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President[ Ulysses S. Grant

         Date[ December 5, 1876


To the Senate and House of Representatives:


In submitting my eighth and last annual message to Congress it seems proper

that I should refer to and in some degree recapitulate the events and

official acts of the past eight years.


It was my fortune, or misfortune, to be called to the office of Chief

Executive without any previous political training. From the age of 17 I had

never even witnessed the excitement attending a Presidential campaign but

twice antecedent to my own candidacy, and at but one of them was I eligible

as a voter.


Under such circumstances it is but reasonable to suppose that errors of

judgment must have occurred. Even had they not, differences of opinion

between the Executive, bound by an oath to the strict performance of his

duties, and writers and debaters must have arisen. It is not necessarily

evidence of blunder on the part of the Executive because there are these

differences of views. Mistakes have been made, as all can see and I admit,

but it seems to me oftener in the selections made of the assistants

appointed to aid in carrying out the various duties of administering the

Government--in nearly every case selected without a personal acquaintance

with the appointee, but upon recommendations of the representatives chosen

directly by the people. It is impossible, where so many trusts are to be

allotted, that the right parties should be chosen in every instance.

History shows that no Administration from the time of Washington to the

present has been free from these mistakes. But I leave comparisons to

history, claiming only that I have acted in every instance from a

conscientious desire to do what was right, constitutional, within the law,

and for the very best interests of the whole people. Failures have been

errors of judgment, not of intent.


My civil career commenced, too, at a most critical and difficult time. Less

than four years before, the country had emerged from a conflict such as no

other nation had ever survived. Nearly one-half of the States had revolted

against the Government, and of those remaining faithful to the Union a

large percentage of the population sympathized with the rebellion and made

an "enemy in the rear" almost as dangerous as the more honorable enemy in

the front. The latter committed errors of judgment, but they maintained

them openly and courageously; the former received the protection of the

Government they would see destroyed, and reaped all the pecuniary advantage

to be gained out of the then existing state of affairs, many of them by

obtaining contracts and by swindling the Government in the delivery of

their goods.


Immediately on the cessation of hostilities the then noble President, who

had carried the country so far through its perils, fell a martyr to his

patriotism at the hands of an assassin.


The intervening time to my first inauguration was filled up with wranglings

between Congress and the new Executive as to the best mode of

"reconstruction," or, to speak plainly, as to whether the control of the

Government should be thrown immediately into the hands of those who had so

recently and persistently tried to destroy it, or whether the victors

should continue to have an equal voice with them in this control.

Reconstruction, as finally agreed upon, means this and only this, except

that the late slave was enfranchised, giving an increase, as was supposed,

to the Union-loving and Union-supporting votes. If free in the full sense

of the word, they would not disappoint this expectation. Hence at the

beginning of my first Administration the work of reconstruction, much

embarrassed by the long delay, virtually commenced. It was the work of the

legislative branch of the Government. My province was wholly in approving

their acts, which I did most heartily, urging the legislatures of States

that had not yet done so to ratify the fifteenth amendment to the

Constitution. The country was laboring under an enormous debt, contracted

in the suppression of rebellion, and taxation was so oppressive as to

discourage production. Another danger also threatened us--a foreign war.

The last difficulty had to be adjusted and was adjusted without a war and

in a manner highly honorable to all parties concerned. Taxes have been

reduced within the last seven years nearly $300,000,000, and the national

debt has been reduced in the same time over $435,000,000. By refunding the

6 per cent bonded debt for bonds bearing 5 and 4 1/2 per cent interest,

respectively, the annual interest has been reduced from over $130,000,000

in 1869 to but little over $100,000,000 in 1876. The balance of trade has

been changed from over $130,000,000 against the United States in 1869 to

more than $120,000,000 in our favor in 1876.


It is confidently believed that the balance of trade in favor of the United

States will increase, not diminish, and that the pledge of Congress to

resume specie payments in 1879 will be easily accomplished, even in the

absence of much-desired further legislation on the subject.


A policy has been adopted toward the Indian tribes inhabiting a large

portion of the territory of the United States which has been humane and has

substantially ended Indian hostilities in the whole land except in a

portion of Nebraska, and Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana Territories--the

Black Hills region and approaches thereto. Hostilities there have grown out

of the avarice of the white man, who has violated our treaty stipulations

in his search for gold. The question might be asked why the Government has

not enforced obedience to the terms of the treaty prohibiting the

occupation of the Black Hills region by whites. The answer is simple: The

first immigrants to the Black Hills were removed by troops, but rumors of

rich discoveries of gold took into that region increased numbers. Gold has

actually been found in paying quantity, and an effort to remove the miners

would only result in the desertion of the bulk of the troops that might be

sent there to remove them. All difficulty in this matter has, however, been

removed--subject to the approval of Congress--by a treaty ceding the Black

Hills and approaches to settlement by citizens.


