Colliding. I infer that this has some reference to me. I shall make no objection, provided I may have an opportunity to reply to whatever the letter may call for hereafter. Mr. Stevens. I hope this will be postponed until after we get through this bill. I object to interrupting in this way. It was not read then. About an hour later in the proceedings I find this : Mr. Blaine. I ask to send to the Clerk's table to have read the letter the reading of which was objected to this morning. CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 315 Mr. Conllhi'i. I do not object, but only ask, if the matter relates to me, to have an opportunity to reply. Mr. Blaine. I wish to repeat what I said before. Mr. Roxs. I object to the gentleman from New York making a speech. Mr. ConkliiKj. The gentleman does not want a matter to be read relating to a member and then not permit that member to reply. Mr. Ros^, I withdraw my objection. Mr. Bhdne. I want this letter read for the double purpose of vin- dicating myself from the charge of having made an untruthful state- ment on this floor, and to give, in the broad American sense, fair play and opportunity to a worthy oflflcer to be heard in a forum where he has been assailed. I wish further to say that if, on investigation, I had found I was in error in the statement I had made touching the member from the Utica district of New York [Mr. Conlling'] and Provost Marshal General Fry, I would, mortifying as it would have been, have apologized to the House. Whether I was in error or not I leave to those who hear the letter of the Provost Marshal General. And thereupon the letter was read. The House can judge whether there was any invasion of dignity when all the members consented to have the letter read to them. Certainly my colleague did nothing but what was fair and manly. The House cannot now complain if they failed to object to the reading of what they desired to hear. Mr. Hotchhiss. Mr. Speaker, should the resolu- tion which my colleague from the Onondaga district gave notice of a few minutes ago be adopted, we should ascertain who was the right man to be prose- cuted in this case. It has been suggested by the gentleman from Illinois [Mr. Wentwortli] that we are pursuing the wrong man ; that General Fry, when that letter was sent to Mr. Blaine, might not have known that it was to be used in this House. Now, I do not wish to spend a moment's time over that ; I 316 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. desire to call the attention of the House to another subject. Mr. Pilce. Does the gentleman from New York [Mr. Hotchhiss] believe that was the fact ? Mr. Hotclikiss. That what was the fact ? Mr. Pike. That when General Fry sent that letter to my colleague [Mr. Blaine\ he, General Fry, did not expect it to be read in this House. Mr. HotchMss. I have expressed no opinion upon the subject, and therefore I am not to be cross- examined upon the subject. But I would call the attention of the House to libel No. 2, which has been sent stealthily into this House and scattered around here upon the desks of members. It has been kept away from my desk. It has been stolen in here, with this notice served upon the House : " A request made by General Fiy to the investigating committee for the privilege of preparing and submitting, by himself or counsel, a written plea was not granted, ' ' Here is an appeal to the House against the con- duct of one of its committees : "The following letter of instructions was, however, addressed by General Fry to his counsel, Hon. A. G. Riddle, on the eve of the oral plea, which Mr, Riddle made in compliance with the requirements of the committee. It gives a general but brief resume of the grounds on which General Fry rests his charges against Mr. Conkling, and his de- fense against the charge which Mr. Conkling incidentally brings against him." There the attention of this House is called to this question, on an appeal from the action of their com- mittee. He says that they did not treat him fairly, and he now appeals to the House and calls their atten- tion to this letter, and asks them to review the matter. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 817 Now, wlio has done that? I would like to know who is the right man for that, and whether this body has any dignity to protect. We have been lectured here this session from all quarters, until finally clerks in the Departments come here and read lectures to us, or use members of this House for that purpose. Next come in bullies and attack us, and attack the officers of this House. When will the dogs be set upon us ? Such a libel as this is scattered about this House, and the attention of the House is called to it ; and then General Fry says : ' ' I have thus briefly reviewed the charges contained in my letter. Of the principal charges, I maintain and reassert not only the substan- tial but the literal correctness." A more impudent, a more detestable libel, never was presented to the House. It is in defiance of the committee and in defiance of the judgment of the House. It says in substance, "I will insult you, no matter what you do, no matter what the report of your committee may be." The SpeaJcef. The