BANCROFT LIBRARY o THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA REPLY OF GEN. THOMAS J. GREEN, TO THE SPEECH OF GENERAL SAM HOUSTON, IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES, AUGUST 1, 1854. F WASHINGTON CITY, February 15#A, 1855. To THE HONORABLE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES : About the close of the last session of your honorable body, and whilst I was in Texas zealously advocating the building of the Southern Pacific railroad, Sam Houston, one of the Senators from that State, under his senatorial privilege, made an as- sault upon my character, so maliciously false, yea, without a shadow of foundation in truth, that it requires a present notice from me. He made a formal request of the Senate, which was granted, to meet at an earlier hour than usual the next day, to afford him the opportunity of calumniating a private citizen from his senatorial desk; and consequently to have that calumny propagated through the journals and printing patron- age of the Senate thereby making the Senate the ostentatious endorser of the vilest tissue of falsehoods which ever found their way to public notice through such a channel. It is plain that with these meretricious advantages, and the further sena- torial privilege of having reporters to reduce his bombast to readable grammar, and that printed and franked throughout the country, a private citizen, with both truth and justice upon his side, must appear to disadvantage. It is indeed painful to question the justice or policy of the Senate, in any particular ; but when your high body sits day after day as a shield to a mendacious colleague, to pour forth his slanders against myself and others, which, if uttered by him outside the Senate walls would not be credited by his vilest sychophant, is, I trust, a sufficient reason for my protest- ing against the use of a prerogative thus abused. This quarrel between Senator Houston and myself, which has been so offi- cially dignified, has nothing to do with his senatorial duties. It was of foreign birth and growth, of many years' standing before the days of Texas annexation. What I then said of him was openly said, upon the stump, through the press, and from my place in the Congress, of the Republic. That every thing I said of him was believed by the intelligent and honest, is clear, or this new attempt to divert merited odium at this par- ticular time, would hardly have been made. If I have said any thing against his official conduct since annexation, it has been in common with the people of the South, and the general sentiment of Texas, to denounce his abolition treason to a sec- tion which delegated to him her security and political equality. This right belongs as much to Senator Houston's deceived and betrayed constituency, as does that of his new abolition allies, to reward and praise his treason. Had the Senator have asked for a committee to investigate the many charges, which, in most of the States of the Union, would secure him a life tenure in a penitentiary, I should have been saved the trouble of thus appearing before the public. With all his pen- chant for committees of investigation, this he dare not do ; and having no voice in your honorable body, I claim the glorious privilege of an American citizen, to vindicate before the pub- lic that which I hold far more dear than life my honor. The sequel will show, that there are reasons which lie far deeper than appears upon the surface, for the Senator's attack upon me at this time. He knows full well that I have the proofs of his many crimes personal and political with the honesty and boldness to make them known ; and he was in- formed that the proper occasion for this would be when his treasonable insolence to that section of the Union which gave him life and bread, would cause him to talk seriously of being the Presidential candidate of the abolitionists. To break the force of my testimony, by the most calumnious and stupid falsehoods, was his real, while his ostensible object was, that my history of the " Mier Expedition" was in the Congress library. President Polk requested the first copies of this work issued from the press, for the use of himself and Cabinet. It contained information of Texas and Mexico, then new, and for which I received the thanks of the President and other officers of the government. It has been in the Congress library for the last nine years ; was generally read, and as .generally believed ; and which the concurrent testimony of all my comrades in that sanguinary campaign, will bear witness to its truth. I do here most solemnly avow, that I have not, in said work, made a solitary charge upon General Houston, either directly or by implication, which is not strictly true. This the Senator, as well as the most intelligent men of Texas, know, and which I will prove by the most incontestible evidence ; and while the extensive circulation of this work, together with its cost, is beyond the ability of him or his sycophants to sup- press, he resorts to this mode of destroying it. His efforts so far, have greatly increased the public desire to read it ; and for his pains, I promise that the next edition will contain a more full length portrait of himself. Should it not prove true to life, language wilLbe deficient in showing np those monstrous immoralities which constitute his life-time of iniquity ; of fraud and falsehood ; of impiety and hypocrisy ; of inebriety, bestiality, and villainy all of which he attempts to palm upon the public as "eecenfoio&y, tact, coquetry" I own that this is severe language, and sincerely regret the necessity for its use if it were less severe, it would be less true. Gen. Houston's " eccentricity, tact, and coquetry," have re- cently caused him to pitch into Abolitionism, Know-Nothing- ism, and Baptism. As poor an opinion as I entertain of the first-named of these isms, I am slow to believe of that sect, that their political astuteness would readily receive into leading membership this Benedict Arnold, black with treason to that section which gave him birth, in comparison to which the treason of Burr is exalted patriotism, the betrayal T)y Judas of the Son of Peace, an excusable weakness. It would be a gross slander upon the intelligence of the great Know-Nothing party, to suppose that he could pack him- self upon them for any thing except one untrue to every moral obligation, personal and political. But a short time since, the senator made a speech to some Irish regiments in the New- York Park, in which he " thanked 'God that every drop of Uood which circulated through his heart was Irish" Is this the blood of Know-Nothings ; or do his new peans to that party :suit the Irish regiments f Does Ms .common slander of the 6 American people for the last twenty years, and his praises of the faithless Indian, suit them better ? Even now, when his own state for hundreds of miles is bleeding from the scalping- knife of his red brethren, and that state at this time has taken from the plough six companies of her own citizens to assist the United States army in stopping the work of the tomahawk, the senator prates for days, in and out of the senate, of Indian honesty and humanity. For his leap into the Brasos, under the sanctity of Baptism, there are other reasons, of which we will speak hereafter. Such a leap would defile Jordan itself, without purifying his soul, or even imposing upon the true piety of the respected Church to which he has attached him- self; and in vain may he elongate his face to a Puritanical measure, and continue to drawl his words to a ghostly intona- tion, he will not be believed. (Aristotle, the wise preceptor of Alexander the Great, says, " Show me a man who drawls his words, and I will show you a scoundrel" I believe that in the whole of my large experience of mankind I never knew this saying falsified.) Yes, he may Gloster-like, with "a book of prayer in hand, True ornaments to know a holy man," make pilgrimages the balance of his life between the Baptist of the Brasos, and the Abolitionist of the Canada shore, with- out convincing them that this treason and hypocrisy was for any other purpose than to gull their numerous voters. Such an attempt at this late day, when his head is frosted with three score years of crime, is an insult to our political intelligence, and the quintessence of a brutal impudence. The first purpose of this communication is to prove to your honorable body, and the world, the utter falsity of every charge, and every inuendo, contained in the senator's magniloquent tirade ; and next, to give the true reasons for this attack upon me at this late day, interspersed with necessary remarks of himself. Ex-President David G. Burnett, than whom a more truthful, talented, or purer patriot never labored for liberty, in his review of the life of Houston, page 6, says, that " Gen. Hous- ton has long and habitually acted on the Spanish proverb, that ' a lie that can gain belief for one hour is worth the tell- ing? " If tlie reporter of the New Orleans Picayune, and others present, reported his speech truly, he seems to have screwed his courage up to promising the senate that he would give me per- sonal satisfaction. "Whether this promise, for even one hour, gulled a solitary senator of the half dozen who listened to him, is doubtful ; if so, it was more than he accomplished with any who knew him well, and certainly myself. Acting, however, upon the opinion of friends who thought that it was due to the Senate, I wrote to my friend, the Hon. Branch T. Archer, to call upon him to redeem his promise. Before, however, my friend could see the senator, he had taken leave of all worldly promises by his hypocritical submersion in the Brasos, hoping, doubtless, thereby that he could also se- cure the vote of the Baptist. The puerile whining in his pamphlet speech, about his- " two crushed limbs," would be laughable in a superannuated old woman. The two flesh-wound scratches he received, the one upon his arm and the other upon his leg, would not have made a man of ordinary nerve lay up an hour ; though the first was the pretext of his deserting the brave Jackson, in the Creek nation, who conducted the whole of that eventful cam- paign with his right arm broken and in a sling ; the other the pretext for his deserting the army in Texas and going off to New Orleans and Tennessee, exhibiting Santa Anna's gold- headed cane, spurs -agent was entrusted with public funds. This responsibility I sup- posed belonged to the head-agency. But I did suppose, that his dismissal from office was owing to some petit larceny pecu- lations or on account of his having married one of the Chero- kee squaws. Does that senator deny that he was turned out of office, or made to vacate it ? if so, let the correspondence of the department speak. It is well known to the Senate, that on 25 sundry occasions Senator Houston made nullification the osten- sible pretext of his opposition to the distinguished South Caro- linian, who never would condescend to reply to the "big dog of Texas" That great man would as soon have handled a dead dog under an August son. Does the senator deny that he has abused Mr. Calhoun for more than thirty years ? this fact is known to hundreds ; yet, nullification is only half that age. A sycophant, as was Houston, to the great Jackson, might shield himself for the time under such a battery, so that he could vent more effectually his spleen against the great nulli- fier. So did he, for years, vilify and^ calumniate the lamented Henry Clay, because he supposed it pleasing to Gen. Jackson. For years it was a common slander of Houston to say that Mr. Clay's hostility to Jackson was on account of Gen. Jackson having run Mr. Clay out of a tavern in Kentucky. Yet, I have been told that when he, Houston, was sent on to Ashland as one of the Senate's Committee with the remains of that lamented patriot, that he, Houston, in the presence of the people of Kentucky, stooped and kissed the coffin of the illustrious dead, with a sanctimonious phiz which would have shamed any puritan face in the days of the roundheads. Was such unblushing hypocrisy ever before witnessed ? I have related this incident to illustrate in part the character of the senator, whose hardihood could speak, publish and circulate, in one pamphlet, under senatorial privilege, and with the pub- lic money, five hundred Hack-hearted lies. This is a hard word ; but no other so well befits a truthful reply and this oc- casion. I will not attempt here to follow this senatorial harle- quin through his political tactics, tergiversations, antics. I have more important facts for the public ; but on one occasion he said from his place in the Senate, when one of General Jack- son's old friends turned freesoiler, that " if the immortal hero of the hermitage were upon earth, there would not be an olea- ginous spot left of him" the freesoiler. This former friend of the deceased, however, had the boldness to " kick the dead lion," as soon as breath was out of his body. Not so with the senator. Ten years he attempted to act the jackall upon the reputation of the illustrious dead ; and, after trying by every surreptitious means to place the well-earned mantle of the de- 26 ceased upon his own beastly nature, which was nobly resisted by the faithful hard-shell democrats, he, too, turns freesoiler. Now, what kind of spot is left of the senator ? Every honest man will say a DIRTY SPOT. The senator's y him of corruption on the part of President Burnet, in entering into treaty stipulations with Gen. Santa Anna, after the battle of San Jacinto. It is not my purpose here to defend President Burnet. There lives not a man so well able to do it as himself, and which he has often done, to the entire satisfaction of every honest man who chooses to inform himself of facts. President Burnet's emi- nently patriotic service, and his uniform poverty for the last twenty years in Texas, is a sufficient vindication from the slan- ders of ten thousand such tongues as Houston's. And here we might with good reason ask, whence came all the senator's wealth ? This we will answer hereafter. But, says the sen- ator, " Santa Anna was told that the Commander-in-Chief had no power to enter into negotiations with him ; " but in the next breath he admits that he did enter into negotiations with him, by requiring Santa Anna to make Gen. Filisola, then in command, to evacuate the country, which was done. The sen- ator may well squirm upon this subject. Thousands of the most intelligent men of Texas believe that his trip to Or- leans was to receive the amount of the captive's promise, rather than the healing of the scratch upon his ankle. I will here ask the senator where is the letter upon this subject, which was written to President Lamar, and filed in the office of the Secretary of State in 