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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of State of the Union Addresses
+by John Quincy Adams
+(#6 in our series of US Presidential State of the Union Addresses)
+
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+Title: State of the Union Addresses of John Quincy Adams
+
+Author: John Quincy Adams
+
+Release Date: February, 2004 [EBook #5015]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on April 11, 2002]
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+Edition: 10
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+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OF ADDRESSES BY JOHN QUINCY ADAMS ***
+
+
+
+
+This eBook was produced by James Linden.
+
+The addresses are separated by three asterisks: ***
+
+Dates of addresses by John Quincy Adams in this eBook:
+ December 6, 1825
+ December 5, 1826
+ December 4, 1827
+ December 2, 1828
+
+
+
+***
+
+State of the Union Address
+John Quincy Adams
+December 6, 1825
+
+Fellow Citizens of the Senate and of the House of Representatives:
+
+In taking a general survey of the concerns of our beloved country, with
+reference to subjects interesting to the common welfare, the first
+sentiment which impresses itself upon the mind is of gratitude to the
+Omnipotent Disposer of All Good for the continuance of the signal blessings
+of His providence, and especially for that health which to an unusual
+extent has prevailed within our borders, and for that abundance which in
+the vicissitudes of the seasons has been scattered with profusion over our
+land. Nor ought we less to ascribe to Him the glory that we are permitted
+to enjoy the bounties of His hand in peace and tranquillity -- in peace
+with all the other nations of the earth, in tranquillity among our selves.
+There has, indeed, rarely been a period in the history of civilized man in
+which the general condition of the Christian nations has been marked so
+extensively by peace and prosperity.
+
+Europe, with a few partial and unhappy exceptions, has enjoyed 10 years of
+peace, during which all her Governments, what ever the theory of their
+constitutions may have been, are successively taught to feel that the end
+of their institution is the happiness of the people, and that the exercise
+of power among men can be justified only by the blessings it confers upon
+those over whom it is extended.
+
+During the same period our intercourse with all those nations has been
+pacific and friendly; it so continues. Since the close of your last session
+no material variation has occurred in our relations with any one of them.
+In the commercial and navigation system of Great Britain important changes
+of municipal regulation have recently been sanctioned by acts of
+Parliament, the effect of which upon the interests of other nations, and
+particularly upon ours, has not yet been fully developed. In the recent
+renewal of the diplomatic missions on both sides between the two
+Governments assurances have been given and received of the continuance and
+increase of the mutual confidence and cordiality by which the adjustment of
+many points of difference had already been effected, and which affords the
+surest pledge for the ultimate satisfactory adjustment of those which still
+remain open or may hereafter arise.
+
+The policy of the United States in their commercial intercourse with other
+nations has always been of the most liberal character. In the mutual
+exchange of their respective productions they have abstained altogether
+from prohibitions; they have interdicted themselves the power of laying
+taxes upon exports, and when ever they have favored their own shipping by
+special preferences or exclusive privileges in their own ports it has been
+only with a view to countervail similar favors and exclusions granted by
+the nations with whom we have been engaged in traffic to their own people
+or shipping, and to the disadvantage of ours. Immediately after the close
+of the last war a proposal was fairly made by the act of Congress of
+1815-03-03, to all the maritime nations to lay aside the system of
+retaliating restrictions and exclusions, and to place the shipping of both
+parties to the common trade on a footing of equality in respect to the
+duties of tonnage and impost. This offer was partially and successively
+accepted by Great Britain, Sweden, the Netherlands, the Hanseatic cities,
+Prussia, Sardinia, the Duke of Oldenburg, and Russia. It was also adopted,
+under certain modifications, in our late commercial convention with France,
+and by the act of Congress of 1824-01-08, it has received a new
+confirmation with all the nations who had acceded to it, and has been
+offered again to all those who are or may here after be willing to abide in
+reciprocity by it. But all these regulations, whether established by treaty
+or by municipal enactments, are still subject to one important
+restriction.
+
+The removal of discriminating duties of tonnage and of impost is limited to
+articles of the growth, produce, or manufacture of the country to which the
+vessel belongs or to such articles as are most usually first shipped from
+her ports. It will deserve the serious consideration of Congress whether
+even this remnant of restriction may not be safely abandoned, and whether
+the general tender of equal competition made in the act of 1824-01-08, may
+not be extended to include all articles of merchandise not prohibited, of
+what country so ever they may be the produce or manufacture. Propositions
+of this effect have already been made to us by more than one European
+Government, and it is probable that if once established by legislation or
+compact with any distinguished maritime state it would recommend itself by
+the experience of its advantages to the general accession of all.
+
+The convention of commerce and navigation between the United States and
+France, concluded on 1822-06-24, was, in the understanding and intent of
+both parties, as appears upon its face, only a temporary arrangement of the
+points of difference between them of the most immediate and pressing
+urgency. It was limited in the first instance to two years from 1822-10-01,
+but with a proviso that it should further continue in force 'til the
+conclusion of a general and definitive treaty of commerce, unless
+terminated by a notice, 6 months in advance, of either of the parties to
+the other. Its operation so far as it extended has been mutually
+advantageous, and it still continues in force by common consent. But it
+left unadjusted several objects of great interest to the citizens and
+subjects of both countries, and particularly a mass of claims to
+considerable amount of citizens of the United States upon the Government of
+France of indemnity for property taken or destroyed under circumstances of
+the most aggravated and outrageous character. In the long period during
+which continual and earnest appeals have been made to the equity and
+magnanimity of France in behalf of these claims their justice has not been,
+as it could not be, denied.
+
+It was hoped that the accession of a new Sovereign to the throne would have
+afforded a favorable opportunity for presenting them to the consideration
+of his Government. They have been presented and urged hither to without
+effect. The repeated and earnest representations of our minister at the
+Court of France remain as yet even without an answer. Were the demands of
+nations upon the justice of each other susceptible of adjudication by the
+sentence of an impartial tribunal, those to which I now refer would long
+since have been settled and adequate indemnity would have been obtained.
+
+There are large amounts of similar claims upon the Netherlands, Naples, and
+Denmark. For those upon Spain prior to 1819 indemnity was, after many years
+of patient forbearance, obtained; and those upon Sweden have been lately
+compromised by a private settlement, in which the claimants themselves have
+acquiesced. The Governments of Denmark and of Naples have been recently
+reminded of those yet existing against them, nor will any of them be
+forgotten while a hope may be indulged of obtaining justice by the means
+within the constitutional power of the Executive, and without resorting to
+those means of self-redress which, as well as the time, circumstances, and
+occasion which may require them, are within the exclusive competency of the
+Legislature.
+
+It is with great satisfaction that I am enabled to bear witness to the
+liberal spirit with which the Republic of Colombia has made satisfaction
+for well-established claims of a similar character, and among the documents
+now communicated to Congress will be distinguished a treaty of commerce and
+navigation with that Republic, the ratifications of which have been
+exchanged since the last recess of the Legislature. The negotiation of
+similar treaties with all of the independent South American States has been
+contemplated and may yet be accomplished. The basis of them all, as
+proposed by the United States, has been laid in two principles -- the one
+of entire and unqualified reciprocity, the other the mutual obligation of
+the parties to place each other permanently upon the footing of the most
+favored nation. These principles are, indeed, indispensable to the
+effectual emancipation of the American hemisphere from the thralldom of
+colonizing monopolies and exclusions, an event rapidly realizing in the
+progress of human affairs, and which the resistance still opposed in
+certain parts of Europe to the acknowledgment of the Southern American
+Republics as independent States will, it is believed, contribute more
+effectually to accomplish. The time has been, and that not remote, when
+some of those States might, in their anxious desire to obtain a nominal
+recognition, have accepted of a nominal independence, clogged with
+burdensome conditions, and exclusive commercial privileges granted to the
+nation from which they have separated to the disadvantage of all others.
+They are all now aware that such concessions to any European nation would
+be incompatible with that independence which they have declared and
+maintained.
+
+Among the measures which have been suggested to them by the new relations
+with one another, resulting from the recent changes in their condition, is
+that of assembling at the Isthmus of Panama a congress, at which each of
+them should be represented, to deliberate upon objects important to the
+welfare of all. The Republics of Colombia, of Mexico, and of Central
+America have already deputed plenipotentiaries to such a meeting, and they
+have invited the United States to be also represented there by their
+ministers. The invitation has been accepted, and ministers on the part of
+the United States will be commissioned to attend at those deliberations,
+and to take part in them so far as may be compatible with that neutrality
+from which it is neither our intention nor the desire of the other American
+States that we should depart.
+
+The commissioners under the 7th article of the treaty of Ghent have so
+nearly completed their arduous labors that, by the report recently received
+from the agent on the part of the United States, there is reason to expect
+that the commission will be closed at their next session, appointed for May
+22 of the ensuing year.
+
+The other commission, appointed to ascertain the indemnities due for slaves
+carried away from the United States after the close of the late war, have
+met with some difficulty, which has delayed their progress in the inquiry.
+A reference has been made to the British Government on the subject, which,
+it may be hoped, will tend to hasten the decision of the commissioners, or
+serve as a substitute for it.
+
+Among the powers specifically granted to Congress by the Constitution are
+those of establishing uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies
+throughout the United States and of providing for organizing, arming, and
+disciplining the militia and for governing such part of them as may be
+employed in the services of the United States. The magnitude and complexity
+of the interests affected by legislation upon these subjects may account
+for the fact that, long and often as both of them have occupied the
+attention and animated the debates of Congress, no systems have yet been
+devised for fulfilling to the satisfaction of the community the duties
+prescribed by these grants of power.
+
+To conciliate the claim of the individual citizen to the enjoyment of
+personal liberty, with the effective obligation of private contracts, is
+the difficult problem to be solved by a law of bankruptcy. These are
+objects of the deepest interest to society, affecting all that is precious
+in the existence of multitudes of persons, many of them in the classes
+essentially dependent and helpless, of the age requiring nurture, and of
+the sex entitled to protection from the free agency of the parent and the
+husband. The organization of the militia is yet more indispensable to the
+liberties of the country. It is only by an effective militia that we can at
+once enjoy the repose of peace and bid defiance to foreign aggression; it
+is by the militia that we are constituted an armed nation, standing in
+perpetual panoply of defense in the presence of all the other nations of
+the earth. To this end it would be necessary, if possible, so to shape its
+organization as to give it a more united and active energy. There are laws
+establishing an uniform militia throughout the United States and for arming
+and equipping its whole body. But it is a body of dislocated members,
+without the vigor of unity and having little of uniformity but the name. To
+infuse into this most important institution the power of which it is
+susceptible and to make it available for the defense of the Union at the
+shortest notice and at the smallest expense possible of time, of life, and
+of treasure are among the benefits to be expected from the persevering
+deliberations of Congress.
+
+Among the unequivocal indications of our national prosperity is the
+flourishing state of our finances. The revenues of the present year, from
+all their principal sources, will exceed the anticipations of the last. The
+balance in the Treasury on the first of January last was a little short of
+$2,000,000, exclusive of $2,500,000, being the moiety of the loan of
+$5,000,000 authorized by the act of 1824-05-26. The receipts into the
+Treasury from the first of January to the 30th of September, exclusive of
+the other moiety of the same loan, are estimated at $16,500,000, and it is
+expected that those of the current quarter will exceed $5,000,000, forming
+an aggregate of receipts of nearly $22,000,000, independent of the loan.
+The expenditures of the year will not exceed that sum more than $2,000,000.
+By those expenditures nearly $8,000,000 of the principal of the public debt
+that have been discharged.
+
+More than $1,500,000 has been devoted to the debt of gratitude to the
+warriors of the Revolution; a nearly equal sum to the construction of
+fortifications and the acquisition of ordnance and other permanent
+preparations of national defense; $500,000 to the gradual increase of the
+Navy; an equal sum for purchases of territory from the Indians and payment
+of annuities to them; and upward of $1,000,000 for objects of internal
+improvement authorized by special acts of the last Congress. If we add to
+these $4,000,000 for payment of interest upon the public debt, there
+remains a sum of $7,000,000, which have defrayed the whole expense of the
+administration of Government in its legislative, executive, and judiciary
+departments, including the support of the military and naval establishments
+and all the occasional contingencies of a government coextensive with the
+Union.
+
+The amount of duties secured on merchandise imported since the commencement
+of the year is about $25,500,000, and that which will accrue during the
+current quarter is estimated at $5,500,000; from these $31,000,000,
+deducting the draw-backs, estimated at less than $7,000,000, a sum
+exceeding $24,000,000 will constitute the revenue of the year, and will
+exceed the whole expenditures of the year. The entire amount of the public
+debt remaining due on the first of January next will be short of
+$81,000,000.
+
+By an act of Congress of the 3d of March last a loan of $12,000,000 was
+authorized at 4.5%, or an exchange of stock to that amount of 4.5% for a
+stock of 6%, to create a fund for extinguishing an equal amount of the
+public debt, bearing an interest of 6%, redeemable in 1826. An account of
+the measures taken to give effect to this act will be laid before you by
+the Secretary of the Treasury. As the object which it had in view has been
+but partially accomplished, it will be for the consideration of Congress
+whether the power with which it clothed the Executive should not be renewed
+at an early day of the present session, and under what modifications.
+
+The act of Congress of the 3d of March last, directing the Secretary of the
+Treasury to subscribe, in the name and for the use of the United States,
+for 1,500 shares of the capital stock of the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal
+Company, has been executed by the actual subscription for the amount
+specified; and such other measures have been adopted by that officer, under
+the act, as the fulfillment of its intentions requires. The latest accounts
+received of this important undertaking authorize the belief that it is in
+successful progress.
+
+The payments into the Treasury from the proceeds of the sales of the public
+lands during the present year were estimated at $1,000,000. The actual
+receipts of the first two quarters have fallen very little short of that
+sum; it is not expected that the second half of the year will be equally
+productive, but the income of the year from that source may now be safely
+estimated at $1,500,000. The act of Congress of 1824-05-18, to provide for
+the extinguishment of the debt due to the United States by the purchasers
+of public lands, was limited in its operation of relief to the purchaser to
+the 10th of April last. Its effect at the end of the quarter during which
+it expired was to reduce that debt from $10,000,000 to $7,000,000 By the
+operation of similar prior laws of relief, from and since that of
+1821-03-02, the debt had been reduced from upward of $22,000,000 to
+$10,000,000.
+
+It is exceedingly desirable that it should be extinguished altogether; and
+to facilitate that consummation I recommend to Congress the revival for one
+year more of the act of 1824-05-18, with such provisional modification as
+may be necessary to guard the public interests against fraudulent practices
+in the resale of the relinquished land.
+
+The purchasers of public lands are among the most useful of our fellow
+citizens, and since the system of sales for cash alone has been introduced
+great indulgence has been justly extended to those who had previously
+purchased upon credit. The debt which had been contracted under the credit
+sales had become unwieldy, and its extinction was alike advantageous to the
+purchaser and to the public. Under the system of sales, matured as it has
+been by experience, and adapted to the exigencies of the times, the lands
+will continue as they have become, an abundant source of revenue; and when
+the pledge of them to the public creditor shall have been redeemed by the
+entire discharge of the national debt, the swelling tide of wealth with
+which they replenish the common Treasury may be made to reflow in unfailing
+streams of improvement from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean.
+
+The condition of the various branches of the public service resorting from
+the Department of War, and their administration during the current year,
+will be exhibited in the report of the Secretary of War and the
+accompanying documents herewith communicated. The organization and
+discipline of the Army are effective and satisfactory. To counteract the
+prevalence of desertion among the troops it has been suggested to withhold
+from the men a small portion of their monthly pay until the period of their
+discharge; and some expedient appears to be necessary to preserve and
+maintain among the officers so much of the art of horsemanship as could
+scarcely fail to be found wanting on the possible sudden eruption of a war,
+which should take us unprovided with a single corps of cavalry.
+
+The Military Academy at West Point, under the restrictions of a severe but
+paternal superintendence, recommends itself more and more to the patronage
+of the nation, and the numbers of meritorious officers which it forms and
+introduces to the public service furnishes the means of multiplying the
+undertakings of the public improvements to which their acquirements at that
+institution are peculiarly adapted. The school of artillery practice
+established at Fortress Monroe Hampton, VA is well suited to the same
+purpose, and may need the aid of further legislative provision to the same
+end. The reports of the various officers at the head of the administrative
+branches of the military service, connected with the quartering, clothing,
+subsistence, health, and pay of the Army, exhibit the assiduous vigilance
+of those officers in the performance of their respective duties, and the
+faithful accountability which has pervaded every part of the system.
+
+Our relations with the numerous tribes of aboriginal natives of this
+country, scattered over its extensive surface and so dependent even for
+their existence upon our power, have been during the present year highly
+interesting. An act of Congress of 1824-05-25, made an appropriation to
+defray the expenses of making treaties of trade and friendship with the
+Indian tribes beyond the Mississippi. An act of 1825-03-03, authorized
+treaties to be made with the Indians for their consent to the making of a
+road from the frontier of Missouri to that of New Mexico, and another act
+of the same date provided for defraying the expenses of holding treaties
+with the Sioux, Chippeways, Menomenees, Sauks, Foxes, etc., for the purpose
+of establishing boundaries and promoting peace between said tribes.
+
+The first and last objects of these acts have been accomplished, and the
+second is yet in a process of execution. The treaties which since the last
+session of Congress have been concluded with the several tribes will be
+laid before the Senate for their consideration conformably to the
+Constitution. They comprise large and valuable acquisitions of territory,
+and they secure an adjustment of boundaries and give pledges of permanent
+peace between several tribes which had been long waging bloody wars against
+each other.
+
+On the 12th of February last a treaty was signed at the Indian Springs
+between commissioners appointed on the part of the United States and
+certain chiefs and individuals of the Creek Nation of Indians, which was
+received at the seat of Government only a very few days before the close of
+the last session of Congress and of the late Administration. The advice and
+consent of the Senate was given to it on the 3d of March, too late for it
+to receive the ratification of the then President of the United States; it
+was ratified on the 7th of March, under the unsuspecting impression that it
+had been negotiated in good faith and in the confidence inspired by the
+recommendation of the Senate. The subsequent transactions in relation to
+this treaty will form the subject of a separate communication.
+
+The appropriations made by Congress for public works, as well in the
+construction of fortifications as for purposes of internal improvement, so
+far as they have been expended, have been faithfuly applied. Their progress
+has been delayed by the want of suitable officers for superintending them.
+An increase of both the corps of engineers, military and topographical, was
+recommended by my predecessor at the last session of Congress. The reasons
+upon which that recommendation was founded subsist in all their force and
+have acquired additional urgency since that time. The Military Academy at
+West Point will furnish from the cadets there officers well qualified for
+carrying this measure into effect.
+
+The Board of Engineers for Internal Improvement, appointed for carrying
+into execution the act of Congress of 1824-04-30, "to procure the necessary
+surveys, plans, and estimates on the subject of roads and canals", have
+been actively engaged in that service from the close of the last session of
+Congress. They have completed the surveys necessary for ascertaining the
+practicability of a canal from the Chesapeake Bay to the Ohio River, and
+are preparing a full report on that subject, which, when completed, will be
+laid before you. The same observation is to be made with regard to the two
+other objects of national importance upon which the Board have been
+occupied, namely, the accomplishment of a national road from this city to
+New Orleans, and the practicability of uniting the waters of Lake
+Memphramagog with Connecticut River and the improvement of the navigation
+of that river. The surveys have been made and are nearly completed. The
+report may be expected at an early period during the present session of
+Congress.
+
+The acts of Congress of the last session relative to the surveying,
+marking, or laying out roads in the Territories of Florida, Arkansas, and
+Michigan, from Missouri to Mexico, and for the continuation of the
+Cumberland road, are, some of them, fully executed, and others in the
+process of execution. Those for completing or commencing fortifications
+have been delayed only so far as the Corps of Engineers has been inadequate
+to furnish officers for the necessary superintendence of the works. Under
+the act confirming the statutes of Virginia and Maryland incorporating the
+Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, three commissioners on the part of the
+United States have been appointed for opening books and receiving
+subscriptions, in concert with a like number of commissioners appointed on
+the part of each of those States. A meeting of the commissioners has been
+post-poned, to await the definitive report of the board of engineers.
+
+The light-houses and monuments for the safety of our commerce and mariners,
+the works for the security of Plymouth Beach and for the preservation of
+the islands in Boston Harbor, have received the attention required by the
+laws relating to those objects respectively. The continuation of the
+Cumberland road, the most important of them all, after surmounting no
+inconsiderable difficulty in fixing upon the direction of the road, has
+commenced under the most promising of auspices, with the improvements of
+recent invention in the mode of construction, and with advantage of a great
+reduction in the comparative cost of the work.
+
+The operation of the laws relating to the Revolutionary pensioners may
+deserve the renewed consideration of Congress. The act of 1818-03-18, while
+it made provision for many meritorious and indigent citizens who had served
+in the War of Independence, opened a door to numerous abuses and
+impositions. To remedy this the act of 1820-05-01, exacted proofs of
+absolute indigence, which many really in want were unable and all
+susceptible of that delicacy which is allied to many virtues must be deeply
+reluctant to give. The result has been that some among the least deserving
+have been retained, and some in whom the requisites both of worth and want
+were combined have been stricken from the list. As the numbers of these
+venerable relics of an age gone by diminish; as the decays of body, mind,
+and estate of those that survive must in the common course of nature
+increase, should not a more liberal portion of indulgence be dealt out to
+them? May not the want in most instances be inferred from the demand when
+the service can be proved, and may not the last days of human infirmity be
+spared the mortification of purchasing a pittance of relief only by the
+exposure of its own necessities? I submit to Congress the expediency of
+providing for individual cases of this description by special enactment, or
+of revising the act of 1820-05-01, with a view to mitigate the rigor of its
+exclusions in favor of persons to whom charity now bestowed can scarcely
+discharge the debt of justice.
+
+The portion of the naval force of the Union in actual service has been
+chiefly employed on three stations -- the Mediterranean, the coasts of
+South America bordering on the Pacific Ocean, and the West Indies. An
+occasional cruiser has been sent to range along the African shores most
+polluted by the traffic of slaves; one armed vessel has been stationed on
+the coast of our eastern boundary, to cruise along the fishing grounds in
+Hudsons Bay and on the coast of Labrador, and the first service of a new
+frigate has been performed in restoring to his native soil and domestic
+enjoyments the veteran hero whose youthful blood and treasure had freely
+flowed in the cause of our country's independence, and whose whole life has
+been a series of services and sacrifices to the improvement of his fellow
+men.
+
+The visit of General Lafayette, alike honorable to himself and to our
+country, closed, as it had commenced, with the most affecting testimonials
+of devoted attachment on his part, and of unbounded gratitude of this
+people to him in return. It will form here-after a pleasing incident in the
+annals of our Union, giving to real history the intense interest of romance
+and signally marking the unpurchasable tribute of a great nation's social
+affections to the disinterested champion of the liberties of human-kind.
+
+The constant maintenance of a small squadron in the Mediterranean is a
+necessary substitute for the humiliating alternative of paying tribute for
+the security of our commerce in that sea, and for a precarious peace, at
+the mercy of every caprice of four Barbary States, by whom it was liable to
+be violated. An additional motive for keeping a respectable force stationed
+there at this time is found in the maritime war raging between the Greeks
+and the Turks, and in which the neutral navigation of this Union is always
+in danger of outrage and depredation. A few instances have occurred of such
+depredations upon our merchant vessels by privateers or pirates wearing the
+Grecian flag, but without real authority from the Greek or any other
+Government. The heroic struggles of the Greeks themselves, in which our
+warmest sympathies as free men and Christians have been engaged, have
+continued to be maintained with vicissitudes of success adverse and
+favorable.
+
+Similar motives have rendered expedient the keeping of a like force on the
+coasts of Peru and Chile on the Pacific. The irregular and convulsive
+character of the war upon the shores has been extended to the conflicts
+upon the ocean. An active warfare has been kept up for years with alternate
+success, though generally to the advantage of the American patriots. But
+their naval forces have not always been under the control of their own
+Governments. Blockades, unjustifiable upon any acknowledged principles of
+international law, have been proclaimed by officers in command, and though
+disavowed by the supreme authorities, the protection of our own commerce
+against them has been made cause of complaint and erroneous imputations
+against some of the most gallant officers of our Navy. Complaints equally
+groundless have been made by the commanders of the Spanish royal forces in
+those seas; but the most effective protection to our commerce has been the
+flag and the firmness of our own commanding officers.
+
+The cessation of the war by the complete triumph of the patriot cause has
+removed, it is hoped, all cause of dissension with one party and all
+vestige of force of the other. But an unsettled coast of many degrees of
+latitude forming a part of our own territory and a flourishing commerce and
+fishery extending to the islands of the Pacific and to China still require
+that the protecting power of the Union should be displayed under its flag
+as well upon the ocean as upon the land.
+
+The objects of the West India Squadron have been to carry into execution
+the laws for the suppression of the African slave trade; for the protection
+of our commerce against vessels of piratical character, though bearing
+commissions from either of the belligerent parties; for its protection
+against open and unequivocal pirates. These objects during the present year
+have been accomplished more effectually than at any former period. The
+African slave trade has long been excluded from the use of our flag, and if
+some few citizens of our country have continued to set the laws of the
+Union as well as those of nature and humanity at defiance by persevering in
+that abominable traffic, it has been only by sheltering themselves under
+the banners of other nations less earnest for the total extinction of the
+trade of ours.
+
+The active, persevering, and unremitted energy of Captain Warrington and of
+the officers and men under his command on that trying and perilous service
+have been crowned with signal success, and are entitled to the approbation
+of their country. But experience has shown that not even a temporary
+suspension or relaxation from assiduity can be indulged on that station
+without reproducing piracy and murder in all their horrors; nor is it
+probably that for years to come our immensely valuable commerce in those
+seas can navigate in security without the steady continuance of an armed
+force devoted to its protection.
+
+It were, indeed, a vain and dangerous illusion to believe that in the
+present or probable condition of human society a commerce so extensive and
+so rich as ours could exist and be pursued in safety without the continual
+support of a military marine -- the only arm by which the power of this
+Confederacy can be estimated or felt by foreign nations, and the only
+standing military force which can never be dangerous to our own liberties
+at home. A permanent naval peace establishment, therefore, adapted to our
+present condition, and adaptable to that gigantic growth with which the
+nation is advancing in its career, is among the subjects which have already
+occupied the foresight of the last Congress, and which will deserve your
+serious deliberations. Our Navy, commenced at an early period of our
+present political organization upon a scale commensurate with the incipient
+energies, the scanty resources, and the comparative indigence of our
+infancy, was even then found adequate to cope with all the powers of
+Barbary, save the first, and with one of the principle maritime powers of
+Europe.
+
+At a period of further advancement, but with little accession of strength,
+it not only sustained with honor the most unequal of conflicts, but covered
+itself and our country with unfading glory. But it is only since the close
+of the late war that by the numbers and force of the ships of which it was
+composed it could deserve the name of a navy. Yet it retains nearly the
+same organization as when it consisted only of 5 frigates. The rules and
+regulations by which it is governed earnestly call for revision, and the
+want of a naval school of instruction, corresponding with the Military
+Academy at West Point, for the formation of scientific and accomplished
+officers, is felt with daily increasing aggravation.
+
+The act of Congress of 1824-05-26, authorizing an examination and survey of
+the harbor of Charleston, in South Carolina, of St. Marys, in Georgia, and
+of the coast of Florida, and for other purposes, has been executed so far
+as the appropriation would admit. Those of the 3d of March last,
+authorizing the establishment of a navy yard and depot on the coast of
+Florida, in the Gulf of Mexico, and authorizing the building of ten sloops
+of war, and for other purposes, are in the course of execution, for the
+particulars of which and other objects connected with this Department I
+refer to the report of the Secretary of the Navy, herewith communicated.
+
+A report from the PostMaster General is also submitted, exhibiting the
+present flourishing condition of that Department. For the first time for
+many years the receipts for the year ending on the first of July last
+exceeded the expenditures during the same period to the amount of more than
+$45,000. Other facts equally creditable to the administration of this
+Department are that in two years from 1823-07-01, an improvement of more
+than $185,000 in its pecuniary affairs has been realized; that in the same
+interval the increase of the transportation of the mail has exceeded
+1,500,000 miles annually, and that 1,040 new post offices have been
+established. It hence appears that under judicious management the income
+from this establishment may be relied on as fully adequate to defray its
+expenses, and that by the discontinuance of post roads altogether
+unproductive, others of more useful character may be opened, 'til the
+circulation of the mail shall keep pace with the spread of our population,
+and the comforts of friendly correspondence, the exchanges of internal
+traffic, and the lights of the periodical press shall be distributed to the
+remotest corners of the Union, at a charge scarcely perceptible to any
+individual, and without the cost of a dollar to the public Treasury.
+
+Upon this first occasion of addressing the Legislature of the Union, with
+which I have been honored, in presenting to their view the execution so far
+as it has been effected of the measures sanctioned by them for promoting
+the internal improvement of our country, I can not close the communication
+without recommending to their calm and persevering consideration the
+general principle in a more enlarged extent. The great object of the
+institution of civil government is the improvement of the condition of
+those who are parties to the social compact, and no government, in what
+ever form constituted, can accomplish the lawful ends of its institution
+but in proportion as it improves the condition of those over whom it is
+established. Roads and canals, by multiplying and facilitating the
+communications and intercourse between distant regions and multitudes of
+men, are among the most important means of improvement. But moral,
+political, intellectual improvement are duties assigned by the Author of
+Our Existence to social no less than to individual man.
+
+For the fulfillment of those duties governments are invested with power,
+and to the attainment of the end -- the progressive improvement of the
+condition of the governed -- the exercise of delegated powers is a duty as
+sacred and indispensable as the usurpation of powers not granted is
+criminal and odious.
+
+Among the first, perhaps the very first, instrument for the improvement of
+the condition of men is knowledge, and to the acquisition of much of the
+knowledge adapted to the wants, the comforts, and enjoyments of human life
+public institutions and seminaries of learning are essential. So convinced
+of this was the first of my predecessors in this office, now first in the
+memory, as, living, he was first in the hearts, of our country- men, that
+once and again in his addresses to the Congresses with whom he cooperated
+in the public service he earnestly recommended the establishment of
+seminaries of learning, to prepare for all the emergencies of peace and war
+-- a national university and a military academy. With respect to the
+latter, had he lived to the present day, in turning his eyes to the
+institution at West Point he would have enjoyed the gratification of his
+most earnest wishes; but in surveying the city which has been honored with
+his name he would have seen the spot of earth which he had destined and
+bequeathed to the use and benefit of his country as the site for a
+university still bare and barren.
+
+In assuming her station among the civilized nations of the earth it would
+seem that our country had contracted the engagement to contribute her share
+of mind, of labor, and of expense to the improvement of those parts of
+knowledge which lie beyond the reach of individual acquisition, and
+particularly to geographical and astronomical science. Looking back to the
+history only of the half century since the declaration of our independence,
+and observing the generous emulation with which the Governments of France,
+Great Britain, and Russia have devoted the genius, the intelligence, the
+treasures of their respective nations to the common improvement of the
+species in these branches of science, is it not incumbent upon us to
+inquire whether we are not bound by obligations of a high and honorable
+character to contribute our portion of energy and exertion to the common
+stock? The voyages of discovery prosecuted in the course of that time at
+the expense of those nations have not only redounded to their glory, but to
+the improvement of human knowledge.
+
+We have been partakers of that improvement and owe for it a sacred debt,
+not only of gratitude, but of equal or proportional exertion in the same
+common cause. Of the cost of these undertakings, if the mere expenditures
+of outfit, equipment, and completion of the expeditions were to be
+considered the only charges, it would be unworthy of a great and generous
+nation to take a second thought. One hundred expeditions of
+circumnavigation like those of Cook and La Prouse would not burden the
+exchequer of the nation fitting them out so much as the ways and means of
+defraying a single campaign in war. but if we take into account the lives
+of those benefactors of man-kind of which their services in the cause of
+their species were the purchase, how shall the cost of those heroic
+enterprises be estimated, and what compensation can be made to them or to
+their countries for them? Is it not by bearing them in affectionate
+remembrance? Is it not still more by imitating their example -- by enabling
+country-men of our own to pursue the same career and to hazard their lives
+in the same cause?
+
+In inviting the attention of Congress to the subject of internal
+improvements upon a view thus enlarged it is not my desire to recommend the
+equipment of an expedition for circumnavigating the globe for purposes of
+scientific research and inquiry. We have objects of useful investigation
+nearer home, and to which our cares may be more beneficially applied. The
+interior of our own territories has yet been very imperfectly explored. our
+coasts along many degrees of latitude upon the shores of the Pacific Ocean,
+though much frequented by our spirited commercial navigators, have been
+barely visited by our public ships. The River of the West, first fully
+discovered and navigated by a country-man of our own, still bears the name
+of the ship in which he ascended its waters, and claims the protection of
+our armed national flag at its mouth. With the establishment of a military
+post there or at some other point of that coast, recommended by my
+predecessor and already matured in the deliberations of the last Congress,
+I would suggest the expediency of connecting the equipment of a public ship
+for the exploration of the whole north-west coast of this continent.
+
+The establishment of an uniform standard of weights and measures was one of
+the specific objects contemplated in the formation of our Constitution, and
+to fix that standard was on of the powers delegated by express terms in
+that instrument to Congress. The Governments of Great Britain and France
+have scarcely ceased to be occupied with inquiries and speculations on the
+same subject since the existence of our Constitution, and with them it has
+expanded into profound, laborious, and expensive researches into the figure
+of the earth and the comparative length of the pendulum vibrating seconds
+in various latitudes from the equator to the pole. These researches have
+resulted in the composition and publication of several works highly
+interesting to the cause of science. The experiments are yet in the process
+of performance. Some of them have recently been made on our own shores,
+within the walls of one of our own colleges, and partly by one of our own
+fellow citizens. It would be honorable to our country if the sequel of the
+same experiments should be countenanced by the patronage of our Government,
+as they have hitherto been by those of France and Britain.
+
+Connected with the establishment of an university, or separate from it,
+might be undertaken the erection of an astronomical observatory, with
+provision for the support of an astronomer, to be in constant attendance of
+observation upon the phenomena of the heavens, and for the periodical
+publication of his observances. it is with no feeling of pride as an
+American that the remark may be made that on the comparatively small
+territorial surface of Europe there are existing upward of 130 of these
+light-houses of the skies, while throughout the whole American hemisphere
+there is not one. If we reflect a moment upon the discoveries which in the
+last four centuries have been made in the physical constitution of the
+universe by the means of these buildings and of observers stationed in
+them, shall we doubt of their usefulness to every nation? And while
+scarcely a year passes over our heads without bringing some new
+astronomical discovery to light, which we must fain receive at second hand
+from Europe, are we not cutting ourselves off from the means of returning
+light for light while we have neither observatory nor observer upon our
+half of the globe and the earth revolves in perpetual darkness to our
+unsearching eyes?
+
+When, on 1791-10-25, the first President of the United States announced to
+Congress the result of the first enumeration of the inhabitants of this
+Union, he informed them that the returns gave the pleasing assurance that
+the population of the United States bordered on 4,000,000 persons. At the
+distance of 30 years from that time the last enumeration, 5 years since
+completed, presented a population bordering on 10,000,000. Perhaps of all
+the evidence of a prosperous and happy condition of human society the
+rapidity of the increase of population is the most unequivocal. But the
+demonstration of our prosperity rests not alone upon this indication.
+
+Our commerce, our wealth, and the extent of our territories have increased
+in corresponding proportions, and the number of independent communities
+associated in our Federal Union has since that time nearly doubled. The
+legislative representation of the States and people in the two Houses of
+Congress has grown with the growth of their constituent bodies. The House,
+which then consisted of 65 members, now numbers upward of 200. The Senate,
+which consisted of 26 members, has now 48. But the executive and, still
+more, the judiciary departments are yet in a great measure confined to
+their primitive organization, and are now not adequate to the urgent wants
+of a still growing community.
+
+The naval armaments, which at an early period forced themselves upon the
+necessities of the Union, soon led to the establishment of a Department of
+the Navy. But the Departments of Foreign Affairs and of the Interior, which
+early after the formation of the Government had been united in one,
+continue so united to this time, to the unquestionable detriment of the
+public service. The multiplication of our relations with the nations and
+Governments of the Old World has kept pace with that of our population and
+commerce, while within the last 10 years a new family of nations in our own
+hemisphere has arisen among the inhabitants of the earth, with whom our
+intercourse, commercial and political, would of itself furnish occupation
+to an active and industrious department.
