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President[ Ulysses S. Grant

         Date[ December 7, 1875


To the Senate and House of Representatives:


In submitting my seventh annual message to Congress, in this centennial

year of our national existence as a free and independent people, it affords

me great pleasure to recur to the advancement that has been made from the

time of the colonies, one hundred years ago. We were then a people

numbering only 3,000,000. Now we number more than 40,000,000. Then

industries were confined almost exclusively to the tillage of the soil. Now

manufactories absorb much of the labor of the country.


Our liberties remain unimpaired; the bondmen have been freed from slavery;

we have become possessed of the respect, if not the friendship, of all

civilized nations. Our progress has been great in all the arts--in science,

agriculture, commerce, navigation, mining, mechanics, law, medicine, etc.;

and in general education the progress is likewise encouraging. Our thirteen

States have become thirty-eight, including Colorado (which has taken the

initiatory steps to become a State), and eight Territories, including the

Indian Territory and Alaska, and excluding Colorado, making a territory

extending from the Atlantic to the Pacific. On the south we have extended

to the Gulf of Mexico, and in the west from the Mississippi to the

Pacific.


One hundred years ago the cotton gin, the steamship, the railroad, the

telegraph, the reaping, sewing, and modern printing machines, and numerous

other inventions of scarcely less value to our business and happiness were

entirely unknown.


In 1776 manufactories scarcely existed even in name in all this vast

territory. In 1870 more than 2,000,000 persons were employed in

manufactories, producing more than $2,100,000,000 of products in amount

annually, nearly equal to our national debt. From nearly the whole of the

population of 1776 being engaged in the one occupation of agriculture, in

1870 so numerous and diversified had become the occupation of our people

that less than 6,000,000 out of more than 40,000,000 were so engaged. The

extraordinary effect produced in our country by a resort to diversified

occupations has built a market for the products of fertile lands distant

from the seaboard and the markets of the world.


The American system of locating various and extensive manufactories next to

the plow and the pasture, and adding connecting railroads and steamboats,

has produced in our distant interior country a result noticeable by the

intelligent portions of all commercial nations. The ingenuity and skill of

American mechanics have been demonstrated at home and abroad in a manner

most flattering to their pride. But for the extraordinary genius and

ability of our mechanics, the achievements of our agriculturists,

manufacturers, and transporters throughout the country would have been

impossible of attainment.


The progress of the miner has also been great. Of coal our production has

small; now many millions of tons are mined annually. So with iron, which

formed scarcely an appreciable part of our products half a century ago, we

now produce more than the world consumed at the beginning of our national

existence. Lead, zinc, and copper, from being articles of import, we may

expect to be large exporters of in the near future. The development of gold

and silver mines in the United States and Territories has not only been

remarkable, but has had a large influence upon the business of all

commercial nations. Our merchants in the last hundred years have had a

success and have established a reputation for enterprise, sagacity,

progress, and integrity unsurpassed by peoples of older nationalities. This

"good name" is not confined to their homes, but goes out upon every sea and

into every port where commerce enters. With equal pride we can point to our

progress in all of the learned professions.


As we are now about to enter upon our second centennial--commenting our

manhood as a nation--it is well to look back upon the past and study what

will be best to preserve and advance our future greatness From the fall of

Adam for his transgression to the present day no nation has ever been free

from threatened danger to its prosperity and happiness. We should look to

the dangers threatening us, and remedy them so far as lies in our power. We

are a republic whereof one man is as good as another before the law. Under

such a form of government it is of the greatest importance that all should

be possessed of education and intelligence enough to cast a vote with a

right understanding of its meaning. A large association of ignorant men can

not for any considerable period oppose a successful resistance to tyranny

and oppression from the educated few, but will inevitably sink into

acquiescence to the will of intelligence, whether directed by the demagogue

or by priestcraft. Hence the education of the masses becomes of the first

necessity for the preservation of our institutions. They are worth

preserving, because they have secured the greatest good to the greatest

proportion of the population of any form of government yet devised. All

other forms of government approach it just in proportion to the general

diffusion of education and independence of thought and action. As the

primary step, therefore, to our advancement in all that has marked our

progress in the past century, I suggest for your earnest consideration, and

most earnestly recommend it, that a constitutional amendment be submitted

to the legislatures of the several States for ratification, making it the

duty of each of the several States to establish and forever maintain free

public schools adequate to the education of all the children in the

rudimentary branches within their respective limits, irrespective of sex,

color, birthplace, or religions; forbidding the teaching in said schools of

religious, atheistic, or pagan tenets; and prohibiting the granting of any

school funds or school taxes, or any part thereof, either by legislative,

municipal, or other authority, for the benefit or in aid, directly or

indirectly, of any religious sect or denomination, or in aid or for the

benefit of any other object of any nature or kind whatever.


In connection with this important question I would also call your attention

to the importance of correcting an evil that, if permitted to continue,

will probably lead to great trouble in our land before the close of the

nineteenth century. It is the accumulation of vast amounts of untaxed

church property.


In 1850, I believe, the church property of the United States which paid no

tax, municipal or State, amounted to about $83,000,000. In 1860 the amount

had doubled; in 1875 it is about $1,000,000,000. By 1900, without check, it

is safe to say this property will reach a sum exceeding $3,000,000,000. So

vast a sum, receiving all the protection and benefits of Government without

bearing its proportion of the burdens and expenses of the same, will not be

looked upon acquiescently by those who have to pay the taxes. In a growing

country, where real estate enhances so rapidly with time as in the United

States, there is scarcely a limit to the wealth that may be acquired by

corporations, religious or otherwise, if allowed to retain real estate

without taxation. The contemplation of so vast a property as here alluded

to, without taxation, may lead to sequestration without constitutional

authority and through blood.


I would suggest the taxation of all property equally, whether church or

corporation, exempting only the last resting place of the dead and

possibly, with proper restrictions, church edifices.


Our relations with most of the foreign powers continue on a satisfactory

and friendly footing.


Increased intercourse, the extension of commerce, and the cultivation of

mutual interests have steadily improved our relations with the large

majority of the powers of the world, rendering practicable the peaceful

solution of questions which from time to time necessarily arise, leaving

few which demand extended or particular notice.


The correspondence of the Department of State with our diplomatic

representatives abroad is transmitted herewith.


I am happy to announce the passage of an act by the General Cortes of

Portugal, proclaimed since the adjournment of Congress, for the abolition

of servitude in the Portuguese colonies. It is to be hoped that such

legislation may be another step toward the great consummation to be

reached, when no man shall be permitted, directly or indirectly, under any

guise, excuse, or form of law, to hold his fellow-man in bondage. I am of

opinion also that it is the duty of the United States, as contributing

toward that end, and required by the spirit of the age in which we live, to

provide by suitable legislation that no citizen of the United States shall

hold slaves as property in any other country or be interested therein.