1841. President Houston came into office the second term in 1842, and this letter, and many other proofs 27 of his villainy, have been stolen from that office. I have re- cently had occasion to examine said office with much care, not only for that letter, but for the one he so boastfully referred me to that office for the one which caused the " decimation of the Mier prisoners : " neither is to be found. But Commodore E. M. Moore holds one in President Houston's own hand writing, written on that identical day, and signed in his well-known signature. I will here give it without the alteration of a comma. His partisan sycophants have denied that such a letter was in existence. I invite the whole Senate, the whole American Congress, to call and see for themselves. I invite all Texians, Abolitionists, Know-Nothings, Baptists all honest men every where, and of every party, to call and satisfy them- selves of this most infamous of all stealing in the history of Kepublican America. " WASHINGTON (Texas), " Colonel Bryan, 24th January, 1843. " Texian Consul, "New Orleans. " My Dear Sir, When you arrive at Orleans, if you can, have the enclosed Bill filled, and as you pass by Galveston you will be authorised by Gail Bor- den, jun.,* Esq. to draw on him for the amount of the purchases, at sixty or ninety days. I desire that you should see that the carriage or double ba- rouch, will track the usual width of waggons for the road. " You will be judge of the quality of the articles and their prices, regarding economy in their purchase. "The Furniture-Calico you will select, but take care to select none such as will exhibit Turkey Gobblers, Peacocks, Bears, Elephants, Wild Boars, or Stud Horses ! ! ! Vines, Flowers, or any figures of taste, you can select. " I hope you will send them by some careful, clever fellow ; and as I am so poor, if you can make a bargain for the freight, it might be well! " Consign them to my friend Borden, and he will settle the freight! "I will rely upon you in all things, as I have always done, and will only say this is a l Stationery ' Bill! ! ! " You will please present Mrs. Houston and myself to Col. and Madam Christy, also to Mr. Caruthers and family. " Very truly, thy friend, "SAM HOUSTON.'" * Collector of the Port. 28 " GENERAL HOUSTON'S MEMORANDUM. " 2 setts Guitar Strings, " 2 barrels excellent Flour, "2 do do Sugar, "1 do do Soap, " 2 sacks do Coffee (Java), " 1 barrel do Herrings, " i do do Mackerel (No. 1), " 1 keg do Lard, " 1 do do Goshen Butter, " 1 barrel Apples, " 1 do Buckwheat, " 1 box Prime Tea (Young Hyson), " 1 Barouch (excellent), 4 seats, with shafts, tongue, and double harness, with a whip and all complete, " 1 Good Dearbourn Waggon and Harness, " 1 sett neat white China, for Coffee, " 2 Wash Pitchers and Bowls, " 1 neat Wash Stand, " 1 Bolt fine white grass Linnen, " 3 or 4 Bolts white cotton Furniture Fringe, " 1 Bolt fine Calico (handsome), "1 do coarse do, "1 do Furniture Calico, "1 do do Dimity, "1 do Linnen Diaper, for Towels, " 1 Crimping Iron, " 6 yards fine Cambric Linnen, " 3 fine large Silk Pocket Handkerchiefs, " 3 pair Silk and 3 pair Cotton Socks, " 1 handsome Pocket Knife (pretty large), " To be filled by Col. Wm. Bryan for his friend, " SAM HOUSTON. " WASHINGTON, 26th January, 1843." Let it be recollected that this " Stationery " Bill was filled and paid for, as directed by President Houston ; that when the articles arrived at Galveston from Orleans, they were car- ried up the Brasos Eiver to Washington, by Capt. John N. Reed, the present popular Sheriff of Galveston, then in com- mand of a steamer ; and before he could collect his freight bill, this identical Senator Houston made him make it out for express service, and it was so paid. Sugar and Soap, Butter and Buckwheat, Lard and Flour, Herrings and Coffee, Dearborn "Wagon and Barouch, whip, shafts, and tongue complete, Dimity and Crimping Irons, China and Fringe, Lin- en and Stud-Horse Calico, stationery, very ! But this small stealing, which was an every-day practice of President Hous- ton, is the least of the offence. On this very day, January 24th, 1843, while with one hand he was robbing the impoverished treasury of Texas, with the other he was signing the death- warrant of the brave men of "Mier." The following publication made by myself in reference to this subject, will speak for itself, and which neither the Sena- tor or his friends have undertaken since to mystify, until the appearance of his senate pamphlet. TO THE PEOPLE OF TEXAS. " WASHINGTON CITY, Jan. 10th, 1846. " A friend has just placed in my hands a * Galveston Civilian' of the 13th ult., containing a letter from Gen. Sam Houston, purporting to be a vindica- tion of his conduct in reference to the decimation of our countrymen in Mexi- co. Gen. Houston, in his letter, failing to adduce any evidence of his inno- cence of this enormous crime, has endeavored to divert public attention from his guilt, by the grossest, false, and vindictive I had almost said unparal- leled slander of myself. In this I would have erred, for it has many parallels from Gen. Houston himself. His publication of the gallant Commodore Moore to the world, as an outlaw and pirate, at the identical time that his cannon were thundering against more than ten times his force, that of our common enemy his reiterated slanders against the brave Generals Burleson, Sherman and Wharton, and almost every other distinguished man in Texas his oft repeated ridiculous charges against ex-President Burnet, one of the purest men in any country his vile denunciation of Gen. Stephen F. Austin, the father of his country his perfidious slander of the spotless wife of his own bosom yea, in his general character as an universal calumniator, count- less parallels might be adduced. Though his charges against myself must meet that contempt from every honest man which has followed the habitual falsehoods of his whole life, yet the circumstances in which Gen. Houston and myself are now placed before the people of Texas, make it proper that I should appear before the public through the same medium. And I will ask what other redress is left me ? It is well known that Gen. Houston holds himself perfectly irresponsible. If personal chastisement be inflicted upon him, as was done by the Hon. Branch T. Archer and Col. Jordon, he either pleads sickness or old age. If falsehood is proved upon him, as was done by Mr. Wingfield, and many others, he pleads drunkenness. II is due to myself 30 then, that I should in this case prove his falsehood, and ' out of his own mouth will I convict him.' " Fellow citizens, it has been three long years and over, since the hard- fought and sanguinary battle of Mier : a few days more will make three years since that gallant little band of your countrymen was made to draw hi a black-bean lottery, and each tenth man shot. Such a cold blooded murder astonished the whole civilized world, and put to the test the wisest politicians of the most civilized nations, to know what sufficient cause could be assigned therefor. Could it be that they had fought, under the requirements of their own government, considering the disparity of forces and the circumstances of the case, the hardest fought battle in the annals of war ? Could it be, that when captives, they had, while emaciated and worn down by the fatigues of a long and wearisome march, risen upon triple their number of armed guards, over- powered and dispersed them uninjured, and then peaceably pursued their way homewards ? No ! these actions met the praises, not only of all civilized nations, but even the highest encomiums of semi-barbarian Mexico. For what, then, could such a shocking murder have been perpetrated ? Alone, upon the most authoritative evidence, that they were without the pale of those laws which govern civilized nations in war. Did that evidence exist ? If so, who furnished it, and how came it to the knowledge of that government ? " In this letter, fellow citizens, I must necessarily confine myself to a brief statement of this matter, and refer every man who wishes to know the whole history of it, to appendix No. 2, page 450, and appendix No. 6, page 477, of my work upon Texas and Mexico, in which will be seen stated all the evi- dence in the case, and such evidence as no man, so far as I have heard, of the thousands and tens of thousands in this country, who have read it, pre- tended to doubt. That evidence is that Sam Houston, the President of Texas, early in the year 1843, and soon after the battle of Mier, wrote a letter to Capt. Elliot, Her Britannic Majesty's Charge d' Affairs, residing in Galves- ton, which he, Houston, requested him, Elliot, to forward to Mexico, and which he, Elliot, did as he was requested ; in which Houston said, * that though the Mier prisoners had entered Mexico contrary to law and authority, yet Tie, Houston, legged mercy for them, &c? It is in evidence, that upon the re- ceipt of this letter of Presd't Houston, that Santa Anna, the President of Mexico, ordered the decimation, showing that the President of Texas was the highest, and sufficient authority for this horrible deed : because, that evi- dence had proclaimed them brigands and robbers. " Fellow citizens, these facts came to the knowledge of myself and com- panions, through the American and English ministers, while we were in the dungeons of Mexico, very soon after this sad tragedy in March, 1843. After my escape from the castle of Perote, and in October of the same year, I pub- lished them in the ' Galveston News,' and notwithstanding President Hous- ton's then control of the Mails and Post Offices of Texas and the limited cir- culation of that journal, he, Houston, knowing the truth of these charges, and feeling a murderer's guilt, commenced his vindication by denying, with up- lifted eyes, that he ever wrote, or caused to be written, the letter charged to 31 him. (See Lieut. S. H. Walker's statement, page 453.) This was President Houston's FIRST defence of himself; but upon my receipt and publication of Gen. Waddy Thompson's and the British Minister's letters from Mexico, proving the falsity of his denial, he fled to the Presbyterian Church in the town of Houston, in November of the same year, and made a speech, which was published in all his newspapers of that day, and in which he said, * it was not my friend's, Capt. Elliott's letter, that produced the mischief,' 1 thereby implying, that Elliott had written the letter. In said speech, however, he goes on to charge all the consequences of that murder to a letter which Gen. M. Hunt had written to, and which was published in the * Houston Telegraph ' of the 18th of Jan. previously. This is Gen. Houston's SECOND defence, and thus, up to this hour, so far as I am informed, Gen. Hunt and the Telegraph stand charged by Gen. Houston with the horrid butchery. On the 12th of December, which was about one month after his speech was published in his annual message to Congress, he again changes his ground, and said, that ' it was a retaliation on account of those under Gen. Somermlle who robbed Laredo? charging this murder to those who returned from that place with Col. Bennett. Thus, you see, for the THIRD time, in the short space of a few months, when pursued by the ghosts of these murdered heroes, he changes his ground of defence. Now, fellow citizens, after a lapse of nearly three years, when his control over the public intelligence of Texas is about to give way to an honest administration of the mails, when my work upon Texas and Mexico has gone the length and breadth of this great nation, and carried conviction to the mind of every man who has read it, that Sam Houston is the wilful and malicious murderer of his countrymen of Mier, and just on the eve of the Congressional elections and in my absence from Texas, he comes out in the ' Civilian' of the 13th of last month, and charges this crime upon myself, as having been the ' first to incite the men ' to the plun- der of Laredo. Thus, for the FOURTH time, Gen. Houston, has changed his defence. But, fellow citizens, falsehood and crime will always convict itself, be- cause it rarely ever tells one steady tale. Gen. Houston, after changing his de- fence, as you have seen FOUR different times, comes out in his latest publica- tion, and for the FIRST time admits that " he wrote the letter to Capt. Elliott." It cannot be forgotten, in Texas, how often, for the last three years, both Gen. Houston and his partisans have denied this fact, and it would have been better for him always to have denied it ; for then many of his blinded friends would either have believed, or professed to believe, that he never had writ- ten it. " Fellow citizens, the vind'ictiveness of Gen. Houston's last defence can only be equalled by his stupidity. If the plunder of Laredo had been a suf- ficient cause for the decimation of your countrymen, and I had been the 'first to incite the men to that plunder,' why did not Santa Anna have me shot ? His personal hostility to myself for the last ten years was well known, and the slightest pretext would have been sufficient for him to have practised his bloody vengeance upon my person. If Gen. Houston's charge be correct, I ask, in the name of common sense, why it was that innocent, unoffending 32 men, were made to pay the penalty of my crime? Why it was that Majors Cocke and Dunham, Captains Cameron and Eastland, Este, Hams, Jones and Mahan, Ogden, Roberts, Rowan and Shepard, Thompson, Torry, Trum- bull, Wing, and the * iron nerved ' Whaling, were made to pay the penalty of my wrong-doing ? This charge, like a badly counterfeited dollar, carries its own condemnation upon its face, and I should not have deemed it worthy of notice but to show the recklessness of one who scruples at no falsehood to serve his ambition and hatred. " Fellow citizens, what Gen. Houston asserts in his letter, about promptly furnishing the Mier prisoners in Mexico with the supplies which Congress had voted them, is as untrue as the balance of his letter, and I will take the jour- nals of Congress and his own letter to prove it. The facts are these : Early in December, 1843, and soon after the meeting of Congress, the destitution of our countrymen in Mexico was pressed upon the attention of Congress by myself, the Hon. Wm. E. Jones, S. H. Maverick, and others, who had tasted some of the sweets of a Mexican prison. To the honor of that Congress, be it known, no time was lost in voting $15,000 for their relief, under the re- quirement that it should be forthwith furnished them. It was then deemed best by the Congress, for the good of our countrymen in prison, that this law should not be made public at the time. About two months after, and at nearly the close of the session, the Secretary of the Treasury was called upon by myself and others, to know what had been done in carrying out this