i \§§i§mmmmmmmmm II ' '-5:> i»>:3> ^1> "2aBL> 5:i 3> r ^i^T — •;^--S.>";i.?iV%, - ;,; ^ IIlIBRARY OF CONGRESS. Jl B XITED STATES OP AMERICA j> .i> ^>y^j> ":r> >5^ 3 ^>13> sjm>^^ ^ » : .^ =>>^^ ^:>^ > ' ^ ::!> ^ > '-> ^ n>:::3 » ^ ? 3> :> > J> ^i> o > > >• > > .:> :»:> > > ^»j> > :> ^::> > > ::^o > T!> cs>:> >>> ■>:>: >> ^\:> >::>:> j3 ■:>^'"> >:> >^ >> •^ >> >>>'^ Ji^ ^>^ >i > > :::> !> :?>^ -> ^p^ 1 >>^ :>?>i3> ,v.2>^'^'-> >> '^ ^^ » v> j> - V 5> > ^> > lis? »:>:> ^>-^ ~:5>"> '>^^>"i>^ -> ^ > OBITUARY ADDRESSES DF.LTVEnEn ON THE OCCASION OF THE DEATH . ZACHARY TAYLOR, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, JULY 10, 185 0. PRINTED DT ORDER OF THE SENATE AND HOCSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. ■.5: WASHINGTON: PRINTED BY WILLIAM M. BELT. 18 50. \ \J\u ^'V/ V u,t)^ aio^ Ccr,-,o^., if^ju^^i., iT^f- yis-d> t' OBITUARY ADDRESSES DEUTDIZD OX THE 6^ OCCASION OF THE DEATH ZACHARY TAYLOR, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. Irniite nnii yjanur of ^^tprarntatiufs JULY 10, 1850; FlXERAl SERIIOX BY THE REV. SMITH mi D,l). RECTOE OP ST. JOHS 3 CHURCH, WASHINGION, PREACHED m THE PRESIDENTIAL MANSION, JULY 13, 1850. IDrintftJ 6n ortif r of tfir Senate & llJoust of Crprcsciitatibcs. WASniNGTOX: (^/ FEINTED BY WILLIAM M. BELT. ISoO. ^ ^ IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES, Tuesday, July 9, 1850. Mr. Butler proceeded to address the Senate ; and, having spoken an hour, on a private communication from Mr. Webster, he suspended his remarks. Mr. Webster. — Mr. President, I have permission from the honourable member from South CaroHna to interrupt the progress of his speech, and to make a solemn and mournful suggestion to the Senate. The intelUgence which, withm the last few moments, has been received, indicates that a very great mis- fortune is now immediately impending over the country. It is supposed by medical ad\asers and others that the President of the United States can- not live many hours. This intimation comes in a shape so authentic, and through so many varieties of communication, and all tending to the same result, that I have thought it my duty to move the Senate to follow the example which has already been set in the other branch of the National Legis- lature. At half-past eleven o'clock to-day, I called at the President's mansion to inquire after his health. I was informed that he had had a verj^ bad night ; that he was exceedingly ill this morning, but that at that moment he was more easy and more com- posed. I had hardly reached my seat in the Sen- ate when it was announced to me that the fever had suddenly returned upon him with very alarm- ing symptoms ; that appearances of congestion were obvious; and that it was hardly possible his life would be prolonged through the day. With the permission, therefore, of my honour- able friend from South Carolina, who, I am sure, like the rest of us, has those feehngs on this occa- sion which quite disqualify us for the performance of our duties, even in this very important crisis of public affairs, I venture to move the Senate that it do now adjourn. The Senate accordingly adjourned. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Tuesday, July 9, 1850. At one o'clock and seven minutes, P. M. Mr. Bayly rose and stated, that he understood that authentic information had reached the Capitol that the condition of the President of the United States was so critical that he "would probably not survive an hour. He therefore moved that the House adjourn; and the question being put. It -R-as decided in the affirmative. And the House accordingly adjourned until to-morrow at eleven o'clock, A. M. IN SENATE. Wednesday, July 10, 1850. The following communication, received by the Secretary of the Senate, was read : — WasJiington, July 10, 1850. To the Senate of the United States : In consequence of the lamented death of Zachary Taylor, late President of the United States, I shall no longer occupy the chair of the Senate; and I have thought that a formal communication to the Senate, to that effect, through your Secre- tary^, might enable you the more promptly to pro- ceed to the choice of a presiding officer. Millard Fillmore. The following message was received from the President of the United States, by Mr. Fisher : — Washington, July 10, 1850. Fellotv-CitizenB of the Senate and House of Representatives : I have to perform the melancholy duty of announcing to you, that it has pleased Almighty God to remove from this life Zachary Taylor, late President of the United States. He deceased last evening at the hour of half-past ten o'clock, in the midst of bis family and surrounded by affectionate friendsj calmly and in tbe full possession of all bis faculties. Among bis last words were tbese, wbicli be uttered witb empbatic distinction: "I bave always done my duty — I am ready to die — m}' only regret is for tbe friends I leave bebind me." Having announced to you, fellow-citizens, tbis most afflicting bereavement, and assuring you tbat it bas penetrated no beart witb deeper grief tban mine, it remains for me to say, tbat I propose tbis day, at twelve o'clock, in tbe Hall of tbe House of Representatives, in tbe presence of botb Houses of Congress, to take tbe oatb prescribed by tbe con- stitution to enable me to enter on tbe execution of tbe office wbicb tbis event bas devolved on me. Millard Fillmore. The message was read. The following message was received from the President of the United States by Mr. Fisher :— Fellow-Citizens of the Senate and Souse of Representatives : A great man bas fallen among us, and a wliole comitry is