The subject of Indian policy and treatment is so fully set forth by the

Secretary of the Interior and the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and my

views so fully expressed therein, that I refer to their reports and

recommendations as my own.


The relations of the United States with foreign powers continue on a

friendly footing.


Questions have arisen from time to time in the foreign relations of the

Government, but the United States have been happily free during the past

year from the complications and embarrassments which have surrounded some

of the foreign powers.


The diplomatic correspondence submitted herewith contains information as to

certain of the matters which have occupied the Government.


The cordiality which attends our relations with the powers of the earth has

been plainly shown by the general participation of foreign nations in the

exhibition which has just closed and by the exertions made by distant

powers to show their interest in and friendly feelings toward the United

States in the commemoration of the centennial of the nation. The Government

and people of the United States have not only fully appreciated this

exhibition of kindly feeling, but it may be justly and fairly expected that

no small benefits will result both to ourselves and other nations from a

better acquaintance, and a better appreciation of our mutual advantages and

mutual wants.


Congress at its last session saw fit to reduce the amount usually

appropriated for foreign intercourse by withholding appropriations for

representatives of the United States in certain foreign countries and for

certain consular officers, and by reducing the amounts usually appropriated

for certain other diplomatic posts, and thus necessitating a change in the

grade of the representatives. For these reasons, immediately upon the

passage of the bill making appropriations for the diplomatic and consular

service for the present fiscal year, instructions were issued to the

representatives of the United States at Bolivia, Ecuador, and Colombia, and

to the consular officers for whom no appropriation had been made, to close

their respective legations and consulates and cease from the performance of

their duties; and in like manner steps were immediately taken to substitute

charge's d'affaires for ministers resident in Portugal, Denmark, Greece,

Switzerland, and Paraguay.


While thoroughly impressed with the wisdom of sound economy in the foreign

service, as in other branches of the Government, I can not escape the

conclusion that in some instances the withholding of appropriations will

prove an expensive economy, and that the small retrenchment secured by a

change of grade in certain diplomatic posts is not an adequate

consideration for the loss of influence and importance which will attend

our foreign representatives under this reduction. I am of the opinion that

a reexamination of the subject will cause a change in some instances in the

conclusions reached on these subjects at the last session of Congress.


The Court of Commissioners of Alabama Claims, whose functions were

continued by an act of the last session of Congress until the 1st day of

January, 1877, has carried on its labors with diligence and general

satisfaction. By a report from the clerk of the court, transmitted

herewith, bearing date November 14, 1876, it appears that within the time

now allowed by law the court will have disposed of all the claims presented

for adjudication. This report also contains a statement of the general

results of the labors of the court to the date thereof. It is a cause of

satisfaction that the method adopted for the satisfaction of the classes of

claims submitted to the court, which are of long standing and justly

entitled to early consideration, should have proved successful and

acceptable.


It is with satisfaction that I am enabled to state that the work of the

joint commission for determining the boundary line between the United

States and British possessions from the northwest angle of the Lake of the

Woods to the Rocky Mountains, commenced in 1872, has been completed. The

final agreements of the commissioners, with the maps, have been duly

signed, and the work of the commission is complete.


The fixing of the boundary upon the Pacific coast by the protocol of March

10, 1873, pursuant to the award of the Emperor of Germany by Article XXXIV

of the treaty of Washington, with the termination of the work of this

commission, adjusts and fixes the entire boundary between the United States

and the British possessions, except as to the portion of territory ceded by

Russia to the United States under the treaty of 1867. The work intrusted to

the commissioner and the officers of the Army attached to the commission

has been well and satisfactorily performed. The original of the final

agreement of the commissioners, signed upon the 29th of May, 1876, with the

original official "lists of astronomical stations observed," the original

official "list of monuments marking the international boundary line," and

the maps, records, and general reports relating to the commission, have

been deposited in the Department of State. The official report of the

commissioner on the part of the United States, with the report of the chief

astronomer of the United States, will be submitted to Congress within a

short time.