law. To our surprise and mortification we were informed that not a dollar had been sent them, and no measures taken to send them one. We saw then, full well, that President Houston would cloak his vindictive dereliction of duty under a law then not designed to be made public; and just before the close of the Congress another law was passed, in open session, appropriating an additional $15,000. This law was passed without the repeal of the former, and thus the Congress, under full consideration for the eminent services of these men, voted $30,000 to their relief. We come now to the question, how much of this money was sent these men, and when it was sent to them ? Gen. Houston tells you in his letter, that on the 19th of October, 1844, one draft was drawn for $3,740. Mark the time this is ten months and a half from the passage of the law. But he says that he sent Mr. Potter as a spe- cial agent (Mr. Hargous refusing to act as such), with $2,500. Now I ask the question of every Mier man, did they ever receive one dollar of this ap- propriation while in prison? No ! On the 16th of September, the survivors were turned loose at the gates of Perote, like so many cattle, with the excep- tion that the * magnanimous Mexican nation ' gave each man one silver dollar to bear his expenses to Texas. With that silver dollar they started home, and at Jalapa, for the first time, they were furnished, through Mr. Hargous, $2,000. These are the historical facts of the case, proved by the acts of Congress, now upon your statute book, the assertion of every Texian then in Perote, and the confessions of Gen. Houston's own letter. Was there any possible excuse for this cruel delay, even had Mr. Hargous refused to act as our agent ? Was Mr. Hargous the only man in Mexico through whom money 33 could be transmitted? Or was it at all necessary that we should have an agent? I say not! and Gen. Houston knew full well, that in one week from the passage of that act, he could have placed the money in some responsible house or bank in New Orleans, and, with a certificate of deposit and author- ity sent to Gen. Fisher, or Quarter-Master Fenton M. Gibson, or any other officer in the Castle of Perote, to draw for the same, could have been cashed in one hour at that place, at a premium of six per cent. Thus, with this small paper, which could have been sent to them in twenty days from the passage of the act, every $100 on deposit in New Orleans would have been worth to them, in their cheerless and destitute prison, $106! " But, fellow-citizens, in these long ten months of withholding the bread of your dying countrymen, did President Houston hear no complaints'from them ? Yes ! not a sail that crossed the Gulf which did not bring from the miserable cells of Perote the lamentations of the sick and dying ; and the bones of eighty-odd noble souls, now scattered from the bottom of the great ditch of Perote, to nearly every prison-yard in Mexico, are evidence of 'Presi- dent Houston's friendship for the Mier men.' 1 Did President Houston hear no other complaints from the Mier men ? Yes, indeed, be it told to their eternal honor ! though it has been well said that starvation for the want of food is the greatest subduer of the physical man, yet, when these noble countrymen of ours heard that President Houston had his commissioners across the Rio Grande, signing their country away as the ' DEPARTMENT OP TEXAS,' though they were at that time living skeletons, and daily depositing some of their comrades in that horrible ditch, they nobly wrote home, which should be written in letters of gold and engraven upon every patriot's heart, * Let no consideration of us forfeit your country's honor: let us rot in these dungeons ere you concede one inch to these colored barbarians.'' " All this is only equaled by one thing in the conclusion of Gen. Houston's letter, which I must think caps the climax of every assertion and assumption of his whole life, to wit : that ' 1 lie day will come when it will le shown that he obtained the release of the Mier prisoners. 1 This beats * Coquetting ' about Annexation so far that I cannot well conceive how his most devoted followers can read it with becoming gravity. * The day will come.' Was there ever so propitious a day for Gen. Houston to prove that thing as now, when the separate nationality of Texas is merged in this great confederacy, and when he is staking every thing for a seat in that dignified branch of the Congress of this Union, which, should he succeed, it cannot fail to experience the dis- grace of that success. " Fellow-citizens, so much for Gen. Houston and the Mier men ; and, in conclusion, I must crave your further attention to that part of his letter per- sonal to myself. Gen. Houston says, that in the sacking of Laredo, I was 'the first man who broke open a house and incited the men to outrage.' I know not what milder epithet to give to this charge, than to say it is maliciously, infamously false. It is known by the whole army, that on the day of the sacking of Laredo, I did not leave the camp, which was three miles below the town, and that when those that had participated in the sack- 3 34 ing, returned to the camp, I was among the most active in getting them to return the articles to Gen. Somerville's quarters, to be re-delivered to the alcalde, and the well known fact that every Mier man, with many others, did so return them, relieves them from Gen. Houston^ charge of crime, if crime it was. That some who returned from Laredo with Col. Bennett did not return the articles taken from the town is also well known. These men are known to be Gen. Houston's warmest friends, and they must settle with him this high charge of robbery which he brings against them. I will, however, de- fend these friends of Gen. Houston against his wholesale denunciations. " On the 8th of December, 1842, General Somerville's forces arrived at the town of Laredo, after seventeen days' march from their camp upon the Me- dina ; having exhausted the whole of more than three hundred beeves which they started with from the San Antonio, General Somerville made a requisition for eight or ten beeves, which was barely rations for one day, and then took the backward track for home. The men had been promised supplies upon the Rio Grande, and now found that promise neglected. They had, by every law of war and nature, a right to be fed ; and if the General did not do it, through his commissariat, they were reduced to the alternative of doing so of their own accord, though with becoming patience they awaited a whole day for the General to comply with his promise, and did not attempt to sup- ply themselves until he had made a retrograde march of three miles home- wards. That these men took articles useless and unbecoming soldiers, was more the fault of their General, in not telling them what was lawful to take, than in their not knowing what was so lawful by the usages of war. Now, I will ask, did President Houston inform these men what was proper by the laws of war to take, when in his address to the people of Texas, in July, 1842, he called upon them to * to pursue the enemy into his own country, and chastise him for his insolence and wrongs? No ! These are his identical instructions, published in all the newspapers of the day. ' The Government (says Presi- dent Houston) will promise nothing hut authority to march, and such supplies of ammunition as may ~be needful for the campaign. They must look to the valley of the Rio Grande for remuneration 2 he Government mil claim no portion of the spoils ; they will ~be divided among the victors. The flag of Texas will accompany the expedition. 1 Thus much for President Houston's calumny of the sacking of Laredo ; and while the Texian army has been in the invariable habit, during our revolution, of quartering upon our own citizens while in the field, he would have them starve while in an enemy's country, though called there by his own proclamation. " Fellow citizens, the manner in which General Houston has lugged Mr. Hargous into his letter, shows a vindicative hatred of that gentleman, which he (Houston) has manifested in several of his veto messages on those laws of your Congress which provided to pay him the money he furnished our countrymen of the Santa Fe Expedition, while in Mexico. "Wherefore, I ask, has General Houston thus formally brought Mr. Hargous before his govern- ment ? There can be but one answer. It is the same manifestation of his murderous intent which caused him to write to Santa Anna, that the " Mier 35 men had gone into Mexico without authority of lew ;" and while I trust that the fatal consequences of his Mier letter may not befall this excellent gentleman, it is due, both to him and myself, to state the particulars of a transaction for which President Houston, in January, 1844, received the unanimous rebuke of the House of Representatives of Texas. " The facts are these, fellow citizens : In June, 1843, while in the castle of Perote, I received, as was known to all my companions, several letters from my brother, Colonel C. P. Green, of N. C., saying, that in July he would come to Mexico, to see how he could best serve me. On the 2nd of that month, not content to await the arrival of my brother, I escaped from prison, with fifteen of my countrymen. After weeks of suffering in the mountains, myself, Captain C. K. Reese, and Interpreter Dan Drake Henrie, of Brazoria county, Rd. Barclay, and R. Cornegay, of Fayette county, and John For- rester, of the town of Houston, met in disguise in the city of Vera Cruz* Captain Reese had been provided with some means through his father's fac- tor in New Orleans, and Mr. Hargous furnished me with $130, and I became responsible for the balance of the passages of my comrades on board the steamer Petrita, to New Orleans, which, in all, amounted to $280. I dis- tinctly told Mr. Hargous that it was more than probable I would meet my brother in New Orleans, and in expectation of which, I would draw for the $280 upon him ; but at the same time, I would draw a duplicate draft upon the Government of Texas, that for a like purpose General McLeod and Col- onel Cooke had drawn the year previously in his favor, for the Santa Fe pris- oners, for several thousand dollars ; that I was satisfied that General Houston would neither pay the one or the other, for he never was known to pay his own debts voluntarily, and rarely under any circumstances, but that the Texas Congress would. When we sailed on the Petrita, John Forester pre- ferred to work his passage as fireman, thereby reducing my indebtedness to Mr. Hargous to $255. On my arrival at New Orleans, I had sufficient money to pay for the use of a bed, and a drink of grog each. The next day, through the kindness of my friends, Col. W. M. Beal and Charles Duroche, I was enabled to furnish some of them still farther. In a few days after, we sailed for Texas, I becoming individually responsible for passages of four to Captain Ferguson. Upon my arrival in New Orleans, instead of meeting my brother, as I expected, I received the melancholy intelligence that he was upon his death-bed, and from which he never arose. This fact was known to the supercargo of Mr. Hargous, in Orleans, and at my request he sent the duplicate draft to the Government of Texas, which he accompanied with some stupid complaints of my brother not meeting him in Orleans. At this time I was a member of Congress, and had exposed Houston's murder of our decimated Mier men, and all other of his mal-practices coming under my knowl- edge, with that unreserve well known to you all. Upon the receipt of this draft for $280, expended upon our suffering countrymen, President Houston laid it before the House of Representatives, in a special message, with reflections against myself. Upon the presentation of which, the House unanimously .refused to receive his message, and ordered the Clerk forthwith to return it 36 to him : thus rebuking him in a manner never known before or since in the history of the Texian Congress. Did the Congress stop here ? No ! the draft for the $280 was incorporated in Mr. Hargous' Santa Fe outlay, without one dissenting vote ; and if that gentleman has not yet received his whole dues, it has been on account of the constant hostility of Presidents Houston and Jones, which their veto messages will prove. For these facts I refer to the journals of Congress and the Hon. Wm. E. Jones, who was chairman on the Commit- tee, as well as to every member of the House of Representatives, and chal- lenge their denial. THOMAS J. GREEN. Thus it will be seen that the senator has for the first time admitted that he wrote the fatal letter ; but in this he again attempts to charge the consequence of that murderous " black bean lottery," first, to the sacking of Laredo by his own friends and neighbors ; next, to Gen. Hunt's letter of the 18th of January, 1843 ; and, last, to the rising of our prisoners upon their guards. For a more full understanding of the truthful- ness of his assertions, I herewith append the certificate of Capt. Samuel G. Norvell, than whom a braver soldier or better patriot was never in the Texas army. Before doing so, let me call attention to this military pretender's idea of an " armistice." He says, " They had violated the armistice granted to them, and for that, and nothing else, they were punished." Now there never was an armistice granted them / and if there had been, it would necessarily have expired upon the signing of the articles of capitulation. That men loaded with irons, driven and herded like cattle, could violate a parole, by strik- ing for their liberty against three times their number of armed guards, is something new in the science of war ; and I should like to know in what book this " COMMANDEE-IN- CHIEF " found such law. The only parole ever granted to a " Mier prisoner," was to Gen. Fisher and myself, by Col. Savriego, on our march from Matamoras to Monterey. This parole we could have easily broken, and gained our liberty thereby ; but I am sure that either of us would have preferred death. I knew that I was being carried to an implacable enemy, Santa Anna, and my friends believed that my life would be the forfeit. But to- Capt. Norvell's certificate. 