T^i:BieA.i«^^ oi*^ c c oovE>ica:* (lass Q 3?2- BookJ^Jia. i THE LIFE OF MAJOR-GENERAL WILLIAM H. HARRISON, NINTH PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. BY H. MONTGOMERY. PHILADELPHIA: PORTER & COATES. r '7 f Si & 10 MAJOR GENERAL WINFIELD SCOTT, THE HERO, THE PATRIOT, AND THE STATESMAN, WHOSE FAME FILLS THE WORLD, AND WHOSE EFFORTS TO MAINTAIN PEACE HAVE AS MUCH ENDEARED HTM TO HIS COUKTRTMEN AS HIS GLORIOUS ACHIEVEMENTS IN WAR, "WHOSE LIFE FROM BOYHOOD UP HAS BEEN SPENT IN DEFENDING THE HONOIl Jnd j^roviotitig the welfare of Jiis CmtnXry^ THIS WORK IS r, ESPECTFULLY DEDICATED, AS A SUaHT TOKEN OF THE ESTEEM ENTERTAINED FOR HIS CHARACTER, AK9 THE GRATITUDE FELT FOR HIS SERVICES, BY THE AUTHOR. PREFACE. Another life of so eminent a general, and so unselfish a patriot, as William Henry Harrison,— a man whose history is almost literally the history of the country for fifty of the seventy-five years which make up the length of our national existence, — was not undertaken with the hope of producing anything either novel or exciting. No such ambitious design prompted the compiler to the temerity of attempting what had already been done by a Hall and a Todd. His humble object has been to combine, in a single volume, as much of what is now scattered throughout many, and all over the records of the times, as he considered of sufficient interest. No memoir of Gen- eral Harrison but contains something that others do not, and much, indeed, that ought to be preserved to 1* VI PREFACE. the country, in a more durable and attractive form than a badly printed shilling pamphlet. Most of the biographies, too, of the eminent soldier and civilian, were written with the single view to promote his elec- tion to the presidency. This destroys none of their merit, nor diminishes the value of the many facts and truths they contain ; but it is a reason why they contain also much that cannot claim to be preserved in a sober, posthumous biography, written, not to ad- vance the political fortunes nor to defend the political character, but to do justice to the memory and faith- fully to describe the acts of an eminent man. It has elsewhere been said, that not a complete biography of General Harrison, in a permanent form, has ever been published. Judge Hall's Memoirs, and Sketches of Harrison, by Colonel C. S. Todd and Benjamin Drake, Esq., are both admirable in many respects. But the first was written previous to 1835, to promote his first nomination to the presidency, and is therefore necessarily defective, stopping as it does far short of the most important event in his career. The other is much more complete, though it was originally prepared under the supervision of a politi- cal committee, with a political design sclely. It was PREFACE. VU much extended after his death. These comprise the only attempts of any pretension that have ever been made to present the public with even a tolerably full sketch of William Henry Harrison's life. There are also many other sketches of his life of more or less merit, but all having for their aim the single ob- ject of promoting his political prospects. And yet to these unpretending little works the compiler is indebted for much of whatever merit may be accorded to his enterprise. He is also greatly in- debted to McAfee's History of the Late War, to Burnett's Notes on the North-western Territory, Mo- nette's Valley of the Mississippi, Frost's Book of the Army, Dawson's Historical Narrative, Niles* Regis- ter, and, above all, to Brackenridge's Late War, He has made free use of their pages wherever he has found anything to his purpose or taste. It may be that he has not been over scrupulous in giving them credit as he went along for all the good things he has thus appropriated. The fear that he may have done them this great wrong, and the equally strong fear that he will be thought to have attempt- ed thus to appear in borrowed plumes, has prompted him to make an acknowledgment, which he trusts is Viii ^ PREFACE. broad enough to cover all his delinquencies of thia character. He claims but little originality for his book. He might, perhaps, assume for it something more than a compilation, with as much justice as many others ; but a discriminating public would discover the at- tempted cheat as it is discovered in other cases. Policy, therefore, as well as honesty, has induced him to claim no more than he deserves, believing that the most certain means of securing quite as much. It is not much, indeed, in regard to such a man as Harri- son, that has not already somewhere and in some shape been said. If the following pages have a re- deeming point it can only be that there has been grouped together within the more of them facts that make up his public life than are anywhere else to be found. As many of these facts as were accessible, which were considered necessary to complete the rec- ord of his acts, illustrate his character, and do justice to his memory, will be found there. Some things may be found in the Appendix, which have little apparent, and indeed little real, connection with a Life of General Harrison. But still it is be- lieved they will be admitted to occupy an appropriate PREFACE. IX place, aPxd to possess an interest and value that en- titles them to it. Some are important for the instruc- tion they give, some for the information thej contain, some for the pleasure they will afford, and others as simple matters of reference. And it may be thought, that only so many of the events of the war of 1812, as transpired within the range of General Harrison's command, should have been recorded in a Life of Harrison ; but the compiler believed his name and fame sufficiently identified with the whole war to make appropriate a brief sketch of all its most re- markable incidents. This, therefore, has been done, and it is trusted the book will possess none the less interest for the innovation. Little more need be said, — and perhaps it would have been better for the book if much less had been said. The compiler has labored to make it as deserv- ing the great merit of its subject, and as worthy of public approbation, as his humble abilities w^ould per- mit. To what degree of merit it is entitled, and how near it comes to the point at which it aspires, he is quite willing to submit to the universal umpire in all similar cases ; and this he is all the more willing to do, as he has not been able to discover any alternative. X PREFACE. The only merit he will therefore absolutely claim, ia that of making a virtue of necessity, and of submit- ting with cheerfulness to what an inexorable necessity imposes. Auburn, July 1852. , INTRODUCTION. The cheapest as well as tlie most enduring monu- ment that can be erected to the memory of those whose virtues and public services have endeared them to their countrymen is a true and impartial history of their lives, and a faithful record of their acts. Monuments of stone, the sculptured marble, and the animated canvas, may preserve to their posterity, for a few ages, the names of our statesmen, and patriots, and heroes ; but it requires the ever living and speak- ing pages of written history to perpetuate what is far more useful to mankind, and much more worthy to be held in everlasting remembrance — their great and noble deeds, and the examples of wisdom and virtue presented in their lives. While the pyramids and other monuments of antiquity throw but the faintest possible light upon the character and history of the people, by whom they were built, and have scarcely preserved even the names of those to whose memory, or the events to commemorate which thej xii INTRODUCTION. were erected, written liistory lias made us familiar with all we know of the men and their history, as well as the manners and customs, not only of that, but a much earlier period. Though the monument which the American people are now erecting, at the capital of the nation, to the memory of its founder and the Father of his country, is a tribute to George Washington, most grateful to the heart of every true American, and though it may stand long after the Union has ceased to exist, yet if there Avere no more lasting record of his services to his country, and his unrivaled virtues, than that pile of crumbling marble, a few ages hence it might be a disputed point, whether it was reared by *'the great American rebel" as a monument at once of his suc- cessful treason and his overweaning ambition, for a shot-tower, or as a tomb for American kings. It is only by books that the history of nations and men can be permanently preserved from oblivion. What is true of Washington is equally true of every other distinguished American, and it is as much a duty to transmit to their posterity a correct account of their acts, for its benefit and example, as it is to exhibit our gratitude for their public services, by raising to their memories lofty monuments. It has already been said, that this is the cheapest as well as the most enduring means of honoring the memories of national benefactors, and illustrating their virtues, as it is the only means of preserving a faith- INTRODUCTION. Xlll ful record of their lives. Biographies of the great and good are, besides one of the most interesting and an-reeable, one of the most useful studies. Certain it is, at all events, that no class of books is so eagerly read by the American public as the lives of our own distinguished patriots, statesmen, and generals. Our country is not so old yet, but it may almost be said, that the life of every citizen composes a part of its history — at least, that every American can recollect much of its history, from the day it began its struggle for an independent national existence. Biographies, therefore, of the men who have contributed most to^ wards establishing that independence, and who have participated most actively and successfully in creating for us national character and importance, are sought for more with the interest and avidity that we exhibit for an account of the scenes, and events, and men, with which and with whom we are familiar in every- day life, than with that sober and philosophical spirit of investigation, which is shown for that class of bio- graphical writings, which more exclusively and ap- propriately help to form the history of the past. Great as this demand has been for a history of the lives of those who have distinguished themselves, either in the field, the cabinet, the forum, or the pul- pit, it still seems to increase in proportion to the ef- forts made to supply it ; and the Life of one distin- guished man but creates a desire for that of another, and that again for still the third. And thus the 2 XIV INTRODUCTION. public appetite is increased indefinitely by what it feeds upon, like that of the inebriate for the intoxica- ting cup, after he has once tasted its contents. The American press has been prompt to take advantage of this determination in the public mind, to know the history of our public men, and it annually teems with hundreds and thousands of volumes, embracing every degree of merit, from the mere hasty compila- tion to those displaying profound research, philo- sophical enquiry, and striking originality of thought. They all, however, if they but exhibit a reasonable regard for the truth of history, and a fair share of skill and industry in the use of materials, find eager, or at least abundant, readers. It is with the hope of contributing something to- wards satisfying the public desire for this kind of knowledge, but more with the view of erecting a "monument," though a very humble one, to com- memorate the services of a great General, a pure Pa- triot, and a distinguished Statesman, and to supply what is believed to be a public want, that another Life of William Henry Harrison has been undertaken. As large a space as he filled in the public eye for nearly half a century, important as were the services he rendered his country, great as were his virtues, and closely as his name is identified with the history of the government, it is a singular fact, that the whole history of his life has never yet been published in a single volume. INTRODUCTION. XV The half century between the entrance of General Harrison upon public life, in 1791, in defence of what was then the wild western portion of our country, and his death in 1841, embraces almost the whole period of our existence as an independent nation. Commen- cing his career nearly cotemporaneously with the adoption of the constitution under which we now live, he grew up with the country, and lived to see the original thirteen States of the Union multiplied into twice that number ; the population of the country in- creased from four to seventeen millions, and instead of a weak and distracted people, but recently emerged from a long and bloody war, and just entering upon the doubtful experiment of self-government, scarcely respected at home, and openly derided abroad — a great and flourishing republic, respected and feared by the nations of the earth, affording security to its own cit- izens, and a refuge and protection to the oppressed of every land. We had, to be sure, as already stated, just emerg- ed from that glorious struggle which ended in giving us a name amongst independent nations, and in per- manently establishing the only free form of govern- ment that had then ever existed. But, though we had succeeded in asserting our freedom of a foreign yoke, we could yet scarcely claim to be really inde- pendent. The country had hardly begun to recover from the exhausting effects of the war of the Revolu- tion, and it was still suffering the curse of poverty, lYl INTRODUCTION. and the moial as well as physical debility, produced by that long and relentless contest. The government was without credit, without resources, and almost literally bankrupt. The north-western territory, with whose history the name of General Harrison is more closely interwoven than that of any other American, was then almost one unbroken wilderness. The first emigrants, to what is now the seat of empire of the American Union, plant- ed themselves at the mouth of the Muskingum but three ^'ears before he forsook the pleasures and com- forts of .^ome and of civilized life, to aid in defending the infant settlements from the ruthless savages, who claimed undisputed possession of that vast region. What a change was wrought in this wild region during the fifty years that began with his military services, at the age of nineteen, and en^d with his elevation to the presidency of a great and powerful nation ! The v/ild north-western territory of 1791, in 1841 embraced several of the most powerful States of the Union, holding in their hands the destinies of a mighty republic, scattered all over with populous cities, and flourishing villages, and seats of learning, manufactures, rail-roads, canals, and every other in- dication of the highest state of civilization. The crack of the hunter's rifle is now nowhere heard, and the once powerful savage nations, who then held undis- puted dominion over those unbroken forests, have long since wholly disappeared. Civilization reigns supreme INTRODUCTION. XVll ^ihere, but little more than half a century ago, nothing was heard but the war-whoop of the Indian, or the howl of the beasts of prey. All this almost miracu- lous change General Harrison lived to witness, and to contribute his full share to bring about. What in other countries and in other ages of the world would have required many generations to accomplish was here wrought during the public life of a single man. In that brief half century we made a longer stride to- wards greatness and power than even ancient Rome, with all her boasted progress, did in ten centuries.* All that is physically, intellectually, or politically essential to national strength and power, is undeniably to be found in the geographical position and extent of our territory, in the character of our people, and the form of our government ; or rather, these undeniable advantages of position, character, and institutions, have already given us a higher rank in the scale of nations than any other people ever reached in many centuries. The United States is now only the second power in Christendom, and before the present genera- tion has passed away, estimating the future by the past, it will no longer occupy even a secondary posi- tion. At least, nothing but our own folly, and those intestine commotions and feuds, which have ever been the rock upon which free governments have wrecked, can snatch from us the sceptre of empire which Pro- vidence seems to have destined for our country. * See Appendix (A). 2* XVm INTRODUCTION. That we owe much of our present greatness au'l prosperity to the wisdom of our statesmen, and to tlie ability and patriotism of the men who have played the most conspicuous part in the affairs of the Re- public, as well as to the virtue, intelligence, and na- tive energy of the people, is a proposition too self- evident for argument. To the sages, patriots, and heroes of the revolution, undoubtedly belongs the chief glory of founding a great and free nation, and establishing a government, which affords the blessings of civil and religious liberty to so many millions of people, and which holds out in the future so much of hope and promise to the oppressed and suffering mil- lions of other nations. But all their labors, and sacri- fices, and sufferings would have been of little avail, if the duty of carrying out the principles, and of per- fecting the designs, contemplated by the noble system of government they created, had fallen upon ambitious demagogues, or narrow-minded statesmen. Fortunate- ly for us, for our posterity, and for the world, how- ever, what was so well begun by them, has been as wisely carried out by their successors. The spirit of patriotism, with which the founders of our govern- ment were so eminently embued, was shared by those on whom devolved the task of perfecting their noble work. This is especially true of General Harrison. In- deed, he inherited patriotism from one of the most devoted spirits who bequeathed to us, besides their INTRODUCTION. SIX patriotism, the inestimable blessings of the free insti- tutions, of whose great benefits we all now partake. Stimulated by the example of the revolutionary pa- triot whose name he bore, and whose blood coursed in his veins, possessed of superior talents, and occupying a large field for usefulness and renown, he had the powder, and he did not fail to exert it, to contribute largely to that eminence which is the envy of other nations, and towards securing those privileges which are our own greatest boast. Anything like a faithful biography of one who, for so long a portion of our national existence, performed so prominent a part in public afi'airs, and filled so large a space in the public eye, though destitute of great skill, and marked by no very profound ability, cannot fail to be received with favor, if with no very warm approval. The acts of such a man are ever of deep interest to those, to whose services he devoted his life, how^ever clumsily they may be recorded. THE LIFE OF WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. CHAPTER I. William Hexhy Harrison was born at Berkley, Charles City County, in Virginia, February 9th, 1773, and was the third son of Benjamin Harrison, a lead- ing patriot of the revolution, and one of the most prominent actors in the events that lead to that glo- rious struggle for independence. He was a descend- ant of Colonel John Harrison, a distinguished officer during the civil Avars of England, and one of the judges who tried and condemned the ill-fated Charles, for which, and for his active participation in the af- fairs of the Commonwealth, he was himself tried and executed after the Restoration. Benjamin Harrison, the father of William Henry, was, as has already been stated, one of the leading, 22 THE LIFE OF most devoted, and most influential of the many noble patriots, whose virtues, and talents, and self-sacrificing love of country, the occasion called into requisition. He was amongst the first to embrace the cause of the people in the contest with Great Britain, which pre- ceded the resort to arms, and one of the last who would have yielded one hair's breadth to her tyran- nical and haughty demands. The patriot cause had no more active, uncompromising, and fearless defend- er and advocate, nor any whose services were more important, or whose counsels were wiser, than Benja- min Harrison's. At the early age of twenty-one years, he was elect- ed a member of the House of Burgesses of the Colony of Virginia, in which capacity he gave such signal evidence of ability and rising distinction as to attract the immediate attention of the English government. And in order to rid themselves of one who gave pro- mise of becoming so powerful and dangerous an op- ponent of British aggression, and so eloquent and ef- fective a champion of the people's rights, they attempt- ed to purchase his friendship, or at least his silence, by offering him a place in the Executive Council of the colony, notwithstanding he had yet scarcely reach- ed the age of manhood. Though this was a distinc- tion corresponding in character with that of member of the English Privy Council, and presented decided advantages, and opened future prospects of promotion and distinction, that few so young, with the necessity before them of carving out their own fortunes, ever WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 23 possessed virtue and patriotism sufficient to resist, — young Harrison indignantly and promptly rejected it. He had already seen enough of the grasping disposi- tion and the grinding oppression of the British gov- ernment throughout the American colonies to under- stand what was to be expected by a tame submission, or passive obedience, to these incipient measures of a tyrannical prince. Between his own interest and ad- vancement and the submission of his country on the one hand, and the possible fate of a rebel or the in- dependence of his country on the other, ho did not for a moment hesitate. He decided to take sides with the people in the approaching struggle between them and the mother country, and to share with them the fortune, good or ill, of the unequal contest. From the termination of his duties as a member of the House of Burgesses, until the imposition of the attempted obnoxious Stamp Act, little is recorded of the life of Mr. Harrison, beyond his continued and zealous resistance to every attempt, on the part of England, to abridge the liberties of the colonies. But, in 1764, he was appointed one of a committee to pre- pare a remonstrance against that odious Act, a meas- ure at that time in contemplation by the British cab- inet, and which soon after actually became a law. If anything had yet been wanting to decide the future course of Harrison and the other patriots of the dif- ferent colonies, this adoption of the principle of tax- ation without representation would have left them no longer room for hesitation. From that time he con- 24 THE LIFE OF tinued to exert all the energies of his strong mind and his great influence, in connection with the other noble spirits of the day, towards the maintenance of that civil, religious, and political liberty, for which they had already suffered and sacrificed so much, and in resisting the encroachments of a profligate govern- ment. In 1774 be was elected a member from Virginia to the Continental Congress, which assembled at Phil- adelphia, in September of that year. That Congress being unwilling quite to close the door of reconcilia- tion, made a last attempt to bring the parent govern- ment to a sense of justice, adopted a pacific and con- ciliatory address to the crown, proposing such condi- tions of settlement as a proper regard for their honor and the rights of the colonies would permit. After having adopted this measure of peace, it adjourned, patiently and calmly to await the result of the appeal. He was also elected a member of the Continental Congress from Virginia, in 1775. Soon after the meeting of this Congress, his brother-in-law, Peyton Randolph, vacated the office of Speaker of Congress, and the duty devolved upon it of electing a new speaker. The members were divided in their prefer- ence of a successor to Mr. Randolph, between Mr. Harrison and John Hancock, of Massachusetts. But Mr. Harrison, with the magnanimity of a noble n.nnd, promptly waived his claims in favor of Mr. Hancock. Upon modestly hesitating to accept the ofi6ce after bis election, through distrust in his capacity and ability WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 25 for the proper discharge of its responsibilities, Harri- son seized hira in his athletic arms, and placed him in the presidential chair, exclaiming as he did so, ^'\Ye will show mother Britain how little we care for her, by making a Massachusetts man our president, whom she has excluded from pardon by a public proclama- tion." On the 4th of June of the same year, he was se- lected a member of a committee to place the Ameri- can Colonies in a state of defence. The report of that committee, which was made after a month's earn- est deliberation, formed the basis of the present militia system of the United States. In the following Sep- tember he was also appointed a member of a commit- tee, in connection with the immortal Washington, who devised and perfected a plan for the support of the provincial army, and was chairman of the committee through whose agency Lafayette an-d his companions were induced to enlist in the American cause, as well as a member of the Board of War.* On the 10th of June 1776, Harrison called up the resolution, offered three days before by one of his col- leagues, Richard Henry Lee, declaring "that the United Colonies are, and ought to be, free and inde- pendent States ; that they are absolved from all alle- giance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Bri- tain is, and ought to be, totally dissolved." Though * Sanderson's Lives of tlie Signers of tlie Declaration of In- dependence. 8 26 THE LIFE OF this bold proposition to dismember the British Empire was received with great anxiety by all, and was strongly opposed by some, yet in Harrison it found an eloquent, able, and unflinching advocate, and after two days of very warm debate was finally passed by a bare majority. In accordance with this resolution, a committee was appointed to prepare a Declaration of Independence. They reported a draft on the 28th of June, and on the 1st of July it was adopted in committee of the whole, nine States out of the thir- teen having voted for it ; and on the Fourth of July it was finally passed, and published to the world. Amongst the signers to this "Great Charter" of American liberty is the name of Benjamin Harrison. To illustrate the fearless and cheerful character of the man, and to show in how much dread he stood of Brit- ish vengeance while about to take a step by which he would forfeit his life if the colonists should prove un- successful, a curious anecdote is recorded of him. On signing the Declaration, he turned to Elbridge Gerry, — one of the delegates from Massachusetts, who was standing beside him, and who was as slender and tliin as Harrison was vigorous and portly, — and remarked to him with a pleasant smile, "When the hanging- scene comes I shall have the advantage over you, for it will be all over with me in a minute, but you will be kicking in the air half an hour after I am gone." Mr. Harrison remained in Congress until 1778, and continued to exert all his powers and influence in behalf of the cause of his struggling country. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 27 At tlie end of tliat time he withdrew from Congress, but not from the cause he had so ardently espoused and so zealously defended. Soon after, he was elected a member of the House of Delegates of Virginia, and speaker of that body. He continued to discharge the duties of this new and responsible position until 1782. On the resignation of Governor Nelson, in that year, he was elected Governor of Virginia, and was re-elect- ed until the constitution rendered him ineligible, all the time exerting his whole personal as well as polit- ical influence to further the independence of the United States. In 1791 he was again unanimously elected to the Legislature, but suddenly died the next day, at the age of sixty-five years, universally known and universally regretted by those for whom he had aided to establish a free country. Such is a brief sketch of the father of William Henry Harrison, the subject of this biography. Spring- ing from such patriot-stock, reared amid such scenes as he must have been familiar with, and seeing the ex- ample of such patriots as must have been his father's companions and associates, he must have been much less susceptible to good impressions than most other young Americans of that period, not to have imbibed much of that spirit of freedom and love of liberty that was diffused throughout all classes and conditions. But young Harrison was no such dull student, nor such unconcerned spectator, young as he was at the close of the revolutionary struggle, of the great events of those stirring times. It was from such men and such 28 THE LIFE OF events that he received those principles of truth and justice, and that patriotic devotion to his country which so distinguished his after-life. Here was laid deep the foundation upon which was built the super- structure of greatness which he finally attained. Notwithstanding Mr. Harrison left an ample for- tune, it was still insufficient to render all his sons in- dependent of their own mental resources. Devoting so much of his time and means to the service of the people, he knew that his fortune had become too much shattered to place them above the necessity of relying upon their own talents and energies, and therefore wisely resolved to leave them a richer inheritance than gold and lands — sound morals, correct principles, and a good education. With this determination in view, the education of young Harrison was committed to the care of Robert Morrison, his guardian, and one of the most illustrious patriots of the revolution ; and at an early age he was placed under the best teachers in the colony — as his brothers had previously been — when he made such rapid progress, and gave such evidence of talent, as to afford his friends the most gratifying assurances of future distinction. At the age of fourteen he left Hampden Sidney College, where he had remained for about a year, and entered an academy there of high standing in South- ampton county, where he continued to prosecute his studies with great industry and success until his sev- enteenth year. At the end of this time, having thoroughly qualified himself for a commencement of WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 29 die study of medicine, the profession for -wliicli he was designed, he was placed in the office of Dr. Leiber, of Richmond, a physician of considerable eminence and large practice in that city. In the spring of 1791, at the age of eighteen, he was sent to Philadelphia for the purpose of completing his medical studies under the eminent Dr. Richard Rush, a revolutionary compatriot of his father, and, like him, one of the signers of the Declaration of Inde- pendence. It was while on this journey that he heard of the sudden death of his father, an event which determined him to abandon the further prose- cution of his medical studies, and that, consequently, exerted an all-important influence upon his future prospects and fortune. Upon arriving in Philadelphia, he met with the warmest and most gratifying reception from Rush, Shippen, and Wistar, the most distinguished medical professors of that day, and from Morris and other friends and revolutionary associates of his father. But though some of these gentlemen exerted all their influence to dissuade Harrison from abandoning the further study of medicine, he firmly persisted in his purpose. His inclinations as to a profession lay quite in another direction, and having entered upon it against his wishes, he felt quite free, at his father's death, to adopt one more in harmony with his own feelings. His heart had long been set upon adopting the profession of arms, and his inclination was greatly strengthened by the disasters that had overtaken the 3* 30 THE LIFE OP accomplished Harmar and the north-western array m their contest with the Indians of that region. These events removed whatever hesitation he might have •had upon his future plans, and he at once prepared to unite his fortunes with his unfortunate countrymen. His wishes were strongly opposed even by Mr. Mor- ris, his guardian, as well as by many of his other in- fluential friends ; but it was of no avail. Possessing as he did great family influence, being connected with Peyton, Randolph, Colonel Bassett, Mrs. Washington, and other eminent Virginians, be- sides possessing the warm personal friendship of Washington, it was no difficult matter for Harrison to find employment in the army. In the midst of the excitement and anxiety that the misfortunes of Harmar's command had excited. General Henry Lee, of Virginia, proposed to him to take a commission in the army. The proposition was cheerfully accepted by him as infinitely more congenial to his habits, dis- position, and taste, than the profession for which he had been designed. But fearful that his wishes might be thAvarted by his connections if his intentions should become known, it was arranged that General Lee should solicit his commission without communicating the matter to either Mr. Randolph or Mr. Morris. The latter, however, happening to receive some inti- mation of what was going on, sent for Harrison, with a view of attempting to dissuade him from his pur- pose. Suspecting the object of the summons, he hastened to the War Office, at the head of which was WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 31 General Knox, and procured his commission as ensign in the first regiment of United States infantry. He then repaired to the house of Mr. Morris, who ex- pressed his decided disapprobation at the step he had taken, but said he should offer no farther oppositioD to his wishes. Having remained a few davs longer with his friends in Philadelphia, most of which he was em- ployed in the recruiting service, he proceeded to join his regiment at Fort Washington, now the site of Cincinnati, and arrived there shortly after the defeat of the brave but ill-fated General St. Clair. He found the army broken, dispirited, and suffering from the effect of its late disastrous defeat. Everything looked dark and discouraging, and was especially cal- culated to dampen the ardor of a young and inexpe- rienced soldier. But this was not the effect the mis- fortune and misery of his countrymen had upon Harrison. So far from this being the case, it con- vinced him still more strongly of the necessity there existed for his services. Although, when he joined his corps, he was a mere stripling, being only in his nineteenth year of age, tall and thin in his person, and, to judge fi:om his appearance merely, but poorly qualified for the hardships and privations that a sol- dier's life in the wilderness is necessarily exposed to, his ardor and enthusiasm was in nowise dampened by the forlorn and wretched condition of the army. His condition, it must be confessed, was a most trying and perplexing one. St. Clair's army was re- 32 THE LIFE OP duced to a mere skeleton, and consisted of only a few hundred of half starved and half naked troops. The time for which the militia originally enlisted had ex- pired, the detachment of the second regiment of Eegulars which was engaged in the action under St. Clair was nearly annihilated, and the army was wholly inadequate to maintain the line of posts that had been erected for the protection of the north- western settlers. This certainly was a most gloomy prospect for one reared as Harrison had been, amidst all the luxuries, delicacies, and comforts that wealth could produce, and with a frame softened by these influences, added to the enervating effects of a south- ern climate. So formidable were the obstacles pre- sented to his consideration by a friend Avhom he met at Fort Washington, and so lively a picture was pre- sented to him of the sufferings he must endure, and of the almost certain consequence upon him of the habits of intemperance that prevailed at that time in the army, that no man with less firmness of character and purpose could have resisted the strong appeals addressed to him. But notwithstanding these ap- peals, backed as they were by the strong remon- strances of his other friends, he remained firm to his purpose, influenced partly by his romantic notion of the attractive nature of the profession he had chosen, and his pride, but principally by the strong sympathy that the disasters of Harmar and St. Clair's armies had aroused in his breast he inflexiblj' adhered to his •design. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON 33 The name of William Henry Harrison is so closely connected with the West, from the time he arrived at Fort Washington, with an ensign's commission in his pocket, to his election to the office of chief magis- trate of a great nation, that a brief reference to its situation at that time, as well as to the events that immediately preceded his arrival there, may very ap- propriately be here introduced; and indeed this seems in some measure quite necessary to a full understand- ing of many of the incidents in his life that will be narrated. 34 THE LIFE OF CHAPTER II. It has already been incIdeDtally stated that the first emigrants to the north-west territory was made, in the spring of 1788, by a colony from New England, mostly officers and soldiers of the Revolution, who settled at the mouth of the Muskingum River, and laid out the town of Marietta.* The first object of the pioneers was to erect a block-house and stoekade as a means of defence against Indian attacks, after which the town was surveyed, and village lots laid out west of the Muskingum River, adjoining Fort Ilar- mar, then recently built and garrisoned by United States troops. Many of these founders of Ohio were men of distinction, and had held high offices, both civil and military, during the revolutionary war. Amongst their number was General Israel Putnam, who by com- mon consent, from the necessity of having some chief head in such a colony, was selected as their leader, a position for which his character and experience par- ticularly fitted him. Soon after the settlement at Marietta av»s commenced there, other companies were formed, one of whom laid out the tov/n of Columbia, ■^ Burnet's Notes. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 35 at the mouth of the Little Miami ; the second founded Cincinnati, in the fall of 1788 ; and the third settled at North Bend, the subsequent residence of General Harrison, with the intention of founding a magnificent city there. The city was actually laid out on a most extended scale, and named Symmes, after Judge Symmes, the leader of the party by whom it was settled. Seven years after the settlement of Cincinnati, it was but a miserable village of log cabins, except fifteen rouojh, unfinished frame-houses, with stone chimnies. There was not then a single brick house in a place now the Queen of the West, and containing numerous elegant and costly public edifices and many thousands of inhabitants. At this period the pop- ulation of the whole north-western territory was only fifteen thousand, and in 1800, five years after, but a fraction over forty-five thousand. When Harrison reached Cincinnati, to enter upon his military career, there was probably scarcely a log cabin there, much less frame and brick houses, and the population of the whole territory could not have been more than three or four thousand, and these scattered over an immense extent of country. As late as 1796, five years after Har- rison reached Fort Washington, the emigrants in the territory were represented to be few in number, and were located in diff'erent and remote settlements, be- tween which there was little or no intercourse.* The country they inhabited was wild and uncultivated, and * Burnet's Notes. 36 THE LIFE OF •was separated from the Atlantic inhabitants by rug- ged mountains, ahnost impenetrable forests and im- passable rivers, with hardly the semblance of a road, bridge, ferry, or any other improvement for facili- tating communication with the old Atlantic settle- ments. The adjoining regions on every side were all equally wild and uncultivated, without commerce or the means of creating it. The country contained neither shelter nor safety for civilized man.* Previous to the treaty negotiated by General Wayne, in 1795, with all the Indian tribes north-Avest of the Ohio River, known as the treaty of Greenville, by which a permanent peace with all the various tribes was established, but few improvements had been made of any kind; and the settlers, besides the dangers and sufferings to which they were subjected by their almost constant collisions v/ith their inveterate savage foes, endured all the privations that are incident to pioneers. Though a large portion of them had been accustomed to the comforts, and many of the luxuries of civilized life, previous to their emigration to the "West, they were here deprived of all the luxuries, and some of the necessaries of life. But all these incon- veniences and deprivations they submitted to, not only mthout murmiUring, but even with cheerfulness. Before thev determined on selectinoi; a home in the wilderness they had schooled their minds for the new life before them, and to endure with patience and courage whatever might chance to them. They * Burnet's Notes. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 37 mostly sought the West, for the purpose of recovering from the ruin brought upon them by their sacrifices in the revolutionary struggle, and partly to hide themselves from the mortifications of poverty. Little peace, however, was given them, or little chance afl'orded to amend their shattered fortunes. The war they had to wage with the north-western Indians was of equal duration, and little less bloody than that which had so recently ended in estab- lishing their independence. During the revolutionary war many of the tribes took part with the British, and when peace was concluded, some of them refused to lay down their arms, but still continued their mer- ciless ravages upon the new settlers. In 1790, the various north-west tribes were sup- posed to consist of about fifteen thousand warriors, of whom five thousand were in open war with the United States, and of the others, several tribes were by no means friendly. They were also now much more for- midable than the early English colonists found them, for they no longer depended on bows and arrovv^s for defence and attack. Under seventy years of French tuition, and the experience of the revolutionary war, they had become skilled in the use of arms and had acquired considerable knowledge of discipline. In courage and the power of endurance they had no su- periors in any country or age of the world, though in physical strength they were inferior to the descend- ants of Europeans.* * Frost's Book of the Army. 4 38 THE LIFE OP A treaty of peace was concluded with the Creek Indians, who had for some time been at war with Georgia, at New York, in August, 1790, and over- tures were made to the north-western Indians, but rejected. It became necessary, therefore, for vigorous preparations to be made to meet the threatened storm, on the part of the government. It was therefore re- solved by Congress to increase the military force and to destroy the Miami villages. To carry out this ob- ject, the governor of the territory, General St. Clair, was authorized to call on Pennsylvania and Kentucky for fifteen hundred militia, to join General Harmar's regiment, consisting at that time of four hundred ef- fective men. On the 15th of July, 1790, he ad- dressed circular letters to the proper officers of Ken- tucky and Pennsylvania, requesting them to proceed to Fort Harmar, at the mouth of the Muskingum, as soon after the 3rd of September as possible. The militia from Kentucky arrived at Fort Washington, without even stopping at Muskingum, on the day designated, with the exception of about one hundred and fifty. The troops of Pennsylvania were less prompt in their movements ; but they joined the ar- my, however, soon after it had marched from Fort Washington. The troops who composed General Harmar's army were in a wretched condition, many of them being substitutes hired by those who had been drafted. Others were too old and infirm to bear the fatigues 0? an aciive campaign, and they were nearly all awk- WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. iO ward and undisciplined. A large portion of their arms were also unfit for use, many of their muskets and rifles being without locks, and there was a state of insubordination and a disregard of military rule that gave little promise of future success.* When the troops arrived at Fort Washington, the season was too far advanced to permit of any delay for dril- ling them, and on the 1st of October, General Har- mar took up his march for the enemies country. During the campaign, several Indian villages were destroyed, but the expedition on the whole was a dis- astrous one to the American army. When these towns were burnt, and their inhabitants were dis- persed, the chief object of the enterprise was accom- plished. General Harmar, however, considered his work unfinished, and was therefore determined to bring on an engagement with them if possible. But instead of advancing himself with the main body of his army, and forgetful also of the character of his forces, Colonel Hardin was sent forward with a de- tachment of three hundred men, of whom only thirty were regulars, in pursuit of the enemy. He was attacked by a body of Indians, when the militia, un- der his command, were seized with a panic, and pre- cipitately fled, and the regulars were nearly all cut off". Colonel Harden was then sent out with another detachment of three hundred and sixty men, who speedily encountered another large body of the sav- age foe. But after a long and bloody contest, in ^ Burnet's Notes. 40 THE LIFE OF which Colonel Hardin lost nearly half his force, lie was compelled to retreat and fall back on the main body of the army. General Ilarmar, after these and some other less disastrous reverses, returned to Fort Washington, by easy marches, pursued for some time by the Indians ; but owing to the vigilance of the General, they were unable to harrass his movements or injure the troops during the march. Soon after, the militia were disbanded, and General Harmar re- sio-ned his command, and obtained a court martial, by which he was fully acquitted. Though this expedition is generally considered to have been a failure, General Harmar claimed for it a different and more honorable name ; and in justice to the character of a brave and patriotic officer, it ought to be stated that the movement was got up in great haste, and that the troops, with the exception of three hundred and fifty rank and file, were undisciplined, insubordinated, and barely equipped.* Notwithstand- ing these facts, the main object of the expedition, which was the destruction of the Miami villages, was accomplished ; and those places of rendezvous, where British traders resorted to poison the minds of the Indians, and excite their hostility against the settlers, were broken up. Thus far the expedition was com- pletely successful. But in his anxiety to inflict still further injury on the enemy, he suffered what, with very little stretch of the imagination, looks much like a very decided defeat. . * Burnet's Notes. WILLIA3I HENRY HARRISON. 41 But whether General Harmar may have been vic- torious or defeated, the result of his expedition had very little effect in repressing the attacks of the Indi- ans upon the American settlements. In the winter of 1790-1, one of those attacks, by a party of four or five hundred, and headed by the notorious Simon Girty, was made upon Dunlap's station at Coleraine; but it proved unsuccessful, as a similar one subsequently did upon Fort Jefferson. But it is not necessary to enumerate all the hostile movements and outrages of the Indians. Their depredations and incursions con- tinued more or less frequent during the whole pro- gress of the war, and small parties were constantly lurking in the neighborhood of the white settlements, watching for opportunities to plunder and murder the settlers. So frequent were these depredations, that the inhabitants were kept constantly on their guard against them. There was no safety for any one out- side their defenses : no one retired to rest with any confidence of ever seeing another day. The pioneers literally slept on their arms for years ; they felt that there was no security for their lives for a single day. This condition of affairs produced its natural conse- quences upon their characters. They became bold, daring, and almost reckless of life; or rather, they became so accustomed to danger, that they seemed to be almost indifferent to it. This was rather a neces- sity of their mode of life, however, than any real dis- regard for life. Their apparent disregard of life even led tbem to hazard it when nothing was to be gained 4* 42 THE LIFE OF by tlie risk. All the elements of true courage tLey possessed in the highest degree: and it is not too much to say that, by the constant exposure to danger with which they were surrounded, and the hard ne- cessities of the life they were compelled to lead, were planted the germ from which has sprung many of these distinguishing features of their descendants, known as "Western character." So frequent were the depredations and murders of the Indians, even after General Harmar had de- stroyed their towns, that in January, 1791, President Washington felt called upon to submit to Congress a statement of the condition of the western country, and to recomm.cnd the measures which, in his opinion, it was necessary and proper to be taken for its defense and security. lie urged upon Congress the duty of taking prompt and efficient measures for the protec- tion of the white settlements against the relentless and cruel warfare that was carried on against them, and recommended another expedition against the Wa- bash Indians as the most efiectual means of putting an end to these outrages. In consequence of the President's statements, and his urgent recommendation for some speedy action, Con- gress was induced to authorize him to raise an army of three thousand men ; and in the meantime, for the pur- pose of affording immediate relief, they authorized him to raise a corps of Kentucky volunteers, with the view of destrovino; the towns on the Wabash. The exe- cuticn of this latter duty was intrusted to General "WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 43 Charles Scott, and proved entirely successful, s<3veral villages having been burnt, the growing corn cut up, a large amount of property destroyed, thirty-two war- riors killed, and fifty-seven prisoners taken, and with- out the loss of a single man killed, and only four wounded, on the part of the ximericans; and what is more to their honor, without having permitted a single act of cruelty to mark their conduct.* Soon after the termination of this brilliant expe- dition another was fitted out, under the discretionary power given to Governor St. Clair, and the command of it intrusted to Colonel John Wilkinson, who had signalized himself during the campaign of General Scott. It consisted of five hundred and fifty well mounted and equipped Kentucky volunteers. Though all the objects designed by Colonel Wilkinson were not accomplished, it was nevertheless in the main suc- cessful, and great praise was awarded the whole de- tachment for their perseverance and bravery. While these military operations were going on under General Scott and Colonel Wilkinson, the War Department was engaged in raising the army of three thousand men, authorized by Congress. Of this ar- my Governor St. Clair w^as appointed commander, with the rank of Major-General ; and on the 28th of January, 1791, he left Philadelphia for Fort Pitt, now Pittsburgh, w^here he arrived on the 16th of the ensuing April, and at Fort Washington on the 15th of May. The troops which had assembled at this lat- ^ Burnet's Notes. 44 THE LIFE OF ter fort on the last of August, amounted to about two thousand men. On the 17th day of September they took up their line of march from Ludlow's station, five miles in advance of Fort Washington, where they had been encamped for four or five weeks waiting for reinforcements, under the command of General Butler, who was the second in command. On the 3d of November, after a fatiguing and la- borious march, the army arrived at a creek which- proved to be a branch of the Wabash, in the vicinity of the Miami villages for the destruction of which the expedition had been undertaken. Here General St. Clair encamped on a commanding piece of ground, having this creek in front, intending to occupy that position until the first regiment, which had been sent back a few days before to bring up the provisions in the rear, and if possible to arrest three hundred militia who had deserted.* The next day he proposed to commence fortifying his position, for the purpose of rendering himself secure from the attack of the Indians while he should be compelled to wait for the absent regiment, and until he should be prepared for active operations. But the ever-watchful enemy had prepared for him other and far less agreeable em-ployment for that day. They had observed his movements, and had no intention of permitting him peaceably to retrench himself in their midst. On the morning of the 4th, accordingly, a short time before sunrise, the men hav- ing but just been dismissed from parade, a fierce at- * Burnet's Notes. W11.LIAM HENRY HARRISON. 45 tack was suddenly commenced on the militia posted in front, who immediately gave way and rushed into the camp in great confusion, throwing the army into the most hopeless disorder, the Indians following close upon their heels. The enemy, however, were checked for a few moments by the brisk fire of the first line ; but this fire was returned with equal brisk- ness and fatal effect, and in a few minutes extended to the second. In each case the fire was principally directed to the centre, where the artillery was posted, and from which the men were frequently driven with great slaughter. Eesort was had to the bayonet in this emergency, and Colonel Darke was ordered to make the charge with a part of the second line, an order that was ex- ecuted with great spirit and courage. The Indians immediately gave way, and Avere driven back several hundred yards at the point of the bayonet. For v/ant of a sufficient number of riflemen, however, to preserve the advantage thus gained, they soon renewed the at- tack, and the Americans were in turn compelled to give way. At the same instant, they entered the American camp on the left, having forced back the troops stationed at that point. Another attack v/aa made by Major Clark and Major Butler with great success, and several after Avards with equal success. "*" They were attended, however, with heavy loss of men. and particularly of officers. In the charge made by the second regiment, Major Butler fell mortally wound- * Burnet's Notes. 46 THE LIFE OF ed, and every officer of the regiment was killed or mortally wounded, except three. The artillery being silenced, and half of the troops aJain, the General saw no other means of saving the remnant of his forces, than to make a retreat while it was yet in his power. To accomplish this object, a charge was made on the enemy, which was so far successful as to enable him to reach the road, when the militia commenced a hasty, and soon a disorderly retreat, followed by the United States troops, commanded by Major Clark, who cov- ered their rear. The camp and artillery were entire- ly abandoned. The men threw away all their arms, accoutrements, &c., in their flight, even after the pur- suit, which was continued about four miles, had ceased.* The greatest confusion and panic prevailed amongst the militia, and but for the coolness and courage of the regular troops during the retreat, the army would have been nearly annihilated. All the horses of the General were killed in the action, and he was mounted on a broken-down pack-horse that could scarcely be forced out of a walk, so that it was impossible for him to get forward in person to command a halt, and or- ders dispatched by others were wholly disregarded. The rout continued as far as Fort Jefferson, which they had erected in their advance, and twenty-seven miles distance from the battle-ground, where they ar- rived about dark. The battle lasted about three hours, and during its continuance all the troops, with one exception, acted with great bravery. * Burnet's Notes. WILLIAM HE>le of legitimacy. The long undisputed masters of the forest may be thinned by the lightnings, the tempest, or by diseases peculiar to themselves ; and whenever this is the case, one of the oft-rejected of another family, will find between its decaying roots shelter and appropriate food, and, springing into vigorous growth, will soon push its green foliage to the skies through the decayed and withering limbs of its blasted and dying adversary ; the soil itself yielding it a more liberal support than any scion from any occu- pant. It will be conceived what a length of time it will require for a denuded tract of land, by a process so slow, again to clothe itself with the amazing variety of foliage which is the characteristic of the forests of this region. Of what immense age, then, must bo those v/orks, so often referred to, covered, as has been supposed by those who have the best opportunity of examining them, with the second growth after the second forest state had been regained. * * * "An erroneous opinion has prevailed in relation to the character of the Indians of North America. By many they are supposed to be stoics, who willingly encounter deprivations. The very reverse is the fact ; if they belong to either of the classes of philosophers which prevailed in the declining ages of Greece and Rome, it is to that of epicureans ; for no Indian will forego an enjoyment, or suffer an inconvenience, if he can avoid it, but under peculiar circumstances, 'WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. J>17 .— wlien, for instance, he is stimulated by some strong passion ; but even the gratification of this he is ever- ready to postpone, whenever its accomplishment is attended with unlocked for danger, or unexpected hardships. Hence their military operations were always feeble — their expeditions few and far between, and much the (::reater number abandoned without an efficient stroke, from whim, caprice or an aversion to encounter difficulties. But if the Indian will not throw off ' the pomps and pleasures' with Avhich his good fortune furnishes him, — when evils come which he cannot avoid — when ' the stings and arrows of out- rageous fortune' fall thick upon him, — then will he call up all the spirit of a man into his bosom, and meet his fate, however hard, like ' the best Roman of them all.' * * * " It may be proper that I should say something more as to the character of the now scattered and almost extinct tribes which so long and so success- fully resisted our arms, and who, for many years after, stood in the relation of dependents, acknowledging themselves under our exclusive protection. Their character as warriors has been already remarked upon ; their bravery has never been questioned, although there was certainly a considerable difference between the several tribes in this respect. With Wyandots, flight in battle, when meeting with unexpected resist- ance or obstacle, brought with it no disgrace. It was considei ed rather as a principle of tactics ; and I think it may be fairly considered as having its source in that 27* 318 THE LIFE OP peculiar temperament of mind which they often man- ifested of not pressing fortune under any sinister cir- cumstances, but patiently waiting until the changes of a successful issue appeared to be favorable. With the Wyandots it was otherwise ; their youth were taught to consider anything that had the appearance of an acknowledgment of a superiority of an enemy as disgraceful. In the battle of the Miami Rapids, of thirteen chiefs of that tribe who we represent, one only survived, and he badly wounded. " As it regards their moral and intellectual quali- ties the dificrence between the tribes was still greater. The Shawanees, Delawares, and Miamis were much superior to the other members of the confederacy. I have known individuals among them of very high order of talents, but these were not generally to be relied on for sincerity. The Little Turtle, of the Mi- ami tribe, was of this description, as was the Blue Jacket, a Shawanee chief. I think it probable that Tecumthe possessed more integrity than any other of the chiefs who attained to much distinction. But he violated a solemn engagement which he had freely contracted, and there are strong suspicions of his having formed a treacherous design which an accident only prevented him from accomplishing. Sinister in- stances are, however, to be found in the conduct of great men in the history of almost all civilized na- tions. But these instances are more than counter- balanced by the number of individuals of high moral character which were to be found amongst the princi WILLIAM HENRY Hi\RRISON. 319 pal and secondary chiefs of the four tribes above mentioned. This was particuhirly the case with Tache or the Crane, the Grand Sachem of the Wy- andots, and Black Hoof, the chief of the Shaw- anees." The opinions of General Harrison upon the sub- ject of dueling may not be without interest, and pos- sibly they exert some slight influence even in an age when the barbarous custom has almost been driven from respectable society. In 1838, he addressed a letter to A. B. Howell, Esq., of New Jersey, on this subject, from which an extract will be made. He illustrates the dreadful effects of the practice, and its demoralizing tendency, principally by giving one or two instances of his own experience in such matters : — "I believe," he says, "that there were more duels in the north-western army between the years 1791 and 1795 than ever took place in the same length of time, and amongst so small a body of men as composed the commissioned officers of the army, either in America or any other country, at least in modern times. I became an officer in the first-men- tioned year, at so early an age, that it is not wonder- ful that I implicitly adopted the opinions of the older officers, most of whom were veterans of the revolution, upon this as well as upon other subjects connected with my conduct and duty in the profession I had chosen. I believed, therefore, in common with the large portion of the officers, that no brave man would decline a challenge, nor refrain from giving one 820 THE LIFE or whenever lie considered his rights or feelings had been trespassed upon. I must confess, too, that I was not altogether free from the opinion t'hat even honor might be acquired from a well fought dueL Fortun- ately, however, before I was engaged in a duel, either as principal or second, which terminated fatally to any one, I became convinced that all my opinions upon the subject were founded in error, and none of them more so than those which depicted the situation of the successful duelist, as either honorable or desi- rable. It could not be honorable, because the - •*» ater portion of that class of mankind, whose good opinion of an individual confers honor upon him, were opposed to it ; and I had the b^st evidence to believe that in the grave of the fallen duelist was frequently buried the peace and happiness of the survivor; the act which deprived the one of existence in planting a thorn in the bosom of another which would continue to rankle and foster there to the end of his days. The conviction that such was the case with men of good feelings and principles was produced by witness- inir the mental sufferinp;s of an intimate and valued friend by whose hand a worthy man had fallen. * * " In the summer of the year 1793, Lieutenant Drake, of the infantry of the second sub-legion, re- ceived a marked insult from another officer. Mani- festing no disposition to call him to an account, some of those who wished him well, amongst whom I was one, spoke to him on the subject, expressing our fears that his reputatior. as an officer would greatly suffer WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 321 if he permitted such an insult to pass unnoticed. The ans-wer that he gave me was that he cared not what opinion the officers might form of him ; he was de- termined to pursue his own course. That course was so novel in the army that it lost him, as I supposed it would, the respect of nearly all the officers. The ensuing summer, however, gave Mr. Drake an oppor- tunity of vindicating most triumphantly his conduct and his principles. He had been stationed in a small fortress, erected by Gene-ral Wayne, during the winter, upon the spot in which they had the previous day deposited a quantity of provisions, and which had been rendered remarkable by the defeat of General St. Clair's army three years before. The garrison consisted of a single rifle company and thirty infan- try, and of the latter Drake was the immediate com- mander. In the beginning of July, a detachment of the army, consisting of several hundred men, under the command of Major McMahon, being encamped near the fort, were attacked early in the morning by about three thousand Indians. The troops made a gallant resistance, but being turned on both flanks, and in danger of being surrounded, they retreated to the open ground around the fort. " From this, too, they were soon dislodged by the over-poAvering force of the enemy. In their retreat many wounded men were in danger of being left, which being observed from the fort, the commandant. Captain Gibson, directed his own lieutenant to take the infantry (Drake's particular command) and a por- 822 THE LIFE OP tion of the riflemen and sally out to their relief. To this Drake objected, and claimed the right to com- mand his own men, and, as a senior to the other lieu- tenant, his right also to the whole command. * 0, very well. Sir,' said the captain, 4f such is your wish, take it.' 