called to an occasion of unex- pected, deep, and general mourning. I recommend to tbe two Houses of Congress to adopt sucli measures, as in tbeir discretion may seem proper, to perform witb due solemnities tbe funeral obsequies of Zacbary Taylor, late Presi- 9 dent of the United States ; and thereby to signify the great and affectionate regard of the American people for the memory of one whose life has been devoted to the public service ; whose career in arms has not been surpassed in usefulness or brilliancy ; A\ ho has been so recently raised by the unsolicited voice of the people to the highest civil authority in the government, — ^which he administered mth so much honour and advantage to his country; and by whose sudden death so many hopes of future usefulness have been blighted for ever. To you, Senators and Representatives of a Nation in tears, I can say nothing which can alleviate the sorrow with which you are oppressed. I appeal to you to aid me, under the trjdng circumstances which surround me, in the discharge of the duties, from wliich, however much I may be oppressed by them, I dare not shrink ; and I rely upon Him, who holds in his hands the destinies cf nations, to en- dow me with the requisite strength for the task, and to avert from our country the evils apprehended from the heavy calamity which has befiillen us. I shall most readily concur in whatever measures the wisdom of the two Houses may suggest, as befitting this deeply melancholy occasion. Millard Fillmore. Washington, July 10, 1850. The messaice was read. 10 Mr. Downs rose and said : Mr. Secretary : I rise, as a member of the delegar tion of the State whose citizen the late President of the United States was, to offer resolutions suitable to the occasion. The announcement of his death has been already made officially here and elsewhere ; and on the wings of lightning, and almost as swift as thought, the sad intelligence has been conveyed to remote portions of this great repubhc. How su- blime, as well as melancholy, is the scene in which we are now engaged ! But a few days since — less than a week — many of us sat near the then Presi- dent of the United States, and saluted him in health, at the base of that monument which the hands of a grateful posterity are now raising to the memory of the first and the greatest of his predecessors — hero, statesman, hke himself — and where we had assem- bled to pay devotion to the memory of the man " first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen ;" and to rekindle, in the breasts of all, that spirit of union, fraternity, and liberty, without which we shall prove ourselves unworthy of our revolutionary ancestors, and a reproach to their memory. Yes, there sat, quiet and placid as the gentle breeze from the Potomac that cooled his heated brow, the man whose very pathway to his log-cabin school-house in Kentucky, the " Blood}- Ground," was beset by the tomahawk of the savage. 11 and who had passed through four wars and many of the bloodiest and most glorious battle-fields of his country imscathed — at the head of the greatest re- public of this or any other country, protected, not by bayonets, but by the affections of his countr)-- men : yet, in a few short days, in the midst of this quiet, peace, prosperity, and fame, he was to ai> proach that doom which awaits us all. Zachaet Taylor was born in 1784, in Orange county, Virginia. In early life he gave evidence of extraordinary energy and force of character. In 1808, he was appointed, durmg the presidency of Mr. Jefferson, lieutenant in the army of the United States; rose, in 1812, to the rank of captain; and. after the declaration of war -s^dth Great Britain in that year, he was brevetted major by President Ma- dison, for his memorable and gallant defence of Fort Harrison, with a handful of men, against a large body of savages. In 1832, then advanced to the rank of colonel, he distinguished himself in the Black Hawk war ; was ordered into Florida in 1836, and for his signal services against the savage Semi- noles, was created a brevet brigadier-general, and commander-in-chief in Florida. Subsequently, he was transferred to the command of the division of the army in the south-western portion of the Union ; was ordered into Texas in 1845; advanced to the banks of the Eio Grande; and afterwards, beinnniuLi- 12 Adth the battles of the 8th and 9th of May, 1846, at Palo Alto and Kesaca de la Palma, and endmg with Buena Vista, he overthrew, with fearful odds against him, and signally defeated the most skilful of the Mexican generals, Ampudia, Arista, Paredes, and even the President of Mexico himself; and, by a series of brilUant -victories, gained for himself and the brave armies under his command, a world-wide renown, commanding the approval and admiration of Europe and America, and securing an enviable and proud place in the brightest chapters of the history of American arms. But why attempt to portray his life or describe his actions ? This is not the time nor place for such a purpose, if I had the ability to do it justice. His history is part of the history of his country, and therefore needs no aid of friends to preserve it. The battle-fields of Fort Harrison, of Okeechobee, Palo Alto, Resaca de la Palma, Monterey, and, the most glorious of them all, Buena Vista, are at once his monuments and his eulogies. He needs no others. Of his political history, this is not the place nor I the person to speak. Yet I may, I hope, be par- doned a single remark. The wisest and best coun- sels of public men in a free country — free in speech, in the press, and in the