+
+The constitution of the judiciary, experimental and imperfect as it was
+even in the infancy of our existing Government, is yet more inadequate to
+the administration of national justice at our present maturity. Nine years
+have elapsed since a predecessor in this office, now not the last, the
+citizen who, perhaps, of all others throughout the Union contributed most
+to the formation and establishment of our Constitution, in his valedictory
+address to Congress, immediately preceding his retirement from public life,
+urgently recommended the revision of the judiciary and the establishment of
+an additional executive department. The exigencies of the public service
+and its unavoidable deficiencies, as now in exercise, have added yearly
+cumulative weight to the considerations presented by him as persuasive to
+the measure, and in recommending it to your deliberations I am happy to
+have the influence of this high authority in aid of the undoubting
+convictions of my own experience.
+
+The laws relating to the administration of the Patent Office are deserving
+of much consideration and perhaps susceptible of some improvement. The
+grant of power to regulate the action of Congress upon this subject has
+specified both the end to be obtained and the means by which it is to be
+effected, "to promote the progress of science and useful arts by securing
+for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their
+respective writings and discoveries". If an honest pride might be indulged
+in the reflection that on the records of that office are already found
+inventions the usefulness of which has scarcely been transcended in the
+annals of human ingenuity, would not its exultation be allayed by the
+inquiry whether the laws have effectively insured to the inventors the
+reward destined to them by the Constitution -- even a limited term of
+exclusive right to their discoveries?
+
+On 1799-12-24, it was resolved by Congress that a marble monument should be
+erected by the United States in the Capitol at the city of Washington; that
+the family of General Washington should be requested to permit his body to
+be deposited under it, and that the monument be so designed as to
+commemorate the great events of his military and political life. In
+reminding Congress of this resolution and that the monument contemplated by
+it remains yet without execution, I shall indulge only the remarks that the
+works at the Capitol are approaching to completion; that the consent of the
+family, desired by the resolution, was requested and obtained; that a
+monument has been recently erected in this city over the remains of another
+distinguished patriot of the Revolution, and that a spot has been reserved
+within the walls where you are deliberating for the benefit of this and
+future ages, in which the mortal remains may be deposited of him whose
+spirit hovers over you and listens with delight to every act of the
+representatives of his nation which can tend to exalt and adorn his and
+their country.
+
+The Constitution under which you are assembled is a charter of limited
+powers. After full and solemn deliberation upon all or any of the objects
+which, urged by an irresistible sense of my own duty, I have recommended to
+your attention should you come to the conclusion that, however desirable in
+themselves, the enactment of laws for effecting them would transcend the
+powers committed to you by that venerable instrument which we are all bound
+to support, let no consideration induce you to assume the exercise of
+powers not granted to you by the people.
+
+But if the power to exercise exclusive legislation in all cases what so
+ever over the District of Columbia; if the power to lay and collect taxes,
+duties, imposts, and excises, to pay the debts and provide for the common
+defense and general welfare of the United States; if the power to regulate
+commerce with foreign nations and among the several States and with the
+Indian tribes, to fix the standard of weights and measures, to establish
+post offices and post roads, to declare war, to raise and support armies,
+to provide and maintain a navy, to dispose of and make all needful rules
+and regulations respecting the territory or other property belonging to the
+United States, and to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for
+carrying these powers into execution -- if these powers and others
+enumerated in the Constitution may be effectually brought into action by
+laws promoting the improvement of agriculture, commerce, and manufactures,
+the cultivation and encouragement of the mechanic and of the elegant arts,
+the advancement of literature, and the progress of the sciences, ornamental
+and profound, to refrain from exercising them for the benefit of the people
+themselves would be to hide in the earth the talent committed to our charge
+-- would be treachery to the most sacred of trusts.
+
+The spirit of improvement is abroad upon the earth. It stimulates the
+hearts and sharpens the faculties not of our fellow citizens alone, but of
+the nations of Europe and of their rulers. While dwelling with pleasing
+satisfaction upon the superior excellence of our political institutions,
+let us not be unmindful that liberty is power; that the nation blessed with
+the largest portion of liberty must in proportion to its numbers be the
+most powerful nation upon earth, and that the tenure of power by man is, in
+the moral purposes of his Creator, upon condition that it shall be
+exercised to ends of beneficence, to improve the condition of himself and
+his fellow men.
+
+While foreign nations less blessed with that freedom which is power than
+ourselves are advancing with gigantic strides in the career of public
+improvement, were we to slumber in indolence or fold up our arms and
+proclaim to the world that we are palsied by the will of our constituents,
+would it not be to cast away the bounties of Providence and doom ourselves
+to perpetual inferiority? In the course of the year now drawing to its
+close we have beheld, under the auspices and at the expense of one State of
+this Union, a new university unfolding its portals to the sons of science
+and holding up the torch of human improvement to eyes that seek the light.
+We have seen under the persevering and enlightened enterprise of another
+State the waters of our Western lakes mingle with those of the ocean. If
+undertakings like these have been accomplished in the compass of a few
+years by the authority of single members of our Confederation, can we, the
+representative authorities of the whole Union, fall behind our fellow
+servants in the exercise of the trust committed to us for the benefit of
+our common sovereign by the accomplishment of works important to the whole
+and to which neither the authority nor the resources of any one State can
+be adequate?
+
+Finally, fellow citizens, I shall await with cheering hope and faithful
+cooperation the result of your deliberations, assured that, without
+encroaching upon the powers reserved to the authorities of the respective
+States or to the people, you will, with a due sense of your obligations to
+your country and of the high responsibilities weighing upon yourselves,
+give efficacy to the means committed to you for the common good. And may He
+who searches the hearts of the children of men prosper your exertions to
+secure the blessings of peace and promote the highest welfare of your
+country. JOHN QUNICY ADAMS
+
+***
+
+State of the Union Address
+John Quincy Adams
+December 5, 1826
+
+Fellow Citizens of the Senate and of the House of Representatives:
+
+The assemblage of the representatives of our Union in both Houses of the
+Congress at this time occurs under circumstances calling for the renewed
+homage of our grateful acknowledgments to the Giver of All Good. With the
+exceptions incidental to the most felicitous condition of human existence,
+we continue to be highly favored in all the elements which contribute to
+individual comfort and to national prosperity. In the survey of our
+extensive country we have generally to observe abodes of health and regions
+of plenty. In our civil and political relations we have peace without and
+tranquillity within our borders. We are, as a people, increasing with
+unabated rapidity in population, wealth, and national resources, and
+whatever differences of opinion exist among us with regard to the mode and
+the means by which we shall turn the beneficence of Heaven to the
+improvement of our own condition, there is yet a spirit animating us all
+which will not suffer the bounties of Providence to be showered upon us in
+vain, but will receive them with grateful hearts, and apply them with
+unwearied hands to the advancement of the general good.
+
+Of the subjects recommended to Congress at their last session, some were
+then definitively acted upon. Others, left unfinished, but partly matured,
+will recur to your attention without needing a renewal of notice from me.
+The purpose of this communication will be to present to your view the
+general aspect of our public affairs at this moment and the measures which
+have been taken to carry into effect the intentions of the Legislature as
+signified by the laws then and heretofore enacted.
+
+In our intercourse with the other nations of the earth we have still the
+happiness of enjoying peace and a general good understanding, qualified,
+however, in several important instances by collisions of interest and by
+unsatisfied claims of justice, to the settlement of which the
+constitutional interposition of the legislative authority may become
+ultimately indispensable.
+
+By the decease of the Emperor Alexander of Russia, which occurred
+contemporaneously with the commencement of the last session of Congress,
+the United States have been deprived of a long tried, steady, and faithful
+friend. Born to the inheritance of absolute power and trained in the school
+of adversity, from which no power on earth, however absolute, is exempt,
+that monarch from his youth had been taught to feel the force and value of
+public opinion and to be sensible that the interests of his own Government
+would best be promoted by a frank and friendly intercourse with this
+Republic, as those of his people would be advanced by a liberal intercourse
+with our country. A candid and confidential interchange of sentiments
+between him and the Government of the US upon the affairs of Southern
+America took place at a period not long preceding his demise, and
+contributed to fix that course of policy which left to the other
+Governments of Europe no alternative but that of sooner or later
+recognizing the independence of our southern neighbors, of which the
+example had by the United States already been set.
+
+The ordinary diplomatic communications between his successor, the Emperor
+Nicholas, and the United States have suffered some interruption by the
+illness, departure, and subsequent decease of his minister residing here,
+who enjoyed, as he merited, the entire confidence of his new sovereign, as
+he had eminently responded to that of his predecessor. But we have had the
+most satisfactory assurances that the sentiments of the reigning Emperor
+toward the United States are altogether conformable to those which had so
+long and constantly animated his imperial brother, and we have reason to
+hope that they will serve to cement that harmony and good understanding
+between the two nations which, founded in congenial interests, can not but
+result in the advancement of the welfare and prosperity of both.
+
+Our relations of commerce and navigation with France are, by the operation
+of the convention of 1822-06-24, with that nation, in a state of gradual
+and progressive improvement. Convinced by all our experience, no less than
+by the principles of fair and liberal reciprocity which the United States
+have constantly tendered to all the nations of the earth as the rule of
+commercial intercourse which they would universally prefer, that fair and
+equal competition is most conducive to the interests of both parties, the
+United States in the negotiation of that convention earnestly contended for
+a mutual renunciation of discriminating duties and charges in the ports of
+the two countries. Unable to obtain the immediate recognition of this
+principle in its full extent, after reducing the duties of discrimination
+so far as was found attainable it was agreed that at the expiration of two
+years from 1822-10-01, when the convention was to go into effect, unless a
+notice of 6 months on either side should be given to the other that the
+convention itself must terminate, those duties should be reduced 1/4, and
+that this reducation should be yearly repeated, until all discrimination
+should cease, while the convention itself should continue in force. By the
+effect of this stipulation 3/4 of the discriminating duties which had been
+levied by each party upon the vessels of the other in its ports have
+already been removed; and on the first of next October, should the
+convention be still in force, the remaining 1/4 will be discontinued.
+French vessels laden with French produce will be received in our ports on
+the same terms as our own, and ours in return will enjoy the same
+advantages in the ports of France.
+
+By these approximations to an equality of duties and of charges not only
+has the commerce between the two countries prospered, but friendly
+dispositions have been on both sides encouraged and promoted. They will
+continue to be cherished and cultivated on the part of the United States.
+It would have been gratifying to have had it in my power to add that the
+claims upon the justice of the French Government, involving the property
+and the comfortable subsistence of many of our fellow citizens, and which
+have been so long and so earnestly urged, were in a more promising train of
+adjustment than at your last meeting; but their condition remains
+unaltered.
+
+With the Government of the Netherlands the mutual abandonment of
+discriminating duties had been regulated by legislative acts on both sides.
+The act of Congress of 1818-04-20, abolished all discriminating duties of
+impost and tonnage upon the vessels and produce of the Netherlands in the
+ports of the United States upon the assurance given by the Government of
+the Netherlands that all such duties operating against the shipping and
+commerce of the United States in that Kingdom had been abolished. These
+reciprocal regulations had continued in force several years when the
+discriminating principle was resumed by the Netherlands in a new and
+indirect form by a bounty of 10% in the shape of a return of duties to
+their national vessels, and in which those of the United States are not
+permitted to participate. By the act of Congress of 1824-01-07, all
+discriminating duties in the United States were again suspended, so far as
+related to the vessels and produce of the Netherlands, so long as the
+reciprocal exemption should be extended to the vessels and produce of the
+United States in the Netherlands. But the same act provides that in the
+event of a restoration of discriminating duties to operate against the
+shipping and commerce of the United States in any of the foreign countries
+referred to therein the suspension of discriminating duties in favor of the
+navigation of such foreign country should cease and all the provisions of
+the acts imposing discriminating foreign tonnage and impost duties in the
+United States should revive and be in full force with regard to that
+nation.
+
+In the correspondence with the Government of the Netherlands upon this
+subject they have contended that the favor shown to their own shipping by
+this bounty upon their tonnage is not to be considered a discriminating
+duty; but it can not be denied that it produces all the same effects. Had
+the mutual abolition been stipulated by treaty, such a bounty upon the
+national vessels could scarcely have been granted consistent with good
+faith. Yet as the act of Congress of 1824-01-07 has not expressly
+authorized the Executive authority to determine what shall be considered as
+a revival of discriminating duties by a foreign government to the
+disadvantage of the United States, and as the retaliatory measure on our
+part, however just and necessary, may tend rather to that conflict of
+legislation which we deprecate than to that concert to which we invite all
+commercial nations, as most conducive to their interest and our own, I have
+thought it more consistent with the spirit of our institutions to refer to
+the subject again to the paramount authority of the Legislature to decide
+what measure the emergency may require than abruptly by proclamation to
+carry into effect the minatory provisions of the act of 1824.
+
+During the last session of Congress treaties of amity, navigation, and
+commerce were negotiated and signed at this place with the Government of
+Denmark, in Europe, and with the Federation of Central America, in this
+hemisphere. These treaties then received the constitutional sanction of the
+Senate, by the advice and consent to their ratification. They were
+accordingly ratified on the part of the US, and during the recess of
+Congress have been also ratified by the other respective contracting
+parties. The ratifications have been exchanged, and they have been
+published by proclamations, copies of which are herewith communicated to
+Congress.
+
+These treaties have established between the contracting parties the
+principles of equality and reciprocity in their broadest and most liberal
+extent, each party admitting the vessels of the other into its ports, laden
+with cargoes the produce or manufacture of any quarter of the globe, upon
+the payment of the same duties of tonnage and impost that are chargeable
+upon their own. They have further stipulated that the parties shall
+hereafter grant no favor of navigation or commerce to any other nation
+which shall not upon the same terms be granted to each other, and that
+neither party will impose upon articles of merchandise the produce or
+manufacture of the other any other or higher duties than upon the like
+articles being the produce or manufacture of any other country. To these
+principles there is in the convention with Denmark an exception with regard
+to the colonies of that Kingdom in the arctic seas, but none with regard to
+her colonies in the West Indies.
+
+In the course of the last summer the term to which our last commercial
+treaty with Sweden was limited has expired. A continuation of it is in the
+contemplation of the Swedish Government, and is believed to be desirable on
+the part of the United States. It has been proposed by the King of Sweden
+that pending the negotiation of renewal the expired treaty should be
+mutually considered as still in force, a measure which will require the
+sanction of Congress to be carried into effect on our part, and which I
+therefore recommend to your consideration.
+
+With Prussia, Spain, Portugal, and, in general, all the European powers
+between whom and the United States relations of friendly intercourse have
+existed their condition has not materially varied since the last session of
+Congress. I regret not to be able to say the same of our commercial
+intercourse with the colonial possessions of Great Britain in America.
+Negotiations of the highest importance to our common interests have been
+for several years in discussion between the two Governments, and on the
+part of the United States have been invariably pursued in the spirit of
+candor and conciliation. Interests of great magnitude and delicacy had been
+adjusted by the conventions of 1815 and 1818, while that of 1822, mediated
+by the late Emperor Alexander, had promised a satisfactory compromise of
+claims which the Government of the US, in justice to the rights of a
+numerous class of their citizens, was bound to sustain.
+
+But with regard to the commercial intercourse between the United States and
+the British colonies in America, it has been hitherto found impracticable
+to bring the parties to an understanding satisfactory to both. The relative
+geographical position and the respective products of nature cultivated by
+human industry had constituted the elements of a commercial intercourse
+between the United States and British America, insular and continental,
+important to the inhabitants of both countries; but it had been interdicted
+by Great Britain upon a principle heretofore practiced upon by the
+colonizing nations of Europe, of holding the trade of their colonies each
+in exclusive monopoly to herself.
+
+After the termination of the late war this interdiction had been revived,
+and the British Government declined including this portion of our
+intercourse with her possessions in the negotiation of the convention of
+1815. The trade was then carried on exclusively in British vessels 'til the
+act of Congress, concerning navigation, of 1818 and the supplemental act of
+1820 met the interdict by a corresponding measure on the part of the United
+States. These measures, not of retaliation, but of necessary self defense,
+were soon succeeded by an act of Parliament opening certain colonial ports
+to the vessels of the United States coming directly from them, and to the
+importation from them of certain articles of our produce burdened with
+heavy duties, and excluding some of the most valuable articles of our
+exports. The United States opened their ports to British vessels from the
+colonies upon terms as exactly corresponding with those of the act of
+Parliament as in the relative position of the parties could be made, and a
+negotiation was commenced by mutual consent, with the hope on our part that
+a reciprocal spirit of accommodation and a common sentiment of the
+importance of the trade to the interests of the inhabitants of the two
+countries between whom it must be carried on would ultimately bring the
+parties to a compromise with which both might be satisfied. With this view
+the Government of the United States had determined to sacrifice something
+of that entire reciprocity which in all commercial arrangements with
+foreign powers they are entitled to demand, and to acquiesce in some
+inequalities disadvantageous to ourselves rather than to forego the benefit
+of a final and permanent adjustment of this interest to the satisfaction of
+Great Britain herself. The negotiation, repeatedly suspended by accidental
+circumstances, was, however, by mutual agreement and express assent,
+considered as pending and to be speedily resumed.
+
+In the mean time another act of Parliament, so doubtful and ambiguous in
+its import as to have been misunderstood by the officers in the colonies
+who were to carry it into execution, opens again certain colonial ports
+upon new conditions and terms, with a threat to close them against any
+nation which may not accept those terms as prescribed by the British
+Government. This act, passed 1825-07, not communicated to the Government of
+the US, not understood by the British officers of the customs in the
+colonies where it was to be enforced, was never the less submitted to the
+consideration of Congress at their last session. With the knowledge that a
+negotiation upon the subject had long been in progress and pledges given of
+its resumption at an early day, it was deemed expedient to await the result
+of that negotiation rather than to subscribe implicitly to terms the import
+of which was not clear and which the British authorities themselves in this
+hemisphere were not prepared to explain.
+
+Immediately after the close of the last session of Congress one of our most
+distinguished citizens was dispatched as envoy extraordinary and minister
+plenipotentiary to Great Britain, furnished with instructions which we
+could not doubt would lead to a conclusion of this long controverted
+interest upon terms acceptable to Great Britain. Upon his arrival, and
+before he had delivered his letters of credence, he was bet by an order of
+the British council excluding from and after the first of December now
+current the vessels of the United States from all the colonial British
+ports excepting those immediately bordering on our territories. In answer
+to his expostulations upon a measure thus unexpected he is informed that
+according to the ancient maxims of policy of European nations having
+colonies their trade is an exclusive possession of the mother country; that
+all participation in it by other nations is a boon or favor not forming a
+subject of negotiation, but to be regulated by the legislative acts of the
+power owning the colony; that the British Government therefore declines
+negotiating concerning it, and that as the US did not forthwith accept
+purely and simply the terms offered by the act of Parliament of 1825-07,
+Great Britain would not now admit the vessels of the United States even
+upon the terms on which she has opened them to the navigation of other
+nations.
+
+We have been accustomed to consider the trade which we have enjoyed with
+the British colonies rather as an interchange of mutual benefits than as a
+mere favor received; that under every circumstance we have given an ample
+equivalent. We have seen every other nation holding colonies negotiate with
+other nations and grant them freely admission to the colonies by treaty,
+and so far are the other colonizing nations of Europe now from refusing to
+negotiate for trade with their colonies that we ourselves have secured
+access to the colonies of more than one of them by treaty. The refusal,
+however, of Great Britain to negotiate leaves to the United States no other
+alternative than that of regulating or interdicting altogether the trade on
+their part, according as either measure may effect the interests of our own
+country, and with that exclusive object I would recommend the whole subject
+to your calm and candid deliberations.
+
+It is hoped that our unavailing exertions to accomplish a cordial good
+understanding on this interest will not have an unpropitious effect upon
+the other great topics of discussion between the two Governments. Our
+north-eastern and north-western boundaries are still unadjusted. The
+commissioners under the 7th article of the treaty of Ghent have nearly come
+to the close of their labors; nor can we renounce the expectation,
+enfeebled as it is, that they may agree upon their report to the
+satisfaction or acquiescence of both parties. The commission for
+liquidating the claims for indemnity for slaves carried away after the
+close of the war has been sitting, with doubtful prospects of success.
+Propositions of compromise have, however, passed between the two
+Governments, the result of which we flatter ourselves may yet prove
+unsatisfactory. Our own dispositions and purposes toward Great Britain are
+all friendly and conciliatory; nor can we abandon but with strong
+reluctance the belief that they will ultimately meet a return, not of
+favors, which we neither as nor desire, but of equal reciprocity and good
+will.
+
+With the American Governments of this hemisphere we continue to maintain an
+intercourse altogether friendly, and between their nations and ours that
+commercial interchange of which mutual benefit is the source of mutual
+comfort and harmony the result is in a continual state of improvement. The
+war between Spain and them since the total expulsion of the Spanish
+military force from their continental territories has been little more than
+nominal, and their internal tranquillity, though occasionally menaced by
+the agitations which civil wars never fail to leave behind them, has not
+been affected by any serious calamity.
+
+The congress of ministers from several of those nations which assembled at
+Panama, after a short session there, adjourned to meet again at a more
+favorable season in the neighborhood of Mexico. The decease of one of our
+ministers on his way to the Isthmus, and the impediments of the season,
+which delayed the departure of the other, deprived United States of the
+advantage of being represented at the first meeting of the congress. There
+is, however, no reason to believe that any transactions of the congress
+were of a nature to affect injuriously the interests of the United States
+or to require the interposition of our ministers had they been present.
+Their absence has, indeed, deprived United States of the opportunity of
+possessing precise and authentic information of the treaties which were
+concluded at Panama; and the whole result has confirmed me in the
+conviction of the expediency to the United States of being represented at
+the congress. The surviving member of the mission, appointed during your
+last session, has accordingly proceeded to his destination, and a successor
+to his distinguished and lamented associate will be nominated to the
+Senate. A treaty of amity, navigation, and commerce has in the course of
+the last summer been concluded by our minister plenipotentiary at Mexico
+with the united states of that Confederacy, which will also be laid before
+the Senate for their advice with regard to its ratification.
+
+In adverting to the present condition of our fiscal concerns and to the
+prospects of our revenue the first remark that calls our attention is that
+they are less exuberantly prosperous than they were at the corresponding
+period of the last year. The severe shock so extensively sustained by the
+commercial and manufacturing interests in Great Britain has not been
+without a perceptible recoil upon ourselves. A reduced importation from
+abroad is necessarily succeeded by a reduced return to the Treasury at
+home. The net revenue of the present year will not equal that of the last,
+and the receipts of that which is to come will fall short of those in the
+current year. The diminution, however, is in part attributable to the
+flourishing condition of some of our domestic manufactures, and so far is
+compensated by an equivalent more profitable to the nation.
+
+It is also highly gratifying to perceive that the deficiency in the
+revenue, while it scarcely exceeds the anticipations of the last year's
+estimate from the Treasury, has not interrupted the application of more
+than $11M during the present year to the discharge of the principal and
+interest of the debt, nor the reduction of upward of $7,000,000 of the
+capital of the debt itself. The balance in the Treasury on the first of
+January last was $5,201,650.43; the receipts from that time to the 30th of
+September last were $19,585,932.50; the receipts of the current quarter,
+estimated at $6,000,000, yield, with the sums already received, a revenue
+of about $25,500,000 for the year; the expenditures for the first 3
+quarters of the year have amounted to $18,714,226.66; the expenditures of
+the current quarter are expected, including the $2,000,000 of the principal
+of the debt to be paid, to balance the receipts; so that the expense of the
+year, amounting to upward of $1,000,000 less than its income, will leave a
+proportionally increased balance in the Treasury on 1827-01-01, over that
+of the first of January last; instead of $5,200,000 there will be
+$6,400,000.
+
+The amount of duties secured on merchandise imported from the commence of
+the year 'til September 30 is estimated at $21,250,000, and the amount that
+will probably accrue during the present quarter is estimated at $4,250,000,
+making for the whole year $25,500,000, from which the draw-backs being
+deducted will leave a clear revenue from the customs receivable in the year
+1827 of about $20,400,000, which, with the sums to be received from the
+proceeds of public lands, the bank dividends, and other incidental
+receipts, will form an aggregate of about $23,000,000, a sum falling short
+of the whole expenses of the present year little more than the portion of
+those expenditures applied to the discharge of the public debt beyond the
+annual appropriation of $10,000,000 by the act of 1817-03-03. At the
+passage of that act the public debt amounted to $123,500,000. On the first
+of January next it will be short of $74,000,000. In the lapse of these 10
+years $50,000,000 of public debt, with the annual charge of upward of
+$3,000,000 of interest upon them, have been extinguished. At the passage of
+tat act, of the annual appropriation of $10,000,000, $7,000,000 were
+absorbed in the payment of interest, and not more than $3,000,000 went to
+reduce the capital of the debt. Of the same $10,000,000, at this time
+scarcely $4,000,000 are applicable to the interest and upward of $6,000,000
+are effective in melting down the capital.
+
+Yet our experience has proved that a revenue consisting so largely of
+imposts and tonnage ebbs and flows to an extraordinary extent, with all the
+fluctuations incident to the general commerce of the world. It is within
+our recollection that even in the compass of the same last 10 years the
+receipts of the Treasury were not adequate to the expenditures of the year,
+and that in two successive years it was found necessary to resort to loans
+to meet the engagements of the nation. The returning tides of the
+succeeding years replenished the public coffers until they have again begun
+to feel the vicissitude of a decline. To produce these alternations of
+fullness and exhaustion the relative operation of abundant or unfruitful
+seasons, the regulations of foreign governments, political revolutions, the
+prosperous or decaying condition of manufactures, commercial speculations,
+and many other causes, not always to be traced, variously combine.
+
+We have found the alternate swells and diminutions embracing periods of
+from two to three years. The last period of depression to United States was
+from 1819 to 1822. The corresponding revival was from 1823 to the
+commencement of the present year. Still, we have no cause to apprehend a
+depression comparable to that of the former period, or even to anticipate a
+deficiency which will intrench upon the ability to apply the annual $10M to
+the reduction of the debt. It is well for us, however, to be admonished of
+the necessity of abiding by the maxims of the most vigilant economy, and of
+resorting to all honorable and useful expedients for pursuing with steady
+and inflexible perseverance the total discharge of the debt.
+
+Besides the $7,000,000 of the loans of 1813 which will have been discharged
+in the course of the present year, there are $9,000,000 which by the terms
+of the contracts would have been and are now redeemable. $13,000,000 more
+of the loan of 1814 will become redeemable from and after the expiration of
+the present month, and $9,000,000 other from and after the close of the
+ensuing year. They constitute a mass of $31,000,000, all bearing an
+interest of 6%, more than $20,000,000 of which will be immediately
+redeemable, and the rest within little more than a year. Leaving of this
+amount $15,000,000 to continue at the interest of 6%, but to be paid off as
+far as shall be found practicable in the years 1827 and 1828, there is
+scarcely a doubt that the remaining $16,000,000 might within a few months
+be discharged by a loan at not exceeding 5%, redeemable in the years 1829
+and 1830. By this operation a sum of nearly $500,000 may be saved to the
+nation, and the discharge of the whole $31,000,000 within the 4 years may
+be greatly facilitated if not wholly accomplished.
+
+By an act of Congress of 1835-03-03, a loan for the purpose now referred
+to, or a subscription to stock, was authorized, at an interest not
+exceeding 4.5%. But at that time so large a portion of the floating capital
+of the country was absorbed in commercial speculations and so little was
+left for investment in the stocks that the measure was but partially
+successful. At the last session of Congress the condition of the funds was
+still unpropitious to the measure; but the change so soon afterwards
+occurred that, had the authority existed to redeem the $9M now redeemable
+by an exchange of stocks or a loan at 5%, it is morally certain that it
+might have been effected, and with it a yearly saving of $90,000.
+
+With regard to the collection of the revenue of imposts, certain
+occurrences have within the last year been disclosed in one or two of our
+principal ports, which engaged the attention of Congress at their last
+session and may hereafter require further consideration. Until within a
+very few years the execution of the laws for raising the revenue, like that
+of all our other laws, has been insured more by the moral sense of the
+community than by the rigors of a jealous precaution or by penal sanction.
+Confiding in the exemplary punctuality and unsullied integrity of our
+importing merchants, a gradual relaxation from the provisions of the
+collection laws, a close adherence to which have caused inconvenience and
+expense to them, had long become habitual, and indulgences had been
+extended universally because they had never been abused. It may be worthy
+of your serious consideration whether some further legislative provision
+may not be necessary to come in aid of this state of unguarded security.
+
+From the reports herewith communicated of the Secretaries of War and of the
+Navy, with the subsidiary documents annexed to them, will be discovered the
+present condition and administration of our military establishment on the
+land and on the sea. The organization of the Army having undergone no
+change since its reduction to the present peace establishment in 1821, it
+remains only to observe that it is yet found adequate to all the purposes
+for which a permanent armed force in time of peace can be needed or useful.
+It may be proper to add that, from a difference of opinion between the late
+President of the United States and the Senate with regard to the
+construction of the act of Congress of 1821-03-02, to reduce and fix the
+military peace establishment of the US, it remains hitherto so far without
+execution that no colonel has been appointed to command one of the
+regiments of artillery. A supplementary or explanatory act of the
+Legislature appears to be the only expedient practicable for removing the
+difficulty of this appointment.
+
+In a period of profound peace the conduct of the mere military
+establishment forms but a very inconsiderable portion of the duties
+devolving upon the administration of the Department of War. It will be seen
+by the returns from the subordinate departments of the Army that every
+branch of the service is marked with order, regularity, and discipline;
+that from the commanding general through all the gradations of
+superintendence the officers feel themselves to have been citizens before
+they were soldiers, and that the glory of a republican army must consist in
+the spirit of freedom, by which it is animated, and of patriotism, by which
+it is impelled. It may be confidently stated that the moral character of
+the Army is in a state of continual improvement, and that all the
+arrangements for the disposal of its parts have a constant reference to
+that end.
+
+But to the War Department are attributed other duties, having, indeed,
+relation to a future possible condition of war, but being purely defensive,
+and in their tendency contributing rather to the security and permanency of
+peace -- the erection of the fortifications provided for by Congress, and
+adapted to secure our shores from hostile invasion; the distribution of the
+fund of public gratitude and justice to the pensioners of the Revolutionary
+war; the maintenance of our relations of peace and protection with the
+Indian tribes, and the internal improvements and surveys for the location
+of roads and canals, which during the last 3 sessions of Congress have
+engaged so much of their attention, and may engross so large a share of
+their future benefactions to our country.
+
+By the act of 1824-04-30, suggested and approved by my predecessor, the sum
+of $30K was appropriated for the purpose of causing to be made the
+necessary surveys, plans, and estimates of the routes of such roads and
+canals as the President of the United States might deem of national
+importance in a commercial or military point of view, or necessary for the
+transportation of the public mail. The surveys, plans, and estimates for
+each, when completed, will be laid before Congress.
+
+In execution of this act a board of engineers was immediately instituted,
+and have been since most assiduously and constantly occupied in carrying it
+into effect. The first object to which their labors were directed, by order
+of the late President, was the examination of the country between the tide
+waters of the Potomac, the Ohio, and Lake Erie, to ascertain the
+practicability of a communication between them, to designate the most
+suitable route for the same, and to form plans and estimates in detail of
+the expense of execution.
+
+On 1825-02-03, they made their first report, which was immediately
+communicated to Congress, and in which they declared that having maturely
+considered the circumstances observed by them personally, and carefully
+studied the results of such of the preliminary surveys as were then
+completed, they were decidedly of opinion that the communication was
+practicable.
+
+At the last session of Congress, before the board of engineers were enabled
+to make up their second report containing a general plan and preparatory
+estimate for the work, the Committee of the House of Representatives upon
+Roads and Canals closed the session with a report expressing the hope that
+the plan and estimate of the board of engineers might at this time be
+prepared, and that the subject be referred to the early and favorable
+consideration of Congress at their present session. That expected report of
+the board of engineers is prepared, and will forthwith be laid before you.
+
+Under the resolution of Congress authorizing the Secretary of War to have
+prepared a complete system of cavalry tactics, and a system of exercise and
+instruction of field artillery, for the use of the militia of the US, to be
+reported to Congress at the present session, a board of distinguished
+officers of the Army and of the militia has been convened, whose report
+will be submitted to you with that of the Secretary of War. The occasion
+was thought favorable for consulting the same board, aided by the results
+of a correspondence with the governors of the several States and
+Territories and other citizens of intelligence and experience, upon the
+acknowledged defective condition of our militia system, and of the
+improvements of which it is susceptible. The report of the board upon this
+subject is also submitted for your consideration.
+
+In the estimates of appropriations for the ensuing year upward of $5M will
+be submitted for the expenditures to be paid from the Department of War.
+Less than 2/5 of this will be applicable to the maintenance and support of
+the Army. $1,500,000, in the form of pensions, goes as a scarcely adequate
+tribute to the services and sacrifices of a former age, and a more than
+equal sum invested in fortifications, or for the preparations of internal
+improvement, provides for the quiet, the comfort, and happier existence of
+the ages to come. The appropriations to indemnify those unfortunate
+remnants of another race unable alike to share in the enjoyments and to
+exist in the presence of civilization, though swelling in recent years to a
+magnitude burdensome to the Treasury, are generally not without their
+equivalents in profitable value, or serve to discharge the Union from
+engagements more burdensome than debt.
+
+In like manner the estimate of appropriations for the Navy Department will
+present an aggregate sum of upward of $3,000,000M. About half of these,
+however, covers the current expenditures of the Navy in actual service, and
+half constitutes a fund of national property, the pledge of our future
+glory and defense. It was scarcely one short year after the close of the
+late war, and when the burden of its expenses and charges was weighing
+heaviest upon the country, that Congress, by the act of 1816-04-29,
+appropriated $1,000,000 annually for 8 years to the *gradual increase of
+the Navy*. At a subsequent period this annual appropriation was reduced to
+$0,500,000 for 6 years, of which the present year is the last. A yet more
+recent appropriation the last two years, for building 10 sloops of war, has
+nearly restored the original appropriation of 1816 of $1,000,000 for every
+year.
+
+The result is before United States all. We have 12 line-of-battle ships, 20
+frigates, and sloops of war in proportion, which, with a few months
+preparation, may present a line of floating fortifications along the whole
+range of our coast ready to meet any invader who might attempt to set foot
+upon our shores. Combining with a system of fortifications upon the shores
+themselves, commenced about the same time under the auspices of my
+immediate predecessor, and hitherto systematically pursued, it has placed
+in our possession the most effective sinews of war and has left us at once
+an example and a lesson from which our own duties may be inferred.
+
+The gradual increase of the Navy was the principle of which the act of
+1816-04-29, was the first development. It was the introduction of a system
+to act upon the character and history of our country for an indefinite
+series of ages. It was a declaration of that Congress to their constituents
+and to posterity that it was the destiny and the duty of these confederated
+States to become in regular process of time and by no petty advances a
+great naval power. That which they proposed to accomplish in 8 years is
+rather to be considered as the measure of their means that the limitation
+of their design. They looked forward for a term of years sufficient for the
+accomplishment of a definite portion of their purpose, and they left to
+their successors to fill up the canvas of which they had traced the large
+and prophetic outline. The ships of the line and frigates which they had in
+contemplation will be shortly completed. The time which they had allotted
+for the accomplishment of the work has more than elapsed. It remains for
+your consideration how their successors may contribute their portion of
+toil and of treasure for the benefit of the succeeding age in the gradual
+increase of our Navy.
+
+There is perhaps no part of the exercise of the constitutional powers of
+the Federal Government which has given more general satisfaction to the
+people of the Union than this. The system has not been thus vigorously
+introduced and hitherto sustained to be now departed from or abandoned. In
+continuing to provide for the gradual increase of the Navy it may not be
+necessary or expedient to add for the present any more to the number of our
+ships; but should you deem it advisable to continue the yearly
+appropriation of $0.5M to the same objects, it may be profitably expended
+in a providing a supply of timber to be seasoned and other materials for
+future use in the construction of docks or in laying the foundations of a
+school for naval education, as to the wisdom of Congress either of those
+measures may appear to claim the preference.
