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						| Back | John 
						Tyler's 4th Annual Message Washington, December 3, 
						1844.
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				| To the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States: 
 We have continued cause for expressing our gratitude to the 
				Supreme Ruler of the Universe for the benefits and blessings 
				which our country, under His kind providence, has enjoyed during 
				the past year. Notwithstanding the exciting scenes through which 
				we have passed, nothing has occurred to disturb the general 
				peace or to derange the harmony of our political system. The 
				great moral spectacle has been exhibited of a nation 
				approximating in number to 20,000,000 people having performed 
				the high and important function of electing their Chief 
				Magistrate for the term of four years without the commission of 
				any acts of violence or the manifestation of a spirit of 
				insubordination to the laws. The great and inestimable right of 
				suffrage has been exercised by all who were invested with it 
				under the laws of the different States in a Spirit dictated 
				alone by a desire, in the selection of the agent, to advance the 
				interests of the country and to place beyond jeopardy the 
				institutions under which it is our happiness to live. That the 
				deepest interest has been manifested by all our countrymen in 
				the result of the election is not less true than highly 
				creditable to them. Vast multitudes have assembled from time to 
				time at various places for the purpose of canvassing the merits 
				and pretensions of those who were presented for their suffrages, 
				but no armed soldiery has been necessary to restrain within 
				proper limits the popular zeal or to prevent violent outbreaks. 
				A principle much more controlling was found in the love of order 
				and obedience to the laws, which, with mere individual 
				exceptions, everywhere possesses the American mind, and controls 
				with an influence far more powerful than hosts of armed men. We 
				can not dwell upon this picture without recognizing in it that 
				deep and devoted attachment on the part of the people to the 
				institutions under which we live which proclaims their 
				perpetuity. The great objection which has always prevailed 
				against the election by the people of their chief executive 
				officer has been the apprehension of tumults and disorders which 
				might involve in ruin the entire Government. A security against 
				this is found not only in the fact before alluded to, but in the 
				additional fact that we live under a Confederacy embracing 
				already twenty-six States, no one of which has power to control 
				the election. The popular vote in each State is taken at the 
				time appointed by the laws, and such vote is announced by the 
				electoral college without reference to the decision of other 
				States. The right of suffrage and the mode of conducting the 
				election are regulated by the laws of each State, and the 
				election is distinctly federative in all its prominent features. 
				Thus it is that, unlike what might be the results under a 
				consolidated system, riotous proceedings, should they prevail, 
				could only affect the elections in single States without 
				disturbing to any dangerous extent the tranquillity of others. 
				The great experiment of a political confederation each member of 
				which is supreme as to all matters appertaining to its local 
				interests and its internal peace and happiness, while by a 
				voluntary compact with others it confides to the united power of 
				all the protection of its citizens in matters not domestic has 
				been so far crowned with complete success. The world has 
				witnessed its rapid growth in wealth and population, and under 
				the guide and direction of a superintending Providence the 
				developments of the past may be regarded but as the shadowing 
				forth of the mighty future. In the bright prospects of that 
				future we shall find, as patriots and philanthropists, the 
				highest inducements to cultivate and cherish a love of union and 
				to frown down every measure or effort which may be made to 
				alienate the States or the people of the States in sentiment and 
				feeling from each other. A rigid and close adherence to the 
				terms of our political compact and, above all, a sacred 
				observance of the guaranties of the Constitution will preserve 
				union on a foundation which can not be shaken, while personal 
				liberty is placed beyond hazard or jeopardy. The guaranty of 
				religious freedom, of the freedom of the press, of the liberty 
				of speech, of the trial by jury, of the habeas corpus, and of 
				the domestic institutions of each of the States, leaving the 
				private citizen in the full exercise of the high and ennobling 
				attributes of his nature and to each State the privilege (which 
				can only be judiciously exerted by itself) of consulting the 
				means best calculated to advance its own happiness - these are 
				the great and important guaranties of the Constitution which the 
				lovers of liberty must cherish and the advocates of union must 
				ever cultivate. Preserving these and avoiding all interpolations 
				by forced construction under the guise of an imagined expediency 
				upon the Constitution, the influence of our political system is 
				destined to be as actively and as beneficially felt on the 
				distant shores of the Pacific as it is now on those of the 
				Atlantic Ocean. the only formidable impediments in the way of 
				its successful expansion (time and space) are so far in the 
				progress of modification by the improvements of the age as to 
				render no longer speculative the ability of representatives from 
				that remote region to come up to the Capitol, so that their 
				constituents shall participate in all the benefits of Federal 
				legislation. Thus it is that in the progress of time the 
				inestimable principles of civil liberty will be enjoyed by 
				millions yet unborn and the great benefits of our system of 
				government be extended to now distant and uninhabited regions. 
				In view of the vast wilderness yet to be reclaimed, we may well 
				invite the lover of freedom of every land to take up his abode 
				among us and assist us in the great work of advancing the 
				standard of civilization and giving a wider spread to the arts 
				and refinements of cultivated life. Our prayers should evermore 
				be offered up to the Father of the Universe for His wisdom to 
				direct us in the path of our duty so as to enable us to 
				consummate these high purposes...
 