Chile has made reparation in the case of the whale ship Good Return, seized

without sufficient cause upward of forty years ago. Though she had hitherto

denied her accountability, the denial was never acquiesced in by this

Government, and the justice of the claim has been so earnestly contended

for that it has been gratifying that she should have at last acknowledged

it.


The arbitrator in the case of the United States steamer Montijo, for the

seizure and detention of which the Government of the United States of

Colombia was held accountable, has decided in favor of the claim. This

decision has settled a question which had been pending for several years,

and which, while it continued open, might more or less disturb the good

understanding which it is desirable should be maintained between the two

Republics.


A reciprocity treaty with the King of the Hawaiian Islands was concluded

some months since. As it contains a stipulation that it shall not take

effect until Congress shall enact the proper legislation for that purpose,

copies of the instrument are herewith submitted, in order that, if such

should be the pleasure of Congress, the necessary legislation upon the

subject may be adopted.


In March last an arrangement was made, through Mr. Cushing, our minister in

Madrid, with the Spanish Government for the payment by the latter to the

United States of the sum of $80,000 in coin, for the purpose of the relief

of the families or persons of the ship's company and certain passengers of

the Virginius. This sum was to have been paid in three installments at two

months each. It is due to the Spanish Government that I should state that

the payments were fully and spontaneously anticipated by that Government,

and that the whole amount was paid within but a few days more than two

months from the date of the agreement, a copy of which is herewith

transmitted. In pursuance of the terms of the adjustment, I have directed

the distribution of the amount among the parties entitled thereto,

including the ship's company and such of the passengers as were American

citizens. Payments are made accordingly, on the application by the parties

entitled thereto.


The past year has furnished no evidence of an approaching termination of

the ruinous conflict which has been raging for seven years in the

neighboring island of Cuba. The same disregard of the laws of civilized

warfare and of the just demands of humanity which has heretofore called

forth expressions of condemnation from the nations of Christendom has

continued to blacken the sad scene. Desolation, ruin, and pillage are

pervading the rich fields of one of the most fertile and productive regions

of the earth, and the incendiary's torch, firing plantations and valuable

factories and buildings, is the agent marking the alternate advance or

retreat of contending parties.


The protracted continuance of this strife seriously affects the interests

of all commercial nations, but those of the United States more than others,

by reason of close proximity, its larger trade and intercourse with Cuba,

and the frequent and intimate personal and social relations which have

grown up between its citizens and those of the island. Moreover, the

property of our citizens in Cuba is large, and is rendered insecure and

depreciated in value and in capacity of production by the continuance of

the strife and the unnatural mode of its conduct. The same is true,

differing only in degree, with respect to the interests and people of other

nations; and the absence of any reasonable assurance of a near termination

of the conflict must of necessity soon compel the States thus suffering to

consider what the interests of their own people and their duty toward

themselves may demand.


I have hoped that Spain would be enabled to establish peace in her colony,

to afford security to the property and the interests of our citizens, and

allow legitimate scope to trade and commerce and the natural productions of

the island. Because of this hope, and from an extreme reluctance to

interfere in the most remote manner in the affairs of another and a

friendly nation, especially of one whose sympathy and friendship in the

struggling infancy of our own existence must ever be remembered with

gratitude, I have patiently and anxiously waited the progress of events.

Our own civil conflict is too recent for us not to consider the

difficulties which surround a government distracted by a dynastic rebellion

at home at the same time that it has to cope with a separate insurrection

in a distant colony. But whatever causes may have produced the situation

which so grievously affects our interests, it exists, with all its

attendant evils operating directly upon this country and its people. Thus

far all the efforts of Spain have proved abortive, and time has marked no

improvement in the situation. The armed bands of either side now occupy

nearly the same ground as in the past, with the difference, from time to

time, of more lives sacrificed, more property destroyed, and wider extents

of fertile and productive fields and more and more of valuable property

constantly wantonly sacrificed to the incendiary's torch.


In contests of this nature, where a considerable body of people who have

attempted to free themselves of the control of the superior government have

reached such point in occupation of territory, in power, and in general

organization as to constitute in fact a body politic; having a government

in substance as well as in name; possessed of the elements of stability and

equipped with the machinery for the administration of internal policy and

the execution of its laws; prepared and able to administer justice at home,

as well as in its dealings with other powers, it is within the province of

those other powers to recognize its existence as a new and independent

nation. In such cases other nations simply deal with an actually existing

condition of things, and recognize as one of the powers of the earth that

body politic which, possessing the necessary elements, has in fact become a

new power. In a word, the creation of a new state is a fact.


To establish the condition of things essential to the recognition of this

fact there must be a people occupying a known territory, united under some

known and defined form of government, acknowledged by those subject

thereto, in which the functions of government are administered by usual

methods, competent to mete out justice to citizens and strangers, to afford

remedies for public and for private wrongs, and able to assume the

correlative international obligations and capable of performing the

corresponding international duties resulting from its acquisition of the

rights of sovereignty. A power should exist complete in its organization,

ready to take and able to maintain its place among the nations of the

earth.


While conscious that the insurrection in Cuba has shown a strength and

endurance which make it at least doubtful whether it be in the power of

Spain to subdue it, it seems unquestionable that no such civil organization

exists which may be recognized as an independent government capable of

performing its international obligations and entitled to be treated as one

of the powers of the earth. A recognition under such circumstances would be

inconsistent with the facts, and would compel the power granting it soon to

support by force the government to which it had really given its only claim

of existence. In my judgment the United States should adhere to the policy

and the principles which have heretofore been its sure and safe guides in

like contests between revolted colonies and their mother country, and,

acting only upon the clearest evidence, should avoid any possibility of

suspicion or of imputation.


A recognition of the independence of Cuba being, in my opinion,

impracticable and indefensible, the question which next presents itself is

that of the recognition of belligerent rights in the parties to the

contest.


In a former message to Congress I had occasion to consider this question,

and reached the conclusion that the conflict in Cuba, dreadful and

devastating as were its incidents, did not rise to the fearful dignity of

war. Regarding it now, after this lapse of time, I am unable to see that

any notable success or any marked or real advance on the part of the

insurgents has essentially changed the character of the contest. It has

acquired greater age, but not greater or more formidable proportions. It is

possible that the acts of foreign powers, and even acts of Spain herself,

of this very nature, might be pointed to in defense of such recognition.

But now, as in its past history, the United States should carefully avoid

the false lights which might lead it into the mazes of doubtful law and of

questionable propriety, and adhere rigidly and sternly to the rule, which

has been its guide, of doing only that which is right and honest and of

good report. The question of according or of withholding rights of

belligerency must be judged in every case in view of the particular

attending facts. Unless justified by necessity, it is always, and justly,

regarded as an unfriendly act and a gratuitous demonstration of moral

support to the rebellion. It is necessary, and it is required, when the

interests and rights of another government or of its people are so far

affected by a pending civil conflict as to require a definition of its

relations to the parties thereto. But this conflict must be one which will

be recognized in the sense of international law as war. Belligerence, too,

is a fact. The mere existence of contending armed bodies and their

occasional conflicts do not constitute war in the sense referred to.