+
+Of the small portions of this Navy engaged in actual service during the
+peace, squadrons have continued to be maintained in the Pacific Ocean, in
+the West India seas, and in the Mediterranean, to which has been added a
+small armament to cruise on the eastern coast of South America. In all they
+have afforded protection to our commerce, have contributed to make our
+country advantageously known to foreign nations, have honorably employed
+multitudes of our sea men in the service of their country, and have inured
+numbers of youths of the rising generation to lives of manly hardihood and
+of nautical experience and skill.
+
+The piracies with which the West India seas were for several years infested
+have been totally suppressed, but in the Mediterranean they have increased
+in a manner afflictive to other nations, and but for the continued presence
+of our squadron would probably have been distressing to our own.
+
+The war which has unfortunately broken out between the Republic of Buenos
+Ayres and the Brazilian Government has given rise to very great
+irregularities among the naval officers of the latter, by whom principles
+in relation to blockades and to neutral navigation have been brought
+forward to which we can not subscribe and which our own commanders have
+found it necessary to resist. From the friendly disposition toward the
+United States constantly manifested by the Emperor of Brazil, and the very
+useful and friendly commercial intercourse between the United States and
+his dominions, we have reason to believe that the just reparation demanded
+for the injuries sustained by several of our citizens from some of his
+officers will not be withheld. Abstracts from the recent dispatches of the
+commanders of our several squadrons are communicated with the report of the
+Secretary of the Navy to Congress.
+
+A report from the PostMaster General is likewise communicated, presenting
+in a highly satisfactory manner the result of a vigorous, efficient, and
+economical administration of that Department. The revenue of the office,
+even of the year including the latter half of 1824 and the first half of
+1825, had exceeded its expenditures by a sum of more than $45,000. That of
+the succeeding year has been still more productive. The increase of the
+receipts in the year preceding the first of July last over that of the year
+before exceeds $136,000, and the excess of the receipts over the
+expenditures of the year has swollen from $45,000 to yearly $80,000.
+
+During the same period contracts for additional transportation of the mail
+in stages for about 260,000 miles have been made, and for 70,000 miles
+annually on horse back. 714 new post offices have been established within
+the year, and the increase of revenue within the last 3 years, as well as
+the augmentation of the transportation by mail, is more than equal to the
+whole amount of receipts and of mail conveyance at the commencement of the
+present century, when the seat of the General Government was removed to
+this place. When we reflect that the objects effected by the transportation
+of the mail are among the choicest comforts and enjoyments of social life,
+it is pleasing to observe that the dissemination of them to every corner of
+our country has out- stripped in their increase even the rapid march of our
+population.
+
+By the treaties with France and Spain, respectively ceding Louisiana and
+the Floridas to the United States, provision was made for the security of
+land titles derived from the Governments of those nations. Some progress
+has been made under the authority of various acts of Congress in the
+ascertainment and establishment of those titles, but claims to a very large
+extent remain unadjusted. The public faith no less than the just rights of
+individuals and the interest of the community itself appears to require
+further provision for the speedy settlement of those claims, which I
+therefore recommend to the care and attention of the Legislature.
+
+In conformity with the provisions of the act of 1825-05-20, to provide for
+erecting a penitentiary in the District of Columbia, and for other
+purposes, 3 commissioners were appointed to select a site for the erection
+of a penitentiary for the District, and also a site in the county of
+Alexandria for a county jail, both of which objects have been effected. The
+building of the penitentiary has been commenced, and is in such a degree of
+forwardness as to promise that it will be completed before the meeting of
+the next Congress. This consideration points to the expediency of maturing
+at the present session a system for the regulation and government of the
+penitentiary, and of defining a system for the regulation and government of
+the penitentiary, and of defining the class of offenses which shall be
+punishable by confinement in this edifice.
+
+In closing this communication I trust that it will not be deemed
+inappropriate to the occasion and purposes upon which we are here assembled
+to indulge a momentary retrospect, combining in a single glance the period
+of our origin as a national confederation with that of our present
+existence, at the precise interval of half a century from each other. Since
+your last meeting at this place the 50th anniversary of the day when our
+independence was declared has been celebrated throughout our land, and on
+that day, while every heart was bounding with joy and every voice was tuned
+to gratulation, amid the blessings of freedom and independence which the
+sires of a former age had handed down to their children, two of the
+principal actors in that solemn scene -- the hand that penned the ever
+memorable Declaration and the voice that sustained it in debate -- were by
+one summons, at the distance of 700 miles from each other, called before
+the Judge of All to account for their deeds done upon earth. They departed
+cheered by the benedictions of their country, to whom they left the
+inheritance of their fame and the memory of their bright example.
+
+If we turn our thoughts to the condition of their country, in the contrast
+of the first and last day of that half century, how resplendent and sublime
+is the transition from gloom to glory! Then, glancing through the same
+lapse of time, in the condition of the individuals we see the first day
+marked with the fullness and vigor of youth, in the pledge of their lives,
+their fortunes, and their sacred honor to the cause of freedom and of
+man-kind; and on the last, extended on the bed of death, with but sense and
+sensibility left to breathe a last aspiration to Heaven of blessing upon
+their country, may we not humbly hope that to them too it was a pledge of
+transition from gloom to glory, and that while their mortal vestments were
+sinking into the clod of the valley their emancipated spirits were
+ascending to the bosom of their God! JOHN QUNICY ADAMS
+
+***
+
+State of the Union Address
+John Quincy Adams
+December 4, 1827
+
+Fellow Citizens of the Senate and of the House of Representatives:
+
+A revolution of the seasons has nearly been completed since the
+representatives of the people and States of this Union were last assembled
+at this place to deliberate and to act upon the common important interests
+of their constituents. In that interval the never slumbering eye of a wise
+and beneficent Providence has continued its guardian care over the welfare
+of our beloved country; the blessing of health has continued generally to
+prevail throughout the land; the blessing of peace with our brethren of the
+human race has been enjoyed without interruption; internal quiet has left
+our fellow citizens in the full enjoyment of all their rights and in the
+free exercise of all their faculties, to pursue the impulse of their nature
+and the obligation of their duty in the improvement of their own condition;
+the productions of the soil, the exchanges of commerce, the vivifying
+labors of human industry, have combined to mingle in our cup a portion of
+enjoyment as large and liberal as the indulgence of Heaven has perhaps ever
+granted to the imperfect state of man upon earth; and as the purest of
+human felicity consists in its participation with others, it is no small
+addition to the sum of our national happiness at this time that peace and
+prosperity prevail to a degree seldom experienced over the whole habitable
+globe, presenting, though as yet with painful exceptions, a foretaste of
+that blessed period of promise when the lion shall lie down with the lamb
+and wars shall be no more.
+
+To preserve, to improve, and to perpetuate the sources and to direct in
+their most effective channels the streams which contribute to the public
+weal is the purpose for which Government was instituted. Objects of deep
+importance to the welfare of the Union are constantly recurring to demand
+the attention of the Federal Legislature, and they call with accumulated
+interest at the first meeting of the two Houses after their periodical
+renovation. To present to their consideration from time to time subjects in
+which the interests of the nation are most deeply involved, and for the
+regulation of which the legislative will is alone competent, is a duty
+prescribed by the Constitution, to the performance of which the first
+meeting of the new Congress is a period eminently appropriate, and which it
+is now my purpose to discharge.
+
+Our relations of friendship with the other nations of the earth, political
+and commercial, have been preserved unimpaired, and the opportunities to
+improve them have been cultivated with anxious and unremitting attention. A
+negotiation upon subjects of high and delicate interest with the Government
+of Great Britain has terminated in the adjustment of some of the questions
+at issue upon satisfactory terms and the postponement of others for future
+discussion and agreement.
+
+The purposes of the convention concluded at St. Petersburg on 1822-07-12,
+under the mediation of the late Emperor Alexander, have been carried into
+effect by a subsequent convention, concluded at London on 1826-11-13, the
+ratifications of which were exchanged at that place on 1827-02-06. A copy
+of the proclamations issued on 1827-03-19, publishing this convention, is
+herewith communicated to Congress. The sum of $1,204,960, therein
+stipulated to be paid to the claimants of indemnity under the first article
+of the treaty of Ghent, has been duly received, and the commission
+instituted, comformably to the act of Congress of 1827-03-02, for the
+distribution of the indemnity of the persons entitled to receive it are now
+in session and approaching the consummation of their labors. This final
+disposal of one of the most painful topics of collision between the United
+States and Great Britain not only affords an occasion of gratulation to
+ourselves, but has had the happiest effect in promoting a friendly
+disposition and in softening asperities upon other objects of discussion;
+nor ought it to pass without the tribute of a frank and cordial
+acknowledgment of the magnanimity with which an honorable nation, by the
+reparation of their own wrongs, achieves a triumph more glorious than any
+field of blood can ever bestow.
+
+The conventions of 1815-07-03, and of 1818-10-20, will expire by their own
+limitation on 1828-10-20. These have regulated the direct commercial
+intercourse between the United States and Great Britain upon terms of the
+most perfect reciprocity; and they effected a temporary compromise of the
+respective rights and claims to territory westward of the Rocky Mountains.
+These arrangements have been continued for an indefinite period of time
+after the expiration of the above mentioned conventions, leaving each party
+the liberty of terminating them by giving twelve months' notice to the
+other.
+
+The radical principle of all commercial intercourse between independent
+nations is the mutual interest of both parties. It is the vital spirit of
+trade itself; nor can it be reconciled to the nature of man or to the
+primary laws of human society that any traffic should long be willingly
+pursued of which all the advantages are on one side and all the burdens on
+the other. Treaties of commerce have been found by experience to be among
+the most effective instruments for promoting peace and harmony between
+nations whose interests, exclusively considered on either side, are brought
+into frequent collisions by competition. In framing such treaties it is the
+duty of each party not simply to urge with unyielding pertinacity that
+which suits its own interest, but to concede liberally to that which is
+adapted to the interest of the other.
+
+To accomplish this, little more is generally required than a simple
+observance of the rule of reciprocity, and were it possible for the states-
+men of 1 nation by stratagem and management to obtain from the weakness or
+ignorance of another an over-reaching treaty, such a compact would prove an
+incentive to war rather than a bond of peace.
+
+Our conventions with Great Britain are founded upon the principles of
+reciprocity. The commercial intercourse between the two countries is
+greater in magnitude and amount than between any two other nations on the
+globe. It is for all purposes of benefit or advantage to both as precious,
+and in all probability far more extensive, than if the parties were still
+constituent parts of one and the same nation. Treaties between such States,
+regulating the intercourse of peace between them and adjusting interests of
+such transcendent importance to both, which have been found in a long
+experience of years mutually advantageous, should not be lightly cancelled
+or discontinued. Two conventions for continuing in force those above
+mentioned have been concluded between the plenipotentiaries of the two
+Governments on 1827-08-06, and will be forthwith laid before the Senate for
+the exercise of their constitutional authority concerning them.
+
+In the execution of the treaties of peace of 1782-11 and 1783-09, between
+the United States and Great Britain, and which terminated the war of our
+independence, a line of boundary was drawn as the demarcation of territory
+between the two countries, extending over nearly 20 degrees of latitude,
+and ranging over seas, lakes, and mountains, then very imperfectly explored
+and scarcely opened to the geographical knowledge of the age. In the
+progress of discovery and settlement by both parties since that time
+several questions of boundary between their respective territories have
+arisen, which have been found of exceedingly difficult adjustment.
+
+At the close of the last war with Great Britain four of these questions
+pressed themselves upon the consideration of the negotiators of the treaty
+of Ghent, but without the means of concluding a definitive arrangement
+concerning them. They were referred to three separate commissions
+consisting, of two commissioners, one appointed by each party, to examine
+and decide upon their respective claims. In the event of a disagreement
+between the commissioners, one appointed by each party, to examine and
+decide upon their respective claims. In the event of a disagreement between
+the commissioners it was provided that they should make reports to their
+several Governments, and that the reports should finally be referred to the
+decision of a sovereign the common friend of both.
+
+Of these commissions two have already terminated their sessions and
+investigations, one by entire and the other by partial agreement. The
+commissioners of the 5th article of the treaty of Ghent have finally
+disagreed, and made their conflicting reports to their own Governments. But
+from these reports a great difficulty has occurred in making up a question
+to be decided by the arbitrator. This purpose has, however, been effected
+by a 4th convention, concluded at London by the plenipotentiaries of the
+two Governments on 1827-09-29. It will be submitted, together with the
+others, to the consideration of the Senate.
+
+While these questions have been pending incidents have occurred of
+conflicting pretensions and of dangerous character upon the territory
+itself in dispute between the two nations. By a common understanding
+between the Governments it was agreed that no exercise of exclusive
+jurisdiction by either party while the negotiation was pending should
+change the state of the question of right to be definitively settled. Such
+collision has, never the less, recently taken place by occurrences the
+precise character of which has not yet been ascertained. A communication
+from the governor of the State of Maine, with accompanying documents, and a
+correspondence between the Secretary of State and the minister of Great
+Britain on this subject are now communicated. Measures have been taken to
+ascertain the state of the facts more correctly by the employment of a
+special agent to visit the spot where the alleged outrages have occurred,
+the result of those inquiries, when received, will be transmitted to
+Congress.
+
+While so many of the subjects of high interest to the friendly relations
+between the two countries have been so far adjusted, it is a matter of
+regret that their views respecting the commercial intercourse between the
+United States and the British colonial possessions have not equally
+approximated to a friendly agreement.
+
+At the commencement of the last session of Congress they were informed of
+the sudden and unexpected exclusion by the British Government of access in
+vessels of the United States to all their colonial ports except those
+immediately bordering upon our own territories. In the amicable discussions
+which have succeeded the adoption of this measure which, as it affected
+harshly the interests of the United States, became subject of expostulation
+on our part, the principles upon which its justification has been placed
+have been of a diversified character. It has been at once ascribed to a
+mere recurrence to the old, long established principle of colonial monopoly
+and at the same time to a feeling of resentment because the offers of an
+act of Parliament opening the colonial ports upon certain conditions had
+not been grasped at with sufficient eagerness by an instantaneous
+conformity to them.
+
+At a subsequent period it has been intimated that the new exclusion was in
+resentment because a prior act of Parliament, of 1822, opening certain
+colonial ports, under heavy and burdensome restrictions, to vessels of the
+United States, had not been reciprocated by an admission of British vessels
+from the colonies, and their cargoes, without any restriction or
+discrimination what ever. But be the motive for the interdiction what it
+may, the British Government have manifested no disposition, either by
+negotiation or by corresponding legislative enactments, to recede from it,
+and we have been given distinctly to understand that neither of the bills
+which were under the consideration of Congress at their last session would
+have been deemed sufficient in their concessions to have been rewarded by
+any relaxation from the British interdict. It is one of the inconveniences
+inseparably connected with the attempt to adjust by reciprocal legislation
+interests of this nature that neither party can know what would be
+satisfactory to the other, and that after enacting a statute for the avowed
+and sincere purpose of conciliation it will generally be found utterly
+inadequate to the expectation of the other party, and will terminate in
+mutual disappointment.
+
+The session of Congress having terminated without any act upon the subject,
+a proclamation was issued on 1827-03-17, conformably to the provisions of
+the 6th section of the act of 1823-03-01 declaring the fact that the trade
+and intercourse authorized by the British act of Parliament of 1822-06-24,
+between the United States and the British enumerated colonial ports had
+been by the subsequent acts of Parliament of 1825-07-05, and the order of
+council of 1826-07-27 prohibited. The effect of this proclamation, by the
+terms of the act under which it was issued, has been that each and every
+provision of the act concerning navigation of 1818-04-18, and of the act
+supplementary thereto of 1820-05-15, revived and is in full force.
+
+Such, then is the present condition of the trade that, useful as it is to
+both parties it can, with a single momentary exception, be carried on
+directly by the vessels of neither. That exception itself is found in a
+proclamation of the governor of the island of St. Christopher and of the
+Virgin Islands, inviting for 3 months from 1827-08-28 the importation of
+the articles of the produce of the United States which constitute their
+export portion of this trade in the vessels of all nations.
+
+That period having already expired, the state of mutual interdiction has
+again taken place. The British Government have not only declined
+negotiation upon this subject, but by the principle they have assumed with
+reference to it have precluded even the means of negotiation. It becomes
+not the self respect of the United States either to solicit gratuitous
+favors or to accept as the grant of a favor that for which an ample
+equivalent is exacted. It remains to be determined by the respective
+Governments whether the trade shall be opened by acts of reciprocal
+legislation. It is, in the mean time, satisfactory to know that apart from
+the inconvenience resulting from a disturbance of the usual channels of
+trade no loss has been sustained by the commerce, the navigation, or the
+revenue of the United States, and none of magnitude is to be apprehended
+from this existing state of mutual interdict.
+
+With the other maritime and commercial nations of Europe our intercourse
+continues with little variation. Since the cessation by the convention of
+1822-06-24, of all discriminating duties upon the vessels of the United
+States and of France in either country our trade with that nation has
+increased and is increasing. A disposition on the part of France has been
+manifested to renew that negotiation, and in acceding to the proposal we
+have expressed the wish that it might be extended to other subjects upon
+which a good understanding between the parties would be beneficial to the
+interests of both.
+
+The origin of the political relations between the United States and France
+is coeval with the first years of our independence. The memory of it is
+interwoven with that of our arduous struggle for national existence.
+Weakened as it has occasionally been since that time, it can by us never be
+forgotten, and we should hail with exultation the moment which should
+indicate a recollection equally friendly in spirit on the part of France.
+
+A fresh effort has recently been made by the minister of the United States
+residing at Paris to obtain a consideration of the just claims of citizens
+of the United States to the reparation of wrongs long since committed, many
+of them frankly acknowledged and all of them entitled upon every principle
+of justice to a candid examination. The proposal last made to the French
+Government has been to refer the subject which has formed an obstacle to
+this consideration to the determination of a sovereign the common friend of
+both. To this offer no definitive answer has yet been received, but the
+gallant and honorable spirit which has at all times been the pride and
+glory of France will not ultimately permit the demands of innocent
+sufferers to be extinguished in the mere consciousness of the power to
+reject them.
+
+A new treaty of amity, navigation, and commerce has been concluded with the
+Kingdom of Sweden, which will be submitted to the Senate for their advice
+with regard to its ratification. At a more recent date a minister
+plenipotentiary from the Hanseatic Republics of Hamburg, Lubeck, and Bremen
+has been received, charged with a special mission for the negotiation of a
+treaty of amity and commerce between that ancient and renowned league and
+the United States. This negotiation has accordingly been commenced, and is
+now in progress, the result of which will, if successful, be also submitted
+to the Senate for their consideration.
+
+Since the accession of the Emperor Nicholas to the imperial throne of all
+the Russias the friendly dispositions toward the United States so
+constantly manifested by his predecessor have continued unabated, and have
+been recently testified by the appointment of a minister plenipotentiary to
+reside at this place. From the interest taken by this Sovereign in behalf
+of the suffering Greeks and from the spirit with which others of the great
+European powers are cooperating with him the friends of freedom and of
+humanity may indulge the hope that they will obtain relief from that most
+unequal of conflicts which they have so long and so gallantly sustained;
+that they will enjoy the blessing of self government, which by their
+sufferings in the cause of liberty they have richly earned, and that their
+independence will be secured by those liberal institutions of which their
+country furnished the earliest examples in the history of man-kind, and
+which have consecrated to immortal remembrance the very soil for which they
+are now again profusely pouring forth their blood. The sympathies which the
+people and Government of the United States have so warmly indulged with
+their cause have been acknowledged by their Government in a letter of
+thanks, which I have received from their illustrious President, a
+translation of which is now communicated to Congress, the representatives
+of that nation to whom this tribute of gratitude was intended to be paid,
+and to whom it was justly due.
+
+In the American hemisphere the cause of freedom and independence has
+continued to prevail, and if signalized by none of those splendid triumphs
+which had crowned with glory some of the preceding years it has only been
+from the banishment of all external force against which the struggle had
+been maintained. The shout of victory has been superseded by the expulsion
+of the enemy over whom it could have been achieved.
+
+Our friendly wishes and cordial good will, which have constantly followed
+the southern nations of America in all the vicissitudes of their war of
+independence, are succeeded by a solicitude equally ardent and cordial that
+by the wisdom and purity of their institutions they may secure to
+themselves the choicest blessings of social order and the best rewards of
+virtuous liberty. Disclaiming alike all right and all intention of
+interfering in those concerns which it is the prerogative of their
+independence to regulate as to them shall seem fit, we hail with joy every
+indication of their prosperity, of their harmony, of their persevering and
+inflexible homage to those principles of freedom and of equal rights which
+are alone suited to the genius and temper of the American nations.
+
+It has been, therefore, with some concern that we have observed indications
+of intestine divisions in some of the Republics of the south, and
+appearances of less union with one another than we believe to be the
+interest of all. Among the results of this state of things has been that
+the treaties concluded at Panama do not appear to have been ratified by the
+contracting parties, and that the meeting of the congress at Tacubaya has
+been indefinitely postponed. In accepting the invitations to be represented
+at this congress, while a manifestation was intended on the part of the
+United States of the most friendly disposition toward the southern
+Republics by whom it had been proposed, it was hoped that it would furnish
+an opportunity for bringing all the nations of this hemisphere to the
+common acknowledgment and adoption of the principles in the regulation of
+their internal relations which would have secured a lasting peace and
+harmony between them and have promoted the cause of mutual benevolence
+throughout the globe. But as obstacles appear to have arisen to the
+reassembling of the congress, one of the 2 ministers commissioned on the
+part of the United States has returned to the bosom of his country, while
+the minister charged with the ordinary mission to Mexico remains authorized
+to attend the conferences of the congress when ever they may be resumed.
+
+A hope was for a short time entertained that a treaty of peace actually
+signed between the Government of Buenos Ayres and of Brazil would supersede
+all further occasion for those collisions between belligerent pretensions
+and neutral rights which are so commonly the result of maritime war, and
+which have unfortunately disturbed the harmony of the relations between the
+United States and the Brazilian Governments. At their last session Congress
+were informed that some of the naval officers of that Empire had advanced
+and practiced upon principles in relation to blockades and to neutral
+navigation which we could not sanction, and which our commanders found it
+necessary to resist. It appears that they have not been sustained by the
+Government of Brazil itself. Some of the vessels captured under the assumed
+authority of these erroneous principles have been restored, and we trust
+that our just expectations will be realized that adequate indemnity will be
+made to all the citizens of the United States who have suffered by the
+unwarranted captures which the Brazilian tribunals themselves have
+pronounced unlawful.
+
+In the diplomatic discussions at Rio de Janeiro of these wrongs sustained
+by citizens of the United States and of others which seemed as if emanating
+immediately from that Government itself the charge' d'affaires of the
+United States, under an impression that his representations in behalf of
+the rights and interests of his country-men were totally disregarded and
+useless, deemed it his duty, without waiting for instructions, to terminate
+his official functions, to demand his pass- ports, and return to the United
+States. This movement, dictated by an honest zeal for the honor and
+interests of his country -- motives which operated exclusively on the mind
+of the officer who resorted to it -- has not been disapproved by me.
+
+The Brazilian Government, however, complained of it as a measure for which
+no adequate intentional cause had been given by them, and upon an explicit
+assurance through their charge' d'affaires residing here that a successor
+to the late representative of the United States near that Government, the
+appointment of whom they desired, should be received and treated with the
+respect due to his character, and that indemnity should be promptly made
+for all injuries inflicted on citizens of the United States or their
+property contrary to the laws of nations, a temporary commission as charge'
+d'affaires to that country has been issued, which it is hopes will entirely
+restore the ordinary diplomatic intercourse between the 2 Governments and
+the friendly relations between their respective nations.
+
+Turning from the momentous concerns of our Union in its intercourse with
+foreign nations to those of the deepest interest in the administration of
+our internal affairs, we find the revenues of the present year
+corresponding as nearly as might be expected with the anticipations of the
+last, and presenting an aspect still more favorable in the promise of the
+next.
+
+The balance in the Treasury on 1827-01-01 was $6,358,686.18. The receipts
+from that day to 1827-09-30, as near as the returns of them yet received
+can show, amount to $16,886,581.32. The receipts of the present quarter,
+estimated at $4,515,000, added to the above form an aggregate of
+$21,400,000 of receipts.
+
+The expenditures of the year may perhaps amount to $22,300,000 presenting a
+small excess over the receipts. But of these $22,000,000, upward of
+$6,000,000 have been applied to the discharge of the principal of the
+public debt, the whole amount of which, approaching $74,000,000 on
+1827-01-01, will on 1828-01-01 fall short of $67,500,000. The balance in
+the Treasury on 1828-01-01 it is expected will exceed $5,450,000, a sum
+exceeding that of 1825-01-01, though falling short of that exhibited on
+1827-01-01.
+
+It was foreseen that the revenue of the present year 1827 would not equal
+that of the last, which had itself been less than that of the next
+preceding year. But the hope has been realized which was entertained, that
+these deficiencies would in no wise interrupt the steady operation of the
+discharge of the public debt by the annual $10,000,000 devoted to that
+object by the act of 1817-03-03.
+
+The amount of duties secured on merchandise imported from the commencement
+of the year until 1827-09-30 is $21,226,000, and the probably amount of
+that which will be secured during the remainder of the year is $5,774,000,
+forming a sum total of $27,000,000. With the allowances for draw-backs and
+contingent deficiencies which may occur, though not specifically foreseen,
+we may safely estimate the receipts of the ensuing year at $22,300,000 -- a
+revenue for the next equal to the expenditure of the present year.
+
+The deep solicitude felt by our citizens of all classes throughout the
+Union for the total discharge of the public debt will apologize for the
+earnestness with which I deem it my duty to urge this topic upon the
+consideration of Congress -- of recommending to them again the observance
+of the strictest economy in the application of the public funds. The
+depression upon the receipts of the revenue which had commenced with the
+year 1826 continued with increased severity during the two first quarters
+of the present year.
+
+The returning tide began to flow with the third quarter, and, so far as we
+can judge from experience, may be expected to continue through the course
+of the ensuing year. In the mean time an alleviation from the burden of the
+public debt will in the three years have been effected to the amount of
+nearly $16,000,000, and the charge of annual interest will have been
+reduced upward of $1,000,000. But among the maxims of political economy
+which the stewards of the public moneys should never suffer without urgent
+necessity to be transcended is that of keeping the expenditures of the year
+within the limits of its receipts.
+
+The appropriations of the two last years, including the yearly $10,000,000
+of the sinking fund, have each equaled the promised revenue of the ensuing
+year. While we foresee with confidence that the public coffers will be
+replenished from the receipts as fast as they will be drained by the
+expenditures, equal in amount to those of the current year, it should not
+be forgotten that they could ill suffer the exhaustion of larger
+disbursements.
+
+The condition of the Army and of all the branches of the public service
+under the superintendence of the Secretary of War will be seen by the
+report from that officer and the documents with which it is accompanied.
+
+During the last summer a detachment of the Army has been usefully and
+successfully called to perform their appropriate duties. At the moment when
+the commissioners appointed for carrying into execution certain provisions
+of the treaty of 1825-08-19, with various tribes of the NorthWestern
+Indians were about to arrive at the appointed place of meeting the
+unprovoked murder of several citizens and other acts of unequivocal
+hostility committed by a party of the Winnebago tribe, one of those
+associated in the treaty, followed by indications of a menacing character
+among other tribes of the same region, rendered necessary an immediate
+display of the defensive and protective force of the Union in that
+quarter.
+
+It was accordingly exhibited by the immediate and concerted movements of
+the governors of the State of Illinois and of the Territory of Michigan,
+and competent levies of militia, under their authority, with a corps of 700
+men of United States troops, under the command of General Atkinson, who, at
+the call of Governor Cass, immediately repaired to the scene of danger from
+their station at St. Louis. Their presence dispelled the alarms of our
+fellow citizens on those disorders, and overawed the hostile purposes of
+the Indians. The perpetrators of the murders were surrendered to the
+authority and operation of our laws, and every appearance of purposed
+hostility from those Indian tribes has subsided.
+
+Although the present organization of the Army and the administration of its
+various branches of service are, upon the whole, satisfactory, they are yet
+susceptible of much improvement in particulars, some of which have been
+heretofore submitted to the consideration of Congress, and others are now
+first presented in the report of the Secretary of War.
+
+The expediency of providing for additional numbers of officers in the two
+corps of engineers will in some degree depend upon the number and extent of
+the objects of national importance upon which Congress may think it proper
+that surveys should be made conformably to the act of 1824-04-30. Of the
+surveys which before the last session of Congress had been made under the
+authority of that act, reports were made -- Of the Board of Internal
+Improvement, on the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. On the continuation of the
+national road from Cumberland to the tide waters within the District of
+Columbia. On the continuation of the national road from Canton to
+Zanesville. On the location of the national road from Zanesville to
+Columbus. On the continuation of the same to the seat of government in
+Missouri. On a post road from Baltimore to Philadelphia. Of a survey of
+Kennebec River (in part). On a national road from Washington to Buffalo. On
+the survey of Saugatuck Harbor and River. On a canal from Lake
+PontChartrain to the Mississippi River. On surveys at Edgartown,
+Newburyport, and Hyannis Harbor. On survey of La Plaisance Bay, in the
+Territory of Michigan. And reports are now prepared and will be submitted
+to Congress -- On surveys of the peninsula of Florida, to ascertain the
+practicability of a canal to connect the waters of the Atlantic with the
+Gulf of Mexico across that peninsula; and also of the country between the
+bays of Mobile and of Pensacola, with the view of connecting them together
+by a canal. On surveys of a route for a canal to connect the waters of
+James and Great Kenhawa rivers. On the survey of the Swash, in Pamlico
+Sound, and that of Cape Fear, below the town of Wilmington, in North
+Carolina. On the survey of the Muscle Shoals, in the Tennessee River, and
+for a route for a contemplated communication between the Hiwassee and Coosa
+rivers, in the State of Alabama. Other reports of surveys upon objects
+pointed out by the several acts of Congress of the last and preceding
+sessions are in the progress of preparation, and most of them may be
+completed before the close of this session. All the officers of both corps
+of engineers, with several other persons duly qualified, have been
+constantly employed upon these services from the passage of the act of
+1824-04-30, to this time.
+
+Were no other advantage to accrue to the country from their labors than the
+fund of topographical knowledge which they have collected and communicated,
+that alone would have been a profit to the Union more than adequate to all
+the expenditures which have been devoted to the object; but the
+appropriations for the repair and continuation of the Cumberland road, for
+the construction of various other roads, for the removal of obstructions
+from the rivers and harbors, for the erection of light houses, beacons,
+piers, and buoys, and for the completion of canals undertaken by individual
+associations, but needing the assistance of means and resources more
+comprehensive than individual enterprise can command, may be considered
+rather as treasures laid up from the contributions of the present age for
+the benefit of posterity than as unrequited applications of the accruing
+revenues of the nation.
+
+To such objects of permanent improvement to the condition of the country,
+of real addition to the wealth as well as to the comfort of the people by
+whose authority and resources they have been effected, from $3,000,000 to
+$4,000,000 of the annual income of the nation have, by laws enacted at the
+three most recent sessions of Congress, been applied, without intrenching
+upon the necessities of the Treasury, without adding a dollar to the taxes
+or debts of the community, without suspending even the steady and regular
+discharge of the debts contracted in former days, which within the same
+three years have been diminished by the amount of nearly $16,000,000.
+
+The same observations are in a great degree applicable to the
+appropriations made for fortifications upon the coasts and harbors of the
+United States, for the maintenance of the Military Academy at West Point,
+and for the various objects under the superintendence of the Department of
+the Navy. The report from the Secretary of the Navy and those from the
+subordinate branches of both the military departments exhibit to Congress
+in minute detail the present condition of the public establishments
+dependent upon them, the execution of the acts of Congress relating to
+them, and the views of the officers engaged in the several branches of the
+service concerning the improvements which may tend to their perfection.
+
+The fortification of the coasts and the gradual increase and improvement of
+the Navy are parts of a great system of national defense which has been
+upward of 10 years in progress, and which for a series of years to come
+will continue to claim the constant and persevering protection and
+superintendence of the legislative authority. Among the measures which have
+emanated from these principles the act of the last session of Congress for
+the gradual improvement of the Navy holds a conspicuous place. The
+collection of timber for the future construction of vessels of war, the
+preservation and reproduction of the species of timber peculiarly adapted
+to that purpose, the construction of dry docks for the use of the Navy, the
+erection of a marine railway for the repair of the public ships, and the
+improvement of the navy yards for the preservation of the public property
+deposited in them have all received from the Executive the attention
+required by that act, and will continue to receive it, steadily proceeding
+toward the execution of all its purposes.
+
+The establishment of a naval academy, furnishing the means of theoretic
+instruction to the youths who devote their lives to the service of their
+country upon the ocean, still solicits the sanction of the Legislature.
+Practical seamanship and the art of navigation may be acquired on the
+cruises of the squadrons which from time to time are dispatched to distant
+seas, but a competent knowledge even of the art of ship building, the
+higher mathematics, and astronomy; the literature which can place our
+officers on a level of polished education with the officers of other
+maritime nations; the knowledge of the laws, municipal and national, which
+in their intercourse with foreign states and their governments are
+continually called into operation, and, above all, that acquaintance with
+the principles of honor and justice, with the higher obligations of morals
+and of general laws, human and divine, which constitutes the great
+distinction between the warrior-patriot and the licensed robber and pirate
+-- these can be systematically taught and eminently acquired only in a
+permanent school, stationed upon the shore and provided with the teachers,
+the instruments, and the books conversant with and adapted to the
+communication of the principles of these respective sciences to the
+youthful and inquiring mind.
+
+The report from the PostMaster General exhibits the condition of that
+Department as highly satisfactory for the present and still more promising
+for the future. Its receipts for the year ending 1827-07-01 amounted to
+$1,473,551, and exceeded its expenditures by upward of $100,000. It can not
+be an over sanguine estimate to predict that in less than 10 years, of
+which half have elapsed, the receipts will have been more than doubled.
+
+In the mean time a reduced expenditure upon established routes has kept
+pace with increased facilities of public accommodation and additional
+services have been obtained at reduced rates of compensation. Within the
+last year the transportation of the mail in stages has been greatly
+augmented. The number of post offices has been increased to 7,000, and it
+may be anticipated that while the facilities of intercourse between fellow
+citizens in person or by correspondence will soon be carried to the door of
+every villager in the Union, a yearly surplus of revenue will accrue which
+may be applied as the wisdom of Congress under the exercise of their
+constitutional powers may devise for the further establishment and
+improvement of the public roads, or by adding still further to the
+facilities in the transportation of the mails. Of the indications of the
+prosperous condition of our country, none can be more pleasing than those
+presented by the multiplying relations of personal and intimate intercourse
+between the citizens of the Union dwelling at the remotest distances from
+each other.
+
+Among the subjects which have heretofore occupied the earnest solicitude
+and attention of Congress is the management and disposal of that portion of
+the property of the nation which consists of the public lands. The
+acquisition of them, made at the expense of the whole Union, not only in
+treasury but in blood, marks a right of property in them equally extensive.
+By the report and statements from the General Land Office now communicated
+it appears that under the present Government of the United States a sum
+little short of $33,000,000 has been paid from the common Treasury for that
+portion of this property which has been purchased from France and Spain,
+and for the extinction of the aboriginal titles. The amount of lands
+acquired is near 260,000,000 acres, of which on 1826-01-01, about
+139,000,000 acres had been surveyed, and little more than 19,000,000 acres
+had been sold. The amount paid into the Treasury by the purchasers of the
+public lands sold is not yet equal to the sums paid for the whole, but
+leaves a small balance to be refunded. The proceeds of the sales of the
+lands have long been pledged to the creditors of the nation, a pledge from
+which we have reason to hope that they will in a very few years be
+redeemed.
+
+The system upon which this great national interest has been managed was the
+result of long, anxious, and persevering deliberation. Matured and modified
+by the progress of our population and the lessons of experience, it has
+been hitherto eminently successful. More than 9/10 of the lands still
+remain the common property of the Union, the appropriation and disposal of
+which are sacred trusts in the hands of Congress.