five minutes of the gentleman have expired. Mr. 81iellaharger. I yield to the gentleman five minutes more. Mr. Hotchhiss. I desire to say only a few words more. Mr. Speaker, if this matter should be referred to the Judiciary Committee as a matter of law, the special committee having found all the facts, and this last libel being before us, that committee will be enabled to ascertain who the " right man " is ; and by and by we shall be able to find some one whom we may be 318 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. able to bring into this House, that the Speaker may talk to him and persuade him, perhaps, that he really has been in the wrong in ti'ampling upon the dignity of the American Congress, by insulting us, by treating us as no man would dare to treat a common pettifogger in a decent justice's court. By and by we shall rise, perhaps, to sufficient dignity to resent an insult. Mr. Speaker, it has been suggested here by an honorable member that if a bureau of this Grovern- ment — a bureau reeking with corruption, a stench in the nostrils of the people — comes in here and asks for a continuance of public confidence and public favoi', that it be incorporated in a new law, perhaps ingrafted upon the Constitution by way of amendment, no member here has a right to rise and say anything about the man who administers that bureau. No matter how corrupt his conduct may have been, our mouths must be closed, or else when we approach the door of this Hall ruffians may pounce upon us ; or we may be libelled by newspaper correspondents ; it may be heralded all over the country that this or that member has violated the Constitution and the law, and has disgraced himself. The hirelings of the press throughout the country have been busy libelling my colleague ever since this infamous slander was read here, the attacks emanating from this city, the press being shamelessly prostituted for the purpose of traducing him. I have told him to wait in silence till the day of reckoning should come. Now I want to have the verdict of this House pro- claimed throughout the Union. There is one more point to which I wish to call CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 319 attention. This investigation has been conducted by a committee who hav^e become acquainted with the question. I hope the subject may not be taken out of their hands and referred to the Executive for his action. The Executive should hear the whole story when it is told. We have scarcely begun this matter. General Fry has not been tried. We tried Mr. Conk- ling. We have, so far as we have been permitted, shown General Fry's motive in writing this libel, but have gone no further. This committee should be continued to investigate the whole case. They should go on " in this line if it takes all summer." Mr. Speaker, I had no idea of saying a word on this subject ; but when it is suggested that a Repre- sentative on this floor has no right to speak his mind independently on questions of public interest, matters of legislation, I desire to know whether that is the rule or not. If he is to be tongue-tied here I would rather not hold a position in this House. Mr. Shellaharger. Mr. Speaker, I now ask that the vote be taken. Mr. Randall, of Pennsylvania. Will the gentle- man from Ohio allow me to ask him a question ? Mr. Shellaharger. Yes, sir. Mr. Randall, of Pennsylvania. Preliminary to the question, I desire to say a word or two. I have not had time to read this report, nor do I wish in any manner to enter into the personal matters to which it relates ; but I want to know of the chairman whether this committee in their report justify the taking of employment by a member of Congress who is in receipt of his salary as a member of Congress, and 320 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. taking payment for such employment in addition to his emoluments as a member of Congress. I want to know whether the committee, irrespective of the parties involved in this ease, justify that or not. Mr. Shellaharger. The committee find in their report that a member of Congress who is qualified as such shall not hold any other ofifice or receive any compensation therefor. They find that a member of Congress, after the 4th of March, the day on which his pay commences under the law, cannot receive the salary of any other office during that time. A mem- ber of Congress may be employed by the Government as counsel, and such employment may be competently performed ; and that is what occurred in this case. Mr. Handall, of Pennsylvania. Then I under- stand the gentleman to say he believes a member of Congress, subsequent to the 4th of March and prior to the expiration of his term, can be employed by the Government in another capacity and receive compen- sation therefor. Mr. Shellaharger. That is what the committee find on the subject, if the employment is not an office. Mr. Randall, of Pennsylvania. Can he be em- ployed against the Government? Mr. SJiellaharger. In favor of the Government he may be employed; against the Government he can- not be employed, because there is a statute of 1864 which expressly provides in this identical case of Mr. Conkling, that is to say, it