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wrong in secretly offering Mexico, at the samne time, ten millions of dollars to hush up the war which he had created-wrong now in refusing Mr. Polk three millions to aid in getting out of the war which he made-wrong in throwing the blame of this war of his own making upon the shoulders of Mr. Polk-wrong in his retreat and occupation line of policy-wrong in expelling old Father Ritchie from the Senate, who worked so hard for him during the Texas annexation-and more wrong now than ever, in that string of resolutions which he has laid upon the table, and in which, as Sylla saw in the young Cæsar many Mariuses, so do I see in them many nullifications.

In a picture of so many and such dreadful errors, it is hard to specify the worst, or to dwell upon any one to the exclusion of the rest; but there is one feature in this picture of enormities which seems entitled to that distinction: I allude to the pledge upon which the armistice and the peace negotiations between Mexico and Texas were broken up in 1844, and those two countries put back into a state of war, and ourselves involved in the contest. The story is briefly told, and admits of no dispute. The letter of 17th January is the accusing record, from which there is no escape. Its awful words cannot be read now without freezing up the blood:

"It is known to you that an armistice exists between Mexico and Texas, and that negotiations for peace are now going on under the mediation of two powerful sovereigns, mutually friendly. If we yield to your solicitation to be annexed to the United States, under these circumstances, we shall draw upon ourselves a fresh invasion from Mexico, incur the imputation of bad faith, and lose the friendship and respect of the two great mediating powers. Now, will you, in the event of our acceding to your request, step between us and Mexico,

and take the war off our hands?"

This was the letter, and the terrible question with which it concluded. Mr. Upshur, to whom it was addressed, gave it no answer. In the forty days that his life was spared, he gave it no answer. Mr. Nelson, his temporary successor, gave it an answer; and, speaking for the President of the United States, positively refused to take annexation on the awful terms proposed. This answer was sent to Texas, and put an end to all negotiation for annexation. The Senator from South Carolina came into the Department of State, procured the reversal of the President's decision, and gave the pledge to the whole extent that Texas asked it. Without, in the least, denying the knowledge of the armistice, and the negotiations for peace, and all the terrible consequences which were to result from their breach, he accepts the whole, and gives the fatal pledge which his predecessors had refused; and follows it up by sending our troops and ships to fight a people with whom we were at peace-the whole veiled by the mantle of secrecy, and pretexted by motives as unfounded as they were absurd. Now, what

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[29TH CONG.

says morality and Christianity to this conduct? Certainly, if two individuals were engaged in strife, and two others should part them, and put them under an agreement to submit to an amicable settlement; and while the settlement was going on another man, lying behind a hedge, should secretly instigate one of the parties to break off the agreement and renew the strife, and promise to take the fight off his hands if he did: what would morality and Christianity say to this? Surely the malediction of all good men would fall upon the man who had interfered to renew the strife. And if this would be the voice of all good men in the case of mere individuals, what would it be when the strife was between nations, and when the renewal of it was to involve a third nation in the contest, and such a war as we now have with our sister republic of Mexico? This is the feature which stands out in the awful picture: this is the question which now presents itself to the moral sense of the civilized world, in judging the conduct of the Senator from South Carolina in writing that letter of the 11th of April, 1844, aggravated by now throwing upon another the blame of a war for which he then contracted.

Mr. BENTON having concluded-
Mr. CALHOUN rose and said:

One thing, Mr. President, at least, may be inferred, from the unprovoked attack of the Senator, and the great solicitude he evinced to trace the authorship of the war to me-and that is, that the war is unpopular. There can be no mistake. He felt that the tide of public sentiment had turned against it, and hence the anxiety exhibited to place its responsibility on my shoulders, and take it from those on whom it ought justly to rest. Had he supposed the opposite-had he believed that the war was necessary and unavoidable, and that its termination would be successful-I am the last man to whom he would attribute any agency in causing it. I am gratified that the Senator has furnished this evidence. It affords reasonable hope, that those who are responsible for it will exert themselves, and I hope with success, to bring it to a speedy termination.

He traces the authorship to me, because, as he asserts, I am the real author of the annexation of Texas, and that annexation is the real cause of the war. I trust, Mr. President, there will be no dispute hereafter as to who is the real author of annexation. Less than twelve months since, I had many competitors for that honor: the official organ here claimed, if my memory serves me, a large share for Mr. Polk and his Administration, and not less than half a dozen competitors from other quarters claimed to be the real authors. But now, since the war has become unpopular, they all seem to agree that I, in reality, am the author of annexation. I will not put the honor aside. I may now rightfully and indisputably claim to be the author of that great event an event which has so much extended the domains of the Union,

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The Three Million Bill.