 There has been no material change in our foreign relations since 
				my last annual message to Congress. With all the powers of 
				Europe we continue on the most friendly terms. Indeed, it 
				affords me much satisfaction to state that at no former period 
				has the peace of that enlightened and important quarter of the 
				globe ever been, apparently, more firmly established. The 
				conviction that peace is the true policy of nations would seem 
				to be growing and becoming deeper amongst the enlightened every 
				where, and there is no people who have a stronger interest in 
				cherishing the sentiments and adopting the means of preserving 
				and giving it permanence than those of the United States. 
				Amongst these, the first and most effective are, no doubt, the 
				strict observance of justice and the honest and punctual 
				fulfillment of all engagements. But it is not to be forgotten 
				that in the present state of the world it is no less necessary 
				to be ready to enforce their observance and fulfillment in 
				reference to ourselves than to observe and fulfill them on our 
				part in regard to others.
 
 Since the close of your last session a negotiation has been 
				formally entered upon between the Secretary of State and Her 
				Britannic Majesty's minister plenipotentiary and envoy 
				extraordinary residing at Washington relative to the rights of 
				their respective nations in and over the Oregon Territory. That 
				negotiation is still pending. Should it during your session be 
				brought to a definitive conclusion, the result will be promptly 
				communicated to Congress. I would, however, again call your 
				attention to the recommendations contained in previous messages 
				designed to protect and facilitate emigration to that Territory. 
				The establishment of military posts at suitable points upon the 
				extended line of land travel would enable our citizens to 
				emigrate in comparative safety to the fertile regions below the 
				Falls of the Columbia, and make the provision of the existing 
				convention for the joint occupation of the territory by subjects 
				of Great Britain and the citizens of the United States more 
				available than heretofore to the latter. These posts would 
				constitute places of rest for the weary emigrant, where he would 
				be sheltered securely against the danger of attack from the 
				Indians and be enabled to recover from the exhaustion of a long 
				line of travel. Legislative enactments should also be made which 
				should spread over him the aegis of our laws, so as to afford 
				protection to his person and property when he shall have reached 
				his distant home. In this latter respect the British Government 
				has been much more careful of the interests of such of her 
				people as are to be found in that country than the United 
				States. She has made necessary provision for their security and 
				protection against the acts of the viciously disposed and 
				lawless, and her emigrant reposes in safety under the panoply of 
				her laws. Whatever may be the result of the pending negotiation, 
				such measures an necessary. It will afford me the greatest 
				pleasure to witness a happy and favorable termination to the 
				existing negotiation upon terms compatible with the public 
				honor, and the best efforts of the Government will continue to 
				be directed to this end...
 
 We continue to receive assurances of the most friendly feelings 
				on the part of all the other European powers, with each and all 
				of whom it is so obviously our interest to cultivate the most 
				amicable relations; nor can I anticipate the occurrence of any 
				event which would be likely in any degree to disturb those 
				relations. Russia, the great northern power, under the judicious 
				sway of her Emperor, is constantly advancing in the road of 
				science and improvement, while France, guided by the counsels of 
				her wise Sovereign, pursues a course calculated to consolidate 
				the general peace. Spain has obtained a breathing spell of some 
				duration from the internal convulsions which have through so 
				many years marred her prosperity, while Austria, the 
				Netherlands, Prussia, Belgium, and the other powers of Europe 
				reap a rich harvest of blessings from the prevailing peace...
 In my last annual message I felt it to be my duty to make known 
				to Congress, in terms both plain and emphatic, my opinion in 
				regard to the war which has so long existed between Mexico and 
				Texas, which since the battle of San Jacinto has consisted 
				altogether of predatory incursions, attended by circumstances 
				revolting to humanity. I repeat now what I then said, that after 
				eight years of feeble and ineffectual efforts to reconquer Texas 
				it was time that the war should have ceased. The United States 
				have a direct interest in the question. The contiguity of the 
				two nations to our territory was but too well calculated to 
				involve our peace. Unjust suspicions were engendered in the mind 
				of one or the other of the belligerents against us, and as a 
				necessary consequence American interests were made to suffer and 
				our peace became daily endangered; in addition to which it must 
				have been obvious to all that the exhaustion produced by the war 
				subjected both Mexico and Texas to the interference of other 
				powers, which, without the interposition of this Government, 
				might eventuate in the most serious injury to the United States. 
				This Government from time to time exerted its friendly offices 
				to bring about a termination of hostilities upon terms honorable 
				alike to both the belligerents. Its efforts in this behalf 
				proved unavailing. Mexico seemed almost without an object to 
				persevere in the war, and no other alternative was left the 
				Executive but to take advantage of the well known dispositions 
				of Texas and to invite her to enter into a treaty for annexing 
				her territory to that of the United States.
 