+
+Of the lands sold, a considerable part were conveyed under extended
+credits, which in the vicissitudes and fluctuations in the value of lands
+and of their produce became oppressively burdensome to the purchasers. It
+can never be the interest or the policy of the nation to wring from its own
+citizens the reasonable profits of their industry and enterprise by holding
+them to the rigorous import of disastrous engagements. In 1821-03, a debt
+of $22,000,000, due by purchasers of the public lands, had accumulated,
+which they were unable to pay. An act of Congress of 1821-03-02, came to
+their relief, and has been succeeded by others, the latest being the act of
+1826-05-04, the indulgent provisions of which expired on 1827-07-04. The
+effect of these laws has been to reduce the debt from the purchasers to a
+remaining balance of about $4,300,000 due, more than 3/5 of which are for
+lands within the State of Alabama. I recommend to Congress the revival and
+continuance for a further term of the beneficent accommodations to the
+public debtors of that statute, and submit to their consideration, in the
+same spirit of equity, the remission, under proper discriminations, of the
+forfeitures of partial payments on account of purchases of the public
+lands, so far as to allow of their application to other payments.
+
+There are various other subjects of deep interest to the whole Union which
+have heretofore been recommended to the consideration of Congress, as well
+by my predecessors as, under the impression of the duties devolving upon
+me, by myself. Among these are the debt, rather of justice than gratitude,
+to the surviving warriors of the Revolutionary war; the extension of the
+judicial administration of the Federal Government to those extensive since
+the organization of the present judiciary establishment, now constitute at
+least 1/3 of its territory, power, and population; the formation of a more
+effective and uniform system for the government of the militia, and the
+amelioration in some form or modification of the diversified and often
+oppressive codes relating to insolvency. Amidst the multiplicity of topics
+of great national concernment which may recommend themselves to the calm
+and patriotic deliberations of the Legislature, it may suffice to say that
+on these and all other measures which may receive their sanction my hearty
+cooperation will be given, conformably to the duties enjoined upon me and
+under the sense of all the obligations prescribed by the Constitution. JOHN
+QUNICY ADAMS
+
+***
+
+State of the Union Address
+John Quincy Adams
+December 2, 1828
+
+Fellow Citizens of the Senate and of the House of Representatives:
+
+If the enjoyment in profusion of the bounties of Providence forms a
+suitable subject of mutual gratulation and grateful acknowledgment, we are
+admonished at this return of the season when the representatives of the
+nation are assembled to deliberate upon their concerns to offer up the
+tribute of fervent and grateful hearts for the never failing mercies of Him
+who ruleth over all. He has again favored us with healthful seasons and
+abundant harvests; He has sustained us in peace with foreign countries and
+in tranquillity within our borders; He has preserved us in the quiet and
+undisturbed possession of civil and religious liberty; He has crowned the
+year with His goodness, imposing on us no other condition than of improving
+for our own happiness the blessings bestowed by His hands, and, in the
+fruition of all His favors, of devoting his faculties with which we have
+been endowed by Him to His glory and to our own temporal and eternal
+welfare.
+
+In the relations of our Federal Union with our brethren of the human race
+the changes which have occurred since the close of your last session have
+generally tended to the preservation of peace and to the cultivation of
+harmony. Before your last separation a war had unhappily been kindled
+between the Empire of Russia, one of those with which our intercourse has
+been no other than a constant exchange of good offices, and that of the
+Ottoman Porte, a nation from which geographical distance, religious
+opinions and maxims of government on their part little suited to the
+formation of those bonds of mutual benevolence which result from the
+benefits of commerce had department us in a state, perhaps too much
+prolonged, of coldness and alienation.
+
+The extensive, fertile, and populous dominions of the Sultan belong rather
+to the Asiatic than the European division of the human family. They enter
+but partially into the system of Europe, nor have their wars with Russia
+and Austria, the European States upon which they border, for more than a
+century past disturbed the pacific relations of those States with the other
+great powers of Europe. Neither France nor Prussia nor Great Britain has
+ever taken part in them, nor is it to be expected that they will at this
+time. The declaration of war by Russia has received the approbation or
+acquiescence of her allies, and we may indulge the hope that its progress
+and termination will be signalized by the moderation and forbearance no
+less than by the energy of the Emperor Nicholas, and that it will afford
+the opportunity for such collateral agency in behalf of the suffering
+Greeks as will secure to them ultimately the triumph of humanity and of
+freedom.
+
+The state of our particular relations with France has scarcely varied in
+the course of the present year. The commercial intercourse between the two
+countries has continued to increase for the mutual benefit of both. The
+claims of indemnity to numbers of our fellow citizens for depredations upon
+their property, heretofore committed during the revolutionary governments,
+remain unadjusted, and still form the subject of earnest representation and
+remonstrance. Recent advices from the minister of the United States at
+Paris encourage the expectation that the appeal to the justice of the
+French Government will ere long receive a favorable consideration.
+
+The last friendly expedient has been resorted to for the decision of the
+controversy with Great Britain relating to the north-eastern boundary of
+the United States. By an agreement with the British Government, carrying
+into effect the provisions of the 5th article of the treaty of Ghent, and
+the convention of 1827-09-29, His Majesty the King of the Netherlands has
+by common consent been selected as the umpire between the parties. The
+proposal to him to accept the designation for the performance of this
+friendly office will be made at an early day, and the United States,
+relying upon the justice of their cause, will cheerfully commit the
+arbitrament of it to a prince equally distinguished for the independence of
+his spirit, his indefatigable assiduity to the duties of his station, and
+his inflexible personal probity.
+
+Our commercial relations with Great Britain will deserve the serious
+consideration of Congress and the exercise of a conciliatory and forbearing
+spirit in the policy of both Governments. The state of them has been
+materially changed by the act of Congress, passed at their last session, in
+alteration of several acts imposing duties on imports, and by acts of more
+recent date of the British Parliament. The effect of the interdiction of
+direct trade, commenced by Great Britain and reciprocated by the United
+States, has been, as was to be foreseen, only to substitute different
+channels for an exchange of commodities indispensable to the colonies and
+profitable to a numerous class of our fellow citizens. The exports, the
+revenue, the navigation of the United States have suffered no diminution by
+our exclusion from direct access to the British colonies. The colonies pay
+more dearly for the necessaries of life which their Government burdens with
+the charges of double voyages, freight, insurance, and commission, and the
+profits of our exports are somewhat impaired and more injuriously
+transferred from one portion of our citizens to another.
+
+The resumption of this old and otherwise exploded system of colonial
+exclusion has not secured to the shipping interest of Great Britain the
+relief which, at the expense of the distant colonies and of the United
+States, it was expected to afford. Other measures have been resorted to
+more pointedly bearing upon the navigation of the United States, and more
+pointedly bearing upon the navigation of the United States, and which,
+unless modified by the construction given to the recent acts of Parliament,
+will be manifestly incompatible with the positive stipulations of the
+commercial convention existing between the two countries. That convention,
+however, may be terminated with 12 months' notice, at the option of either
+party.
+
+A treaty of amity, navigation, and commerce between the United States and
+His Majesty the Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary and Bohemia, has been
+prepared for signature by the Secretary of State and by the Baron de
+Lederer, intrusted with full powers of the Austrian Government.
+Independently of the new and friendly relations which may be thus commenced
+with one of the most eminent and powerful nations of the earth, the
+occasion has been taken in it, as in other recent treaties concluded by the
+United States, to extend those principles of liberal intercourse and of
+fair reciprocity which intertwine with the exchanges of commerce the
+principles of justice and the feelings of mutual benevolence.
+
+This system, first proclaimed to the world in the first commercial treaty
+ever concluded by the United States -- that of 1778-02-06, with France --
+has been invariably the cherished policy of our Union. It is by treaties of
+commerce alone that it can be made ultimately to prevail as the established
+system of all civilized nations. With this principle our fathers extended
+the hand of friendship to every nation of the globe, and to this policy our
+country has ever since adhered. What ever of regulation in our laws has
+ever been adopted unfavorable to the interest of any foreign nation has
+been essentially defensive and counteracting to similar regulations of
+theirs operating against us.
+
+Immediately after the close of the War of Independence commissioners were
+appointed by the Congress of the Confederation authorized to conclude
+treaties with every nation of Europe disposed to adopt them. Before the
+wars of the French Revolution such treaties had been consummated with the
+United Netherlands, Sweden, and Prussia. During those wars treaties with
+Great Britain and Spain had been effected, and those with Prussia and
+France renewed. In all these some concessions to the liberal principles of
+intercourse proposed by the United States had been obtained; but as in all
+the negotiations they came occasionally in collision with previous internal
+regulations or exclusive and excluding compacts of monopoly with which the
+other parties had been trammeled, the advances made in them toward the
+freedom of trade were partial and imperfect. Colonial establishments,
+chartered companies, and ship building influence pervaded and encumbered
+the legislation of all the great commercial states; and the United States,
+in offering free trade and equal privilege to all, were compelled to
+acquiesce in many exceptions with each of the parties to their treaties,
+accommodated to their existing laws and anterior agreements.
+
+The colonial system by which this whole hemisphere was bound has fallen
+into ruins, totally abolished by revolutions converting colonies into
+independent nations throughout the two American continents, excepting a
+portion of territory chiefly at the northern extremity of our own, and
+confined to the remnants of dominion retained by Great Britain over the
+insular archipelago, geographically the appendages of our part of the
+globe. With all the rest we have free trade, even with the insular colonies
+of all the European nations, except Great Britain. Her Government also had
+manifested approaches to the adoption of a free and liberal intercourse
+between her colonies and other nations, though by a sudden and scarcely
+explained revulsion the spirit of exclusion has been revived for operation
+upon the United States alone.
+
+The conclusion of our last treaty of peace with Great Britain was shortly
+afterwards followed by a commercial convention, placing the direct
+intercourse between the two countries upon a footing of more equal
+reciprocity than had ever before been admitted. The same principle has
+since been much further extended by treaties with France, Sweden, Denmark,
+the Hanseatic cities, Prussia, in Europe, and with the Republics of
+Colombia and of Central America, in this hemisphere. The mutual abolition
+of discriminating duties and charges upon the navigation and commercial
+intercourse between the parties is the general maxim which characterizes
+them all. There is reason to expect that it will at no distant period be
+adopted by other nations, both of Europe and America, and to hope that by
+its universal prevalence one of the fruitful sources of wars of commercial
+competition will be extinguished.
+
+Among the nations upon whose Governments many of our fellow citizens have
+had long-pending claims of indemnity for depredations upon their property
+during a period when the rights of neutral commerce were disregarded was
+that of Denmark. They were soon after the events occurred the subject of a
+special mission from the United States, at the close of which the assurance
+was given by His Danish Majesty that at a period of more tranquillity and
+of less distress they would be considered, examined, and decided upon in a
+spirit of determined purpose for the dispensation of justice. I have much
+pleasure in informing Congress that the fulfillment of this honorable
+promise is now in progress; that a small portion of the claims has already
+been settled to the satisfaction of the claimants, and that we have reason
+to hope that the remainder will shortly be placed in a train of equitable
+adjustment. This result has always been confidently expected, from the
+character of personal integrity and of benevolence which the Sovereign of
+the Danish dominions has through every vicissitude of fortune maintained.
+
+The general aspect of the affairs of our neighboring American nations of
+the south has been rather of approaching than of settled tranquillity.
+Internal disturbances have been more frequent among them than their common
+friends would have desired. Our intercourse with all has continued to be
+that of friendship and of mutual good will. Treaties of commerce and of
+boundaries with the United Mexican States have been negotiated, but, from
+various successive obstacles, not yet brought to a final conclusion.
+
+The civil war which unfortunately still prevails in the Republics of
+Central America has been unpropitious to the cultivation of our commercial
+relations with them; and the dissensions and revolutionary changes in the
+Republics of Colombia and of Peru have been seen with cordial regret by us,
+who would gladly contribute to the happiness of both. It is with great
+satisfaction, however, that we have witnessed the recent conclusion of a
+peace between the Governments of Buenos Ayres and of Brazil, and it is
+equally gratifying to observe that indemnity has been obtained for some of
+the injuries which our fellow citizens had sustained in the latter of those
+countries. The rest are in a train of negotiation, which we hope may
+terminate to mutual satisfaction, and that it may be succeeded by a treaty
+of commerce and navigation, upon liberal principles, propitious to a great
+and growing commerce, already important to the interests of our country.
+
+The condition and prospects of the revenue are more favorable than our most
+sanguine expectations had anticipated. The balance in the Treasury on
+1828-01-01, exclusive of the moneys received under the convention of
+1826-11-13, with Great Britain, was $5,861,972.83. The receipts into the
+Treasury from 1828-01-01 to 1828-09-30, so far as they have been
+ascertained to form the basis of an estimate, amount to $18,633,580.27,
+which, with the receipts of the present quarter, estimated at
+$5,461,283.40, form an aggregate of receipts during the year of
+$24,094,863.67. The expenditures of the year may probably amount to
+$25,637,111.63, and leave in the Treasury on 1829-01-01 the sum of
+$5,125,638.14.
+
+The receipts of the present year have amounted to near $2,000,000 more than
+was anticipated at the commencement of the last session of Congress.
+
+The amount of duties secured on importations from the first of January to
+the 30th of September was about $22,997,000, and that of the estimated
+accruing revenue is $5,000,000, forming an aggregate for the year of near
+$28,000,000. This is $1,000,000 more than the estimate last December for
+the accruing revenue of the present year, which, with allowances for
+draw-backs and contingent deficiencies, was expected to produce an actual
+revenue of $22,300,000. Had these only been realized the expenditures of
+the year would have been also proportionally reduced, for of these
+$24,000,000 received upward of $9,000,000 have been applied to the
+extinction of public debt, bearing an interest of 6% a year, and of course
+reducing the burden of interest annually payable in future by the amount of
+more than $500,000. The payments on account of interest during the current
+year exceed $3,000,000, presenting an aggregate of more than $12,000,000
+applied during the year to the discharge of the public debt, the whole of
+which remaining due on 1829-01-01 will amount only to $58,362,135.78.
+
+That the revenue of the ensuing year will not fall short of that received
+in the one now expiring there are indications which can scarcely prove
+deceptive. In our country an uniform experience of 40 years has shown that
+what ever the tariff of duties upon articles imported from abroad has been,
+the amount of importations has always borne an average value nearly
+approaching to that of the exports, though occasionally differing in the
+balance, some times being more and some times less. It is, indeed, a
+general law of prosperous commerce that the real value of exports should by
+a small, and only a small, balance exceed that of imports, that balance
+being a permanent addition to the wealth of the nation.
+
+The extent of the prosperous commerce of the nation must be regulated by
+the amount of its exports, and an important addition to the value of these
+will draw after it a corresponding increase of importations. It has
+happened in the vicissitudes of the seasons that the harvests of all Europe
+have in the late summer and autumn fallen short of their usual average. A
+relaxation of the interdict upon the importation of grain and flour from
+abroad has ensued, a propitious market has been opened to the granaries of
+our country, and a new prospect of reward presented to the labors of the
+husband-man, which for several years has been denied. This accession to the
+profits of agriculture in the middle and western portions of our Union is
+accidental and temporary. It may continue only for a single year. It may
+be, as has been often experienced in the revolutions of time, but the first
+of several scanty harvests in succession. We may consider it certain that
+for the approaching year it has added an item of large amount to the value
+of our exports and that it will produce a corresponding increase of
+importations. It may therefore confidently be foreseen that the revenue of
+1829 will equal and probably exceed that of 1828, and will afford the means
+of extinguishing $10,000,000 more of the principal of the public debt.
+
+This new element of prosperity to that part of our agricultural industry
+which is occupied in producing the first article of human subsistence is of
+the most cheering character to the feelings of patriotism. Proceeding from
+a cause which humanity will view with concern, the sufferings of scarcity
+in distant lands, it yields a consolatory reflection that this scarcity is
+in no respect attributable to us; that it comes from the dispensation of
+Him who ordains all in wisdom and goodness, and who permits evil itself
+only as an instrument of good; that, far from contributing to this
+scarcity, our agency will be applied only to the alleviation of its
+severity, and that in pouring forth from the abundance of our own garners
+the supplies which will partially restore plenty to those who are in need
+we shall ourselves reduce our stores and add to the price of our own bread,
+so as in some degree to participate in the wants which it will be the good
+fortune of our country to relieve.
+
+The great interests of an agricultural, commercial, and manufacturing
+nation are so linked in union together that no permanent cause of
+prosperity to one of them can operate without extending its influence to
+the others. All these interests are alike under the protecting power of the
+legislative authority, and the duties of the representative bodies are to
+conciliate them in harmony together.
+
+So far as the object of taxation is to raise a revenue for discharging the
+debts and defraying the expenses of the community, its operation should be
+adapted as much as possible to suit the burden with equal hand upon all in
+proportion with their ability of bearing it without oppression. But the
+legislation of one nation is some times intentionally made to bear heavily
+upon the interests of another. That legislation, adapted, as it is meant to
+be, to the special interests of its own people, will often press most
+unequally upon the several component interests of its neighbors.
+
+Thus the legislation of Great Britain, when, as has recently been avowed,
+adapted to the depression of a rival nation, will naturally abound with
+regulations to interdict upon the productions of the soil or industry of
+the other which come in competition with its own, and will present
+encouragement, perhaps even bounty, to the raw material of the other State
+which it can not produce itself, and which is essential for the use of its
+manufactures, competitors in the markets of the world with those of its
+commercial rival.
+
+Such is the state of commercial legislation of Great Britain as it bears
+upon our interests. It excludes with interdicting duties all importation
+(except in time of approaching famine) of the great staple of production of
+our Middle and Western States; it proscribes with equal rigor the bulkier
+lumber and live stock of the same portion and also of the Northern and
+Eastern part of our Union. It refuses even the rice of the South unless
+aggravated with a charge of duty upon the Northern carrier who brings it to
+them. But the cotton, indispensable for their looms, they will receive
+almost duty free to weave it into a fabric for our own wear, to the
+destruction of our own manufactures, which they are enabled thus to
+under-sell.
+
+Is the self-protecting energy of this nation so helpless that there exists
+in the political institutions of our country no power to counter-act the
+bias of this foreign legislation; that the growers of grain must submit to
+this exclusion from the foreign markets of their produce; that the shippers
+must dismantle their ships, the trade of the North stagnate at the wharves,
+and the manufacturers starve at their looms, while the whole people shall
+pay tribute to foreign industry to be clad in a foreign garb; that the
+Congress of the Union are impotent to restore the balance in favor of
+native industry destroyed by the statutes of another realm?
+
+More just and generous sentiments will, I trust, prevail. If the tariff
+adopted at the last session of Congress shall be found by experience to
+bear oppressively upon the interests of any one section of the Union, it
+ought to be, and I can not doubt will be, so modified as to alleviate its
+burden. To the voice of just complaint from any portion of their
+constituents the representatives of the States and of the people will never
+turn away their ears.
+
+But so long as the duty of the foreign shall operate only as a bounty upon
+the domestic article; while the planter and the merchant and the shepherd
+and the husbandman shall be found thriving in their occupations under the
+duties imposed for the protection of domestic manufactures, they will not
+repine at the prosperity shared with themselves by their fellow citizens of
+other professions, nor denounce as violations of the Constitution the
+deliberate acts of Congress to shield from the wrongs of foreigns the
+native industry of the Union.
+
+While the tariff of the last session of Congress was a subject of
+legislative deliberation it was foretold by some of its opposers that one
+of its necessary consequences would be to impair the revenue. It is yet too
+soon to pronounce with confidence that this prediction was erroneous. The
+obstruction of one avenue of trade not unfrequently opens an issue to
+another. The consequence of the tariff will be to increase the exportation
+and to diminish the importation of some specific articles; but by the
+general law of trade the increase of exportation of one article will be
+followed by an increased importation of others, the duties upon which will
+supply the deficiencies which the diminished importation would otherwise
+occasion. The effect of taxation upon revenue can seldom be foreseen with
+certainty. It must abide the test of experience.
+
+As yet no symptoms of diminution are perceptible in the receipts of the
+Treasury. As yet little addition of cost has even been experienced upon the
+articles burdened with heavier duties by the last tariff. The domestic
+manufacturer supplies the same or a kindred article at a diminished price,
+and the consumer pays the same tribute to the labor of his own country-man
+which he must otherwise have paid to foreign industry and toil.
+
+The tariff of the last session was in its details not acceptable to the
+great interests of any portion of the Union, not even to the interest which
+it was specially intended to subserve. Its object was to balance the
+burdens upon native industry imposed by the operation of foreign laws, but
+not to aggravate the burdens of one section of the Union by the relief
+afforded to another. To the great principle sanctioned by that act -- one
+of those upon which the Constitution itself was formed -- I hope and trust
+the authorities of the Union will adhere. But if any of the duties imposed
+by the act only relieve the manufacturer by aggravating the burden of the
+planter, let a careful revisal of its provisions, enlightened by the
+practical experience of its effects, be directed to retain those which
+impart protection to native industry and remove or supply the place of
+those which only alleviate one great national interest by the depression of
+another.
+
+The United States of America and the people of every State of which they
+are composed are each of them sovereign powers. The legislative authority
+of the whole is exercised by Congress under authority granted them in the
+common Constitution. The legislative power of each State is exercised by
+assemblies deriving their authority from the constitution of the State.
+Each is sovereign within its own province. The distribution of power
+between them presupposes that these authorities will move in harmony with
+each other. The members of the State and General Governments are all under
+oath to support both, and allegiance is due to the one and to the other.
+The case of a conflict between these two powers has not been supposed, nor
+has any provision been made for it in our institutions; as a virtuous
+nation of ancient times existed more than five centuries without a law for
+the punishment of parricide.
+
+More than once, however, in the progress of our history have the people and
+the legislatures of one or more States, in moments of excitement, been
+instigated to this conflict; and the means of effecting this impulse have
+been allegations that the acts of Congress to be resisted were
+unconstitutional. The people of no one State have ever delegated to their
+legislature the power of pronouncing an act of Congress unconstitutional,
+but they have delegated to them powers by the exercise of which the
+execution of the laws of Congress within the State may be resisted. If we
+suppose the case of such conflicting legislation sustained by the
+corresponding executive and judicial authorities, patriotism and
+philanthropy turn their eyes from the condition in which the parties would
+be placed, and from that of the people of both, which must be its victims.
+
+The reports from the Secretary of War and the various subordinate offices
+of the resort of that Department present an exposition of the public
+administration of affairs connected with them through the course of the
+current year. The present state of the Army and the distribution of the
+force of which it is composed will be seen from the report of the Major
+General. Several alterations in the disposal of the troops have been found
+expedient in the course of the year, and the discipline of the Army, though
+not entirely free from exception, has been generally good.
+
+The attention of Congress is particularly invited to that part of the
+report of the Secretary of War which concerns the existing system of our
+relations with the Indian tribes. At the establishment of the Federal
+Government under the present Constitution of the United States the
+principle was adopted of considering them as foreign and independent powers
+and also as proprietors of lands. They were, moreover, considered as
+savages, whom it was our policy and our duty to use our influence in
+converting to Christianity and in bringing within the pale of
+civilization.
+
+As independent powers, we negotiated with them by treaties; as proprietors,
+we purchased of them all the lands which we could prevail upon them to
+sell; as brethren of the human race, rude and ignorant, we endeavored to
+bring them to the knowledge of religion and letters. The ultimate design
+was to incorporate in our own institutions that portion of them which could
+be converted to the state of civilization. In the practice of European
+States, before our Revolution, they had been considered as children to be
+governed; as tenants at discretion, to be dispossessed as occasion might
+require; as hunters to be indemnified by trifling concessions for removal
+from the grounds from which their game was extirpated. In changing the
+system it would seem as if a full contemplation of the consequences of the
+change had not been taken.
+
+We have been far more successful in the acquisition of their lands than in
+imparting to them the principles or inspiring them with the spirit of
+civilization. But in appropriating to ourselves their hunting grounds we
+have brought upon ourselves the obligation of providing them with
+subsistence; and when we have had the rare good fortune of teaching them
+the arts of civilization and the doctrines of Christianity we have
+unexpectedly found them forming in the midst of ourselves communities
+claiming to be independent of ours and rivals of sovereignty within the
+territories of the members of our Union. This state of things requires that
+a remedy should be provided -- a remedy which, while it shall do justice to
+those unfortunate children of nature, may secure to the members of our
+confederation their rights of sovereignty and of soil. As the outline of a
+project to that effect, the views presented in the report of the Secretary
+of War are recommended to the consideration of Congress.
+
+The report from the Engineer Department presents a comprehensive view of
+the progress which has been made in the great systems promotive of the
+public interest, commenced and organized under authority of Congress, and
+the effects of which have already contributed to the security, as they will
+hereafter largely contribute to the honor and dignity, of the nation.
+
+The first of these great systems is that of fortifications, commenced
+immediately after the close of our last war, under the salutary experience
+which the events of that war had impressed upon our country-men of its
+necessity. Introduced under the auspices of my immediate predecessor, it
+has been continued with the persevering and liberal encouragement of the
+Legislature, and, combined with corresponding exertions for the gradual
+increase and improvement of the Navy, prepares for our extensive country a
+condition of defense adapted to any critical emergency which the varying
+course of events may bring forth. Our advances in these concerted systems
+have for the last 10 years been steady and progressive, and in a few years
+more will be so completed as to leave no cause for apprehension that our
+sea coast will ever again offer a theater of hostile invasion.
+
+The next of these cardinal measures of policy is the preliminary to great
+and lasting works of public improvement in the surveys of roads,
+examination for the course of canals, and labors for the removal of the
+obstructions of rivers and harbors, first commenced by the act of Congress
+of 1824-04-30.
+
+The report exhibits in one table the funds appropriated at the last and
+preceding sessions of Congress for all these fortifications, surveys, and
+works of public improvement, the manner in which these funds have been
+applied, the amount expended upon the several works under construction, and
+the further sums which may be necessary to complete them; in a second, the
+works projected by the Board of Engineers which have not been commenced,
+and the estimate of their cost; in a third, the report of the annual Board
+of Visitors at the Military Academy at West Point.
+
+For 13 fortifications erecting on various points of our Atlantic coast,
+from Rhode Island to Louisiana, the aggregate expenditure of the year has
+fallen little short of $1,000,000. For the preparation of 5 additional
+reports of reconnoissances and surveys since the last session of Congress,
+for the civil construction upon 37 different public works commenced, 8
+others for which specific appropriations have been made by acts of
+Congress, and 20 other incipient surveys under the authority given by the
+act of 1824-04-30, about $1,000,000 more has been drawn from the Treasury.
+
+To these $2,000,000 is to be added the appropriation of $250,000 to
+commence the erection of a break-water near the mouth of the Delaware
+River, the subscriptions to the Delaware and Chesapeake, the Louisville and
+Portland, the Dismal Swamp, and the Chesapeake and Ohio canals, the large
+donations of lands to the States of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Alabama
+for objects of improvements within those States, and the sums appropriated
+for light-houses, buoys, and piers on the coast; and a full view will be
+taken of the munificence of the nation in the application of its resources
+to the improvement of its own condition.
+
+Of these great national under-takings the Academy at West Point is among
+the most important in itself and the most comprehensive in its
+consequences. In that institution a part of the revenue of the nation is
+applied to defray the expense of educating a competent portion of her youth
+chiefly to the knowledge and the duties of military life. It is the living
+armory of the nation. While the other works of improvement enumerated in
+the reports now presented to the attention of Congress are destined to
+ameliorate the face of nature, to multiply the facilities of communication
+between the different parts of the Union, to assist the labors, increase
+the comforts, and enhance the enjoyments of individuals, the instruction
+acquired at West Point enlarges the dominion and expands the capacities of
+the mind. Its beneficial results are already experienced in the composition
+of the Army, and their influence is felt in the intellectual progress of
+society. The institution is susceptible still of great improvement from
+benefactions proposed by several successive Boards of Visitors, to whose
+earnest and repeated recommendations I cheerfully add my own.
+
+With the usual annual reports from the Secretary of the Navy and the Board
+of Commissioners will be exhibited to the view of Congress the execution of
+the laws relating to that department of the public service. The repression
+of piracy in the West Indian and in the Grecian seas has been effectually
+maintained, with scarcely any exception. During the war between the
+Governments of Buenos Ayres and of Brazil frequent collisions between the
+belligerent acts of power and the rights of neutral commerce occurred.
+Licentious blockades, irregularly enlisted or impressed sea men, and the
+property of honest commerce seized with violence, and even plundered under
+legal pretenses, are disorders never separable from the conflicts of war
+upon the ocean.
+
+With a portion of them the correspondence of our commanders on the eastern
+aspect of the South American coast and among the islands of Greece discover
+how far we have been involved. In these the honor of our country and the
+rights of our citizens have been asserted and vindicated. The appearance of
+new squadrons in the Mediterranean and the blockade of the Dardanelles
+indicate the danger of other obstacles to the freedom of commerce and the
+necessity of keeping our naval force in those seas. To the suggestions
+repeated in the report of the Secretary of the Navy, and tending to the
+permanent improvement of this institution, I invite the favorable
+consideration of Congress.
+
+A resolution of the House of Representatives requesting that one of our
+small public vessels should be sent to the Pacific Ocean and South Sea to
+examine the coasts, islands, harbors, shoals, and reefs in those seas, and
+to ascertain their true situation and description, has been put in a train
+of execution. The vessel is nearly ready to depart. The successful
+accomplishment of the expedition may be greatly facilitated by suitable
+legislative provisions, and particularly by an appropriation to defray its
+necessary expense. The addition of a 2nd, and perhaps a 3rd, vessel, with a
+slight aggravation of the cost, would contribute much to the safety of the
+citizens embarked on this under-taking, the results of which may be of the
+deepest interest to our country.
+
+With the report of the Secretary of the Navy will be submitted, in
+conformity to the act of Congress of 1827-03-03, for the gradual
+improvement of the Navy of the United States, statements of the
+expenditures under that act and of the measures for carrying the same into
+effect. Every section of that statute contains a distinct provision looking
+to the great object of the whole -- the gradual improvement of the Navy.
+Under its salutary sanction stores of ship timber have been procured and
+are in process of seasoning and preservation for the future uses of the
+Navy. Arrangements have been made for the preservation of the live oak
+timber growing on the lands of the United States, and for its reproduction,
+to supply at future and distant days the waste of that most valuable
+material for ship building by the great consumption of it yearly for the
+commercial as well as for the military marine of our country.
+
+The construction of the two dry docks at Charlestown and at Norfolk is
+making satisfactory progress toward a durable establishment. The
+examinations and inquiries to ascertain the practicability and expediency
+of a marine railway at Pensacola, though not yet accomplished, have been
+post-poned but to be more effectually made. The navy yards of the United
+States have been examined, and plans for their improvement and the
+preservation of the public property therein at Portsmouth, Charlestown,
+Philadelphia, Washington, and Gosport, and to which 2 others are to be
+added, have been prepared and received my sanction; and no other portion of
+my public duties has been performed with a more intimate conviction of its
+importance to the future welfare and security of the Union.
+
+With the report from the PostMaster General is exhibited a comparative view
+of the gradual increase of that establishment, from 5 to 5 years, since
+1792 'til this time in the number of post offices, which has grown from
+less than 200 to nearly 8,000; in the revenue yielded by them, which from
+$67,000 has swollen to upward of $1,500,000, and in the number of miles of
+post roads, which from 5,642 have multiplied to 114,536. While in the same
+period of time the population of the Union has about thrice doubled, the
+rate of increase of these offices is nearly 40, and of the revenue and of
+traveled miles from 20 to 25 for one. The increase of revenue within the
+last 5 years has been nearly equal to the whole revenue of the Department
+in 1812.
+
+The expenditures of the Department during the year which ended on
+1828-07-01 have exceeded the receipts by a sum of about $25,000. The excess
+has been occasioned by the increase of mail conveyances and facilities to
+the extent of near 800,000 miles. It has been supplied by collections from
+the post masters of the arrearages of preceding years. While the correct
+principle seems to be that the income levied by the Department should
+defray all its expenses, it has never been the policy of this Government to
+raise from this establishment any revenue to be applied to any other
+purposes. The suggestion of the PostMaster General that the insurance of
+the safe transmission of moneys by the mail might be assumed by the
+Department for a moderate and competent remuneration will deserve the
+consideration of Congress.
+
+A report from the commissioner of the public buildings in this city
+exhibits the expenditures upon them in the course of the current year. It
+will be seen that the humane and benevolent intentions of Congress in
+providing, by the act of 1826-05-20, for the erection of a penitentiary in
+this District have been accomplished. The authority of further legislation
+is now required for the removal to this tenement of the offenders against
+the laws sentenced to atone by personal confinement for their crimes, and
+to provide a code for their employment and government while thus confined.
+
+The commissioners appointed, conformably to the act of 1827-03-02, to
+provide for the adjustment of claims of persons entitled to indemnification
+under the first article of the treaty of Ghent, and for the distribution
+among such claimants of the sum paid by the Government of Great Britain
+under the convention of 1826-11-13, closed their labors on 1828-08-30 last
+by awarding to the claimants the sum of $1,197,422.18, leaving a balance of
+$7,537.82, which was distributed ratably amongst all the claimants to whom
+awards had been made, according to the directions of the act.
+
+The exhibits appended to the report from the Commissioner of the General
+Land Office present the actual condition of that common property of the
+Union. The amount paid into the Treasury from the proceeds of lands during
+the year 1827 and for the first half of 1828 falls little short of
+$2,000,000. The propriety of further extending the time for the
+extinguishment of the debt due to the United States by the purchasers of
+the public lands, limited by the act of 1828-03-21 to 1829-07-04, will
+claim the consideration of Congress, to whose vigilance and careful
+attention the regulation, disposal, and preservation of this great national
+inheritance has by the people of the United States been intrusted.
+
+Among the important subjects to which the attention of the present Congress
+has already been invited, and which may occupy their further and deliberate
+discussion, will be the provision to be made for taking the 5th census of
+enumeration of the inhabitants of the United States. The Constitution of
+the United States requires that this enumeration should be made within
+every term of 10 years, and the date from which the last enumeration
+commenced was the first Monday of August of the year 1820.
+
+The laws under which the former enumerations were taken were enacted at the
+session of Congress immediately preceding the operation; but considerable
+inconveniences were experienced from the delay of legislation to so late a
+period. That law, like those of the preceding enumerations, directed that
+the census should be taken by the marshals of the several districts and
+Territories of the Union under instructions from the Secretary of State.
+The preparation and transmission to the marshals of those instructions
+required more time than was then allowed between the passage of the law and
+the day when the enumeration was to commence. The term of 6 months limited
+for the returns of the marshals was also found even then too short, and
+must be more so now, when an additional population of at least 3,000,000
+must be presented upon the returns.
+
+As they are to be made at the short session of Congress, it would, as well
+as from other considerations, be more convenient to commence the
+enumeration from an earlier period of the year than the first of August.
+The most favorable season would be the spring.
+
+On a review of the former enumerations it will be found that the plan for
+taking every census has contained many improvements upon that of its
+predecessor. The last is still susceptible of much improvement. The 3rd
+Census was the first at which any account was taken of the manufactures of
+the country. It was repeated at the last enumeration, but the returns in
+both cases were necessarily very imperfect. They must always be so,
+resting, of course, only upon the communications voluntarily made by
+individuals interested in some of the manufacturing establishments. Yet
+they contained much valuable information, and may by some supplementary
+provision of the law be rendered more effective.
+
+The columns of age, commencing from infancy, have hitherto been confined to
+a few periods, all under the number of 45 years. Important knowledge would
+be obtained by extending these columns, in intervals of 10 years, to the
+utmost boundaries of human life. The labor of taking them would be a
+trifling addition to that already prescribed, and the result would exhibit
+comparative tables of longevity highly interesting to the country. I deem
+it my duty further to observe that much of the imperfections in the returns
+of the last and perhaps of preceding enumerations proceeded from the
+inadequateness of the compensations allowed to the marshals and their
+assistants in taking them.
+
+In closing this communication it only remains for me to assure the
+Legislature of my continued earnest wish for the adoption of measures
+recommended by me heretofore and yet to be acted on by them, and of the
+cordial concurrence on my part in every constitutional provision which may
+receive their sanction during the session tending to the general welfare.
+JOHN QUNICY ADAMS
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OF ADDRESSES BY JOHN QUINCY ADAMS ***
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of State of the Union Addresses
+by John Quincy Adams
+(#6 in our series of US Presidential State of the Union Addresses)
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+Title: State of the Union Addresses of John Quincy Adams
+
+Author: John Quincy Adams
+
+Release Date: February, 2004 [EBook #5015]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on April 11, 2002]
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+Edition: 11
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+Language: English
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+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OF ADDRESSES BY JOHN QUINCY ADAMS ***
+
+
+
+This eBook was produced by James Linden.