37 - "AUSTIN, TEXAS, "Oct. 29th, 1854. "To Gen'l Thomas J. Green, "Dear Sir: " Having read Senator Sam Houston's late attack upon you in the United States Senate, in which he denounces as untrue your . work upon the ' Mier Expedition,' and endeavors to exculpate himself by charging Gen. Memucan Hunt as the cause of the decimation of the 'Mier Prisoners,' and the murder of the brave Capt. Ewin Cameron ; and having carefully examined all the evidences in this matter, from page 450 to 461, in your work, all of which I know to be true, I feel it due to yourself and the public to make this further unsolicited statement, to which at any time I am ready to testify. "I, as one of the sixty-seven 'Bexar prisoners of war,' who surrendered to Gen. Adrian Woll, of the Mexican army, in September, 1842, at the city of San Antonio, was marched, with my comrades, through Mexico as far as the city of Queretero, where I was left sick. Through the intercession of friends, upon my recovery I was released, and proceeded to the city of Mexico, where, for the first time, I heard of the capture of the * Mier Prisoners,' their decimation, and the shooting of Capt. Cameron. I went immediately to Gen. Waddy Thompson, the American Minister, to know more of this mel- ancholy news. He told me that it was too true, and that President Sam Houston's letter, written through the British legation, at Galveston, to Mexico, was the cause of it. I replied that it was impossible that the President of Texas could have written such a letter. He answered, go to the British min- ister and see for yourself. I went immediately to see Mr. Packenham, the British Minister, and upon my announcing myself as one of the released Texian prisoners, he inquired, Did you know Captain Cameron, and was he the bloody robber he is represented to be ? I answered that I knew Captain Cameron well ; had served in the army with him, and that a purer gentleman and better patriot and soldier never fought for his country. Upon this the tears trickled down the cheeks of that gentleman, and he said, I fear the worst has not come for your unfortunate countrymen. This letter, by the authority of your President, has done all the mischief, and President Santa Anna claims the full privilege, under it, of shooting the whole of your men. I read particularly this letter, which you refer to in your book, and which your correspondence with the American and British ministers show that it was on file at that time. As for General Hunt's having written a letter to a Texas newspaper, I can say that neither myself or any one with whom I conversed with in Mexico ever heard of it. I will add, that both Gen. Thompson and Mr. Packenham promised to use their best endeavors to pre- vent the farther slaughter of our men, and the sequel shows with what good success. That they deserve the lasting gratitude of all true-hearted Texians, no honest man will doubt. " Very respectfully, your ob't serv't, "S. G. NORVELL." .. 38 The following resolution, offered by myself, in Congress,. Dec. 22d, 1843, page 66, Journal House of Representatives, will show that they were not forgotten, as it passed unan- imously : " Mr. Green, from the Select Committee to whom was referred sundry papers concerning our own prisoners of war, in Mexico, offered the following resolution, to wit : " Resolved, That the gratitude of this nation is due to the Hon. Waddy Thompson, United States Minister in Mexico, and her Majesty's Charge d* Affairs, the Hon. Percy TV. Doyle, and also her Britannic Majesty's late Minis- ter, Mr. Packenham, for their active interference in behalf of our fellow- countrymen, while prisoners of war in Mexico ; and that the thanks of this House be unanimously tendered them therefor, and that they be furnished with copies of this resolution." The Senator has devoted a large portion of his pamphlet speech to disprove what I have charged upon him, to wit : that he was the malicious cause of the murder of the "decimated Mier men." In his speech, he says, " I could appeal to an honorable gentleman from Texas, now present in this chamber (General Memucan Hunt). The capture took place on the 26th of December. On the 18th of January following, General Hunt, who had been out in the campaign, who had marched as a private soldier under Gene- ral Somerville, who had won the admiration of the whole army by his soldier- like, manly, and chivalrous conduct, wrote an account as to the scenes at Mier, in which he bore testimony to all that I have said. He came to Hous- ton, in Texas, and published to the world the facts connected with the Mier expedition ; he showed that it had gone unauthorizedly ; he did not condemn it, but merely gave the historical facts. That was on the 18th of January, so that by the end of the month the news would be in the pdsses'si6n of Santa Anna ; and yet he suspended all vengeance until March afterwards, and until the rising of the prisoners upon the guard. What, then, was the use of the President of Texas saying it was against law? Was it not known by General Hunt's letter (in which he detailed the facts), that Colonel Fisher, Green, and others, had deserted from the command of Gen. Somerville, when ordered to the interior of Texas, had united to maraud upon Mexico, had crossed the Rio Grande without authority of law, and in open violation of or- ders, had taken possession of Mier, and that a battle ensued." I will prove by the letters of Capt. Norvell, Col. Fisher, and the American and British ministers, that Gen. Hunt's letter to a Texas newspaper had nothing to do with this most hellish murder. Col. Fisher and his brother officers, writing from the 39 Castle of Perot e, on the 26th day of July, 1844, one year and a half after the date of Gen. Hunt's letter, says, " I have re- ceived the paper containing Gen. Hunt's letter ', and I can see in it nothing to give the slightest foundation for the charge of Sam Houston." The Senator here makes General Hunt accuse the " Mier men" of uniting to " maraud upon Mexico, and that they had crossed the Rio Grande without authority of law" Gen. Hunt having permitted this speech to go forth to the world and widely circulated, I am to presume that it has his sanction, or he would have corrected it months ago. On two previous occasions, both in 1844 and '46, I defended Gen. Hunt before the public, from this charge, which Houston had made against him, of being the cause of the " decimation of the Mier Men" Gen. Hunt himself denounced Houston in severe, though just terms, for this charge. The facts are these : that so far from crossing the Rio Grande in violation of law and orders, Presi- dent Houston, on the 27th of January, 1844 page 376 of the Journals of the House of Representatives forgetting his fre- quent denials upon this subject, in a veto message says, "In an address to the people of Texas, dated July, 1842, and pub- lished in the newspapers of the day, the Executive remarked, in reference to the contemplated expedition, that < the Govern- ment will promise nothing but authority to march, and such supplies of ammunition as may be useful for the campaign .They must look to the valley -of the Rio Grande for remuneration. The Government will claim no portion of the spoils they will be divided among the victors. The flag of Texas will accom- pany the expedition." Again, in the same message, he reiterates, " he plainly told them they must look' for remuner- ation to the valley of the Rio Grande? " It will be recollected that these proclamations from President Houston were numerous, and under which we assembled to defend western Texas. Gen. Hunt knew these facts. ' He also knew that, by the law of 1840, volunteers had the right to elect their own commanders. My work upon this expedition shows that General Somerville had marched a competent force to Laredo (not as the Senator falsely says in his speech), " MANY miles on the east side of the Rio Grande" but immediately upon the east bank of said river, 40 is the town of Laredo. General Somerville here got sight of the enemy, and commenced a homeward retreat. In this re- treat he was arrested by the unanimous voice of the army, after he had proceeded several miles. He then said that the army could elect a commander ; that he would be among those who would "*lleach his bones upon the plains of Mexico." The army then re-elected him under this pledge. He moved down the east bank of the river, until he reached a point opposite Guerrero, and crossed. Here he again got a view of the enemy, and then falsified his word by a precipitate retreat homewards. This is a fact well recollected, that when he recrossed the river homewards, there was no man more loud against this cowardly movement than Gen. Hunt ; and on that very night the army was stimulated to elect a new commander by Gen. Hunt, which they had a right lawfully to do, and which they did do. Gen. Hunt was a candidate for the command, and made as many promises of " bone bleaching " as any of us ; but he was not elected. Next morning the General was among the first to saddle his horse for home ; he then found out it was necessary to obey the defunct Gen. Somerville's orders. Instead of Gen. Hunt being where the Senator places him, in the situation of giving a " correct account of the scenes of Mier" he was fol- lowing his home-sick leader through bog and chapparal, within hearing of our cannons' thunder. His friend and messmate, Capt. Bartlett Sims, informed me, that such was their destitu- tion, they had to stew up raw hides, of which their packs were made, to subsist upon. Under these circumstances, let every sensible and impartial reader say, who were the deserters ! Was it General Somerville and his two hundred followers who ran home from the sight of the enemy ; or was it the three hundred and twenty -four men who agreed to stand their ground and fight ? In my knowledge and reading of war, the " Mier men" are the first to desert from a run-away general, by standing their ground andjfighting an overwhelming enemy. It is passing strange that General Hunt should have per- mitted himself to be thus abused by the Senator. A few weeks after the delivery of this speech, while on my return from Texas, I met Gen. Hunt upon a railroad in North Carolina, and he, for the first time, told me that, " the damned old 41 villain, Sam Houston, had the audacity to allude to him. in his speech against you. You know that I have not spoken to him for six years, and that I have denounced him as severely as ever you did. Demolish him ; I~know you have the evidence to do it" This was Gen. Hunt's opinion of the Senator in August last, soon after his speech was delivered against myself. The following extract from General Memucan Hunt's letter to General Sam Houston, dated October 30th, 1849, and pub- lished in the " Texas State Gazette," of November 10th, page 91, will show what General Hunt's opinion of the Senator was at that date : " Your overbounding ambition, added to your jealousy and selfishness , has so uniformly prompted you in this propensity, that you are notorious in Texas as having reviled, traduced, and calumniated, or threatened, as in your judgment you thought most politic, the character of almost every man who has obtained any favorable reputation for himself and his country, either in connection with its revolt, the acquisition of its independence from Mexico, or subsequent annexation as a state of the United States. To prevent the least misapprehension of the justness of my assertions, I will, with your leave, make the following applications and references, namely : Have you not hushed your insidious attacks, either of ridicule, slander, or threats, or all of them, by making assertions to those who were your menials, and whom you knew would repeat the same after you (and make it more public and effective for your purpose than if published in newspapers), or by messages in a similar manner, as you recently sent openly and publicly to me by Major Neighbours, traducing them for the purpose of destroying their usefulness and in- fluence, as you have done of Col. Austin, the father of Texas; Governor Smith, Provisional Governor in 1835 ; Ex-President Burnet, and Lorenzo de Zavalla, Vice President, ad interim, of Texas; Ex-President Lamar; Ex- President Jones ; the late venerable Richard Ellis, President of the Conven- tion which formed the Constitution of the late republic of Texas ; the late William and John Wharton ; the late gallant Travis, and Fannin, and Crock- et, and Brenham, and Walker, Genl. Burleson, Col. Frank Johnson, Col. Sherman, Dr. Branch T. Archer, Gen. A. Sydney Johnson, late Sterling C. Robertson, Judge Megison, Leonard Groce, Col. Henry Jones, Col. Morgan, late Bailey Wardaman, Gov. Wood, Col. Bell, Governor elect ; Ex-Lieutenant Governor Horton, Dr. Levi Jones, late Gen. Wm. S. Fisher, late J. T. Van Zanett, late S. Rhodes Fisher, Gen. Tom Green of Fayette, Judge Webb, Ex- Governor Henderson, George W. Smyth, Commissioner of the General Land Office; Col. Caldwell, Judge Richard Scurry, Col. Barnard E. Bee, Gen. James Hamilton, A. T. Burney, late Richard Morris, Gen. Cazineau, Gen. Chambers, Gen. Thomas Jeff Green, Col. Latimer, Judge Franklin, Gen. Por- tis, late Dr. Tom Anderson, Commodore Moore, late Judge Jack Todd Robin- 42 son, Judge Ochiltree, Judge W. E. Jones, late Col. Wm. G.