[FEBRUARY, 1847.

which has added so largely to its productive was indispensable for that purpose, I have high powers, which promises so greatly to extend authority in my possession that which all its commerce, which has stimulated its industry, would admit to be the highest, if I could with and given security to our most exposed fron-propriety introduce it; and for this prompt and tier. I take pride to myself as being the author of this great event.

decided act, if for nothing else, 1 might claim the authorship of annexation. Now, can any But the Senator objects that I so conducted thing be more absurd than the assertion that the question of annexation as necessarily to the war with Mexico resulted from selecting lead to the war. On what does he rest this the House resolution, instead of the amendcharge? He rests it on the ground that I ment of the Senator? He has ventured the selected the resolution as it came from the bold assertion, without the shadow of an arguHouse of Representatives, as the basis of the ment to sustain it. What possible difference annexation, instead of giving the Texan Gov- could it make with Mexico, whether the annexaernment the choice between the House resolution was made upon one or the other? Why tion and the amendment of the Senate origi- should the one not be as offensive to her as the nally moved by the Senator himself. He com- other? Indeed, I doubt much whether, even plained bitterly that the Senate resolution to this day, the Government of Mexico knows passed at the very heel of the session, under whether the resolution was passed with or withthe expectation that it would be carried into out an alternative. Such is the baseless ground effect by the present Administration, then just on which he has charged me with being the coming into power, and not by Mr. Tyler's Ad-author of the war. I had heard, for several ministration, then about to expire, had not been adopted.

He seemed to think that the then Administration had no right to act upon it, and that, undertaking to do so, was depriving its successor of some of its rights. He accused me of acting with the greatest promptness. The fact is so. The resolution, if I recollect, was signed by the late President about the first of March. I saw the importance of acting promptly, and advised the President to act without delay, that he had the constitutional right of doing so, and that I deemed it necessary that he should act in order effectually to secure the success of a measure which had originated with his Administration. His Cabinet were summoned the next day, and concurred in the opinion. That night I prepared the despatch for Mr. Donelson, our chargé in Texas, and the next day, late in the evening of the third of March, it was forwarded to him. It was my last official act of any importance as Secretary of State.

days past, that he had prepared to make an elaborate attack on me. Some of my friends asked, rather jestingly, if I did not expect to be annihilated. After these givings out, and such laborious preparation, I did suppose the Senator would make some show of a formidable charge; but of all the attacks I have ever witnessed, in this or any other legislative body, I have never known one so empty and ridiculous. Every one of his charges is founded either in gross error or partial statement of facts, or on some forced and absurd conclusion. I may begin with the very first that he made. He had the assurance to assert, in the presence of the Senate, that I was the first to introduce the question, who was the real author or cause of this war. Now, I appeal to every Senator, and every other individual who was present on the occasion, whether the Senator from Tennessee (Mr. TURNEY) did not first charge me with being the author of this war, and whether I did not limit myself to repelling this charge, by showing that it originated in the order to I selected the resolution of the House in General Taylor, to march from Corpus Christi, preference to the amendment of which the Sen- and take position on the Rio del Norte? I go ator from Missouri was the author, because I further, and ask, is there a Senator here ignoclearly saw, not only that it was every way rant of the fact, that the question of, who was preferable, but the only certain mode by which the author or cause of the war, had been long annexation could be effected. My reasons for before elaborately discussed in this body-in the thinking so were fully set forth in my despatch, House of Representatives, and throughout the which may be found among the public docu- whole country, from its declaration up to that ments accompanying the first annual Message time. In the face of all this, the Senator rises up of the present Executive. They will speak for in his place, after a long and laborious preparathemselves, they never have been controverted, tion, and asserts that it was I who originated and never can be successfully. Indeed, I never the inquiry as to who was its author. This considered the Senator's amendment as express-is a fair sample of the accuracy of the Senator, ing the deliberate sense either of the Senate in his numerous allegations to show that I was or House of Representatives. It is well known the author of the war. I might go on and take that he, and a few of his friends, had the power them up one by one, and show that every one of greatly embarrassing the passage of the resolutions of the House, if not of defeating them; and that his amendment was moved, not so much as an improvement of the resolutions as to gratify him and them. That the course I adopted did secure the annexation, and that it Vol. XVI.-7

of his positions and deductions is equally unfounded in fact or false in conclusion. I de not deem it necessary. A large portion of his speech was but the stale repetition of what he said in the session of 1842-'43, upon the treaty which I had concluded with Texas, then under

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[29TH CONG. portant that this state of things should terminate, which could only be done by obtaining the possession of Florida.