Applying to the existing condition of affairs in Cuba the tests recognized

by publicists and writers on international law, and which have been

observed by nations of dignity, honesty, and power when free from sensitive

or selfish and unworthy motives, I fail to find in the insurrection the

existence of such a substantial political organization, real, palpable, and

manifest to the world, having the forms and capable of the ordinary

functions of government toward its own people and to other states, with

courts for the administration of justice, with a local habitation,

possessing such organization of force, such material, such occupation of

territory, as to take the contest out of the category of a mere rebellious

insurrection or occasional skirmishes and place it on the terrible footing

of war, to which a recognition of belligerency would aim to elevate it. The

contest, moreover, is solely on land; the insurrection has not possessed

itself of a single seaport whence it may send forth its flag, nor has it

any means of communication with foreign powers except through the military

lines of its adversaries. No apprehension of any of those sudden and

difficult complications which a war upon the ocean is apt to precipitate

upon the vessels, both commercial and national, and upon the consular

officers of other powers calls for the definition of their relations to the

parties to the contest. Considered as a question of expediency, I regard

the accordance of belligerent rights still to be as unwise and premature as

I regard it to be, at present, indefensible as a measure of right. Such

recognition entails upon the country according the rights which flow from

it difficult and complicated duties, and requires the exaction from the

contending parties of the strict observance of their rights and

obligations; it confers the right of search upon the high seas by vessels

of both parties; it would subject the carrying of arms and munitions of

war, which now may be transported freely and without interruption in the

vessels of the United States, to detention and to possible seizure; it

would give rise to countless vexatious questions, would release the parent

Government from responsibility for acts done by the insurgents, and would

invest Spain with the right to exercise the supervision recognized by our

treaty of 1795 over our commerce on the high seas, a very large part of

which, in its traffic between the Atlantic and the Gulf States and between

all of them and the States on the Pacific, passes through the waters which

wash the shores of Cuba. The exercise of this supervision could scarce fail

to lead, if not to abuses, certainly to collisions perilous to the peaceful

relations of the two States. There can be little doubt to what result such

supervision would before long draw this nation. It would be unworthy of the

United States to inaugurate the possibilities of such result by measures of

questionable right or expediency or by any indirection. Apart from any

question of theoretical right, I am satisfied that while the accordance of

belligerent rights to the insurgents in Cuba might give them a hope and an

inducement to protract the struggle, it would be but a delusive hope, and

would not remove the evils which this Government and its people are

experiencing, but would draw the United States into complications which it

has waited long and already suffered much to avoid. The recognition of

independence or of belligerency being thus, in my judgment, equally

inadmissible, it remains to consider what course shall be adopted should

the conflict not soon be brought to an end by acts of the parties

themselves, and should the evils which result therefrom, affecting all

nations, and particularly the United States, continue. In such event I am

of opinion that other nations will be compelled to assume the

responsibility which devolves upon them, and to seriously consider the only

remaining measures possible--mediation and intervention, Owing, perhaps, to

the large expanse of water separating the island from the peninsula, the

want of harmony and of personal sympathy between the inhabitants of the

colony and those sent thither to rule them, and want of adaptation of the

ancient colonial system of Europe to the present times and to the ideas

which the events of the past century have developed, the contending parties

appear to have within themselves no depository of common confidence to

suggest wisdom when passion and excitement have their sway and to assume

the part of peacemaker. In this view in the earlier days of the contest the

good offices of the United States as a mediator were tendered in good

faith, without any selfish purpose, in the interest of humanity and in

sincere friendship for both parties, but were at the time declined by

Spain, with the declaration, nevertheless, that at a future time they would

be indispensable. No intimation has been received that in the opinion of

Spain that time has been reached. And yet the strife continues, with all

its dread horrors and all its injuries to the interests of the United

States and of other nations. Each party seems quite capable of working

great injury and damage to the other, as well as to all the relations and

interests dependent on the existence of peace in the island; but they seem

incapable of reaching any adjustment, and both have thus far failed of

achieving any success whereby one party shall possess and control the

island to the exclusion of the other. Under these circumstances the agency

of others, either by mediation or by intervention, seems to be the only

alternative which must, sooner or later, be invoked for the termination of

the strife. At the same time, while thus impressed I do not at this time

recommend the adoption of any measure of intervention. I shall be ready at

all times, and as the equal friend of both parties, to respond to a

suggestion that the good offices of the United States will be acceptable to

aid in bringing about a peace honorable to both. It is due to Spain, so far

as this Government is concerned, that the agency of a third power, to which

I have adverted, shall be adopted only as a last expedient. Had it been the

desire of the United States to interfere in the affairs of Cuba, repeated

opportunities for so doing have been presented within the last few years;

but we have remained passive, and have performed our whole duty and all

international obligations to Spain with friendship, fairness, and fidelity,

and with a spirit of patience and forbearance which negatives every

possible suggestion of desire to interfere or to add to the difficulties

with which she has been surrounded.


The Government of Spain has recently submitted to our minister at Madrid

certain proposals which it is hoped may be found to be the basis, if not

the actual submission, of terms to meet the requirements of the particular

griefs of which this Government has felt itself entitled to complain. These

proposals have not yet reached me in their full text. On their arrival they

will be taken into careful examination, and may, I hope, lead to a

satisfactory adjustment of the questions to which they refer and remove the

possibility of future occurrences such as have given rise to our just

complaints.


It is understood also that renewed efforts are being made to introduce

reforms in the internal administration of the island. Persuaded, however,

that a proper regard for the interests of the United States and of its

citizens entitles it to relief from the strain to which it has been

subjected by the difficulties of the questions and the wrongs and losses

which arise from the contest in Cuba, and that the interests of humanity

itself demand the cessation of the strife before the whole island shall be

laid waste and larger sacrifices of life be made, I shall feel it my duty,

should my hopes of a satisfactory adjustment and of the early restoration

of peace and the removal of future causes of complaint be, unhappily,

disappointed, to make a further communication to Congress at some period

not far remote, and during the present session, recommending what may then

seem to me to be necessary.


The free zone, so called, several years since established by the Mexican

Government in certain of the States of that Republic adjacent to our

frontier, remains in full operation. It has always been materially

injurious to honest traffic, for it operates as an incentive to traders in

Mexico to supply without customs charges the wants of inhabitants on this

side of the line, and prevents the same wants from being supplied by

merchants of the United States, thereby to a considerable extent defrauding

our revenue and checking honest commercial enterprise.