- Cpoke, late Col. James R. Cooke, Col. Samuel M. Williams, Judge W. Munifer, late Richard Dunlap, late Richard Bullock, Gen. Felix Huston, late Major Ben. Fort Smith, late Josiah Bell, Judge John B. Jones, Gen. McLeod, Dr. Gideon Williams, Col. Ira R. Lewis, Col. Robert Williams, Robert Mills, Major Mont- gomery, Judge Mills, Judge Robert Williamson, Ex-Governor Runnels, Col. Oli- ver Jones, Dr. Francis Moore, jun. Indeed, General, who is there that you have spared? Do not, however, understand me as being the defender of all the acts of all these gentlemen ; but I will venture the assertion that there is not one of them whose character in private or public life, or either, or both, as the case may be, would not bear a fair and advantageous comparison, now, if living, and, at their death, if they are no more, with your own. There is no one, indeed, in public life, who has dared to oppose your mandates, or even express a difference of opinion to yours ; nor is there any in private life, pos- sessing influence, who opposed your will and wishes, but have been, more or less, your victims, in the manner above referred to. It is, sir, proverbial in Texas, that the lowest compliment that can be bestowed on an old public offi- cer, or an influential gentleman in private life, in Texas, is, that General Sam Houston has never denounced him in a manner before named." If I recollect rightly, this was not only Gen. Hunt's opinion of the Senator in 1849, but with every change of season since the commencement of the Texas Revolution to the present time, his denunciation has been as strong, or his friendship oppositely warm. I do not envy the amiability of General Hunt, and confess that my nature is of sterner stuff. My friendship was far beyond the reach of President Houston's official bribery. I have uniformly, and on all occasions, op- posed his corruptions and denounced his villanies. I recollect last winter, when General Hunt was a Member of the Legislature from Galveston, he had with him the orphan son of the late gallant Colonel "William R. Cook, who he pub- licly and repeatedly charged President Houston of having had assassinated. In this belief, however, General Huut is far from being alone. . The Senator's charge of my " having filched a good deal of money out of benevolent individuals, while a prisoner of war in Mexico," is as unmitigated a slander as could have been invented by his black heart. I had money frequently offered me in Mexico, but never accepted a dollar, except from three individuals, to wit J. P. Schatzell, of Matamoras ; S. L. Har- gous ; and Governor F. M. Dimond, (now of Rhode Island,) 43 -but then United States Consul at Vera Cruz. The circum- stances of my receiving aid from these excellent gentlemen, are these : After the capitulation of Mier, we were marched via Matamoras to the city of Mexico and Perote* Upon reaching Matamoras, Mr. J. P. Schatzell. a wealthy and benevolent merchant, and an old friend of the Hon. J. J. Crittenden, with the permission of General Ampudia, furnished Lieutenant, now Major George Crittenden of the Kifles, with means. Mr. Schatzell also insisted that I should take from him a sufficient amount to carry myself and r other officers through our long tirid tedious journey. I accepted only four hundred dollars, for which I receipted, he insisting upon my taking a much larger sum, and was perfectly willing to await the result of Texas success for his pay. Before, however, leaving Matamoras, he placed in my hands an unlimited letter of credit, to draw upon him if we required a further amount; Upon reaching Monterey, 'I called upon his correspondent, and received three hundred .dollars, making in the aggregate seven hundred dollars, every cent of which was expended in common for myself and com- rades on our long march of more than two thousand miles to the Castle of Perote. The Congress of Texas, in 1844, not only recognized this debt of Mr. Schatzell, but on the last day of the session page 470 of the Journal of the House of Representa- tives upon my motion, the House unanimously passed the following resolution : " Mr. Green^ ly leave, introduced the following resolution : " Be it resolved, ~by the House of Representatives of the Republic of Texas in 'Congress assembled, That the thanks of this house be tendered to J. P. Schat- zell, Esq., of Matamoras, for the uniform kindness and liberality extended by "him to our unfortunate fellow citizens, while prisoners in Mexico." .-. The next money I " borrowed " in Mexico was from our avhole-souled American citizen Mr. L. S. Hargous, then of Yera .Cruz, whose heart' is as large as his purse. It was under these circumstances : I was a prisoner heavily ironed in the Castle of Perote, and nearly starved, as were my comrades, through the neglect and baseness of President Houston. Mr. Hargous I had never seen, and he sent me one hundred dollars ; my journal will show how this sum was nsed. After my escape 4:4: from the Castle, I reached Yera Cruz with five of my com- rades who had escaped the pursuit of Santa Anna's guards. Mr. Hargous gave me thirty dollars more, and an order for myself and companions to go to the United States on board of his steamer Petrita so that amount of money and passages made the sum of $280, which I drew upon Texas for, in favor of Mr. Hargous, which amount was promptly acknowledged by the Texas Congress and incorporated with the amount of $8,000, which this gentleman had the year previous advanced to Generals McCleod and Cook for the Santa Fe prisoners. My publication of the 10th January, 1846, above copied, fully explains this transaction, and page 399 of the Journals of the House of Representatives shows the truth of my statement that though it was an administration Congress I denounced President Houston from my place in the house, .as a " Hack- Jiearted murderer and villain /" yet that house unani- mously sustained me by having the papers forthwith returned to the President. I subsequently visited the city of Mexico, in 1849, and enjoyed the open hospitality of Mr. Hargous, who thanked me in the warmest manner for my active services in the Texas Congress in procuring the law for his payment. In this connection I will relate an incident which that excellent gentleman told me at that time. It is this. Upon the arrival of the steamer of Mr. Hargous in Orleans, some imprudent one of my comrades let it be known to the papers that we had escaped out of Mexico on board said steamer. The conse- quence was, that upon the return of the steamer to Yera Cruz, she was seized by order of President Santa Anna, and Mr. Hargous went in person to the President to procure her resto- ration. The President put Mr. H. upon his honor as a gentle- man, to say whether he knew of my being on board of his steamer when she left port. Mr. H. answered promptly in the affirmative, and asked the President if their positions were reversed, would he have done likewise for his countrymen. Santa Anna said he would, and forthwith ordered the release of the steamer. This transaction, so honorable in Mr. Hargous as a true American, is not less noble in the President of Mexico. I come now to the third and last person who I " filched," money of, in the language of the senator, while in Mexico. It was Governor F. M. Dimond, of Rhode Island, then the United States Consul at Yera Cruz a better man or truer American never held office under his government. The following cor- respondence between Governor Dimond and myself will ex- plain this transaction. " NEW YOKK, "January 24th, 1855. " DEAR SIR At the last session of Congress I was charged by a speech in the United States Senate, of borrowing money by false representations, while a prisoner of war in Mexico. The only three persons I ever borrowed money of while a prisoner, were J. P. Schatzell, of Matamoras, yourself, and L. S, Hargous, of Vera Cruz. " I request you to state the circumstances of our transaction. " Very respectfully, " Your obedient servant, " THOS. J. GREEN. " To Governor F. M. DIMOND, " Bristol, Rhode Island." " BRISTOL, R. I., " January 29, 1855. " DEAR GENERAL I received yours of the 24th instant, requesting me to state to you the circumstances under which you borrowed money from me. I cheerfully comply with your request by stating the facts as I recollect them. " I was U. S. Consul at Vera Cruz, in 1843. In the month of July, I think, of that year, I heard of your miraculous escape, with fifteen others of your comrades, from the strong (and by Mexicans considered impregnable), castle of Perote. Some weeks after, yourself, Capt. Dan Drake Henrie, Capt. C. K. Reese, and several others of your escaped comrades, notified me of your whereabout* in Vera Cruz ; after night-fall I visited your gloomy and horrid abode ; to have done so in open day, would have been destruction to you and certain ruin to myself. I knew you only from character and that you were my countryman in danger and distress, and when you visited my office under the cover of night, I offered you all the aid in my power ; you availed your- self of my offer, (I thought too modestly for your necessities), observing that you all could go to New Orleans in the steamer of a friend, on credit. I fur- ther state, and do so with great pleasure, that you paid it back to me the first opportunity, after your return to the United States, and that you were the wry first of the numerous Texan prisoners to whom I loaned money, who paid back the demand. " With great respect, " I am your friend, "F. M. DIMOND. " General THOM. J. GREEN, " New York. 46 True, it would have been destruction to myself ; for there was a price upon my head. I had committed the heinous offence, when my parole was refused, in violation of the usages of civilized warfare, of throwing off my irons, and, with a por- tion of my comrades, performing an escape (in the opinion of the greatest military captain of this age, Gen. Winfield Scott) " more difficult than that of Baron Trenck." It is the opinion of such men in military matters as Generals Scott and Worth, that a soldier estimates above price ; and while this military buffoon, this '''''bleating cub" Gen. Houston, has the low mean- ness to disparage the battle of Mier, these great leaders pro- nounce it one of the most extraordinary in the annals of war. Gen. Scott said that " I recollect of no such battle ; that, Con- sidering all things, the advantage of the enemy in position, his superior force of 3,000 to 260, the nineteen consecutive hours during which the battle raged, the execution done upon each side (their official reported loss 730, and known to be greater), to 11 killed and 23 wounded, astonishes me, and does immor- tal honor to your Spartan band." But to return to Governor Dimond. How can I sufficient- ly express the gratitude of Texas, or my own admiration of his noble conduct. Upon my arrival in Yera Cruz, incog., he came every night to see me with the consolations of his repub- lican countenance, and the full freedom of his purse. Such officers do honor to their country, and deserve the gratitude of every lover of liberty. Nor was Texas forgetful of his many kindnesses to her suffering countrymen while prisoners. Her resolutions of thanks, and the compliment of a league and labor of land, show how his services were estimated. "What the senator says of my vote for Congress in 1846 is new to me. If I received forty-three votes for Congress, they were forty-three more than I desired to receive. My name was before the people of Texas for a time ; but, finding that I could not return to the State, it had been withdrawn by niy- self long before the election. I find in page 31, Journals of the House of Representatives, 1st Congress, that the scattering vote for President in 1836 was, for T. J. Green, 42 ; T. J. Rusk, 1 ; and B. T. Archer, 4. These votes were cast for me with- out my knowledge or desire, and is what the senator may al- lude to. 4:7 The senator refers in complimentary terms to the late General Fisher. The following extract from a letter to my- self, written from the Castle of Perote, will show Gen. F.s' opinion of the senator. He entertained this opinion, from the battle of San Jacinto until his death. " CASTLE OF PEROTE, " July 26th, 1844. "DEAR GENERAL Your very estimable favor of the 15th day of June last, was received yesterday, for which receive my thanks ; it is the second, I be- lieve, that I have received from you since your escape. For your indefatiga ble exertions in our cause, every man of us feels properly grateful. Although unsuccessful in procuring us the benefits of the appropriation of Congress, it has been occasioned by no neglect of yours, and we know whom to hold re- sponsible. Our condition is bad enough, * God knows,' but still we have manly pride sufficient to bear it, and not to trouble the ungrate^il * govern- ment and people of Texas ' with our sufferings and repinings, caused by too much loyalty and fidelity to her honor and true interests. Sam Houston and his administration cannot bear all the sins of Texas, deeply died as Tie may 1e in villainy ; for I consider him less base than that portion of the population who passively tolerate his outrageous acts, and still better than those who approve his course Capt. Ryan sends his respects and requests you to write him. All hands join me in respects. " I remain your friend and u Obedient servant, WILLIAM S. FISHER. General Fisher is now no more ; but before his death he stated, in an address to the public, that " every fact set forth in my work, the ' Mier Expedition? WAS TKUE.". He objected only to some deductions bearing upon his advocacy of the sur- render of Mier. Whilst I believe that I did General Fisher justice in that work, it is with pleasure I defend his memory now against the slanders of the Senator. General Fisher was the first captain at San Jacinto to charge the enemy's works. Here he witnessed the dastardly cowardice of this squalling peacock, General-in-Chief Sam Houston, which he then de- nounced, while he praised the gallantry of Rusk, Wharton, Lamar, Sherman, Burlison, and others ; since which time he has been one of the few with honesty and boldness enough to denounce Houston's many crimes and filthy vices. Such virtue in Fisher he (Houston) could no more forgive, than he could change his own corrupt nature. He therefore charges upon 48 Fisher and myself that the " Mier expedition was organized to maraud ivpon and plunder Mexico" He, however, in the next breath, falsifies his accusation, by showing that we did take and hold undisputed possession of Mier, the richest town upon the Hio Grande, two clays previous to the battle, and not a copper's worth of private property was taken by any one of our com- mand. "What the Senator says of my participation in the sacking of Laredo, he knew to be a dirty lie when he gave utterance to it. It was shown, that when he made this charge in 1845, it was one of those slanders which the meanest of his partizans did not credit. It was shown that I was not in Laredo during that day, but was at the camp of General Somerville, several miles east of the town, and that mainly it was through the influence and energy of Fisher and myself that most of the articles were returned to General Somerville's head-quarters, to be returned to the owners. If any articles were carried into Texas, it was by those friends and neighbors of President Houston who returned with Colonel Bennett from that camp. That any one of the Mier men ever did take a pin's worth of private property, either at Laredo or elswhere, is positively, maliciously, infamously false, and its author is Sam Houston, the murderer of the slandered. I understand, however, that he pretends to give as his authority an individual by the name of H. Clay Davis, who came to Texas some years since, repre- senting himself as the nephew of Henry Clay, and took up with a Mexican woman. Page 142 of my work shows that he was the only American citizen who ever deserted our standard. That page thus speaks of him : " We have alluded to this circumstance as the first and last instance in our whole ^Revolution, where an American, born and raised in the United States, ever deserted our standard to join that of cur Mexican enemy, and it should be a warning to others against a too intimate Mexican association." The best refutation of the Senator's slander of my receiving $24,154 04 by a resolution of the congress, for what he, Hous- ton, insinuates was a false charge, is contained in the proceed- ings of the first Congress, Journals House of Representatives, pages 164-5 and 272. The following law, which was passed in accordance with these proceedings, approved and executed 49 "by the Senator, then President of Texas, will show what he thought of its justice at that time : "Be it resolved, &c., That the President be and is hereby authorized to pay to Thomas J. Green, or order, out of the first means in the Treasury or any agency of Texas, the sum of $24,154 04, together