 Since your last session Mexico has threatened to renew the war, 
				and has either made or proposes to make formidable preparations 
				for invading Texas. She has issued decrees and proclamations, 
				preparatory to the commencement of hostilities, full of threats 
				revolting to humanity, and which if carried into effect would 
				arouse the attention of all Christendom. This new demonstration 
				of feeling. There is too much reason to believe, has been 
				produced in consequence of the negotiation of the late treaty of 
				annexation with Texas. The Executive, therefore, could not be 
				indifferent to such proceedings, and it felt it to be due as 
				well to itself as to the honor of the country that a strong 
				representation should be made to the Mexican Government upon the 
				subject. This was accordingly done, as will be seen by the copy 
				of the accordingly dispatch from the Secretary of State to the 
				United States envoy at Mexico. Mexico has no right to jeopard 
				the peace of the world by urging any longer a useless and 
				fruitless contest. Such a condition of things would not be 
				tolerated on the European continent. Why should it be on this? A 
				war of desolation, such as is now threatened by Mexico, can not 
				be waged without involving our peace and tranquillity...
 
 Her Government and people decided on annexation to the United 
				States, and the Executive saw in the acquisition of such a 
				territory the means of advancing their permanent happiness and 
				glory. What principle of good faith, then, was violated? What 
				rule of political morals trampled under foot? So far as Mexico 
				herself was concerned, the measure should have been regarded by 
				her as highly beneficial. Her inability to reconquer Texas had 
				been exhibited, I repeat, by eight (now nine) years of fruitless 
				and ruinous contest. In the meantime Texas has been growing in 
				population and resources. Emigration has flowed into her 
				territory from all parts of the world in current which continues 
				to increase in strength. Mexico requires a permanent boundary 
				between that young Republic and herself. Texas at no distant 
				day, if she continues separate and detached from the United 
				States, will inevitably seek to consolidate her strength by 
				adding to her domain the contiguous Provinces of Mexico. The 
				spirit of revolt from the control of the central Government has 
				heretofore manifested itself in some of those Provinces, and it 
				is fair to infer that they would be inclined to take the first 
				favorable opportunity to proclaim their independence and to form 
				close alliances with Texas. The war would thus be endless, or if 
				cessations of hostilities should occur they would only endure 
				for a season. The interests of Mexico, therefore, could in 
				nothing be better consulted than in a peace with her neighbors 
				which would result in the establishment of a permanent boundary. 
				Upon the ratification of the treaty the Executive was prepared 
				to treat with her on the most liberal basis. Hence the 
				boundaries of Texas were left undefined by the treaty. The 
				Executive proposed to settle these upon terms that all the world 
				should have pronounced just and reasonable. No negotiation upon 
				that point could have been undertaken between the United States 
				and Mexico in advance of the ratification of the treaty. We 
				should have had no right, no power, no authority, to have 
				conducted such a negotiation, and to have undertaken it would 
				have been an assumption equally revolting to the pride of Mexico 
				and Texas and subjecting us to the charge of arrogance, while to 
				have proposed in advance of annexation to satisfy Mexico for any 
				contingent interest she might have in Texas would have been to 
				have treated Texas not as an independent power, but as a mere 
				dependency of Mexico. This assumption could not have been acted 
				on by the Executive without setting at defiance your own solemn 
				declaration that that Republic was an independent State. Mexico 
				had, it is true, threatened war against the United States in the 
				event the treaty of annexation was ratified. The Executive could 
				not permit itself to be influenced by this threat. It 
				represented in this the spirit of our people, who are ready to 
				sacrifice much for peace, but nothing to intimidation. A war 
				under any circumstances is greatly to be deplored, and the 
				United States is the last nation to desire it; but if, as the 
				condition of peace, it be required of us to forego the 
				unquestionable right of treating with an independent power of 
				our own continent upon matters highly interesting to both, and 
				that upon a naked and unstained pretension of claim by a third 
				power to control the free will of the power with whom we treat, 
				devoted as we may be to peace and anxious to cultivate friendly 
				relations with the whole world, the Executive does not hesitate 
				to say that the people of the United States would be ready to 
				brave all consequences sooner than submit to such condition. But 
				no apprehension of war was entertained by the Executive, and I 
				must express frankly the opinion that had the treaty been 
				ratified by the Senate it would have been followed by a prompt 
				settlement, to the entire satisfaction of Mexico, of every 
				matter in difference between the two countries. Seeing, then, 
				that new preparations for hostile invasion of Texas were about 
				to be adopted by Mexico, and that these were brought about 
				because Texas had adopted the suggestions of the Executive upon 
				the subject of annexation, it could not passively have folded 
				its arms and permitted a war, threatened to be accompanied by 
				every act that could mark a barbarous age, to be waged against 
				her because she had done so.
 