ballot — cannot be expected to go unquestioned. It would not be a free country, if they were. But it is consolatory to know that, 13 whatever differences of opinion may have existed as to the policy of him whose untimely death we all so much lament, they are already, before the tomb has been closed over him, buried in oblivion for ever. He is hereafter to belong to no party, to no section, but to the whole American family, and his memory will be revered and cherished by them all ahke. But let not the tears we are shedding over our departed President blind us to the grandeur of the scene in which we stand. Did the world ever wit- ness such an one before ? How soon, if ever, can it be witnessed in other countries? The chief of a nation of more than twenty millions of freemen is suddenly withdrawn from the world by an act of God, followed by no disturbance of the perfect equi- poise of our institutions. The gentlemen composing the cabinet of the late President, after his decease, and at the approach of midnight, without ostenta- tion, quietly repair to the residence of the Vice-Pre- sident, and there announce the national bereave- ment, and his own promotion by the operation of our Constitution, and the pre\aous designation of the person to the highest and the most honourable position on earth. Within little more than twelve hours after that event, the new President has taken the oath of office, without any military parade, and been installed in command of the ship of state, which moves on over the billows of time, more 14 bright and buoyant than ever, bearing at her mast- head the proud emblems of national glory and great- ness, and presenting to the world a sublime spectacle of the beauty and perfection of self-government. Such a scene as this ought to make us a happier and a better people. It should make us sensible of the great and manifold advantages we enjoy as a free and united people. Let us, then, bury in the tomb of our departed President, all sectional feelings and divisions, and unite once more in that spirit of cordial good will and brotherly love which united our forefathers in the earlier days of the republic. Let us renew before we leave his grave our vows to support the Union, and our determination to perpe- tuate our Constitution in all its primeval simphcity and purity. There is room enough, glory enough, and honours enough for us all, while we preserve the Union, and know how wisely and prudently to en- joy it- Mr. Downs then submitted the following resolution, -which was considered by unanimous consent and agreed to. Whereas, it has pleased Divine Providence to remove from this life, Zachary Taylor, late President of the United States, the Senate, sharing in the general sorrow which this melancholy event must produce, is desirous of manifesting its sensibility on this occasion : Therefore, Resolved, That a committee, consisting of Messrs. Web- ster, Cass, and King, be appointed on the part of the Se- 15 natc, to meet such committee as may be appointed on the part of the House of Representatives, to consider and "re- port Avhat measures it may be deemed proper to adopt to show the respect and affection of Congress for tlie memory of the illustrious deceased, and to make the necessary ar- rangements for his funeral. Ordered, That the Secretary of the Senate communicate the foregoing resolution to the House of Representatives. Mr. "Webster. — Mr. Secretary, at a time -vvlien the great mass of our fellow-citizens enjoy remark- able health and happiness throughout the M'hole country, it has pleased Divine Providence to visit the two houses of CongTess, and especially this house, with repeated occasions for mourning and lamen- tation. Since the commencement of the session, we have followed two of our own members to their last home; and we are now called upon, in conjunction with the other branch of the legislature, and in full sjTnpathy with that deep tone of affliction Avliich I am sure is felt throughout all the country, to take part in the last and due solemnities of the funeral of the late President of the United States. Truly, sir, was it said in the communication read to us, that a '•' great man has fallen among us." The late President of the United States, originally a soldier by profession, having gone through a long and splendid career of military service, had, at the close of the late war with Mexico, become so nnicli 16 endeared to the people of the United States, and had inspired them with so high a degree of regard and confidence, that without sohcitation or appHcation, without pursuing any devious paths of poHcy, or turning a hair's hreadth to the right or the left from the path of duty, a great, and powerful, and gener- ous people saw fit, by popular vote and voice, to confer upon him the highest civil authority in the nation. We cannot forget that as in other instances so in this, the public feeling was won and carried away, in some degree, by the eclat of mihtary re- no^nl. So it has been always; and so it always will be, because high respect for noble feats in arms has been, and always will be, outpoured from an ex- haustless fountain in the hearts of the peoj)le, living under a popular government. But it would be a great mistake to suppose that the late President of the United States owed his advancement to high civil trust, or his great accej)tabinty with the people, to military talent or ability alone. I believe, sir, that associated with the highest admiration for those qualities possessed by him, there was spread through- out the community a high degree of confidence and faith in his