with the damages and cost of protest, for or on account of this Government, provided the said Thomas J. Green shall file with the Executive the account of the same, report- ed to this Congress, receipted in full. " IRA INGRAM, " Speaker of House of Representatives. "RICHARD ELLIS, "Pres. Pro tern, of Senate. "Approved, Dec. 17th, 1836. "SAM HOUSTON." I was paid this amount by the President's order upon David White, the Texas agent at Mobile, not in good money, which was due me, but in Land Scrip, which I sold at ten cents per acre, and in other depreciated stuff, almost valueless : so the amount proved nearly an entire loss, and up to this day I have never been a supplicant to Congress for relief. The Senator's attempt at wit, for the purpose of diverting serious attention from what I have said of his two fugitive slaves, Tom and Esau, pages 122-3, is pointless and stupid. What I have related of them is literally true. I might have said, with equal truth, that Esau said that "he. did not so much dislike the blasphemous swearing of Old Sam, but that he had to sleep with him of nights, and scratch his back ; this was more than this nigger could stand ; I just as leave sleep with a dead horse." This was the language of Esau, the " Hack boy" as the Senator calls him. Boy, indeed ! he weighed two hundred pounds, was as black as the ten of spades, as greasy, and nearly as filthy as his old master. I have learned, but for the truth of which I cannot vouch that the senator, in some northern abolition address, said he had manumitted his slaves. Up to the period above referred to, Tom and Esau, with the exception of his woman and chil- dren, were the only slaves President Houston claimed to own. We have seen how Tom and Esau manumitted themselves by leg bail ; and I understand that it is a fact well known, that he sold Martha Houston and children, as she called herself, 4 50 and put the money in his pocket, or rather in his belly. in my knowledge of physiology, the senator is the only animal that feeds upon its young, with the exception of the alligator. Providence seems to have supplied the latter with instinct to- eat only a portion of its young, to prevent an increase too great to be subsisted. Nature has not been so bountiful with the senator. In the absence of instinct and morals, human nature is the worst of brutes. Thus a gormand avarice makes him sell and eat the African litter and the mother who bare them, while we have seen him fly from his Cherokee wife and papooses, because he could not sell, and was too mean to feed them. I said in the above paragraph, that these were the only slaves at that period which the senator claimed to own. Whe- ther he owned these lawfully or honestly is more than doubtful^ The boy Tom was a kidnapped slave of Colonel Augustus Als- ton, of Tallahassee, Florida, and had been run into Texas. Esau, I am informed, was purchased by a government agent with government securities, which were never accounted for. The Journals of the House of Representatives, Ylllth Congress, pages 87, 98, and 104, will show that the House believed he had a " Cherokee wife and children." " Mr. Lott, by leave, offered the following resolution, to wit : " Resolved, ~by the House of Representatives, That the President be, and is hereby, requested to furnish this House, immediately and without delay, a copy of the letter of the King of the Netherlands, in relation to the marriage of his daughter ; his answer thereto ; also, his correspondence with the for" eign powers now in treaty with this Republic, on the birth of his son, Sam. Laid upon the table one day. " The resolution calling upon the President for information in relation to a correspondence with the King of the Netherlands, in relation to the mar- riage of his daughter ; also, to the birth of his son, Sam. Read second time. " Mr. Lott moved its reference to the Committee on Foreign Relations. Lost. Mr. Cazneau offered the following amendment after the word * Sam,' insert l also, his wife and children in tfle Cherokee Nation. 1 Mr. Rowett moved its postponement until next day. Mr. Kendrick moved its postpone- ment until the 1st of June. The Ayes and Noes being called thereon, stood 34 ayes and 1 No. Next day Mr. Rabb moved to strike from the journals the resolution calling upon the President for correspondence with the King of the Netherlands in relation to the marriage of his daughter ; also, in relation, to the birth of his son Sam, with the amendment of Mr. Cazneau. LOST." 51 With all the senator's influence, he could not expunge these proceedings. A Mend of the senator onca applied to few for a letter of recommendation for office. The letter was at once written^ warm and strong ; but no sooner was the applicant's back turned than the senator wrote to the party telling him to dis- regard the former letter, that the applicant was unworthy, etc. The applicant got hold of the last written letter, put it in his pocket, and asked the senator if he had ever so written. With uplifted eyes and hands, he protested before high heaven he never had. Whereupon the letter was produced. The senator looked at it with a ghastly grin, and replied : "Drunk, ~by God ! this hand may have written, l)ut this heart never dictated that letter, my dear friend" So it is now with the senator. He doubtless forgets that in' 1836, while he was abusing President Burnet, for the Santa Anna treaty, he wrote me a letter of eight pages, approving in his highest terms of eulogy my con- duct at Yelasco, in relation to Santa Anna, which he now so vehemently abuses. He said " you deserve the lasting grati" tude of the country for your conduct in relation to the pris- oner" It is the opinion and approval of better men that I value. Gen. Thomas J. Rusk writes me thus from his " Head Quarters, Victoria, June ~L5th, 1836 : " DEAR GEN'L. ... I would have liked much to have seen you, to have tendered to you in person the expressions of my gratitude on the part of the people of Texas^ for your zeal in our cause, as well as to have commu- nicated with you freely upon the present position of our affairs. The gene- ral opinion prevailing that our difficulties with Mexico have terminated is ill-founded. We now as much underrate as when I saw you before, we over- rated the enemy and we have but a short period to organize upon the frontiers a sufficient force to meet the enemy in another campaign when, beyond doubt, he will come upon us with redoubled numbers. I have re- ceived information entitled to credit, that the government of Mexico have directed Gen. Filisola to disregard any treaties entered into with Santa Anna. " I have the honor to be, with great respect, " Your obedient servant, " THOMAS J. RUSK.." To Brig'r Gen'l. T. J. GREEN." This was the general sentiment of the country at that time. I had been to the United States, mortgaged my property, raised 52 money, recruited men, brought into the field munitions of war, and provision to sustain those men. A portion of my brigade and my supplies had already reached the vicinity of General Husk's Headquarters. My quarter-masters were directed 1y me to make no difference in the issuing of provisions between Gen. Eusk's brigade and my own. These were things which an honest man and a patriot thanked me for, because these supplies found him destitute, and the government wholly un- able to help him. His letter shows that his forces were at that time reduced to less than four hundred men, without ammuni- tion or provisions, (except green beef,) and not good horses enough to send expresses through the country. At this time I had been ordered by President Burnet to proceed against the Indians on the upper Brazos with that portion of my brigade which had landed at Yelasco. I promptly proceeded to exe- cute said order, and had advanced into the country as far as Coles' settlement, some hundred and twenty miles, through a rainy season and boggy roads, when Gen. Eusk's despatch reached me, with the following information, which I give en- tire, as the best refutation ,of the senator's slander about my getting near the Indians and then turning my course. Gen. Eusk, in sending these despatches, informed me, that he had sent Col. Smith and Captain Billingsly, with two hundred mounted men in the direction of the Indians ; and requested me, in the strongest terms, to re-inforce him with all possible despatch. I would have been recreant, to every duty of patri- otism not to have complied. The President approved and applauded my course for so doing. "MATAMOKAS, STATE OF TAMAULIPAS, June 9th, 1836. "Gen. THOMAS J. RUSK. " Dear Sir: The messenger who carries this is strongly recommended by all the friends in this place. The news he carries is of the greatest importance to Texas. In God's name ~be governed ~by it. I expected to have carried this news to Texas myself; but to have been made prisoner is not what I ex- pected. I was to have left this evening by the assistance of the friends of our cause. At 12 o'clock this day, I have been called up by Gen. , and obliged to give security that I would appear at any time I was called upon, or that I would not leave the city, or else be imprisoned in the quartet Captains Teal and Karnes are prisoners also. I hope, if the bad faith at the 53 Mission, Goliad, and elsewhere, will not fully open your eyes to the perfi- diousness of these unprincipled wretches, in the detention of our Commis- sioners in this place, as well as myself, and four of my men all with pass- ports from Gen. Filisola you will hereafter act on principle of retaliation, regardless of consequences to us. If you had shot the officers already taken, I have no doubt this second attack would not have been made. The infor- mation is so full in the other documents or letters, that it is not necessary for me to go into detail. The advice given in them, pay all attention to ; and, for heaven's sake, pay strict attention, and profit thereby. To Galveston and Matagorda, and your prisons, look well. Our situation is bad enough, but death can cure our troubles. " I am your enemy's prisoner, "MAJOR W. P. MILLER, Legion Cavalry." "MATAMORAS, June 9th, 1836. " My Dear Friend: I am sorry to inform you of our unfortunate situa- tion. We are detained for nothing but to keep you ignorant of the enemy's intentions. They will soon be down on you in great numbers. Four thou- sand will leave here in four or eight days, for La Baliia, it is supposed via Nueces or San Patricio, and as many more in fifteen or twenty days, by water, from Vera Cruz, to land at Conano or Brazos not yet ascertained at which place. They make war of extermination, and show no quarter. Now, my dear friend, you see what treating with a prisoner is. But you must make the best of it. You can fall back to the Colorado, and call all the men to the field ; for if you do not, Texas is gone. They have heard that the President is at Velasco with a very weak guard, and say they will have him in less than two weeks. I think you ought to send all the prisoners there to San Augustine, for safe-keeping. You will have from 7,000 to 10,000 troops to contend with, many of them cavalry, to be well mounted to murder women and children. No, soldiers ! You must not spare any pains for the sake of saving us. We are willing to be lost to save Texas. Our soldiers, march to the field, and there defend your rights. They say that you are rebels ; but you must show them that you are soldiers, and know how to defend your rights. Send all the prisoners to the east. We are not in jail yet, but to-morrow demand our passports ; as soon as that is done we shall have quarters in the calaboose. We have good friends, which, at present, prudence forbids me to name, for fear of detection. Urea is Commander-in-chief of the Mexican army, and says he will not stop short of the Sabine river. Be not discour- aged poison every pool of water in the road. You must now work hard work as well as fighting. Blow up Goliad and Bexar ; you must have a sufficient force in the field at once, and we will whip them again. Be united ; but do not let the people of the United States know what kind of a war they make of it, and they will certainly come to our assistance. I do not consider our lives in danger, if in close quarters. Do not let my father and sister know 54: that we are prisoners ; if they do, say that I am treated well. Remember me to Col. Millard, and my Lieutenant, and all friends tell them I will be with them soon. To give you as much information as possible, my letter is in this small hand, and bid you adieu in haste. Ourjcaute for ever ! "Your friend, "HENRY TEAL." " I concur with all that has been stated above and foregoing. Your obe- dient servant, " H. W. KARNES, Captain." " A true copy of the original, signed by Captains Teal and Karnes. " HEAD-QUARRTERS, VICTORIA, June Vlih, 1836. " THOMAS J. RUSK." Tliis correspondence, so creditable to Major Miller and Cap- tains Teal and Karnes, our commissioners, who had been sent by General Rusk to see the retreating Mexican army evacuate Texas, was of a most alarming character. They knew that Gen- eral Kusk's force was reduced to a few hundred men, and des- titute of supplies, and believed that their President, Santa Anna, had sailed for Mexico ;' and hence this determination to countermarch upon Texas. Dates will show that this deter- mination on the part of the enemy was not abandoned until after they heard of the retention of Santa Anna, at Yelasco, and the arrival of my brigade with abundant supplies for the campaign. Where was the Senator during these exciting times ? Either hawking Santa Anna's saddle and spurs about the United States, or drunk at his partner's in Eastern Texas. The Senator again invents this senseless falsehood " He even had the meanness to steal women's saddles" The follow- ing order from President Burnet to myself, will show by what authority I acted in supplying the army with " beef, horses^ wagons, <&c. ;" " EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT, " Velasco, 7th June, 1836. " To Brigadier-General " THOS. J. GREEN. " SIR You will take the forces [assigned to you at this place, and proceed with all practical expedition to the northern frontier of our settlements, where several small tribes of Indians are said to have concentrated for the purposes of depredation Should circumstances and the public good 55 Tender it necessary, you will press horses, provisions, and whatever private property may be required. But I want to enjoin upon you great circumspec- tion in the exercise of this harsh power, for it is beyond dispute that many shameful abuses have been practised under it. Be very cautious, therefore, to whom you depute an authority so invidious and so susceptible of perversion. "Wishing you and your companions in arms a successful and glorious cam- paign, I am, "Your obedient servant, " DAVID