I reserve for a separate communication to Congress a statement of the

condition of the questions which lately arose with Great Britain respecting

the surrender of fugitive criminals under the treaty of 1842.


The Ottoman Government gave notice, under date of January 15, 1874, of its

desire to terminate the treaty of 1862, concerning commerce and navigation,

pursuant to the provisions of the twenty-second article thereof. Under this

notice the treaty terminated upon the 5th day of June, 1876. That

Government has invited negotiations toward the conclusion of a new treaty.


By the act of Congress of March 23, 1874, the President was authorized,

when he should receive satisfactory information that the Ottoman Government

or that of Egypt had organized new tribunals likely to secure to citizens

of the United States the same impartial justice enjoyed under the exercise

of judicial functions by diplomatic and consular officers of the United

States, to suspend the operation of the act of June 22, 1860, and to accept

for citizens of the United States the jurisdiction of the new tribunals.

Satisfactory information having been received of the organization of such

new tribunals in Egypt, I caused a proclamation to be issued upon the 27th

of March last, suspending the operation of the act of June 22, 1860, in

Egypt, according to the provisions of the act. A copy of the proclamation

accompanies this message. The United States has united with the other

powers in the organization of these courts. It is hoped that the

jurisdictional questions which have arisen may be readily adjusted, and

that this advance in judicial reform may be hindered by no obstacles.


The necessary legislation to carry into effect the convention respecting

commercial reciprocity concluded with the Hawaiian Islands in 1875 having

been had, the proclamation to carry into effect the convention, as provided

by the act approved August 15, 1876, was duly issued upon the 9th day of

September last. A copy thereof accompanies this message.


The commotions which have been prevalent in Mexico for some time past, and

which, unhappily, seem to be not yet wholly quieted, have led to complaints

of citizens of the United States of injuries by persons in authority. It is

hoped, however, that these will ultimately be adjusted to the satisfaction

of both Governments. The frontier of the United States in that quarter has

not been exempt from acts of violence by citizens of one Republic on those

of the other. The frequency of these is supposed to be increased and their

adjustment made more difficult by the considerable changes in the course of

the lower part of the Rio Grande River, which river is a part of the

boundary between the two countries. These changes have placed on either

side of that river portions of land which by existing conventions belong to

the jurisdiction of the Government on the opposite side of the river. The

subject of adjustment of this cause of difficulty is under consideration

between the two Republics.


The Government of the United States of Colombia has paid the award in the

case of the steamer Montijo, seized by authorities of that Government some

years since, and the amount has been transferred to the claimants.


It is with satisfaction that I am able to announce that the joint

commission for the adjustment of claims between the United States and

Mexico under the convention of 1868, the duration of which has been several

times extended, has brought its labors to a close. From the report of the

agent of the United States, which accompanies the papers transmitted

herewith, it will be seen that within the time limited by the commission

1,017 claims on the part of citizens of the United States against Mexico

were referred to the commission. Of these claims 831 were dismissed or

disallowed, and in 186 cases awards were made in favor of the claimants

against the Mexican Republic, amounting in the aggregate to $4,125,622.20.

Within the same period 998 claims on the part of citizens of the Mexican

Republic against the United States were referred to the commission. Of

these claims 831 were dismissed or disallowed, and in 167 cases awards were

made in favor of the claimants against the United States, amounting in the

aggregate to $150,498.41.


By the terms of the convention the amount of these awards is to be deducted

from the amount awarded in favor of our citizens against Mexico, and the

balance only to be paid by Mexico to the United States, leaving the United

States to make provision for this proportion of the awards in favor of its

Own citizens.


I invite your attention to the legislation which will be necessary to

provide for the payment.


In this connection I am pleased to be able to express the acknowledgments

due to Sir Edward Thornton, the umpire of the commission, who has given to

the consideration of the large number of claims submitted to him much time,

unwearied patience, and that firmness and intelligence which are well known

to belong to the accomplished representative of Great Britain, and which

are likewise recognized by the representative in this country of the

Republic of Mexico.


Monthly payments of a very small part of the amount due by the Government

of Venezuela to citizens of the United States on account of claims of the

latter against that Government continue to be made with reasonable

punctuality. That Government has proposed to change the system which it has

hitherto pursued in this respect by issuing bonds for part of the amount of

the several claims. The proposition, however, could not, it is supposed,

properly be accepted, at least without the consent of the holders of

certificates of the indebtedness of Venezuela. These are so much dispersed

that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to ascertain their

disposition on the subject.