integrity, and honour and uprightness as a man ; I believe he was especially regarded as both a firm and a mild man in the exercise of autho- rity; and I have observed, more than once, in this and in other popular governments, that the prevalent 17 motiAe M-itli the masses of inaiikiiid I'or conferring liigli power on individuals, is often a confidence in their mildness, their paternal, protecting, and safe character. The people naturally feel safe -where they feel themselves to be under the control and protection of sober counsels, of impartial minds, and a general paternal superintendence. I suppose, sir, that no case ever happened in the very best days of the Roman republic, when any man found himself clothed with the highest autho- rity in the State, under circumstances more repelling all suspicion of personal appHcation, all suspicion of pursuing any crooked path in poUtics, or all sus- picion of having been actuated by sinister views and purposes, than in the case of the w^orthy, and eminent, and distinguished, and good man, whose death we now deplore. He has left to the people of his comitry a legacy in this : He has left them a bright example, which addresses itself with peculiar force to the young and rising generation; for it tells them that there is a path to the highest degree of renown — straight, on- ward, steady, without change or deviation. Mr. Secretary, my friend from Louisiana, [Mr. Downs] has detailed shortly the events in the military career of General Taylor. His service throuLili life was mostly on the frontier, and always a hard service — often in combat witli the trilx's of 18 Indians all along the borders for many thousands of miles. It has been justly remarked by one of the most eloquent men whose voice was ever heard in these houses, that it is not in Indian wars that heroes are celebrated, but that it is there that they are formed. The hard service, the stern discipline, devolving upon all those who have a great extent of frontier to defend, and often with irregular troops, being called on suddenly to enter into contests with savages, to study the habits of savage life and savage war, in order to foresee and overcome their stratagems — all these things tend to make a hardy military character. For a very short time, sir, I had a coimexion with the executive government of this country; and at that period very perilous embarrassing circum- stances existed between the United States and the Indians on the borders, and Avar was actually raging between the United States and the Florida tribes; and I very well remember that those who took counsel together on that occasion officiallj^ and who were desirous of placing the military com- mand in the safest hands, came to the conclusion that there was no man in the service more full}' uniting the qualities of military ability and great personal prudence than Zachary Taylok; and lie was, of course, appointed to the command. Unlbrtunately his career at the head of this go- 4 19 vemment was short. For my part, in all that I have seen of him, I have found much to respect and nothing to condemn. The circumstances under which he conducted the government for the few mouths he was at the head of it have been such as, perhaps, not to give to him a very favourable, cer- tiiinlj not a long oi3portunity, of developing his prin- ciples and his policy, and to carry them out : Ijut I believe he has left on the minds of the country a strong impression, first, of his absolute honesty and integrity of character; next, of his sound, practical good sense; and, lastly, of the mildness, kindness, and friendUness of his temper towards all his countrymen. But he is gone. He is ours no more, except in the force of his example. Sir, I heard with infinite dehght the sentiments expressed by my honourable friend from Louisiana, [Mr. Downs,] who has just resumed his seat, when he earnestly prayed that this event might be used to soften animosities, to allay party criminations and recriminations, and to restore fellowship and good feeling among the various parts of the Union. Mr. Secretary, great as is our loss to- day, if these inestimable and inappreciable blessings shall have been secured to us, even by the death of Zachart Taylor, they have not been purchased at •too liigh a price : and if his spirit, from the regions to which ho has ascended, could see these results 20 flowing from his unexpected and untimely end on earth — ^if he could see that he had entwtaed a sol- dier's laurel around a martyr's crown, he would say exultingly, " Happy am I, that by my death I have done more for that country which I loved and served, than I did or could do by all the devotion and all the efforts that I could make in her behalf, during the short span of my earthly existence." Mr. Secretary, great as this calamity is, we mourn, but not as those without hope. We have seen one eminent man, and another eminent man, and at last a man in the most eminent station fall away from the midst of us. But I doubt not there is a Power above us, exercising over us that paren- tal care that has marked our progress for so many 3^ears. I have confidence still that the place of the departed will be supplied ; that the kind, beneficent favour of Almighty God will still ,be with us, and that we shall be borne along, and borne onward and upward, on the wings of His sustaining Providence. jMay God grant that in the time that is before us, there may not be wanting to us as wise men, as good men for our counsellors, as he was whose funeral obsequies we now propose to celebrate. Mr. Cass addressed the Senate as follows : Again and