provides no member of Congress shall be permitted to be employed by any person in any proceeding before a court-martial, fur- nishing a complete legislative determination that he CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 321 may be employed in that identical case on the other side, because the provision of 1864, in saying that a member of Congress may not be employed by any other person, would imply that he may be employed in that identical case by the Government itself. Mr. Mcmdall, of Pennsylvania. That is a fine distinction— a distinction without a difference. If it be not a violation of the letter of the law, it is to my mind a violation of its spirit. Mr. Stevens. Suppose a man had an action of ejectment against the Government in Philadelphia, and came to my colleague to employ him, woidd he think himself barred ? Mr, Randall^ of Pennsylvania. I am not a mem- ber of the bar and therefore I should not be barred. [Laughter.] I will answer my colleague that I do not think it would be proper for me while receiving pay as a member of Congress to be employed against the Government I was sent here to represent. Mr. Stevens. Last September parties came to me to represent them in a suit in reference to the internal revenue. They made it worth my while ; that is, I suppose, paying my expenses. [Laughter.] I did so and defeated the Government, by which it is com- pelled to refund some six or seven thousand dollars. I owe an apology to the country for having done jus- tice to these parties. Mr. Randall^ of Pennsylvania. That is a matter about which I have no concern. Mr. Shellaharger demanded the yeas and nays. The yeas and nays were ordered. The question was taken; and it was decided in 322 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. the affirmative — yeas 96, nays 4, not voting 82 ; as follows : Yeas — Messrs. Alley, Allison, Ames, Anderson, Delos R. Ashley, Banks, Baxter, Bidwell, Bingham, Boutvrell, Boyer, Broomall, Buckland, Bundy, Reader W. Clarke, Sidney Clarke, Cobb, Davis, Dawson, Defrees, Delano, Deming, Donnelly, Eckley, Eggles- ton, Eliot, Ferry, Garfield, Hale, Abner C. Harding, Hart, Higby, Holmes, Hooper, Hotchkiss, Chester D. Hubbard, John H. Hubbard, James R. Hubbell, Hul- burd, Humphrey, Jenckes, Julian, Kasson, Kelley, Ketcham, Koontz, Laflin, George V. Lawrence, Wil- liam Lawrence, Loan, Longyear, Marston, McClurg, McKee, McRuer, Mercur, Miller, Moorhead, Morrill, Morris, Myers, Newell, O'Neill, Orth, Paine, Perham, Pike, Plants, Price, Radford, William H. Randall, Raymond, Alexander H. Rice, John H. Rice, Rollins, Sawyer, Shellabarger, Stevens, Strouse, Taber, Taylor, John L. Thomas, Van Aernam, Burt Van Horn, Robert T. Van Horn, Ward, Warner, Henry D. Wash- burn, AVilliam B. Washburn, Welker, Williams, James F. Wilson, Stephen F. Wilson, Windom, and Wood- bridge — 96. Nays — Messrs. Bromwell, Ross, Thornton, and Wentworth — 4. Not voting — Messrs. Ancona, James M. Ashley, Baker, Baldwin, Barker, Beamen, Benjamin, Bergen, Blaine, Blow, Brandegee, Chanler, Conkling, Cook, Cullom, Culver, Darling, Dawes, Denison, Dixon, Dodge, Driggs, Dumont, Eldridge, Farnsworth, Farquhar, Finck, Glossbrenner, Goodyear, Grider, Grinnell, Griswold, Aaron Harding, Harris, Hayes, CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 323 Henderson, Hill, Hogan, Asaliel B. Hubbard, Demas Hubbard, Edwin N. Hubbell, Ingersoll, Johnson, Jones, Kelso, Kerr, Kuykendall, Latham, Le Blond, Lynch, Marshall, Marvin, McCullough, Mclndoe, Moulten, Niblack, Nicholson, Noell, Patterson, Phelps, Pomeroy, Samuel J. Randall, Kitter, Rogers, Rousseau, Schenck, Scofield, Shanklin, Sitgreaves, Sloan, Smith, Spalding, Starr, Stilwell, Thayer, Francis Thomas, Trimble, Upson, Elihu B. Washburne, Whaley, Win- field, and Wright— 82. So the resolution was adopted. During the roll call, Mr. Wentworth said : While I concur in so much of the report as relates to the gentleman from New York, in othei' respects I cannot concur in it for the reasons I have stated, and I therefore vote "no." The vote having been announced as above recorded, Mr. SheJlaharger moved to reconsider the vote by which the resolution w^as passed, and also moved to lay the motion to reconsider upon the table. The latter motion was a2;reed to. Mr. Davis. I rise to a question of privilege. I offer the following resolution and demand the previous question upon it : Whereas on the 80th of April a letter purporting to be written by General Fry was read in the House, together with sundry documents accompanying it, which letter was grossly libellous and reflected upon the public and private character of a member; and whereas the House having ordered an inquiry as to said letter and its truth or falsity; and whereas for 324 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. that purpose a select committee was raised, which committee has ascertained and reported said letter to have been false and malicious : Therefore, Resolved, That the Judiciary Committee be instructed to inquire and report whether any breach of the privileges of the House not sufficiently reported upon by said select committee has been committed in connection with writing or sending said letter, the