G. BURNET." The following letter will show with what promptness I obeyed the above order of the President : "BRAZORIA, June 12th, 1836. " To His Excellency, " DAVID G. BURNET, " President of the Republic of Texas. " SIR I arrived here two days since, and found not a horse or wagon of any description with which to transport our provisions. After much difficulty in sending around the country, I have succeeded in procuring teams to trans- port about half of my provisions, and have taken up our line of march via Columbia and San Filipe, to the seat of war. My present force at this place is about two hundred rank and file, besides the 100 mounted men under Bre- vet-Brigadier Felix Huston, now in advance. Further news arrived here, stating that the Indians are in much larger numbers than was reported in your despatches. If so, it will be prudent for the troops at Coxe's Point, be- longing to my brigade, to be ordered to advance and join me, as I understand it is probable that the present state of Gen. Rusk's command may place it out of his power to comply with your requisition for the 100 mounted men. I would further suggest whether it would not be best for your Excellency to take some early orders upon reinforcing my command by such companies as may come in from the United States via Red River. With sentiments of high consideration, " I am, your obt. servt, "THOS. J. GREEN, " Brig. Gen. Texas Army." Upon the receipt of Gen. Husk's letter with his despatches from Matamoras, I again wrote to President Burnet, thus : " COLES' SETTLEMENT, " June 28th, 1836. '" His Excellency, "DAVID G. BURNET, " Pres. of the Republic of Texas. " SIR Enclosed you will find a letter from Gen. Rusk to me, of the 17th mst. This news, is unexpected and extraordinary, and under any circum- 56 stances leaves me but one course, and that to meet the call promptly and without hesitation. It is proper for me, however, here to remark, that the spies which Gen. Felix Huston sent out, bring intelligence that the Indian information you received was not only highly colored, but much magnified, and that the Indians had disappeared far north soon after their depredations, and that they had not been in large numbers. On yesterday I despatched Brevet-Brigadier Gen. F. Huston, in person, to Gen. Rusk's head quarters, and to-day I have ordered on the cavalry under his command ; and to-mor- row shall follow with the remaining forces under my command. I think that from the turnout hereabouts, and those troops just now arriving from the States, we will have from 1,500 to 2,000 men in the field in fifteen days. I have advised Gen. Rusk, to drive back all the cattle to the east of the Cola- rado, and make that our strongest line of defence. We ought to fight the enemy there, and if we do, I have every confidence he will not cross. " I have had much difficulty in procuring beef, as most of the citizens upon the road hide out their cattle, and some have several times stolen my teams. But now, since this news, they begin to get very kind, and say that they will feed us upon the Colorado, for their horses are so low in flesh many cannot again run. " Your obedient servant, THOS. J. GREEN, Brig.-Gen. Texas Army." In the execution of President Burnet's orders, it became my unavoidable duty not only to feed my men, but to procure transportation. Many on the line of my march believed that our Mexican difficulties were at an end ; and they were un- willing to furnish beef or horses for government credit. Those who were believed to be the best friends of the Mexicans were the first to refuse our troops supplies. Had there been more such patriotic citizens as Dr. Hoxie, Col. Coles, Capt. Swisher, Josiah Bell, Mrs. Ebberly and Miss Rebecca Cummings, and others, I would not have been compelled to have pressed a beef or a horse into the service. As it was, it became my duty to take for the service some eight or ten horses. For this ser- vice I detailed Lieutenant, now Major James Scott, the United States Post-office agent for the State of Texas. He was charged in his duty according to President Burnet's instructions to me. If he ever took a " woman's saddle," it was in violation of his orders, (which I do not believe,) and for which, had he com- mitted such an outrage, I would have been the first to punish him therefor. Major Scott is the warm personal friend of the 57 senator, and enjoys at present a lucrative office through his re- commendation. The senator has long known that he was the officer who pressed these horses into the service ; and, if a woman's saddle was taken, it was the work of his friend. I believe it a most unwitty and stupid lie. I do say that every beef, and horse, or other property that was taken, was re- ceipted for at the highest valuation, and Texas has paid or acknowledged the debt. I was particular to offer receipts at the time. Some few refused ; but whenever they have applied since, I have most cheerfully furnished them. I must take leave for the present of the numerous other minor falsehoods contained in the senator's speech. They have already been abundantly refuted, not only in my work, but by ex-Presidents Burnet, Lamar, and Jones, Gen. S. H. Foote's history of Texas, Commodore Moore, Gen. Hunt, and numer- ous other writers ; whilst I notice his two most prominent, to wit, that concerning the " Texas Bank charter" and the one about the broken " West Florida Bcmk." To say that these are base falsehoods, is to use language which poorly expresses the blind malignity and infamous pur- pose of the author. They are HELLISH LIES, wholly destitute of the shadow of truth ; and hundreds of the most intelligent men of Texas will bear testimony to this assertion. To the first of these calumnies the senator has devoted a large portion of his speech. He evidently feels here that the ground is soft be- neath him, and " hereby hangs a tale" The senator has been charged by many gentlemen of Texas, with having been bribed, while President of that Republic, to sign this law. "We will see with what truth. On the 12th of December, 1836, see journals, House of Representatives -, page 261-2, an act of incorporation styled the " Texas Railroad, Navigation and Banking Company" was passed, granting to " Branch T. Archer, James ollingsworth, and their present and future associates, successors, and assigns," the rights and privileges therein set forth. The i\v& present associates of the petitioners, Archer and Collingsworth, were Stephen F. Austin (the father of Texas), Ex-Governor J. Pinckney Henderson, and Thomas F. M'Kinney. They organized after the adjourn- ment of the Legislature, and, for the purpose of carrying out 58 in good faith the objects of the charter, invited other gentle- men of influence, both in and out of Texas, to the number of sixteen, to an equal participation of its benefits. Among those out of Texas, were Judge James H. Gholson and Col. 0. P. Green, of Virginia ; Col. "William Christie, of New Orleans ; and, subsequently, Gen. James Hamilton, of South Carolina. My- self, amongst other prominent gentlemen of Texas, were of the future associates ; and, amongst the Texas associates, the per- sonal and bosom friend of President Houston, John K. Allen, applied for and obtained two shares, of a sixteenth each, one in his own name, and the other in Uank. It will be recollect- ed that President Houston was at this time " an anti-bank, mint drop " democrat ; and the presumption consequently was, that he would refuse to sign any bank charter. He did, how- ever, sign this charter, with its large banking privileges. This was at the time a matter of general surprise ; but the sequel will explain. By the terms of the charter, $25,000 dollars were to be paid as a bonus to the State, in gold or silver, within eighteen months from the passage thereof, or, in case of fail- ure, the charter was to be forfeited. Before the expiration of the eighteen months, a new Legislature having convened, enacted a law requiring the paper issue of the Republic (usu- ally called star money) " to be received for all debts, dues, and demands of any kind whatsoever, owing or coming to the Re- public." Before the expiration of the eighteen months, the Hon. Branch T. Archer, President of said Banking Company, presented the Secretary of the Treasury (the Hon. Henry Smith) the bonus of $25,000 in the star money of the Repub- lic. The Secretary of the Treasury acknowledged, by a certi- ficate now in my possession, that this tender was duly and lawfully made, but that President Houston had ordered him not to receive any thing but gold or silver. This was a few days previous to the expiration of the eighteen months, with- in which time, according to the terms of the charter, the bonus was to have been paid. The day before this tender was made, this identical President Houston offered to sell to the said Branch T. Archer ', President of the said Banking Company r , the identical share of one sixteenth, which the said John K. Allen had obtained in Hank from the original grantees. The 59 Hon. Mr. Archer, as pure a man as ever lived, suspecting cor- ruption on the part of President Houston, indignantly refused to purchase, even at the low price of $4,000, when said shares had been a short time previous sold at from $12,000 to $20,000 each. President Houston had retained his share a little too long ; and, failing to get even $4,000 therefor, Ms anti-lank, " mint drop" principles turned up so strongly, that he ordered the Secretary of the Treasury to receive nothing as a bonus but gold or silver. He had as little right to make this order as his brother-in-law Bowles, the Chief of the Cherokees. The law governed the case. The co-operators complied with the law ; and no lawyer in Texas, or out of it, who is honest, will hesitate to say the tender was legal, and therefore all the rights under the charter were vested in the Company. The Congress of the Eepublic of Texas, subsequent to the tender, in relation to this matter, determined that they could not interfere with vested rights, and that to determine these rights was the pro- vince of the Judiciary. The constitution of the (present) State of Texas reiterates this principle in its broadest sense, and guarantees fully all the rights vested by the Eepublic. The Senator's charge that I sold $28,000 of this stock, is utterly false ; so far from this, I have never sold or offered to sell one dollar's worth to living man, whilst others of the asso- ciation, amongst whom Lieut. Gov. Albert C. Horton, Chief Justice James Collingsworth, Thomas F. McKinney, Samuel M. Williams, "Wm. H. Wharton, James Knight, C. P. Green, and others, did sell all or portions of theirs, at prices ranging from $20,000, down ; I, on the contrary, became the purchaser of a large portion of this stock, for which I paid more than $40,000, as my receipts and certificates will show. This heavy loss I have borne for eighteen years, without complaint ; and whilst I and my associates have secured to us the only banking privilege in the state of Texas, we have made no effort to avail ourselves of these chartered rights, in opposition to what might possibly be the public sentiment of the state ; and, whilst I be- lieve that a system of banking in all of her sister southern states makes it necessary for Texas to adopt and foster a simi- lar institution, I have not attempted to thrust it upon her in advance of public opinion. Whatever the rights of myself and 60 associates may be, we hold them lawfully and constitutionally ^ and we will thus exercise them, or not at all. Thus it is that the Senator, knowing that I had the proofs of his corruption in my possession, has devoted so large a portion of his senatorial vindication to this subject. I have said elsewhere that this peculation and stealing was an every day business of President Houston. Does he deny that he advocated the removal of the seat of government to a place called for himself, and for a large number of town lots in said place ? If he does, I refer to the books of the town proprietors, and to their agent, Major J. S. Holman, who, I learn, did, by order of said proprietors, make out his gratuitous deeds, Tor which he, Houston, never paid a dollar. The Senator, in his " /Stationery Stud-Horse" letter to his friend William Bryan, says, " I will rely upon you in all things, as I have always done, and will only say, this is a < Stationery ' Bill ! ! ! " What does the Senator mean by these exclamations ? What does he mean by " all things f " Have they any reference to a duplicate of the Land Office seal, found among his friend's papers, amongst which was this honest " STATIONERY " Bill ; or is this seal, by which Texas lands can be created, a part of the " STATIONERY ? " Where is the Seal ? The other of the Senator's assertions, that I purchased a plantation with " twenty thousand dollars of the circulation of a broken West Florida Bank," is notoriously false as any one of his numerous other slanders. I can appeal for the truth of this assertion to the present Governor of Texas, and Judge Robert J. Townes, Hon. John W. Harris, Hon. James C. Wil- son, Dr. Branch T. Archer, and every other gentleman of my very extensive acquaintance in Texas. So far from which, I never did own, directly or indirectly, one single dollar of said paper, neither did I ever circulate one dollar thereof. It is true, as was the custom then and now in Texas, that I endors- ed some few of these bills, the circumstances of my so doing are these : Captain Eed, of the regular army of Texas, was in- troduced to me by our mutual friend President Lamar, as his warm friend, who informed me he had some West Florida money, which was perfectly good, but that he could make no use of it without the name of some gentleman well known in 61 Texas ; that he had immediate use for a few hundred dollars, and desired me as a matter of personal favor to endorse said bills, which I did for him, as I should have done for any other gentleman whom I looked upon as an honorable man. With- in a day or two subsequently, Mr. Thomas F. M'Kinney, of Galveston, informed me that he had good reason to suspect the solvency of said bank, from a letter which had accidental- ly came into his possession. I went immediately to Capt. Red, and made him cancel my endorsement. Capt. Red informed me, however, that he had lost at a faro bank some five or six hundred dollar bills, and promised to redeem them, so that no one was ever the loser in any lonafide transaction in receiving said bills." Bancroft Libra- The senator has told one truth, and only one, I believe, in his whole speech it is this : That I did instigate and stimu- late the Mier prisoners to rise upon their guards and obtain their liberty and return to Texas. At the battle of Mier, Gen. Ampudia promised that our men should be kept upon the Rio Grande until an exchange could