But there were other and powerful considerations for the acquisition. We had, a short time before, extinguished the Indian title to large tracts of country in Alabama, Mississippi, and Georgia, lying upon streams and rivers which

discussion in this body. All the documents now brought forward, were then before the Senate, and he went on with the same topics very elaborately, and with much more power than on the present occasion, without making any impression on the country. The country was against him then, and still remains against him, and it is in vain that he undertakes to disturb its settled conviction. It will remain ever un-passed through Florida to the gulf-lands in a changed, in spite of all that he can do. Under this conviction, I will not weary the Senate by repelling assaults then made and then repelled. The most prominent of the charges the orders given by the Administration to place a fleet in the Gulf of Mexico, and a portion of the army on the frontier of Texas-was repelled by my then colleague, (Mr. McDuffie,) of whom he speaks so highly on this occasion. In repelling it, he said, that if the orders to which the Senator then and now objects, had not been issued, the Executive would have been guilty of great dereliction of duty.

The Florida treaty, forming another subject of attack, figured also on that occasion in connection with annexation; and what he has said now is but a repetition of what he said then. He then, as now, made me responsible for that treaty, although I was but one of six members of Mr. Monroe's Cabinet, and the youngest of its members-responsible, without advancing a particle of proof that I even gave it my support or approbation. He rests the charge on some disclaimer, as it seems, that the then Secretary of State (Mr. Adams) has, at some time, made, that he was not responsible for the treaty. The Senator may be right as to that; but how can that, by any possibility, show that I was responsible? But I am prepared to take my full share of responsibility as a member of Mr. Monroe's Cabinet, without having any particular agency in forming the treaty, or influence in inducing the Cabinet to adopt it. I then thought, and still think it a good treaty; and so thought the Senate of the United States; for, if my memory does not deceive me, it received every vote of the Senate. [A Senator: "Yes, every vote."] It then received the unanimous vote of the Senate, promptly given. Of course, if that treaty was the cause of the war with Mexico, as the Senator seems to suppose, this body is as much the author and cause of the war, as the individual on whom he is now so anxious to fix it.

I have said it is a good treaty, not without due reflection. We acquired much by it. It gave us Florida-an acquisition not only important in itself, but also in reference to the whole south-western frontier. There was, at that time, four powerful tribes of Indians, two of whom the Creeks and the Choctaws-were contiguous to Florida, and the two others-the Chickasaws and Cherokees-were adjoining. They were the most numerous and powerful tribes in the United States, and, from their position, were exposed to be acted on and excited against us from Florida. It was im

great measure valueless, without the right of navigating them to their mouths. The acquisition of Florida gave us this right, and enabled us to bring into successful cultivation a great extent of fertile lands, which have added much to the increased production of our great staple, cotton. Another important point was effected by the acquisition: It terminated a very troublesome dispute with Spain, growing out of the capture of St. Marks and Pensacola by General Jackson, in the Seminole war; and, finally, it perfected our title to Oregon, by ceding to us whatever right Spain had to that territory.

Such is the treaty on which the Senator has lavished so much of his abuse; but there were other reasons for adopting the Sabine as the boundary, and of which I was ignorant at the time the treaty was formed, and to the knowlege of which I have come within the last few years. Mr. Monroe, if I am correctly informed, in adopting that line acted under circumstances which left him little option. I am not at liberty to state them the information I received confidentially. It is sufficient to state that he had ascertained that the Senate would not ratify a treaty with a boundary farther west. It was communicated to him by Senators of first respectability. Their reasons for refusing to ratify a treaty which would extend the boundary beyond the Sabine, I do not choose to go into, although it was communicated to me with information to which I have alluded.

But if we take out of the speech of the Senator what he has stated in relation to annexation, and the Florida treaty, in which, as I have stated, he has but repeated old and stale charges, that made not the slightest impression on the country at the time, what is there left of his present attack upon me? It is surprising that a man of his experience and sagacity should suppose that the repetition of these threadbare charges, regarded as futile when first made, should make any impression now. Indeed, I may consider myself obliged to him for repeating them, after such elaborate preparation, as it affords the most conclusive proof how exempt my course has been from any just censure during the long period of time in which he has attempted to trace it.