Depredations by armed bands from Mexico on the people of Texas near the

frontier continue. Though the main object of these incursions is robbery,

they frequently result in the murder of unarmed and peaceably disposed

persons, and in some instances even the United States post-offices and mail

communications have been attacked. Renewed remonstrances upon this subject

have been addressed to the Mexican Government, but without much apparent

effect. The military force of this Government disposable for service in

that quarter is quite inadequate to effectually guard the line, even at

those points where the incursions are usually made. An experiment of an

armed vessel on the Rio Grande for that purpose is on trial, and it is

hoped that, if not thwarted by the shallowness of the river and other

natural obstacles, it may materially contribute to the protection of the

herdsmen of Texas.


The proceedings of the joint commission under the convention between the

United States and Mexico of the 4th of July, 1868, on the subject of

claims, will soon be brought to a close. The result of those proceedings

will then be communicated to Congress.


I am happy to announce that the Government of Venezuela has, upon further

consideration, practically abandoned its objection to pay to the United

States that share of its revenue which some years since it allotted toward

the extinguishment of the claims of foreigners generally. In thus

reconsidering its determination that Government has shown a just sense of

self-respect which can not fail to reflect credit upon it in the eyes of

all disinterested persons elsewhere. It is to be regretted, however, that

its payments on account of claims of citizens of the United States are

still so meager in amount, and that the stipulations of the treaty in

regard to the sums to be paid and the periods when those payments were to

take place should have been so signally disregarded.


Since my last annual message the exchange has been made of the ratification

of a treaty of commerce and navigation with Belgium, and of conventions

with the Mexican Republic for the further extension of the joint commission

respecting claims; with the Hawaiian Islands for commercial reciprocity,

and with the Ottoman Empire for extradition; all of which have been duly

proclaimed.


The Court of Commissioners of Alabama Claims has prosecuted its important

duties very assiduously and very satisfactorily. It convened and was

organized on the 22d day of July, 1874, and by the terms of the act under

which it was created was to exist for one year from that date. The act

provided, however, that should it be found impracticable to complete the

work of the court before the expiration of the year the President might by

proclamation extend the time of its duration to a period not more than six

months beyond the expiration of the one year.


Having received satisfactory evidence that it would be impracticable to

complete the work within the time originally fixed, I issued a proclamation

(a copy of which is presented herewith) extending the time of duration of

the court for a period of six months from and after the 22d day of July

last.


A report made through the clerk of the court (communicated herewith) shows

the condition of the calendar on the 1st of November last and the large

amount of work which has been accomplished. One thousand three hundred and

eighty-two claims have been presented, of which 682 had been disposed of at

the date of the report. I am informed that 170 cases were decided during

the month of November. Arguments are being made and decisions given in the

remaining cases with all the dispatch consistent with the proper

consideration of the questions submitted. Many of these claims are in

behalf of mariners, or depend on the evidence of mariners, whose absence

has delayed the taking or the return of the necessary evidence.


It is represented to me that it will be impracticable for the court to

finally dispose of all the cases before it within the present limit of its

duration. Justice to the parties claimant, who have been at large expense

in preparing their claims and obtaining the evidence in their support,

suggests a short extension, to enable the court to dispose of all of the

claims which have been presented.


I recommend the legislation which may be deemed proper to enable the court

to complete the work before it.


I recommend that some suitable provision be made, by the creation of a

special court or by conferring the necessary jurisdiction upon some

appropriate tribunal, for the consideration and determination of the claims

of aliens against the Government of the United States which have arisen

within some reasonable limitation of time, or which may hereafter arise,

excluding all claims barred by treaty provisions or otherwise. It has been

found impossible to give proper consideration to these claims by the

Executive Departments of the Government. Such a tribunal would afford an

opportunity to aliens other than British subjects to present their claims

on account of acts committed against their persons or property during the

rebellion, as also to those subjects of Great Britain whose claims, having

arisen subsequent to the 9th day of April, 1865, could not be presented to

the late commission organized pursuant to the provisions of the treaty of

Washington.


The electric telegraph has become an essential and indispensable agent in

the transmission of business and social messages. Its operation on land,

and within the limit of particular states, is necessarily under the control

of the jurisdiction within which it operates. The lines on the high seas,

however, are not subject to the particular control of any one government.


In 1869 a concession was granted by the French Government to a company

which proposed to lay a cable from the shores of France to the United

States. At that time there was a telegraphic connection between the United

States and the continent of Europe (through the possessions of Great

Britain at either end of the line), under the control of an association

which had, at large outlay of capital and at great risk, demonstrated the

practicability of maintaining such means of communication. The cost of

correspondence by this agency was great, possibly not too large at the time

for a proper remuneration for so hazardous and so costly an enterprise. It

was, however, a heavy charge upon a means of communication which the

progress in the social and commercial intercourse of the world found to be

a necessity, and the obtaining of this French concession showed that other

capital than that already invested was ready to enter into competition,

with assurance of adequate return for their outlay. Impressed with the

conviction that the interests, not only of the people of the United States,

but of the world at large, demanded, or would demand, the multiplication of

such means of communication between separated continents, I was desirous

that the proposed connection should be made; but certain provisions of this

concession were deemed by me to be objectionable, particularly one which

gave for a long term of years the exclusive right of telegraphic

communication by submarine cable between the shores of France and the

United States. I could not concede that any power should claim the right to

land a cable on the shores of the United States and at the same time deny

to the United States, or to its citizens or grantees, an equal fight to

land a cable on its shores. The right to control the conditions for the

laying of a cable within the jurisdictional waters of the United States, to

connect our shores with those of any foreign state, pertains exclusively to

the Government of the United States, under such limitations and conditions

as Congress may impose. In the absence of legislation by Congress I was

unwilling, on the one hand, to yield to a foreign state the right to say

that its grantees might land on our shores while it denied a similar right

to our people to land on its shores, and, on the other hand, I was

reluctant to deny to the great interests of the world and of civilization

the facilities of such communication as were proposed. I therefore withheld

any resistance to the landing of the cable on condition that the offensive

monopoly feature of the concession be abandoned, and that the right of any

cable which may be established by authority of this Government to land upon

French territory and to connect with French land lines and enjoy all the

necessary facilities or privileges incident to the use thereof upon as

favorable terms as any other company be conceded. As the result thereof the

company in question renounced the exclusive privilege, and the

representative of France was informed that, understanding this

relinquishment to be construed as granting the entire reciprocity and equal

facilities which had been demanded, the opposition to the landing of the

cable was withdrawn. The cable, under this French concession, was landed in

the month of July, 1869, and has been an efficient and valuable agent of

communication between this country and the other continent. It soon passed

under the control, however, of those who had the management of the cable

connecting Great Britain with this continent, and thus whatever benefit to

the public might have ensued from competition between the two lines was

lost, leaving only the greater facilities of an additional line and the

additional security in case of accident to one of them. But these increased

facilities and this additional security, together with the control of the

combined capital of the two companies, gave also greater power to prevent

the future construction of other lines and to limit the control of

telegraphic communication between the two continents to those possessing

the lines already laid. Within a few months past a cable has been laid,

known as the United States Direct Cable Company, connecting the United

States directly with Great Britain. As soon as this cable was reported to

be laid and in working order the rates of the then existing consolidated

companies were greatly reduced. Soon, however, a break was announced in

this new cable, and immediately the rates of the other line, which had been

reduced, were again raised. This cable being now repaired, the rates appear

not to be reduced by either line from those formerly charged by the

consolidated companies.