In former messages I have called the attention of Congress to the necessity

of legislation with regard to fraudulent naturalization and to the subject

of expatriation and the election of nationality.


The numbers of persons of foreign birth seeking a home in the United

States, the ease and facility with which the honest emigrant may, after the

lapse of a reasonable time, become possessed of all the privileges of

citizenship of the United States, and the frequent occasions which induce

such adopted citizens to return to the country of their birth render the

subject of naturalization and the safeguards which experience has proved

necessary for the protection of the honest naturalized citizen of paramount

importance. The very simplicity in the requirements of law on this question

affords opportunity for fraud, and the want of uniformity in the

proceedings and records of the various courts and in the forms of the

certificates of naturalization issued affords a constant source of

difficulty.


I suggest no additional requirements to the acquisition of citizenship

beyond those now existing, but I invite the earnest attention of Congress

to the necessity and wisdom of some provisions regarding uniformity in the

records and certificates, and providing against the frauds which frequently

take place and for the vacating of a record of naturalization obtained in

fraud.


These provisions are needed in aid and for the protection of the honest

citizen of foreign birth, and for the want of which he is made to suffer

not infrequently. The United States has insisted upon the right of

expatriation, and has obtained, after a long struggle, an admission of the

principle contended for by acquiescence therein on the part of many foreign

powers and by the conclusion of treaties on that subject. It is, however,

but justice to the government to which such naturalized citizens have

formerly owed allegiance, as well as to the United States, that certain

fixed and definite rules should be adopted governing such cases and

providing how expatriation may be accomplished.


While emigrants in large numbers become citizens of the United States, it

is also true that persons, both native born and naturalized, once citizens

of the United States, either by formal acts or as the effect of a series of

facts and circumstances, abandon their citizenship and cease to be entitled

to the protection of the United States, but continue on convenient

occasions to assert a claim to protection in the absence of provisions on

these questions.


And in this connection I again invite your attention to the necessity of

legislation concerning the marriages of American citizens contracted

abroad, and concerning the status of American women who may marry

foreigners and of children born of American parents in a foreign country.


The delicate and complicated questions continually occurring with reference

to naturalization, expatriation, and the status of such persons as I have

above referred to induce me to earnestly direct your attention again to

these subjects.


In like manner I repeat my recommendation that some means be provided for

the hearing and determination of the just and subsisting claims of aliens

upon the Government of the United States within a reasonable limitation,

and of such as may hereafter arise. While by existing provisions of law the

Court of Claims may in certain cases be resorted to by an alien claimant,

the absence of any general provisions governing all such cases and the want

of a tribunal skilled in the disposition of such cases upon recognized

fixed and settled principles, either provides no remedy in many deserving

cases or compels a consideration of such claims by Congress or the

executive department of the Government.


It is believed that other governments are in advance of the United States

upon this question, and that the practice now adopted is entirely

unsatisfactory.


Congress, by an act approved the 3d day of March, 1875, authorized the

inhabitants of the Territory of Colorado to form a State government, with

the name of the State of Colorado, and therein provided for the admission

of said State, when formed, into the Union upon an equal footing with the

original States.


A constitution having been adopted and ratified by the people of that

State, and the acting governor having certified to me the facts as provided

by said act, together with a copy of such constitution and ordinances as

provided for in the said act, and the provisions of the said act of

Congress having been duly complied with, I issued a proclamation upon the

1st of August, 1876, a copy of which is hereto annexed.


The report of the Secretary of War shows that the Army has been actively

employed during the year in subduing, at the request of the Indian Bureau,

certain wild bands of the Sioux Indian Nation and in preserving the peace

at the South during the election. The commission constituted under the act

of July 24, 1876, to consider and report on the "whole subject of the

reform and reorganization of the Army" met in August last, and has

collected a large mass of statistics and opinions bearing on the subject

before it. These are now under consideration, and their report is

progressing. I am advised, though, by the president of the commission that

it will be impracticable to comply with the clause of the act requiring the

report to be presented, through me, to Congress on the first day of this

session, as there has not yet been time for that mature deliberation which

the importance of the subject demands. Therefore I ask that the time of

making the report be extended to the 29th day of January, 1877.


In accordance with the resolution of August 15, 1876, the Army regulations

prepared under the act of March 1, 1875, have not been promulgated, but are

held until after the report of the above-mentioned commission shall have

been received and acted on.


