PRESIDENT
GROVER CLEVELAND'S MESSAGE
December 18, 1893
To the
Senate and House of Representatives:
In my recent
annual message to the Congress I briefly referred to our relations with
Hawaii and expressed the intention of transmitting further information
on the subject when additional advices permitted.
Though I
am not able now to report a definite change in the actual situation, I
am convinced that the difficulties lately created both here and in Hawaii
and now standing in the way of a solution through Executive action of
the problem presented, render it proper and expedient, that the matter
should be referred to the broader authority and discretion of Congress,
with a full explanation of the endeavor thus far made to deal with the
emergency and a statement of the considerations which have governed my
action.
I suppose
that right and justice should determine the path to be followed in treating
this subject. If national honesty is to be disregarded and a desire for
territorial extension, or dissatisfaction with a form of government not
our own, ought to regulate our conduct, I have entirely misapprehended
the mission and character of our Government and the behavior which the
conscience of our people demands of their public servants.
When the
present Administration entered upon its duties the Senate had under consideration
a treaty providing for the annexation of the Hawaiian Islands to the territory
of the United States. Surely under our Constitution and laws the enlargement
of our limits is a manifestation of the highest attribute of sovereignty,
and if entered upon as an Executive act, all things relating to the transaction
should be clear and free from suspicion. Additional importance attached
to this particular treaty of annexation, because it contemplated a departure
from unbroken American tradition in providing for the addition to our
territory of islands of the sea more than two thousand miles removed from
our nearest coast.
These considerations
might not of themselves call for interference with the completion of a
treaty entered upon by a previous Administration. but it appeared from
the documents accompanying the treaty when submitted to the Senate, that
the ownership of Hawaii was tendered to us by a provisional government
set up to succeed the constitutional ruler of the islands, who had been
dethroned, and it did not appear that such provisional government had
the sanction of either popular revolution or suffrage. Two other remarkable
features of the transaction naturally attracted attention. One was the
extraordinary haste - not to say precipitancy - characterizing all the
transactions connected with the treaty. It appeared that a so-called Committee
of Safety, ostensibly the source of the revolt against the constitutional
Government of Hawaii, was organized on Saturday, the 14th day of January;
that on Monday, the 16th, the United States forces were landed at Honolulu
from a naval vessel lying in its harbor; that on the 17th the scheme of
a provisional government was perfected, and a proclamation naming its
officers was on the same day prepared and read at the Government building;
that immediately thereupon the United States Minister recognized the provisional
government thus created; that two days afterwards, on the 19th day of
January, commissioners representing such government sailed for this country
in a steamer especially chartered for the occasion, arriving in San Francisco
on the 28th day of January, and in Washington on the 3rd day of February;
that on the next day they had their first interview with the Secretary
of State, and another on the 11th, when the treaty of annexation was practically
agreed upon, and that on the 14th it was formally concluded and on the
15th transmitted to the Senate. Thus between the initiation of the scheme
for a provisional government in Hawaii on the 14th day of January and
the submission to the Senate of the treaty of annexation concluded with
such government, the entire interval was thirty-two days, fifteen of which
were spent by the Hawaiian Commissioners in their journey to Washington.
In the next
place, upon the face of the papers submitted with the treaty, it clearly
appeared that there was open and undetermined an issue of fact of the
most vital importance. The message of the President accompanying the treaty
declared that "the overthrow of the monarchy was not in any way promoted
by this Government," and in a letter to the President from the Secretary
of State also submitted to the Senate with the treaty, the following message
occurs: "At the time the provisional government took possession of the
Government buildings no troops or officers of the United States were present
or took any part whatever in the proceedings. No public recognition was
accorded to the provisional government by the United States Minister until
after the Queen's abdication and when they were in effective possession
of the Government buildings, the archives, the treasury, the barracks,
the police station, and all the potential machinery of the Government."
But a protest also accompanied said treaty, signed by the Queen and her
ministers at the time she made way for the provisional government, which
explicitly stated that she yielded to the superior force of the United
States, whose Minister had caused United States troops to be landed at
Honolulu and declared that he would support such provisional government.
The truth
or falsity of this protest was surely of the first importance. If true,
nothing but the concealment of its truth could induce our Government to
negotiate with the semblance of a government thus created, nor could a
treaty resulting from the acts stated in the protest have been knowingly
deemed worthy of consideration by the Senate. Yet the truth or falsity
of the protest had not been investigated.
I conceived
it to be my duty therefore to withdraw the treaty from the Senate for
examination, and meanwhile to cause an accurate, full, and impartial investigation
to be made of the facts attending the subversion of the constitutional
Government of Hawaii and the installment in its place of the provisional
government. I selected for the work of investigation the Hon. James H.
Blount, of Georgia, whose service of eighteen years as a member of the
House of Georgia, and whose experience as chairman of the Committee of
Foreign Affairs in that body, and his consequent familiarity with international
topics, joined with his high character and honorable reputation, seemed
to render him peculiarly fitted for the duties entrusted to him. His report
detailing his action under the instructions given to him and the conclusions
derived from his investigation accompany this message.