'It is my wish. Sir, to do my duty, and I will endeavor to do it now and at all times,' was the modest reply of Drake. He accordingly sallied out, skillfully interposed his detachments be- tween the retreating troops and the enemy, opened upon them a hot fire, arrested their advance, and gave an opportu^nity to the wounded to efiect their escape, and to the broken and retreating companies of our troops to reform, and again to face the enemy. Throughout the whole affair Drake's activity, skill and extraordinary self-possession, was most conspicu- ous. The enemy of course observed, as well as his friends, the numerous shots directed at him, how^ever, like the arrows of Tenar aimed at the heart of Hec- tor, were turned aside by providential interference, until he had accomplished all that he had been sent to perform. He then received a ball through his body, and fell ; a faithful corporal came to his assist- ance, and with his aid he reached the fort, and those two were the last of the retreating party that entered it. Drake made it a point of order that it should be so. He was rendered unfit for service for a long time by his wound. He had not, indeed, recovered from t in the summer of 1796, when he was my gu^st ^t Fort Wayne, where I was in command, while WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 823 on furlough, to visit his native State, Connecticut. His friends, however, enjoyed his presence but a short time. Having, as I understood, taken the yellow fever in passing through Philadelphia, he died a few days after he reached home. * * * " I acknowledge, then, that the change of my opinions which I have admitted in relation to dueling have no other influence on my conduct than to deter- mine me never to be the aggressor. But although resolved to offer no insult nor to inflict any injury, I was determined to suffer none. When I left the army, however,, and retired to civil life, I considered myself authorized greatly to narrow the ground upon which I would be willing to resort to a personal com- bat. To the determination which I had previously made, to offer no insult or to inflict any injury, to give occasion to any one to call upon me in this way, I re- solved to disregard all remarks upon my conduct which could not be construed into a deliberate insult, or any injury which did not affect my reputation, or the happi- ness and peace of my family. When I had the honor to be called upon to command the north-western army, recollecting the number of gallant men that had fallen in the former war in personal combat, I determined to use all the authority and all the influence of my station to prevent their recurrence. And to take away the principal source from which they sprung, in an address to the Pennsylvania brigade, at Sandusky, I declared it to be my determination to prevent, by all the means the military laws placed in my hands, i 324: THE LIFE OF any injury or even insult wliich should be offered by the superior to the inferior officers. I cannot say what influence this course upon my part may have produced in the result ; but I state with pleasure that there was not a single duel, nor, as far as I know^, a challenge given, whilst I retained the command. " The activity in which the army was constantly kept may, however, have been the principal cause of this uncommon harmony. In relation to my present sentiments, a sense of higher obligation than human laws or human opinions can impose, has determined me never, on any occasion, to accept a challenge, or seek redress for a personal injury, by a resort to the laws which compose the code of honor." WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 325 CHAPTER XX. In tlie fall of 1838, an Anti-Masonic lN"ational Convention assembled at Harrisburgh, and after a calm and careful survey of the whole ground, nomi- nated General Harrison as the candidate of that party for the Presidency in 1840. The proceedings of this convention were communicated to him by the Honor- able Harman Denny. In December of the same year, General Harrison replied to this ofScial announcement, laying down his views of the duty of the chief exec- utive of the nation, and the principles by which he should be governed if elected. Having expressed his gratitude to the convention for the honor conferred upon him, he proceeds thus to develope his political creed. Among the principles proper to be adopted by an executive sincerely desi- rous to restore the administration to its original sim- plicity and purity, he laid down the following as of the most prominent importance : I. To confine his services to a single term. II. To disclaim all right of control over the pub- lic treasury, with the exception of such part of it as may be appropriated by law to carry on the public 28 S26 THE LIFE OP service, and that to be applied precisely as the law may direct, and drawn from the treasury agreeably to the long-established forms of that department. III. That he should never attempt to influence the elections, either by the people or the State legis- latures, nor suffer the federal officers under his control to take any other part in them than by giving their own votes when they possess the right of voting. IV. That, in the exercise of the veto pow^r, he .should limit his rejection of bills to, — 1st. Such as are, in his opinion, unconstitutional ; 2nd. Such as tend to encroach on the rights of the States or individuals ; 3rd. Such as involving deep interests, may, in his opinion, require more mature deliberation or reference to the will of the people, to be ascertained at the suc- ceeding elections. V. That he should never suffer the influence of his office to be used for purposes of a purely party character. VI. That in removals from office of those who hold their appointments during the pleasure of the executive, the cause of such removal should be stated, if requested, to the Senate, at the time the nomination of a successor is made. And last, but not least in importance, VII. That he should not suffer the executive de- partment of the government to become the source of legislation ; but leave the w^hole business of making laws for the Union to the department to which the constitution has exclusively assigned it, until they have WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 827 assumed that perfected shape, T\'here and when alone the opinions of the executive may be heard. A community of power in the preparation of the laws between the legislative and executive depart- ments must necessarily lead to dangerous combina- tions, greatly to the advantage of a President desirous of extending his power. Such a construction of the constitution could never have been contemplated by those who propose the bills, and will always take care of themselves or the interests of their constituents ; and hence the provision in the constitution, borrowed from that of England, restricting the originating of revenue bills to the immediate representatives of the people. Referring to the appointment of members of Congress to office by the President, he says the con- stitution contains no 23rohibition of such appointments, no doubt because its authors could not believe in its necessity for the purity of character which was man- ifested by those who possessed the confidence of the people at that period. It is, however, an opinion very generally entertained by the opposition party, that the country would have escaped much of the evil under which it has suffered for some years past, if the constitution had contained a provision of that kind. * * * ^' To the duties I have enumerated, so proper, in my opinion, to be performed by a President, elevated by the opposition to the present administration (and which are, as I believe, of constitutional obligation), 828 THE LIFE OF I will add cinother, which I believe also t) be of much importance ; I mean the observance of the most con- ciliatory course of conduct towards our political op- ponents. After the censure our friends have so freely and so justly bestowed upon the present chief magis- istrate for having, in no inconsiderable degree, dis- franchised the whole body of his political opponents, I am certain that no oppositionist, true to the princi- ple he professes, would approve a similar course of conduct in the person whom his vote has contributed to elect. In a republic, one of the surest tests of a healthy state of its institutions is to be found in the community with which everj citizen may, upon all occasions, express his political opinions, and even his prejudices, in the discharge of his duty as an elector. " The question may be asked of me, what security I have in my power to offer, if the majority of the American people should select me for their chief mag- istrate, that I would adopt the principles which I have herein laid down as those upon which my administration would be conducted, I could only answer by referring to my conduct, and the disposition manifested in the dis- charge of the duties of several important offices Avhich have heretofore been conferred upon me. If the power placed in my hands has, on even a single occa- sion, been used for any purpose other than that for which it was given, or retained longer than was nec- essary to accomplish the objects designated by those from whom the trusts were received, I will acknowl- edge that either will constitute a sufficient reason for WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 329 discrediting any promises I may make under the cir- cumstances in which I am now placed. " The time had now arrived for selecting a Presi dential candidate in opposition to Martin Van Buren, who was almost the only man the democratic party had spoken of for that oiRce. Though General Har- rison was defeated in 1836, by causes heretofore hastily glanced at, his friends were far from being discouraged by the event. On the contrary, the vote that he received, in spite of the unfavorable circum- stances under which he entered the contest, more than ever satisfied them that he might be elected if once the whole opposition could be united upon him, and their hopes were greatly strengthened by the univer- sal dissatisfaction that prevailed throughout the coun- try an;ainst the administration of Mr. Van Buren. Hitherto the whig party in each State of the Union had nominated their own candidate in their own way ; but the necessity had gradually made itself apparent that some mode must be adopted by which the senti- ment of the whole whig party could be concentrated upon one point. Accordingly a caucus of the whig members of Congress was held at Washington on the 15th of May, 1838, to devise some plan of combining the strength of the opposition against Mr. Van Buren. They finally resolved upon a national convention as the or^an through whom the Avill of that party should be expressed, and it was decided that it should be held at Harrisburgh, on the first Wednesday in De- cember, 1839, each State to be entitled to as many 28* 830 THE LIFE OP delegates as it had senators and representatives in Congress. ^' The convention met at Harrishurgh, in accord- ance with this appointment. Delegates were in attend- ance from twenty-two of the twenty-six States. It undoubtedly combined more talent and patriotism, and a larger number of the eminent men of the nation than any body of any kind that ever before assem- bled in this country, with the single exception of the old continental Congress, and the convention which framed our national constitution. Amongst them were sixteen ex-governors, United States senators and ex-senators, members of Congress and ex-members, and some of the highest officers and most distinguished citizens from every State in the Union that was rep- resented. And they assembled with motives as patri- otic and purposes as pure as their characters were high. They saw, or thought they saw, that the best interests of the country required a change in the administra- tion, and they entered upon the discharge of the duty WMth which they had been delegated with a disposition to sacrifice every personal consideration, and relin- quish all personal preferences to the general good. Mr. Webster having requested that his name should not be brought before the convention, the only candidates were William Henry Harrison, Winfield Scott and Henry Clay. The friends of each urged their favorite with all the zeal and warmth their high characters, great talents, and important public ser- vices were so well calculated to inspire. The choice. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 831 after an ardent contest, fell upon General Harrison ; and then it was that the real patriotism of the con- vention exhibited itself in all its force, and in its true colors. The moment the nomination was known, all the warmth of feeling that had been engendered by an exciting canvass was forgotten, and the States, one after another, through one or more of their delegates, cordially, eloquently, nobly, responded to it ; the only rivalry being who should be the first to show that if he had preferred either General Scott or Mr. Chay to the successful candidate, it was not because they had any doubt of his patriotism, his abilities or his honesty. The generous cordiality with which this nomina- tion was received by the convention was but the pre- monitory symptoms of the deep satisfaction which it created amongst the people themselves. They were already ripe for a revolution in the administration, and when the name of a man who had not only dis- tinguished himself as one of the first captains of the day, but who had proved himself an accomphshed statesman, and, above all, an honest man and a well- tried patriot, the popular feeling broke out in such exhibitions of enthusiasm as this nor any other coun- try ever before witnessed. There was undoubtedly some little disappointment amongst the friends of the unsuccessful candidates, but it was comparatively only momentary. The canvass gave rise to a system of immense mass meetings, at Tvhich the people met by tens and tAventies, and fifties of thousands, to listen 832 THE LIFE OP to the discussion of party principles, and to a mode of electioneering as novel as it Avas exciting. At such times as the several States had determined the election took place, and General Harrison received the electoral vote of twenty of the twenty-six States, and two hundred and thirty-four electoral votes of the two hundred and ninety-four, Mr. Van Buren receiv- ing the vote of six States and sixty electoral votes. There were two millions, three hundred and ninety- five thousand, nine hundred votes polled, of which General Harrison received one million, two hundred and sixty-nine thousand, seven hundred and sixty- three ; and Mr. Van Buren one million, one hundred and twenty-six thousand, one hundred and thirty- seven, giving Harrison a majority of one hundred and forty-three thousand, six hundred and forty-six of the popular vote. The vote of the electoral colleges waa opened in Congress, and the election of General Har- rison as President of the United States was officially declared. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 333 CHAPTER XXI. Ox the 4th of March, 1841, General Harrison was inaugurated as eleventh President of the United States, with the usual ceremonies of that important occasion. The oath of office was tended him by Chief Justice Taney. The event drew together an immense concourse of citizens from every party of the Union, to witness the simple, yet imposing and sub- lime ceremony ; and he entered upon the duties of his high position with as bright anticipations, as hon- est purposes, and as firm resolves on his own part, and with the confidence of the American people to as great an extent as any man who had occupied the position since Washington. The inaugural address was read by the President, from the steps of the cap- itol, in a voice so clear and distinct as to have been clearly heard by the vast multitude of spectators present. Though of great length, it is entitled to a place in a work of this character, aside from its im- portant declaration of principles, and the lesson of political wisdom it contains. It is given below : " Called from a retirement which I had supposed was to continue for the residue of my life, to fill the 334 THE LIFE OP chief executive office of this great and free nation, I appear before you, fellow-citizens, to take the oath "which the constitution prescribes as a necessary qual- ification for the performance of its duties; and in obedience to the custom coeval with our government, and what I believe to be your expectations, I proceed to present to you a summary of the principles which will govern me in the discharge of the duties which I shall be called upon to perform. " It was the remark of a Koman consul, in an early period of that celebrated republic, that a most striking contrast was observable in the conduct of candidates for offices of power and trust, before and after obtaining them — they seldom carrying out in the latter case the pledges and promises made in the former. How^ever much the world may have improved in many respects in the lapse of upwards of two thousand years since the remark was made by the virtuous and indignant Roman, I fear that a strict examination of the annals of some of the modern elective governments would develop similar instances of violated confidence. Although the fiat of the people has gone forth proclaiming me the chief magistrate of this glorious Union, nothing on their part remaining to be done, it may be thought that a motive may exist to keep up the delusion under which they may be supposed to have acted in relation to my principles and opinions, and perhaps there may be some in this assembly who have come here either prepared to condemn those I shall now deliver, or, approving them, to doubt the WILLIAM IlENllY HARRISON. ooO Bincerity with which they are uttered ; but the lapse of a few months will confirm or dispel their fears. The outlines of principles to govern and measures to be adopted, by an administration not yet begun, will soon be exchanged for immutable history ; and I shall stand, either exonerated by my countrymen, or classed with the mass of those who promised that they might deceive, and flattered with the intention to betray. ^ " However strong may be my present purpose to realize the expectations of a magnanimous and confid- ing people, I too well understand the infirmities of human nature and the dangerous temptations to which I shall be exposed, from the magnitude of the power which it has been the pleasure of the peo- ple to commit to my hands, not to place my chief confidence upon the aid of that Almighty Power which has hitherto protected me, and enabled me to bring to favorable issues other important, but still greatly inferior, trusts heretofore confided to me by my country. *' The broad foundation upon which our constitu- tion rests, being the people — a breath of theirs having made, as a breath can unmake, change, or modify it — it can be assigned to none of the great divisions of government but to that of democracy. If such is its theory, those who are called upon to administer it must recognize, as its leading principle, the duty of shaping their measures so as to produce the greatest good to the greatest number. But, with these broad admissions, if we would compare the sovereignty ac 6 TUE LIFE OF knowledged to exist in the mass of our people, wit"h the power claimed by other sovereignties, even by those which have been considered most purely demo- cratic, we shall find a most essential difference ; all others lay claim to power limited only by their own will. The majority of our citizens, on the contrary, possess a sovereignty with an amount of power pre- cisely equal to that which has been granted to them by the parties to the national compact, and nothing beyond. We admit of no government by divine right — believing that, so far as power is concerned, the beneficent Creator has made no distinction among: men ; that all are upon an equality ; and that the only legitimate right to govern is an express grant of power from the governed. The Constitution of the United States is the instrument containing this grant of power to the several departments composing the government. On an examination of that instrument it will be found to contain declarations of power granted, and of power withheld. The latter is also susceptible of division into power which the majority had the right to grant, but which they did not think proper to entrust to their agents, and that which they could not have granted, not being possessed by them- selves. In other words, there are certain rights pos- sessed by each individual American citizen, which in his compact with the others he has never surrendered. Some of them, indeed, he is unable to surrender, being in the language of our system inalienable. The boasted privilege of a Roman citizen was to WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 337 him a shield only against a petty provincial rule, whilst the proud democrat of Athens could console himself under a sentence of death for a supposed violation of national faith which no one understood, and which, at times, was the subject of the mockery of all ; or of banishment from his home, his family and his coun- try, with or without an alleged cause, that it was the act, not of a single tyrant or hated aristocracy, but of his assembled countrymen. Far different is the power of our sovereignty. It can interfere with no one's faith, prescribe forms of worship for no one's observance, inflict no punishment but after well ascer- tained guilt, the result of investigation under rules prescribed by the constitution itself. These precious privileges, and these, scarcely less important, of giving expression to his thoughts and opinions, either by writing or speaking, unrestrained but by the liability for injury to others, and that of a full participation in all advantages which flow from the government, the acknowledged property of all, the American citi- zen derives from no charter granted by his fellow- man. He claims them because he is himself a man ; fashioned by the same Almighty hand as the rest of his species, and entitled to a full share of the bless- in ors with which he has endowed them. Notwithstand- ing the limited sovereignty possessed by the people of the United States, and the restricted grant of power to the government which they have adopted, enough has been given to accomplish all the objects for which it was created. It has been found powerful in war, and, 29 838 THE LIFE OP hitherto, justice has been administered, an intimate union effected, domestic tranquillity preserved, and personal liberty secured to the citizen. As was to be expected, however, from the defect of language, and the necessarily sententious manner in which the constitution is written, disputes have arisen as to the amount of power which it has actually granted, or was intended to grant. This is more particularly the case in relation to that part of the instrument which treats of the legislative branch. And not only as regards the exercise of powers claimed under a gen- eral clause, giving that body the authority to pass all laws necessary to carry into effect the specified pow- ers, but in relation to the latter also. It is, however, consolatory to reflect that most of the instances of alleged departure from the letter or spirit of the con- stitution have ultimately received the sanction of a majority of the people. And the fact, that many of our statesmen, most distinguished for talent and pa- triotism, have been, at one time or other of their po- litical career, on both sides of each of the most warmly disputed questions, forces upon us the inference that the errors, if errors there were, are attributable to the intrinsic difficulty, in many instances, of ascer- taining the intentions of the framers of the constitu- tion, rather than the influence of any sinister or un- patriotic motive. " But the great danger to our institutions does not appear to me to be in a usurpation, by the gov- ernment, of power not granted by the people, but by WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 339 tlie accumulation, in one of the departments, of that which was assigned to others. Limited as are the powders which have been granted, still enough have been granted to constitute a despotism, if concen- trated in one of the departments. Many of the stern- est republicans of the day were alarmed at the extent of the power which has been granted to the federal government, and more particularly of that portion which has been assigned to the executive branch. There were in it features Avhich appeared not to be in harmony with their ideas of a simple representative democracy or republic ; and knowing the tendency of power to increase itself, particularly when exercised by a single individual, predictions were made that, at no very remote period, the government w^ould termin- ate in virtual monarchy. It would not become me to say that the fears of those patriots would not have been already realized. But as I sincerely believe that the tendency of measures and of men's opinions, for some years past, has been in that direction, it is, I conceive, strictly proper that I should take this oc- casion to repeat the assurances I have heretofore given of my determination to arrest the progress of that tendency, if it really exist, and restore the gov- ernment to its pristine health and vigor, as far as this can be affected by any legitimate exercise of the power placed in my hands. " I proceed to state, in as summary a manner as I can, my opinion of the sources of the evils which have been so extensively complained of, and the con- 340 THE LIFE OP nectives which may be applied. Sjme of the former are unquestionably to be found in the defects of the constitution ; others, in my judgment, are attributable to a misconstruction of some of its provisions. Of the former is the elligibility of the same individual to a sec- ond term of the presidency. The sagacious mind of Mr. Jefferson early saw and lamented this error, and at- tempts have been made, hitherto without success, to apply the amendatory power of the States to its cor- rection. *' As, however, one mode of correction is in the power of every President, and consequently in mine, it would be useless, and perhaps invidious, to enume- rate the evils of which, in the opinion of many of our fellow-citizens, this error of the sages who framed the constitution may have been the source and the bitter fruits which we are still to gather from it, if it con- tinues to disfigure our system. It may be observed, however, as a general remark, that republics can commit no greater error than to adopt or continue any feature in their systems of government which may be calculated to create or increase the love of power in the bosoms of those to whom necessity obliges them to commit the management of their affairs. And, surely, nothing is more likely to produce such a state of mind than the long continuance of an office of high trust. Nothing can be more corrupting, nothing more destructive, of all those noble feelings which belong to the character of a devoted republican patriot. When this corrupting passion once takes possession of the WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 341 human mind, like the love of gold, it becomes insati- able. It is the never-dying worm in his bosom, grows with his growth, and strengthens with the declining years of its victim. If this is true, it is the part of wisdom for a republic to limit the service of that offi- cer, at least, to whom she has intrusted the manage- ment of her foreign relations, the execution of her laws, and the command of her armies and navies, to a period so short as to prevent his forgetting that he is the accountable agent, not the principal — the servant, not the master. Until an amendment of the constitution can be effected, public opinion may secure the desired object. I give my aid to it by renewing the pledge heretofore given, that under no circumstances will I consent to serve a second term. " But if there is danger to public liberty from the acknwvledged defects of the constitution, in the want of limit to the continuance of the executive power in the same hands, there is, I apprehend, not much less from a misconstruction of that instrument, as it re- gards the powers actually given. I cannot conceive that, by a fair construction, any or either of its pro- visions would be found to constitute the President a part of the legislative power. It cannot be claimed from the power to recommend, since, although en- joined as a duty upon him, it is a privilege which he holds in common with every other citizen. And al- though there may be something more of confidence in the propriety of the measures recommended in the one case than in the other, in the obligations of ultimate 29* 342 THE LIFE OF decision there can be no difference. In the language of the constitution, ' all legislative powers' which it grants 'are vested in the Congress of the United States.* It would be a solecism in language to say that any portion of these is not included in the whole. " It may be said, indeed, that the constitution has given to the executive the power to annul the acts of the legislative body by refusing to them his assent. So a similar power has necessarily resulted from that instrumeni: to the judiciary, and yet the judiciary forms no part of the legislature. There is, it is true, this difference between these grants of power ; the executive can put his negative upon the acts of the legislature for other cause than that of want of conformity to the constitution ; whilst the judiciary can only declare void those which violate that instru- ment. But the decision of the judiciary is final in such a case ; whereas, in every instance where the veto of the executive is applied, it may be overcome bv a veto of two-thirds of both houses of Congress. The negative upon the acts of the legislature, by the executive authority, and that in the hands of one in- dividual, would seem to be an incongruity in our sys- tem. Like some others of a similar character, how- ever, it appeared to be highly expedient, and if used only with the forbearance and in the spirit which was intended by its authors, it may be productive of great good, and be found one of the best safe-guards to the Union. At the period of the formation, the principle does not appear to have enjoyed much favor in the ^VIILIAM HENRY HARRISON. 343 State governments. It existed in but two, and in one of these was a plural executive. If we would search for the motives which operated upon the purely pat- riotic and enlightened assembly which framed the constitution for the adoption of a provision so appar- ently repugnant to the leading democratic principle, that the majority should govern, we must reject the idea that they anticipated from it any benefit to the ordinary course of legislation. They knew too w^ell the high degree of intelligence which existed among the people, and the enlightened character of the State legislatures, not to have the fullest confidence that the two bodies elected by them would he w^orthy of such constituents, and, of course, that they would re- quire no aid in conceiving and maturing the measures which the circumstances of the country might require. And it is preposterous to suppose that a thought could for a moment have been entertained, that the Presi- dent, placed at the capital, in the centre of the coun- try, could better understand the wants and wishes of the people than their own immediate representatives, who spend a part of every year among them, living with them, often laboring with them, and bound to them by the triple tie of interest, duty, and affection. To assist or control Congress, then, in its ordinary legislation, could not, I conceive, have been the mo- tive for conferring the veto power on the President. This argument acquires additional force from the fact of its never having been thus used by the first six Presidents — and two of them were members of the 344 THE LIFE OP convention ; on€ presiding over its deliberations, and the other having a larger share in consummating the labors of that august body than any other person. But if bills were never returned to Congress by either of the Presidents above referred to, upon the ground of their being inexpedient, or not as well adapted as they might be to the wants of the people, the veto was applied upon that of want of conformity to the constitution, or because errors had been committed from a too hasty enactment. " There is another ground for the adoption of the veto principle, which had probably more influence in recommending it to the convention than any other. I refer to the security which it gives to the just and equitable action of the legislature upon all parts of the Union. It could not but have occurred to the convention that, in a country so extensive, embracing so great a variety of soil and climate, and conse- quently of products, and which, from the same causes, must ever exhibit a great difference in the amount of population of its various sections, calling for a great diversity in the employments of the people, that the legislation of the majority might not always justly regard the rights and interests of the minority ; and that acts of this character might be passed under an express grant by the words of the constitution, and, therefore, not within the competency of the judiciary to declare void. That however enlightened and pat- riotic they might suppose, from past experience, the members of Congress might be, and however largely WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 345 partaldng in general of the liberal feelings of the people, it was impossible to expect that bodies so con- stituted should not sometimes be controlled by local interests and sectional feelings. It was proper, there- fore, to provide some umpire from whose situation and mode of appointment more independence and freedom from such influence might be expected. Such a one was afforded by the executive department, constituted by the constitution. A person elected to that high office, having his constituents in every section. State and sub-division of the Union, must consider himself bound by the most solemn sanctions to guard, protect and defend the rights of all, and of every portion, great or small, from the injustice and oppression of the rest. I consider the veto power, therefore, given by the constitution to the executive of the United States solely as a conservative power ; to be used only, — first, to protect the constitution from violation ; secondly, the people from the effects of hasty legisla- tion, where their will has probably been disregarded or not well understood ; and, thirdly, to prevent the effects of combinations, violative of the rights of mi- norities. In reference to the second of these objects, I may observe, that I consider it the right and the privilege of the people to decide disputed points of the constitution, arising from the general grant of power to Congress to carry into effect the powers expressly given. And I believe with Mr. Madison that repeated recofrnitions, under varied circumstances, in acts of the legislative, executive and judicial branches of the 346 THE LIFE OF gOA^ernment, accompanied by indications in different modes of the concurrence of the general will of the nation, as affording to the President sufficient author- ity for his considering such disputed points as settled. " Upwards of half a century has elapsed since the adoption of our present form of government. It will be an object more highly desirable than the gratifica- tion of the curiosity of speculative statesmen if its precise situation could be ascertained, and a fair ex- hibit made of the operations of each of its depart- ments ; of the powers which they respectively claim and exercise ; of the collisions which have occurred between them, or between the whole government and those of the States, or either of them. We could then compare our actual condition after fifty years' trial of our system, w^ith what it was in the commencement of its operations, and ascertain whether the predic- tions of the patriots who opposed its adoption, or the confident hopes of its advocates, have been best real- ized. The great dread of the former seems to have been, that the reserved powers of the States would be absorbed by those of the federal government, and a C'>nsolidated power established, leaving to the States the shadow only of that independent action for which they had so zealously contended, and on the preser- vation of which they relied as the last hope of liberty. " Without denying that the result to which they looked with so much apprehension is in the way of being realized, it is obvious that they did not clearly see the mode of its accomplishment. The general WIIXIAxM HENRY HARRISON. 