+
+The addresses are separated by three asterisks: ***
+
+Dates of addresses by John Quincy Adams in this eBook:
+ December 6, 1825
+ December 5, 1826
+ December 4, 1827
+ December 2, 1828
+
+
+
+***
+
+State of the Union Address
+John Quincy Adams
+December 6, 1825
+
+Fellow Citizens of the Senate and of the House of Representatives:
+
+In taking a general survey of the concerns of our beloved country, with
+reference to subjects interesting to the common welfare, the first
+sentiment which impresses itself upon the mind is of gratitude to the
+Omnipotent Disposer of All Good for the continuance of the signal
+blessings of His providence, and especially for that health which to an
+unusual extent has prevailed within our borders, and for that abundance
+which in the vicissitudes of the seasons has been scattered with
+profusion over our land. Nor ought we less to ascribe to Him the glory
+that we are permitted to enjoy the bounties of His hand in peace and
+tranquillity--in peace with all the other nations of the earth, in
+tranquillity among our selves. There has, indeed, rarely been a period
+in the history of civilized man in which the general condition of the
+Christian nations has been marked so extensively by peace and
+prosperity.
+
+Europe, with a few partial and unhappy exceptions, has enjoyed ten
+years of peace, during which all her Governments, what ever the theory
+of their constitutions may have been, are successively taught to feel
+that the end of their institution is the happiness of the people, and
+that the exercise of power among men can be justified only by the
+blessings it confers upon those over whom it is extended.
+
+During the same period our intercourse with all those nations has been
+pacific and friendly; it so continues. Since the close of your last
+session no material variation has occurred in our relations with any
+one of them. In the commercial and navigation system of Great Britain
+important changes of municipal regulation have recently been sanctioned
+by acts of Parliament, the effect of which upon the interests of other
+nations, and particularly upon ours, has not yet been fully developed.
+In the recent renewal of the diplomatic missions on both sides between
+the two Governments assurances have been given and received of the
+continuance and increase of the mutual confidence and cordiality by
+which the adjustment of many points of difference had already been
+effected, and which affords the surest pledge for the ultimate
+satisfactory adjustment of those which still remain open or may
+hereafter arise.
+
+The policy of the United States in their commercial intercourse with
+other nations has always been of the most liberal character. In the
+mutual exchange of their respective productions they have abstained
+altogether from prohibitions; they have interdicted themselves the
+power of laying taxes upon exports, and when ever they have favored
+their own shipping by special preferences or exclusive privileges in
+their own ports it has been only with a view to countervail similar
+favors and exclusions granted by the nations with whom we have been
+engaged in traffic to their own people or shipping, and to the
+disadvantage of ours. Immediately after the close of the last war a
+proposal was fairly made by the act of Congress of March 3rd, 1815, to
+all the maritime nations to lay aside the system of retaliating
+restrictions and exclusions, and to place the shipping of both parties
+to the common trade on a footing of equality in respect to the duties
+of tonnage and impost. This offer was partially and successively
+accepted by Great Britain, Sweden, the Netherlands, the Hanseatic
+cities, Prussia, Sardinia, the Duke of Oldenburg, and Russia. It was
+also adopted, under certain modifications, in our late commercial
+convention with France, and by the act of Congress of January 1st,
+1824, it has received a new confirmation with all the nations who had
+acceded to it, and has been offered again to all those who are or may
+here after be willing to abide in reciprocity by it. But all these
+regulations, whether established by treaty or by municipal enactments,
+are still subject to one important restriction.
+
+The removal of discriminating duties of tonnage and of impost is
+limited to articles of the growth, produce, or manufacture of the
+country to which the vessel belongs or to such articles as are most
+usually first shipped from her ports. It will deserve the serious
+consideration of Congress whether even this remnant of restriction may
+not be safely abandoned, and whether the general tender of equal
+competition made in the act of January 8th, 1824, maynot be extended to
+include all articles of merchandise not prohibited, of what country so
+ever they may be the produce or manufacture. Propositions of this
+effect have already been made to us by more than one European
+Government, and it is probable that if once established by legislation
+or compact with any distinguished maritime state it would recommend
+itself by the experience of its advantages to the general accession of
+all.
+
+The convention of commerce and navigation between the United States and
+France, concluded on June 24th, 1822, was, in the understanding and
+intent of both parties, as appears upon its face, only a temporary
+arrangement of the points of difference between them of the most
+immediate and pressing urgency. It was limited in the first instance to
+two years from January 10th, 1822, but with a proviso that it should
+further continue in force 'til the conclusion of a general and
+definitive treaty of commerce, unless terminated by a notice, six
+months in advance, of either of the parties to the other. Its operation
+so far as it extended has been mutually advantageous, and it still
+continues in force by common consent. But it left unadjusted several
+objects of great interest to the citizens and subjects of both
+countries, and particularly a mass of claims to considerable amount of
+citizens of the United States upon the Government of France of
+indemnity for property taken or destroyed under circumstances of the
+most aggravated and outrageous character. In the long period during
+which continual and earnest appeals have been made to the equity and
+magnanimity of France in behalf of these claims their justice has not
+been, as it could not be, denied.
+
+It was hoped that the accession of a new Sovereign to the throne would
+have afforded a favorable opportunity for presenting them to the
+consideration of his Government. They have been presented and urged
+hither to without effect. The repeated and earnest representations of
+our minister at the Court of France remain as yet even without an
+answer. Were the demands of nations upon the justice of each other
+susceptible of adjudication by the sentence of an impartial tribunal,
+those to which I now refer would long since have been settled and
+adequate indemnity would have been obtained.
+
+There are large amounts of similar claims upon the Netherlands, Naples,
+and Denmark. For those upon Spain prior to 1819 indemnity was, after
+many years of patient forbearance, obtained; and those upon Sweden have
+been lately compromised by a private settlement, in which the claimants
+themselves have acquiesced. The Governments of Denmark and of Naples
+have been recently reminded of those yet existing against them, nor
+will any of them be forgotten while a hope may be indulged of obtaining
+justice by the means within the constitutional power of the Executive,
+and without resorting to those means of self-redress which, as well as
+the time, circumstances, and occasion which may require them, are
+within the exclusive competency of the Legislature.
+
+It is with great satisfaction that I am enabled to bear witness to the
+liberal spirit with which the Republic of Colombia has made
+satisfaction for well-established claims of a similar character, and
+among the documents now communicated to Congress will be distinguished
+a treaty of commerce and navigation with that Republic, the
+ratifications of which have been exchanged since the last recess of the
+Legislature. The negotiation of similar treaties with all of the
+independent South American States has been contemplated and may yet be
+accomplished. The basis of them all, as proposed by the United States,
+has been laid in two principles--the one of entire and unqualified
+reciprocity, the other the mutual obligation of the parties to place
+each other permanently upon the footing of the most favored nation.
+These principles are, indeed, indispensable to the effectual
+emancipation of the American hemisphere from the thralldom of
+colonizing monopolies and exclusions, an event rapidly realizing in the
+progress of human affairs, and which the resistance still opposed in
+certain parts of Europe to the acknowledgment of the Southern American
+Republics as independent States will, it is believed, contribute more
+effectually to accomplish. The time has been, and that not remote, when
+some of those States might, in their anxious desire to obtain a nominal
+recognition, have accepted of a nominal independence, clogged with
+burdensome conditions, and exclusive commercial privileges granted to
+the nation from which they have separated to the disadvantage of all
+others. They are all now aware that such concessions to any European
+nation would be incompatible with that independence which they have
+declared and maintained.
+
+Among the measures which have been suggested to them by the new
+relations with one another, resulting from the recent changes in their
+condition, is that of assembling at the Isthmus of Panama a congress,
+at which each of them should be represented, to deliberate upon objects
+important to the welfare of all. The Republics of Colombia, of Mexico,
+and of Central America have already deputed plenipotentiaries to such a
+meeting, and they have invited the United States to be also represented
+there by their ministers. The invitation has been accepted, and
+ministers on the part of the United States will be commissioned to
+attend at those deliberations, and to take part in them so far as may
+be compatible with that neutrality from which it is neither our
+intention nor the desire of the other American States that we should
+depart.
+
+The commissioners under the 7th article of the treaty of Ghent have so
+nearly completed their arduous labors that, by the report recently
+received from the agent on the part of the United States, there is
+reason to expect that the commission will be closed at their next
+session, appointed for May 22 of the ensuing year.
+
+The other commission, appointed to ascertain the indemnities due for
+slaves carried away from the United States after the close of the late
+war, have met with some difficulty, which has delayed their progress in
+the inquiry. A reference has been made to the British Government on the
+subject, which, it may be hoped, will tend to hasten the decision of
+the commissioners, or serve as a substitute for it.
+
+Among the powers specifically granted to Congress by the Constitution
+are those of establishing uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies
+throughout the United States and of providing for organizing, arming,
+and disciplining the militia and for governing such part of them as may
+be employed in the services of the United States. The magnitude and
+complexity of the interests affected by legislation upon these subjects
+may account for the fact that, long and often as both of them have
+occupied the attention and animated the debates of Congress, no systems
+have yet been devised for fulfilling to the satisfaction of the
+community the duties prescribed by these grants of power.
+
+To conciliate the claim of the individual citizen to the enjoyment of
+personal liberty, with the effective obligation of private contracts,
+is the difficult problem to be solved by a law of bankruptcy. These are
+objects of the deepest interest to society, affecting all that is
+precious in the existence of multitudes of persons, many of them in the
+classes essentially dependent and helpless, of the age requiring
+nurture, and of the sex entitled to protection from the free agency of
+the parent and the husband. The organization of the militia is yet more
+indispensable to the liberties of the country. It is only by an
+effective militia that we can at once enjoy the repose of peace and bid
+defiance to foreign aggression; it is by the militia that we are
+constituted an armed nation, standing in perpetual panoply of defense
+in the presence of all the other nations of the earth. To this end it
+would be necessary, if possible, so to shape its organization as to
+give it a more united and active energy. There are laws establishing an
+uniform militia throughout the United States and for arming and
+equipping its whole body. But it is a body of dislocated members,
+without the vigor of unity and having little of uniformity but the
+name. To infuse into this most important institution the power of which
+it is susceptible and to make it available for the defense of the Union
+at the shortest notice and at the smallest expense possible of time, of
+life, and of treasure are among the benefits to be expected from the
+persevering deliberations of Congress.
+
+Among the unequivocal indications of our national prosperity is the
+flourishing state of our finances. The revenues of the present year,
+from all their principal sources, will exceed the anticipations of the
+last. The balance in the Treasury on the first of January last was a
+little short of $2,000,000, exclusive of $2,500,000, being the moiety
+of the loan of $5,000,000 authorized by the act of May 26th, 1824. The
+receipts into the Treasury from the first of January to the 30th of
+September, exclusive of the other moiety of the same loan, are
+estimated at $16,500,000, and it is expected that those of the current
+quarter will exceed $5,000,000, forming an aggregate of receipts of
+nearly $22,000,000, independent of the loan. The expenditures of the
+year will not exceed that sum more than $2,000,000. By those
+expenditures nearly $8,000,000 of the principal of the public debt that
+have been discharged.
+
+More than $1,500,000 has been devoted to the debt of gratitude to the
+warriors of the Revolution; a nearly equal sum to the construction of
+fortifications and the acquisition of ordnance and other permanent
+preparations of national defense; $500,000 to the gradual increase of
+the Navy; an equal sum for purchases of territory from the Indians and
+payment of annuities to them; and upward of $1,000,000 for objects of
+internal improvement authorized by special acts of the last Congress.
+If we add to these $4,000,000 for payment of interest upon the public
+debt, there remains a sum of $7,000,000, which have defrayed the whole
+expense of the administration of Government in its legislative,
+executive, and judiciary departments, including the support of the
+military and naval establishments and all the occasional contingencies
+of a government coextensive with the Union.
+
+The amount of duties secured on merchandise imported since the
+commencement of the year is about $25,500,000, and that which will
+accrue during the current quarter is estimated at $5,500,000; from
+these $31,000,000, deducting the draw-backs, estimated at less than
+$7,000,000, a sum exceeding $24,000,000 will constitute the revenue of
+the year, and will exceed the whole expenditures of the year. The
+entire amount of the public debt remaining due on the first of January
+next will be short of $81,000,000.
+
+By an act of Congress of the 3d of March last a loan of $12,000,000 was
+authorized at 4.5%, or an exchange of stock to that amount of 4.5% for
+a stock of 6%, to create a fund for extinguishing an equal amount of
+the public debt, bearing an interest of 6%, redeemable in 1826. An
+account of the measures taken to give effect to this act will be laid
+before you by the Secretary of the Treasury. As the object which it had
+in view has been but partially accomplished, it will be for the
+consideration of Congress whether the power with which it clothed the
+Executive should not be renewed at an early day of the present session,
+and under what modifications.
+
+The act of Congress of the 3d of March last, directing the Secretary of
+the Treasury to subscribe, in the name and for the use of the United
+States, for 1,500 shares of the capital stock of the Chesapeake and
+Delaware Canal Company, has been executed by the actual subscription
+for the amount specified; and such other measures have been adopted by
+that officer, under the act, as the fulfillment of its intentions
+requires. The latest accounts received of this important undertaking
+authorize the belief that it is in successful progress.
+
+The payments into the Treasury from the proceeds of the sales of the
+public lands during the present year were estimated at $1,000,000. The
+actual receipts of the first two quarters have fallen very little short
+of that sum; it is not expected that the second half of the year will
+be equally productive, but the income of the year from that source may
+now be safely estimated at $1,500,000. The act of Congress of May 18th,
+1824, to provide for the extinguishment of the debt due to the United
+States by the purchasers of public lands, was limited in its operation
+of relief to the purchaser to the 10th of April last. Its effect at the
+end of the quarter during which it expired was to reduce that debt from
+$10,000,000 to $7,000,000 By the operation of similar prior laws of
+relief, from and since that of March 2d, 1821, the debt had been
+reduced from upward of $22,000,000 to $10,000,000.
+
+It is exceedingly desirable that it should be extinguished altogether;
+and to facilitate that consummation I recommend to Congress the revival
+for one year more of the act of May 18th, 1824, with such provisional
+modification as may be necessary to guard the public interests against
+fraudulent practices in the resale of the relinquished land.
+
+The purchasers of public lands are among the most useful of our fellow
+citizens, and since the system of sales for cash alone has been
+introduced great indulgence has been justly extended to those who had
+previously purchased upon credit. The debt which had been contracted
+under the credit sales had become unwieldy, and its extinction was
+alike advantageous to the purchaser and to the public. Under the system
+of sales, matured as it has been by experience, and adapted to the
+exigencies of the times, the lands will continue as they have become,
+an abundant source of revenue; and when the pledge of them to the
+public creditor shall have been redeemed by the entire discharge of the
+national debt, the swelling tide of wealth with which they replenish
+the common Treasury may be made to reflow in unfailing streams of
+improvement from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean.
+
+The condition of the various branches of the public service resorting
+from the Department of War, and their administration during the current
+year, will be exhibited in the report of the Secretary of War and the
+accompanying documents herewith communicated. The organization and
+discipline of the Army are effective and satisfactory. To counteract
+the prevalence of desertion among the troops it has been suggested to
+withhold from the men a small portion of their monthly pay until the
+period of their discharge; and some expedient appears to be necessary
+to preserve and maintain among the officers so much of the art of
+horsemanship as could scarcely fail to be found wanting on the possible
+sudden eruption of a war, which should take us unprovided with a single
+corps of cavalry.
+
+The Military Academy at West Point, under the restrictions of a severe
+but paternal superintendence, recommends itself more and more to the
+patronage of the nation, and the numbers of meritorious officers which
+it forms and introduces to the public service furnishes the means of
+multiplying the undertakings of the public improvements to which their
+acquirements at that institution are peculiarly adapted. The school of
+artillery practice established at Fortress Monroe Hampton, Virginia is
+well suited to the same purpose, and may need the aid of further
+legislative provision to the same end. The reports of the various
+officers at the head of the administrative branches of the military
+service, connected with the quartering, clothing, subsistence, health,
+and pay of the Army, exhibit the assiduous vigilance of those officers
+in the performance of their respective duties, and the faithful
+accountability which has pervaded every part of the system.
+
+Our relations with the numerous tribes of aboriginal natives of this
+country, scattered over its extensive surface and so dependent even for
+their existence upon our power, have been during the present year
+highly interesting. An act of Congress of May 25th, 1824, made an
+appropriation to defray the expenses of making treaties of trade and
+friendship with the Indian tribes beyond the Mississippi. An act of
+March 3d, 1825, authorized treaties to be made with the Indians for
+their consent to the making of a road from the frontier of Missouri to
+that of New Mexico, and another act of the same date provided for
+defraying the expenses of holding treaties with the Sioux, Chippeways,
+Menomenees, Sauks, Foxes, etc., for the purpose of establishing
+boundaries and promoting peace between said tribes.
+
+The first and last objects of these acts have been accomplished, and
+the second is yet in a process of execution. The treaties which since
+the last session of Congress have been concluded with the several
+tribes will be laid before the Senate for their consideration
+conformably to the Constitution. They comprise large and valuable
+acquisitions of territory, and they secure an adjustment of boundaries
+and give pledges of permanent peace between several tribes which had
+been long waging bloody wars against each other.
+
+On the 12th of February last a treaty was signed at the Indian Springs
+between commissioners appointed on the part of the United States and
+certain chiefs and individuals of the Creek Nation of Indians, which
+was received at the seat of Government only a very few days before the
+close of the last session of Congress and of the late Administration.
+The advice and consent of the Senate was given to it on the 3d of
+March, too late for it to receive the ratification of the then
+President of the United States; it was ratified on the 7th of March,
+under the unsuspecting impression that it had been negotiated in good
+faith and in the confidence inspired by the recommendation of the
+Senate. The subsequent transactions in relation to this treaty will
+form the subject of a separate communication.
+
+The appropriations made by Congress for public works, as well in the
+construction of fortifications as for purposes of internal improvement,
+so far as they have been expended, have been faithfully applied. Their
+progress has been delayed by the want of suitable officers for
+superintending them. An increase of both the corps of engineers,
+military and topographical, was recommended by my predecessor at the
+last session of Congress. The reasons upon which that recommendation
+was founded subsist in all their force and have acquired additional
+urgency since that time. The Military Academy at West Point will
+furnish from the cadets there officers well qualified for carrying this
+measure into effect.
+
+The Board of Engineers for Internal Improvement, appointed for carrying
+into execution the act of Congress of April 30th, 1824, "to procure the
+necessary surveys, plans, and estimates on the subject of roads and
+canals", have been actively engaged in that service from the close of
+the last session of Congress. They have completed the surveys necessary
+for ascertaining the practicability of a canal from the Chesapeake Bay
+to the Ohio River, and are preparing a full report on that subject,
+which, when completed, will be laid before you. The same observation is
+to be made with regard to the two other objects of national importance
+upon which the Board have been occupied, namely, the accomplishment of
+a national road from this city to New Orleans, and the practicability
+of uniting the waters of Lake Memphramagog with Connecticut River and
+the improvement of the navigation of that river. The surveys have been
+made and are nearly completed. The report may be expected at an early
+period during the present session of Congress.
+
+The acts of Congress of the last session relative to the surveying,
+marking, or laying out roads in the Territories of Florida, Arkansas,
+and Michigan, from Missouri to Mexico, and for the continuation of the
+Cumberland road, are, some of them, fully executed, and others in the
+process of execution. Those for completing or commencing fortifications
+have been delayed only so far as the Corps of Engineers has been
+inadequate to furnish officers for the necessary superintendence of the
+works. Under the act confirming the statutes of Virginia and Maryland
+incorporating the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, three
+commissioners on the part of the United States have been appointed for
+opening books and receiving subscriptions, in concert with a like
+number of commissioners appointed on the part of each of those States.
+A meeting of the commissioners has been postponed, to await the
+definitive report of the board of engineers.
+
+The light-houses and monuments for the safety of our commerce and
+mariners, the works for the security of Plymouth Beach and for the
+preservation of the islands in Boston Harbor, have received the
+attention required by the laws relating to those objects respectively.
+The continuation of the Cumberland road, the most important of them
+all, after surmounting no inconsiderable difficulty in fixing upon the
+direction of the road, has commenced under the most promising of
+auspices, with the improvements of recent invention in the mode of
+construction, and with advantage of a great reduction in the
+comparative cost of the work.
+
+The operation of the laws relating to the Revolutionary pensioners may
+deserve the renewed consideration of Congress. The act of March 18th,
+1818, while it made provision for many meritorious and indigent
+citizens who had served in the War of Independence, opened a door to
+numerous abuses and impositions. To remedy this the act of May 1st, 1820,
+exacted proofs of absolute indigence, which many really in want were
+unable and all susceptible of that delicacy which is allied to many
+virtues must be deeply reluctant to give. The result has been that some
+among the least deserving have been retained, and some in whom the
+requisites both of worth and want were combined have been stricken from
+the list. As the numbers of these venerable relics of an age gone by
+diminish; as the decays of body, mind, and estate of those that survive
+must in the common course of nature increase, should not a more liberal
+portion of indulgence be dealt out to them? May not the want in most
+instances be inferred from the demand when the service can be proved,
+and may not the last days of human infirmity be spared the
+mortification of purchasing a pittance of relief only by the exposure
+of its own necessities? I submit to Congress the expediency of
+providing for individual cases of this description by special
+enactment, or of revising the act of May 1st, 1820, with a view to
+mitigate the rigor of its exclusions in favor of persons to whom
+charity now bestowed can scarcely discharge the debt of justice.
+
+The portion of the naval force of the Union in actual service has been
+chiefly employed on three stations--the Mediterranean, the coasts of
+South America bordering on the Pacific Ocean, and the West Indies. An
+occasional cruiser has been sent to range along the African shores most
+polluted by the traffic of slaves; one armed vessel has been stationed
+on the coast of our eastern boundary, to cruise along the fishing
+grounds in Hudsons Bay and on the coast of Labrador, and the first
+service of a new frigate has been performed in restoring to his native
+soil and domestic enjoyments the veteran hero whose youthful blood and
+treasure had freely flowed in the cause of our country's independence,
+and whose whole life has been a series of services and sacrifices to
+the improvement of his fellow men.
+
+The visit of General Lafayette, alike honorable to himself and to our
+country, closed, as it had commenced, with the most affecting
+testimonials of devoted attachment on his part, and of unbounded
+gratitude of this people to him in return. It will form here-after a
+pleasing incident in the annals of our Union, giving to real history
+the intense interest of romance and signally marking the unpurchasable
+tribute of a great nation's social affections to the disinterested
+champion of the liberties of human-kind.
+
+The constant maintenance of a small squadron in the Mediterranean is a
+necessary substitute for the humiliating alternative of paying tribute
+for the security of our commerce in that sea, and for a precarious
+peace, at the mercy of every caprice of four Barbary States, by whom it
+was liable to be violated. An additional motive for keeping a
+respectable force stationed there at this time is found in the maritime
+war raging between the Greeks and the Turks, and in which the neutral
+navigation of this Union is always in danger of outrage and
+depredation. A few instances have occurred of such depredations upon
+our merchant vessels by privateers or pirates wearing the Grecian flag,
+but without real authority from the Greek or any other Government. The
+heroic struggles of the Greeks themselves, in which our warmest
+sympathies as free men and Christians have been engaged, have continued
+to be maintained with vicissitudes of success adverse and favorable.
+
+Similar motives have rendered expedient the keeping of a like force on
+the coasts of Peru and Chile on the Pacific. The irregular and
+convulsive character of the war upon the shores has been extended to
+the conflicts upon the ocean. An active warfare has been kept up for
+years with alternate success, though generally to the advantage of the
+American patriots. But their naval forces have not always been under
+the control of their own Governments. Blockades, unjustifiable upon any
+acknowledged principles of international law, have been proclaimed by
+officers in command, and though disavowed by the supreme authorities,
+the protection of our own commerce against them has been made cause of
+complaint and erroneous imputations against some of the most gallant
+officers of our Navy. Complaints equally groundless have been made by
+the commanders of the Spanish royal forces in those seas; but the most
+effective protection to our commerce has been the flag and the firmness
+of our own commanding officers.
+
+The cessation of the war by the complete triumph of the patriot cause
+has removed, it is hoped, all cause of dissension with one party and
+all vestige of force of the other. But an unsettled coast of many
+degrees of latitude forming a part of our own territory and a
+flourishing commerce and fishery extending to the islands of the
+Pacific and to China still require that the protecting power of the
+Union should be displayed under its flag as well upon the ocean as upon
+the land.
+
+The objects of the West India Squadron have been to carry into
+execution the laws for the suppression of the African slave trade; for
+the protection of our commerce against vessels of piratical character,
+though bearing commissions from either of the belligerent parties; for
+its protection against open and unequivocal pirates. These objects
+during the present year have been accomplished more effectually than at
+any former period. The African slave trade has long been excluded from
+the use of our flag, and if some few citizens of our country have
+continued to set the laws of the Union as well as those of nature and
+humanity at defiance by persevering in that abominable traffic, it has
+been only by sheltering themselves under the banners of other nations
+less earnest for the total extinction of the trade of ours.
+
+The active, persevering, and unremitted energy of Captain Warrington
+and of the officers and men under his command on that trying and
+perilous service have been crowned with signal success, and are
+entitled to the approbation of their country. But experience has shown
+that not even a temporary suspension or relaxation from assiduity can
+be indulged on that station without reproducing piracy and murder in
+all their horrors; nor is it probably that for years to come our
+immensely valuable commerce in those seas can navigate in security
+without the steady continuance of an armed force devoted to its
+protection.
+
+It were, indeed, a vain and dangerous illusion to believe that in the
+present or probable condition of human society a commerce so extensive
+and so rich as ours could exist and be pursued in safety without the
+continual support of a military marine--the only arm by which the power
+of this Confederacy can be estimated or felt by foreign nations, and
+the only standing military force which can never be dangerous to our
+own liberties at home. A permanent naval peace establishment,
+therefore, adapted to our present condition, and adaptable to that
+gigantic growth with which the nation is advancing in its career, is
+among the subjects which have already occupied the foresight of the
+last Congress, and which will deserve your serious deliberations. Our
+Navy, commenced at an early period of our present political
+organization upon a scale commensurate with the incipient energies, the
+scanty resources, and the comparative indigence of our infancy, was
+even then found adequate to cope with all the powers of Barbary, save
+the first, and with one of the principle maritime powers of Europe.
+
+At a period of further advancement, but with little accession of
+strength, it not only sustained with honor the most unequal of
+conflicts, but covered itself and our country with unfading glory. But
+it is only since the close of the late war that by the numbers and
+force of the ships of which it was composed it could deserve the name
+of a navy. Yet it retains nearly the same organization as when it
+consisted only of five frigates. The rules and regulations by which it
+is governed earnestly call for revision, and the want of a naval school
+of instruction, corresponding with the Military Academy at West Point,
+for the formation of scientific and accomplished officers, is felt with
+daily increasing aggravation.
+
+The act of Congress of May 26th, 1824, authorizing an examination and
+survey of the harbor of Charleston, in South Carolina, of St. Marys, in
+Georgia, and of the coast of Florida, and for other purposes, has been
+executed so far as the appropriation would admit. Those of the 3d of
+March last, authorizing the establishment of a navy yard and depot on
+the coast of Florida, in the Gulf of Mexico, and authorizing the
+building of ten sloops of war, and for other purposes, are in the
+course of execution, for the particulars of which and other objects
+connected with this Department I refer to the report of the Secretary
+of the Navy, herewith communicated.
+
+A report from the Post Master General is also submitted, exhibiting the
+present flourishing condition of that Department. For the first time
+for many years the receipts for the year ending on the first of July
+last exceeded the expenditures during the same period to the amount of
+more than $45,000. Other facts equally creditable to the administration
+of this Department are that in two years from July 1st, 1823, an
+improvement of more than $185,000 in its pecuniary affairs has been
+realized; that in the same interval the increase of the transportation
+of the mail has exceeded 1,500,000 miles annually, and that 1,040 new
+post offices have been established. It hence appears that under
+judicious management the income from this establishment may be relied
+on as fully adequate to defray its expenses, and that by the
+discontinuance of post roads altogether unproductive, others of more
+useful character may be opened, 'til the circulation of the mail shall
+keep pace with the spread of our population, and the comforts of
+friendly correspondence, the exchanges of internal traffic, and the
+lights of the periodical press shall be distributed to the remotest
+corners of the Union, at a charge scarcely perceptible to any
+individual, and without the cost of a dollar to the public Treasury.
+
+Upon this first occasion of addressing the Legislature of the Union,
+with which I have been honored, in presenting to their view the
+execution so far as it has been effected of the measures sanctioned by
+them for promoting the internal improvement of our country, I can not
+close the communication without recommending to their calm and
+persevering consideration the general principle in a more enlarged
+extent. The great object of the institution of civil government is the
+improvement of the condition of those who are parties to the social
+compact, and no government, in what ever form constituted, can
+accomplish the lawful ends of its institution but in proportion as it
+improves the condition of those over whom it is established. Roads and
+canals, by multiplying and facilitating the communications and
+intercourse between distant regions and multitudes of men, are among
+the most important means of improvement. But moral, political,
+intellectual improvement are duties assigned by the Author of Our
+Existence to social no less than to individual man.
+
+For the fulfillment of those duties governments are invested with
+power, and to the attainment of the end--the progressive improvement of
+the condition of the governed--the exercise of delegated powers is a
+duty as sacred and indispensable as the usurpation of powers not
+granted is criminal and odious.
+
+Among the first, perhaps the very first, instrument for the improvement
+of the condition of men is knowledge, and to the acquisition of much of
+the knowledge adapted to the wants, the comforts, and enjoyments of
+human life public institutions and seminaries of learning are
+essential. So convinced of this was the first of my predecessors in
+this office, now first in the memory, as, living, he was first in the
+hearts, of our country-men, that once and again in his addresses to the
+Congresses with whom he cooperated in the public service he earnestly
+recommended the establishment of seminaries of learning, to prepare for
+all the emergencies of peace and war--a national university and a
+military academy. With respect to the latter, had he lived to the
+present day, in turning his eyes to the institution at West Point he
+would have enjoyed the gratification of his most earnest wishes; but in
+surveying the city which has been honored with his name he would have
+seen the spot of earth which he had destined and bequeathed to the use
+and benefit of his country as the site for a university still bare and
+barren.
+
+In assuming her station among the civilized nations of the earth it
+would seem that our country had contracted the engagement to contribute
+her share of mind, of labor, and of expense to the improvement of those
+parts of knowledge which lie beyond the reach of individual
+acquisition, and particularly to geographical and astronomical science.
+Looking back to the history only of the half century since the
+declaration of our independence, and observing the generous emulation
+with which the Governments of France, Great Britain, and Russia have
+devoted the genius, the intelligence, the treasures of their respective
+nations to the common improvement of the species in these branches of
+science, is it not incumbent upon us to inquire whether we are not
+bound by obligations of a high and honorable character to contribute
+our portion of energy and exertion to the common stock? The voyages of
+discovery prosecuted in the course of that time at the expense of those
+nations have not only redounded to their glory, but to the improvement
+of human knowledge.
+
+We have been partakers of that improvement and owe for it a sacred
+debt, not only of gratitude, but of equal or proportional exertion in
+the same common cause. Of the cost of these undertakings, if the mere
+expenditures of outfit, equipment, and completion of the expeditions
+were to be considered the only charges, it would be unworthy of a great
+and generous nation to take a second thought. One hundred expeditions
+of circumnavigation like those of Cook and La Prouse would not burden
+the exchequer of the nation fitting them out so much as the ways and
+means of defraying a single campaign in war. But if we take into
+account the lives of those benefactors of man-kind of which their
+services in the cause of their species were the purchase, how shall the
+cost of those heroic enterprises be estimated, and what compensation
+can be made to them or to their countries for them? Is it not by
+bearing them in affectionate remembrance? Is it not still more by
+imitating their example--by enabling country-men of our own to pursue
+the same career and to hazard their lives in the same cause?
+
+In inviting the attention of Congress to the subject of internal
+improvements upon a view thus enlarged it is not my desire to recommend
+the equipment of an expedition for circumnavigating the globe for
+purposes of scientific research and inquiry. We have objects of useful
+investigation nearer home, and to which our cares may be more
+beneficially applied. The interior of our own territories has yet been
+very imperfectly explored. Our coasts along many degrees of latitude
+upon the shores of the Pacific Ocean, though much frequented by our
+spirited commercial navigators, have been barely visited by our public
+ships. The River of the West, first fully discovered and navigated by a
+country-man of our own, still bears the name of the ship in which he
+ascended its waters, and claims the protection of our armed national
+flag at its mouth. With the establishment of a military post there or
+at some other point of that coast, recommended by my predecessor and
+already matured in the deliberations of the last Congress, I would
+suggest the expediency of connecting the equipment of a public ship for
+the exploration of the whole north-west coast of this continent.
+
+The establishment of an uniform standard of weights and measures was
+one of the specific objects contemplated in the formation of our
+Constitution, and to fix that standard was on of the powers delegated
+by express terms in that instrument to Congress. The Governments of
+Great Britain and France have scarcely ceased to be occupied with
+inquiries and speculations on the same subject since the existence of
+our Constitution, and with them it has expanded into profound,
+laborious, and expensive researches into the figure of the earth and
+the comparative length of the pendulum vibrating seconds in various
+latitudes from the equator to the pole. These researches have resulted
+in the composition and publication of several works highly interesting
+to the cause of science. The experiments are yet in the process of
+performance. Some of them have recently been made on our own shores,
+within the walls of one of our own colleges, and partly by one of our
+own fellow citizens. It would be honorable to our country if the sequel
+of the same experiments should be countenanced by the patronage of our
+Government, as they have hitherto been by those of France and Britain.
+
+Connected with the establishment of an university, or separate from it,
+might be undertaken the erection of an astronomical observatory, with
+provision for the support of an astronomer, to be in constant
+attendance of observation upon the phenomena of the heavens, and for
+the periodical publication of his observances. It is with no feeling of
+pride as an American that the remark may be made that on the
+comparatively small territorial surface of Europe there are existing
+upward of 130 of these light-houses of the skies, while throughout the
+whole American hemisphere there is not one. If we reflect a moment upon
+the discoveries which in the last four centuries have been made in the
+physical constitution of the universe by the means of these buildings
+and of observers stationed in them, shall we doubt of their usefulness
+to every nation? And while scarcely a year passes over our heads
+without bringing some new astronomical discovery to light, which we
+must fain receive at second hand from Europe, are we not cutting
+ourselves off from the means of returning light for light while we have
+neither observatory nor observer upon our half of the globe and the
+earth revolves in perpetual darkness to our unsearching eyes?
+
+When, on October 25th, 1791, the first President of the United States
+announced to Congress the result of the first enumeration of the
+inhabitants of this Union, he informed them that the returns gave the
+pleasing assurance that the population of the United States bordered on
+4,000,000 persons. At the distance of 30 years from that time the last
+enumeration, five years since completed, presented a population
+bordering on 10,000,000. Perhaps of all the evidence of a prosperous
+and happy condition of human society the rapidity of the increase of
+population is the most unequivocal. But the demonstration of our
+prosperity rests not alone upon this indication.
+
+Our commerce, our wealth, and the extent of our territories have
+increased in corresponding proportions, and the number of independent
+communities associated in our Federal Union has since that time nearly
+doubled. The legislative representation of the States and people in the
+two Houses of Congress has grown with the growth of their constituent
+bodies. The House, which then consisted of 65 members, now numbers
+upward of 200. The Senate, which consisted of 26 members, has now 48.
+But the executive and, still more, the judiciary departments are yet in
+a great measure confined to their primitive organization, and are now
+not adequate to the urgent wants of a still growing community.
+
+The naval armaments, which at an early period forced themselves upon
+the necessities of the Union, soon led to the establishment of a
+Department of the Navy. But the Departments of Foreign Affairs and of
+the Interior, which early after the formation of the Government had
+been united in one, continue so united to this time, to the
+unquestionable detriment of the public service. The multiplication of
+our relations with the nations and Governments of the Old World has
+kept pace with that of our population and commerce, while within the
+last ten years a new family of nations in our own hemisphere has arisen
+among the inhabitants of the earth, with whom our intercourse,
+commercial and political, would of itself furnish occupation to an
+active and industrious department.