again, during the present session, has a warnmg voice come from the tomb, sa^dng to all ^ 21 of us, " Be ye also ready." Two of our colleagues have fallen iii the midst of their labours, and we have followed them to the narrow house, where all must lie. In life we are in death ; and this lesson, A\liicli accompanies us from the cradle to the grave, is among those merciful dispensations of Providence A\liicli teach us how transitory are the things around us, and how soon they must be abandoned for an existence, with no hope but that which is held out by the Gospel of our Saviour. And now another solemn warning is heard ; and this time it will carry mourning to the hearts of twenty millions of people. Impressively has it been said and repeated here to- day that "A great man has fallen in our Israel." In the providence of God the Chief Magistrate of the Republic, to whom his fellow-citizens had con- fided the high executive duties of the country, has been suddenly taken from us — ripe, indeed, in years and honours, and but the other day in the full pos- session of his health, and with the promise of years of faithful and patriotic services before him. The statesman, occupying as proud a position as this world offers to human hopes, has been struck down in a crisis which demanded all his firmness and wis- dom. The conqueror upon many a battle-field has fought his last fight, and been vanquished. The soldier, who had passed unharmed through many a bloody fray, has fallen before the shaft of the great 99 destroyer. How truly are we told, that tliere is one event unto all! The mighty and the lowly descend to the tomb together, and together are covered with the cold clod of the valley — and thus pass away the honours and cares of life. The moment is too solemn and impressive for laboured addresses. Thoughts, not words, are the tribute which it demands. History will do justice to the deceased patriot. He will live in the memorj^ of his countrjnnen, as he lived in their hearts, and affection. His active life was spent in their service, and in those scenes of peril, of exertion, and of ex- posure, which it is the lot of the American soldier to encounter, and which he meets without a mur- mur, faithful to his duty, lead him where it ma}^, in life or in death. His splendid miUtary exploits have placed him among the great Caj)tains of the age, and will be an imperishable monument of his own fame and of the glory of his country. In the disparity of force, they carry us back for similar ex- amples to the early ages of the world — to the com- bats which history has recorded, and where inequa- lity of numbers yielded to the exertions of skill and valour. But I need not recur to them : are they not written in burning characters upon the heart of every American ? Strong in tlie confidence of his countrymen, he was called to the Chief Magistracy at a period of 23 great dilKculty — more portentous, indeed, tlian any Ave have ever experienced. And now he has heen called by Providence from his high functions, with his mission unfulfdled, leaving us to mourn his loss and to honour his memory. His own last words, spoken with equal truth and sincerity, constitute his highest eulogy : '' I am not afraid to die," said the dying patriot. " I have done my duty." The integrity of his motives was never assailed nor as- sailable. He had passed through life, and a long and active one, neither meriting nor meeting re- proach ; and in his last hour, the conviction of the honest discharge of his duty was present to console him, even when the things of this life were ilxnt fading away. Let us humbly hope that this afilicting dispeusar tion of Providence may not be without its salutary influence upon the American people, and of their representatives. It comes in the midst of a stormy agitation, threatening the most disastrous conse- quences to our country, and to the great cause of self-government through the w^orld. It is a solenni appeal, and should be solemnly heard and heeded. His death, whose loss we mourn, will not be in vain, if it tend to subdue the feelings that have hccn excited, and to prepare the various sections of our country for a mutual spirit of forbearance, Avhidi shall insure the safety of all, l)y the zealous co- 24 oiieration of all. We could offer no more appro- priate nor durable tribute to departed worth, tlian such a sacrifice of conflicting views upon the altar of our common country-. In life and in death he would have equally devoted himself to her service and her safety. Mr. Pearce. — Mr. Seceetaet, I must ask the Senate to pardon me for venturuig to add to what has been said, the expression of the profound regret Avith which, in common \\ith the Senate and the country, I have learned the sad event wliich has been announced to-day. A life of public service, hardship, danger, and glory has been suddenly closed. That Providence Avhich protected the late President amidst the perils of his long, faithful, and splendid military career, and which permitted him to reap the harvest of admiration and affection which had grown up for him in the hearts of his countrymen, has removed him from us before the measure of his usefulness Avas full. That life which was ever devoted to the service of his country, was yielded up while he was in the discharge of the highest civil trusts — trusts not sought by him, but imposed upon him ])y the people. To the performance of those trusts lie had brought the pledges of an unstained life, of a pure and fer\'ent patriotism, of stern integrity. 