There is reason to believe that large amounts of capital, both at home and

abroad, are ready to seek profitable investment in the advancement of this

useful and most civilizing means of intercourse and correspondence. They

await, however, the assurance of the means and conditions on which they may

safely be made tributary to the general good.


As these cable telegraph lines connect separate states, there are questions

as to their organization and control which probably can be best, if not

solely, settled by conventions between the respective states. In the

absence, however, of international conventions on the subject, municipal

legislation may secure many points which appear to me important, if not

indispensable for the protection of the public against the extortions which

may result from a monopoly of the right of operating cable telegrams or

from a combination between several lines:


I. No line should be allowed to land on the shores of the United States

under the concession from another power which does not admit the right of

any other line or lines, formed in the United States, to land and freely

connect with and operate through its land lines.


II. No line should be allowed to land on the shores of the United States

which is not, by treaty stipulation with the government from whose shores

it proceeds, or by prohibition in its charter, or otherwise to the

satisfaction of this Government, prohibited from consolidating or

amalgamating with any other cable telegraph line, or combining therewith

for the purpose of regulating and maintaining the cost of telegraphing.


III. All lines should be bound to give precedence in the transmission of

the official messages of the governments of the two countries between which

it may be laid.


IV. A power should be reserved to the two governments, either conjointly or

to each, as regards the messages dispatched from its shores, to fix a limit

to the charges to be demanded for the transmission of messages.


I present this subject to the earnest consideration of Congress.


In the meantime, and unless Congress otherwise direct, I shall not oppose

the landing of any telegraphic cable which complies with and assents to the

points above enumerated, but will feel it my duty to prevent the landing of

any which does not conform to the first and second points as stated, and

which will not stipulate to concede to this Government the precedence in

the transmission of its official messages and will not enter into a

satisfactory arrangement with regard to its charges.


Among the pressing and important subjects to which, in my opinion, the

attention of Congress should be directed are those relating to fraudulent

naturalization and expatriation.


The United States, with great liberality, offers its citizenship to all who

in good faith comply with the requirements of law. These requirements are

as simple and upon as favorable terms to the emigrant as the high privilege

to which he is admitted can or should permit. I do not propose any

additional requirements to those which the law now demands; but the very

simplicity and the want of unnecessary formality in our law have made

fraudulent naturalization not infrequent, to the discredit and injury of

all honest citizens, whether native or naturalized. Cases of this character

are continually being brought to the notice of the Government by our

representatives abroad, and also those of persons resident in other

countries, most frequently those who, if they have remained in this country

long enough to entitle them to become naturalized, have generally not much

overpassed that period, and have returned to the country of their origin,

where they reside, avoiding all duties to the United States by their

absence, and claiming to be exempt from all duties to the country of their

nativity and of their residence by reason of their alleged naturalization.

It is due to this Government itself and to the great mass of the

naturalized citizens who entirely, both in name and in fact, become

citizens of the United States that the high privilege of citizenship of the

United States should not be held by fraud or in derogation of the laws and

of the good name of every honest citizen. On many occasions it has been

brought to the knowledge of the Government that certificates of

naturalization are held and protection or interference claimed by parties

who admit that not only they were not within the United States at the time

of the pretended naturalization, but that they have never resided in the

United States; in others the certificate and record of the court show on

their face that the person claiming to be naturalized had not resided the

required time in the United States; in others it is admitted upon

examination that the requirements of law have not been complied with; in

some cases, even, such certificates have been matter of purchase. These are

not isolated cases, arising at rare intervals, but of common occurrence,

and which are reported from all quarters of the globe. Such occurrences can

not, and do not, fail to reflect upon the Government and injure all honest

citizens. Such a fraud being discovered, however, there is no practicable

means within the control of the Government by which the record of

naturalization can be vacated; and should the certificate be taken up, as

it usually is, by the diplomatic and consular representatives of the

Government to whom it may have been presented, there is nothing to prevent

the person claiming to have been naturalized from obtaining a new

certificate from the court in place of that which has been taken from him.


The evil has become so great and of such frequent occurrence that I can not

too earnestly recommend that some effective measures be adopted to provide

a proper remedy and means for the vacating of any record thus fraudulently

made, and of punishing the guilty parties to the transaction.


In this connection I refer also to the question of expatriation and the

election of nationality.


The United States was foremost in upholding the right of expatriation, and

was principally instrumental in overthrowing the doctrine of perpetual

allegiance. Congress has declared the right of expatriation to be a natural

and inherent right of all people; but while many other nations have enacted

laws providing what formalities shall be necessary to work a change of

allegiance, the United States has enacted no provisions of law and has in

no respect marked out how and when expatriation may be accomplished by its

citizens. Instances are brought to the attention of the Government where

citizens of the United States, either naturalized or native born, have

formally become citizens or subjects of foreign powers, but who,

nevertheless, in the absence of any provisions of legislation on this

question, when involved in difficulties or when it seems to be their

interest, claim to be citizens of the United States and demand the

intervention of a Government which they have long since abandoned and to

which for years they have rendered no service nor held themselves in any

way amenable.


In other cases naturalized citizens, immediately after naturalization, have

returned to their native country; have become engaged in business; have

accepted offices or pursuits inconsistent with American citizenship, and

evidence no intent to return to the United States until called upon to

discharge some duty to the country where they are residing, when at once

they assert their citizenship and call upon the representatives of the

Government to aid them in their unjust pretensions. It is but justice to

all bona fide citizens that no doubt should exist on such questions, and

that Congress should determine by enactment of law how expatriation may be

accomplished and change of citizenship be established.


I also invite your attention to the necessity of regulating by law the

status of American women who may marry foreigners, and of defining more

fully that of children born in a foreign country of American parents who

may reside abroad; and also of some further provision regulating or giving

legal effect to marriages of American citizens contracted in foreign

countries. The correspondence submitted herewith shows a few of the

constantly occurring questions on these points presented to the

consideration of the Government. There are few subjects to engage the

attention of Congress on which more delicate relations or more important

interests are dependent.


In the month of July last the building erected for the Department of State

was taken possession of and occupied by that Department. I am happy to

announce that the archives and valuable papers of the Government in the

custody of that Department are now safely deposited and properly cared

for.