347 government has siezed upon none of the reserved rights of the States. As far as any open warfare may have gone, the State authorities have amply maintained their rights. To a casual observer, our system presents no appearance of discord between the different members which compose it. Even the addi- tion of many new ones has produced no jarring ; they move in ther respective orbits in perfect harmony with the central head, and with each other. But there is still an under current at work, by which, if not seasonably checked, the worst apprehensions of our anti-federal patriots will be realized. And not only will the State authorities be overshadowed by the great increase of the power in the executive depart- ment of the general government, but the character of that government, if not its designation, be essentially and radically changed. " This state of things has been in part effected by causes inherent in the constitution, and in part by the never-failing tendency of political power to in- crease itself. By making the President the sole dis- tributor of all the patronage of the government, the framers of the constitution do not appear to have an- ticipated at how short a period it would become a formidable instrument to control the free operations of the State governments. Of trifling importance at first, it had, early in Mr. Jefferson's administration, become so powerful as to create great alarm in the mind of that patriot, from the potent influence it might exert in controling the freedom of the elec- 348 THE LIFE OF tive franchise. If such could have then been the eiFect of its influence, how much greater must be its danger at this time, quadrupled in amount, as it cer- tainly is, and more completely under the control of the executive will than their construction of the pow- ers allowed, or the forbearing characters, of all the earlier presidents permitted them to make. But it is not by the extent of its patronage alone that the ex- ecutive department has become dangerous, but by the use which it appears may be made of the appointing power to bring under its control the whole revenues of the country. '' The constitution has declared it the duty of the President to see that the laws are executed, and it makes him the commander-in-chief of the armies and navy of the United States. If the opinion of the most approved writers upon that species of mixed government which in modern Europe is termed mon- archy^ in contradistinction to despotism, is correct, there Avas wanting no other addition to the powers of our chief magistrate to stamp a monarchial character on our government but the control of the public finances. And to me it appears indeed that any one should doubt that the entire control which a President possesses over the officers who have the custody of the public monies by the power of removal, with or without cause, does for all mischievous purpose?', at least, virtually subject the treasure also to his disposal. The first Roman emperor, in his attempt to seize the sacred treasure, silenced the opposition of the officer WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 349 CO whose charge it had been committed by a signifi- cant allusion to his sword. By a selection of politi cal instruments for the care of the public money, a reference to their commission by a President would be quite as effectual an argument as that of Caesar to the Roman knight. I am not insensible of the great difficulty that exists in devising a proper plan for the safe-keeping and disbursement of the public revenues, and I know the importance which has been attached by men of great abilities and patriotism to the divorce, as it is called, of the treasury from the banking insti- tutions. It is not the divorce which is complained of, but the unhallowed union of the treasury with the executive department which has created such exten- sive alarm. To this danger to our republican institu- tions, and that created by the influence given to the executive through the instrumentality of the federal officers, I propose to apply all the remedies which may be at my command. " It was certainly a great error, in the framers of the constitution, not to have made the officer at the head of the treasury department entirely independent of the executive. He should at least have been re- movable only upon the demand of the popular branch of the legislature. I have determined never to re- move a secretary of the treasury without communi- cating all the circumstances attending such removal to both Houses of Congress. The influence of the executive in controling the freedom of the elective franchise through the medium of the public officers 30 350 THE LIFE OP can be effectually checked by renewing the prohibi- tion published by Mr. Jefferson, forbidding their in- terference in elections further than giving their own Votes ; and their own independence secured by an assurance of perfect immunity, in exercising this sa- cred privilege of freemen under the dictates of their own unbiased judgments. Never, with my consent, shall an officer of the people, compensated for his services out of their pockets, become the pliant instru- ment of executive will. " There is no part of the means placed in the hands of the executive which might be used with greater effect, for unhallowed purposes, than the con- trol of the public press. The maxim which our an- cestors derived from the mother country, that ' the freedom of the press is the great bulwark of civil and religious liberty,' is one of the most precious legacies which they have left us. We have learned, too, from our own, as well as the experience of other countries, that golden shackels, by whomsoever or by whate-ver pretense imposed, are as fatal to it as the iron bonds of despotism. The presses in the necessary employ- ment of the government should never be used ' to clear the guilty or varnish crimes.' A decent and manly examination of the acts of the government should be not only tolerated but encouraged. " Upon another occasion I have given my opinion, at some length, upon the impropriety of executive in- terference in the legislation of Congress. That the article in the constitution making it the duty of the WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 351 President to coinmunicate information, and author- izing him to recommend measures, was not intended to make him the source of legislation, and, in partic- ular, that he should never be looked to for schemes of finance. It would be very strange, indeed, if the constitution should have strictly forbidden one branch of the legislature from interfering in the origination of such bills, and that it should be considered proper that an altogether different department of the govern- ment should be permitted to do so. Some of our best political maxims and principles have been drawn from our parent Isle. There are others, however, which cannot be introduced in our system without singular incongruity and the production of much mischief; and this I conceive to be one. " No matter in which of the Houses of Parliament a bill may originate, nor by whom introduced, a min- ister or a member of the opposition, by the fiction of law, or rather of constitutional principle, the sover- eign is supposed to have prepared it agreeably to his will, and then submitted it to Parliament for their advice and consent. Now the very reverse is the case here, not only with regard to the principle, but the forms prescribed by the constitution. The principle certainly assigns to the only body constituted by the constitution (the legislative body) the power to maky laws, and the forms even direct that the enactment should be ascribed to them. • " The Senate, in relation to revenue bills, have the ri<4it to propose amendments ; and so has the execu- 852 THE LIFE OF tive, by the power given him to return them to the House of Representatives with his objections. It is in his power, also, to propose amendments in the exist- ing revenue laws, suggested by his observations upon their defective or injurious operation. But the deli- cate duty of devising schemes of revenue should be left where the constitution has placed it — with the immediate representatives of the people. For similar reasons, the mode of keeping the public treasure should be prescribed by them ; and the farther re- moved it may be from the control of the executive, the more wholesome the arrangement, and the more in accordance with republican principle. " Connected with this subject is the character of the currency. The idea of making it exclusively metallic, however well intended, appears to me to be fraught with more fatal consequences than any other scheme, having no relation to the personal rights of the citizen, that has ever been devised. If any single scheme could produce the effect of arresting, at once, that mutation of condition by which thousands of our most indigent fellow-citizens, by their industry and enterprise, are raised to the possession of wealth, that is the one. If there is one measure better calculated than another to produce that state of things so much deprecated by all true republicans, by which the rich are daily adding to their hoards, and the poor sinking deeper into penury, it is an exclusive metallic cur- rency. Or if there is a process by which the char- acter of the country for generosity and nobleness of i WILLIAM HENRY HARllISON. 853 feeling may be destroyed by the great increase and necessary toleration of usury, it is an exclusive me* tallic currency. " Amongst the other duties of a delicate character which the President is called upon to perform is the supervision of the government of the Territories of the United States. Those of them which are destined to become members of our great political family are compensated by their rapid progress from infancy to manhood, for the partial and temporary deprivation of their political rights. It is in this District only where American citizens are to be found, who, under a settled system of policy, are deprived of many im- portant political privileges, without any inspiring hope as to the future. Their only consolation, under circumstances of such deprivation, is that of the de- voted exterior guards of a camp — that their sufferings secure tranquillity and safety within. Are there any of their countrymen who would subject them to greater, to any other, humiliations than those essen- tially necessary to the security of the object for which they were thus separated from their fellow-citizens ? Are their rights alone not to be guaranteed by the application of those great principles upon which ail our constitutions are founded ? We are told by tlie greatest of British orators and statesmen, that at the commencement of the war of the revolution the most Btupid men in England spoke of ' their American sub- jects.' Are there, indeed, citizens of any of our States who have dreamed of their subjects in the Dis- 30* 354 THE LIFE OP trict of Columbia? Such dreams can never be real- ized by any agency of mine. " The people of the District of Columbia are not the subjects of the people of the States, but free American citizens. Being in the latter condition, when the constitution was formed, no words used in that instrument could have been intended to depri\^e them of that character. If there is anything in the great principle of inalienable rights, so emphatically insisted upon in our Declaration of Independence, they could neither make, nor the United States accept, a surrender of their liberties and become the subjects, — in other words, the slaves, — of their former fellow- citizens. If this be true, and it will scarcely be de- nied by any one who has a correct idea of his own rights as an American citizen, the grant to Congress of exclusive jurisdiction in the District of Columbia can be interpreted, so far as respects the aggregate people of the United States, as meaning nothing more than to allow to Congress the controling power neces- sary to afford a free and safe exercise of the functions assigned to the general government by the constitu- tion. In all other respects the legislation of Congress should be adapted to their peculiar position and wants, and be conformable with their deliberate opin- ions of their own interests. " I have spoken of the necessity of keeping the respective departments of the government, as well as the other authorities of our country, within their ap- propriate orbits. This is a matter of difficulty in WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 355 some cases, as the powers which they respectively claim are often not defined by very distinct lines. " Mischievous, however, in their tendencies, as col- lisions of this kind may be, those which arise between the respective communities, which for certain purposes compose one nation, are much more so ; for no such nation can long exist without the careful culture of those feelings of confidence and afi'ection which are the eff'ective bonds of union between free and confed- erated States. Strong as is the tie of interest, it has been often found ineff'ectual. Men, blinded by their passions, have been known to adopt measures for their country in direct opposition to all the suggestions of policy. The alternative, then, is to destroy or keep down a bad passion, by creating and fostering a good one ; and this seems to be the corner-stone upon which our American political architects have reared the tabric of our government. The cement which was io bind it and perpetuate its existence was the afi'ec- tionate attachment between all its members. To msure the continuance of this feeling, produced at first by a community of dangers, of suff'erings and of interests, the advantages of each were made accessible to all. " No participation in any good, possessed by any member of an extensive confederacy, except in do- mestic government, was withheld from the citizen of any other member. By a process attended with no difiiculty, no delay, no expense but that of removal, the citizen of one might become the citizen of any 356 THE LIFE OP other, and successively of the whole. The lines, too, separating powers to be exercised by the citizens of one State from those of another, seem to be so dis- tinctly drawn as to leave no room for misunderstand- ing. The citizens of each State unite in their persons all the privileges which that character confers, and all that they may claim as citizens of the United States ; but in no case can the same person, at the same time, act as the citizen of two separate States ; and he is therefore positively precluded from any interference with the reserved powers of any State hut that of which he is, for the time being, a citizen. He may indeed offer to the citizens of other States his advice as to their management, but the form in which it is tendered is left to his own discretion and sense of propriety. " It may be observed, however, that organized as- sociations of citizens, requiring compliance with their wishes, too much resemble the recommendations of Athens to her allies — supported by an armed and powerful fleet. It was, indeed, to the ambition of the leading States of Greece to control the domestic con- cerns of others that the destruction of that celebrated confederacy, and subsequently of all its members, is mainly to be attributed. And it is owing to the ab- sence of that spirit that the Helvetic confederacy has for so many years been preserved. Never has there been seen in the institutions of the separate members of the confederacy more elements of discord. In the principles and forms of government and religion, as WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 357 well as in the circumstances of the several countries, so marked a discrepancy was observable, as to promise anything but harmony in their intercourse or perma- nency in their alliance ; and yet for ages neither has been interrupted. Content with the positive benefits which their union produced, with the dependence and safety from foreign aggression which it secured, these sagacious people respected the institutions of each other, however repugnant to their own principles and prejudices. "Our confederacy, fellow-citizens, can only be preserved by the same forbearance. Our citizens must be content with the exercise of the powers with which the constitution clothes them. The attempt of those of one State to control the domestic institutions of another can only result in feelings of distrust and jealousy — the certain harbingers of disunion, vio- lence, civil war, and the ultimate destruction of our free institutions. Our confederacy is perfectly illus- trated by the terms and principles governing a com- mon co-partnership. There a fund of power is to be exercised under the direction of the joint councils of the allied members ; but that Avhich has been reserved by the individual members is intangible by the com- mon government or the individual members composing it. To attempt it finds no support in the principles of our constitution. It should be our constant and earnest endeavor mutually to cultivate a spirit of con- cord and harmony among the various parts of our confederacy. Experience has abundantly taught us 858 THE LIFE OF that the agitation by citizens of one part of the Union of a subject not confided to the general government, but exclusively under the guardianship of the local authorities, is productive of no other consequences than bitterness, alienation, discord, and injury to the very cause which is intended to be advanced. Of all the great interests which apper- tain to our country, that of union, cordial, confiding, fraternal union, is by far the most important, — since it is the only true and sure guaranty of all others. '' In consequence of the embarrassed state of bu- siness and the currency, some of the States may meet with difficulty in their financial concerns. However deeply we may regret anything imprudent or excess- ive in the eno-ao-ements into which States have entered for purposes of their own, it does not become us to disparage the State governments, nor to discourage them from making proper eff"orts for their own relief; on the contrary, it is our duty to encourage them, to the extent of our constitutional authority, to apply their best means, and cheerfully to make all necessary sacrifices, and submit to all necessary burdens, to fulfill their engagements and maintain their credit ; for the character and credit of the several States form part of the character and credit of the whole country. The resources of the country are abundant, the enterprise and activity of our people proverbial ; and we may well hope that wise legislation and pru- dent administration, by the respective governments, WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 859 eacli acting within his own sphere, will restore former prosperity. " Unpleasant, and even dangerous, as collisions may sometimes be between the constituted authorities or the citizens of our country, in relation to the lines which separate their respective jurisdictions, the re- sults can be of no vital injury to our institutions, if that ardent patriotism, that devoted attachment to liberty, that spirit of moderation and forbearance for which our countrymen were once distinguished, con- tinue to be cherished. If this continues to be the ruling passion of our souls, the weaker feelings of the mistaken enthusiast will be corrected, the Utopian dreams of the scheming politician dissipated, and the complicated intrigues of the demagogue rendered harmless. The secret of liberty is the sovereign balm for every injury which our institutions may receive. On the contrary, no care that can be used in the con- struction of our government, no division of powers, no distribution of checks in its several departments, will prove effectual to keep us a free people if this feehng is suffered to decay ; and decay it will without constant nurture. To the neglect of this duty, the best historians agree in attributing the ruin of all the republics with whose existence and fall their writings have made us acquainted. The same causes will ever produce the same effects ; and as long as the love of power is a dominant passion of the human bosom, and as long as the understanding of men can be warped and their affections changed, by operations 360 THE LIFE OF on their passions and prejudices, so long will the lib- erty of a people depend upon their own constant at- tention to its preservation. The danger to all well- established free governments arises from the unwil- lingness of the people to believe in its existence, or from the influence of designing men diverting their attention from the quarter whence it approaches to a source from which it can never come. This is the old trick of those who would usurp the government of their country. In the name of democracy they speak, warning the people against the influence of wealth and the danger of aristocracy. History, ancient and modern, is full of such examples. Caesar became the master of the Roman people and the Senate, under the pretense of supporting the democratic claims of the former against the aristocracy of the latter ; Cromwell, in the character of protector of the liber- ties of the people, became the dictator of England ; and Bolivar possessed himself of unlimited power with the title of his country's liberator. There is, on the contrary, no single instance on record, of an extensive and well-established republic being changed into an aristocracy. The tendency of all such gov- ernments in their decline is to monarchy ; and in the antagonist principle to liberty there is the spirit of fiiction — a spirit which assumes the character, and, in times of great excitement, imposes itself upon the people as the genuine spirit of freedom, and like the false Christs, whose coming was foretold by the Sa- vior, seeks to, and were it possible would, impose upon 'V\-1ILIAM HENRY HARRISON. 361 the true and most fiiitliful disciples of liberty. It is in periods like this that it behooves the people to be most watchful of those to whom they have intrusted power. And although there is at times much difficulty in distinguishing the false from the true spirit, a calm and dispassionate investigation will detect the coun- terfeit as well by the character of its operations as the results which are produced. The true spirit of liberty, although devoted, persevering, bold, and un- compromising in principle, that secured, is mild and tolerant and scrupulous as to the means it employs ; whilst the spirit of party, assuming to be that of lib- erty, is harsh, vindictive and intolerant, and totally reckless as to the character of the allies which it brings to the aid of its cause. When the genuine spirit of liberty animates the body of a people to a thorough examination of their affairs, it leads to the excision of every excrescence which may have fast- ened itself upon any of the departments of the gov- ernment, and restores the system to its pristine health and beauty. But the reign of an intolerant spirit of party amongst a free people seldom fails to result in a dangerous accession to the executive power introduced and established amidst unusual professions of devoticn to democracy. " The foregoing remarks relate almost exclusively to matters conncoted with our domestic concerns. It may be proper, however, that I should give some indi- cations to my fellow-citizens of my proposed course of conduct in the management of our foreign relations, 31 862 THE LIFE OF I assure tliem, therefore, that it is my intention to use every means in my power to preserve the friendly intercourse which now so happily subsists with every foreign nation ; and that although, of course, not well informed as to the state of any pending negotia- tions with any of them, I see in the personal charac- ters of the sovereigns, as well as in the mutual interest of our own and of the government with which our relations are most intimate, a pleasing guaranty that the harmony so important to the interests of their subjects, as well as our citizens, will not be interrupted by the advancement of any claim or pretension upon their part to which our honor would not permit us to yield. Long the defender of my country's rights in the field, I trust that my fellow-citizens wdll not see, in my earnest desire to preserve peace with foreign powers, any indication that their rights will ever be sacrificed, or the honor of the na- tion tarnished, by any admission on the part of their chief magistrate, unworthy of their former glory. " In our intercourse with our Aboriginal neighbors, the same liberality and justice which marked the course prescribed to me by two of my illustrious pred- ecessors, w^hen acting under their direction in the dis- charge of the duty of superintendent and commis- sioner, shall be strictly observed. I can conceive of no more sublime spectacle — none more likely to pro- pitiate an impartial and common Creator — than a rigid adherence to the principles of justice on the part of a WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 363 powerful nation in its transactions with a weaker and uncivilized people, whom circumstances have placed at its disposal. ^'Before concluding, fellow-citizens, I must say something to you on the subject of the parties at this time existing in our country. To me it appears per- fectly clear that the interest of that country requires that the violence of the spirit, by which those parties are at this time governed, must be greatly mitigated, if not entirely extinguished, or consequences will en- sue which are appalling to be thought of. If parties in a republic are necessary to secure a degree of vig- ilance sufficient to keep the republic functionaries within the bounds of law and duty, at that point their usefulness ends. Beyond that they become destruc- tive of public virtue, — the parents of a spirit antago- nist to that of liberty, and eventually its inevitable conqueror. We have examples of republics where the love of country and of liberty, at one time, were the dominant passions of the whole mass of citizens ; and yet, with the contour of the name and forms of free government, not a vestige of these qualities re- maining in the bosom of any one of its citizens. It was the beautiful remark of a distinguished English writer, that ^ in the Roman Senate, Octavius had a party, and Anthony a party, but the Commonwealth had none. ' Yet the Senate continued to meet in the Temple of liberty, to talk of the sacredness and beauty of the Commonwealth, and gaze at the statues of the elder Brutus and of the Curtii and Decii. 364 THE LIFE OP And the people assembled in the forum, not as in the days of Camillus and the Scipios, to cast their free votes for annual magistrates, or pass upon the acts of the Senate, but to receive from the hands of the leaders of the respective parties their share of the spoils, and to shout for one or the other, as those collected in Gaul, or Egypt, and the Lesser Asia, would furnish the larger dividend. The spirit of liberty had fled, and, avoiding the abodes of civilized man, had sought protection in the wilds of Scythia or Scandinavia ; and so, under the operation of the same causes and influences, it will fly from our capitol and our forums. A calamity so awful, not only to our country, but to the world, must be deprecated by every patriot ; and every tendency to a state of things likely to produce it, immediately checked. Such a tendency has ex- isted — does exist. Always the friend of my country- men, never their flatterer, it becomes my duty to say to them from this high place, to which their partiality has exalted me, that there exists in the land a spirit hostile to their best interests — hostile to liberty itself. It is a spirit contracted in its views, selfish in its ob- ject. It looks to the aggrandizement of a few, even to the destruction of the interests of the whole. The entire remedy is with the people. Something, how- ever, may be efi'ected by the means which they have placed in my hands. It is union that we want, not of a party for the sake of that party, but a union of the whole country for the sake of the whole country—* for the defense of its interests and its honor against "WILLI A.M HENRY HARRISON. 3Go foreign aggression — for the defense of those principles for which our ancestors so gloriously contended. As far as it depends upon me, it shall be accomplished. All the influence that I possess shall be exerted to prevent the formation at least of an executive party in the halls of the legislative body. I wish for the support of no member of that body to any measure of mine that does not satisfy his judgment, and his sense of duty to those from whom he holds his ap- pointment ; nor any confidence in advance from the people, but that asked for by Mr. Jefferson, to give firmness and effect to the lefral administration of their affairs. " I deem the present occasion sufficiently import- ant and solemn to justify me in presenting to my fel- low-citizens a profound reverence for the christian relicrion, and a thorough conviction that sound morals, religious liberty, and a just sense of religious respon- sibility, are essentially connected with all true and lasting happiness ; and to that good Being who has blessed us by the gifts of civil and religious freedom, who watched over and prospered the labors of our fathers, and has hitherto preserved to us institutions far exceeding in excellence those of any other people, let us unite in commending every interest of our be- loved country in all future time. " Fellow-citizens I being fully invested with that high office to which the partiality of my countrymen has called me, I now take an affectionate leave of you. You will bear with you to your homes the remem- 31* 366 THE LIFE OP brance of the pledge I have this day given to dis- charge all the high duties of my exalted station, according to the best of my ability, and I shall enter upon their performance with entire confidence In the support of a just and generous people. V/ILLTAM HENRY HARRISON. 367 CHAPTER XXIII. HAvma now gone through all the requirementa of the constitution necessary to qualify him for the discharge of the duties of President of the United States, General Harrison promptly set himself about the great work of correcting whatever abuses may have crept into the administration of the government, and of performing the pledges he had made before his election and in his inaugural address. These pledges had been made from an honest conviction that they were not only just, but demanded by the general good. Having therefore been made in good faith, he was determined to carry them out in the same, so far as it was in his power to do so. Investigations were instituted into the various branches of the public ser- vice with a view to those reforms which the country had so long demanded and he had promised to intro- duce, and many corrupt or injurious practices marked out for correction. And if he had been spared to the country to serve out the term for which the people elected him, there is no doubt that he would have redeemed all his pledges to the country. Considering it a great abuse of power to bring 368 THE LIFE OF the pationage of the government into conflict with the freedom of elections, as has been seen both by his letters before his election and his inaugural address, and that such abuse ought to be corrected wherever it might exist, circulars were addressed to all the heads of the departments on the 20th of March, de- signed to effect this object. They were directed to furnish information to all officers and agents in their several departments, that partisan interference in pop- ular elections, whether ©f State officers or officers of the general government, and that for whomsoever or against whomsoever it might be exercised, or the pay- ment of any contribution or assessment on salaries, or official compensation for party or election purposes, would be regarded by him as cause of removal. It was not intended that any officer should be restrained in the free and proper expression and maintenance of his opinions respecting public men, or public measures, or in the exercise, to the fullest degree, of the constitutional right of suffrage ; but persons employed under the government, and paid for their services out of the public treasury, were not ex- pected to take an active or officious part in attempts to influence the minds or votes of others, such con- duct being deemed inconsistent w4th the spirit of the constitution and the duties of public agents acting under it. He expressed his determination, that while the exercise of the elective franchise by the people shall be free from undue influence of official stations and authority, so far as depended upon him, opinion f WILLIAM HENRT HARRISON. 