'l-y of a kind and benignant temper, of unyielding firm- ness, and of unmixed devotion to the welliire of that country which he had served so well, and which so freely and worthily bestowed its confidence on him. Few men have had better fortune than he — none better deserved it. The virtues of his simple and modest, but heroic character, had so endeared him to his fellow-citizens, that I am sure I may venture to say, that, even in the midst of the political strife which he ever sought to moderate and soften, there is not one whose heart will not throb with emotion when he learns the death of Zachart Taylor. Mr. King. — Mr. Secretary, it is not my design, after the eloquent tribute that has been paid to the memory of the ^ deceased President of the United States, to add many words to what has already fallen from the honourable gentlemen. It was my fortune to have been personally and intimately acquainted with the distinguished individual, who has been called away from among us, for more than five-and- twenty years past. My relations with him, for a portion of that period, were of such a character as enabled me to form, I think, a correct estimate of the man, and to appreciate, as I did most highly, his many estimable quaUties ; and I can say that, in all the relations of life, he so bore himself as to com- — ^ love him None named him Imt tu praise." The beauties of his domestic life remain to his family as sacred recollections. It is not for ?m, there to in- trude, or, by any attempt to pass them in review, to 66 disturb the melancholy but sweet satisfaction the memory of them must necessarily inspire. To us, as pubHc men, the bright example of the departed is set " as a lamp to our path." May it be present through all the watches of the night : may we, too, be able to repeat to a grateful country, as the last of earth shall come to each of us, the simple and touch- ing, but subhme declaration of the President's death- scene — " I am not afraid to die : I am ready : I have done my duty." A message was received from the Senate by Mr. Machen, their chief clerk : Mr. Speaker: — The Senate have passed the fol- lowing resolution in which I am directed to ask the concurrence of this House, viz. : Whereas, it has pleased Divine Pro\'idence to re- move from this life Zachary Taylor, late President of the United States, the Senate, sharing in the general sorrow which this melancholy event must produce, is desirous of manifesting its sensibility on the occasion ; Therefore, Resolved, That a committee consisting of Mr. Web- ster, Mr. Cass, and Mr. King, be aj^pointed on the part of the Senate, to meet such committee as may be appointed on the part of the House of Represen- tatives, to consider and report what measures it may be proper to adopt, to show the respect and affection / 67 of Congress for the memory of the illustrious de- ceased, and to make the necessary arrangements for his funeral. The resolutions submitted by Mr. Conrad "were then unanimously agreed to. On motion of Mr. White of New York, the blank in the resolutions was filled by inserting the word "nine." WTien the following named members were appointed the said committee, on the part of the House, viz. : Mr. Conrad of Louisiana. Mr. McDowell of Virginia. Mr. WiNTHROP of Massachusetts. Mr. BissELL of Illinois. Mr. DuER of New York. Mr. Orr of South Carolina. Mr. Beck of Kentucky. Mr. Strong of Pennsylvania. Mr. Vinton of Ohio. Mr. Cabell of Florida. Mr. Kerr of Maryland. Mr. Stanly of North Carohna. Mr. Littlefield of Maine. Ordered^ That the clerk acquaint the Senate therewith. And then, on motion of Mr. Jacob Thompson, the House adjourned until to-morrow at eleven o'clock, A. M. 68 IN SENATE. Thursday, July 11, 1850. Mr. "Webster, from the committee appointed on the part of the Senate, jointly with the committee appointed on the part of the House of Representatives, to consider and report •what measures it may be proper to adopt in order to show the respect and aifection of Congress for the memory of Zachary Taylor, late President of the United States, re- ported in part the following : That the funeral take place from the President's house on Saturday next. The ceremonies to commence at twelve o'clock, M., and the procession to move at one o'clock pre- cisely. That the two Houses of Congress assemble in their re- spective chambers on Saturday next at eleven o'clock, and thence move in joint procession to the President's house. That the chambers of the two Houses be hung in black, and that the members wear the usual badges of mourning. The Senate proceeded by unanimous consent to consider the report, and the same was concurred in. Mr. Underwood then rose and said : Mr. President, — The report just made having brought up again to the attention of the Senate the G9 death of the late President of the United States, and having been absent yesterday when the gentle- man from Louisiana [Mr. Downs] made his elo- quent and appropriate address, and offered his reso- lutions — my absence resulting from the fact that I was appointed one of the committee on the part of the Senate to wait upon Mr. Fillmore, and make arrangements preparatory to his taking the oath of office — I throw myself upon the indulgence of the Senate, and beg permission to make a few remarks. I was among the earliest to advocate the election of General Taylor, and, in common ^yith. a very large majority of the people of my State, gave him a most cordial sup^wrt. He had been raised among us. Ilis character was formed and developed by as- sociations with the pioneers of a western wilderness ; with those who encountered the difficulties and pri- vations of settling and improving the