By the act of August 15, 1876, the cavalry force of the Army was increased

by 2,500 men, with the proviso that they should be discharged on the

expiration of hostilities. Under this authority the cavalry regiments have

been strengthened, and a portion of them are now in the field pursuing the

remnants of the Indians with whom they have been engaged during the

summer.


The estimates of the War Department are made up on the basis of the number

of men authorized by law, and their requirements as shown by years of

experience, and also with the purpose on the part of the bureau officers to

provide for all contingencies that may arise during the time for which the

estimates are made. Exclusive of engineer estimates (presented in

accordance with acts of Congress calling for surveys and estimates for

improvements at various localities), the estimates now presented are about

six millions in excess of the appropriations for the years 1874-75 and

1875-76. This increase is asked in order to provide for the increased

cavalry force (should their services be necessary), to prosecute

economically work upon important public buildings, to provide for armament

of fortifications and manufacture of small arms, and to replenish the

working stock in the supply departments. The appropriations for these last

named have for the past few years been so limited that the accumulations in

store will be entirely exhausted during the present year, and it will be

necessary to at once begin to replenish them.


I invite your special attention to the following recommendations of the

Secretary of War:


First. That the claims under the act of July 4, 1864, for supplies taken by

the Army during the war be removed from the offices of the Quartermaster

and Commissary Generals and transferred to the Southern Claims Commission.

These claims are of precisely similar nature to those now before the

Southern Claims Commission, and the War Department bureaus have not the

clerical force for their examination nor proper machinery for investigating

the loyalty of the claimants.


Second. That Congress sanction the scheme of an annuity fund for the

benefit of the families of deceased officers, and that it also provide for

the permanent organization of the Signal Service, both of which were

recommended in my last annual message.


Third. That the manufacturing operations of the Ordnance Department be

concentrated at three arsenals and an armory, and that the remaining

arsenals be sold and the proceeds applied to this object by the Ordnance

Department.


The appropriations for river and harbor improvements for the current year

were $5,015,000. With my approval, the Secretary of War directed that of

this amount $2,000,000 should be expended, and no new works should be begun

and none prosecuted which were not of national importance. Subsequently

this amount was increased to $2,237,600, and the works are now progressing

on this basis.


The improvement of the South Pass of the Mississippi River, under James B.

Eads and his associates, is progressing favorably. At the present time

there is a channel of 20.3 feet in depth between the jetties at the mouth

of the pass and 18.5 feet at the head of the pass. Neither channel,

however, has the width required before payments can be made by the United

States. A commission of engineer officers is now examining these works, and

their reports will be presented as soon as received.


The report of the Secretary of the Navy shows that branch of the service to

be in condition as effective as it is possible to keep it with the means

and authority given the Department. It is, of course, not possible to rival

the costly and progressive establishments of great European powers with the

old material of our Navy, to which no increase has been authorized since

the war, except the eight small cruisers built to supply the place of

others which had gone to decay. Yet the most has been done that was

possible with the means at command; and by substantially rebuilding some of

our old ships with durable material and completely repairing and refitting

our monitor fleet the Navy has been gradually so brought up that, though it

does not maintain its relative position among the progressive navies of the

world, it is now in a condition more powerful and effective than it ever

has been in time of peace.


The complete repairs of our five heavy ironclads are only delayed on

account of the inadequacy of the appropriations made last year for the

working bureaus of the Department, which were actually less in amount than

those made before the war, notwithstanding the greatly enhanced price of

labor and materials and the increase in the cost of the naval service

growing out of the universal use and great expense of steam machinery. The

money necessary for these repairs should be provided at once, that they may

be completed without further unnecessary delay and expense.


When this is done, all the strength that there is in our Navy will be

developed and useful to its full capacity, and it will be powerful for

purposes of defense, and also for offensive action, should the necessity

for that arise within a reasonable distance from our shores.


The fact that our Navy is not more modern and powerful than it is has been

made a cause of complaint against the Secretary of the Navy by persons who

at the same time criticise and complain of his endeavors to bring the Navy

that we have to its best and most efficient condition; but the good sense

of the country will understand that it is really due to his practical

action that we have at this time any effective naval force at command.


The report of the Postmaster-General shows the excess of expenditures

(excluding expenditures on account of previous years) over receipts for the

fiscal year ended June 30, 1876, to be $4,151,988.66.


Estimated expenditures for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1878, are

$36,723,432.43.