To make good his allegation that I am the anthor of annexation, and that annexation caused the war, he asserts that I was in favor of the annexation of Texas as far back as 1836, immediately after the battle of San Jacinto, and the capture of Santa Anna; to prove which, he read an extract from the speech which I delivered on resolutions from Mississippi, pre

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sented by her Senator, now Secretary of the Treasury, instructing the Senators to obtain an immediate recognition of the independence of

Texas.

It is true that I then advocated an early recognition of the independence of Texas, and its admission into this Union; but I was not alone in that, nor did I take a leading part in the discussion; the two most prominent advocates of her cause at that time were the Senator from Mississippi, and my then colleague, (Mr. Preston;) but they were seconded by a large portion of this body at the time. The distinguished Senator from Massachusetts bore a part in the debate, and expressed his opinion in favor of recognition at an early period, and of the vast importance of the future condition of Texas to our country. I have not had time to examine the discussion; but find that I was among those who advised delay until further information could be obtained, and many were for prompt action; but the Senator from Missouri has thought proper, in the face of these facts, to hold me up as the only individual disposed for a prompt and immediate action. He has done more. He has suppressed the fact, very important to be known, that before the close of that very session, the report of the Committee on Foreign Relations, recommending that the acknowledgment of the independence of Texas, as soon as satisfactory information could be obtained that it had successfully established a Government, was adopted by the unanimous vote of the Senate, including the Senator himself, and that at the very next session her independence was recognized.

Sir, I admit, even at that early period, I saw that the incorporation of Texas into this Union, would be indispensable both to her safety and ours. I saw that it was impossible that she could stand as an independent power between us and Mexico, without becoming the scene of intrigue of foreign powers, alike destructive of the peace and security of both Texas and ourselves. I saw more: I saw the bearing of the slave question at that early stage, and that it would become an instrument in the hands of a foreign power of striking a blow at us, and that two conterminous slaveholding communities could not co-exist without one being wielded to the destruction of the other. The Senator is right. What I then said was intended to shadow forth the future, that future which actually came, when I was called, by the unanimous voice of the country, to take charge of the State Department, in reference to these very events. I saw, with General Jackson, that the golden opportunity had occurred when annexation must take place in order to avoid interminable difficulties and great disasters; and, seeing it, I did not hesitate to undertake the duty which has been assigned me, notwithstanding the difficulties, from the weakness of the Administration at that period. I succeeded, in despite of them, and that, too, without war; and all the elaborate efforts of

[FEBRUARY, 1847.

the Senator from Missouri, never can deprive me of the credit to which I am entitled, in reference to the great question of annexation. On a review of the whole, my course, I may say, exhibits not only some foresight in reference to it, but also some powers of averting the dangers, and securing the end which I desired.

Every measure towards the accomplishment of annexation had been consummated before the present Administration came into power. No war followed, although the act of annexation had been completed more than a year before the rupture between us and Mexico took place; nor would war have followed at all, had we acted with ordinary prudence. That Mexico was chafed, chagrined; that she threatened much, and blustered much; talked about war and even the existence of hostilities-are all true. It was, however, but talk. The strong should always permit the weak and aggrieved to talk, to bluster, and scold, without taking offence: and if we had so acted, and exercised proper skill in the management of our affairs, Mexico and ourselves would by this time have quietly and peaceably settled all difficulties, and been good friends. We have chosen to pursue the opposite course, and are in war.

Every Senator knows that I was opposed to the war; but none knows but myself the depth of that opposition. With my conceptions of its character and consequences, it was impossible for me to vote for it. When, accordingly, I was deserted by every friend on this side of the House, including my then honorable colleague among the rest, (Mr. McDuffie,) I was not shaken in the least degree in reference to my course. On the passage of the act recognizing the war, I said to many of my friends that a deed had been done from which the country would not be able to recover for a long time, if ever; and added, it has dropped a curtain between the present and the future, which to me is impenetrable; and for the first time since I have been in public life, I am unable to see the future. I also added, that it has closed the first volume of our political history under the constitution, and opened the second, and that no mortal could tell what would be written in it. These deep impressions were made upon my mind, because I saw, from the circumstances under which the war was made, a total departure from that course of policy which had governed the country from the commencement of our Government until that time; and that, too, under circumstances calculated to lead to most disastrous consequences. Since then less than a year has elapsed; but in that short period enough has already been developed to make what was then said look like prophecy.