 Other considerations of a controlling character influenced the 
				course of the Executive. The treaty which had thus been 
				negotiated had failed to receive the ratification of the Senate. 
				One of the chief objections which was urged against it was found 
				to consist in the fact that the question of annexation had not 
				been submitted to the ordeal of public opinion in the United 
				States. However untenable such an objection was esteemed to be, 
				in view of the unquestionable power of the Executive to 
				negotiate the treaty and the great and lasting interests 
				involved in the question, I felt it to be my duty to submit the 
				whole subject to Congress as the best expounders of popular 
				sentiment. No definitive action having been taken on the subject 
				by Congress, the question referred itself directly to the 
				decision of the States and people. The great popular election 
				which has just terminated afforded the best opportunity of 
				ascertaining the will of the States and the people upon it. 
				Pending that issue it became the imperative duty of the 
				Executive to inform Mexico that the question of annexation was 
				still before the American people, and that until their decision 
				was pronounced any serious invasion of Texas would be regarded 
				as an attempt to forestall their judgment and could not be 
				looked upon with indifference. I am most happy to inform you 
				that no such invasion has taken place; and I trust that whatever 
				your action may be upon it Mexico will see the importance of 
				deciding the matter by a resort to peaceful expedients in 
				preference to those of arms. The decision of the people and the 
				States on this great and interesting subject has been decisively 
				manifested. The question of annexation has been presented 
				nakedly to their consideration. By the treaty itself all 
				collateral and incidental issues which were calculated to divide 
				and distract the public councils were carefully avoided. These 
				were left to the wisdom of the future to determine. It 
				presented, I repeat, the isolated question of annexation, and in 
				that form it has been submitted to the ordeal of public 
				sentiment. A controlling majority of the people and a large 
				majority of the States have declared in favor of immediate 
				annexation. Instructions have thus come up to both branches of 
				Congress from their respective constituents ill terms the most 
				emphatic. It is the will of both the people and the States that 
				Texas shall be annexed to the Union promptly and immediately. It 
				may be hoped that in carrying into execution the public will 
				thus declared all collateral issues may be avoided. Future 
				Legislatures can best decide as to the number of States which 
				should be formed out of the territory when the time has arrived 
				for deciding that question. So with all others. By the treaty 
				the United States assumed the payment of the debts of Texas to 
				an amount not exceeding $10,000,000, to be paid, with the 
				exception of a sum falling short of $400,000, exclusively out of 
				the proceeds of the sales of her public lands. We could not with 
				honor take the lands without assuming the full payment of all 
				incumbrances upon them...
 
 The two Governments having already agreed through their 
				respective organs on the terms of annexation, I would recommend 
				their adoption by Congress in the form of a joint resolution or 
				act to be perfected and made binding on the two countries when 
				adopted in like manner by the Government of Texas...
 