369 should also be free among the officers and agents of the government. He wished it farther announced and understood, that from all collecting and disburs- ing officers promptitude in rendering accounts, and entire punctuality in paying balances, would be rigor- ously exacted. With a view of arresting what was feared to be a needless and extravagant expenditure of money upon the public works in the city of Washington, he ap- pointed a board of commissioners or examination to investigate the subject rigidly. They were required to report upon the number of persons employed upon those works, exclusive of laborers, what was their re- spective duty, what compensation was paid them, and whether there was any just ground of complaint against any of these in regard to their diligence or skill, or in regard to their treatment of laborers. They were especially instructed to inquire into no man's political opinions, but to report if any one hav- ing the power of appointing and removing had abused that power, or in any way violated his duty for party or election purposes. These evidences of the honesty and sincerity of his professions were received with lively demonstra- tions of satisfaction by the public at large, however little encouj-aging they may have been to the hopes and aspirations of the mere politician. They gave assurance that, under his administration, that system of prescription which had excluded every man from office, however deserving, competent or needy, whose 370 THE LT'FE OP political principles did not accord with the ruling ex- ecutive, was to be repudiated, and all the benefits of the government to be shared by the people equally. This he believed to be the theory of our government, and so far as was consistent with the obligations he admitted himself to be under to the party which had placed him in power, he determined it should be its practice. As the case always had been, and as it is always desirable it should be, under our democratic form of government, upon so important an occasion as the change of rulers, he was overwhelmed with visits of all classes, actuated either by motives of pure friend- ship or personal interest ; and no one was ever denied an interview. Unlike the members of his cabinet, and indeed the members of most American cabinets, he could at all times be approached, and when ap- proached, he assumed none of the airs which men, oc- cupying minor positions, too frequently think it nec- essary to put on for the purpose of inspiring that reverence and respect which their characters would never command. He understood that real greatness could not be aifected by a familiar and free intercourse with the people, and that it would never fail to re- strain the impertinent and ill-bred. An assumption of superiority, and that supercilious bearing so com- mon to naturally vulgar minds, however high in ofiice, found no countenance in his practice, nor no sympathy in his disposition. This practice of General Harrison, of receiving visits from all who sought access to him, WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 371 and tlie multiplicity of public duties necessarily attend- ant on his first entrance into office, produced not only great fatigue of body, but anxiety of mind. In ad- dition to this, he was overtaken by a violent shower in one of his usual morning walks, and his clothes became thoroughly wet. This was followed by a slight cold ; but he paid little attention to it, although on the 25th of March he was really ill, and continued to receive visits from all, as when in health, refusing to postpone any of his official duties. Even when thus indisposed, and pressed with cares too great for a man in sound health to endure, he neglected no demand upon his friendship and benevolence. Accidentally meeting an old acquaintance in distress, he took him to the President's house, gave him a breakfast, and after conversing with him a while upon events long since passed, he wrote to the collector of New York the following [his last) letter, dated March 26, 1841, for the purpose, as will be seen, of aiding him in his adversity : "■ The bearer hereof, Mr. Thomas Tucker, a vet- eran seaman, came with me from Carthagenia, as the mate of the brig Montidia, in the year 1829. In an association of several weeks, I formed a high opinion of his character; so much so, that (expressing a de- sire to leave the sea) I invited him to come to North Bend, and spend the remainder of his days with me. ^' Subsequent misfortunes prevented his doing so, as he was desirous to bring some money with him to commence farming operations. His bad fortune still 872 THE LIFE OP continues, having been several times shipwrecked within a few years. He says that himself and fam- ily are now in such a situation that the humblest em- ployment would be acceptable to him. I write this to recommend him to your favorable notice. I am per- suaded that no one possesses, in a higher degree, the vir- tues of fidelity, honesty and indefatigable industry, and I might add, indomitable bravery, if that was a quality necessary for the kind of employment he seeks." On the 27th of March he was seized with a chill, and other symptoms of fever. The next day, pneu- monia, with congestion of the liver, and derangement of the stomach and bowels, was ascertained to exist. In spite of all the efforts and skill of his physicians to arrest the disease, it continued to increase in vio- lence until the 3rd of April, at three o'clock in the afternoon. A profuse diarrhea then came on, un- der Avhich he rapidly sank ; and at thirty minutes past twelve o'clock, on the morning of April 4th, 1841, he breathed his last. His last words were, as heard by Dr. Worthington, one of his consulting physicians : Sir, I wish you to understand the true principles of the government. I wish them carried out. I ask nothing more." Thus died General William Henry Harrison, the ninth President of the United States, at the age of sixty-eight years and twenty-six days, after having filled the office of President but one single short month. This great national calamity fell upon the public mind with startling suddenness. Almost before the WILLIAM HENRY EARRI.tOX. 873 sound of the cannon -vNliich announced to tlie people that he had been invested with the office of Pres- ident had died away, and before the news had spread scarcely beyond the District of Columbia, the sad intelhgence was received that he had ceased to exist. The affecting event, feared, perhaps, by those who best knew General Harrison's enfeebled constitution, was at once officially made public in the following document, signed by the Secretary of State, and all the other heads of departments : "An All-wise Providence having suddenly re- moved from this life William Henry Harrison, late President of the United States, we have thought it our duty, in the recess of Congress, and in the ab- sence of the Vice-President from the seat of govern- ment, to make this afflicting bereavement known to the country, by this declaration under our hands. He died at the President's House, in this city, this' 4th day of April, Anno Domini 1841, at thirty min- utes before one o'clock in the morning. " The people of the United States, overwhelmed like ourselves, by an event so unexpected and so mel- ancholy, will derive consolation from knowing that his death was calm and resigned as his life had been patriotic, useful and distinguished; and that the last utterance from his lips expressed a fervent desire for the perpetuity of the constitution and the preservation of its true pi;inciples. In death, as in life, the hap- piness of his countiy was uppermost in his thoughts." Wednesday, April Tth, was selected for perform- 32 374 THE LIFE OF ing the funeral solemnities of the late President. The ceremony was as solemn as it was imposing. Every countenance was impressed with the most profound melancholy. The military portion of the procession was volunteer companies from Washington city, George- town, Baltimore, Philadelphia and various other cities, together with several companies of marines and United States artillerists, all accompanied by the mounted and dismounted officers of the army, navy, militia and volunteers. The civic part of it consisted of the municipal officers of the District of Columbia, the clergy, the judiciary and executive officers of the government, including the President of the United States and all the heads of bureaus. The procession occupied two miles in length. The religious ceremo- nies at the grave were performed by the Reverend Mr. Healey, of the Episcopal church.* As the news of General Harrison's death spread throughout the Union, the profound respect which was entertained for his character, and the gratitude they felt for his important public services, begun to be ex- hibited in their full force. Every demonstration in the power of the people to show was bestowed upon his memory. All party animosity was at once for- gotten, and the whole people united in the perform- ance of ceremonies appropriate to the occasion. In almost every city and town in the Union funeral ser- mons were delivered, processions got up and addresses delivered; and the most profound grief was every- *See Appendix (D). WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 875 where, and by all parties and sects, evinced. The nation for a time was almost literally clothed in mourning, and there was a general rivalry amongst tKose so lately his warm political opponents who should best show how little their political differences blinded them to his real merits and many noble virtues. On the 31st of May following, Congress assem- bled in extra session, in pursuance of a proclamation issued by General Harrison ; and on the 4th of June, passed the following resolutions in relation to the national loss : " The melancholy event of the death of William Henry Harrison, late President of the United States, having occurred during the recess of Congress, and the two houses sharing in the general grief, and de- siring to manifest their sensibilities upon the occasion of that public bereavement, therefore ; ^' Hesolved, hy the Senate and House of Rep'e- sentatives of the United States of America in Con- gress assembled^ That the chairs of the President of the Senate and Speaker of the House of Representa- tives be shrouded in black during the residue of the session ; and that the President pro tempore of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the members and officers of both Houses, wear the usual badge of mourning for thirty days. " Resolved, That the President of the United States be requested to transmit a copy of these reso- lutions to Mrs. Harrison, and to assure her of the profound respect of the two Houses of Congress for 376 THE LIFE OF her person and character, and of their sincere condo- lence with the late dispensation of Providence." But Congress went still further than this. On the 9th of June, John Quincy Adams reported a bill in th© House of Representatives in favor of a grant of money to the widow of General Harrison. This had been suggested to Congress by Mr. Tyler, in his mes- sage at the opening of the session. He said, " that the preparations necessary for his removal to the seat of government, in view of a residence of four years, must have devolved upon the late President heavy expenditures, which, if permitted to burthen the lim- ited resources of his private fortune, might tend to the serious embarrassment of his surviving family ; and it was therefore respectfully submitted to Congress, whether the ordinary principles of justice would not dictate the propriety of legislative interposition." The measure was also urged upon Congress from various quarters as an act of simple justice to the family of Harrison. He had occupied positions in which he might have amassed an immense fortune, if he had chosen to avail himself of the advantagfes placed in his hands. It could have been done without any real injustice to government, and with but a very slight departure from the principles of rectitude. He chose not to enrich himself by any doubtful means. Poverty in his estimation was far preferable to riches thus acquired. These and other considerations, oper- ating with the sympathy felt for the affliction of the widow of Harrison, an appropriation of $25,000 was WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 377 finally made to Mrs. Harrison. The bill passed tlie House, on the 18th of June, by a vote of 122 to 66, and the Senate by a vote of 28 to 16. General Harrison's personal appearance was com- manding, and his manners prepossessing. He was about six feet high, of rather slender form, straight, and of a firm, elastic gait, even at the time of his election to the presidency, though then closely bord- ering on seventy. He had a keen, penetrating eye, denoting quickness of apprehension, promptness and energy. His forehead was high, broad and prom- inent, his lips rather thin and compressed, and his whole features strongly marked. His countenance was expressive of the genuine kindness and philan- thropy which his whole life had practically exempli- fied. There was that in his personal appearance which indicated him as a man of not an ordinary character. The inherent honesty and integrity of his nature showed forth in his countenance. The qualities which General Harrison displayed as a military chieftain are now universally admitted to be of the very highest order. Indeed few were ever found, even during the violent political" contest which resulted in his elevation to the presidency, hardy enough, and so reckless of his own reputation, as to deny him the merit of a great general. As com- mander-in-chief of the north-western army, he was intrusted with almost unlimited discretionary poAvers, requiring the exercise of military skill, science and ability, such as few commanders of American armies 32* 878 THE LIFE OP have ever exhibited. The history of the last war with England, and especially the misfortunes that befell so many of our generals at the North and North-west, as well as at the South, proves this to be true. While most of the generals in command of our armies in that war, no matter how eminent and how successful gen- erally they may have been, sometimes meet with reverses, General Harrison never lost a battle, and never committed an error in his military movements. This was the peculiar glory of General Harrison as a commander. This uniform success was the result of ''an almost intuitive sagacity, great power of combina- tion, with prudence, caution, promptness and energy, combined with perfect self-reliance and self-control." These qualities are necessary to form the great, or what is equivalent, the successful general. It has been claimed that in many points the mili- tary career of Harrison bears a striking analogy to that of Washington, — that the same extent of discre- tionary powers and responsibilities were assigned to both, that both had the same difficulty in procuring supplies of troops and provisions, and, above all, that they never hazarded the grand result of a campaign, by any minor enterprise, however tempting. Both exercised the extensive powers with which they were invested without any invasion of the laws, or the rights of citizens, and both retired to the peaceful pursuits of agriculture when the objects which had called them to the field had been eflected. This is high praise to General Harrison, as the parallel has. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 379 at least, sooe ground to rest upon, though nothing must be admitted to stand almost without parallel. The prominent feature of General Harrison's character was the most inflexible and rigid integrity, his devoted patriotism, his keen sense of honor, and his great love of justice. These noble virtues marked his whole life from youth to old age, in the field as well as in the council. No consideration of personal advantage, of whatever character, could induce him to swerve a hair's breadth from them. During tw^enty years of public employment he had numerous oppor- tunities of enriching himself; but he sternly rejected them all, and retired from the service of his coun- try poorer than he entered it. Of the three million dollars that passed through his hands as a government agent, not a single dollar ever adhered to them. So nice were his feelings upon these points that he even refused to make purchases of land, lest it might by possibility be charged that he had transcended his offi- cial authority. Equally sensitive w^ere his feelings of honor, with the single exception of private secretary, he invariably refused to appoint any of his relatives to office. General Harrison's mind w^as of a good order. He possessed excellent natural powers of mind, and they were thoroughly disciplined and well-directed. Few men possessed a sounder or better judgment, or had more sagacity and penetration. His scholarly attainments were far above mediocrity. In general history he was thoroughly versed, and his notes upon 380 THE LIFE OP that important branch of education possess many val- uable suggestions. With the public characters and leading: events of both ancient and modern times he was intimately familiar. As a writer he ranks among the first public men of the country ; and many of his compositions exhibit felicity of expression, strength of thought, and sound, practical common sense. As a speaker he was easy, graceful and fluent, often rising to real eloquence. He might have excelled as an ora- tor had he failed as a soldier, and the renown he won in the field might have been eclipsed by that he pos- sessed in the Senate, had his profession led him in that direction. No man possessed a kinder or more benevolent heart. His feelings were ever alive to the sufferings or misfortunes of those about him, and his hand was ever open to relieve the necessities of the needy. His personal address and manners were well suited to win the favor of the people, as he was open, frank, and courteous in his intercourse with all. There was nothing of the aristocrat in his character ; on the con- trary, he was purely democratic in his tastes as well as in his inclinations. While President of the nation he was as easy of approach, and as free in his inter- course with the people, as when only the plain farmer of North Bend. Courtesy and a graceful condescen- sion, united with ease and dignity of manners, re- lieved every one of embarrassment while in his pres- ence. His moral character was above reproach ; though WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 08 1 perhaps not a professing christian, he entertained the highest and most profound regard for the christian re- ligion. This he did not fear to declare as well in his in- augural address as upon all suitable occasions during the brief period he occupied the presidential chair. Such, imperfectly drawn, is the character, — and such, imperfectly recorded, are the great deeds and import- ant public services, — of William Henry Harrison. There is much that cannot fail to be admired in the one, imperfectly as it has been sketched, and much to excite the gratitude of the people in the other, imper- fectly as they have been recorded. General Harrison had his imperfections, like all other men, but that his virtues greatly outweighed them must be the verdict of impartial history. His errors, whatever they were, were never permitted to affect the public wel- fare, while his virtues and public services have con- tributed something, at least, to the happiness of the people, and much to the honor of the nation. A single circumstance will illustrate his hin;h sense of justice and his true nobleness of soul far better than any studied panegyric could do : A few years ago it was ascertained that a large tract of land near Cincinnati, which had been sold some time before for a mere trifle, under an execution against the original proprietors, could not be held by the title derived from the purchasers on account of some irregularity in the proceedings. The legal title was in General Harrison and another gentleman, who were the heirs at law. This tract of land was exceedingly valuable, 882 THE LIFE OP and would have constituted a princely estate for both these heirs, had they chosen to insist on their legal rights ; or they might have compromised with the purchaser. But General Harrison refused to do either the one or the other. He had never yet suf- fered his own interests to blind him to other's rights, and on being informed of the situation of the property, he and his co-heir immediately granted deeds in fee simple to the purchaser, without claiming any consid- eration except the trifling difference between the ac- tual value of the land when sold and the amount paid at the sheriff's sale. There were in this tract, too, twelve acres of General Harrison's private property improperly included in the sale, which he might have retained both legally and equitably. But such was his nice sense of honor and scrupulous regard for the rights of others, that he suffered even his own rights to be invaded rather than to vindicate them at the ex- pense of others. Such instances of magnanimity and chivalrous sense of honesty are bright spots in the history of humanity, the more conspicuous, perhaps, from being so seldom seen, but equally the objects of our admiration, however often and whenever seen. i [Aj APPENDIX. STATISTICS OF THE SIX CENSUS. The following facts, compiled from the returns in the census office, will show the extent, population, resources, manufactors, and, above all, the growth of our country since Greneral Harrison entered upon public life. They will also be of great and permanent interest as a matter of reference. The seventh enumeration of the inhabitants of the the United States exhibits results which every citizen of country may contemplate with gratification and pride. Since the census of 1840 there have been added to the territory of the Republic, by annexation, conquest, and purchase, 635,988 square miles ; and our title to regions covering 341,463 square miles, which before properly be- longed to us, but was claimed, and partially occupied, by a foreign power, has been established by negotiation, and it has been broucjht within our acknowledged boundaries. By such means the area of the United States has been extended, during the past ten years, from 2,055,163 to 3,221,595 square miles, without including the great lakes which lie upon our northern border, or the bays which indentate our Atlantic and Pacific shores, all which has come within the scope of the seventh census. 384 APPENDIX. [Aj In the endeavor to ascertain the progress of our popula- tion since 1840, it will be proper to deduct from the aggre- gate number of inhabitants shown b}^ the present census the population of Texas in 1840, and the number embraced within the limits of California and the new territories at the time of their acquisition. From the best information which has come to hand it is believed that Texas contained, in 1840, 75,000 inhabitants; and that when California, New Mexico, and Oregon came into our possession, in 1846, they had a population of 97,000. It thus appears that we have received, by additions of Territory since 1840, an accession of 172,000 to the number of our people. The increase which has taken place in those extended regionh since they came under the authority of our govern- ment should obviously be received as a part of the develop- ment and progress of our population ; nor is it necessary to complicate the comparison by taking into account the pro- bable natural increase of this acquired population, because we have not the means of determining the rate of its ad- vancement, nor the law which governed its progress while yet beyond the influence of our political system. The year 1840, rather than the date of our enumeration of Texas, has been taken for estimating her population in connection with that of the Union, because it may be safely assumed that, whatever the increase during the five mtervening years may have been, it was mainly, if not altogether, derived from the United States. Owing to delays and difficulties mentioned in completing the work, which no action on the part of this office could obviate, some of the returns from California have not jei been received. [a] appendix. 885 Assumiug tlie population of California to be 165,000 (which we do partly by estimate), and omitting that of Utah, estimated at 15,000, the total number of inhabitants in the United States was, on the 1st of June, 1850, 23,- 246,301. The absolute increase from the 1st of June, 1810, has been 6,176,848; and the actual increase per cent, is 36.18. But it has been shown that the probable amount of popu- lation acquired by additions of territory should be deducted in making a comparison between the results of the present and the last census. These deductions reduce the total population of the country, as a basis of comparison, to 23,074,301, and the increase to 6,004,848. The relative increase, after this allowance, is found to be 35.17 per cent. The aggregate number of whites in 1850 was 19,- 619,366, exhibiting a gain upon the number of the same class in 1840 of 5,423,371, and a relative increase of 38.20 per cent. But excluding the 153,000 free population sup- posed to be acquired by the addition of territory since 1840, the gain is 5,270,371, and the increased per cent. 37.14. The number of slaves, by the present census, is 8,198,298, which shows an increase of 711,085, equal to 28.58 per cent. If we deduct 19,000 for the probable slave population in Texas in 1840, the result of the com- parison will be slightly different. The absolute increase will be 692,085, and the rate per cent. 27.83. The number of free colored in 1850 was 428,637, in 1840, 386,245. The increase of this class has been 42,- 892, or 10.95 per cent. From 1830 to 1840 the increase of the whole population was at the rate of 32.67 per cent. At the same rate of 386 APPENDIX. [a] advancement the absolute gain for the ten years last past would have been 5,578,333, or 426,515 less than it baa been, without including the increase consequent upon addi- tions of territory. The aggregate increase of population from all sources shows a relative advance greater than that of any other decimal term, except that from the second to the third census, during which time the country received an accession of inhabitants, by the purchase of Louisiana, considerably greater than one per cent, of the whole number. Rejecting from the census of 1810 1.45 per cent, for the population of Louisiana, and from the census of 1850 one per cent, for that of Texas, California, &c., the result is in favor of the last ten years by about one-fourteeuth of one per cent. ; the gain from 1800 to 1810 being 35.05 per cent., and from 1840 to 1850 35.12 per cent. But without going behind the sum of the returns, it appears that the increase from the second to the third census was thirty-two-hun- dredths of one per cent, greater than from the sixth to the seventh. The relative progress of the several races and classes of the population is shown in the following tabular statement : Increase jper cent, for each class of Lihabitants in the United States for sixty years. 1790 1800 1810 1820 1830 1810 to to to to to to 1800. 1810. 1820. 1830. 1840. 1850. Whites 35.68 36.18 84.30 34.52 34.72 38.20 Free colored 82.28 72.00 27.75 34.85 20.88 10.95 Slaves 27.96 33.40 29.57 30.75 23.81 28.58 Total colored 32.23 37.58 29.33 31.31 23.40 20.16 Total population 35.02 36.50 33.35 33.92 32.07 3(L.1S [a] appendix. 387 The census had been taken previously to 1830 on the 1st day of August; the enumeration began on that year on the 1st of June, two months earlier, so that the interval between the fourth and fifth census was two months less than ten years; which time allowed for would bring the total increase up to the rate of 34.36 per cent. The tables given below show the increase from 1790 to 1850, without reference to intervening periods. Absolute increase Incr. per 1790. 1850. in 60 years. ct. in 60 years. No. of whites 3,172,464 19,630,019 16,457,555 52,797 Free colored 59,466 428,637 369,171 61,744 Slaves 697,897 3,184,262 2,486,365 35,013 Tot. free col. & si. 757,363 3,612,899 2,855,536 377 Total population... 3,929,827 23,246,301 19,316,417 491,152 Sixty years since the proportion between the whites and blacks, bond and free, was 4.2 to 1. In 1850 it was 5.26 to 1 ; and the ratio in favor of the former race is in- creasing. Had the blacks increased as fast as the whites during these sixty years the number on the first of June would have been 4,657,239; so that, in comparison with the whites, they have lost in this period 1,350,340. This disparity is much more than accounted for by European emigration to the United States. Dr. Chickering, in an essay on emigration, published in Boston in 1848, distinguished for great elaborateness of research, estimates the gain of the white population from this source at 3,922,152. No reliable record was kept of the emigrants into the United States until 1820, when, by the laws of March, 1819, the collectors were required to make quarterly' returns of foreign passengers arriving in their districts. For the first ten years the returns under 388 APPENDIX. [a] the laws afford materials for only an approximation to a true .state of the facts involved in this inquiry. Dr. Chickering assumes, as a result of his investigations, that of the 6,431,088 inhabitants of the United States in 1820, 1,430,906 were foreigners arrived subsequent to 1790, or the descendants of such. According to Dr. Sey- bert, an earlier writer upon statistics, the number of foreign passengers from 1790 to 1810 was, as nearly as could be ascertained, 120,000; and from the estimates of Dr. Sey- bert, and other evidence, Honorable Geo. Tucker, author of a valuable work on the census of 1840, supposed the num- ber from 1810 to 1820 to have been 114,000. These esti- mates make, for the thirty years preceding 1820, 284,000. If we reckon the census of emigrants at the average rate of the whole body of white population during these three decades, they and their descendants in 1820 would amount to about 360,000. From 1820 to 1830 there arrived, according to the returns of the custom-houses, 135,986 foreign passengers; and from 1830 to 1840, 579,370 ; making, for the twenty years, 715,356. During this period a large number of emigrants from England, Scotland, and Ireland, came into the United States through Canada. Dr. Chickering estimates the number of such from 1820 to 1830 at 67,993, and from 1830 to 1840 at 199,130; for the twenty years together, 267,123. During the same time a considerable number are supposed to have landed at New York with the purpose of pursuing their route to Caoad-x; but it is probable that the number of these was biA~^anced by omissions in the official returns. [a] appendix. 889 Witliout reference to the natural increase, then the accession to our population from foreign sources, from 1820 to 1840, was 982,479 persons. From 1840 to 1850 the arrivals of foreign passengers in the ports of the United States have been as follows : 1840, 1841 83,504 1842 101,107 1843 75,159 1844 74,G07 1845 102,415 1846 202,157* 1847 234,756 1848 226,524 1849 269,610 1850 173,011f Total 1,552,830 As the heaviest portion of this great influx of emigra- tion took place in the latter part of the decade, it will * This return includes fifteen months, to wit, from July 1, 1845, to September 30, 1846. f The report from the State Department for this year gives 315,333 as the total number of passengers arriving in the United States ; but of these 30,023 were citizens of the Atlantic States proceeding to California by sea, and 5,320 natives of the country returning from visits abroad. A deduction of 106,879 is made from the balance for that portion of the year from June 1 to Sep- tember 30. Within the last ten years there has probably been very little migration of foreigners into the United States over the Canadian frontier, — the disposition to take the route by Quebec having yielded to the increased facilities for direct passenger trans- portation to the cities of the Union ; what there has been may perhaps be considered as equaled by the number of foreigners passing into Canada, often landing at New York, many having been drawn thither by the opportunity of employment afforded by the public works of the province. 890 APPENDIX. [a] probably be fair to estimate the natural increase during the terra at 12 per cent., being about one-third of that of the white population of the country at its commencement. This will swell the aggregate to 1,739,192. Deducting this accession to the population from the Whole amount of the increase of white inhabitants before given, that increase is shown to be 3,684,519, and the rate per cent, is reduced to 25.95. The density of population is a branch of the subject which naturally first attracts the attention of the inquirer. The following table has been prepared from the most authen- tic data accessible to this office. Table of the Area, and the number of Inhabitants to the square mihf of each State and Territory of the Union. Area in Population No. ofinhab. States. square mile. in 1850. to sq. mile. Maine 30,000 583,188 19.44 New Hampshire 9,280 317,964 34.26 Vermont 10,212 313,611 30.07 Massachusetts 7,800 994,499 126.15 Rhode Island 1,360 147,544-^108.04 Connecticut 4,674 370,791 79.33 New York 46,000 3,097,394 67.06 New Jersey 8,320 489,555 60.04 Pennsylvania 46,000 2,311,785 60.25 Delaware 2,120 91,535 43.04 Maryland 9,356 583,035 62.31 Virginia 61,552 1,421,661 23.17 North Carolina 45,000 868,903 19.30 South Carolina 24,500 668,507 27.28 Georgia 58,000 905,999 15.68 Alabama 50,722 771,671 15.21 Mississippi 47,156 606,555 12.86 Louisiana 46,431 511,974 11.02 Texas 237,321 212,592 .89 Florida 59,268 87,401 1.47 Kentucky 37,680 982,405 26.07 Tennessee 45,600 1,002,625 21.98 Missouri 67,380 682,013 10.12 W APPENDIX. 