+
+The constitution of the judiciary, experimental and imperfect as it was
+even in the infancy of our existing Government, is yet more inadequate
+to the administration of national justice at our present maturity. Nine
+years have elapsed since a predecessor in this office, now not the
+last, the citizen who, perhaps, of all others throughout the Union
+contributed most to the formation and establishment of our
+Constitution, in his valedictory address to Congress, immediately
+preceding his retirement from public life, urgently recommended the
+revision of the judiciary and the establishment of an additional
+executive department. The exigencies of the public service and its
+unavoidable deficiencies, as now in exercise, have added yearly
+cumulative weight to the considerations presented by him as persuasive
+to the measure, and in recommending it to your deliberations I am happy
+to have the influence of this high authority in aid of the undoubting
+convictions of my own experience.
+
+The laws relating to the administration of the Patent Office are
+deserving of much consideration and perhaps susceptible of some
+improvement. The grant of power to regulate the action of Congress upon
+this subject has specified both the end to be obtained and the means by
+which it is to be effected, "to promote the progress of science and
+useful arts by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the
+exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries". If an
+honest pride might be indulged in the reflection that on the records of
+that office are already found inventions the usefulness of which has
+scarcely been transcended in the annals of human ingenuity, would not
+its exultation be allayed by the inquiry whether the laws have
+effectively insured to the inventors the reward destined to them by the
+Constitution--even a limited term of exclusive right to their
+discoveries?
+
+On December 24th, 1799, it was resolved by Congress that a marble
+monument should be erected by the United States in the Capitol at the
+city of Washington; that the family of General Washington should be
+requested to permit his body to be deposited under it, and that the
+monument be so designed as to commemorate the great events of his
+military and political life. In reminding Congress of this resolution
+and that the monument contemplated by it remains yet without execution,
+I shall indulge only the remarks that the works at the Capitol are
+approaching to completion; that the consent of the family, desired by
+the resolution, was requested and obtained; that a monument has been
+recently erected in this city over the remains of another distinguished
+patriot of the Revolution, and that a spot has been reserved within the
+walls where you are deliberating for the benefit of this and future
+ages, in which the mortal remains may be deposited of him whose spirit
+hovers over you and listens with delight to every act of the
+representatives of his nation which can tend to exalt and adorn his and
+their country.
+
+The Constitution under which you are assembled is a charter of limited
+powers. After full and solemn deliberation upon all or any of the
+objects which, urged by an irresistible sense of my own duty, I have
+recommended to your attention should you come to the conclusion that,
+however desirable in themselves, the enactment of laws for effecting
+them would transcend the powers committed to you by that venerable
+instrument which we are all bound to support, let no consideration
+induce you to assume the exercise of powers not granted to you by the
+people.
+
+But if the power to exercise exclusive legislation in all cases what so
+ever over the District of Columbia; if the power to lay and collect
+taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, to pay the debts and provide for
+the common defense and general welfare of the United States; if the
+power to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several
+States and with the Indian tribes, to fix the standard of weights and
+measures, to establish post offices and post roads, to declare war, to
+raise and support armies, to provide and maintain a navy, to dispose of
+and make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory or
+other property belonging to the United States, and to make all laws
+which shall be necessary and proper for carrying these powers into
+execution--if these powers and others enumerated in the Constitution
+may be effectually brought into action by laws promoting the
+improvement of agriculture, commerce, and manufactures, the cultivation
+and encouragement of the mechanic and of the elegant arts, the
+advancement of literature, and the progress of the sciences, ornamental
+and profound, to refrain from exercising them for the benefit of the
+people themselves would be to hide in the earth the talent committed to
+our charge--would be treachery to the most sacred of trusts.
+
+The spirit of improvement is abroad upon the earth. It stimulates the
+hearts and sharpens the faculties not of our fellow citizens alone, but
+of the nations of Europe and of their rulers. While dwelling with
+pleasing satisfaction upon the superior excellence of our political
+institutions, let us not be unmindful that liberty is power; that the
+nation blessed with the largest portion of liberty must in proportion
+to its numbers be the most powerful nation upon earth, and that the
+tenure of power by man is, in the moral purposes of his Creator, upon
+condition that it shall be exercised to ends of beneficence, to improve
+the condition of himself and his fellow men.
+
+While foreign nations less blessed with that freedom which is power
+than ourselves are advancing with gigantic strides in the career of
+public improvement, were we to slumber in indolence or fold up our arms
+and proclaim to the world that we are palsied by the will of our
+constituents, would it not be to cast away the bounties of Providence
+and doom ourselves to perpetual inferiority? In the course of the year
+now drawing to its close we have beheld, under the auspices and at the
+expense of one State of this Union, a new university unfolding its
+portals to the sons of science and holding up the torch of human
+improvement to eyes that seek the light. We have seen under the
+persevering and enlightened enterprise of another State the waters of
+our Western lakes mingle with those of the ocean. If undertakings like
+these have been accomplished in the compass of a few years by the
+authority of single members of our Confederation, can we, the
+representative authorities of the whole Union, fall behind our fellow
+servants in the exercise of the trust committed to us for the benefit
+of our common sovereign by the accomplishment of works important to the
+whole and to which neither the authority nor the resources of any one
+State can be adequate?
+
+Finally, fellow citizens, I shall await with cheering hope and faithful
+cooperation the result of your deliberations, assured that, without
+encroaching upon the powers reserved to the authorities of the
+respective States or to the people, you will, with a due sense of your
+obligations to your country and of the high responsibilities weighing
+upon yourselves, give efficacy to the means committed to you for the
+common good. And may He who searches the hearts of the children of men
+prosper your exertions to secure the blessings of peace and promote the
+highest welfare of your country.
+
+JOHN QUINCY ADAMS
+
+***
+
+State of the Union Address
+John Quincy Adams
+December 5, 1826
+
+Fellow Citizens of the Senate and of the House of Representatives:
+
+The assemblage of the representatives of our Union in both Houses of
+the Congress at this time occurs under circumstances calling for the
+renewed homage of our grateful acknowledgments to the Giver of All
+Good. With the exceptions incidental to the most felicitous condition
+of human existence, we continue to be highly favored in all the
+elements which contribute to individual comfort and to national
+prosperity. In the survey of our extensive country we have generally to
+observe abodes of health and regions of plenty. In our civil and
+political relations we have peace without and tranquillity within our
+borders. We are, as a people, increasing with unabated rapidity in
+population, wealth, and national resources, and whatever differences of
+opinion exist among us with regard to the mode and the means by which
+we shall turn the beneficence of Heaven to the improvement of our own
+condition, there is yet a spirit animating us all which will not suffer
+the bounties of Providence to be showered upon us in vain, but will
+receive them with grateful hearts, and apply them with unwearied hands
+to the advancement of the general good.
+
+Of the subjects recommended to Congress at their last session, some
+were then definitively acted upon. Others, left unfinished, but partly
+matured, will recur to your attention without needing a renewal of
+notice from me. The purpose of this communication will be to present to
+your view the general aspect of our public affairs at this moment and
+the measures which have been taken to carry into effect the intentions
+of the Legislature as signified by the laws then and heretofore
+enacted.
+
+In our intercourse with the other nations of the earth we have still
+the happiness of enjoying peace and a general good understanding,
+qualified, however, in several important instances by collisions of
+interest and by unsatisfied claims of justice, to the settlement of
+which the constitutional interposition of the legislative authority may
+become ultimately indispensable.
+
+By the decease of the Emperor Alexander of Russia, which occurred
+contemporaneously with the commencement of the last session of
+Congress, the United States have been deprived of a long tried, steady,
+and faithful friend. Born to the inheritance of absolute power and
+trained in the school of adversity, from which no power on earth,
+however absolute, is exempt, that monarch from his youth had been
+taught to feel the force and value of public opinion and to be sensible
+that the interests of his own Government would best be promoted by a
+frank and friendly intercourse with this Republic, as those of his
+people would be advanced by a liberal intercourse with our country. A
+candid and confidential interchange of sentiments between him and the
+Government of the United States upon the affairs of Southern America
+took place at a period not long preceding his demise, and contributed
+to fix that course of policy which left to the other Governments of
+Europe no alternative but that of sooner or later recognizing the
+independence of our southern neighbors, of which the example had by the
+United States already been set.
+
+The ordinary diplomatic communications between his successor, the
+Emperor Nicholas, and the United States have suffered some interruption
+by the illness, departure, and subsequent decease of his minister
+residing here, who enjoyed, as he merited, the entire confidence of his
+new sovereign, as he had eminently responded to that of his
+predecessor. But we have had the most satisfactory assurances that the
+sentiments of the reigning Emperor toward the United States are
+altogether conformable to those which had so long and constantly
+animated his imperial brother, and we have reason to hope that they
+will serve to cement that harmony and good understanding between the
+two nations which, founded in congenial interests, can not but result
+in the advancement of the welfare and prosperity of both.
+
+Our relations of commerce and navigation with France are, by the
+operation of the convention of June 24th, 1822, with that nation, in a
+state of gradual and progressive improvement. Convinced by all our
+experience, no less than by the principles of fair and liberal
+reciprocity which the United States have constantly tendered to all the
+nations of the earth as the rule of commercial intercourse which they
+would universally prefer, that fair and equal competition is most
+conducive to the interests of both parties, the United States in the
+negotiation of that convention earnestly contended for a mutual
+renunciation of discriminating duties and charges in the ports of the
+two countries. Unable to obtain the immediate recognition of this
+principle in its full extent, after reducing the duties of
+discrimination so far as was found attainable it was agreed that at the
+expiration of two years from October 1st, 1822, when the convention was
+to go into effect, unless a notice of six months on either side should
+be given to the other that the convention itself must terminate, those
+duties should be reduced one quarter, and that this reduction should be
+yearly repeated, until all discrimination should cease, while the
+convention itself should continue in force. By the effect of this
+stipulation three quarters of the discriminating duties which had been
+levied by each party upon the vessels of the other in its ports have
+already been removed; and on the first of next October, should the
+convention be still in force, the remaining one quarter will be
+discontinued. French vessels laden with French produce will be received
+in our ports on the same terms as our own, and ours in return will
+enjoy the same advantages in the ports of France.
+
+By these approximations to an equality of duties and of charges not
+only has the commerce between the two countries prospered, but friendly
+dispositions have been on both sides encouraged and promoted. They will
+continue to be cherished and cultivated on the part of the United
+States. It would have been gratifying to have had it in my power to add
+that the claims upon the justice of the French Government, involving
+the property and the comfortable subsistence of many of our fellow
+citizens, and which have been so long and so earnestly urged, were in a
+more promising train of adjustment than at your last meeting; but their
+condition remains unaltered.
+
+With the Government of the Netherlands the mutual abandonment of
+discriminating duties had been regulated by legislative acts on both
+sides. The act of Congress of April 20th, 1818, abolished all
+discriminating duties of impost and tonnage upon the vessels and
+produce of the Netherlands in the ports of the United States upon the
+assurance given by the Government of the Netherlands that all such
+duties operating against the shipping and commerce of the United States
+in that Kingdom had been abolished. These reciprocal regulations had
+continued in force several years when the discriminating principle was
+resumed by the Netherlands in a new and indirect form by a bounty of
+10% in the shape of a return of duties to their national vessels, and
+in which those of the United States are not permitted to participate.
+By the act of Congress of January 7th, 1824, all discriminating duties
+in the United States were again suspended, so far as related to the
+vessels and produce of the Netherlands, so long as the reciprocal
+exemption should be extended to the vessels and produce of the United
+States in the Netherlands. But the same act provides that in the event
+of a restoration of discriminating duties to operate against the
+shipping and commerce of the United States in any of the foreign
+countries referred to therein the suspension of discriminating duties
+in favor of the navigation of such foreign country should cease and all
+the provisions of the acts imposing discriminating foreign tonnage and
+impost duties in the United States should revive and be in full force
+with regard to that nation.
+
+In the correspondence with the Government of the Netherlands upon this
+subject they have contended that the favor shown to their own shipping
+by this bounty upon their tonnage is not to be considered a
+discriminating duty; but it can not be denied that it produces all the
+same effects. Had the mutual abolition been stipulated by treaty, such
+a bounty upon the national vessels could scarcely have been granted
+consistent with good faith. Yet as the act of Congress of January 7th,
+1824 has not expressly authorized the Executive authority to determine
+what shall be considered as a revival of discriminating duties by a
+foreign government to the disadvantage of the United States, and as the
+retaliatory measure on our part, however just and necessary, may tend
+rather to that conflict of legislation which we deprecate than to that
+concert to which we invite all commercial nations, as most conducive to
+their interest and our own, I have thought it more consistent with the
+spirit of our institutions to refer to the subject again to the
+paramount authority of the Legislature to decide what measure the
+emergency may require than abruptly by proclamation to carry into
+effect the minatory provisions of the act of 1824.
+
+During the last session of Congress treaties of amity, navigation, and
+commerce were negotiated and signed at this place with the Government
+of Denmark, in Europe, and with the Federation of Central America, in
+this hemisphere. These treaties then received the constitutional
+sanction of the Senate, by the advice and consent to their
+ratification. They were accordingly ratified on the part of the United
+States, and during the recess of Congress have been also ratified by
+the other respective contracting parties. The ratifications have been
+exchanged, and they have been published by proclamations, copies of
+which are herewith communicated to Congress.
+
+These treaties have established between the contracting parties the
+principles of equality and reciprocity in their broadest and most
+liberal extent, each party admitting the vessels of the other into its
+ports, laden with cargoes the produce or manufacture of any quarter of
+the globe, upon the payment of the same duties of tonnage and impost
+that are chargeable upon their own. They have further stipulated that
+the parties shall hereafter grant no favor of navigation or commerce to
+any other nation which shall not upon the same terms be granted to each
+other, and that neither party will impose upon articles of merchandise
+the produce or manufacture of the other any other or higher duties than
+upon the like articles being the produce or manufacture of any other
+country. To these principles there is in the convention with Denmark an
+exception with regard to the colonies of that Kingdom in the arctic
+seas, but none with regard to her colonies in the West Indies.
+
+In the course of the last summer the term to which our last commercial
+treaty with Sweden was limited has expired. A continuation of it is in
+the contemplation of the Swedish Government, and is believed to be
+desirable on the part of the United States. It has been proposed by the
+King of Sweden that pending the negotiation of renewal the expired
+treaty should be mutually considered as still in force, a measure which
+will require the sanction of Congress to be carried into effect on our
+part, and which I therefore recommend to your consideration.
+
+With Prussia, Spain, Portugal, and, in general, all the European powers
+between whom and the United States relations of friendly intercourse
+have existed their condition has not materially varied since the last
+session of Congress. I regret not to be able to say the same of our
+commercial intercourse with the colonial possessions of Great Britain
+in America. Negotiations of the highest importance to our common
+interests have been for several years in discussion between the two
+Governments, and on the part of the United States have been invariably
+pursued in the spirit of candor and conciliation. Interests of great
+magnitude and delicacy had been adjusted by the conventions of 1815 and
+1818, while that of 1822, mediated by the late Emperor Alexander, had
+promised a satisfactory compromise of claims which the Government of
+the United States, in justice to the rights of a numerous class of
+their citizens, was bound to sustain.
+
+But with regard to the commercial intercourse between the United States
+and the British colonies in America, it has been hitherto found
+impracticable to bring the parties to an understanding satisfactory to
+both. The relative geographical position and the respective products of
+nature cultivated by human industry had constituted the elements of a
+commercial intercourse between the United States and British America,
+insular and continental, important to the inhabitants of both
+countries; but it had been interdicted by Great Britain upon a
+principle heretofore practiced upon by the colonizing nations of
+Europe, of holding the trade of their colonies each in exclusive
+monopoly to herself.
+
+After the termination of the late war this interdiction had been
+revived, and the British Government declined including this portion of
+our intercourse with her possessions in the negotiation of the
+convention of 1815. The trade was then carried on exclusively in
+British vessels 'til the act of Congress, concerning navigation, of
+1818 and the supplemental act of 1820 met the interdict by a
+corresponding measure on the part of the United States. These measures,
+not of retaliation, but of necessary self defense, were soon succeeded
+by an act of Parliament opening certain colonial ports to the vessels
+of the United States coming directly from them, and to the importation
+from them of certain articles of our produce burdened with heavy
+duties, and excluding some of the most valuable articles of our
+exports. The United States opened their ports to British vessels from
+the colonies upon terms as exactly corresponding with those of the act
+of Parliament as in the relative position of the parties could be made,
+and a negotiation was commenced by mutual consent, with the hope on our
+part that a reciprocal spirit of accommodation and a common sentiment
+of the importance of the trade to the interests of the inhabitants of
+the two countries between whom it must be carried on would ultimately
+bring the parties to a compromise with which both might be satisfied.
+With this view the Government of the United States had determined to
+sacrifice something of that entire reciprocity which in all commercial
+arrangements with foreign powers they are entitled to demand, and to
+acquiesce in some inequalities disadvantageous to ourselves rather than
+to forego the benefit of a final and permanent adjustment of this
+interest to the satisfaction of Great Britain herself. The negotiation,
+repeatedly suspended by accidental circumstances, was, however, by
+mutual agreement and express assent, considered as pending and to be
+speedily resumed.
+
+In the mean time another act of Parliament, so doubtful and ambiguous
+in its import as to have been misunderstood by the officers in the
+colonies who were to carry it into execution, opens again certain
+colonial ports upon new conditions and terms, with a threat to close
+them against any nation which may not accept those terms as prescribed
+by the British Government. This act, passed July, 1825, not
+communicated to the Government of the United States, not understood by
+the British officers of the customs in the colonies where it was to be
+enforced, was never the less submitted to the consideration of Congress
+at their last session. With the knowledge that a negotiation upon the
+subject had long been in progress and pledges given of its resumption
+at an early day, it was deemed expedient to await the result of that
+negotiation rather than to subscribe implicitly to terms the import of
+which was not clear and which the British authorities themselves in
+this hemisphere were not prepared to explain.
+
+Immediately after the close of the last session of Congress one of our
+most distinguished citizens was dispatched as envoy extraordinary and
+minister plenipotentiary to Great Britain, furnished with instructions
+which we could not doubt would lead to a conclusion of this long
+controverted interest upon terms acceptable to Great Britain. Upon his
+arrival, and before he had delivered his letters of credence, he was
+bet by an order of the British council excluding from and after the
+first of December now current the vessels of the United States from all
+the colonial British ports excepting those immediately bordering on our
+territories. In answer to his expostulations upon a measure thus
+unexpected he is informed that according to the ancient maxims of
+policy of European nations having colonies their trade is an exclusive
+possession of the mother country; that all participation in it by other
+nations is a boon or favor not forming a subject of negotiation, but to
+be regulated by the legislative acts of the power owning the colony;
+that the British Government therefore declines negotiating concerning
+it, and that as the United States did not forthwith accept purely and
+simply the terms offered by the act of Parliament of July, 1825, Great
+Britain would not now admit the vessels of the United States even upon
+the terms on which she has opened them to the navigation of other
+nations.
+
+We have been accustomed to consider the trade which we have enjoyed
+with the British colonies rather as an interchange of mutual benefits
+than as a mere favor received; that under every circumstance we have
+given an ample equivalent. We have seen every other nation holding
+colonies negotiate with other nations and grant them freely admission
+to the colonies by treaty, and so far are the other colonizing nations
+of Europe now from refusing to negotiate for trade with their colonies
+that we ourselves have secured access to the colonies of more than one
+of them by treaty. The refusal, however, of Great Britain to negotiate
+leaves to the United States no other alternative than that of
+regulating or interdicting altogether the trade on their part,
+according as either measure may effect the interests of our own
+country, and with that exclusive object I would recommend the whole
+subject to your calm and candid deliberations.
+
+It is hoped that our unavailing exertions to accomplish a cordial good
+understanding on this interest will not have an unpropitious effect
+upon the other great topics of discussion between the two Governments.
+Our north-eastern and north-western boundaries are still unadjusted.
+The commissioners under the 7th article of the treaty of Ghent have
+nearly come to the close of their labors; nor can we renounce the
+expectation, enfeebled as it is, that they may agree upon their report
+to the satisfaction or acquiescence of both parties. The commission for
+liquidating the claims for indemnity for slaves carried away after the
+close of the war has been sitting, with doubtful prospects of success.
+Propositions of compromise have, however, passed between the two
+Governments, the result of which we flatter ourselves may yet prove
+unsatisfactory. Our own dispositions and purposes toward Great Britain
+are all friendly and conciliatory; nor can we abandon but with strong
+reluctance the belief that they will ultimately meet a return, not of
+favors, which we neither as nor desire, but of equal reciprocity and
+good will.
+
+With the American Governments of this hemisphere we continue to
+maintain an intercourse altogether friendly, and between their nations
+and ours that commercial interchange of which mutual benefit is the
+source of mutual comfort and harmony the result is in a continual state
+of improvement. The war between Spain and them since the total
+expulsion of the Spanish military force from their continental
+territories has been little more than nominal, and their internal
+tranquillity, though occasionally menaced by the agitations which civil
+wars never fail to leave behind them, has not been affected by any
+serious calamity.
+
+The congress of ministers from several of those nations which assembled
+at Panama, after a short session there, adjourned to meet again at a
+more favorable season in the neighborhood of Mexico. The decease of one
+of our ministers on his way to the Isthmus, and the impediments of the
+season, which delayed the departure of the other, deprived United
+States of the advantage of being represented at the first meeting of
+the congress. There is, however, no reason to believe that any
+transactions of the congress were of a nature to affect injuriously the
+interests of the United States or to require the interposition of our
+ministers had they been present. Their absence has, indeed, deprived
+United States of the opportunity of possessing precise and authentic
+information of the treaties which were concluded at Panama; and the
+whole result has confirmed me in the conviction of the expediency to
+the United States of being represented at the congress. The surviving
+member of the mission, appointed during your last session, has
+accordingly proceeded to his destination, and a successor to his
+distinguished and lamented associate will be nominated to the Senate. A
+treaty of amity, navigation, and commerce has in the course of the last
+summer been concluded by our minister plenipotentiary at Mexico with
+the united states of that Confederacy, which will also be laid before
+the Senate for their advice with regard to its ratification.
+
+In adverting to the present condition of our fiscal concerns and to the
+prospects of our revenue the first remark that calls our attention is
+that they are less exuberantly prosperous than they were at the
+corresponding period of the last year. The severe shock so extensively
+sustained by the commercial and manufacturing interests in Great
+Britain has not been without a perceptible recoil upon ourselves. A
+reduced importation from abroad is necessarily succeeded by a reduced
+return to the Treasury at home. The net revenue of the present year
+will not equal that of the last, and the receipts of that which is to
+come will fall short of those in the current year. The diminution,
+however, is in part attributable to the flourishing condition of some
+of our domestic manufactures, and so far is compensated by an
+equivalent more profitable to the nation.
+
+It is also highly gratifying to perceive that the deficiency in the
+revenue, while it scarcely exceeds the anticipations of the last year's
+estimate from the Treasury, has not interrupted the application of more
+than $11 millions during the present year to the discharge of the
+principal and interest of the debt, nor the reduction of upward of
+$7,000,000 of the capital of the debt itself. The balance in the
+Treasury on the first of January last was $5,201,650.43; the receipts
+from that time to the 30th of September last were $19,585,932.50; the
+receipts of the current quarter, estimated at $6,000,000, yield, with
+the sums already received, a revenue of about $25,500,000 for the year;
+the expenditures for the first 3 quarters of the year have amounted to
+$18,714,226.66; the expenditures of the current quarter are expected,
+including the $2,000,000 of the principal of the debt to be paid, to
+balance the receipts; so that the expense of the year, amounting to
+upward of $1,000,000 less than its income, will leave a proportionally
+increased balance in the Treasury on January 1st, 1827, over that of
+the first of January last; instead of $5,200,000 there will be
+$6,400,000.
+
+The amount of duties secured on merchandise imported from the commence
+of the year 'til September 30 is estimated at $21,250,000, and the
+amount that will probably accrue during the present quarter is
+estimated at $4,250,000, making for the whole year $25,500,000, from
+which the draw-backs being deducted will leave a clear revenue from the
+customs receivable in the year 1827 of about $20,400,000, which, with
+the sums to be received from the proceeds of public lands, the bank
+dividends, and other incidental receipts, will form an aggregate of
+about $23,000,000, a sum falling short of the whole expenses of the
+present year little more than the portion of those expenditures applied
+to the discharge of the public debt beyond the annual appropriation of
+$10,000,000 by the act of March 3d, 1817. At the passage of that act
+the public debt amounted to $123,500,000. On the first of January next
+it will be short of $74,000,000. In the lapse of these 10 years
+$50,000,000 of public debt, with the annual charge of upward of
+$3,000,000 of interest upon them, have been extinguished. At the
+passage of tat act, of the annual appropriation of $10,000,000,
+$7,000,000 were absorbed in the payment of interest, and not more than
+$3,000,000 went to reduce the capital of the debt. Of the same
+$10,000,000, at this time scarcely $4,000,000 are applicable to the
+interest and upward of $6,000,000 are effective in melting down the
+capital.
+
+Yet our experience has proved that a revenue consisting so largely of
+imposts and tonnage ebbs and flows to an extraordinary extent, with all
+the fluctuations incident to the general commerce of the world. It is
+within our recollection that even in the compass of the same last ten
+years the receipts of the Treasury were not adequate to the
+expenditures of the year, and that in two successive years it was found
+necessary to resort to loans to meet the engagements of the nation. The
+returning tides of the succeeding years replenished the public coffers
+until they have again begun to feel the vicissitude of a decline. To
+produce these alternations of fullness and exhaustion the relative
+operation of abundant or unfruitful seasons, the regulations of foreign
+governments, political revolutions, the prosperous or decaying
+condition of manufactures, commercial speculations, and many other
+causes, not always to be traced, variously combine.
+
+We have found the alternate swells and diminutions embracing periods of
+from two to three years. The last period of depression to United States
+was from 1819 to 1822. The corresponding revival was from 1823 to the
+commencement of the present year. Still, we have no cause to apprehend
+a depression comparable to that of the former period, or even to
+anticipate a deficiency which will intrench upon the ability to apply
+the annual $10 millions to the reduction of the debt. It is well for
+us, however, to be admonished of the necessity of abiding by the maxims
+of the most vigilant economy, and of resorting to all honorable and
+useful expedients for pursuing with steady and inflexible perseverance
+the total discharge of the debt.
+
+Besides the $7,000,000 of the loans of 1813 which will have been
+discharged in the course of the present year, there are $9,000,000
+which by the terms of the contracts would have been and are now
+redeemable. $13,000,000 more of the loan of 1814 will become redeemable
+from and after the expiration of the present month, and $9,000,000
+other from and after the close of the ensuing year. They constitute a
+mass of $31,000,000, all bearing an interest of 6%, more than
+$20,000,000 of which will be immediately redeemable, and the rest
+within little more than a year. Leaving of this amount $15,000,000 to
+continue at the interest of 6%, but to be paid off as far as shall be
+found practicable in the years 1827 and 1828, there is scarcely a doubt
+that the remaining $16,000,000 might within a few months be discharged
+by a loan at not exceeding 5%, redeemable in the years 1829 and 1830.
+By this operation a sum of nearly $500,000 may be saved to the nation,
+and the discharge of the whole $31,000,000 within the four years may be
+greatly facilitated if not wholly accomplished.
+
+By an act of Congress of March 3d, 1825, a loan for the purpose now
+referred to, or a subscription to stock, was authorized, at an interest
+not exceeding 4.5%. But at that time so large a portion of the floating
+capital of the country was absorbed in commercial speculations and so
+little was left for investment in the stocks that the measure was but
+partially successful. At the last session of Congress the condition of
+the funds was still unpropitious to the measure; but the change so soon
+afterwards occurred that, had the authority existed to redeem the $9
+millions now redeemable by an exchange of stocks or a loan at 5%, it is
+morally certain that it might have been effected, and with it a yearly
+saving of $90,000.
+
+With regard to the collection of the revenue of imposts, certain
+occurrences have within the last year been disclosed in one or two of
+our principal ports, which engaged the attention of Congress at their
+last session and may hereafter require further consideration. Until
+within a very few years the execution of the laws for raising the
+revenue, like that of all our other laws, has been insured more by the
+moral sense of the community than by the rigors of a jealous precaution
+or by penal sanction. Confiding in the exemplary punctuality and
+unsullied integrity of our importing merchants, a gradual relaxation
+from the provisions of the collection laws, a close adherence to which
+have caused inconvenience and expense to them, had long become
+habitual, and indulgences had been extended universally because they
+had never been abused. It may be worthy of your serious consideration
+whether some further legislative provision may not be necessary to come
+in aid of this state of unguarded security.
+
+From the reports herewith communicated of the Secretaries of War and of
+the Navy, with the subsidiary documents annexed to them, will be
+discovered the present condition and administration of our military
+establishment on the land and on the sea. The organization of the Army
+having undergone no change since its reduction to the present peace
+establishment in 1821, it remains only to observe that it is yet found
+adequate to all the purposes for which a permanent armed force in time
+of peace can be needed or useful. It may be proper to add that, from a
+difference of opinion between the late President of the United States
+and the Senate with regard to the construction of the act of Congress
+of March 2d, 1821, to reduce and fix the military peace establishment
+of the United States, it remains hitherto so far without execution that
+no colonel has been appointed to command one of the regiments of
+artillery. A supplementary or explanatory act of the Legislature
+appears to be the only expedient practicable for removing the
+difficulty of this appointment.
+
+In a period of profound peace the conduct of the mere military
+establishment forms but a very inconsiderable portion of the duties
+devolving upon the administration of the Department of War. It will be
+seen by the returns from the subordinate departments of the Army that
+every branch of the service is marked with order, regularity, and
+discipline; that from the commanding general through all the gradations
+of superintendence the officers feel themselves to have been citizens
+before they were soldiers, and that the glory of a republican army must
+consist in the spirit of freedom, by which it is animated, and of
+patriotism, by which it is impelled. It may be confidently stated that
+the moral character of the Army is in a state of continual improvement,
+and that all the arrangements for the disposal of its parts have a
+constant reference to that end.
+
+But to the War Department are attributed other duties, having, indeed,
+relation to a future possible condition of war, but being purely
+defensive, and in their tendency contributing rather to the security
+and permanency of peace--the erection of the fortifications provided
+for by Congress, and adapted to secure our shores from hostile
+invasion; the distribution of the fund of public gratitude and justice
+to the pensioners of the Revolutionary war; the maintenance of our
+relations of peace and protection with the Indian tribes, and the
+internal improvements and surveys for the location of roads and canals,
+which during the last three sessions of Congress have engaged so much
+of their attention, and may engross so large a share of their future
+benefactions to our country.
+
+By the act of April 30th, 1824, suggested and approved by my
+predecessor, the sum of $30,000 was appropriated for the purpose of
+causing to be made the necessary surveys, plans, and estimates of the
+routes of such roads and canals as the President of the United States
+might deem of national importance in a commercial or military point of
+view, or necessary for the transportation of the public mail. The
+surveys, plans, and estimates for each, when completed, will be laid
+before Congress.
+
+In execution of this act a board of engineers was immediately
+instituted, and have been since most assiduously and constantly
+occupied in carrying it into effect. The first object to which their
+labors were directed, by order of the late President, was the
+examination of the country between the tide waters of the Potomac, the
+Ohio, and Lake Erie, to ascertain the practicability of a communication
+between them, to designate the most suitable route for the same, and to
+form plans and estimates in detail of the expense of execution.
+
+On March 2d, 1825, they made their first report, which was immediately
+communicated to Congress, and in which they declared that having
+maturely considered the circumstances observed by them personally, and
+carefully studied the results of such of the preliminary surveys as
+were then completed, they were decidedly of opinion that the
+communication was practicable.
+
+At the last session of Congress, before the board of engineers were
+enabled to make up their second report containing a general plan and
+preparatory estimate for the work, the Committee of the House of
+Representatives upon Roads and Canals closed the session with a report
+expressing the hope that the plan and estimate of the board of
+engineers might at this time be prepared, and that the subject be
+referred to the early and favorable consideration of Congress at their
+present session. That expected report of the board of engineers is
+prepared, and will forthwith be laid before you.
+
+Under the resolution of Congress authorizing the Secretary of War to
+have prepared a complete system of cavalry tactics, and a system of
+exercise and instruction of field artillery, for the use of the militia
+of the United States, to be reported to Congress at the present
+session, a board of distinguished officers of the Army and of the
+militia has been convened, whose report will be submitted to you with
+that of the Secretary of War. The occasion was thought favorable for
+consulting the same board, aided by the results of a correspondence
+with the governors of the several States and Territories and other
+citizens of intelligence and experience, upon the acknowledged
+defective condition of our militia system, and of the improvements of
+which it is susceptible. The report of the board upon this subject is
+also submitted for your consideration.
+
+In the estimates of appropriations for the ensuing year upward of $5
+millions will be submitted for the expenditures to be paid from the
+Department of War. Less than two fifths of this will be applicable to
+the maintenance and support of the Army. $1,500,000, in the form of
+pensions, goes as a scarcely adequate tribute to the services and
+sacrifices of a former age, and a more than equal sum invested in
+fortifications, or for the preparations of internal improvement,
+provides for the quiet, the comfort, and happier existence of the ages
+to come. The appropriations to indemnify those unfortunate remnants of
+another race unable alike to share in the enjoyments and to exist in
+the presence of civilization, though swelling in recent years to a
+magnitude burdensome to the Treasury, are generally not without their
+equivalents in profitable value, or serve to discharge the Union from
+engagements more burdensome than debt.
+
+In like manner the estimate of appropriations for the Navy Department
+will present an aggregate sum of upward of $3,000,000. About half of
+these, however, covers the current expenditures of the Navy in actual
+service, and half constitutes a fund of national property, the pledge
+of our future glory and defense. It was scarcely one short year after
+the close of the late war, and when the burden of its expenses and
+charges was weighing heaviest upon the country, that Congress, by the
+act of April 29th, 1816, appropriated $1,000,000 annually for eight
+years to the gradual increase of the Navy. At a subsequent period this
+annual appropriation was reduced to $500,000 for six years, of which
+the present year is the last. A yet more recent appropriation the last
+two years, for building ten sloops of war, has nearly restored the
+original appropriation of 1816 of $1,000,000 for every year.
+
+The result is before United States all. We have 12 line-of-battle
+ships, 20 frigates, and sloops of war in proportion, which, with a few
+months preparation, may present a line of floating fortifications along
+the whole range of our coast ready to meet any invader who might
+attempt to set foot upon our shores. Combining with a system of
+fortifications upon the shores themselves, commenced about the same
+time under the auspices of my immediate predecessor, and hitherto
+systematically pursued, it has placed in our possession the most
+effective sinews of war and has left us at once an example and a lesson
+from which our own duties may be inferred.
+
+The gradual increase of the Navy was the principle of which the act of
+April 29th, 1816, was the first development. It was the introduction of
+a system to act upon the character and history of our country for an
+indefinite series of ages. It was a declaration of that Congress to
+their constituents and to posterity that it was the destiny and the
+duty of these confederated States to become in regular process of time
+and by no petty advances a great naval power. That which they proposed
+to accomplish in eight years is rather to be considered as the measure
+of their means that the limitation of their design. They looked forward
+for a term of years sufficient for the accomplishment of a definite
+portion of their purpose, and they left to their successors to fill up
+the canvas of which they had traced the large and prophetic outline.
+The ships of the line and frigates which they had in contemplation will
+be shortly completed. The time which they had allotted for the
+accomplishment of the work has more than elapsed. It remains for your
+consideration how their successors may contribute their portion of toil
+and of treasure for the benefit of the succeeding age in the gradual
+increase of our Navy.
+
+There is perhaps no part of the exercise of the constitutional powers
+of the Federal Government which has given more general satisfaction to
+the people of the Union than this. The system has not been thus
+vigorously introduced and hitherto sustained to be now departed from or
+abandoned. In continuing to provide for the gradual increase of the
+Navy it may not be necessary or expedient to add for the present any
+more to the number of our ships; but should you deem it advisable to
+continue the yearly appropriation of $0.5 millions to the same objects,
+it may be profitably expended in a providing a supply of timber to be
+seasoned and other materials for future use in the construction of
+docks or in laying the foundations of a school for naval education, as
+to the wisdom of Congress either of those measures may appear to claim
+the preference.