be effected. No sooner, how- ever, than the Texians were cajoled into a surrender of their arms, they were informed that they were to be marched some two thousand miles to the interior, either to the city of Mexico or the Castle of Perote. This was the violation of promise, so horrible to the feelings of our men, that they naturally spoke of resistance to its execution whenever an opportunity offered. The senator's two bed-fellow T s, Tom and Esau, were in the habit of mixing with our prisoners, and soon communicated these threats to Gen. Ampudia, who sent for Gen. Fisher and my- self, and informed us that we should be held as hostages for the good conduct of our men that he should keep us under a separate guard of forty men one day in advance of the main body of the prisoners, and if they made any attempt to over- power their guards, our lives should be the forfeit ; and he directed that Col. Savreigo and guards, who had us in charge, should take us by the prison where our men were confined, so that we might inform them in person of the consequences in which such an attempt would involve us. Believing, as I did, that this long march of two thousand miles, and "Mexican humanity" would cause a loss, by the 62 , most horrid suffering, of a large portion of our men, I did not hesitate to make them promise me, before I left the prison, to lose no opportunity of effecting their escape, regardless of any consequences that might befall my person. This they did with tears in their eyes, and hearts bursting with anguish. From my then imperfect knowledge of the country, I supposed that the crossing of the Eio Juan, or at the Kinconada, would be the most favorable points for such an attempt. Unforeseen cir- cumstances however prevented the consummation of this ad- vice at these places, and it was not until the main body of our men overtook us at Salado, that the plan of an attack was consummated. That plan, as is known to Dr. William M. Sheppard, late Secretary of the Texian Navy, and other officers present, was my own. The whole world, with the exception of their calumniator, senator Houston, awards lasting honor to these brave men, who thus struck for their liberty against three times their numbers of armed guards. Had the whole of my plan have been adhered to, of never leaving the main road, four days would have taken them into Texas, without the loss of a man, after their victory was gained at Salado. Chance prevented myself and other officers from being with them, or the whole of that plan would have been carried out. The Senator in his speech says that I am a " coward." This, I presume, is of the smallest moment to the United States Senate. It is what, however, those who know me as well as does the Senator, will not believe. Those who were with me at Guerrero, at the Alcantro, Mier, Salado, Perote, at Bear River, and other places of danger, know it to be false. Even the Senator himself seems to have changed his opinion upon this subject. The last two interviews I had with him were in the spring, 1844:, at a public meeting in the city of Galveston, Texas. I denounced him then as " villain and traitor" and made him leave the stand, fly frbm the meeting, and seek pro- tection under a lady's roof. The next interview I had with the Senator, was in Barnum's Hotel, Baltimore, at the Democratic Convention in 1848, in the presence of the Hon. Isaac E. Holmes, and General Daniel M. Baringer, our late minister to Spain. There he " took the door," with the haste of one who wished to escape the explosion of a powder magazine. Since 63 which time, to quiet his nerves, he has taken to the cold water cure ; and I have my doubts whether the hydropathy of the Brazos, Colorado, or the Jordan itself, will keep them still. Speaking of the Colorado, reminds me of an incident illustrative of the Senator's benevolence. In 1841 the Senator was upset in a stage and thrown into the Colorado river, at the town of Bastrop, and not knowing how to swim, under the unerring law of gravity (whiskey being lighter than water), he floated down the river some distance, in a nearly drowned condition, when an old negro man, by the name of Sam Banks, plunged in and rescued him. The Senator was taken to the house of Mr. Noessel, where he remained some weeks ; but before leav- ing, he requited the kindness of his host, by swindling him not only of his bill, but also of a certain " Hooded filly " belonging to Mrs. Noessel. His benevolence was more manifest when he came to reward the heroic old negro, who had risked his own life to save that of the Senator. How do you suppose this was done ? By procuring the freedom of the old man and provid- ing him a competent pension the remainder of his days ? This was the natural reward which any gentleman would have applied to such service. Not so with the Senator. I am told, upon good authority, that he put his hand in his pocket, and abso- lutely gave his rescuer " ONE DIME IN SILVEK !" Last summer he passed through this same town of Bastrop, where this poor old negro called upon him for charity, when the Senator's heart, after fourteen years' expansion, did give the old negro a silver half dollar, which he threw under his feet with contempt, and died within a few weeks thereafter, saying up to the day of his death, " If God would forgive him, he never would do the lilce again ; that he thought it was a gentleman, and not OLD SAM, he was pulling out of the river" These facts, disgraceful as they appear, are nevertheless true. They have been published time and again, and can be attested by many of the most respectable citizens of that county. The Senator had many causes of complaint against me ; among others, one well known to many of the first gentlemen of Texas now living, to wit of his swindling me out of my cloak, and General Santa Anna out of his gold snuff-box. The circumstances of this transaction are these : 1836, during the 64: session of the first congress of the republic, then sitting at Columbia on the Brazos, President Houston begged me to give him a valuable cloak, which I had just received from New Orleans, stating that he was greatly in need of one, which I cheerfully did. The following day he visited the prisoner, General Santa Anna, then confined twelve miles distant at Orizimbo. Spying in the hands of the prisoner a luxurious gold snuff-box, valued at more than a thousand dollars, he placed upon the prisoner's shoulders the cloak of which he (Houston) had that day begged of me for his own use. This favor done to the prisoner, with the copious admiraton on the part of Houston of said snuff-box, the prisoner, in gen- tleman courtesy, could not do less than to offer it to him in return. Thus he received this, among other bribes, of the President of Mexico, in violation of his oath and the constitu- tion of the Republic. I ask now of the Senator, Where is the snuff-box ? Has he sold it, as he did the prisoner's saddle ; or has he got it secreted from public view, because to receive and hold it thus, was in violation of his oath and the constitution. The further facts are these : No sooner had President Houston been inaugurated, and even before, than he visited the prisoner, got a glimpse of the snuff-box, and returned to Columbia and begged of me my cloak, as a gentlemanly pretext by which he could get the prisoner's snuff-box. At this time he also com- menced a negotiation with the prisoner for his release (see pages 111, 116, and 134 to 145, inclusive, of the Journals of the House of Representatives). It was determined, by a vote 21 to 5, inexpedient to release the prisoner ; yet, in violation of this expression of the Congress, President Houston had con- summated a plan, and at that time was carrying it into effect, by which he did so smuggle the prisoner out of the country. Few will believe that Houston was so stupendous an ass, as to sup- pose that Santa Anna's promises would hold beyond the bounds of Texas. Houston's motives, then, in acting in violation to the vote of the Congress, and the public sentiment of the country, must have been strongly mercenary, as have been repeatedly charged upon him. Another reason for the Senator's dislike to me has been my uncompromising hostility to the demoralizing American system 65 of divorce. From earliest manhood, in every legislature in which I have served, I have opposed this system of prostitu- tion, as destructive of morals and good society. I have had occasion to refer to the Senator himself for repudiating his former wives with as much indifference as he did his honest debts, or as little compunction as Henry the Eighth. I crave pardon for speaking of Henry and the Senator in the same paragraph the hyena and the mink resemble as well. The Senator says, that of the "sixty-seven gallant brave men" who fell in the Mier Expedition, only the seventeen decimated claim my special sympathy. " How does he account for the loss of the other fifty f" I refer the Senator to the following extract from my work, which he says he " has read so particularly." ^QQ pages 369 to 72, inclusive: " Let us now turn to inquire after the main body of our countrymen prisoners ; and we do so with feelings of mournful sorrow, with a heart over- whelmed with sadness. We go back to the prisons of San Luis Potosi, and find them covered with rags and filth, loaded with vermin, and worn down with hunger and all the multiplied cruelties of their captors. We trace their bloody path south three hundred miles, through the scorching plains of Mexico, by the unburied bones of many noble souls who sunk under a task more than human. We see the brave and dauntless Cameron taken out upon this path and murdered for no other cause than his bravery. We see the remainder herded together like beasts of burden, and driven forth into the streets with sticks and bayonets by brutal overseers, as scavengers of filth too horrible to contemplate. We see their manly frames worn down by an insufficient allowance of the offal of a rotten population. As the opposite plate will show, which was drawn from life by our indefatigable fellow pris- oner, Charles M'Laughlin, we see them heavily ironed, working upon a pavement in front of the archbishop's palace at Tacubaya ; and what was still more grating to their feelings, was to be gazed upon from their coaches, by the yellow, pepper-eating, demi-savages, as if they had been so many hye- nas. We trace most of the survivors, naked and emaciated, two hundred miles east, to the dark, cold dungeons of Perote ; the balance to San Juan de Ulloa, to be offered up as a certain sacrifice to the vomito, that universal ma- laria of death-. We follow around the massive castle walls of Perote upon the north, and in the bottom of the great ditch find newly-stirred earth. Here, underneath the loose sand, without a plank to cover their bones, or a stone to mark the place without the last sad rights of burial, in a spot not only un- consecrated, but cursed by a fanatical priesthood, lie the remains of the best spirits of our country. Here, in a foreign land, in a priest-ridden nation, and in full view of the eternal snows of Orazaba, repose the bones of fathers, 5 66 brothers, husbands, and sons of Texians here we helped to deposite Booker and Jackson, Trapnal and Crews, Saunders, Gray, Trimble, and a long list of others. Peace to their ashes, and a nation's gratitude to their memories ! But, oh ! how the heart sickens at perfidy the most unparalleled, when we trace those bloody murders, starvation, and deaths to the President of our own country! I would to Gor! that a due regard to truth, as well as justice to the memories of these brave men, would allow me to throw the mantle of eternal darkness over the sequel ; if so, I would bury this horrible conclusion in lasting oblivion for my country's credit. It is, however, my task to regis- ter this bloody tale, and I have no option but in truth ; and when President Houston has been charged as the cause of the sufferings and murder of our countrymen, for our country's honor it has been too clearly proven. (See Appendix, Nos. 2 and 6.) " We still look after the surviving half of the brave band of Mier, and find them in the cheerless cells of Perote, living skeletons, without clothing enough to hide their nakedness ; and what language do we hear from them ? Though they feel mortified and indignant at their President's denunciation of them, and his Heartless usurpation of the laws of their Congress, in withholding their supplies, yet there is but one sentiment, one language among them, and that is * the honor and liberty of their country? At all times, all occasions, and under all circumstances, when hunger has pressed them most, when death made no sham visits to their gloomy abodes, boldly did they publish this sen- timent. Time after time did they write home to their countrymen, 'Let no consideration of us forfeit your country's honor. Let us rot in these dungeons ere you concede" one inch to these colored barbarians.' " The Senator, while known to be a physical coward, is said to be a man of moral courage. To some extent this is true. Moral courage to change his politics without reason. Moral courage to commit, in the daily practices of life, the vilest in- decencies. Moral courage, under senate protection, to fulmi- nate numerous falsehoods against the best men in the country. Moral courage to commit perjury in open court, as is known to Governor J. Pinckney Henderson, and other gentlemen in Texas. Moral courage to play saint and sinner, thief and liar, without the change of countenance, or the quickening of a pulsation. Moral courage to break a seal or steal a dollar. Yet, Senator,* President, Preacher, Big Drunk, General Sam Houston, is an extraordinary man. It is impossible, in the limits of this reply, that I can do him full justice ; and having much material still on hand, it is due to the public that I should give a faithful account of his life cmd doings, in which I shall take him, without fear or favor from his " BIG DKTHSTK " 67 administration of his Cherokee wigwam, to his senatorial charlatanry. I come now to the most pleasant part of this defence it is to ask pardon, both of the Senate and the public, for the use of language, while in every instance true, yet mortifying, deeply mortifying, to myself for its necessity. I have been driven to its use by a tissue of falsehoods, malicious, vindictive, fiend- ish, which has no other foundation in truth than the ipse dixit of a Senator, the most mendacious who ever disgraced your high body. I am willing that the Senate and public shall judge whether there has been a necessity for language on my part, thus harsh, though true. To apply the ordinary lash to the hide of the rhinoceros, would be as futile as "darting straws against the wind." I have been compelled to use the rasp. I am, very respectfully, THOMAS J. GKEEK