doc- uments accompanying the same, or the introduction thereof into the House, or causing the same to be read in the House, or entered upon the record of the House, or making the same public, and if so, by whom, and what action, if any, should be taken ; and that said committee also inquire and report whether said libel has been republished or renewed by the said General Fry or any other person since the termination of the session of said committee, and if so, by Avhom, and whether any and what action ought to be had thereon ; and that said committee have power to send for per- sons and papers. The Speaker. The gentleman claims this to be a question of privilege. The Chair will submit to the House whether it is a question of privilege. Mr. Wilson, of Iowa. I suggest that the gentle- man modify it so far as to refer the subject to the same committee that has had this matter under con- sideration heretofore. I see no necessity for taking it out of the jurisdiction of that committee and referring it to another. I am satisfied that the House has entire confidence in the ability and integrity of that com- mittee. Mr. Eldridge. Is this debatable ? CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 325 The Speaher. The Chair thinks it is scarcely debatable. It is a question which must be decided by the House exactly as the Chair decides a question of privilege, upon the presentation of the resolution itself, Mr. Davis. I desire to say that I have no objec tion to this going to the special committee, though I preferred it should go to the Judiciary Committee. I am entirely willing to modify it. Mr. Eldridge. I withdraw my objection. Mr. Pihe. My colleague, I know, would not object to the fullest investigation. Mr. Shellaharger. I did not hear the resolution read, but I understand it to relate to the question whether in the conduct of the gentleman from Maine there was anything that constituted a breach of the rules or privileges of the House. Now, that is a ques- tion for the Committee on Rules, and I beg that the resolution may take that direction, for no member of the select committee, that I am aware of, professes to be familiar with the rules of this body. Mr. Davis. I desire not to reflect upon the char- acter of any member whatever. I have not introduced the resolution from any personal feeling toward any member of the House. But I desire to know what constitutes a breach of the privileges of the House. Mr. Radford. I object to further debate. Mr. Davis. Will the gentleman allow a state- ment to be made ? Mr. Radford. No, sir. The S2:)eaker. The only subject to be referred to the Committee on Rules is a proposition to amend the rules. 326 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. Mr. Davis. Then I will insist upon the previous motion to refer it to the Committee on the Judiciary. The Speaker. The Chair will submit to the House whether this is a question of privilege. The question being taken, it was decided in the negative — ayes 24, noes 71. APPENDIX E. I expect to show that Captain Orandall, when he was suspended from duty as Provost Marshal of the Twenty-first District, held in his hands money and bonds which belonged to the United States, and which he had refused at least three times to turn over, on competent orders from superior authority, to wit : Major Haddock and General (Tames B. Fry, Provost Marshal General of the United States. I expect to show that he was ordered to turn it over to a special officer of Major Haddock! s, and that he refused ; that he was ordered to turn it over to a disbursing officer of the United States who had no connection with Major Haddock, but who kept his accounts with the Treasury of the United States, whose business it was to receive the money ; and that he refused to turn it over. I expect to show that he was directed by Major Haddock to turn it over to his successor in office, who relieved him of the duties of Provost Marshal of that district, and who was directed to receive and receipt for these moneys, which had come to Captain Oran- dall^ 8 hands as Provost Marshal ; that he was going out of office as Provost Marshal, being suspended from duty, and Major Beadle was about to relieve him ; and that Captain CrandaU disobeyed the order and refused to turn over these moneys and bonds to his successor. I expect, further, to show that this was all 327 328 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. known to Mr. ConMing, and that no prosecution was ever made for the violation of these orders. I ex23ect to show that the county of Oneida was paying a bounty of $700, perhaps $725 ; that a large number of men, during the time that the county was paying this bounty, were mustered into service with $50 bounty ; and that a large number of these recruits deserted. I expect, further, to prove that Captain Crandall stated, under oath, that prior to a certain date, which I cannot now remember, but during his administra- tion, and after he had been in office some time, of all the recruits who had entered the service, none of them were citizens of Oneida county ; that it was his duty to know that the law required that persons not residents of Oneida county could not be credited to