 The greatly improved condition of the Treasury affords a subject 
				for general congratulation. The paralysis which had fallen on 
				trade and commerce, and which subjected the Government to the 
				necessity of resorting to loans and the issue of Treasury notes 
				to a large amount, has passed away, and after the payment of 
				upward of $7,000,000 on account of the interest, and in 
				redemption of more than $5,000,000 of the public debt which 
				falls due on the 1st of January next, and setting apart upward 
				of $2,000,000 for the payment of outstanding Treasury notes and 
				meeting an installment of the debts of the corporate cities of 
				the District of Columbia, an estimated surplus of upward of 
				$7,000,000 over and above the existing appropriations will 
				remain in the Treasury at the close of the fiscal year. Should 
				the Treasury notes continue outstanding as heretofore, that 
				surplus will be considerably augmented. Although all interest 
				has ceased upon them and the Government has invited their return 
				to the Treasury, yet they remain outstanding, affording great 
				facilities to commerce, and establishing the fact that under a 
				well-regulated
 system of finance the Government has resources within itself 
				which render it independent in time of need, not only of private 
				loans, but also of bank facilities...
 
 It must also be a matter of unmingled gratification that under 
				the existing financial system (resting upon the act of 1789 and 
				the resolution of 18l6) the currency of the country has attained 
				a state of perfect soundness; and the rates of exchange between 
				different parts of the Union, which in I841 denoted by their 
				enormous amount the great depreciation and, in fact, 
				worthlessness of the currency in most of the States, are now 
				reduced to little more than the mere expense of transporting 
				specie from place to place and the risk incident to the 
				operation. In a new country like that of the United States, 
				where so many inducements are held out for speculation, the 
				depositories of the surplus revenue, consisting of banks of any 
				description, when it reaches any considerable amount, require 
				the closest vigilance on the part of the Government. All banking 
				institutions, under whatever denomination they may pass, are 
				governed by an almost exclusive regard to the interest of the 
				stockholders. That interest consists in the augumentation of 
				profits in the form of dividends, and a large surplus revenue 
				intrusted to their custody is but too apt to lead to excessive 
				loans and to extravagantly large issues of paper. As a necessary 
				consequence prices are nominally increased and the speculative 
				mania very soon seized upon the public mind. A fictitious state 
				of prosperity for a season exists, and, in the language of the 
				day, money becomes plenty. Contracts are entered into by 
				individuals resting on this unsubstantial state of things, but 
				the delusion speedily passes away and the country is overrun 
				with an indebtedness so weighty as to overwhelm many and to 
				visit every department of industry with great and ruinous 
				embarrassment. The greatest vigilance becomes necessary on the 
				part of Government to guard against this state of things. The 
				depositories must be given distinctly to understand that the 
				favors of the Government will be altogether withdrawn, or 
				substantially diminished, if its revenues shall be regarded as 
				additions to their banking capital or as the foundation of an 
				enlarged circulation.
 
 I refer you to the report of the Secretary of War for an 
				exhibition of the condition of the Army, and recommend to you as 
				well worthy your best consideration many of the suggestions it 
				contains... I refer you also to his report for a full statement 
				of the condition of the Indian tribes within our jurisdiction. 
				The Executive has abated no effort in carrying into effect the 
				well-established policy of the Government which contemplates a 
				removal of all the tribes residing within the limits of the 
				several States beyond those limits, and it is now enabled to 
				congratulate the country at the prospect of an early 
				consummation of this object. Many of the tribes have already 
				made great progress in the arts of civilized life, and through 
				the operation of the schools established among them, aided by 
				the efforts of the pious men of various religious denominations 
				who devote themselves to the task of their improvement, we may 
				fondly hope that the remains of the formidable tribes which were 
				once masters of this country will in their transition from the 
				savage state to a condition of refinement and cultivation add 
				another bright trophy to adorn the labors of a well-directed 
				philanthropy...
 
 In referring you to the accompanying report of the 
				Postmaster-General it affords me continued cause of 
				gratification to be able to advert to the fact that the affairs 
				of the Department for the last four years have been so conducted 
				as from its unaided resources to meet its large expenditures...
 
 There is a strong desire manifested in many quarters so to alter 
				the tariff of letter postage as to reduce the amount of tax at 
				present imposed. Should such a measure be carried into effect to 
				the full extent desired, it can not well be doubted but that for 
				the first years of its operation a diminished revenue would be 
				collected, the supply of which would necessarily constitute a 
				charge upon the Treasury. Whether such a result would be 
				desirable it will be for Congress in its wisdom to determine It 
				may in general be asserted as true that radical alterations in 
				any system should rather be brought about gradually than by 
				sudden changes, and by pursuing this prudent policy in the 
				reduction of letter postage the Department might still sustain 
				itself through the revenue which would accrue by the increase of 
				letters. The state and condition of the public Treasury has 
				heretofore been such as to have precluded the recommendation of 
				any material change. The difficulties upon this head have, 
				however, ceased, and a larger discretion is now left to the 
				Government.
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