The report of the Secretary of the Treasury shows the receipts from customs

for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1874, to have been $163,103,833.69, and

for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1875, to have been $157,267,722.35, a

decrease for the last fiscal year of $5,936,111.34. Receipts from internal

revenue for the year ending the 30th of June, 1874, were $102,409,784.90,

and for the year ending June 30, 1875, $110,007,493.58; increase,

$7,597,708.68.


The report also shows a complete history of the workings of the Department

for the last year, and contains recommendations for reforms and for

legislation which I concur in, but can not comment on so fully as I should

like to do if space would permit, but will confine myself to a few

suggestions which I look upon as vital to the best interests of the whole

people--coming within the purview of "Treasury;" I mean specie resumption.

Too much stress can not be laid upon this question, and I hope Congress may

be induced, at the earliest day practicable, to insure the consummation of

the act of the last Congress, at its last session, to bring about specie

resumption "on and after the 1st of January, 1879," at furthest. It would

be a great blessing if this could be consummated even at an earlier day.


Nothing seems to me more certain than that a full, healthy, and permanent

reaction can not take place in favor of the industries and financial

welfare of the country until we return to a measure of values recognized

throughout the civilized world. While we use a currency not equivalent to

this standard the world's recognized standard, specie, becomes a commodity

like the products of the soil, the surplus seeking a market wherever there

is a demand for it.


Under our present system we should want none, nor would we have any, were

it not that customs dues must be paid in coin and because of the pledge to

pay interest on the public debt in coin. The yield of precious metals would

flow out for the purchase of foreign productions and the United States

"hewers of wood and drawers of water," because of wiser legislation on the

subject of finance by the nations with whom we have dealings. I am not

prepared to say that I can suggest the best legislation to secure the end

most heartily recommended. It will be a source of great gratification to me

to be able to approve any measure of Congress looking effectively toward

securing "resumption."


Unlimited inflation would probably bring about specie payments more

speedily than any legislation looking to redemption of the legal-tenders in

coin; but it would be at the expense of honor. The legal-tenders would have

no value beyond settling present liabilities, or, properly speaking,

repudiating them. They would buy nothing after debts were all settled.


There are a few measures which seem to me important in this connection and

which I commend to your earnest consideration:


A repeal of so much of the legal-tender act as makes these notes receivable

for debts contracted after a date to be fixed in the act itself, say not

later than the 1st of January, 1877. We should then have quotations at real

values, not fictitious ones. Gold would no longer be at a premium, but

currency at a discount. A healthy reaction would set in at once, and with

it a desire to make the currency equal to what it purports to be. The

merchants, manufacturers, and tradesmen of every calling could do business

on a fair margin of profit, the money to be received having an unvarying

value. Laborers and all classes who work for stipulated pay or salary would

receive more for their income, because extra profits would no longer be

charged by the capitalists to compensate for the risk of a downward

fluctuation in the value of the currency.


Second. That the Secretary of the Treasury be authorized to redeem, say,

not to exceed $2,000,000 monthly of legal-tender notes, by issuing in their

stead a long bond, bearing interest at the rate of 3.65 per cent per annum,

of denominations ranging from $50 up to $1,000 each. This would in time

reduce the legal-tender notes to a volume that could be kept afloat without

demanding redemption in large sums suddenly.


Third. That additional power be given to the Secretary of the Treasury to

accumulate gold for final redemption, either by increasing revenue,

curtailing expenses, or both (it is preferable to do both); and I recommend

that reduction of expenditures be made wherever it can be done without

impairing Government obligations or crippling the due execution thereof.

One measure for increasing the revenue--and the only one I think of--is the

restoration of the duty on tea and coffee. These duties would add probably

$18,000,000 to the present amount received from imports, and would in no

way increase the prices paid for those articles by the consumers.


These articles are the products of countries collecting revenue from

exports, and as we, the largest consumers, reduce the duties they

proportionately increase them. With this addition to the revenue, many

duties now collected, and which give but an insignificant return for the

cost of collection, might be remitted, and to the direct advantage of

consumers at home.


I would mention those articles which enter into manufactures of all sorts.

All duty paid upon such articles goes directly to the cost of the article

when manufactured here, and must be paid for by the consumers. These duties

not only come from the consumers at home, but act as a protection to

foreign manufacturers of the same completed articles in our own and distant

markets.


I will suggest or mention another subject bearing upon the problem of "how

to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to accumulate balances." It is to

devise some better method of verifying claims against the Government than

at present exists through the Court of Claims, especially those claims

growing out of the late war. Nothing is more certain than that a very large

percentage of the amounts passed and paid are either wholly fraudulent or

are far in excess of the real losses sustained. The large amount of losses

proven--on good testimony according to existing laws, by affidavits of

fictitious or unscrupulous persons--to have been sustained on small farms

and plantations are not only far beyond the possible yield of those places

for any one year, but, as everyone knows who has had experience in tilling

the soil and who has visited the scenes of these spoliations, are in many

instances more than the individual claimants were ever worth, including

their personal and real estate.


The report of the Attorney-General, which will be submitted to Congress at

an early day, will contain a detailed history of awards made and of claim

pending of the class here referred to.


The report of the Secretary of War, accompanying this message, gives a

detailed account of Army operations for the year just passed, expenses for

maintenance, etc., with recommendations for legislation to which I

respectfully invite your attention. To some of these I invite special

attention:


First. The necessity of making $300,000 of the appropriation for the

Subsistence Department available before the beginning of the next fiscal

year. Without this provision troops at points distant from supply

production must either go without food or existing laws must be violated.

It is not attended with cost to the Treasury.


Second. His recommendation for the enactment of a system of annuities for

the families of deceased officers by voluntary deductions from the monthly

pay of officers. This again is not attended with burden upon the Treasury,

and would for the future relieve much distress which every old army officer

has witnessed in the past--of officers dying suddenly or being killed,

leaving families without even the means of reaching their friends, if

fortunate enough to have friends to aid them.


Third. The repeal of the law abolishing mileage, and a return to the old

system.


Fourth. The trial with torpedoes under the Corps of Engineers, and

appropriation for the same. Should war ever occur between the United States

and any maritime power, torpedoes will be among if not the most effective

and cheapest auxiliary for the defense of harbors, and also in aggressive

operations, that we can have. Hence it is advisable to learn by experiment

their best construction and application, as well as effect.


Fifth. A permanent organization for the Signal-Service Corps. This service

has now become a necessity of peace as well as war, under the advancement

made by the present able management.


Sixth. A renewal of the appropriation for compiling the official records of

the war, etc.


The condition of our Navy at this time is a subject of satisfaction. It

does not contain, it is true, any of the powerful cruising ironclads which

make so much of the maritime strength of some other nations, but neither

our continental situation nor our foreign policy requires that we should

have a large number of ships of this character, while this situation and

the nature of our ports combine to make those of other nations little

dangerous to us under any circumstances.