most fertile region of the globe ; and who, ahnost unaided by government, relying exclusively upon their own individual resources and energies, successfully re- sisted the i^ersevering efforts of numerous hordes of warlike savages to expel them from the country. His father, Richard Taylor, a soldier of the Revolu- tion, was eminently qualified to infuse into the mind of his son those sentiments of ardent patriotism and lofty heroism which pervaded all classes with whom Zachary Taylor associated when a boy. "Well do 70 I remember that father; for I was associated with liim in the legislature of Kentucky, at a time when questions of constitutional law deeply agitated the entire State, and when rancorous and bitter politi- cians threatened the public peace, and dared to talk of bloodshed. I remember the conciliating, calm, and yet firm demeanour of that father amidst the storms of debate and the fierce collisions of conflict- ing opinions. In these respects he was the admira- ble prototype of the hero of Buena Vista. With such a father, and under the influences of the society and circumstances by which General Taylor was surrounded in his boyhood, it would have been indeed strange had he gro^vn up without a strong predilection for military life. Fortunately for his own fame, fortunately for the glory of his country, in youth he put on the armour of a soldier. What followed is well-known history, and needs no repetition here. A grateful country, penetrated by a deep con\ac- tion of the intuitive sagacity and elevated patriotism of General Taylor, united with military achieve- ments of unsurpassed splendour, and a ^^ersonal character for truth and honesty without a superior, made him Chief Magistrate. The providence of God has termmated his earthly career, during this the first session of Congress since his inauguration. His fither was permitted to live and take an ofiicient 71 part in accomplishing those measures which relieved Kentucky from the threatened horrors of ci^^l war. The son has been taken hence to the world of spirits, before those agitating questions which now excite Congress and the people, and threaten the destruction of the government, have been settled. Mysterious providence ! There were thousands and hundreds of thousands of our countrymen who looked for help in this time of need to the unbend- ing integrity and firmness of purpose which ever characterized our late President. God has taken from them this staff of their reliance. It ^vill be manifested in time whether the measure of General Taylor's honours and usefulness being full and overflowing, he was removed by the Ruler of the Universe to give place to those equally or better able to calm political dissensions, and to extricate the country from impending dangers, or whether the awful judgments of God are to rest upon us for national sins, and for the want of that ^^'isdom and spirit of conciliation which have heretofore enabled such men as Zaciiary Taylor to secure national prosperity and happiness. Whatever purposes of the Deity the future may unfold, the present is a day of mourning ; and certain I am that no portion of our extensive country will feel more sensibly the general bereavement than the State in which our dead and yet unburied Chief Magistrate spent the morning of his life. Kentucky will long remember and mourn for him as one of her o^\ti sons, and as the commander who led her McKee, her Clay, her Hardin, her Barbour, her AVillis, and a host of her less distinguished children, to the glorious sacrifice of life, to secure the triumph of their country. And while we sympathize and condole with the family of the great and good man gone from earth for ever, let us indulg^e the hope that his bright ex- ample will be of immense value to succeeding gene- rations, and that his spirit with kindred spirits now constitute a blessed society in heaven. On motion by Mr. Atchison, Ordered, That when the Senate adjourn, it adjourn to Monday next. On motion the Senate then adjourned. 73 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Thursday, July 11, 1850. Mr. Conrad, from the Joint Committee appointed to take into consideration " What measures it may be proper to adopt, to show the respect and affection of Congress for the memory of Zachary Taylor, late President of the United States, and to make the necessary arrangements for his funeral," made the following Report : — [See the report in the Senate proceedings.] The said report having been read, it was unanimously concurred in. On motion of Mr. Strong, it was Ordered, That when the House adjom-n, it adjourn to meet again on Saturday next, at ten o'clock, A. M. And then. On motion of Mr. Duer, the House adjourned until Saturday next, at eleven o'clock, A. M. Saturday, July 13, 1850. The House met at eleven o'clock, A. M., pursuant to ad- journment. The Speaker, members, and oflBcers, in pursuance of the order of Thursday last, then proceeded in procession to the President's House, for the purpose of uniting in the funeral ceremonies of Zacuary Taylor, late President of the United States. 