391 {^Continued from last page.) Area in States. square mile. Arkansas 62,198 Ohio 39,964 Indiana 33,809 Illinois 55,405 Michigan 56,243 Iowa 60,914 Wisconsin 63,924 California 188,981 Minnesota 83,000 Oregon 341,463 New Mexico 210,744 Utah 177,923 Nebraska 136,700 Indian 187,171 North-West 687,564 District Columbia 60 Population iu 185U, 209,639 1,980,408 988,^,6 851,470 397,654 192,214 305,191 No. of inhab. to .sq. mile. 4.01 49.55 29.23 15.36 7.07 8.77 6.65 6,077 13,293 61,505 .07 .03 .28 51,687 861,45 23,080,792 Total 3,221,595 From tlie location, climate, productions, and tlie habits and pursuits of their inhabitants, the States of the Union may be properly arranged into the following groups : Area in No. of inhab- States. square mile. Population. to sq. mile. New England States 63,226 2,727,597 43.07 Middle States, including Ma- ryland, Delaware, and Ohio 151,760 8,653,713 67.02 Coast planting States, includ- ing South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Missis- sippi, and Louisiana 296,077 3,537,089 12.36 Central Slave States, Vir- ginia, N. Carolina, Ten- nessee, Kentucky, Missoui"i, and Arkansas 308,210 5,168,000 16.75 North-Western States, India- na, Micliigan, Illinois, Wis- consin, and Iowa 250,000 2,735,000 10.92 Texas 237,000 212,000 89 California 189,000 165,000 87 392 APPENDIX. [A^ There are points of agreement in the general character- istics of the States combined in the above groups which warrant the mode of arrangement adopted. Maryland is classed as heretofore with the Middle States, because ita leading interests appear to connect it rather with the com- mercial and manufacturing section to which it is here assigned, than with the purely agricultural States. Ohio is placed in the same connection for nearly similar reasons. There seems to be a marked propriety for setting off the new agricultural States of the North-West by themselves, as a preliminary to the comparison of their progress with other portions of the Union. The occupations which give employment to the people of the central range of States south of the line of the Potomac, distinguish them to some extent from that division to which we have given the ap- pellation of coast planting States. In the latter cotton, sugar, and rice are the great staples, the cultivation of which is so absorbing as to stamp its impress on the char- acter of the people. The industry of the central States is more diversified, the surface of the country is more broken, the modes of cultivation are different, and the minuter divisions of labor create more numerous and less accordant interests. So far as Texas is settled, its population closely assimilates with that of the other coast planting States, but it would obviously convey no well-founded idea of the density of population in that section to distribute their people over the most uninhabited region of Texas. For the same reason, and the additional one of the isolation of her position, California is considered distinct from other States. Taking the thirty-one States together, their area ia [a] appendix. 393 1,485,870 square miles, and the average inimber of thQit inhabitants is 15.48 to the square mile. The total area fif the United States is 3,220,000 square mUes, and the average density of population is 7.219 to the square mile. The areas assigned to those States and Territories in which public lands are situated are doubtless correct, being taken from the records of the Land Ofl&ce ; but as to those attributed to the older States, the same means of verifying their accuracy, or the want of it, do not exist. But care has been taken to consult the best local authorities for ascertaining the extent of surface in these States ', and as the figures adopted are found to agree with, or differ but slightly from, those assumed to be correct at the General Land Office, it is probable they do not vary essentially from the exact truth. The area of some of the States, as Maryland and Vir- ginia, are stated considerably below the commonly assumed extent of the territory, which may be accounted for on the supposition that the portions of the surface within their exterior limits, covered by large bodies of water, have been subtracted from the aggregate amount. This is known to be the case in regard to Maryland, the superficial extent of which, within the outlines of its boundaries, is 13,959 square mJles, and is deemed probable with reference to Virginia, from the fact that many geographers have giveu its total area as high as 66,000 square miles. It appears from the returns that during the year ending on the 1st of June, 1850, there escaped from their owners 1,011 slaves, and that during the same period 1,467 were manumitted. The number of both classes will appear in the foUowino; table : 394 APPENDIX. [a] Manumitted and Fugitive Slaves in 1850. Manu. Fug. Delaware 277 26 Maryland 493 297 Virginia 218 83 Kentucky 152 96 Tennessee ' 45 70 North Carolina 2 64 South Carolina 2 16 Georgia 19 89 Florida 22 18 Alabama 16 29 Mississippi 6 41 Louisiana 159 90 Texas 5 29 Arkansas 1 21 Missouri .... 50 60 Total 1,467 1,011 In connection with this statement, and as affectinsf the natural increase of the free colored population of the United States, it may be proper to remark that, during the year to which the census applies, the Colonization Society sent 562 colored emigrants to Liberia. In our calculations respecting the increase of the free colored population, we have not considered that ckss of persons, independent of these two causes, which respectively swell and diminish their number. The statistics of mortality for the census year represent the number of deaths occurring within the year at 320.194, the ratio being as 1 to 72.6 of the living population, or as 10 to each 726 of the population. The rate of mortality in this statement seems so much less than that of any portion of Europe, that it must at present be received with some degree of allowance. Should a more critical examination, which time will [a] appendix. 395 enable us to exercise, prove the returns of the number of deaths too small, such a result will not affect their value for the purposes of comparison of one portion of the country with another, or cause with effect. The tables will possess an interest second to none others in the world; and the many valuable truths which they will suggest will be found of great practical advantage. Medical men accord to the Census Bureau no small meed of credit, for the wisdom manifested in an arrange- ment which will throw more light on the history of disease in the United States, and present in connection more inter- esting facts connected therewith, than the united efforts of all scientific men have heretofore acccomplished. AGRICULTDRE. The great amount of labor requisite to the extraction of the returns of agriculture will admit at this time of pre- senting but limited accounts, though perhaps, to some ex- tent, of the most separate interests. The returns of the wheat crop for many of the Western States will not at all indicate the average crop of those States. This is especially the case with Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, from which, especially the former, the Assistant Marshals returned a "short crop'' to the extent of fifty per cent, throughout the whole State. The shortness of the wheat crop in Ohio in 1849 is veri- fied by returns made during the subserjuent season by authority of the legislature. 396 APPENDIX. [aJ MANUFACTURES. The period which has elapsed since the receipt of the returns has been so short as to enable the office to make but a general report of the facts relating to a few of the most important manufactures. If, in some instances, the amount of capital invested iu any branch of manufacture should seem too small, it must be borne in mind that, where the product is of several kinds, the capital invested, not being divisible, is connected with the product of greatest consequence. This, to some extent, reduces the capital invested in the manufacture of bar iron in such establishments where some other article of wrought iron predominates. — sheet iron, for example. The aggregate, however, of the capital invested in the various branches of wrought iron will, it is confidently be- lieved, be found correct. The entire capital invested in the various manufactures in the United States, on the 1st of June, 1850, not to include any estab- lishment producing less than the annual value of $500, amounted to, in round numbers $580,000,000 Value of raw material 550,000,000 Amount paid for labor 240,000,000 Value of manufactured articles 1,020,300,000 Number of persons employed 1,050,000 The capital invested in the manufacture of cotton... $74,501,031 Value of raw material 84,835,056 Amount paid for labor 16,286,804 Value of manufactured articles 61,869,184 Number of hands employed 39,252 The capital invested in the manufacture of woolen goods amounted to $28,118,650 Value of raAv material 25,755,98 Amount paid for labor 8,899,28 Value of product 43,207,55 Number of hands employed 92,286 [a] appendix. 397 The capital invested in the manufacture of pig iron amounted to $17,846,425 Value of raw material 7,005,289 Amount paid for labor 5,006,028 Value of product 12,748,777 Number of hands employed 20,448 In making these estimates the Assistant Marshals did not include any return of works which had not produced metal within the year, or those which had not commenced operations. The same is applicable to all manufactures enumerated. The capital invested in the manufacture of castings amounted to $17,416,361 Value of raw material 10,341), ;>55 Amount paid for labor 7,078,920 Value of product 25,108,155 Isuraber of hands employed 23,589 The capital invested in the manufacture of wrought iron amounted to $13,995,220 Value of raw material 9,518,109 Amount paid for labor 4,196.628 Value of product 16,387,074 Number of hands employed 13,057 The statistics of the newspaper press form an interest- in o- feature in the returns of the seventh census. It appears that the whole number of newspapers and periodi- cals in the United States, on the 1st of June, 1850, amounted to 2,800. Of these 2,494 were fully returned, 234 had all the facts excepting circulation given, and 72 are estimated for California, the territories, and for those that may have been omitted by the Assistant Marshals. From calculations made on the statistics returned, and estimated circulations where they have been omitted, it appears that the aggregate circulation of those 2,800 papers 34 398 APPENDIX. [a] and periodicals is about 5,000,000, and that the entire number of copies printed annually in the United States amounts to 422,600,000. The following table will show the number of daily, weekly, monthly, and other issues, with the aggregate circulation of each class. No. of copies No. Circulation. printed annually. Dailies 350 750,000 235,000,000 Tri-weeklies 150 75,000 11,700,000 Semi-weeklies 125 80,000 8,3-20,000 Weeklies 2,000 2,875,000 149,500,000 Semi-monthlies 50 300,000 9,300,000 Monthlies 100 900,000 10,800,000 Quarterlies 25 20,000 80,000 Total 2,800 6,000,000 422,600,000 424 papers are issued in the New England States, 876 in the Middle States, 716 in the Southern States, and 784 in the AVestern States. The average circulation of papers in the United States is 1,785. There is one publication for every 7,161 free inhabit- ants in the United States and Territories. The work, of course, has not been submitted to the public for its judgment; but where opinions have been at all expressed, by those deemed good authority, on the pro- priety of our classification, they have been invariably favor- able. Some such have found their way into public docu- ments. In the 32d Annual Report of the New York Institution for the Deaf and Dumb, made to the legislature of that State, the following language occurs with respect to our designed classification of such portion of the work as interested particularly the Directors of the Institution : [a] appendix. 399 " Such a list will furnish valuable materials, never possessed to any extent before, for solving many highly interesting statisti- cal questions, and its publication is looked for with much interest. We shall endeavor in our next Annual Report to set forth the results of a careful analysis of the census respecting the Deaf and Dumb." So far as the judgment of the public press is concerned, its expression has been much more favorable than could be wished, with its imperfect knowledge of the plan, as expec- tations may thereby be raised which the results will not justify. None of the information, as imparted in the volume of statistics, has been promulgated, it being con- sidered indelicate to make known to the world information due first to the Head of the Department, and through him to Congress ; and it would not be decorous to forestal the dispassionate judgment of either. It has seemed to me that a work, the expense of which is shared by the whole community, should be arranged, as far as possible, for general utility, and not a compilation of mere columns of figures, interesting only to the man of science, for legislative purposes, or for reference, but should be so adapted that, while it will furnish practical information to the statesman and philosopher, and useful data for the legislator, it will contain also matters interest- ing to every portion of the community, furnished somewhat in advance of those deductions from analytical investiga- tions made years after its publication. To this end, if sup- ported by the favorable opinion of Congress, it will be made to evolve all the instruction which zealous efi"orts, though limited ability, are capable of eliciting from the facts, within such period of time as it must be accomplished without retarding its publication. J. K. Roche. Census Office, Dec 3, 5 J o'clock, A. 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The Message of President Madison to Congress, imme- diately preceding the Declaration of War against England, in 1812, — the Pteport of the Committee on Foreign Rela- tions, to whom it was referred, — the Declaration of War itself, — and the President's Proclamation of that grave event, — are all documents that will ever possess deep in- terest to Americans. The two first give, in the most concise form, the causes that led to that war, and they therefore deserve to be often read and free to general access. For these reasons they have been incorporated in this volume. The President's message was communicated to Congress on the 1st day of June, 1812. To the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States. I communicate to Congress certain documents, being a continuation of those heretofore laid before them, on the subject of our affairs with Great Britain. Without going back beyond the renewal, in 1803, of the war in which Great Britain is engaged, and omitting our repaired wrongs of inferior magnitude, the conduct of her government presents a series of acts hostile to the United States as an independent and neutral nation. British iiruisers have been in the continued practice of violating the American flag on the great high way of na- tions, and of seizing and carrying off persons sailing under it ; not in the exercise of a belligerent right, founded on the laws of nations against an enemy, but of a municipal prerogative over British subjects. British jurisdiction is thus extended to neutral vessels in a situation where no 4C4 Ax-fiiWDix. [b] laws can operate but the law of nations and the laws of the country to which the vessels belong; and a self-redress is assumed which, if British subjects were wrongfully de- tained and alone concerned, is that substitution of force, for a resort to the responsible sovereign, which falls within the definition of war. Could the seizure of British subjects in such cases be regarded as within the exercise of a belligerent right, the acknowledged laws of war, which forbid an article of captured property to be adjudged without a regular in- vestigation before a competent tribunal, would imperiously demand the fairest trial when the sacred rights of person were at issue. In place of such a trial, these rights are subject to the will of every petty commander. The practice, hence, is so far from affecting British sub- jects alone, that under the pretext of searching for these, thousands of American citizens, under the safeguard of the public and of their national flag, have been torn from their country and from everything dear to them ; have been dragged on board ships of war of foreign nations, and ex- posed, under the severities of their discipline, to be exiled to the most distant and deadly climes, to risk their lives in the battles of their oppressors, and to be the melancholy instruments of taking away those of their own brethren. Against this crying enormity, which Great Britain would be so prompt to avenge if committed on herself,, the United States have in vain exhausted remonstrance and expostula- tion. And that no proof might be wanting of their con- ciliatory dispositions, and no pretext left for a continuance of the practice, the British government was formally assured of the readiness of the United States to enter into arrange- mentS; such as could not be rejected, if the recovery of [b] appendix. 405 BritisL subjects were the real and sole object. The com- mimication passed without eflPect. British cruisers have been in the practice also of violat* ing the rights and the peace of our coasts. They hover over and harass our entering and deporting commerce. To the most ins^alting pretensions they have added the most lawless proceedings in our very harbors, and have wantonly spilt American blood within the sanctuary of our territorial jurisdiction. The principles and rules enforced by that nation, when a neutral nation, against armed vessels of bel- ligerents hovering near her coasts and disturbing her com- merce, are well known. When called on, nevertheless, by the United States to punish the greater offences committed by her own vessels, her government has bestowed on their commanders additional marks of honor and confidence. Under pretended blockades, without the presence of an adequate force, and sometimes without the practicability of applying one, our commerce has been plundered in every sea; the great staples of our country have been cut ofT from their legitimate markets, and a destructive blow aimed at our agricultural and maritime interests. In aggravation of these predatory measures, they have been considered as in force from the dates of their notification, a retrospective effect being thus added, as has been done in other important cases, to the unlawfulness of the course pursued; and to render the outrage the more signal, these mock blockades have been reiterated and enforced in the face of official communications from the British government, declaring, as the true definition of a legal blockade, " the particular ports must be actually invested, and previous warning given to vessels bound to them not to enter." 406 APPENDI X. [b] Not content with these occasional i xpedients for laying waste our neutral trade, the cabinet of Great Britain re- sorted, at length, to the sweeping system of blockades, un- der the name of Orders in Council, which has been moulded and managed as might best suit its political views, its com- mercial jealousies, or the avidity of British cruisers. To our remonstrances against the complicated and trans- cendent injustice of this innovation, the first reply was that the orders were reluctantly adopted by Great Britain as a necessary retaliation on decrees of her enemy, proclaiming a general blockade of the British Isles, at a time when the naval force of that enemy dared not to issue from his own ports. She was reminded, without effect, that her own prior blockade, unsupported by an adequate naval force ac- tually applied and continued, was a bar to this plea ; that executed edicts against millions of our property would not be retaliation on edicts confessedly impossible to be exe- cuted; that retaliation, to be just, should fall on the party setting the guilty example, not on an innocent party, which was not even chargeable with an acquiescence in it. When deprived of this flimsy veil for a prohibition of our trade with her enemy, by the repeal of his prohibition of our trade with Great Britain, her cabinet, instead of a corresponding repeal or a practical discontinuance of its orders, formally avowed a determination to persist in them against the United States, until the markets of her enemy should be laid open to British product ; thus asserting an obligation on a neutral power to require one belligerent power to encourage, by its internal regulations, the trade of another belligerent, contradicting her own practice to- wards all nations, in peace as well as war, and betraying the [b] appendix. 407 insincerity of these professions which inculcated a belief that, having resorted to her orders with regret, she waa anxious to find an occasion for putting an end to them. Abandoning still more all respect for the neutral rights of the United States, and for its own consistency, the British government now demands, as pre-requisites to a repeal of its orders as they relate to the United States, that a formality should be observed in the repeal of the French decrees, no- wise necessary to their termination, nor exemplified by British usage ; and that the French repeal, besides includ- ing that portion of the decrees which operate within a ter- ritorial jurisdiction, as well as that which operates on the high seas against the commerce of the United States, should not be a single special repeal in relation to the United States, but should be extended to whatever other neutral nations unconnected with them may be afiected by those decrees. And as an additional insult, they are called on for a formal disavowal of conditions and pretensions ad- vanced by the French government, for which the United States are so far from having made themselves responsible, that, in official explanations, which have been published to the world, and in a correspondence of the American minister at London with the British minister for foreign affairs, such a responsibility was explicitly and emphatically disclaimed. It has become, indeed, sufficiently certain that the com- merce of the United States is to be sacrificed, not as interfer- ing with the belligerent rights of Great Britain, not as sup- plying the wants of her enemies, which she herself supplies, but as interfering with the monopoly which she covets for her own commerce and navigation. She carries on a war against the lawful commerce of a friend, that she may the 408 APPENDIX. [b] better carry on a commerce polluted by the forgeries M\d perjuries which are, for the most part, the only passports by which it can succeed. Anxious to make every experiment short of the last re- sort of injured nations, the United States have withheld from Great Britain, under successive modifications, the ben- efits of a free intercourse with their market, the loss of which could not but outweigh the profits accruing from her restrictions of our commerce with other nations. And to entitle these experiments to the more favorable considera- tion, they were so framed as to enable her to place her ad- versary under the exclusive operation of them. To these appeals her government has been equally inflexible, as if willing to make sacrifices of every sort, rather than yield to the claims of justice or renounce the errors of a false pride. Nay, so far were the attempts carried, to overcome the at tachment of the British cabinet to its unjust edicts, that it received every encouragement within the competency of the executive branch of our government to expect that a repeal of them would be followed by a war between the United States and France, unless the French edicts should also be repealed. Even this communication, although silencing forever the plea of a disposition in the United States to acquiesce in those edicts, originally the sole plea for them, received no attention. If no other proof existed of a predetermination of the British government against a repeal of its orders, it might be found on the correspondence of the minister plenipoten- tiary of the United States at London, and the British secre- tary for foreign aifairs in 1810, on the question whether the blockade of May, 1806, was considered as in force or as [b] appendix. 409 not in force. It had been ascertained that the French gov- ernment, which urged this blockade as the ground of its Berlin decree, was willing, in the event of its removal, to repeal that decree; which, being followed by alternate re- peals of the other oflfensive edicts, might abolish the whole system on both sides. This inviting opportunity for accom- plishing an object so important to the United States, and professed so often to be the desire of both the belligerents, was made known to the British government. As that gov- ernment admits that an actual application of an adequate force is necessary to the existence of a legal blockade, — and it was notorious, that if such a force had ever been applied, its long discontinuance had annulled the blockade in ques- tion, — there could be no sufficient objection on the part of Great Britain to a formal revocation of it ; and no imagin- able objection to a declaration of the fact, that the blockade did not exist. The declaration would have been consistent with her avowed principles of blockade, and would have enabled the United States to demand from France the pledged repeal of her decrees ; either with success, in which case the way would have been opened for a general repeal of the belligerent edicts ; or without success, in which case the United States would have been justified in turning their measures exclusively against France. The British govern- ment would, however, neither rescind the blockade nor de- clare its non-existence ; nor permit its non-existence to be inferred and affirmed by the American plenipotentiary. On the contrary, by representing the blockade to be compre- hended in the orders in council, the United States were compelled so to regard it in their subsequent proceedings. There was a period when a favorable change in the pol- 35 410 APPENDIX. [b] icy of the British cabinet was justly considered as estab- lished. The minister plenipotentiary of his Britannic ma- jesty here proposed an adjustment of the differences more immediately endangering the harmony of the two countries. The proposition was accepted with a promptitude and cor- diality corresponding with the invariable professions of this government. A foundation appeared to be laid for a sincere and lasting reconciliation. The prospect, however, quickly vanished. The whole proceeding was disavowed by the British government without any explanations which could at that time repress the belief that the disavowal proceeded from a spirit of hostility to the commercial rights and pros- perity of the United States. And it has since come into proof, that at the very moment when the public minister was holding the language of friendship, and inspiring confi- dence in the sincerity of the negotiation with which he was charged, a secret agent of his government was employed in intrigues, having for their object a subversion of our gov- ernmentj and a dismemberment of our happy union. In reviewing the conduct of Great Britain towards the United States, our attention is necessarily drawn to the warfare just renewed by the savages on one of our extensive frontiers ; a warfare which is known to spare neither age or sex, and to be distinguished by features peculiarly shock- ing to humanity. It is difficult to account for the activity and combinations which have for some time been developing themselves among tribes in the constant intercourse with British traders and garrisons, without connecting their hostility with that influence, and without recollecting the authenticated examples of such interpositions heretofore furnished by the officers and agents of that government. [b] appendix. 411 Sucli is the spectacle of injuries and indignities -which have been heaped on our country, and such the crisis which its unexampled forbearance and concihatory cfibrts have not been able to avert. It might at least have been expected that an enlightened nation, if less urged by moral obliga- tions, or invited by friendly dispositions on the part of the United States, would have found, in its true interest alone, a sufficient motive to respect their rights and their tranquil- lity on the high seas; that an enlarged policy would have favored that free and general circulation of commerce, in which the British nation is at all times interested, and which in times of war is the best alleviation of its calamities to herself as well as the other belligerents ; and more espe- cially that the British cabinet would not, for the sake of the precarious and surreptitious intercourse with hostile markets, have persevered in a course of measures which necessarily put at hazard the invaluable market of a great and growing country, disposed to cultivate the mutual advantages of an active commerce. Other councils have prevailed. Our moderation and conciliation have had no other effect than to encourage per- severance and to enlarge pretensions. ^Ye behold our sea- faring citizens still the daily victims of lawless violence committed on the great common and highway of nations, even within sight of the country which owes them protec- tion. We behold our vessels freighted with the products of our soil and industry, or returning with the honest pro- ceeds of them, wrested from their lawful destinations, con- fiscated by prize courts, no longer the organ of public law, but the instrumeiits of arbitrary edicts; and their unfortu- nate crews dispeised and lost, or forced or inveigled, in 412 APPENDIX. J_bJ British pcrts, into Britisli fleets; whilst arguments are em- ployed in support of these aggressions, which have no foundation but in a principle equally supporting a claim to regulate our external commerce in all cases whatsoever. "We behold, in fine, on the side of Great Britain a state of war against the United States ; and on the side of the United States a state of peace toward Great Britain. Whether the United States shall continue passive under these progressive usurpations, and these accumulating wrongs, or, opposing force to force in defense of their nat- ural rights, shall commit a just cause into the hands of the Almighty Disposer of events, avoiding all connections which might entangle it in the contests or views of other powers, and preserving a constant readiness to concur in an honora- ble re-establishment of peace and friendship, is a solemn question, which the constitution wisely confides to the leg- islative department of the government. In recommending it to their early deliberations, I am happy in the assurance that the decision will be worthy the enlightened and patri- otic councils of a virtuous, a free, and a powerful nation. Having presented this view of the relations of the United States with Great Britain, and of the solemn alter- native growing out of them, I proceed to remark that the communications last made to Congress, on the subject of our relations with France, will have shown that since the revo- cation of her decrees as they violated the neutral rights of the United States, her government has authorized illegal captures, by its privateers and public ships, and that other outrages have been practiced on our vessels and our citizens. It will have been seen, also, that no indemnity had been provided or satisfactorily pledged for the extensive spolia- [b] appendix. 413 tions (X).Timitted under the violent and retrospective orders of the French government against the property of our citi- zens, seized within the jurisdiction of France. I abstain at this time from recommending to the consideration of Congress definitive measures with respect to that nation, in the expectation that the result of unclosed discussions be- tween our minister plenipotentiary at Paris and the French government will speedily enable Congress to decide, with greater advantage, on the course due to the rights, the interest, and the honor of our country. JAMES MADISON. Washingtox, June 1, 1812. The committee on Foreign relations, — to whom uas re- f erred tlie Message of the President of the United States^ of the \st of June, 1812, — Keport, — That after the experience which the United States have had of the great injustice of the British gov- ernment towards them, exemplified by so many acts of vio- lence and oppression, it will be more difficult to justify to the impartial world their patient forbearance than the meas- ures to which it has become necessary to resort, to avenge the wrongs, and vindicate the rights and honor of the nation. Your committee are happy to observe, on a dispassionate review of the conduct of the United States, that they see in it no cause for censure. If a long forbearance under injuries ought ever to be considered a virtue in any nation, it is one which peculiarly becomes the United States. No people ever had stronger motives to cherish peace : none have ever cherished it with greater sincerity and zeal. 35* 414 APPENDIX. [b] Bat the period has now arrived when the United States must support their character and station among the nations of the earth, or submit to the most shameful degradation. Forbearance has ceased to be a virtue. War on the one side, and peace on the other, is a situation as ruinous as it is disgraceful. The mad ambition, the lust of power and commercial avarice of Great Britain, arrogatino; to herself 7 Do the complete dominion of the ocean, and exercising over it a lawless and unbounded tyranny, have left to neutral na- tions an alternative only between a base surrender of their rights and a manly surrender of them. Happily for the United States, their destiny, under the aid of heaven, is in their own hands. The crisis is formidable only by their love of peace. As soon as it becomes a duty to relinquish their situation, danger disappears. They have suffered no wrongs, — they have received no insults, however great, for which they cannot obtain redress. More than seven years have elapsed since the commence- ment of the system of hostile aggression by the British government on the rights and interests of the United States. The manner of its commencement was not less hostile than the spirit with which it has been prosecuted. The United States have invariably done everything in their power to preserve the relations of friendship with Great Britain. Of this disposition they gave a distinguished proof at the moment when they were made the victims of an op- posite policy. The wrongs of the last war had not been forgotten at the commencement of the present one. They warned us of dangers against which it was sought to pro- vide. As early as the year 1804, the minister of the United States at London was instructed to invite the British gov- [b] appendix. 