that county ; and that these persons who, he swore, were not resi- dents of Oneida county, were by him credited to Oneida county. I expect to show that that came to the knowl- edge of Mr. ConMing on the trial of the Haddock Court Martial. I expect to show that there was an order or regulation in force in that district which required the Provost Marshal, during the time Captain Crandall was in office, to disregard any pretended claim that a recruit was going for a less sum than the bounty offered by the county. I propose to show that that order, then in force, was disregarded by Captain Crandall^ and that it came to the knowledge of Mr. ConMing^ and that no prosecution was ever made for it. CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 329 I [)ropose, further, to show that, at the time the call of the 19th of December, 1804, was being filled, and a fund was raised by the Supervisors of Oneida county, equivalent to $700 for each recruit who would enlist for three years ; that the quota fixed was calculated on a three years' basis; that a resolu- tion of the Board of Supervisors authorized each Supervisor to recruit for his own town ; that he was authorized to draw from the Treasurer, or the agent who had control of the fund, an amount of money equal to seven hundred times the quota of the town ; and that each Supervisor was authorized to do that as a recruiting agent ; that when he had finished recruit- ing, he settled with the rest of the Supervisors, or they settled among themselves; and if he could produce credit sufficient, or certificates of some mustering officer — as, for instance, the Provost Marshal — show- ing recruits equal to the amount of quota he was re- quired to pay for (for illustration — if the quota of a town was forty, and he could produce to the recruit- ing agents, who happened to be Supervisors, forty certificates of credit, he having previously drawn twenty-eight thousand dollars), that that would be regarded as the full settlement of that county. I expect to prove, further, that the class of men who were enlisted at that office by Captain Orandall were a disgrace to the service; that the office was notorious as a place at which deserters and bounty jumpers could be passed and mustered into service; that they deserted in large numbers, and that men, in addition to that, who were physically disqualified, were passed by that Board ; that the examinations 330 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FBY CONTROVERSY, were not conducted in compliance witb the Regula- tions; that the surgeon had his office in one place and the Provost Marshal in another, in different rooms, and that improper men were passed by the Board. I expect to prove that these bonds, which Cap- tain Grmidall refused to turn over under the orders to which I have alluded, were afterwards offered by him to the County Supervisors ; that he offered to surrender up the bonds to the Supervisors who had issued them. I expect to prove that, about this time, Captain Crandall, in the Supreme Court of Oneida county, testified that these bonds belonged to the United States; that, in a suit in which a man named Richard- son was plaintiff — which was an action, as I under- stand, of replevin, brought by the plaintiff Michardson, to recover possession of these bonds — Captain Oran- dall, in that action, set up as a defense to defeat the plaintiff's right of recovery, the fact that these bonds were the property of the United States ; and that he had, on several occasions, refused to deliver up this property, which, on that trial, he swore was the prop- erty of the United States. I expect to show that Captain Crandall was ordered to give up these bonds, and that he refused. APPENDIX F. THE BONDS. lu arriving at this opinion, there is no doubt that the Committee had some reasons which satisfied them of the soundness thereof. It is proposed, for a moment, to examine the argu- ment of the Committee on this point, and discover, if possible, the nature of these reasons. The first fact which the Committee find is, that " these bonds were not local bounty, nor were they deposited in behalf of recruits, as stated in General Fry's letter." Captain Crandall, in his oflScial report, dated March 11, (which Judge Hiviit says he advised and suggested,) states : " I have in my hands, left with me by recruits in the manner stated, $11,395, and county bonds to the amount of $20,000." Captain Orandall having reported that the bonds " were left with him by recruits," and I having stated in my letter that the bonds " were deposited on be- half of recruits," the Committee take occasion to con- tradict the latter, by asserting that " these bonds were not local bounty, nor were they deposited in behalf of recruits"; and this contradiction is given by the Committee when the point is no way material to the issue under investigation. This is only important, as showing the bias of the Committee. The next statement is, that "on the 4th of March, 1865, Major Haddock directed Captain Crandall to 331 332 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. turn over these bonds to S. Floyd Hoard, Special Agent. Captain Crandall sought the advice of dis- tinguished