+
+Of the small portions of this Navy engaged in actual service during the
+peace, squadrons have continued to be maintained in the Pacific Ocean,
+in the West India seas, and in the Mediterranean, to which has been
+added a small armament to cruise on the eastern coast of South America.
+In all they have afforded protection to our commerce, have contributed
+to make our country advantageously known to foreign nations, have
+honorably employed multitudes of our sea men in the service of their
+country, and have inured numbers of youths of the rising generation to
+lives of manly hardihood and of nautical experience and skill.
+
+The piracies with which the West India seas were for several years
+infested have been totally suppressed, but in the Mediterranean they
+have increased in a manner afflictive to other nations, and but for the
+continued presence of our squadron would probably have been distressing
+to our own.
+
+The war which has unfortunately broken out between the Republic of
+Buenos Ayres and the Brazilian Government has given rise to very great
+irregularities among the naval officers of the latter, by whom
+principles in relation to blockades and to neutral navigation have been
+brought forward to which we can not subscribe and which our own
+commanders have found it necessary to resist. From the friendly
+disposition toward the United States constantly manifested by the
+Emperor of Brazil, and the very useful and friendly commercial
+intercourse between the United States and his dominions, we have reason
+to believe that the just reparation demanded for the injuries sustained
+by several of our citizens from some of his officers will not be
+withheld. Abstracts from the recent dispatches of the commanders of our
+several squadrons are communicated with the report of the Secretary of
+the Navy to Congress.
+
+A report from the Post Master General is likewise communicated,
+presenting in a highly satisfactory manner the result of a vigorous,
+efficient, and economical administration of that Department. The
+revenue of the office, even of the year including the latter half of
+1824 and the first half of 1825, had exceeded its expenditures by a sum
+of more than $45,000. That of the succeeding year has been still more
+productive. The increase of the receipts in the year preceding the
+first of July last over that of the year before exceeds $136,000, and
+the excess of the receipts over the expenditures of the year has
+swollen from $45,000 to yearly $80,000.
+
+During the same period contracts for additional transportation of the
+mail in stages for about 260,000 miles have been made, and for 70,000
+miles annually on horse back. 714 new post offices have been
+established within the year, and the increase of revenue within the
+last three years, as well as the augmentation of the transportation by
+mail, is more than equal to the whole amount of receipts and of mail
+conveyance at the commencement of the present century, when the seat of
+the General Government was removed to this place. When we reflect that
+the objects effected by the transportation of the mail are among the
+choicest comforts and enjoyments of social life, it is pleasing to
+observe that the dissemination of them to every corner of our country
+has out-stripped in their increase even the rapid march of our
+population.
+
+By the treaties with France and Spain, respectively ceding Louisiana
+and the Floridas to the United States, provision was made for the
+security of land titles derived from the Governments of those nations.
+Some progress has been made under the authority of various acts of
+Congress in the ascertainment and establishment of those titles, but
+claims to a very large extent remain unadjusted. The public faith no
+less than the just rights of individuals and the interest of the
+community itself appears to require further provision for the speedy
+settlement of those claims, which I therefore recommend to the care and
+attention of the Legislature.
+
+In conformity with the provisions of the act of May 20th, 1825, to
+provide for erecting a penitentiary in the District of Columbia, and
+for other purposes, three commissioners were appointed to select a site
+for the erection of a penitentiary for the District, and also a site in
+the county of Alexandria for a county jail, both of which objects have
+been effected. The building of the penitentiary has been commenced, and
+is in such a degree of forwardness as to promise that it will be
+completed before the meeting of the next Congress. This consideration
+points to the expediency of maturing at the present session a system
+for the regulation and government of the penitentiary, and of defining
+a system for the regulation and government of the penitentiary, and of
+defining the class of offenses which shall be punishable by confinement
+in this edifice.
+
+In closing this communication I trust that it will not be deemed
+inappropriate to the occasion and purposes upon which we are here
+assembled to indulge a momentary retrospect, combining in a single
+glance the period of our origin as a national confederation with that
+of our present existence, at the precise interval of half a century
+from each other. Since your last meeting at this place the 50th
+anniversary of the day when our independence was declared has been
+celebrated throughout our land, and on that day, while every heart was
+bounding with joy and every voice was tuned to gratulation, amid the
+blessings of freedom and independence which the sires of a former age
+had handed down to their children, two of the principal actors in that
+solemn scene--the hand that penned the ever memorable Declaration and
+the voice that sustained it in debate--were by one summons, at the
+distance of 700 miles from each other, called before the Judge of All
+to account for their deeds done upon earth. They departed cheered by
+the benedictions of their country, to whom they left the inheritance of
+their fame and the memory of their bright example.
+
+If we turn our thoughts to the condition of their country, in the
+contrast of the first and last day of that half century, how
+resplendent and sublime is the transition from gloom to glory! Then,
+glancing through the same lapse of time, in the condition of the
+individuals we see the first day marked with the fullness and vigor of
+youth, in the pledge of their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred
+honor to the cause of freedom and of man-kind; and on the last,
+extended on the bed of death, with but sense and sensibility left to
+breathe a last aspiration to Heaven of blessing upon their country, may
+we not humbly hope that to them too it was a pledge of transition from
+gloom to glory, and that while their mortal vestments were sinking into
+the clod of the valley their emancipated spirits were ascending to the
+bosom of their God!
+
+JOHN QUINCY ADAMS
+
+***
+
+State of the Union Address
+John Quincy Adams
+December 4, 1827
+
+Fellow Citizens of the Senate and of the House of Representatives:
+
+A revolution of the seasons has nearly been completed since the
+representatives of the people and States of this Union were last
+assembled at this place to deliberate and to act upon the common
+important interests of their constituents. In that interval the never
+slumbering eye of a wise and beneficent Providence has continued its
+guardian care over the welfare of our beloved country; the blessing of
+health has continued generally to prevail throughout the land; the
+blessing of peace with our brethren of the human race has been enjoyed
+without interruption; internal quiet has left our fellow citizens in
+the full enjoyment of all their rights and in the free exercise of all
+their faculties, to pursue the impulse of their nature and the
+obligation of their duty in the improvement of their own condition; the
+productions of the soil, the exchanges of commerce, the vivifying
+labors of human industry, have combined to mingle in our cup a portion
+of enjoyment as large and liberal as the indulgence of Heaven has
+perhaps ever granted to the imperfect state of man upon earth; and as
+the purest of human felicity consists in its participation with others,
+it is no small addition to the sum of our national happiness at this
+time that peace and prosperity prevail to a degree seldom experienced
+over the whole habitable globe, presenting, though as yet with painful
+exceptions, a foretaste of that blessed period of promise when the lion
+shall lie down with the lamb and wars shall be no more.
+
+To preserve, to improve, and to perpetuate the sources and to direct in
+their most effective channels the streams which contribute to the
+public weal is the purpose for which Government was instituted. Objects
+of deep importance to the welfare of the Union are constantly recurring
+to demand the attention of the Federal Legislature, and they call with
+accumulated interest at the first meeting of the two Houses after their
+periodical renovation. To present to their consideration from time to
+time subjects in which the interests of the nation are most deeply
+involved, and for the regulation of which the legislative will is alone
+competent, is a duty prescribed by the Constitution, to the performance
+of which the first meeting of the new Congress is a period eminently
+appropriate, and which it is now my purpose to discharge.
+
+Our relations of friendship with the other nations of the earth,
+political and commercial, have been preserved unimpaired, and the
+opportunities to improve them have been cultivated with anxious and
+unremitting attention. A negotiation upon subjects of high and delicate
+interest with the Government of Great Britain has terminated in the
+adjustment of some of the questions at issue upon satisfactory terms
+and the postponement of others for future discussion and agreement.
+
+The purposes of the convention concluded at St. Petersburg on July
+12th, 1822, under the mediation of the late Emperor Alexander, have
+been carried into effect by a subsequent convention, concluded at
+London on November 13th, 1826, the ratifications of which were
+exchanged at that place on February 6th, 1827. A copy of the
+proclamations issued on March 19th, 1827, publishing this convention,
+is herewith communicated to Congress. The sum of $1,204,960, therein
+stipulated to be paid to the claimants of indemnity under the first
+article of the treaty of Ghent, has been duly received, and the
+commission instituted, conformably to the act of Congress of March 2d,
+1827, for the distribution of the indemnity of the persons entitled to
+receive it are now in session and approaching the consummation of their
+labors. This final disposal of one of the most painful topics of
+collision between the United States and Great Britain not only affords
+an occasion of gratulation to ourselves, but has had the happiest
+effect in promoting a friendly disposition and in softening asperities
+upon other objects of discussion; nor ought it to pass without the
+tribute of a frank and cordial acknowledgment of the magnanimity with
+which an honorable nation, by the reparation of their own wrongs,
+achieves a triumph more glorious than any field of blood can ever
+bestow.
+
+The conventions of March 7th, 1815, and of October 20th, 1818, will
+expire by their own limitation on October 20th, 1828. These have
+regulated the direct commercial intercourse between the United States
+and Great Britain upon terms of the most perfect reciprocity; and they
+effected a temporary compromise of the respective rights and claims to
+territory westward of the Rocky Mountains. These arrangements have been
+continued for an indefinite period of time after the expiration of the
+above mentioned conventions, leaving each party the liberty of
+terminating them by giving twelve months' notice to the other.
+
+The radical principle of all commercial intercourse between independent
+nations is the mutual interest of both parties. It is the vital spirit
+of trade itself; nor can it be reconciled to the nature of man or to
+the primary laws of human society that any traffic should long be
+willingly pursued of which all the advantages are on one side and all
+the burdens on the other. Treaties of commerce have been found by
+experience to be among the most effective instruments for promoting
+peace and harmony between nations whose interests, exclusively
+considered on either side, are brought into frequent collisions by
+competition. In framing such treaties it is the duty of each party not
+simply to urge with unyielding pertinacity that which suits its own
+interest, but to concede liberally to that which is adapted to the
+interest of the other.
+
+To accomplish this, little more is generally required than a simple
+observance of the rule of reciprocity, and were it possible for the
+states-men of one nation by stratagem and management to obtain from
+the weakness or ignorance of another an over-reaching treaty, such a
+compact would prove an incentive to war rather than a bond of peace.
+
+Our conventions with Great Britain are founded upon the principles of
+reciprocity. The commercial intercourse between the two countries is
+greater in magnitude and amount than between any two other nations on
+the globe. It is for all purposes of benefit or advantage to both as
+precious, and in all probability far more extensive, than if the
+parties were still constituent parts of one and the same nation.
+Treaties between such States, regulating the intercourse of peace
+between them and adjusting interests of such transcendent importance to
+both, which have been found in a long experience of years mutually
+advantageous, should not be lightly cancelled or discontinued. Two
+conventions for continuing in force those above mentioned have been
+concluded between the plenipotentiaries of the two Governments on
+August 6th, 1827, and will be forthwith laid before the Senate for the
+exercise of their constitutional authority concerning them.
+
+In the execution of the treaties of peace of November, 1782 and
+September, 1783, between the United States and Great Britain, and which
+terminated the war of our independence, a line of boundary was drawn as
+the demarcation of territory between the two countries, extending over
+nearly 20 degrees of latitude, and ranging over seas, lakes, and
+mountains, then very imperfectly explored and scarcely opened to the
+geographical knowledge of the age. In the progress of discovery and
+settlement by both parties since that time several questions of
+boundary between their respective territories have arisen, which have
+been found of exceedingly difficult adjustment.
+
+At the close of the last war with Great Britain four of these questions
+pressed themselves upon the consideration of the negotiators of the
+treaty of Ghent, but without the means of concluding a definitive
+arrangement concerning them. They were referred to three separate
+commissions consisting, of two commissioners, one appointed by each
+party, to examine and decide upon their respective claims. In the event
+of a disagreement between the commissioners, one appointed by each
+party, to examine and decide upon their respective claims. In the event
+of a disagreement between the commissioners it was provided that they
+should make reports to their several Governments, and that the reports
+should finally be referred to the decision of a sovereign the common
+friend of both.
+
+Of these commissions two have already terminated their sessions and
+investigations, one by entire and the other by partial agreement. The
+commissioners of the 5th article of the treaty of Ghent have finally
+disagreed, and made their conflicting reports to their own Governments.
+But from these reports a great difficulty has occurred in making up a
+question to be decided by the arbitrator. This purpose has, however,
+been effected by a 4th convention, concluded at London by the
+plenipotentiaries of the two Governments on September 29th, 1827. It
+will be submitted, together with the others, to the consideration of
+the Senate.
+
+While these questions have been pending incidents have occurred of
+conflicting pretensions and of dangerous character upon the territory
+itself in dispute between the two nations. By a common understanding
+between the Governments it was agreed that no exercise of exclusive
+jurisdiction by either party while the negotiation was pending should
+change the state of the question of right to be definitively settled.
+Such collision has, never the less, recently taken place by occurrences
+the precise character of which has not yet been ascertained. A
+communication from the governor of the State of Maine, with
+accompanying documents, and a correspondence between the Secretary of
+State and the minister of Great Britain on this subject are now
+communicated. Measures have been taken to ascertain the state of the
+facts more correctly by the employment of a special agent to visit the
+spot where the alleged outrages have occurred, the result of those
+inquiries, when received, will be transmitted to Congress.
+
+While so many of the subjects of high interest to the friendly
+relations between the two countries have been so far adjusted, it is a
+matter of regret that their views respecting the commercial intercourse
+between the United States and the British colonial possessions have not
+equally approximated to a friendly agreement.
+
+At the commencement of the last session of Congress they were informed
+of the sudden and unexpected exclusion by the British Government of
+access in vessels of the United States to all their colonial ports
+except those immediately bordering upon our own territories. In the
+amicable discussions which have succeeded the adoption of this measure
+which, as it affected harshly the interests of the United States,
+became subject of expostulation on our part, the principles upon which
+its justification has been placed have been of a diversified character.
+It has been at once ascribed to a mere recurrence to the old, long
+established principle of colonial monopoly and at the same time to a
+feeling of resentment because the offers of an act of Parliament
+opening the colonial ports upon certain conditions had not been grasped
+at with sufficient eagerness by an instantaneous conformity to them.
+
+At a subsequent period it has been intimated that the new exclusion was
+in resentment because a prior act of Parliament, of 1822, opening
+certain colonial ports, under heavy and burdensome restrictions, to
+vessels of the United States, had not been reciprocated by an admission
+of British vessels from the colonies, and their cargoes, without any
+restriction or discrimination what ever. But be the motive for the
+interdiction what it may, the British Government have manifested no
+disposition, either by negotiation or by corresponding legislative
+enactments, to recede from it, and we have been given distinctly to
+understand that neither of the bills which were under the consideration
+of Congress at their last session would have been deemed sufficient in
+their concessions to have been rewarded by any relaxation from the
+British interdict. It is one of the inconveniences inseparably
+connected with the attempt to adjust by reciprocal legislation
+interests of this nature that neither party can know what would be
+satisfactory to the other, and that after enacting a statute for the
+avowed and sincere purpose of conciliation it will generally be found
+utterly inadequate to the expectation of the other party, and will
+terminate in mutual disappointment.
+
+The session of Congress having terminated without any act upon the
+subject, a proclamation was issued on March 17, 1827, conformably to
+the provisions of the 6th section of the act of March 3rd, 1823
+declaring the fact that the trade and intercourse authorized by the
+British act of Parliament of June 24th, 1822, between the United States
+and the British enumerated colonial ports had been by the subsequent
+acts of Parliament of July 5th, 1825, and the order of council of July
+27th, 1826 prohibited. The effect of this proclamation, by the terms of
+the act under which it was issued, has been that each and every
+provision of the act concerning navigation of April 18th, 1818, and of
+the act supplementary thereto of May 15th, 1820, revived and is in full
+force.
+
+Such, then is the present condition of the trade that, useful as it is
+to both parties it can, with a single momentary exception, be carried
+on directly by the vessels of neither. That exception itself is found
+in a proclamation of the governor of the island of St. Christopher and
+of the Virgin Islands, inviting for three months from August 28th, 1827
+the importation of the articles of the produce of the United States
+which constitute their export portion of this trade in the vessels of
+all nations.
+
+That period having already expired, the state of mutual interdiction
+has again taken place. The British Government have not only declined
+negotiation upon this subject, but by the principle they have assumed
+with reference to it have precluded even the means of negotiation. It
+becomes not the self respect of the United States either to solicit
+gratuitous favors or to accept as the grant of a favor that for which
+an ample equivalent is exacted. It remains to be determined by the
+respective Governments whether the trade shall be opened by acts of
+reciprocal legislation. It is, in the mean time, satisfactory to know
+that apart from the inconvenience resulting from a disturbance of the
+usual channels of trade no loss has been sustained by the commerce, the
+navigation, or the revenue of the United States, and none of magnitude
+is to be apprehended from this existing state of mutual interdict.
+
+With the other maritime and commercial nations of Europe our
+intercourse continues with little variation. Since the cessation by the
+convention of June 24th, 1822, of all discriminating duties upon the
+vessels of the United States and of France in either country our trade
+with that nation has increased and is increasing. A disposition on the
+part of France has been manifested to renew that negotiation, and in
+acceding to the proposal we have expressed the wish that it might be
+extended to other subjects upon which a good understanding between the
+parties would be beneficial to the interests of both.
+
+The origin of the political relations between the United States and
+France is coeval with the first years of our independence. The memory
+of it is interwoven with that of our arduous struggle for national
+existence. Weakened as it has occasionally been since that time, it can
+by us never be forgotten, and we should hail with exultation the moment
+which should indicate a recollection equally friendly in spirit on the
+part of France.
+
+A fresh effort has recently been made by the minister of the United
+States residing at Paris to obtain a consideration of the just claims
+of citizens of the United States to the reparation of wrongs long since
+committed, many of them frankly acknowledged and all of them entitled
+upon every principle of justice to a candid examination. The proposal
+last made to the French Government has been to refer the subject which
+has formed an obstacle to this consideration to the determination of a
+sovereign the common friend of both. To this offer no definitive answer
+has yet been received, but the gallant and honorable spirit which has
+at all times been the pride and glory of France will not ultimately
+permit the demands of innocent sufferers to be extinguished in the mere
+consciousness of the power to reject them.
+
+A new treaty of amity, navigation, and commerce has been concluded with
+the Kingdom of Sweden, which will be submitted to the Senate for their
+advice with regard to its ratification. At a more recent date a
+minister plenipotentiary from the Hanseatic Republics of Hamburg,
+Lubeck, and Bremen has been received, charged with a special mission
+for the negotiation of a treaty of amity and commerce between that
+ancient and renowned league and the United States. This negotiation has
+accordingly been commenced, and is now in progress, the result of which
+will, if successful, be also submitted to the Senate for their
+consideration.
+
+Since the accession of the Emperor Nicholas to the imperial throne of
+all the Russias the friendly dispositions toward the United States so
+constantly manifested by his predecessor have continued unabated, and
+have been recently testified by the appointment of a minister
+plenipotentiary to reside at this place. From the interest taken by
+this Sovereign in behalf of the suffering Greeks and from the spirit
+with which others of the great European powers are cooperating with him
+the friends of freedom and of humanity may indulge the hope that they
+will obtain relief from that most unequal of conflicts which they have
+so long and so gallantly sustained; that they will enjoy the blessing
+of self government, which by their sufferings in the cause of liberty
+they have richly earned, and that their independence will be secured by
+those liberal institutions of which their country furnished the
+earliest examples in the history of man-kind, and which have
+consecrated to immortal remembrance the very soil for which they are
+now again profusely pouring forth their blood. The sympathies which the
+people and Government of the United States have so warmly indulged with
+their cause have been acknowledged by their Government in a letter of
+thanks, which I have received from their illustrious President, a
+translation of which is now communicated to Congress, the
+representatives of that nation to whom this tribute of gratitude was
+intended to be paid, and to whom it was justly due.
+
+In the American hemisphere the cause of freedom and independence has
+continued to prevail, and if signalized by none of those splendid
+triumphs which had crowned with glory some of the preceding years it
+has only been from the banishment of all external force against which
+the struggle had been maintained. The shout of victory has been
+superseded by the expulsion of the enemy over whom it could have been
+achieved.
+
+Our friendly wishes and cordial good will, which have constantly
+followed the southern nations of America in all the vicissitudes of
+their war of independence, are succeeded by a solicitude equally ardent
+and cordial that by the wisdom and purity of their institutions they
+may secure to themselves the choicest blessings of social order and the
+best rewards of virtuous liberty. Disclaiming alike all right and all
+intention of interfering in those concerns which it is the prerogative
+of their independence to regulate as to them shall seem fit, we hail
+with joy every indication of their prosperity, of their harmony, of
+their persevering and inflexible homage to those principles of freedom
+and of equal rights which are alone suited to the genius and temper of
+the American nations.
+
+It has been, therefore, with some concern that we have observed
+indications of intestine divisions in some of the Republics of the
+south, and appearances of less union with one another than we believe
+to be the interest of all. Among the results of this state of things
+has been that the treaties concluded at Panama do not appear to have
+been ratified by the contracting parties, and that the meeting of the
+congress at Tacubaya has been indefinitely postponed. In accepting the
+invitations to be represented at this congress, while a manifestation
+was intended on the part of the United States of the most friendly
+disposition toward the southern Republics by whom it had been proposed,
+it was hoped that it would furnish an opportunity for bringing all the
+nations of this hemisphere to the common acknowledgment and adoption of
+the principles in the regulation of their internal relations which
+would have secured a lasting peace and harmony between them and have
+promoted the cause of mutual benevolence throughout the globe. But as
+obstacles appear to have arisen to the reassembling of the congress,
+one of the two ministers commissioned on the part of the United States
+has returned to the bosom of his country, while the minister charged
+with the ordinary mission to Mexico remains authorized to attend the
+conferences of the congress when ever they may be resumed.
+
+A hope was for a short time entertained that a treaty of peace actually
+signed between the Government of Buenos Ayres and of Brazil would
+supersede all further occasion for those collisions between belligerent
+pretensions and neutral rights which are so commonly the result of
+maritime war, and which have unfortunately disturbed the harmony of the
+relations between the United States and the Brazilian Governments. At
+their last session Congress were informed that some of the naval
+officers of that Empire had advanced and practiced upon principles in
+relation to blockades and to neutral navigation which we could not
+sanction, and which our commanders found it necessary to resist. It
+appears that they have not been sustained by the Government of Brazil
+itself. Some of the vessels captured under the assumed authority of
+these erroneous principles have been restored, and we trust that our
+just expectations will be realized that adequate indemnity will be made
+to all the citizens of the United States who have suffered by the
+unwarranted captures which the Brazilian tribunals themselves have
+pronounced unlawful.
+
+In the diplomatic discussions at Rio de Janeiro of these wrongs
+sustained by citizens of the United States and of others which seemed
+as if emanating immediately from that Government itself the charge
+d'affaires of the United States, under an impression that his
+representations in behalf of the rights and interests of his country-
+men were totally disregarded and useless, deemed it his duty, without
+waiting for instructions, to terminate his official functions, to
+demand his pass-ports, and return to the United States. This movement,
+dictated by an honest zeal for the honor and interests of his country--
+motives which operated exclusively on the mind of the officer who
+resorted to it--has not been disapproved by me.
+
+The Brazilian Government, however, complained of it as a measure for
+which no adequate intentional cause had been given by them, and upon an
+explicit assurance through their charge d'affaires residing here that a
+successor to the late representative of the United States near that
+Government, the appointment of whom they desired, should be received
+and treated with the respect due to his character, and that indemnity
+should be promptly made for all injuries inflicted on citizens of the
+United States or their property contrary to the laws of nations, a
+temporary commission as charge d'affaires to that country has been
+issued, which it is hopes will entirely restore the ordinary diplomatic
+intercourse between the two Governments and the friendly relations
+between their respective nations.
+
+Turning from the momentous concerns of our Union in its intercourse
+with foreign nations to those of the deepest interest in the
+administration of our internal affairs, we find the revenues of the
+present year corresponding as nearly as might be expected with the
+anticipations of the last, and presenting an aspect still more
+favorable in the promise of the next.
+
+The balance in the Treasury on January 1st, 1827 was $6,358,686.18. The
+receipts from that day to September 30th, 1827, as near as the returns
+of them yet received can show, amount to $16,886,581.32. The receipts
+of the present quarter, estimated at $4,515,000, added to the above
+form an aggregate of $21,400,000 of receipts.
+
+The expenditures of the year may perhaps amount to $22,300,000
+presenting a small excess over the receipts. But of these $22,000,000,
+upward of $6,000,000 have been applied to the discharge of the
+principal of the public debt, the whole amount of which, approaching
+$74,000,000 on January 1st, 1827, will on January 1st, 1828 fall short
+of $67,500,000. The balance in the Treasury on January 1st, 1828 it is
+expected will exceed $5,450,000, a sum exceeding that of January 1st,
+1825, though falling short of that exhibited on January 1st, 1827.
+
+It was foreseen that the revenue of the present year 1827 would not
+equal that of the last, which had itself been less than that of the
+next preceding year. But the hope has been realized which was
+entertained, that these deficiencies would in no wise interrupt the
+steady operation of the discharge of the public debt by the annual
+$10,000,000 devoted to that object by the act of March 3d, 1817.
+
+The amount of duties secured on merchandise imported from the
+commencement of the year until September 30th, 1827 is $21,226,000, and
+the probably amount of that which will be secured during the remainder
+of the year is $5,774,000, forming a sum total of $27,000,000. With the
+allowances for draw-backs and contingent deficiencies which may occur,
+though not specifically foreseen, we may safely estimate the receipts
+of the ensuing year at $22,300,000--a revenue for the next equal to the
+expenditure of the present year.
+
+The deep solicitude felt by our citizens of all classes throughout the
+Union for the total discharge of the public debt will apologize for the
+earnestness with which I deem it my duty to urge this topic upon the
+consideration of Congress--of recommending to them again the observance
+of the strictest economy in the application of the public funds. The
+depression upon the receipts of the revenue which had commenced with
+the year 1826 continued with increased severity during the two first
+quarters of the present year.
+
+The returning tide began to flow with the third quarter, and, so far as
+we can judge from experience, may be expected to continue through the
+course of the ensuing year. In the mean time an alleviation from the
+burden of the public debt will in the three years have been effected to
+the amount of nearly $16,000,000, and the charge of annual interest
+will have been reduced upward of $1,000,000. But among the maxims of
+political economy which the stewards of the public moneys should never
+suffer without urgent necessity to be transcended is that of keeping
+the expenditures of the year within the limits of its receipts.
+
+The appropriations of the two last years, including the yearly
+$10,000,000 of the sinking fund, have each equaled the promised revenue
+of the ensuing year. While we foresee with confidence that the public
+coffers will be replenished from the receipts as fast as they will be
+drained by the expenditures, equal in amount to those of the current
+year, it should not be forgotten that they could ill suffer the
+exhaustion of larger disbursements.
+
+The condition of the Army and of all the branches of the public service
+under the superintendence of the Secretary of War will be seen by the
+report from that officer and the documents with which it is
+accompanied.
+
+During the last summer a detachment of the Army has been usefully and
+successfully called to perform their appropriate duties. At the moment
+when the commissioners appointed for carrying into execution certain
+provisions of the treaty of August 19th, 1825, with various tribes of
+the North Western Indians were about to arrive at the appointed place
+of meeting the unprovoked murder of several citizens and other acts of
+unequivocal hostility committed by a party of the Winnebago tribe, one
+of those associated in the treaty, followed by indications of a
+menacing character among other tribes of the same region, rendered
+necessary an immediate display of the defensive and protective force of
+the Union in that quarter.
+
+It was accordingly exhibited by the immediate and concerted movements
+of the governors of the State of Illinois and of the Territory of
+Michigan, and competent levies of militia, under their authority, with
+a corps of 700 men of United States troops, under the command of
+General Atkinson, who, at the call of Governor Cass, immediately
+repaired to the scene of danger from their station at St. Louis. Their
+presence dispelled the alarms of our fellow citizens on those
+disorders, and overawed the hostile purposes of the Indians. The
+perpetrators of the murders were surrendered to the authority and
+operation of our laws, and every appearance of purposed hostility from
+those Indian tribes has subsided.
+
+Although the present organization of the Army and the administration of
+its various branches of service are, upon the whole, satisfactory, they
+are yet susceptible of much improvement in particulars, some of which
+have been heretofore submitted to the consideration of Congress, and
+others are now first presented in the report of the Secretary of War.
+
+The expediency of providing for additional numbers of officers in the
+two corps of engineers will in some degree depend upon the number and
+extent of the objects of national importance upon which Congress may
+think it proper that surveys should be made conformably to the act of
+April 30th, 1824. Of the surveys which before the last session of
+Congress had been made under the authority of that act, reports were
+made--Of the Board of Internal Improvement, on the Chesapeake and Ohio
+Canal. On the continuation of the national road from Cumberland to the
+tide waters within the District of Columbia. On the continuation of the
+national road from Canton to Zanesville. On the location of the
+national road from Zanesville to Columbus. On the continuation of the
+same to the seat of government in Missouri. On a post road from
+Baltimore to Philadelphia. Of a survey of Kennebec River (in part). On
+a national road from Washington to Buffalo. On the survey of Saugatuck
+Harbor and River. On a canal from Lake Pont Chartrain to the
+Mississippi River. On surveys at Edgartown, Newburyport, and Hyannis
+Harbor. On survey of La Plaisance Bay, in the Territory of Michigan.
+And reports are now prepared and will be submitted to Congress--On
+surveys of the peninsula of Florida, to ascertain the practicability of
+a canal to connect the waters of the Atlantic with the Gulf of Mexico
+across that peninsula; and also of the country between the bays of
+Mobile and of Pensacola, with the view of connecting them together by a
+canal. On surveys of a route for a canal to connect the waters of James
+and Great Kenhawa rivers. On the survey of the Swash, in Pamlico Sound,
+and that of Cape Fear, below the town of Wilmington, in North Carolina.
+On the survey of the Muscle Shoals, in the Tennessee River, and for a
+route for a contemplated communication between the Hiwassee and Coosa
+rivers, in the State of Alabama. Other reports of surveys upon objects
+pointed out by the several acts of Congress of the last and preceding
+sessions are in the progress of preparation, and most of them may be
+completed before the close of this session. All the officers of both
+corps of engineers, with several other persons duly qualified, have
+been constantly employed upon these services from the passage of the
+act of April 30th, 1824, to this time.
+
+Were no other advantage to accrue to the country from their labors than
+the fund of topographical knowledge which they have collected and
+communicated, that alone would have been a profit to the Union more
+than adequate to all the expenditures which have been devoted to the
+object; but the appropriations for the repair and continuation of the
+Cumberland road, for the construction of various other roads, for the
+removal of obstructions from the rivers and harbors, for the erection
+of light houses, beacons, piers, and buoys, and for the completion of
+canals undertaken by individual associations, but needing the
+assistance of means and resources more comprehensive than individual
+enterprise can command, may be considered rather as treasures laid up
+from the contributions of the present age for the benefit of posterity
+than as unrequited applications of the accruing revenues of the nation.
+
+To such objects of permanent improvement to the condition of the
+country, of real addition to the wealth as well as to the comfort of
+the people by whose authority and resources they have been effected,
+from $3,000,000 to $4,000,000 of the annual income of the nation have,
+by laws enacted at the three most recent sessions of Congress, been
+applied, without intrenching upon the necessities of the Treasury,
+without adding a dollar to the taxes or debts of the community, without
+suspending even the steady and regular discharge of the debts
+contracted in former days, which within the same three years have been
+diminished by the amount of nearly $16,000,000.
+
+The same observations are in a great degree applicable to the
+appropriations made for fortifications upon the coasts and harbors of
+the United States, for the maintenance of the Military Academy at West
+Point, and for the various objects under the superintendence of the
+Department of the Navy. The report from the Secretary of the Navy and
+those from the subordinate branches of both the military departments
+exhibit to Congress in minute detail the present condition of the
+public establishments dependent upon them, the execution of the acts of
+Congress relating to them, and the views of the officers engaged in the
+several branches of the service concerning the improvements which may
+tend to their perfection.
+
+The fortification of the coasts and the gradual increase and
+improvement of the Navy are parts of a great system of national defense
+which has been upward of ten years in progress, and which for a series
+of years to come will continue to claim the constant and persevering
+protection and superintendence of the legislative authority. Among the
+measures which have emanated from these principles the act of the last
+session of Congress for the gradual improvement of the Navy holds a
+conspicuous place. The collection of timber for the future construction
+of vessels of war, the preservation and reproduction of the species of
+timber peculiarly adapted to that purpose, the construction of dry
+docks for the use of the Navy, the erection of a marine railway for the
+repair of the public ships, and the improvement of the navy yards for
+the preservation of the public property deposited in them have all
+received from the Executive the attention required by that act, and
+will continue to receive it, steadily proceeding toward the execution
+of all its purposes.
+
+The establishment of a naval academy, furnishing the means of theoretic
+instruction to the youths who devote their lives to the service of
+their country upon the ocean, still solicits the sanction of the
+Legislature. Practical seamanship and the art of navigation may be
+acquired on the cruises of the squadrons which from time to time are
+dispatched to distant seas, but a competent knowledge even of the art
+of ship building, the higher mathematics, and astronomy; the literature
+which can place our officers on a level of polished education with the
+officers of other maritime nations; the knowledge of the laws,
+municipal and national, which in their intercourse with foreign states
+and their governments are continually called into operation, and, above
+all, that acquaintance with the principles of honor and justice, with
+the higher obligations of morals and of general laws, human and divine,
+which constitutes the great distinction between the warrior-patriot and
+the licensed robber and pirate--these can be systematically taught and
+eminently acquired only in a permanent school, stationed upon the shore
+and provided with the teachers, the instruments, and the books
+conversant with and adapted to the communication of the principles of
+these respective sciences to the youthful and inquiring mind.
+
+The report from the Post Master General exhibits the condition of that
+Department as highly satisfactory for the present and still more
+promising for the future. Its receipts for the year ending July 1st,
+1827 amounted to $1,473,551, and exceeded its expenditures by upward of
+$100,000. It can not be an over sanguine estimate to predict that in
+less than ten years, of which half have elapsed, the receipts will have
+been more than doubled.
+
+In the mean time a reduced expenditure upon established routes has kept
+pace with increased facilities of public accommodation and additional
+services have been obtained at reduced rates of compensation. Within
+the last year the transportation of the mail in stages has been greatly
+augmented. The number of post offices has been increased to 7,000, and
+it may be anticipated that while the facilities of intercourse between
+fellow citizens in person or by correspondence will soon be carried to
+the door of every villager in the Union, a yearly surplus of revenue
+will accrue which may be applied as the wisdom of Congress under the
+exercise of their constitutional powers may devise for the further
+establishment and improvement of the public roads, or by adding still
+further to the facilities in the transportation of the mails. Of the
+indications of the prosperous condition of our country, none can be
+more pleasing than those presented by the multiplying relations of
+personal and intimate intercourse between the citizens of the Union
+dwelling at the remotest distances from each other.
+
+Among the subjects which have heretofore occupied the earnest
+solicitude and attention of Congress is the management and disposal of
+that portion of the property of the nation which consists of the public
+lands. The acquisition of them, made at the expense of the whole Union,
+not only in treasury but in blood, marks a right of property in them
+equally extensive. By the report and statements from the General Land
+Office now communicated it appears that under the present Government of
+the United States a sum little short of $33,000,000 has been paid from
+the common Treasury for that portion of this property which has been
+purchased from France and Spain, and for the extinction of the
+aboriginal titles. The amount of lands acquired is near 260,000,000
+acres, of which on January 1st, 1826, about 139,000,000 acres had been
+surveyed, and little more than 19,000,000 acres had been sold. The
+amount paid into the Treasury by the purchasers of the public lands
+sold is not yet equal to the sums paid for the whole, but leaves a
+small balance to be refunded. The proceeds of the sales of the lands
+have long been pledged to the creditors of the nation, a pledge from
+which we have reason to hope that they will in a very few years be
+redeemed.
+
+The system upon which this great national interest has been managed was
+the result of long, anxious, and persevering deliberation. Matured and
+modified by the progress of our population and the lessons of
+experience, it has been hitherto eminently successful. More than nine
+tenths of the lands still remain the common property of the Union, the
+appropriation and disposal of which are sacred trusts in the hands of
+Congress.