415 ernmcnt to enter into a negotiation on all the points on which a coalition might arise between the two countries, in the course of the war, and to propose to it an arrangement of their claims on fair and reasonable conditions. The in- vitation was accepted. A negotiation had commenced and was depending, and nothing had occurred to excite a doubt that it would not terminate to the satisfaction of both par- ties. It was at this time, and under these circumstances, that an attack was made by surprise on an important branch of American commerce, which affected every part of the United States, and involved many of their citizens in ruin. The commerce on which this attack was so unexpectedly made was between the United Utatcs and the colonies of France, Spain, and other enemies of Great Britain. A commerce just in itself, sanctioned by the example of Great Britain, in regard to the trade with her own colonies; sanctioned by a solemn act between the two governments in the last war, and sanctioned by the practice of the British government in the present war, more than two years having elapsed without any interference with it. The injustice of the attack could only be equaled by the absurdity of the pretext alleged for it. It was pre- tended by the British government that, in case of war, her enemy had no right to modify its colonial regulations so as to mitigate the calamities of war to the inhabitants of its colonies. This pretension to Great Britain is utterly incom- patible with the rights of the sovereignty in every independ- ent State. If we recur to the well-established and universally admitted law of nations, we shall find no sanction to it in that venerable code. The sovereignty of every State is co- extensive with its dominions, and cannot be abrogated, or 416 APPENDIX. [bJ curtailed in riglits, as to any part, except by conquest. Neutral nations have a right to trade to every port of either belligerent which is not legally blockaded, and in all articles which are not contraband of war. Such is the absurdity of this pretension, that your committee are aware, especially after the able manner in vvhich it has been heretofore refuted and exposed, that they would ofter an insult to the under- standing of the House if they enlarged on it; and if any- thing could add to the high sense of the injustice of the British government in the transaction, it would be the con- trast which her conduct exhibits in regard to this trade, and in regard to a similar trade by neutrals with her own colo- nies. It is known to the world that Great Britain regulates her own trade in war and in peace, at home in her colonies, as she finds for her interest — that in war she relaxes the restraints of her colonial systems in favor of the colonies, and that it never was suggested that she had not a right to do it, or that a neutral in taking advantage of the relaxa- tion violated a belligerent right of her enemy. But with Great Britain evcrytliing is lawful. It is only in a trade with her enemies that the United States can do wrong. With them all trade is unlawful. In the year 1793, an attack was made by the British government on the same branch of our neutral trade, which had nearly involved the two countries in a war. That dif- ference, however, was amicably accommodated. The pre- tension was withdrawn and reparation made to the United States for the losses which they had suffered by it. It was fair to infer from that arrangement that the commerce wa? deemed by the British government lawful, and that it would not be again disturbed. [b] appendix. 417 Had the Britisli goverument been resolved to contest tins trade with neutrals, it was due to the character of the British nation that the decision should be made known to the government of the United States. The existence of a negotiation which had been invited by our government, for the purpose of preventing differences by an amicable ar- rangement of their respective pretensions, gave a strong claim to the notification, while it aff"orded the fairest oppor- tunity for it. But a very diff'erent policy animated the then cabinet of England. The liberal confidence and friendly overtures of the United States were taken advantage of to ensnare them. Steady to its purpose, and inflexibly hostile to this country, the British government calmly looked for- ward to the moment when it might give the most deadly wound to our interests. A trade just in itself, which was secured by so many strong and sacred pledges, was consid- ered safe. Our citizens, with their usual industry and enterprise, had embarked in it a vast proportion of their shipping, and of their capital, which were at sea, under no other protection than the law of nations, and the confidence which they reposed in the justice and friendship of the Brit- ish nation. At this period the unexpected blow was given ; many of our vessels were seized, carried into port and con- demned by a tribunal, which, while it professes to respect the law of nations, obeyed the mandates of its own goveru- ment. Hundreds of other vessels were driven from the ocean, and the trade itself in a great measure suppressed. The eff'ect produced by this attack on the lawful commerce of the United States was such as might have been expected from a virtuous, independent and highly injured people. But one sentiment pervaded the whole American natioa 418 APPENDIX. [b] No local interests ^ere regarded ; no sordid motives felt. Without looking to the parts which suffered most, the inva- sion of our rights was considered a common cause, and from one extremity of our Union to the other was heard the voice of an united people, calling on their government to avenge their wrongs, and vindicate the rights and honor of their country. From this period the British government has gone on in a continued encroachment on the rights and interests of the United States, disregarding in its course, in many in- stances, obligations which have heretofore been held sacred by civilized nations. In May, 1806, the whole coast of the continent, from the Elbe to Brest inclusive, was declared to be in a state of blockade. By this act, the well-established principles of the law of nations, principles which have served for ages as guides, and fixed the boundary between the rights to beli- gerents and neutrals, were violated : By the law of nations, as recognized by Great Britain herself, no blockade is law- ful, unless it be sustained by the application of an adequate force, and that an adequate force was applied to this block- ade, in its full extent, ought not to be pretended. Whether Great Britain was able to maintain, legally, so extensive a blockade, considering the war in which she is engaged, re- quiring such extensive naval operations, is a question which it is not necessary at this time to examine. It is sufficient to be known that such force was not applied, and this is evident from the terms of the blockade itself, by which, comparatively, an inconsiderable portion of the coast only was declared to be in a state of strict and rigorous hlockade. The objection to the measure is not diminished by that cir- [bJ appendix. 410 cu instance. If the force was not applied, the blockade was unlawful from whatever cause the failure might proceed. The belligerent who institutes the blockade cannot absolva itself from the obligation to apply the force under any pre- text whatever. For a belligerent to relax a blockade, which it could not maintain, it would be a refinement in justice, not less insulting to the understanding than repugnant to the law of nations. To claim merit for the mitigation of an evil, which the party either had not the power or found it inconvenient to inflict, would be a new mode of encroaching on neutral rights. Your committee think it just to remark that this act of the British government does not appear to have been adopted in the sense in which it has been since construed. On consideration of all the circumstances at- tending the measure, and particularly the character of the distinguished statesman who announced it, we are persuaded that it was conceived in a spirit of conciliation, and intended to lead to an accommodation of all difi'erences between the United States and Great Britain. His death disappointed that hope, and the act has since become subservient to other purposes. It has been made by his successors a pretext for that vast system of usurpation which has so long oppressed and harassed our commerce. The next act of the British government which claims our attention is the order of council of January 7, 1807, by which neutral powers are prohibited trading from one port to another of France or her allies, or any other country with which Great Britain might not freely trade. By this order the pretension of England, heretofore claimed by every ether power, to prohibit neutrals disposing of parts of their cargoes at different ports of the same enemy, is revived and 420 Ari'ENDIX. [s] with vast accumuktion of injury. Every enemy, however great the number or distant from each other, is considered one, and the like trade even with powers at peace with Eng- land, who from motives of policy had excluded or restrained her commerce, was also prohibited. In this act the British government evidently disclaimed all regard for neutral rights. Aware that the measures authorized by it could find no pretext in any belligerent right, none was urged. To prohibit the sale of our produce, consisting of innocent articles, at any port of a belligerent, not blockaded, — to con- sider every belligerent as one, and subject neutrals to the Bame restraints with all, as if there was but one, — were bold encroachments. But to restrain or in any manner interfere with our commerce with neutral nations w^ith whom Great Britain was at peace, and against whom she had no justifi- able cause of war, for the sole reason that they restrained or excluded from their ports her commerce, was utterly in- compatible with the pacific relations subsisting between the two countries. We proceed to bring into view the British order in council of November 11th, 1807, which superseded every other order, and consummated that system of hostility on- the commerce of the United States which has been since so steadily pursued. By this order all France and her allies and every other country at war with Great Britain, or with which she was not at war, from which the British flag was excluded and all the colonies of her enemies, were subjected to the same restrictions as if they were actually blockaded in the most strict and rigorous manner ; and all trade in arti- cles, the produce and manufacture of the said countries and colonies, and the vessels engaged in it, were subject tv [b] appendix. 421 capture and condemnation as lawful prizes. To tliis order certain exceptions were made, which we forbear to notice, because they were not adopted from a regard to natural rights, but were dictated by policy to promote the commerce of England, and, so far as they related to neutral powers, were said to emanate from the clemency of the British gov • ernment. It would be surperfluous in your committee to state that by this order the British government declared direct and positive war against the United States. The dominion of the ocean was completely usurped by it, all commerce for- bidden, and every flag driven from it or subjected to cap- ture and condemnation, which did not subserve the policy of the British government by paying it a tribute and sailing under its sanction. From this period the United States have incurred the heaviest losses and most mortifying hu- miliations. They have borne the calamities of war without retorting them upon its authors. So far your committee has presented to the view of the House the aggressions which have been committed, un- der the authority of the British government, on the com- merce of the United States. We will now proceed to other wrongs which have been still more severely felt. Among these is the impressment of our seamen, a practice which has been unceasingly maintained by Great Britain in the wars to which she has been a party since our revolution. Your committee cannot convey in adequate terms the deep sense which they entertain of the injustice and oppression of this proceeding. Under the pretext of impressing Brit- ish seamen, our fellow-citizens are seized in British ports, on the high seas, and in every other quarter to which iho 3li 4*22 APJ'EKDIX. [b] British power extends, are taken on board British-men-of- war, and compelled to servo them as British subjects. In this mode our citizens are wantonly snatched from their country and their families, deprived of their liberty and doomed to an ignominious and slavish bondage, compelled to fight the battles of a foreign country, and often to perish in them. Our flag has given them no protection ; it has been unceasingly violated, and our vessels exposed to danger by the loss of the men taken from them. Your committee need not remark that while the practice is continued, it is impossible for the United States to consider themselves an independent nation. Every new case is a new proof of their degradation. Its continuance is the more unjustifiable be- cause the United States have repeatedl}^ proposed to the British government an arrangement which would secure to it the control of its own people. An exemption of the Uni- ted States from this degrading oppression, and their flag from violation, is all that they have sought. The lawless waste of our trade, and equally unlawful impressment of our seamen, have been much aggravated by the insults and indignities attending them. Under the pretext of blockading the ports and harbors of France and her allies, British squadrons have been stationed on our own coast to watch and annoy our own trade. To give efi'ect to the blockade of European ports, the ports and harbors of the United States have been blockaded. In executino; these orders of the British government, or in obeying the spirit which was known to animate it, the commanders of these squadrons have encroached on our jurisdiction ; siezed our vessels and carried into effect impressments within our lim- its, and done other acts of great injustice, violence and op- [b] appendix. 423 prcssion. The United States have seen, with feelings of mingled indignation and surprise, that these acts, instead of procuring to the perpetrators the punishment due to their crimes, have not failed to recommend them to the favor of their government. Whether the British government has contributed by active measures to exercise against us the hostility of the savage tribes on our frontiers, your committee are not dis- posed to occupy much time in investigating. Certain indi- cations of general notoriety may supply the place of authen- tic documents ; though these have not been wanting to es- tablish the fact in some instances. It is known that symp- toms of British hostility towards the United States have never failed to produce corresponding symptoms among those tribes. It is also well known that, on all such occa- sions, abundant supplies of the ordinary munitions of war have been afforded by the agents of British commercial companies, and even from British garrisons, wherewith they were enabled to commence that system of savage warfare on our frontier which has been, at all times, indiscriminate in its effects on all ages, sexes and conditions, and so revolt- ing to humanity. Your committee would be much gratified if they could close here the detail of British aggressions ; but it is their duty to recite another act of still greater malignity than any of those which have been already brought to your view. The attempt to dismember our Union and overthrow our excellent constitution by a secret mission, the object of which was to foment discontents, and excite insurrection against the constituted authorities and laws of the nation, as lately disclosed by the agent emj^loyed in it, afford? full 424 APPENDIX. [l?] proof that there is no bound to the hostility of the British government towcards the United States — no act, however unjustifiable, which it would not commit to accomplish their ruin. This attempt excites the greater honor from the consideration that it was made while the United States and Great Britain were at peace, and an amicable negotia- tion was depending between them for the accommodation of their differences, through public ministers, regularly authorized for the purpose. The United States have beheld, with unexampled for- bearance, this continued series of hostile encroachments on their rights and interests, in the hope that yielding to the force of friendly remonstrances, often repeated, the British government might adopt a more just policy towards them; but that hope no longer exists. They have also weighed impartially the reasons which have been urged by the Brit- ish government in vindication of these encroachments, and found in them neither justification or apology. » The British government has alleged, in vindication of the orders in council, that they were resorted to as a retal- iation on France, for similar aggressions committed by her on our neutral trade with the British dominions. But how has this plea been supported ? The dates of all British and French aggressions are well known to the world. Their origin and progress have been marked with too wide and destructive a waste of the property of our fellow-citizens to have been forgotten. The decree of Berlin, of November 21st, 1806, was the first aggression of France in the pres- ent war. Eighteen months had then elapsed, after the at- tack made by Great Britain on our neutral trade, with the colonies of France and her allies, and six months from the [b] appendix. " 425 date of the proclamation of May, 1806. Even on the 7th January, 1807, the date of the first British order in coun- 2il, so short a time had elapsed after the Berlin decree, that it was hardly possible that the intelligence of it should have reached the United States. A retaliation which is to pro- duce its effect, by operating on a neutral power, ought not to be resorted to till the neutral had justified it by a culpa- ble acquiescence in the unlawful act of the other belligerent. Tt ought to be delayed until after sufiicient time had been allowed to the neutral to remonstrate against the measure complained of to receive an answer, and to act on it, which had not been done in the present instance ; and when the order of November 11th was issued, it is well known that a minister of France had declared to the minister plenipoten- tiary of the United States at Paris, that it was not intended that the decree of Berlin should apply to the United States. It is equally well known that no American vessel had then been condemned under it, or seizure been made. The facts prove incontestibly that the measures of France, however unjustifiably in themselves, were nothing more than a pre- text for those of England. And of the insufficiency of that pretext, ample proof has already been afforded by the British government itself, and in the most impressive form, al- though it has declared that the orders in council were retal- iatory on France for her decrees. It was also declared, and in the orders themselves, that owing to the superiority of the British navy, by which the fleets of France and her allies were confined within her own ports, the French decrees were considered only as empty threats. It is no justification of the wrongs of one power, that the like were committed by another; nor ought the fact, if 36* 426 APPENDIX. [b] true, to huvc been urged by either, as it could aiford no proof of its love of justice, of its magnanimity, or even of its courage. It is more worthy the government of a great nation to relieve than to assail the injured, ^or can a repetition of the wrongs by another power repair the violated rights or Abounded honor of the injured party. An utter inability alone to resist would justify a quiet surrender of our rights, and degrading submission to the will of otJiers. To that condition the United States are not reduced, nor do they fear it. That they ever consented to discuss with either power the misconduct of the other, is a proof of their love of peace, of their moderation, and of the hope which they still indulged, that friendly appeals to just and gener- ous sentiment would not be made to them in vain. But the motive was mistaken, if their forbearance was imputed, either to the want of a just sensibility to their wrongs, or of a determination, if suitable redress was not obtained, to resent them. The tim.e has now arrived when this system of reasoning must cease. It would be insulting to repeat it ; it would be degrading to hear it. The United States must act as an independent nation, and assert their rights and avenge their wrongs^ according to their own estimate of them, with the party who commits them, holding it responsible for its own misdeeds unmitigated by those of another. For the difference made between Great Britain and France, by the application of the non-importation act against England only, the motive has been already too often explained, and is too well known to rcojuire further illustra- tion. In the commercial restrictions to which the United States resorted as an evidence of their sensibility, and a [b] appendix. 427 mild retaliation of their wrongs, tliej invariably placed both powers on the same footing, holding to each, in respect to itself, the same accommodation, in case it accepted the con- dition offered; and in respect to the other, the same re- straint, if it refused. Had the British government con- firmed the arrangement which was entered into with the British minister in 1809, and France maintained her de- crees, would the United States have had to resist, with the firmness belonging to their character, the continued violation of their rights ? The committee do not hesitate to declare that France has greatly injured the United States, and that satisfactory reparation has not yet been made for many of those injuries; but that is a concern which the United States will look to and settle for themselves. The high character of the American people is a sufficient pledge to the world, that they will not fail to settle it on conditions which they have a right to claim. More recently, the true policy of the British government towards the United States has been completely unfolded. It has been publicly declared by those in power that the orders in council should not be repealed until the French government had revoked all its internal restraints on the British commerce, and that the trade of the United States with France and her allies should be prohibited until Great Britain was also allowed to trade with them. By this declaration, it appears, that to satisfy the pretensions of the British government, the United States must join Great Britain in the war with France, and prosecute the war until France should be subdued, for without her subjugation it were in vain to presume on such a concession. The hostil- ity of the British government to these States has been still 428 APPi^NDix. [b] further di,'- closed. It has been made manifest that the United States are considered by it as the commercial rival of Great Britain, and that their prosperity and growth are incompatible with her welfare. When all these circum- stances are taken into consideration, it is impossible for your committee to doubt the motives which have governed the British ministry in all its measures towards the United States since the year 1805. Equally is it impossible to doubt, longer, the course which the United States ought to pursue towards Great Britain. From this view of the multiplied wrongs of the British government, since the commencement of the present war, it must be evident to the impartial world that the contest which is now forced on the United States is radically a contest for their sovereignty and independence. Your com- mittee will not enlarge on any of the injuries, however great, v>dnch have had a transitory effect. They wish to call the attention of the House to those of a parliamentary nature only, which intrench so deeply on our most import- ant rights, and wound so extensively and vitally our best interests, as could not fail to deprive the United States of the principal advantages of their revolution, if submitted to. The control of our commerce by Great Britain in reg- ulating at pleasure, and expelling it almost from the ocean ; the oppressive manner in which these regulations have been carried into effect, by seizing and confiscating such of our vessels, with their cargoes, as were said to have violated her edicts, often without previous warning of their danger; the impressment of our citizens from on board our own vessels, on the high stas, and elsewhere, and holding them in bond- age until it suited the convenience of these oppressors to [b] appendix. 429 deliver them up, are encroachments of that high and dan- gerous tendency which could not fail to produce that perni- cious effect, nor would those be the only consequences that would result from it. The British government might for a while be satisfied with the ascendancy thus gained over us, but its pretensions would soon increase. The proof which so complete and disgraceful a submission to its authority would afford of our degeneracy, could not fail to inspire confidence that there was no limit to which its usurpations and our degradations might not be carried. Your committee believing that the freeborn sons of America are worthy to enjoy the liberty which their fathers purchased at the price of much blood and treasure, and see- ing, in the measures adopted by Great Britain, a course commenced and persisted in which might lead to a loss of national character and independence, feel no hesitation in advising resistance by force, in which the Americans of the present day will prove to the enemy and to the world that we have not only inherited that liberty which our fathers gave us, but also the will and power to maintain it. Bely- ing on the patriotism of the nation, and confidently trusting that the Lord of Hosts will go with us to battle in a right- eous cause, and, crown our efforts with success— your com- mittee recommend an immediate appeal to ARMS. AN ACT Declaring War between the U7iited Kingdom of Great Britain and Ire- land, and the dependencies thereof, and the United States of America and their territories. Be it enacted ly the Senate and Haiise of Representa- tives of the United States in Congress assembled, That 4^0 APPENDIX. [bJ WAR be, and the same is hereby declared tc exist, between the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and the dependencies thereof, and the United States of America and their territories ; and that the President of the United States be, and he is, hereby authorized to use the whole land and naval force of the United States, to carry the same into effect, and to issue to private armed vessels of the United States commissions, or letters of marque and general repri- sals, in such form as he shall think proper, and under the seal of the United States, against the vessels, goods and effects of the government of the same United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and of the subjects thereof. June 18, 1812. Approved, — ^James Madison. On the final passage of the act in the Senate, the vote was 19 to 13 — in the House 79 to 49. By tlie Presichiit of the United States of America. A PROCLAMATION. Whereas the Congress of the United States, by virtue of the constituted authority vested in them, have declared by their act, bearing date the 18th day of the present month, that war exists between the United Kingdom of Great Bri- tain and Ireland, and the dependencies thereof, and the United States of America and their territories : Now, therefore, I, James Madison, President of the United States of America, do hereby proclaim the same to all whom it may concern ; and I do especially enjoin on all persons holding office, civil or military, under the authority of the [b] appendix. 431 United States, that tliey be vigilant and zealous in dis- charging the duties respectively incident thereto : and I do moreover exhort all the good people of the United States, as they love their country, — as they value the precious her- itage derived from the virtue and valor of their fathers, — as they feel the wrongs which have forced on them the last re- sort of injured nations, — and as they consult the best means under the blessings of Divine Providence, of abridging its calamities, — that they exert themselves in preserving order, in promoting concord, in maintaining the authority and the efficacy of the laws, and in supporting and invigorating all the measures which may be adopted by the constituted au- thorities, for obtaining a speedy, a just, and an honorable peace. In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand, Jj. S. and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed to these presents. Done at the City of Washington the nineteenth day of June one thousand eight hundred and twelve, and of the In- dependence of the United States the thirty -sixth. (Signed) James Madison, President. (Signed) James Monroe, Secretary of State.. GENERAL GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. This gentleman, though his history has never yet been written, was undoubtedly one of the most eminent men and purest patriots the country has ever produced, fruitful as it has been in great men and disinterested patriots. And for decision, energy, forethought, good sense and intrepidity, 432 APPENDIX. [C] he will compare favorably with any general of the Revolu- tionary War. In the West he was one of the best, if not the best, soldier that ever led an army against the savage force. He has been esteemed, too, the most extraordinary military genius which Virginia, of which State he was a native, has ever produced, although the field of his opera- tions was the remote wilderness of the West. Judge Hall, a biographer of General Harrison, declares him to have been a man of extraordinary talents and energy of charac- ter, and possessed of a military genius, which enabled him to plan with consummate wisdom, and to execute his designs with decision and promptitude. . His great mind readily comprehended the situation of the country, and he made himself acquainted with the topo- graphy of the whole region and the localities of the ene- mies forts, as well as the strength of their forces. He possessed the rare faculty of penetrating the designs of his antagonist, thus becoming informed of the actual condition and movements of the enemy. He could therefore deduce his subsequent operations and his ulterior designs, and hence was enabled to anticipate and defeat all his plans and movements before they were matured. In the execution of his plans, his movements were made with such precision and celerity, and conducted with such consummate judg- ment, that success was always doubly ensured. General Washington entertained the highest opinion of his charac- ter, talents and military genius, and long hesitated whether he would appoint him or " Mad'' Anthony Wayne to the command of the army designed to chastise the north-westcru Indians after the defeat of General St. Clair. He only se- lected General Wayne because he was compelld to make a [C] APPENDIX. 433 choice between tliem — not because he believed cither pos- sessed superior qualifications or claims as a general. General Clark, it has already been stated, was a native of Virginia, and was born in 1742. In his personal ap- pearance he was commanding and dignified, and was well calculated to attract attention. His personal appearance was rendered particularly agreeable by the manliness of his deportment, the intelligence of his conversation, and, above all, by the vivacity of his manners and the boldness of his spirit for enterprise. Early in the Revolutionary War, while a private citi- zen, holding no commission, civil or military, he distin- guished himself by his efforts to protect the frontier settle- ments of Virginia and North Carolina against the incursions of the Indians. He led the p] cape no ouG; and men walked abroad to their daily avoca^ tions, with faces which betrayed what every honest man's heart felt. Our daily avocations make us among the ear- liest of early risers, and had we been, by any chance, unap- prised of the intelligence, we could have read in the faces of those whom we met, the unanimous declaration that some grief, for the general weal, oppressed our fellow-citizens. The method of striking fire alarms in this city prevents the use of the bells to toll an unexpected announcement. None were therefore struck, but at the usual hour of hoist- ing flags, the city standard, and the national ensign were displayed at half mast upon the City Hall. All the prin- cipal hotels, the political head quarters of both parties, and the other public buildings upon which flags are usually hoisted on public occasions, displayed them yesterday at half mast ; and the shipping at the piers and in the harbor wore the same testimonials of national grief. We never felt before so proud of our citizenship, as we did in exchang- ino- remarks of sincere condolence with our friends of the opposition party, who thus testified that love of country is superior in American hearts to devotion to party. The courts met only to adjourn ; and the Common Council was convened to take measures for testifying the public sympathy and respect. All the flags in Albany were displayed at half mast ; the Supreme Court and Court of Chancery adjourned, and an extraordinary meeting of the Common Council was con- vened at 12 o'clock. The Governor of the State sent a message to the legis- lature, which immediately adjourned after appointing com- mittees of arrangements. [r^] APPENDIX. 