Estimated revenue for same period is $30,645,165, leaving estimated excess

of expenditure, to be appropriated as a deficiency, of $6,078,267.43.


The Postmaster-General, like his predecessor, is convinced that a change in

the basis of adjusting the salaries of postmasters of the fourth class is

necessary for the good of the service as well as for the interests of the

Government, and urgently recommends that the compensation of the class of

postmasters above mentioned be based upon the business of their respective

offices, as ascertained from the sworn returns to the Auditor of stamps

canceled.


A few postmasters in the Southern States have expressed great apprehension

of their personal safety on account of their connection with the postal

service, and have specially requested that their reports of apprehended

danger should not be made public lest it should result in the loss of their

lives. But no positive testimony of interference has been submitted, except

in the case of a mail messenger at Spartanburg, in South Carolina, who

reported that he had been violently driven away while in charge of the

mails on account of his political affiliations. An assistant superintendent

of the Railway Mail Service investigated this case and reported that the

messenger had disappeared from his post, leaving his work to be performed

by a substitute. The Postmaster-General thinks this case is sufficiently

suggestive to justify him in recommending that a more severe punishment

should be provided for the offense of assaulting any person in charge of

the mails or of retarding or otherwise obstructing them by threats of

personal injury.


"A very gratifying result is presented in the fact that the deficiency of

this Department during the last fiscal year was reduced to $4,081,790.18,

as against $6,169,938.88 of the preceding year. The difference can be

traced to the large increase in its ordinary receipts (which greatly exceed

the estimates therefor) and a slight decrease in its expenditures."


The ordinary receipts of the Post-Office Department for the past seven

fiscal years have increased at an average of over 8 per cent per annum,

while the increase of expenditures for the same period has been but about

5.50 per cent per annum, and the decrease of deficiency in the revenues has

been at the rate of nearly 2 per cent per annum.


The report of the Commissioner of Agriculture accompanying this message

will be found one of great interest, marking, as it does, the great

progress of the last century in the variety of products of the soil;

increased knowledge and skill in the labor of producing, saving, and

manipulating the same to prepare them for the use of man; in the

improvements in machinery to aid the agriculturist in his labors, and in a

knowledge of those scientific subjects necessary to a thorough system of

economy in agricultural production, namely, chemistry, botany, entomology,

etc. A study of this report by those interested in agriculture and deriving

their support from it will find it of value in pointing out those articles

which are raised in greater quantity than the needs of the world require,

and must sell, therefore, for less than the cost of production, and those

which command a profit over cost of production because there is not an

overproduction.


I call special attention to the need of the Department for a new gallery

for the reception of the exhibits returned from the Centennial Exhibition,

including the exhibits donated by very many foreign nations, and to the

recommendations of the Commissioner of Agriculture generally.


The reports of the District Commissioners and the board of health are just

received--too late to read them and to make recommendations thereon--and

are herewith submitted.


The international exhibition held in Philadelphia this year, in

commemoration of the one hundredth anniversary of American independence,

has proven a great success, and will, no doubt, be of enduring advantage to

the country. It has shown the great progress in the arts, sciences, and

mechanical skill made in a single century, and demonstrated that we are but

little behind older nations in any one branch, while in some we scarcely

have a rival. It has served, too, not only to bring peoples and products of

skill and labor from all parts of the world together, but in bringing

together people from all sections of our own country, which must prove a

great benefit in the information imparted and pride of country engendered.


It has been suggested by scientists interested in and connected with the

Smithsonian Institution, in a communication herewith, that the Government

exhibit be removed to the capital and a suitable building be erected or

purchased for its accommodation as a permanent exhibit. I earnestly

recommend this; and believing that Congress would second this view, I

directed that all Government exhibits at the Centennial Exhibition should

remain where they are, except such as might be injured by remaining in a

building not intended as a protection in inclement weather, or such as may

be wanted by the Department furnishing them, until the question of

permanent exhibition is acted on.


Although the moneys appropriated by Congress to enable the participation of

the several Executive Departments in the International Exhibition of 1876

were not sufficient to carry out the undertaking to the full extent at

first contemplated, it gives me pleasure to refer to the very efficient and

creditable manner in which the board appointed from these several

Departments to provide an exhibition on the part of the Government have

discharged their duties with the funds placed at their command. Without a

precedent to guide them in the preparation of such a display, the success

of their labors was amply attested by the sustained attention which the

contents of the Government building attracted during the period of the

exhibition from both foreign and native visitors.