These conclusions
do not rest for their acceptance entirely upon Mr. Blount's honesty and
ability as a man, nor upon his acumen and impartiality as an investigator.
They are accompanied by the evidence upon which they are based, which
evidence is also herewith transmitted, and from which it seems to me no
other deductions could possibly be reached than those arrived at by the
Commissioner.
The report
with its accompanying proofs, and such other evidence as is now before
the Congress or is herewith submitted, justifies in my opinion the statement
that when the President was led to submit the treaty to the Senate with
the declaration that "the overthrow of the monarchy was not in any way
promoted by this Government", and when the Senate was induced to receive
and discuss it on that basis, both President and Senate were misled.
The attempt
will not be made in this communication to touch upon all the facts which
throw light upon the progress and consummation of this scheme of annexation.
A very brief and imperfect reference to the facts and evidence at hand
will exhibit its character and the incidents in which it had its birth.
It is unnecessary
to set forth the reasons which in January, 1893, led a considerable proportion
of American and other foreign merchants and traders residing at Honolulu
to favor the annexation of Hawaii to the United States. It is sufficient
to note the fact and to observe that the project was one which was zealously
promoted by the Minister representing the United States in that country.
He evidently had an ardent desire that it should become a fact accomplished
by his agency and during his ministry, and was not inconveniently scrupulous
as to the means employed to that end. On the 19th day of November, 1892,
nearly two months before the first overt act tending towards the subversion
of the Hawaiian Government and the attempted transfer of Hawaiian territory
to the United States, he addressed a long letter to the Secretary of State
in which the case for annexation was elaborately argued, on moral, political,
and economical grounds. He refers to the loss of the Hawaiian sugar interests
from the operation of the McKinley bill, and the tendency to still further
depreciation of sugar property unless some positive measure of relief
is granted. He strongly inveighs against the existing Hawaiian Government
and emphatically declares for annexation. He says: "In truth the monarchy
here is an absurd anachronism. It has nothing on which it logically or
legitimately stands. The feudal basis on which it once stood no longer
existing, the monarchy now is only an impediment to good government -
an obstruction to the prosperity and progress of the islands."
He further
says: "As a crown colony of Great Britain or a Territory of the United
States the government modifications could be made readily and good administration
of the law secured. Destiny and the vast future interests of the United
States in the Pacific clearly indicate who at no distant day must be responsible
for the government of these islands. Under a territorial government they
could be as easily governed as any of the existing Territories of the
United States." * * * "Hawaii has reached the parting of the ways. She
must now take the road which leads to Asia, or the other which outlets
her in America, gives her an American civilization, and binds her to the
care of American destiny." He also declares: "One of two courses seems
to me absolutely necessary to be followed, either bold and vigorous measures
for annexation or a 'customs union," an ocean cable from the Californian
coast to Honolulu, Pearl Harbor perpetually ceded to the United States,
with an implied but not expressly stipulated American protectorate over
the islands. I believe the former to be the better, that which will prove
much the more advantageous to the islands, and the cheapest and least
embarrassing in the end to the United States. If it was wise for the United
States through Secretary Marcy thirty-eight years ago to offer to expend
$100,000 to secure a treaty of annexation, it certainly can not be chimerical
or unwise to expend $100,000 to secure annexation in the near future.
To-day the United States has five times the wealth she possessed in 1854,
and the reasons now existing for annexation are much stronger than they
were then. I can not refrain from expressing the opinion with emphasis
that the golden hour is near at hand."
These declarations
certainly show a disposition and condition of mind, which may be usefully
recalled when interpreting the significance of the Minister's conceded
acts or when considering the probabilities of such conduct on his part
as may not be admitted.
In this
view it seems proper to also quote from a letter written by the Minister
to the Secretary of State on the 8th day of March, 1892, nearly a year
prior to the first step taken toward annexation. After stating the possibility
that the existing Government of Hawaii might be overturned by an orderly
and peaceful revolution, Minister Stevens writes as follows: "Ordinarily
in like circumstances, the rule seems to be to limit the landing and movement
of United States forces in foreign waters and dominion exclusively to
the protection of the United States legation and of the lives and property
of American citizens. But as the relations of the United States to Hawaii
are exceptional, and in former years the United States officials here
took somewhat exceptional action in circumstances of disorder, I desire
to know how far the present Minister and naval commander may deviate from
established international rules and precedents in the contingencies indicated
in the first part of this dispatch."
To a minister
of this temper full of zeal for annexation there seemed to arise in January,
1893, the precise opportunity for which he was watchfully waiting - an
opportunity which by timely "deviation from established international
rules and precedents" might be improved to successfully accomplish the
great object in view; and we are quite prepared for the exultant enthusiasm
with which in a letter to the State Department dated February 1, 1893,
he declares: "The Hawaiian pear is now fully ripe and this is the golden
hour for the United States to pluck it."