74 IN SENATE. Saturday, July 13, 1850. The Senate having, in conformity with their previous order, attended the funeral of the late President of the United States, returned to their chamber ; and On motion by Mr. Greene, Adjourned. *<■ J 75 THE FUNERAL. The following account of the funeral solemnities ap- peared in the National Intelligencer. " Can this be death ? — then what is life or death ? ' Speak I' — but he spoke not : ' Wake I' — but still he slept. But yesterday, and who had mightier breath? A thousand warriors by his word were kept In awe ; he said, as the Centurion saith, 'Go,' and he goeth ; 'come,' and forth he stepp'd. The trump and bugle till he spake were dumb ; And now nought left him but the muftled drum I" "When it became our melancholy duty, nine years ago, to record some account of the obsequies of the lamented Harrison, we little thought that, during our brief remain- ing term of life, it would ever, certainly not so soon, be our lot to repeat the tale of another Presidential Funeral. But that mysterious roll of human fate, written in Heaven, but slowly unfolded, line after line, by the unerring hand of Time, has many things in reserve for us all, of which we little dream ; and nations, like individuals, are sometimes shocked by the advent of calamities as sudden and unlookceaking sermon — to the world more imme- diately around us, among whom this illustrious per- son so lately and so conspicuously moved — speaking with esjDecial emphasis. May God teach our hearts all its lessons. I shall not pretend to present them all, but will endeavour, hy His grace, to awake your attention and my own to that lesson at least which comes home to the great business and wants of our daily life, and may make us wise unto salvation. I would remark, then, that in the sudden removal of this distinguished jx^i-son, from the cai'es, activi- ties, and ivsponsibilities of life, taking him (to use a common phrase) to his account^ God was only doing 89 in 11 ^vay which men in a sense see, and therefore more fully realize, ■what He was just as really doing at every moment of his previous existence. Before he came to that great ofiice, at every instant of tliat momentous period of his life, up to the very time when the Great Judge gave visible note of what He had never ceased to do — it is not one whit more true that he has now gone to his account, that his Great Judge will one day pronounce his final award, than that every day he lived he was going to it — the Judge just as near to him, the account going on, the award made. This is true of every human creature; but its great and startling truth is unquestionably brought more home to us when we have before us some noted instance like the present. Let us suppose that on that memorable fifth of March, sixteen months ago, a message from God had revealed to the departed President, that which we now know! — that he had said to him, '• I have brought you to this great office ; in the full career of its duties you shall die." It is not fur any human creature to say whether it would have changed or modified any of the acts of his Presidential career; perhaps I cannot express in stronger teims my indi- vidual estimation of the man than to declare my strong personal impression that it would nt)t. I do in my heart believe that ever}' act of his ofiicial lil'e 90 was done under the sense of personal and official responsibility. But, unquestionably, such a revela- tion would have given awful solemnity to every deci- sion — it would have suffered no veil to interpose to conceal motive, no conflict or combination of interests to modify the one great motive and purpose, to repress the abiding conviction, "I am making up my own judgment — the judgment of man is nothing to me, except as it responds to the judgment of my conscience and my God. I must do my work — the messenger stands at the door and knocks — the grave is waiting — it is my work — the instruments I use to do it must be not those' which others like the best, but such as I believe will do the work the best." Now, I am not preaching to official people simply — be the office high or low ; I am preaching, and this great event is preaching to all. We are all in office ! — an office before which the government of the world itself sinks into insignificance ; the dig- nity of which was fully realized b^- llim who, when the world and its glories were proffered to Him, saw their comparative nothingness — the great reahn of conscience, the hingdoni of God within 2(S. To the administration of this government all the powers of nature and of grace are made subordinate; we may use them or abuse them ; for that use or abuse v»e know that wo sliall be held accountable. But we know it and admit it in a ircneral wav ; and we 91 know tliat were such a revelation made to us as tliat I liave intimated, the wliole character and tenor of life would be affected l)v it. If you and I knew 1)eyond the possibility of doubt that on the ninth of next July we should die, I say to you un- hesitatingly that we would not live the coming year as we ha\-e lived the last. The world would as- sume a different character and relation to us; the opinions and associations of men would possess a widely different influence. Things which we think of very little importance because the rest of the world think them so, would be weighed in a very different balance — things that occupy a large por- tion of our attention and affection, because other men value or love them, would sink immeasurably in the scale. Oh ! it is in the light of such a reve- lation that we should learn the full force of that apostolic injunction : " Love not the world, nor the things that are in the world," for we should find, amid all our imagined love of God, and of His truth, what deep-seated care and love and worship of the world there is in the best of us; ay, and even in the best moods and movements of the best of us. AW-ll. such a revelation has been made — not of the hour of death, but the hour of judgment^ — not of years in perspective, but in the awful pn^^mf. 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