But the Senator charges, entertaining as I did these impressions, that I did not take a stand, and arrest the march of General Taylor to the Rio del Norte. I have already stated the reasons on another occasion why I did not; and however unsatisfactory they may be to the

FEBRUARY, 1847.]

The Three Million Bill.

Senator, they are satisfactory to myself, and I doubt not they will be to the community at large. He also intimated that I ought to have communicated my views to the President. I was guilty of no neglect in that respect. I did not fail to state in the proper quarter explicitly what I thought would result from the order given to General Taylor, but I found very different views from mine entertained there. Those in power were quite as confident that the march of General Taylor to the Del Norte would not in its consequences involve war, as they were that notice without compromise in reference to the joint occupancy of Oregon would not involve war with England.

In looking back upon these matters, I have the satisfaction to feel that I fully performed my duty both here and elsewhere with reference to these important questions.

With my view of the character and consequences of the war, I have forborne much. I have suffered not a little in the estimation of my friends, both in and out of Congress, for refusing to vote for the bill recognizing the existence of a war asserted to be made by the act of Mexico. I have been urged by them to explain the reasons for my course on that occasion; but I persisted in declining to do so, because I could not see that it would be of any service to the country, while it might weaken the hands of those who are charged with the prosecution of the war. I adopted the only course which, according to my opinion, I could with propriety-to take no active or leading part in reference to the measures intended for carrying on the war, but to give a quiet and silent vote in favor of all which did not seem to me decidedly objectionable; but, in the mean time, to look out for the first favorable opportunity of presenting my views how the war should be conducted to bring it most advantageously to a successful termination. I accordingly embraced the opportunity on the discussion of the three-million bill now before the Senate, to present my views, not in the spirit of opposition, but of kindness to the Administration, reserving to myself the expression of my opinion as to the causes of the war for some suitable occasion. It seems, however, that the friends of those in power were not satisfied with this course on my part: it became an object of assault both in this Chamber and without its walls. The Senator from Tennessee immediately on my right, (Mr. TURNEY,) commenced the attack here by directly charging me with being the author of the war, and it has since been followed by the Senator from Missouri on this occasion. I have thus been forced, in self-defence, to depart from the line which I had prescribed for myself, and to enter into the question, Who is the author or the cause of the war? The responsibility is not on me, but on those who have compelled me to make the departure. Thus far I have limited what I have said strictly to self-defence, as I shall also do on the present occasion.

[29TH CONG In looking to the causes which led to the war, I go one step further back than the Senator from Maine, (Mr. EVANS,) who discussed the subject in this aspect with great accuracy and ability. He began with Mr. Slidell's mission and negotiations. I go a step further back, to the management of the negotiation prior to that period. When this Administration came into power, there were two great questions on hand connected with our foreign relations-the Oregon and the Mexican. As different as they were in their character, and as remote as the two powers were from each other, there was an intimate connection between them which could not be overlooked in conducting the negotiation, without falling into a great and dangerous error. Such at least is my opinion. I wish to say nothing to wound the feelings of the distinguished individual who had charge of the negotiation, but it seems to me that he fell into a great error in consequence of overlooking this connection between the two subjects. To my mind it is one of the clearest of propositions, that there could be no well-founded hope of adjusting our difficulties with Mexico until the Oregon question was finally settled. Why so? The reason is obvious. Mexico knew that we had heavy claims against her, which she was little able to pay. Debtors without means are usually shy of their creditor. She could not but see that there was a chance of escaping our demands against her, provided a conflict should ensue between us and England in reference to Oregon. She could not but see more-that it might possibly afford her an opportunity of recovering either a part or the whole of Texas by an alliance with England, and availing herself of the aid of British strength and resources in waging a war against us. At all events, she would look with confidence to her being protected as an ally of England in the treaty by which the war should be terminated. Whatever objection may be made to England, she never deserts an ally in war. It seemed to me, under these circumstances, that it was a great error to suppose that the differences with Mexico could be adjusted while those with England were pending. Our true policy, then, according to my opinion, was to suspend all attempts at opening negotiation with Mexico until that question was finally settled. When that was effected, and Mexico could no longer look to the support of England in her controversy with us, she would see the folly of declining to adjust the differences between us, and enter into conflict with a power every way so vastly her superior.

There would, then, be another advantage which would greatly favor a settlement of our difficulties with Mexico. The eloquent Senator from Louisiana has truly said that Mexico, at least so far as capital is concerned, was a British colony. The immense interest which England has in the country, would have enlisted her on the side of peace, and the whole of her vast influence would have been

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