+
+Of the lands sold, a considerable part were conveyed under extended
+credits, which in the vicissitudes and fluctuations in the value of
+lands and of their produce became oppressively burdensome to the
+purchasers. It can never be the interest or the policy of the nation to
+wring from its own citizens the reasonable profits of their industry
+and enterprise by holding them to the rigorous import of disastrous
+engagements. In March, 1821, a debt of $22,000,000, due by purchasers
+of the public lands, had accumulated, which they were unable to pay. An
+act of Congress of March 2nd, 1821, came to their relief, and has been
+succeeded by others, the latest being the act of May 4th, 1826, the
+indulgent provisions of which expired on July 4th, 1827. The effect of
+these laws has been to reduce the debt from the purchasers to a
+remaining balance of about $4,300,000 due, more than three fifths of
+which are for lands within the State of Alabama. I recommend to
+Congress the revival and continuance for a further term of the
+beneficent accommodations to the public debtors of that statute, and
+submit to their consideration, in the same spirit of equity, the
+remission, under proper discriminations, of the forfeitures of partial
+payments on account of purchases of the public lands, so far as to
+allow of their application to other payments.
+
+There are various other subjects of deep interest to the whole Union
+which have heretofore been recommended to the consideration of
+Congress, as well by my predecessors as, under the impression of the
+duties devolving upon me, by myself. Among these are the debt, rather
+of justice than gratitude, to the surviving warriors of the
+Revolutionary war; the extension of the judicial administration of the
+Federal Government to those extensive since the organization of the
+present judiciary establishment, now constitute at least one third of
+its territory, power, and population; the formation of a more effective
+and uniform system for the government of the militia, and the
+amelioration in some form or modification of the diversified and often
+oppressive codes relating to insolvency. Amidst the multiplicity of
+topics of great national concernment which may recommend themselves to
+the calm and patriotic deliberations of the Legislature, it may suffice
+to say that on these and all other measures which may receive their
+sanction my hearty cooperation will be given, conformably to the duties
+enjoined upon me and under the sense of all the obligations prescribed
+by the Constitution.
+
+JOHN QUINCY ADAMS
+
+***
+
+State of the Union Address
+John Quincy Adams
+December 2, 1828
+
+Fellow Citizens of the Senate and of the House of Representatives:
+
+If the enjoyment in profusion of the bounties of Providence forms a
+suitable subject of mutual gratulation and grateful acknowledgment, we
+are admonished at this return of the season when the representatives of
+the nation are assembled to deliberate upon their concerns to offer up
+the tribute of fervent and grateful hearts for the never failing
+mercies of Him who ruleth over all. He has again favored us with
+healthful seasons and abundant harvests; He has sustained us in peace
+with foreign countries and in tranquillity within our borders; He has
+preserved us in the quiet and undisturbed possession of civil and
+religious liberty; He has crowned the year with His goodness, imposing
+on us no other condition than of improving for our own happiness the
+blessings bestowed by His hands, and, in the fruition of all His
+favors, of devoting his faculties with which we have been endowed by
+Him to His glory and to our own temporal and eternal welfare.
+
+In the relations of our Federal Union with our brethren of the human
+race the changes which have occurred since the close of your last
+session have generally tended to the preservation of peace and to the
+cultivation of harmony. Before your last separation a war had unhappily
+been kindled between the Empire of Russia, one of those with which our
+intercourse has been no other than a constant exchange of good offices,
+and that of the Ottoman Porte, a nation from which geographical
+distance, religious opinions and maxims of government on their part
+little suited to the formation of those bonds of mutual benevolence
+which result from the benefits of commerce had department us in a
+state, perhaps too much prolonged, of coldness and alienation.
+
+The extensive, fertile, and populous dominions of the Sultan belong
+rather to the Asiatic than the European division of the human family.
+They enter but partially into the system of Europe, nor have their wars
+with Russia and Austria, the European States upon which they border,
+for more than a century past disturbed the pacific relations of those
+States with the other great powers of Europe. Neither France nor
+Prussia nor Great Britain has ever taken part in them, nor is it to be
+expected that they will at this time. The declaration of war by Russia
+has received the approbation or acquiescence of her allies, and we may
+indulge the hope that its progress and termination will be signalized
+by the moderation and forbearance no less than by the energy of the
+Emperor Nicholas, and that it will afford the opportunity for such
+collateral agency in behalf of the suffering Greeks as will secure to
+them ultimately the triumph of humanity and of freedom.
+
+The state of our particular relations with France has scarcely varied
+in the course of the present year. The commercial intercourse between
+the two countries has continued to increase for the mutual benefit of
+both. The claims of indemnity to numbers of our fellow citizens for
+depredations upon their property, heretofore committed during the
+revolutionary governments, remain unadjusted, and still form the
+subject of earnest representation and remonstrance. Recent advices from
+the minister of the United States at Paris encourage the expectation
+that the appeal to the justice of the French Government will ere long
+receive a favorable consideration.
+
+The last friendly expedient has been resorted to for the decision of
+the controversy with Great Britain relating to the north-eastern
+boundary of the United States. By an agreement with the British
+Government, carrying into effect the provisions of the 5th article of
+the treaty of Ghent, and the convention of September 29th, 1827, His
+Majesty the King of the Netherlands has by common consent been selected
+as the umpire between the parties. The proposal to him to accept the
+designation for the performance of this friendly office will be made at
+an early day, and the United States, relying upon the justice of their
+cause, will cheerfully commit the arbitrament of it to a prince equally
+distinguished for the independence of his spirit, his indefatigable
+assiduity to the duties of his station, and his inflexible personal
+probity.
+
+Our commercial relations with Great Britain will deserve the serious
+consideration of Congress and the exercise of a conciliatory and
+forbearing spirit in the policy of both Governments. The state of them
+has been materially changed by the act of Congress, passed at their
+last session, in alteration of several acts imposing duties on imports,
+and by acts of more recent date of the British Parliament. The effect
+of the interdiction of direct trade, commenced by Great Britain and
+reciprocated by the United States, has been, as was to be foreseen,
+only to substitute different channels for an exchange of commodities
+indispensable to the colonies and profitable to a numerous class of our
+fellow citizens. The exports, the revenue, the navigation of the United
+States have suffered no diminution by our exclusion from direct access
+to the British colonies. The colonies pay more dearly for the
+necessaries of life which their Government burdens with the charges of
+double voyages, freight, insurance, and commission, and the profits of
+our exports are somewhat impaired and more injuriously transferred from
+one portion of our citizens to another.
+
+The resumption of this old and otherwise exploded system of colonial
+exclusion has not secured to the shipping interest of Great Britain the
+relief which, at the expense of the distant colonies and of the United
+States, it was expected to afford. Other measures have been resorted to
+more pointedly bearing upon the navigation of the United States, and
+more pointedly bearing upon the navigation of the United States, and
+which, unless modified by the construction given to the recent acts of
+Parliament, will be manifestly incompatible with the positive
+stipulations of the commercial convention existing between the two
+countries. That convention, however, may be terminated with 12 months'
+notice, at the option of either party.
+
+A treaty of amity, navigation, and commerce between the United States
+and His Majesty the Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary and Bohemia,
+has been prepared for signature by the Secretary of State and by the
+Baron de Lederer, intrusted with full powers of the Austrian
+Government. Independently of the new and friendly relations which may
+be thus commenced with one of the most eminent and powerful nations of
+the earth, the occasion has been taken in it, as in other recent
+treaties concluded by the United States, to extend those principles of
+liberal intercourse and of fair reciprocity which intertwine with the
+exchanges of commerce the principles of justice and the feelings of
+mutual benevolence.
+
+This system, first proclaimed to the world in the first commercial
+treaty ever concluded by the United States--that of February 6th, 1778,
+with France--has been invariably the cherished policy of our Union. It
+is by treaties of commerce alone that it can be made ultimately to
+prevail as the established system of all civilized nations. With this
+principle our fathers extended the hand of friendship to every nation
+of the globe, and to this policy our country has ever since adhered.
+What ever of regulation in our laws has ever been adopted unfavorable
+to the interest of any foreign nation has been essentially defensive
+and counteracting to similar regulations of theirs operating against
+us.
+
+Immediately after the close of the War of Independence commissioners
+were appointed by the Congress of the Confederation authorized to
+conclude treaties with every nation of Europe disposed to adopt them.
+Before the wars of the French Revolution such treaties had been
+consummated with the United Netherlands, Sweden, and Prussia. During
+those wars treaties with Great Britain and Spain had been effected, and
+those with Prussia and France renewed. In all these some concessions to
+the liberal principles of intercourse proposed by the United States had
+been obtained; but as in all the negotiations they came occasionally in
+collision with previous internal regulations or exclusive and excluding
+compacts of monopoly with which the other parties had been trammeled,
+the advances made in them toward the freedom of trade were partial and
+imperfect. Colonial establishments, chartered companies, and ship
+building influence pervaded and encumbered the legislation of all the
+great commercial states; and the United States, in offering free trade
+and equal privilege to all, were compelled to acquiesce in many
+exceptions with each of the parties to their treaties, accommodated to
+their existing laws and anterior agreements.
+
+The colonial system by which this whole hemisphere was bound has fallen
+into ruins, totally abolished by revolutions converting colonies into
+independent nations throughout the two American continents, excepting a
+portion of territory chiefly at the northern extremity of our own, and
+confined to the remnants of dominion retained by Great Britain over the
+insular archipelago, geographically the appendages of our part of the
+globe. With all the rest we have free trade, even with the insular
+colonies of all the European nations, except Great Britain. Her
+Government also had manifested approaches to the adoption of a free and
+liberal intercourse between her colonies and other nations, though by a
+sudden and scarcely explained revulsion the spirit of exclusion has
+been revived for operation upon the United States alone.
+
+The conclusion of our last treaty of peace with Great Britain was
+shortly afterwards followed by a commercial convention, placing the
+direct intercourse between the two countries upon a footing of more
+equal reciprocity than had ever before been admitted. The same
+principle has since been much further extended by treaties with France,
+Sweden, Denmark, the Hanseatic cities, Prussia, in Europe, and with the
+Republics of Colombia and of Central America, in this hemisphere. The
+mutual abolition of discriminating duties and charges upon the
+navigation and commercial intercourse between the parties is the
+general maxim which characterizes them all. There is reason to expect
+that it will at no distant period be adopted by other nations, both of
+Europe and America, and to hope that by its universal prevalence one of
+the fruitful sources of wars of commercial competition will be
+extinguished.
+
+Among the nations upon whose Governments many of our fellow citizens
+have had long-pending claims of indemnity for depredations upon their
+property during a period when the rights of neutral commerce were
+disregarded was that of Denmark. They were soon after the events
+occurred the subject of a special mission from the United States, at
+the close of which the assurance was given by His Danish Majesty that
+at a period of more tranquillity and of less distress they would be
+considered, examined, and decided upon in a spirit of determined
+purpose for the dispensation of justice. I have much pleasure in
+informing Congress that the fulfillment of this honorable promise is
+now in progress; that a small portion of the claims has already been
+settled to the satisfaction of the claimants, and that we have reason
+to hope that the remainder will shortly be placed in a train of
+equitable adjustment. This result has always been confidently expected,
+from the character of personal integrity and of benevolence which the
+Sovereign of the Danish dominions has through every vicissitude of
+fortune maintained.
+
+The general aspect of the affairs of our neighboring American nations
+of the south has been rather of approaching than of settled
+tranquillity. Internal disturbances have been more frequent among them
+than their common friends would have desired. Our intercourse with all
+has continued to be that of friendship and of mutual good will.
+Treaties of commerce and of boundaries with the United Mexican States
+have been negotiated, but, from various successive obstacles, not yet
+brought to a final conclusion.
+
+The civil war which unfortunately still prevails in the Republics of
+Central America has been unpropitious to the cultivation of our
+commercial relations with them; and the dissensions and revolutionary
+changes in the Republics of Colombia and of Peru have been seen with
+cordial regret by us, who would gladly contribute to the happiness of
+both. It is with great satisfaction, however, that we have witnessed
+the recent conclusion of a peace between the Governments of Buenos
+Ayres and of Brazil, and it is equally gratifying to observe that
+indemnity has been obtained for some of the injuries which our fellow
+citizens had sustained in the latter of those countries. The rest are
+in a train of negotiation, which we hope may terminate to mutual
+satisfaction, and that it may be succeeded by a treaty of commerce and
+navigation, upon liberal principles, propitious to a great and growing
+commerce, already important to the interests of our country.
+
+The condition and prospects of the revenue are more favorable than our
+most sanguine expectations had anticipated. The balance in the Treasury
+on January 1st, 1828, exclusive of the moneys received under the
+convention of November 13th, 1826, with Great Britain, was
+$5,861,972.83. The receipts into the Treasury from January 1st, 1828 to
+September 30th, 1828, so far as they have been ascertained to form the
+basis of an estimate, amount to $18,633,580.27, which, with the
+receipts of the present quarter, estimated at $5,461,283.40, form an
+aggregate of receipts during the year of $24,094,863.67. The
+expenditures of the year may probably amount to $25,637,111.63, and
+leave in the Treasury on January 1st, 1829 the sum of $5,125,638.14.
+
+The receipts of the present year have amounted to near $2,000,000 more
+than was anticipated at the commencement of the last session of
+Congress.
+
+The amount of duties secured on importations from the first of January
+to the 30th of September was about $22,997,000, and that of the
+estimated accruing revenue is $5,000,000, forming an aggregate for the
+year of near $28,000,000. This is $1,000,000 more than the estimate
+last December for the accruing revenue of the present year, which, with
+allowances for draw-backs and contingent deficiencies, was expected to
+produce an actual revenue of $22,300,000. Had these only been realized
+the expenditures of the year would have been also proportionally
+reduced, for of these $24,000,000 received upward of $9,000,000 have
+been applied to the extinction of public debt, bearing an interest of
+6% a year, and of course reducing the burden of interest annually
+payable in future by the amount of more than $500,000. The payments on
+account of interest during the current year exceed $3,000,000,
+presenting an aggregate of more than $12,000,000 applied during the
+year to the discharge of the public debt, the whole of which remaining
+due on January 1st, 1829 will amount only to $58,362,135.78.
+
+That the revenue of the ensuing year will not fall short of that
+received in the one now expiring there are indications which can
+scarcely prove deceptive. In our country an uniform experience of 40
+years has shown that what ever the tariff of duties upon articles
+imported from abroad has been, the amount of importations has always
+borne an average value nearly approaching to that of the exports,
+though occasionally differing in the balance, some times being more and
+some times less. It is, indeed, a general law of prosperous commerce
+that the real value of exports should by a small, and only a small,
+balance exceed that of imports, that balance being a permanent addition
+to the wealth of the nation.
+
+The extent of the prosperous commerce of the nation must be regulated
+by the amount of its exports, and an important addition to the value of
+these will draw after it a corresponding increase of importations. It
+has happened in the vicissitudes of the seasons that the harvests of
+all Europe have in the late summer and autumn fallen short of their
+usual average. A relaxation of the interdict upon the importation of
+grain and flour from abroad has ensued, a propitious market has been
+opened to the granaries of our country, and a new prospect of reward
+presented to the labors of the husband-man, which for several years has
+been denied. This accession to the profits of agriculture in the middle
+and western portions of our Union is accidental and temporary. It may
+continue only for a single year. It may be, as has been often
+experienced in the revolutions of time, but the first of several scanty
+harvests in succession. We may consider it certain that for the
+approaching year it has added an item of large amount to the value of
+our exports and that it will produce a corresponding increase of
+importations. It may therefore confidently be foreseen that the revenue
+of 1829 will equal and probably exceed that of 1828, and will afford
+the means of extinguishing $10,000,000 more of the principal of the
+public debt.
+
+This new element of prosperity to that part of our agricultural
+industry which is occupied in producing the first article of human
+subsistence is of the most cheering character to the feelings of
+patriotism. Proceeding from a cause which humanity will view with
+concern, the sufferings of scarcity in distant lands, it yields a
+consolatory reflection that this scarcity is in no respect attributable
+to us; that it comes from the dispensation of Him who ordains all in
+wisdom and goodness, and who permits evil itself only as an instrument
+of good; that, far from contributing to this scarcity, our agency will
+be applied only to the alleviation of its severity, and that in pouring
+forth from the abundance of our own garners the supplies which will
+partially restore plenty to those who are in need we shall ourselves
+reduce our stores and add to the price of our own bread, so as in some
+degree to participate in the wants which it will be the good fortune of
+our country to relieve.
+
+The great interests of an agricultural, commercial, and manufacturing
+nation are so linked in union together that no permanent cause of
+prosperity to one of them can operate without extending its influence
+to the others. All these interests are alike under the protecting power
+of the legislative authority, and the duties of the representative
+bodies are to conciliate them in harmony together.
+
+So far as the object of taxation is to raise a revenue for discharging
+the debts and defraying the expenses of the community, its operation
+should be adapted as much as possible to suit the burden with equal
+hand upon all in proportion with their ability of bearing it without
+oppression. But the legislation of one nation is some times
+intentionally made to bear heavily upon the interests of another. That
+legislation, adapted, as it is meant to be, to the special interests of
+its own people, will often press most unequally upon the several
+component interests of its neighbors.
+
+Thus the legislation of Great Britain, when, as has recently been
+avowed, adapted to the depression of a rival nation, will naturally
+abound with regulations to interdict upon the productions of the soil
+or industry of the other which come in competition with its own, and
+will present encouragement, perhaps even bounty, to the raw material of
+the other State which it can not produce itself, and which is essential
+for the use of its manufactures, competitors in the markets of the
+world with those of its commercial rival.
+
+Such is the state of commercial legislation of Great Britain as it
+bears upon our interests. It excludes with interdicting duties all
+importation (except in time of approaching famine) of the great staple
+of production of our Middle and Western States; it proscribes with
+equal rigor the bulkier lumber and live stock of the same portion and
+also of the Northern and Eastern part of our Union. It refuses even the
+rice of the South unless aggravated with a charge of duty upon the
+Northern carrier who brings it to them. But the cotton, indispensable
+for their looms, they will receive almost duty free to weave it into a
+fabric for our own wear, to the destruction of our own manufactures,
+which they are enabled thus to under-sell.
+
+Is the self-protecting energy of this nation so helpless that there
+exists in the political institutions of our country no power to
+counter-act the bias of this foreign legislation; that the growers of
+grain must submit to this exclusion from the foreign markets of their
+produce; that the shippers must dismantle their ships, the trade of the
+North stagnate at the wharves, and the manufacturers starve at their
+looms, while the whole people shall pay tribute to foreign industry to
+be clad in a foreign garb; that the Congress of the Union are impotent
+to restore the balance in favor of native industry destroyed by the
+statutes of another realm?
+
+More just and generous sentiments will, I trust, prevail. If the tariff
+adopted at the last session of Congress shall be found by experience to
+bear oppressively upon the interests of any one section of the Union,
+it ought to be, and I can not doubt will be, so modified as to
+alleviate its burden. To the voice of just complaint from any portion
+of their constituents the representatives of the States and of the
+people will never turn away their ears.
+
+But so long as the duty of the foreign shall operate only as a bounty
+upon the domestic article; while the planter and the merchant and the
+shepherd and the husbandman shall be found thriving in their
+occupations under the duties imposed for the protection of domestic
+manufactures, they will not repine at the prosperity shared with
+themselves by their fellow citizens of other professions, nor denounce
+as violations of the Constitution the deliberate acts of Congress to
+shield from the wrongs of foreigns the native industry of the Union.
+
+While the tariff of the last session of Congress was a subject of
+legislative deliberation it was foretold by some of its opposers that
+one of its necessary consequences would be to impair the revenue. It is
+yet too soon to pronounce with confidence that this prediction was
+erroneous. The obstruction of one avenue of trade not unfrequently
+opens an issue to another. The consequence of the tariff will be to
+increase the exportation and to diminish the importation of some
+specific articles; but by the general law of trade the increase of
+exportation of one article will be followed by an increased importation
+of others, the duties upon which will supply the deficiencies which the
+diminished importation would otherwise occasion. The effect of taxation
+upon revenue can seldom be foreseen with certainty. It must abide the
+test of experience.
+
+As yet no symptoms of diminution are perceptible in the receipts of the
+Treasury. As yet little addition of cost has even been experienced upon
+the articles burdened with heavier duties by the last tariff. The
+domestic manufacturer supplies the same or a kindred article at a
+diminished price, and the consumer pays the same tribute to the labor
+of his own country-man which he must otherwise have paid to foreign
+industry and toil.
+
+The tariff of the last session was in its details not acceptable to the
+great interests of any portion of the Union, not even to the interest
+which it was specially intended to subserve. Its object was to balance
+the burdens upon native industry imposed by the operation of foreign
+laws, but not to aggravate the burdens of one section of the Union by
+the relief afforded to another. To the great principle sanctioned by
+that act--one of those upon which the Constitution itself was formed--I
+hope and trust the authorities of the Union will adhere. But if any of
+the duties imposed by the act only relieve the manufacturer by
+aggravating the burden of the planter, let a careful revisal of its
+provisions, enlightened by the practical experience of its effects, be
+directed to retain those which impart protection to native industry and
+remove or supply the place of those which only alleviate one great
+national interest by the depression of another.
+
+The United States of America and the people of every State of which
+they are composed are each of them sovereign powers. The legislative
+authority of the whole is exercised by Congress under authority granted
+them in the common Constitution. The legislative power of each State is
+exercised by assemblies deriving their authority from the constitution
+of the State. Each is sovereign within its own province. The
+distribution of power between them presupposes that these authorities
+will move in harmony with each other. The members of the State and
+General Governments are all under oath to support both, and allegiance
+is due to the one and to the other. The case of a conflict between
+these two powers has not been supposed, nor has any provision been made
+for it in our institutions; as a virtuous nation of ancient times
+existed more than five centuries without a law for the punishment of
+parricide.
+
+More than once, however, in the progress of our history have the people
+and the legislatures of one or more States, in moments of excitement,
+been instigated to this conflict; and the means of effecting this
+impulse have been allegations that the acts of Congress to be resisted
+were unconstitutional. The people of no one State have ever delegated
+to their legislature the power of pronouncing an act of Congress
+unconstitutional, but they have delegated to them powers by the
+exercise of which the execution of the laws of Congress within the
+State may be resisted. If we suppose the case of such conflicting
+legislation sustained by the corresponding executive and judicial
+authorities, patriotism and philanthropy turn their eyes from the
+condition in which the parties would be placed, and from that of the
+people of both, which must be its victims.
+
+The reports from the Secretary of War and the various subordinate
+offices of the resort of that Department present an exposition of the
+public administration of affairs connected with them through the course
+of the current year. The present state of the Army and the distribution
+of the force of which it is composed will be seen from the report of
+the Major General. Several alterations in the disposal of the troops
+have been found expedient in the course of the year, and the discipline
+of the Army, though not entirely free from exception, has been
+generally good.
+
+The attention of Congress is particularly invited to that part of the
+report of the Secretary of War which concerns the existing system of
+our relations with the Indian tribes. At the establishment of the
+Federal Government under the present Constitution of the United States
+the principle was adopted of considering them as foreign and
+independent powers and also as proprietors of lands. They were,
+moreover, considered as savages, whom it was our policy and our duty to
+use our influence in converting to Christianity and in bringing within
+the pale of civilization.
+
+As independent powers, we negotiated with them by treaties; as
+proprietors, we purchased of them all the lands which we could prevail
+upon them to sell; as brethren of the human race, rude and ignorant, we
+endeavored to bring them to the knowledge of religion and letters. The
+ultimate design was to incorporate in our own institutions that portion
+of them which could be converted to the state of civilization. In the
+practice of European States, before our Revolution, they had been
+considered as children to be governed; as tenants at discretion, to be
+dispossessed as occasion might require; as hunters to be indemnified by
+trifling concessions for removal from the grounds from which their game
+was extirpated. In changing the system it would seem as if a full
+contemplation of the consequences of the change had not been taken.
+
+We have been far more successful in the acquisition of their lands than
+in imparting to them the principles or inspiring them with the spirit
+of civilization. But in appropriating to ourselves their hunting
+grounds we have brought upon ourselves the obligation of providing them
+with subsistence; and when we have had the rare good fortune of
+teaching them the arts of civilization and the doctrines of
+Christianity we have unexpectedly found them forming in the midst of
+ourselves communities claiming to be independent of ours and rivals of
+sovereignty within the territories of the members of our Union. This
+state of things requires that a remedy should be provided--a remedy
+which, while it shall do justice to those unfortunate children of
+nature, may secure to the members of our confederation their rights of
+sovereignty and of soil. As the outline of a project to that effect,
+the views presented in the report of the Secretary of War are
+recommended to the consideration of Congress.
+
+The report from the Engineer Department presents a comprehensive view
+of the progress which has been made in the great systems promotive of
+the public interest, commenced and organized under authority of
+Congress, and the effects of which have already contributed to the
+security, as they will hereafter largely contribute to the honor and
+dignity, of the nation.
+
+The first of these great systems is that of fortifications, commenced
+immediately after the close of our last war, under the salutary
+experience which the events of that war had impressed upon our country-
+men of its necessity. Introduced under the auspices of my immediate
+predecessor, it has been continued with the persevering and liberal
+encouragement of the Legislature, and, combined with corresponding
+exertions for the gradual increase and improvement of the Navy,
+prepares for our extensive country a condition of defense adapted to
+any critical emergency which the varying course of events may bring
+forth. Our advances in these concerted systems have for the last ten
+years been steady and progressive, and in a few years more will be so
+completed as to leave no cause for apprehension that our sea coast will
+ever again offer a theater of hostile invasion.
+
+The next of these cardinal measures of policy is the preliminary to
+great and lasting works of public improvement in the surveys of roads,
+examination for the course of canals, and labors for the removal of the
+obstructions of rivers and harbors, first commenced by the act of
+Congress of April 30th, 1824.
+
+The report exhibits in one table the funds appropriated at the last and
+preceding sessions of Congress for all these fortifications, surveys,
+and works of public improvement, the manner in which these funds have
+been applied, the amount expended upon the several works under
+construction, and the further sums which may be necessary to complete
+them; in a second, the works projected by the Board of Engineers which
+have not been commenced, and the estimate of their cost; in a third,
+the report of the annual Board of Visitors at the Military Academy at
+West Point.
+
+For thirteen fortifications erecting on various points of our Atlantic
+coast, from Rhode Island to Louisiana, the aggregate expenditure of the
+year has fallen little short of $1,000,000. For the preparation of five
+additional reports of reconnoissances and surveys since the last
+session of Congress, for the civil construction upon 37 different
+public works commenced, eight others for which specific appropriations
+have been made by acts of Congress, and twenty other incipient surveys
+under the authority given by the act of April 30th, 1824, about
+$1,000,000 more has been drawn from the Treasury.
+
+To these $2,000,000 is to be added the appropriation of $250,000 to
+commence the erection of a break-water near the mouth of the Delaware
+River, the subscriptions to the Delaware and Chesapeake, the Louisville
+and Portland, the Dismal Swamp, and the Chesapeake and Ohio canals, the
+large donations of lands to the States of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and
+Alabama for objects of improvements within those States, and the sums
+appropriated for light-houses, buoys, and piers on the coast; and a
+full view will be taken of the munificence of the nation in the
+application of its resources to the improvement of its own condition.
+
+Of these great national under-takings the Academy at West Point is
+among the most important in itself and the most comprehensive in its
+consequences. In that institution a part of the revenue of the nation
+is applied to defray the expense of educating a competent portion of
+her youth chiefly to the knowledge and the duties of military life. It
+is the living armory of the nation. While the other works of
+improvement enumerated in the reports now presented to the attention of
+Congress are destined to ameliorate the face of nature, to multiply the
+facilities of communication between the different parts of the Union,
+to assist the labors, increase the comforts, and enhance the enjoyments
+of individuals, the instruction acquired at West Point enlarges the
+dominion and expands the capacities of the mind. Its beneficial results
+are already experienced in the composition of the Army, and their
+influence is felt in the intellectual progress of society. The
+institution is susceptible still of great improvement from benefactions
+proposed by several successive Boards of Visitors, to whose earnest and
+repeated recommendations I cheerfully add my own.
+
+With the usual annual reports from the Secretary of the Navy and the
+Board of Commissioners will be exhibited to the view of Congress the
+execution of the laws relating to that department of the public
+service. The repression of piracy in the West Indian and in the Grecian
+seas has been effectually maintained, with scarcely any exception.
+During the war between the Governments of Buenos Ayres and of Brazil
+frequent collisions between the belligerent acts of power and the
+rights of neutral commerce occurred. Licentious blockades, irregularly
+enlisted or impressed sea men, and the property of honest commerce
+seized with violence, and even plundered under legal pretenses, are
+disorders never separable from the conflicts of war upon the ocean.
+
+With a portion of them the correspondence of our commanders on the
+eastern aspect of the South American coast and among the islands of
+Greece discover how far we have been involved. In these the honor of
+our country and the rights of our citizens have been asserted and
+vindicated. The appearance of new squadrons in the Mediterranean and
+the blockade of the Dardanelles indicate the danger of other obstacles
+to the freedom of commerce and the necessity of keeping our naval force
+in those seas. To the suggestions repeated in the report of the
+Secretary of the Navy, and tending to the permanent improvement of this
+institution, I invite the favorable consideration of Congress.
+
+A resolution of the House of Representatives requesting that one of our
+small public vessels should be sent to the Pacific Ocean and South Sea
+to examine the coasts, islands, harbors, shoals, and reefs in those
+seas, and to ascertain their true situation and description, has been
+put in a train of execution. The vessel is nearly ready to depart. The
+successful accomplishment of the expedition may be greatly facilitated
+by suitable legislative provisions, and particularly by an
+appropriation to defray its necessary expense. The addition of a 2nd,
+and perhaps a 3rd, vessel, with a slight aggravation of the cost, would
+contribute much to the safety of the citizens embarked on this under-
+taking, the results of which may be of the deepest interest to our
+country.
+
+With the report of the Secretary of the Navy will be submitted, in
+conformity to the act of Congress of March 3d, 1827, for the gradual
+improvement of the Navy of the United States, statements of the
+expenditures under that act and of the measures for carrying the same
+into effect. Every section of that statute contains a distinct
+provision looking to the great object of the whole--the gradual
+improvement of the Navy. Under its salutary sanction stores of ship
+timber have been procured and are in process of seasoning and
+preservation for the future uses of the Navy. Arrangements have been
+made for the preservation of the live oak timber growing on the lands
+of the United States, and for its reproduction, to supply at future and
+distant days the waste of that most valuable material for ship building
+by the great consumption of it yearly for the commercial as well as for
+the military marine of our country.
+
+The construction of the two dry docks at Charlestown and at Norfolk is
+making satisfactory progress toward a durable establishment. The
+examinations and inquiries to ascertain the practicability and
+expediency of a marine railway at Pensacola, though not yet
+accomplished, have been postponed but to be more effectually made. The
+navy yards of the United States have been examined, and plans for their
+improvement and the preservation of the public property therein at
+Portsmouth, Charlestown, Philadelphia, Washington, and Gosport, and to
+which two others are to be added, have been prepared and received my
+sanction; and no other portion of my public duties has been performed
+with a more intimate conviction of its importance to the future welfare
+and security of the Union.
+
+With the report from the Post Master General is exhibited a comparative
+view of the gradual increase of that establishment, from five to five
+years, since 1792 'til this time in the number of post offices, which
+has grown from less than 200 to nearly 8,000; in the revenue yielded by
+them, which from $67,000 has swollen to upward of $1,500,000, and in
+the number of miles of post roads, which from 5,642 have multiplied to
+114,536. While in the same period of time the population of the Union
+has about thrice doubled, the rate of increase of these offices is
+nearly 40, and of the revenue and of traveled miles from 20 to 25 for
+one. The increase of revenue within the last five years has been nearly
+equal to the whole revenue of the Department in 1812.
+
+The expenditures of the Department during the year which ended on July
+1st, 1828 have exceeded the receipts by a sum of about $25,000. The
+excess has been occasioned by the increase of mail conveyances and
+facilities to the extent of near 800,000 miles. It has been supplied by
+collections from the post masters of the arrearages of preceding years.
+While the correct principle seems to be that the income levied by the
+Department should defray all its expenses, it has never been the policy
+of this Government to raise from this establishment any revenue to be
+applied to any other purposes. The suggestion of the Post Master
+General that the insurance of the safe transmission of moneys by the
+mail might be assumed by the Department for a moderate and competent
+remuneration will deserve the consideration of Congress.
+
+A report from the commissioner of the public buildings in this city
+exhibits the expenditures upon them in the course of the current year.
+It will be seen that the humane and benevolent intentions of Congress
+in providing, by the act of May 20th, 1826, for the erection of a
+penitentiary in this District have been accomplished. The authority of
+further legislation is now required for the removal to this tenement of
+the offenders against the laws sentenced to atone by personal
+confinement for their crimes, and to provide a code for their
+employment and government while thus confined.
+
+The commissioners appointed, conformably to the act of March 2d, 1827,
+to provide for the adjustment of claims of persons entitled to
+indemnification under the first article of the treaty of Ghent, and for
+the distribution among such claimants of the sum paid by the Government
+of Great Britain under the convention of November 13th, 1826, closed
+their labors on August 30th, 1828 last by awarding to the claimants the
+sum of $1,197,422.18, leaving a balance of $7,537.82, which was
+distributed ratably amongst all the claimants to whom awards had been
+made, according to the directions of the act.
+
+The exhibits appended to the report from the Commissioner of the
+General Land Office present the actual condition of that common
+property of the Union. The amount paid into the Treasury from the
+proceeds of lands during the year 1827 and for the first half of 1828
+falls little short of $2,000,000. The propriety of further extending
+the time for the extinguishment of the debt due to the United States by
+the purchasers of the public lands, limited by the act of March 21st,
+1828 to July 4th, 1829, will claim the consideration of Congress, to
+whose vigilance and careful attention the regulation, disposal, and
+preservation of this great national inheritance has by the people of
+the United States been intrusted.
+
+Among the important subjects to which the attention of the present
+Congress has already been invited, and which may occupy their further
+and deliberate discussion, will be the provision to be made for taking
+the 5th census of enumeration of the inhabitants of the United States.
+The Constitution of the United States requires that this enumeration
+should be made within every term of ten years, and the date from which
+the last enumeration commenced was the first Monday of August of the
+year 1820.
+
+The laws under which the former enumerations were taken were enacted at
+the session of Congress immediately preceding the operation; but
+considerable inconveniences were experienced from the delay of
+legislation to so late a period. That law, like those of the preceding
+enumerations, directed that the census should be taken by the marshals
+of the several districts and Territories of the Union under
+instructions from the Secretary of State. The preparation and
+transmission to the marshals of those instructions required more time
+than was then allowed between the passage of the law and the day when
+the enumeration was to commence. The term of six months limited for the
+returns of the marshals was also found even then too short, and must be
+more so now, when an additional population of at least 3,000,000 must
+be presented upon the returns.
+
+As they are to be made at the short session of Congress, it would, as
+well as from other considerations, be more convenient to commence the
+enumeration from an earlier period of the year than the first of
+August. The most favorable season would be the spring.
+
+On a review of the former enumerations it will be found that the plan
+for taking every census has contained many improvements upon that of
+its predecessor. The last is still susceptible of much improvement. The
+3rd Census was the first at which any account was taken of the
+manufactures of the country. It was repeated at the last enumeration,
+but the returns in both cases were necessarily very imperfect. They
+must always be so, resting, of course, only upon the communications
+voluntarily made by individuals interested in some of the manufacturing
+establishments. Yet they contained much valuable information, and may
+by some supplementary provision of the law be rendered more effective.
+
+The columns of age, commencing from infancy, have hitherto been
+confined to a few periods, all under the number of 45 years. Important
+knowledge would be obtained by extending these columns, in intervals of
+ten years, to the utmost boundaries of human life. The labor of taking
+them would be a trifling addition to that already prescribed, and the
+result would exhibit comparative tables of longevity highly interesting
+to the country. I deem it my duty further to observe that much of the
+imperfections in the returns of the last and perhaps of preceding
+enumerations proceeded from the inadequateness of the compensations
+allowed to the marshals and their assistants in taking them.
+
+In closing this communication it only remains for me to assure the
+Legislature of my continued earnest wish for the adoption of measures
+recommended by me heretofore and yet to be acted on by them, and of the
+cordial concurrence on my part in every constitutional provision which
+may receive their sanction during the session tending to the general
+welfare.
+
+JOHN QUINCY ADAMS
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OF ADDRESSES BY JOHN QUINCY ADAMS ***
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