and able counsel, and was told he could not safely turn them over," &c. Captain Crandall was a subordinate military officer, under the command of Major Haddock. He received an order in the line of his duty. Instead of obeying it, he advised with his lawyer, and disobeyed it. If the surmise of the Committee as to Major Had- doch^s object in getting possession of the funds be true, and that object had been accomplished, it would still have been better for the government for Captain Cran- dall to have obeyed the order, because we are told that " Haddock was compelled to disgorge," while, as it turns out, these bonds are all lost to the government, as the Supervisors, so far as heard from, have not in- timated any disposition to "disgorge." The material fact that Captain Crandall was or- dered to turn over these bonds to Captain Meredith, a United States disbursing officer, is entirely ignored by the Committee. As this officer kept his account with the United States Treasury, and did not account to Major Haddock, or place his funds at the disposal of that officer, there was no ground for apprehension that'the transfer of the bonds to Captain MereditJi could, in any event, inure to the benefit of Major Had- dock, or loss to the government. This order was disobeyed. Captain Cra/ndatl was ordered to turn the money over to his successor, Major Beadle, which order, like the others, he dis- obeyed. On the 30th of March, he was ordered by the CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTEOVERSY. 333 Provost Marshal General "to turn over all moneys, bonds and other evidence of indebtedness in his pos- session, whether belonging to enlisted men who had deserted, or other enlisted men," (page 202). To which he answered by telegraph as follows : " Your communication I'eceived ; will comply at once." And, on the same day, he turned over $2,600 to Major Lee, and $5,495 to Major Ladd, (page 203) which, with other amounts, he held in defiance of the three pre- ceding orders to turn them over, and that, too, after having been relieved from duty on the 13th of the preceding month. On advising with his counsel, he came to the conclusion that the $20,000 in bonds, which he had reported to me "he held in his hands, left with him hy recvuita^'' and which he had been three times peremptorily ordered to turn over, were not em- braced in the order above cited, and he again i-efused to turn them over. As soon as I learned that he had turned over only certain moneys, and had not turned over the bonds, his attention was called to the fact, and, on the 5th of April, he was directed as follows (page 204) : "WAR DEPARTMENT, PROVOST MARSHAL GENERAL'S BUREAU, Washington, D. C, April 5, 1865. Captain: I am directed by the Provost Marshal General to acknowledge receipt of your communication of the 1st instant, report- ing the transfer, by you, of $5,495 to Major Ladd, and $2,000 to Major Lee, and to invite your attention to the fact that, in a tabular state- ment of moneys, checks, bonds and vouchers deposited with you, on account of local bounties, forwarded by you to this office, you admit having in your possession $33,995, which leaves a balance of $25,900 334 CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. unaccounted for. The Provost Marshal General directs me to inquire what disposition you have made of the balance, $35,900. I am, Captain, very respectfully, Your obedient servant, (Signed) C. McKEEVER, Assistant Adjutant General. Captain P. B. Crandall, Care of Major Beadle, Acting Provost Marshal, Utica, N.Y." From this it plainly appears that the bonds were embraced in my order of March 30 ; and that Cap- tain Crandall so understood it appears fi'om his an- swer (page 204), in which he accounts for the bonds, and states that they have been seized by a writ of re- plevin at the suit of Aaron Richardson. Upon this statement of the case, the Committee say : "These bonds belonged unquestionably either to Aaron Richard- son or to the government. ' ' If they belonged to Richardson, it is not easy to see why the complaint should be made that Captain Crandall had violated the order of the Dei^artment in not tvirning over the bonds to Major Had- dock or Major Lee, leaving himself liable to Richardson for this amount. If they belonged to the government, it is still more difficult to see why the government should not have employed counsel, and protected its rights to the bonds. ' ' But the Committee do see that it was eminently proper for Captain Crandall to turn them over to the Supervisors of Oneida county. At least they approve Captain CraiidalTs action in having done so. But, notwithstanding the Committee's logic, should not Captain Crandall have turned them over, as ordered, even if they did belong to Richardson? He held them as Provost Marshal, and when he ceased to act as such, and another Provost Marshal took his place and assumed all the duties, taking charge of all the property, records and business of the office, CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. 