Our Navy does contain, however, a considerable number of ironclads of the

monitor class, which, though not properly cruisers, are powerful and

effective for harbor defense and for operations near our own shores. Of

these all the single-turreted ones, fifteen in number, have been

substantially rebuilt, their rotten wooden beams replaced with iron, their

hulls strengthened, and their engines and machinery thoroughly repaired, so

that they are now in the most efficient condition and ready for sea as soon

as they can be manned and put in commission.


The five double-turreted ironclads belonging to our Navy, by far the most

powerful of our ships for fighting purposes, are also in hand undergoing

complete repairs, and could be ready for sea in periods varying from four

to six months. With these completed according to the present design and our

two iron torpedo boats now ready, our ironclad fleet will be, for the

purposes of defense at home, equal to any force that can readily be brought

against it.


Of our wooden navy also cruisers of various sizes, to the number of about

forty, including those now in commission, are in the Atlantic, and could be

ready for duty as fast as men could be enlisted for those not already in

commission. Of these, one-third are in effect new ships, and though some of

the remainder need considerable repairs to their boilers and machinery,

they all are, or can readily be made, effective.


This constitutes a fleet of more than fifty war ships, of which fifteen are

ironclad, now in hand on the Atlantic coast. The Navy has been brought to

this condition by a judicious and practical application of what could be

spared from the current appropriations of the last few years and from that

made to meet the possible emergency of two years ago. It has been done

quietly, without proclamation or display, and though it has necessarily

straitened the Department in its ordinary expenditure, and, as far as the

ironclads are concerned, has added nothing to the cruising force of the

Navy, yet the result is not the less satisfactory because it is to be found

in a great increase of real rather than apparent force. The expenses

incurred in the maintenance of an effective naval force in all its branches

are necessarily large, but such force is essential to our position,

relations, and character, and affects seriously the weight of our

principles and policy throughout the whole sphere of national

responsibilities.


The estimates for the regular support of this branch of the service for the

next year amount to a little less in the aggregate than those made for the

current year; but some additional appropriations are asked for objects not

included in the ordinary maintenance of the Navy, but believed to be of

pressing importance at this time. It would, in my opinion, be wise at once

to afford sufficient means for the immediate completion of the five

double-turreted monitors now undergoing repairs, which must otherwise

advance slowly, and only as money can be spared from current expenses.

Supplemented by these, our Navy, armed with the destructive weapons of

modern warfare, manned by our seamen, and in charge of our instructed

officers, will present a force powerful for the home purposes of a

responsible though peaceful nation.


The report of the Postmaster-General herewith transmitted gives a full

history of the workings of the Department for the year just past. It will

be observed that the deficiency to be supplied from the General Treasury is

increased over the amount required for the preceding year. In a country so

vast in area as the United States, with large portions sparsely settled, it

must be expected that this important service will be more or less a burden

upon the Treasury for many years to come. But there is no branch of the

public service which interests the whole people more than that of cheap and

rapid transmission of the mails to every inhabited part of our territory.

Next to the free school, the post-office is the great educator of the

people, and it may well receive the support of the General Government.


The subsidy of $150,000 per annum given to vessels of the United States for

carrying the mails between New York and Rio de Janeiro having ceased on the

30th day of September last, we are without direct mail facilities with the

South American States. This is greatly to be regretted, and I do not

hesitate to recommend the authorization of a renewal of that contract, and

also that the service may be increased from monthly to semi-monthly trips.

The commercial advantages to be gained by a direct line of American

steamers to the South American States will far outweigh the expense of the

service.


By act of Congress approved March 3, 1875, almost all matter, whether

properly mail matter or not, may be sent any distance through the mails, in

packages not exceeding 4 pounds in weight, for the sum of 16 cents per

pound. So far as the transmission of real mail matter goes, this would seem

entirely proper; but I suggest that the law be so amended as to exclude

from the mails merchandise of all descriptions, and limit this

transportation to articles enumerated, and which may be classed as mail

matter proper.


The discovery of gold in the Black Hills, a portion of the Sioux

Reservation, has had the effect to induce a large emigration of miners to

that point. Thus far the effort to protect the treaty rights of the Indians

to that section has been successful, but the next year will certainly

witness a large increase of such emigration. The negotiations for the

relinquishment of the gold fields having failed, it will be necessary for

Congress to adopt some measures to relieve the embarrassment growing out of

the causes named. The Secretary of the Interior suggests that the supplies

now appropriated for the sustenance of that people, being no longer

obligatory under the treaty of 1868, but simply a gratuity, may be issued

or withheld at his discretion.


The condition of the Indian Territory, to which I have referred in several

of my former annual messages, remains practically unchanged. The Secretary

of the Interior has taken measures to obtain a full report of the condition

of that Territory, and will make it the subject of a special report at an

early day. It may then be necessary to make some further recommendation in

regard to legislation for the government of that Territory.


The steady growth and increase of the business of the Patent Office

indicates in some measure the progress of the industrial activity of the

country. The receipts of the office are in excess of its expenditures, and

the office generally is in a prosperous and satisfactory condition.


The report of the General Land Office shows that there were 2,459,601 acres

less disposed of during this than during the last year. More than one-half

of this decrease was in lands disposed of under the homestead and

timber-culture laws. The cause of this decrease is supposed to be found in

the grasshopper scourge and the droughts which prevailed so extensively in

some of the frontier States and Territories during that time as to

discourage and deter entries by actual settlers. The cash receipts were

less by $690,322.23 than during the preceding year.


The entire surveyed area of the public domain is 680,253,094 acres, of

which 26,077,531 acres were surveyed during the past year, leaving

1,154,471,762 acres still unsurveyed.


The report of the Commissioner presents many interesting suggestions in

regard to the management and disposition of the public domain and the

modification of existing laws, the apparent importance of which should

insure for them the careful consideration of Congress.


The number of pensioners still continues to decrease, the highest number

having been reached during the year ending June 30, 1873. During the last

year 11,557 names were added to the rolls, and 12,977 were dropped

therefrom, showing a net decrease of 1,420. But while the number of

pensioners has decreased, the annual amount due on the pension rolls has

increased $44,733.13. This is caused by the greatly increased average rate

of pensions, which, by the liberal legislation of Congress, has increased

from $90.26 in 1872 to $103.91 in 1875 to each invalid pensioner, an

increase in the average rate of 15 per cent in the three years. During the

year ending June 30, 1875, there was paid on account of pensions, including

the expenses of disbursement, $29,683,116, being $910,632 less than was

paid the preceding year. This reduction in amount of expenditures was

produced by the decrease in the amount of arrearages due on allowed claims

and on pensions the rate of which was increased by the legislation of the

preceding session of Congress. At the close of the last fiscal year there

were on the pension rolls 234,821 persons, of whom 210,363 were army

pensioners, 105,478 being invalids and 104,885 widows and dependent

relatives; 3,420 were navy pensioners, of whom 1,636 were invalids and

1,784 widows and dependent relatives; 21,038 were pensioners of the War of

1812, 15,875 of whom were survivors and 5,163 were widows.