I am strongly impressed with the value of the collection made by the

Government for the purposes of the exhibition, illustrating, as it does,

the mineral resources of the country, the statistical and practical

evidences of our growth as a nation, and the uses of the mechanical arts

and the applications of applied science in the administration of the

affairs of Government.


Many nations have voluntarily contributed their exhibits to the United

States to increase the interest in any permanent exhibition Congress may

provide for. For this act of generosity they should receive the thanks of

the people, and I respectfully suggest that a resolution of Congress to

that effect be adopted.


The attention of Congress can not be too earnestly called to the necessity

of throwing some greater safeguard over the method of choosing and

declaring the election of a President. Under the present system there seems

to be no provided remedy for contesting the election in any one State. The

remedy is partially, no doubt, in the enlightenment of electors. The

compulsory support of the free school and the disfranchisement of all who

can not read and write the English language, after a fixed probation, would

meet my hearty approval. I would not make this apply, however, to those

already voters, but I would to all becoming so after the expiration of the

probation fixed upon. Foreigners coming to this country to become citizens,

who are educated in their own language, should acquire the requisite

knowledge of ours during the necessary residence to obtain naturalization.

If they did not take interest enough in our language to acquire sufficient

knowledge of it to enable them to study the institutions and laws of the

country intelligently, I would not confer upon them the right to make such

laws nor to select those who do.


I append to this message, for convenient reference, a synopsis of

administrative events and of all recommendations to Congress made by me

during the last seven years. Time may show some of these recommendations

not to have been wisely conceived, but I believe the larger part will do no

discredit to the Administration. One of these recommendations met with the

united opposition of one political party in the Senate and with a strong

opposition from the other, namely, the treaty for the annexation of Santo

Domingo to the United States, to which I will specially refer, maintaining,

as I do, that if my views had been concurred in the country would be in a

more prosperous condition to-day, both politically and financially.


Santo Domingo is fertile, and upon its soil may be grown just those

tropical products of which the United States use so much, and which are

produced or prepared for market now by slave labor almost exclusively,

namely, sugar, coffee, dyewoods, mahogany, tropical fruits, tobacco, etc.

About 75 per cent of the exports of Cuba are consumed in the United States.

A large percentage of the exports of Brazil also find the same market.

These are paid for almost exclusively in coin, legislation, particularly in

Cuba, being unfavorable to a mutual exchange of the products of each

country. Flour shipped from the Mississippi River to Havana can pass by the

very entrance to the city on its way to a port in Spain, there pay a duty

fixed upon articles to be reexported, transferred to a Spanish vessel and

brought back almost to the point of starting, paying a second duty, and

still leave a profit over what would be received by direct shipment. All

that is produced in Cuba could be produced in Santo Domingo. Being a part

of the United States, commerce between the island and mainland would be

free. There would be no export duties on her shipments nor import duties on

those coming here. There would be no import duties upon the supplies,

machinery, etc., going from the States. The effect that would have been

produced upon Cuban commerce, with these advantages to a rival, is

observable at a glance. The Cuban question would have been settled long ago

in favor of "free Cuba." Hundreds of American vessels would now be

advantageously used in transporting the valuable woods and other products

of the soil of the island to a market and in carrying supplies and

emigrants to it. The island is but sparsely settled, while it has an area

sufficient for the profitable employment of several millions of people. The

soil would have soon fallen into the hands of United States capitalists.

The products are so valuable in commerce that emigration there would have

been encouraged; the emancipated race of the South would have found there a

congenial home, where their civil rights would not be disputed and where

their labor would be so much sought after that the poorest among them could

have found the means to go. Thus in cases of great oppression and cruelty,

such as has been practiced upon them in many places within the last eleven

years, whole communities would have sought refuge in Santo Domingo. I do

not suppose the whole race would have gone, nor is it desirable that they

should go. Their labor is desirable--indispensable almost--where they now

are. But the possession of this territory would have left the negro "master

of the situation," by enabling him to demand his rights at home on pain of

finding them elsewhere.


I do not present these views now as a recommendation for a renewal of the

subject of annexation, but I do refer to it to vindicate my previous action

in regard to it.


With the present term of Congress my official life terminates. It is not

probable that public affairs will ever again receive attention from me

further than as a citizen of the Republic, always taking a deep interest in

the honor, integrity, and prosperity of the whole land.


U. S. GRANT


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