335 why should not Captain Crandall have turned over these bonds ? Was it not a complete defense, as against mdiardson^ that the government had so directed ? Were Ilicliarihoii! s rights in the premises in Jeopardy by a transfer of the bonds from one incumbent of the office of Provost Marshal to another? Would they not legally be in possession of the same depositary, viz., the Provost Marshal of the District ? But the Committee do not say that, if the bonds belonged to the government, it is still more difficult to see why Captain Crandall should not have turned them over as ordered, but say that " it is difficult to see why the government should not have employed counsel and protected its rights to the bonds," That is to say, having refused to turn them over, and dur- ing the delay which his disobedience of orders occa- sioned, another claimant having been enabled to seize them, the government ought to be particular to see that Captain Crandall is put to no expense or trouble in defending the suit, and I am blamable for not em- ploying counsel to protect him from the consequences of his disobedience of my orders. The remaining points in relation to this branch of the subject are briefly these : Admitting, for the sake of the ai'gument, that Captain Crandall ought not to have turned over the bonds to Major Haddock^ or Hoards and admitting that my order of March 30 did not include the bonds, what excuse does the Committee offer in his behalf for not turning them over to the United States disbursing officer, as directed, or to his successor. Ma- jor Beadle ? 336 GONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. Can it be one of those reasons which his counsel, Judge Hunt, gives as to the motives which Captain Orandall had in retaining thein? Judge Hunt was acting as Captain OrandalTs counsel ; he must be sup- posed to have understood his motives, and he advised him as to his duties and conduct. In reply to Mr. GonMing'8 question (page 98) as to whether there was any motive or object about these bonds, on the part of Captain Crandall, Mr. ConMing or the wit- ness, ''except to enable the government to hold them for its benefit against Rlcliardson^'' Judge Hnnt answers: "I know of none but to hold them that the government might have the benefit of them, and to cojnpel the fvo'per conduct of Richardson during the Haddoch investigatioiir As the testimony discloses that the first of these reasons had no effect on the conduct of Captain Oran- dall in disposing of the bonds, as shown by his promptly surrendering them, after the Haddoch trial, to the Supervisors who issued them, we are forced to the conclusion that the second reason was the sole cause of his failure to obey the orders requiring him to turn them over. It ap23ears from the testimony that Richardson was the most important witness against Major Had- doch ; that Mr. CoiiMlng was the prosecutor of Major Haddoch ; and that Captaui Qrandcdl was a client of Judge Hunt's, and also a witness against Major Had- doch. Captain Orandall was not a client of Mr. Oonh- ling''s, although Mr. Conhling seemed to think that such was the impression, for he puts a witness on the stand to prove that " he never did act as counsel, or professionally, for Captain OrandcdV (page 98). CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 837 But still there was an intimate relation existing between them, which Mr. Coiikling describes with much pathos in a letter to Mr. Dana, dated March 13, 1865, in which he states (page 48), in reference to Captain Crandall, " that throughout his (^CrandaW s) short experience as Provost Marshal, he has constantly, from day to day, confided to me his troubles, his pro- ceedings, and the attempts made upon him." It may be assumed that Mr. ConJaluig, in some of these outpourings, was advised that Captain Crandall had been several times ordered to turn over money and bonds belonging to the government, and that he had disobeyed the orders. And while he was confid- ing to Mr. ConMing " all his troubles and his p?'Oceed- ings,^'' it may have been that he disclosed the reasons why he disobeyed the orders — one of which, his dis- tinguished counsel swears, was " to compel the proper conduct of Richardson during the Uaddoch investiga- tion,^'' of which Mr. ConMing was Judge Advocate. The relation of Richardson to the Haddock case was that of an informer and principal witness. He claimed these bonds and Captain Cramlcdl refused to turn them over, holding them, as Judge Hunt testifies, to compel" his proper conduct on the Haddock trial. The Committee did not give an opinion as to this rea- son for not turning over the bonds to the government. But, as they have fully justified Captain Crandall in all that he did in relation to these bonds, and as he furnished the Committee the reasons for his refusal to turn them over, one of which was that "he held them to compel the proper conduct of Hicliardson on the Haddock investigation," it is to be presumed that they 338 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. also approved tlie reasons which induced the act. At any rate, they do not condemn them. To understand the force of this reason, let us glance at the situation of the parties at the period to which Judge Hunt refers. Much complaint had been urged in reference to the Utica office. Captain Jticliardson,^ Mr. Conk- ling's first