It is estimated that $29,535,000 will be required for the payment of

pensions for the next fiscal year, an amount $965,000 less than the

estimate for the present year.


The geological explorations have been prosecuted with energy during the

year, covering an area of about 40,000 square miles in the Territories of

Colorado, Utah, and New Mexico, developing the agricultural and mineral

resources and furnishing interesting scientific and topographical details

of that region.


The method for the treatment of the Indians adopted at the beginning of my

first term has been steadily pursued, and with satisfactory and encouraging

results. It has been productive of evident improvement in the condition of

that race, and will be continued, with only such modifications as further

experience may indicate to be necessary.


The board heretofore appointed to take charge of the articles and materials

pertaining to the War, the Navy, the Treasury, the Interior, and the

Post-Office Departments, and the Department of Agriculture, the Smithsonian

Institution, and the Commission of Food Fishes, to be contributed, under

the legislation of last session, to the international exhibition to be held

at Philadelphia during the centennial year 1876, has been diligent in the

discharge of the duties which have devolved upon it; and the preparations

so far made with the means at command give assurance that the governmental

contribution will be made one of the marked characteristics of the

exhibition. The board has observed commendable economy in the matter of the

erection of a building for the governmental exhibit, the expense of which

it is estimated will not exceed, say, $80,000. This amount has been

withdrawn, under the law, from the appropriations of five of the principal

Departments, which leaves some of those Departments without sufficient

means to render their respective practical exhibits complete and

satisfactory. The exhibition being an international one, and the Government

being a voluntary contributor, it is my opinion that its contribution

should be of a character, in quality and extent, to sustain the dignity and

credit of so distinguished a contributor. The advantages to the country of

a creditable display are, in an international point of view, of the first

importance, while an indifferent or uncreditable participation by the

Government would be humiliating to the patriotic feelings of our people

themselves. I commend the estimates of the board for the necessary

additional appropriations to the favorable consideration of Congress.


The powers of Europe almost without exception, many of the South American

States, and even the more distant Eastern powers have manifested their

friendly sentiments toward the United States and the interest of the world

in our progress by taking steps to join with us in celebrating the

centennial of the nation, and I strongly recommend that a more national

importance be given to this exhibition by such legislation and by such

appropriation as will insure its success. Its value in bringing to our

shores innumerable useful works of art and skill, the commingling of the

citizens of foreign countries and our own, and the interchange of ideas and

manufactures will far exceed any pecuniary outlay we may make.


I transmit herewith the report of the Commissioner of Agriculture, together

with the reports of the Commissioners, the board of audit, and the board of

health of the District of Columbia, to all of which I invite your

attention.


The Bureau of Agriculture has accomplished much in disseminating useful

knowledge to the agriculturist, and also in introducing new and useful

productions adapted to our soil and climate, and is worthy of the continued

encouragement of the Government.


The report of the Commissioner of Education, which accompanies the report

of the Secretary of the Interior, shows a gratifying progress in

educational matters.


In nearly every annual message that I have had the honor of transmitting to

Congress I have called attention to the anomalous, not to say scandalous,

condition of affairs existing in the Territory of Utah, and have asked for

definite legislation to correct it. That polygamy should exist in a free,

enlightened, and Christian country, without the power to punish so flagrant

a crime against decency and morality, seems preposterous. True, there is no

law to sustain this unnatural vice; but what is needed is a law to punish

it as a crime, and at the same time to fix the status of the innocent

children, the offspring of this system, and of the possibly innocent plural

wives. But as an institution polygamy should be banished from the land.


While this is being done I invite the attention of Congress to another,

though perhaps no less an evil--the importation of Chinese women, but few

of whom are brought to our shores to pursue honorable or useful

occupations.


Observations while visiting the Territories of Wyoming, Utah, and Colorado

during the past autumn convinced me that existing laws regulating the

disposition of public lands, timber, etc., and probably the mining laws

themselves, are very defective and should be carefully amended, and at an

early day. Territory where cultivation of the soil can only be followed by

irrigation, and where irrigation is not practicable the lands can only be

used as pasturage, and this only where stock can reach water (to quench its

thirst), can not be governed by the same laws as to entries as lands every

acre of which is an independent estate by itself.


Land must be held in larger quantities to justify the expense of conducting

water upon it to make it fruitful, or to justify utilizing it as pasturage.

The timber in most of the Territories is principally confined to the

mountain regions, which are held for entry in small quantities only, and as

mineral lands. The timber is the property of the United States, for the

disposal of which there is now no adequate law. The settler must become a

consumer of this timber, whether he lives upon the plain or engages in

working the mines. Hence every man becomes either a trespasser himself or

knowingly a patron of trespassers.


My opportunities for observation were not sufficient to justify me in

recommending specific legislation on these subjects, but I do recommend

that a joint committee of the two Houses of Congress, sufficiently large to

be divided into subcommittees, be organized to visit all the mining States

and Territories during the coming summer, and that the committee shall

report to Congress at the next session such laws or amendments to laws as

it may deem necessary to secure the best interests of the Government and

the people of these Territories, who are doing so much for their

development.


I am sure the citizens occupying the territory described do not wish to be

trespassers, nor will they be if legal ways are provided for them to become

owners of these actual necessities of their position.


As this will be the last annual message which I shall have the honor of

transmitting to Congress before my successor is chosen, I will repeat or

recapitulate the questions which I deem of vital importance which may be

legislated upon and settled at this session:


First. That the States shall be required to afford the opportunity of a

good common-school education to every child within their limits.


Second. No sectarian tenets shall ever be taught in any school supported in

whole or in part by the State, nation, or by the proceeds of any tax levied

upon any community. Make education compulsory so far as to deprive all

persons who can not read and write from becoming voters after the year

1890, disfranchising none, however, on grounds of illiteracy who may be

voters at the time this amendment takes effect.


Third. Declare church and state forever separate and distinct, but each

free within their proper spheres; and that all church property shall bear

its own proportion of taxation.


Fourth. Drive out licensed immorality, such as polygamy and the importation

of women for illegitimate purposes. To recur again to the centennial year,

it would seem as though now, as we are about to begin the second century of

our national existence, would be a most fitting time for these reforms.


Fifth. Enact such laws as will insure a speedy return to a sound currency,

such as will command the respect of the world.


Believing that these views will commend themselves to the great majority of

the right-thinking and patriotic citizens of the United States, I submit

the rest to Congress.


U. S. GRANT


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