459 At Hartford, and at all other places, reached by steam- boat hence, the news was divined b}^ the half-mast flag, be- fore a word was spoken -, and many citizens turned away without asking or waiting to hear one word. There was agony in that telegraphic sermon. At Boston, the news of the death of the President of the United States was received on Tuesday morning. The shipping at the wharves hoisted their colors at half mast, and the Revenue Cutter Hamilton, Captain Sturgis, at an- chor in the harbor, fired minute guns for an hour. This was done in compliance with the recommendation and in- structions of the Collector of that Port. The courts ad- journed, and the Common Council was convened to take proper measures for a municipal observance of the occasion. In every place, indeed, throughout the hind, the intelli- gence was received with mourning, dismay and solemnity. No event that has ever occurred since the death of Washing- ton has ever filled the nation with such sincere and univer- sal grief. FUNERAL CEREMONIES ELSEWHERE. In addition to the ceremonies at Washington, there was, on the day and during the hours of the funeral obse- quies, a cessation of business, with other demonstrations of solemnity, in the great cities of Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York and Boston. After due arrangements had been made, during the same or the following week, the afilicting dispensation was further solemnized by the delivery of addresses and large funeral processions in all the principal cities and many other places. The procession in New York occupied a 460 APPENDIX. [d] space of four miles, and was many lionrs in passing, with its large concourse and funeral tread. In Albany there was a torch-light procession. The procession was accompanied by a full band of music, and the funeral urn, covered with its pail — the whole illuminated by the light of upwards of 600 torches. It passed through the principal streets of the city between 8 and 10 o'clock. The night was still, and very dark ; and the effect produced by the long array of mourners at that unusual hour, — the funeral emblems, the solemn music, and the strong red glare of the torches, re- vealing from the gloom and lighting up with picturesque effect the houses and crowds of spectators which thronged the windows as they passed, — left an impression which will not soon be effaced from the memory of those who beheld the scene. Accounts are still coming in from every quarter of the very many public testimonies of the grief of the people, for the loss of their venerable and beloved Chief Magistrate. GENERAL HAlimSON'S FAMILY. 1. The following relatives of Gen. Harrison were pres- ent in the city on the day of the funeral, viz : Mrs. Jane Harrhon, of Ohio (son's widow), and two sons. Mrs. Taylor, of Virginia (niece), a daughter and two sons. Pike Harrison (grand-son), son of J. C. Harrison, and grand-son of Gen. Pike. Mr. D. 0. Coupcland, of Ohio (nephew). Mr. Benjamin Harrison, of Berkley (nephew). Henry Harrison (grand-nephew), son of the preceding, who has acted as confidential secretary of the President. (d] appendix. 461 Dr xTohn 3Iinge, of Charles City, Va (nephew). - Wo may also add the name of Mrs. Flndlei/y of Ohio, who adopted Mrs. Jane Harrison as a daughter, and who almost invariably occupied the right hand of the President at his table. 2. The following are the surviving relatives who were absent : Mrs. Harrison., the General's bereaved widow. John Scott Harrison, the only living son. Mrs. Judge Short, eldest daughter. Mrs. Br. Thornton, daughter. Mrs. Taylor, daughter. All these are living at or near North Bend. Mr. Taylor and his wife and family were expected to become members of the President's family, for the whole term of his service. 3. The following are the names of the deceased mem- bers of the family : Lucy Harrison, a daughter, married Judge Este. J. C. S. Harrison, a son, married Miss Pike. Both dead. Wm. H Harrison, Jr., married Miss Jane Irvine. His widow presided at the President's table, and her personal graces have commended her to the affections of all who have had the pleasure to know her. Dr. Benjamin Harrison, a son. Died the last summer. Carter B. Harrison, who was a lawyer of fine talents, and accompanied General Harrison to Colombia. Died two years ago. All the sons left children. Mrs. Harrison, the President's widow, has been for many years a member of the Presbvterian church. The 39* J 462 ArrENDix. [u] rest of the family are also Presbyterians, except Mr. Ben- amin Harrison, who is an Episcopalian, and IMrs. Tayloi, of Pdchmond, who is a member of the Baptist church. GENERAL HARRISON DEAD. BY ANN S. STEPHENS. Death sitteth in the Capitol ! His sable wing Flung its black shadow o'er a country's hope, And lo ! a nation bendeth down in tears. A few short weeks and all was jubilee, — The air was musical with happy sounds — The future full of promise — joyous smiles Beam'd on each freeman's face and lighted up The gentle eye of beauty. The Hero came — a noble good old man- Strong in the wealth of his high purposes. Age sat upon him with a gentle grace, Giving unto his manhood dignity, Imbuing it with pure and lofty thoughts As pictures owe their mellow hues to time. He stood before the people. Their's had been The vigor of his youth his manhood's strength, And now his green old age was yielded up To answer their behest. Thousands had gathered round the marble dome Silent and motionless in their deep reverence, Save when they gushed the heaving throb And low tumultuous breath of patriot hearts Surcharg'd with grateful joy. The mighty dead Bent gently o'er him with their spirit wings, [d] appendix. 463 As solenmly he took the eartlUy state Which flung its purple o'er his path to Iloaven. The oath was said, and then one mighty pulse Seem'd throbbing through the multitude — Faces were lifted upward, and a prayer Of deep thanksgiving wing'd that vow to Heaven. Time slept on flowers and lent his Glass to Hope — One little month his golden sands had sped When, mingling with the music of our joy, Arose and swell'd a low funeral strain. So sad and mournful, that a nation heard And trembled as she wept. Darkness is o'er the land, For lo ! a death flag streams upon the breeze, — Tlte Hero liath departed ! Nay, let us weep, our grief hath need of tears — Tears should embalm the dead, and there is one, A gentle woman, with her clinging love, Who wrung her heart that she might give him up To his high destiny. Tears are for her, — She lingers yet among her household gods And knoweth not how low her heart is laid. From battle-fields where strife was fiercely waged, And human blood-drops fell a crimson rain, He had returned to her. God help thee, Lady, Look not for him now ! Thron'd in a nation's love he sunk to sleep. And so awoke in Heaven. New York^ Aj ril 5. 464 APPENDIX. [d] VICE-PRESIDENT TYLER'S RECOMMENDATION OF A NATIONAL FAST. OFFICIAL. To the People of the United States. A RECOMMENDATION. When a Christian People feel themselves to be over- taken by a great public calamity, it becomes them to humble themselves under the dispensation of Divine Providence, to recognize His righteous government over the children of men, to acknowledge His goodness in time past, as well as their own unworthiness, and to supplicate His merciful pro- tection for the future. The death of William Henry Harrison, late Presi- dent of the United States, so soon after his elevation to that high office, is a bereavement peculiarly calculated to be regarded as a heavy affliction, and to impress all minds with a sense of the uncertainty of human things, and of the dependence of nations, as well as of individuals, upon our Heavenly Parent. I have thought, therefore, that I should be acting in conformity with the general expectation and feelings of the community in recommending, as I now do, to the People of the United States, of every religious denomination, that, according to their several modes and forms of worship, they observe a day of Fasting and Prayer, by such religious ser- vices as may be suitable on the occasion ; and I recommend Friday, the fourteenth day of May next, for that purpose ; to the end that, on that day, we may all, with one accord, join in humble and reverential approach to Him, in whose hands we are, invoking him to inspire us with a proper [d] appendix. 4G5 Bpirit and temper of heart and mind under these frowns of His providence, and still to bestow His gracious bene- dictions upon our Government and our country. John Tyler. Washington, April 13, 1841. CONCLUSION. Thus the national bereavement, so signal and so over- whelming, has boen acknowledged by many sincere demon- strations of sympathy and grief — and finally by an executive recommendation of a day of national fasting and prayer. President Tyler has done well to enter upon the honors of office by honoring our fathers' God and ours ! The pub- lic solemnities attending the late fearful dispensation are appropriately concluded by the humiliation of the whole people before the majesty of Heaven. Christians ! the voice of God summons you to Zion ! Prepare ye to assemble at her solemn places with humilia- tion and prayer. The national visitation demands national penitence ; and the garment of our praise must be wrapped in the spirit of heaviness. Now therefore, our God, the great, the mighty, and the terrible God, who keepest covenant and mercy, let not all the trouble seem little before Thee, that hath come upon us, unto this day. 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This work which is prep^rfd in flpsant Ftyl-, and profusely illustrated, is a comprehensive iescriptiou of England ai^l Wales, arranged in con ve- Dieut form for the tourist, and at the saui'? time providing; an illustrated cuide-boo'l to a country which Americans always view witn interest. I liere Ire few saiisfactorv works about this laj:d wiiith is ?o generously gift* d by Kature and so full of memorials of the past. Such books as there are, either cover a few counties or a£ 3 devoted to !;])ecial localities, or are merely guide- books. The present work is believr-d to be the first attemiit to give in at trac- tive form a description of ^be statelvbomes, renowned castles.ivj'-clad ruins of abbevs, churches, a-jd ancient fortresses, ddirious scenery, rock-b<)UD(l coasts, aod celebrated places of England and Wales. It is written by an author fully competent "rom travel and reading, and in position to propprlr describe bis very interesting subject; and the artist's pencil h vs bepu calP^ into requisition to graphically illustrate its well-written pages. There are i87 illustrations, prepared in the highest style of the engrav.^rs art, while ihe book itself is one of the most attractive ever presented to the Americaa '^"rs method of construction is systematic, following the most convenient routes taken by tourists, and the letter-press i^<^l"des enough of the history and legend of iach of the places describ d to 'J^^^^e the story highlv inter- esting Its pages fairlv overflow wiih picture and •i'^^r^fV^"' V^'J'" 7^^ Iverfthing Attractive that is presented l.y England ^"'i.^'.^^Vund iSur- in the highest stvleof the printer's and eugravt^r's art " Logland, 1 ictur- esque and Descriptive," is one of the best American books of the year. PORTER & COATES* PUBLICATIONS. HISTOEY OF THE CIVIL WAK IN AMERICA. By the Comte De Paris. With Maps faitlifully Engraved from the Origiu« als, aud Printed in Three Colors. 8vo. Cloth, per volume, $3,50; red cloth, extra, Eoxhurgh style, uncut edges, $3.50; sheep, lihrary style, $4.50; half Turkey morocco, $6.00. Vols. I, II, aud III now ready. The third vohirae embraces, without abridgment, the fifth and sixth volumes of the French editiou, and covers one of the most interesting as well as the most anxious periods of the war, describing the operations of the Army of the Potomac iu tlie East, and the Army of the Cumberland and Tennessee in the West. It contains full accounts of the battle of Cliancellorsvilie, the attack of the monitors on Foit Sumter, the sieges and fall of Yicksbuig and Port Hudson; the battles of Port Gibson and Champion's Hill, and the fullest and most authentic account of the battle of Gettysburg ever written. "The head of the Orleans family has put pen to paper with excellent result Our present impression is that it will form by far the best history of the American war." — Athenmum, London. "Wo advise all Americans to read it carefully, and judge for themselves if 'the future historian of our war.' of whom we have heard so much, be not alrealy arrived iu the Comte de Paris." — Nation, New York. '"Xhis is incomparably the best account of our great second revolution tha' luis yet been even attempted. It is so calm, so di-passionate, so accurate in Gttail, and at the same time so philosophical in general, that its reader coMits confidently on finding the complete work thoroughly satisfactory."— Evening Bulletin, Philadelphia. •'The work expresses the calm, deliberate judgment of an experienced Jliilltary observer and a highly intelligent man. Many of its btatemonls Will excite discussion, but we much mistake if it does not take high and permanent ranlc among the standard histories of the civil war. Indeid that place has been assigned it by the most competent critics both of this country and abroad." — Tunes, Cincinnati. "Messrs. Porter & Coates, of Philadelphia, will publish in a few days the Authorized translation of the new volume of the Comte de Paris' History of Our Civil War. The two volumes in French— the fifth and sixth— are bound together in the translation in one volume. Our readers already know, through a table of contents of these volumes, published in the cable columns of the Herald, the period covered by this new installment of a work remark- able in several ways. It includes the most important and decisive period of the war, and the two great campaigns of Gettysburg and Vicksburg. "The great civil war has had no better, no abler historian than the French prince who, emulating the example of Lafayette, took part in this new struggle for freedom, and who now writes of events, in many of which he participated, as an accomplished oflBcer, and one who, by his independwit position, his high character and eminent talents, was placed in eircum- gtances and relations which gave him almost unequalled opportunities to gain correct information and form impartial judgments. "The new installment, of a work which has already become a classic will be read with increased interest by Americans because of the importance of the period it covers and the stirring events it describes. In advance of a careful review we present to-day some extracts from the advance sheets sent us by Messrs. Porter & Coates, which will give our readers a foretaste of chapters which bring back to memory so many half-forgotten and not a few hitherto unvalued details of a time which Americans of this generation at least cannot read of without a fresh thrill of excitement." PORTER & OOATES' PUBLICATIONS. HaLF-HOUES with the best authors. With short BU ograpliical and Critical Notes. By Charles Knight. New Household Edition. With six portraits on steel. .3 vols., thick 12mo. Cloth, extra, black and o;old, per set, $1.50; half imt. Russia, marbled edges, $G.OO; half calf, gilt, marbled edges, $I2.0a Library Edition. Printed on fine laid and tinted paper. With twenty-four portraits on steel. 6 vols., 12mo. Cloth, extra, per set, $7.50; half calf, gilt, marbled edges, per set, $18.00; half Rus- sia, gilt top, $-21.00; full French morocco, limp, per set, $12.00; full smooth Russia, limp, round corners, in Russia case, per set, $25.00; full seal grained Russia, limp, round corners, in Russia case to match, $25.00. The excellent idea of the editor of these choice vohiraes has been most ad niirahly carried out, as will be seen by the list of authors upon all sub- jects. Seh-ctingsomechoicepassagesofthebeststandard authors, each ofsutli- cient lenscth to occuiiy half an hour in its perusal, there is here food for thought for every day in the year: so that if the purchaser 'will devote but one-half hour each day lo its appropriate selection he will read through these six volumes in one year, and in such a leisurelr manner that the noblest thoughts of many of the greatest minds will be fi'rnily in his mind forever. For every Sunday there is a suitable selection from some of the most eminent writers in sacred literature. We venture to sav if the editor's idea is carried out the reader will possess more and better knowledge of th^ English classics at the end of the year than he would by five years of desul-. tory reading. They can be commenced at any day in the year. The variety of reading is so great that no one will ever tire of these volumes. It is" a library ia itself. THE POETRY OF OTHER LANDS. A Collection of Transla- tions into Euglish Verse of the Poetry of Other Languages, Ancient and Modern. Compiled by N. Clemmons Hunt. Containing translations from the Greek, Latin, Persian, Ara- bian, Japanese, Turkish, Servian, Russian, Bohemian, Polish, Dutch, German, Italian, French, Spanish, and Portuguese languages. 12mo. Cloth, extra, gilt edges, $2.50 ; half calf, gilt, marbled edges, $4.00 ; Turkey morocco, gilt edges, 86.00. " Another of the publications of Porter & Coates, called 'The Poetry of Other Lands,' compiled by N. Clemmons Hunt, we most warmly commend. It is one of the best collections we have seen, containing many exquisite poems and fragments of verse which have not before been put' into book form in English words. We find many of the old favorites, which appear in every well-selected collection of sonnets and songs, and we miss others, which seem a necessity to complete the bouquet of grasses and flowers, some of which, from time to time, we hope to republish in the 'Courier. '"— • Cincinnati Courier. "A book of rare excell-'nce, because it gives a collection of choice gems ia many languages not available to the general lover of poetrv. It contains translations from the Greek, Latin, Persian, Arabian, Japanese, Turkish, Servian, Russian, Bohemian, Polish, Dutch, Germ:m, Italian, French, Spanish, and Portuguese languages. The book will be an admirable com- panion volume to any one of the collections of Enud sh poetry that are new {)ubli»hed. With the full index of authors immediately preceding the col- ectiou, and the arrangement of the poems under headings, the reader will find it convenient for reference. It is a gift that will be more valued by very many than some of the transitory ones at these holiday times."-* ^Philadelphia Methodiai. PORTER & COATES' riTBLICATIONS. THE FIRESIDE ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF POETRY. Edited hy Henry T. Coates. This is the hitest, and beyond doubt tho best collection of poetry published. Printed on fine paper and illustrated with thirteen steel engravings and fifteen titlo pages, containijig portraits of prominent American poets and fac-similes of their handwriting, made expressly for this book, 8vo. Cloth, extra, black and gold, gilt edges, $5.00; half calf, gilt, marbled edges, $7.50; half morocco, full gilt edges, $7.50^ full Turkey morocco, gilt edges, $10.00; tree calf, gilt edge^- $12.00 ; plush, padded side, uickel lettering, $14.00. ( "The et to interest children more than por-ms of other kinds; and Mr. Coates has shown good judgment in supplementing this department with some of the best poems of that class that havf- boen written for erown people. A surer method of forming the taste of chillren for good and pure literature than by readine: to them from any portion of this book can hardly be imagined. The volume is richly illustrated and beautifully bound." — PhUndelfihia Evenivg Bnlletin. "A more excellent volume cannot be found. We have found within the covers of this handsome volunif*, and upon its fair pages, many of the most exquisite poems which our language contains. It must bpcome a standasd Volumej and can never grow old or obsolete." — Episcopal Recorder. PORTER & COATES' PUBLICATIONS. ? THE COMPLETE WOKKS OF TH03. HOOD. With onpraviDfrs on steel. 4 vols., 12nio., tinted paper. Poetical Works ; Up the Rhine; Miscellanies and Hood's Own; Wliimsicalities, Whims, and Oddities. Cloth, extra, black and gold, .$0.00; red cloth, paper label, gilt top, nncut edges, $6.00; half calf, gilt, marbled edges, $14.00; half Eussia, gilt top, $18.00. Hood's verse, whether serious or comic — wliether serene like a cloudless autumn evening or sparkling with puns like a frosty .January midnight ■with stars — was ever pregnant with materials for the thought. Like every author distinguished for true comic humor, there was a deep vein of melan- choly pathos running through his mirth, and even when his sun shone brightly its light seemed often reflected as if only over the rira of a cloud. Well may we say, in the words of Tennyson, " Would he could have stayed with us." for never could it be more truly recorded of any one — in the words of Hamlet characterizing Yorick--that "he was a fallow of in- finite jest, of most excellent fancy." D. M. MoiK. THE ILIAD OF HOMER RENDERED INTO ENGLISH BLANK VERSE. By Edwakd, Earl of Derby. From the latest London edition, with all the author's last revisions and corrections, and with a Biographical Sketch of Lord Derby, by R. Shelton Mackenzie, D.C.L. With twelve steel engravings from Flaxman's celebrated designs. 2 vols., 12mo. Cloth, extra, bev. boards, gilt top, $3.50; half calf, gilt, marbled edges, $7.00; half Turkey morocco, gilt top, $7.00. The same. Popular edition. Two vols, in one. 12mo. Cloth, extra, $150. "It must equally ho considered a splendid performance; and for the pres- ent we have no hesitation in saying that it is by far the best representation of Homer's Iliad in th^ English language." — London Times. "The merits of Lord Derby's translation may be summed up in one word, it is eminently attractive; it is instinct with life; it may be read with fervent interest; it is immeasurably nearer than Pope to the text of the original. . . . . Lord Derby has given a version far more closely allipd to the original, and superior to any that has yet been attempted in the blank verse of our language." — Edmburg Review. THE WORKS OF FLAVIUS JOSEPHUS. Comprising the Anti- quities of the Jews; a History of the Jewish Wars, and a Life of Flavius Josephu^, written by himself. Translated from the original Greek, by William Whiston, A.M. Togetlier with numerous explanatory Notes and seven Dissertations concern- ing Jesus Clirist, John the Baptist, James the Just, (rod's com- mand to Abraham, etc., with an Introductory Essay by Rev. H. Steering, D.D. 8vo. Clotb, extra, black and gold, plain edges, $3.00; cloth, red. black and gold, gilt edges, $4. .50; sheep, marbled edges, $3.50; Turkey morocco, gilt edges, $8.00. This is the largest type one volume edition published. THE ANCIENT HISTORY OF THE EGYPTIANS, CARTHA- GINIANS. ASSYRIANS, BABYLONIANS, MEDES AND PERSIANS, GRECIANS AND MACEDONIANS. Including a History of the Arts and Sciences of tbe Ancietits. P>y Charles Rollin. With a Life of the Author, by James Bell, 2 vols., royal 8vo. Sheep, marbled edges, per set, $6.00. PORTER & COATES' PUBLICATIONS. COOKERY FROM EXPERIENCE. A Practical Guide for House, keepers in the Pteparatiou of Every-day Meals, coutainiug more than One Tliousaud Domestic Recipes, mostly tested by Personal Experience, witli Suggestions for Meals, Lists of Meats and Vegetables in Season, etc. By Mrs. Sara T. Paul. 12mo. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.50. Interleaved Edition. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.75. THE COMPARATIVE EDITION OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. Both Versions in One Book. The i^roof readings of our Comparative Edition have been gone over by so many competent proof readers, that we believe the text is absolutely correct. Large 12mo., 700 pp. Cloth, extra, plain edges, $1.50; cloth, extra, bevelled boards and carmine edges, $1.75; imitation panelled calf, yellow edges, $2.00; arabesque, gilt edges, $2.50; I'rench mo- rocco, limp, gilt edges, $4.00; Turkey morocco, limp, gilt edges, $G.OO. The Comparative New Testament has been published by Porter & Coates. In ()araliel cohimns on each page are KJven llie old and new versions of the Testament, divided also as far as praotieable into eomparative verses, so that it is ahnost inipDssible for the slightest new word to escape the notice of either the ordinary reader or the analytical student. It is decidedly the best edition yet published of tlie most interest-exciting literary production of the day. No more convenient form for compaiison could be devised either for economizing time or labor. Another feature is the foot-notes, and there is also gi^eu in an appendix the various words and expressions preferred by the American members of the lievising Commission. The work is handsomely printed on excellent paper with clear, legible type. It contains nearly 700 pages. THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO. By Alexandre Dumas. Complete in one volume, with two illustrations by George G. White. 12mo. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.25. THE THREE GUARDSMEN. By Alexandre Dumas. Com- plete in one volume, with two illustrations by George G. White. 12ino. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.25. There is a magic influence in his pen, a magnetic attraction in his descrip- tions, a fertility in his literary resources which are characteristic of Dumas alone, and the seal of the master of light literature is set upon all his works. Even when not strictly historical, his romances give an insight into the habits and modes of thought and action of the people of the lime described, which are not offered in any other author's productions. THE LAST DAYS OF POMPEII. By Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton, Bart. Illustrated. 12mo. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.00. Alta edition, one illustration, 75 cts. JANE EYRE. By Charlotte Bronte (Currer Bell). New Li- brary Edition. With five illustrations by E. M. Wimperis. 12mo. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.00. SHIRLEY. By Charlotte Bronte (Currer Bell). New Library Edition. With five illustrations by E. M. Wimperis. 12mo. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.00. PORTER & COATES' PUBLICATIONS. VILLETTE. By Charlotte Broxte (Currer Bell). New Library Edition. With five illustrations by E. M. Wimpekis. 12uio. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.00. THE PROFESSOR, EMMA and POEMS. By Charlotte Bronti (Currer Bell). New Library Edition. With five illustrations by E. M. WiMPERis. 12mo. Cloth, exti-a, black and gold, $1.00. Cloth, extra, black and gold, per set, §4.00; red cloth, paper Voel, gilt top, uncut edges, per set, $5.00; half calf, gilt, per set, ^12.00. The four volumes forming the comjilete works of Char« lotte Bronte (Currer Bell). The wondrous power of Currer Bell's stories consists in their fiery insight into the human heart, their merciless dissection of passion, and their stern analysis of cliaracter and motive. The style of these productions possesses incredible force, sometimes almost grim in its bare severity, then relapsing into passages of melting pathos— always direct, natural, and effective in ita unpretending strength. They exhibit the identity which always belongs to works of genius by the same author, though without the slightest approach to monotony. The characters portrayed by Currer Bell all have a strongly marked individuality. Once brought before the imagination, they haunt tne memory like a strange dream. The sinewy, muscular strength of her ■writings guarantees their permanent duration, and thus far they have lost nothing of their intensity of interest since the period of their composition. CAPTAIN JACK THE SCOUT; or, The Indian Wars about Old Fort Duquesne. An Historical Novel, with copious notes. By Charles McKxight. Illustrated with eight engravings. 12mo. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.50. A work of such rare merit and thrilling interest as to have been repub- lished both in England and Germany. Tliis genuine American historical woik lias been received with extraordinary popular favor, and has "won golden opinions from all sorts of people" for its freshness, its forest life, and its fidelity to truth. In many instances it even corrects History and uses the drapery of fiction simply to enliven and illustrate the fact. It is a universal favorite with boih sexes, and with all ages and condi- tions, and is not only proving a marked and notable success in this country, but has been eagerly taken up abro;id and republished in London, England, and issued in two volumes in the far-famed "Tauchnetz Edition " of Leipsic, Germany. ORANGE BLOSSOMS, FRESH AND FADED. By T. S. Arthur. Illustrated. 12nio. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.50. "Orange Blossoms" contains a number of short stories of society. Like all of Mr. Arthur's works, it has a special moral purpose, and is especially addressed to the young who have just entered the marital experience, whom it pleasantly warns against those social and moral pitfalls into which they may almost innocently plunge. THE BAR ROOMS AT BRANTLEY; or, The Great Hotel Spec- ulation. By T. S. Arthur. Illustrated. 12mo. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.50. "One of the best temperance stories recently issued." — N. Y. Commercial Advertiser. "Although it is in the form of a novel, its truthful delineation of charac- ters is such that in every village in the land you tneet the broken manhood it pictures upon the streets, and look upon sad. tear-dimmed eyes of women and children. The characters are not overdrawn, but are as truthful as an artist's pencil could make them." — Inter-Ocean, Chicago. 10 PORTER & COATES' PUBLICATIONS. EMMA. By Jane Austen. Illustrated. 12mo. Cloth, extra, $1.25. MANSFIELD PAEK. By Jane Austen. Illustrated. 12mo. Cloth, extra, $1.25. PEIDE AND PREJUDICE; and Northanger Abbey. By Janb Austen. Illustrated. 12mo. Cloth, extra, $1.25. SENSE AND SENSIBILITY ; and Persuasion. By Jane Austen. Illustrated. 12uio. Cloth, extra, $1.25. The four volumes, forming the complete works of Jane Austen, In a neat box: Cloth, extra, per set, $5.00 ; red cloth, paper label, gilt top, uncut edges, $5.00; half calf, gilt, per set, $12.00. " Jane Austen, a woman of whom England is justly proud. In her novels she has given us a multitude of cliaracters, all, in a fpvtain sense, common- place, all such as we racket every day. Yet they are all as perfectly discrimi- nated from each oth^r as if they were the most eccentric of human beings. , And almost all this is done by touches so delicate that they elude analvsis that they defy the powers of description, and that we know them to exist only by the general effect to whick they have contributed."— il/a- cauiay^s Easays. AET AT HOME. Containing in one volume House DeCoration, bv Rhoda and Agnes Garkett; Plea for Art in the House, by W. J. Loftie; Music, by John HuLLAH;and Dress, by Mrs. Oliphant. 12mo. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.50. TOM BROWN'S SCHOOL DAYS AT EUGBY. By Thomas " Hughes New Edition, large clear type. With 36 illustra- tions after Caldecott and others. l2mo., 400 pp. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.25; half calf, gilt, $2.75. Alta Edition. One illustration, 75 cents. "It is difficult to estimate the amount, of good which may be done by 'Tom Brown's School Days.' It gives, in the main, a most faithful and int>™stin<^ i.icture of mir public schools, the most English institutions of Fncrland and which educate the best and most powertul elements in our nnner classes. But it is more than this; it is an attempt, a very noble and gi c cessful attempt, to Christianize the society of our youth, through the onlv practicable channel-hearty and brotherly .<^ympathy with their feel- ings; a book, in short, which a father might well wish to see m the hands of his now. '"—London Times. TOM BROWN AT OXFORD. By Thomas Hughes, inustratod. 12mo. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.50 ; half calf, gilt, $o.OO. "Fairlv entitled to the rank and dignity of an English classic. Plot, style and trnthfulness are of the soundest, British character. Racy idiomatic mirror-like, alwavs interesting, suggesting thought on the knottiest socia anc religious questions, now deeply moving by its unconscious pathos, and anon inspiring: uproarious laughter, it is a work the world will not willingly let die."— iV. Y. Christian Advocate. PORTER & COATES' PUBLICATIONS. 11 SENSIBLE ETIQUETTE OF THE BEST SOCIETY. By Mrs. H. O. Wakd. Customs, manners, morals, and home culture, with suggestions how to word notes and letters of invitations, acceptances, and regrets, and general instructions as to calls, rules for watering places, lunches, kettle drums, dinners, re- ceptions, weddings, parties, dress, toilet and juanners, saluta- tions, introductions, social reforms, etc., etc. Bound in cloth, with gilt edge, and sent by mail, postage paid, on receipt of $2.00. LADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S ETIQUETTE: A Complete Manual of the Manners and Dress of American Society. Con- taining forms of Letters, Invitations, Acceptances, and Regrets. With a copious index. By E. B. DuFFEY. 12mo. Cloth, extra, black and gold, $1.50. "It is peculiarly an American book, especially adapted to our people, and its greatest beauty is found in the fact that in every line and luecept it in- culcates the principles of true politene.ss, instead of those foriiml rules that serve only lo gild the surface without afFecting the 8ubsfanc(\ It is admir- ably written, the style being ckar, terse, and iorcible."—