selection, had been dismissed for alleged fraud (see page 130), and Captain Crandall had been suspended from duty, Major Haddock having previ- ously telegraphed to Captain Crandall that he " was filling the quota of Oneida county with bounty jump- ers and thiev^es" (page 142). Colonel Tracy and Lieutenant Lott had called the attention of the gov- ernment to the conduct of Captain Crandcdl ; and Colonel Axtell had protested against receiving any more recruits from that office (see pages 130 and 131). On the other hand, Mr. ConMing claimed that Major Haddock was perpetrating frauds at Elmira and else- where, but denied that Captain Crandall had been guilty of fraud, and offered " to become personally re- sponsible for him " (see page 48), while the Inspector General, who was sent to Utica at my request, to in- vestigate, reported against both Major Haddock and Captain Crandall (see page 155), and recommended that Major Haddock's conduct be investigated, and that Captain Crandall he dismissed the service. The relations of Captain Crandcdl to the case now assumed a grave character. He could ask an investi- gation for himself, or he could aid the prosecution of Major Haddock, and, by convicting him of a 23art, or * Not the same man as the Eichardson spoken of above. CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVEESY. 339 the whole, of what was charged against himself, he would to a great extent not only relieve his name from suspicion, but exonerate Mr. ConMing, who had become responsible for him, and at the same time run no risk incident to a trial. It will be remembered that Mr. ConMing had written a letter to the President, protesting against the removal of Captain Hicliardson, whose appoint- ment he had secured, and, about the 13th of March, Captain CrandaU prepared a defense of himself and an arraignment of Major Haddock^ which Mr. ConMing had printed (page 256 and page 49), and which the latter followed up with a letter to the War Depart- ment, denouncing Major Haddock and eulogizing Captain CrandaU {^qq page 48). This was dated the 13 th of March. The report of Major Luddington, recommending Captain CrandaWs dismissal from the service, was dated March 31, and on the 3d day of April following, Mr. ConMing was appoibted to prose- cute Major Haddock. In the meantime, Mr. Aaron Richardson, who/or some time previous to Major Had- dock's connection ivith the Provost Marshal GeneraVs Bureau, in western New York, had been operating at Utica as a " substitute broker," and was still there in that capacity, had committed offenses for which he had been arrested, and from which arrest he had been released by the intervention of Mr. ConMing, as here- tofore stated, and in relation to which release Mr. Conh- ling had consulted and advised with Judge Hunt, the counsel of Captain Crandcdl (see page 99). The con- sideration which Richardson agreed to offer Mr. Conk- ling for his interference was certain disclosures which 340 CONKLING AND BLAINE-PRY CONTROVERSY. he proposed to make, provided lie should be protected from the penalty of the law for his offenses. Captain Grandall had in his hands $20,000 in Oneida county bonds, which belonged to the government, but which Richardson claimed belonged to him. This was the situation of the parties at the period to which Judge Hunt refers. The feelings and interests of these parties may be briefly considered. Mr. ConMing and Captain Gran- dall were on terms of intimacy and cordiality, but were both bitterly hostile to Major Haddock. Richard- son, on his part, had two objects to accomplish, in which he felt a strong personal interest. First, he desired to keep out of trouble ; and second, he was anxious to get hold of the $20,000 in bonds, which Captain Crandall held, and which he claimed. In this condition of things, it seems that an understanding was arrived at, to the effect that if, in the rose-water style of putting it, Richardson " would make dis- closures," he should be " protected " against any prose- cution on the part of the government, and the $20,000 should " be held to compel his "proper conduct during the investigation of the case of HaddochP As his re- lation thereto was simply that of a witness, his conduct on the trial was the conduct of a witness. Being only a man, and a substitute broker, he was unable to re- sist the opportunity offered. It promised, at least, indemnity for the past, if not security for the futui'e ; and that was certainly more than he had any right to expect, to say nothing of the $20,000 in anticipation. The remaining portion of this subject is found in the recoi-d of the Haddock Court Martial, and is tlius CONKLING AND BLAINE-FRY CONTROVERSY. 341 iiiti'odueed by Mr. ConMinrfs counsel, on page 195 of tliis recoi'd : "■ Mr. Hotchhiss called tlie attention of the Com- mittee to that part of the record of the Haddock Court Maitial, e-liowing that liicJuirdson was a witness, and showing the materiality and importance of his evi- dence," (fee. This, it is thought, sufficiently explains the sub- ject of the bonds. ^l^.f'^fev' ■■^^7^ ^,,.^J* LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Hill mil iiii' 'III' Hill iiii'iiiniiii mil iiiii III! 013 703 071 8