As a further
illustration of the activity of this diplomatic representative, attention
is called to the fact that on the day the above letter was written, apparently
unable longer to restrain his ardor, he issued a proclamation whereby
"in the name of the United States" he assumed the protection of the Hawaiian
Islands and declared that said action was "taken pending and subject to
negotiations at Washington." Of course this assumption of a protectorate
was promptly disavowed by our Government, but the American flag remained
over the Government building at Honolulu and the forces remained on guard
until April, and after Mr. Blount's arrival on the scene, when both were
removed.
A brief
statement of the occurrences that led to the subversion of the constitutional
Government of Hawaii in the interests of annexation to the United States
will exhibit the true complexion of that transaction.
On Saturday,
January 14, 1893, the Queen of Hawaii, who had been contemplating the
proclamation of a new constitution, had, in deference to the wishes and
remonstrances of her cabinet, renounced the project for the present at
least. Taking this relinquished purpose as a basis of action, citizens
of Honolulu numbering from fifty to one hundred, mostly resident aliens,
met in a private office and selected a so-called Committee of Safety,
composed of thirteen persons, seven of whom were foreign subjects, and
consisted of five Americans, one Englishman, and one German. This committee,
though its designs were not revealed, had in view nothing less than annexation
to the United States, and between Saturday, the 14th, and the following
Monday, the 16th of January - though exactly what action was taken may
not be clearly disclosed -they were certainly in communication with the
United States Minister. On Monday morning the Queen and her cabinet made
public proclamation, with a notice which was specially served upon the
representatives of all foreign governments, that any changes in the constitution
would be sought only in the methods provided by that instrument. Nevertheless,
at the call and under the auspices of the Committee of Safety, a mass
meeting of citizens was held on that day to protest against the Queen's
alleged illegal and unlawful proceedings and purposes. Even at this meeting
the Committee of Safety continued to disguise their real purpose and contented
themselves with procuring the passage of a resolution denouncing the Queen
and empowering the committee to devise ways and means "to secure the permanent
maintenance of law and order and the protection of life, liberty, and
property in Hawaii." This meeting adjourned between three and four o'clock
in the afternoon. On the same day, and immediately after such adjournment,
the committee, unwilling to take further steps without the cooperation
of the United States Minister, addressed him a note representing that
the public safety was menaced and that lives and property were in danger,
and concluded as follows: "We are unable to protect ourselves without
aid, and therefore pray for the protection of the United States forces."
Whatever may be thought of the other contents of this note, the absolute
truth of this latter statement is incontestable. When the note was written
and delivered, the committee, so far as it appears, had neither a man
or a gun at their command, and after its delivery they became so panic-stricken
at their stricken position that they sent some of their number to interview
the Minister and request him not to land the United States forces till
the next morning. But he replied that the troops had been ordered, and
whether the committee were ready or not the landing should take place.
And so it happened that on the 16th day of January, 1893, between four
and five o'clock in the afternoon, a detachment of marines from the United
States Steamer Boston, with two pieces of artillery, landed at Honolulu.
The men, upwards of 160 in all, were supplied with double cartridge belts
filled with ammunition and with haversacks and canteens, and were accompanied
by a hospital corps with stretchers and medical supplies. This military
demonstration upon the soil of Honolulu was of itself an act of war, unless
made either with the consent of the Government of Hawaii or for the bona
fide purpose of protecting the imperilled lives and property of citizens
of the United States. But there is no pretense of any such consent on
the part of the Government of the Queen, which at that time was undisputed
and was both the de facto and the de jure government. In point of fact
the existing government instead of requesting the presence of an armed
force protested against it. There is as little basis for the pretense
that such forces were landed for the security of American life and property.
If so, they would have been stationed in the vicinity of such property
and so as to protect it, instead of at a distance and so as to command
the Hawaiian Government building and palace. Admiral Skerrett, the officer
in command of our naval force on the Pacific station, has frankly stated
that in his opinion the location of the troops was inadvisable if they
were landed for the protection of American citizens whose residences and
places of business, as well as the legation and consulate, were in a distant
part of the city, but the location selected was a wise one if the forces
were landed for the purpose of supporting the provisional government.
If any peril to life and property calling for any such martial array had
existed, Great Britain and other foreign powers interested would not have
been behind the United States in activity to protect their citizens. But
they made no sign in that direction. When these armed men were landed,
the city of Honolulu was in its customary orderly and peaceful condition.
There was no symptom of riot or disturbance in any quarter. Men, women,
and children were about the streets as usual, and nothing varied the ordinary
routine or disturbed the ordinary tranquility, except the landing of the
Boston's marines and their march through the town to the quarters assigned
them. Indeed, the fact that after having called for the landing of the
United States forces on the plea of danger to life and property the Committee
of Safety themselves requested the Minister to postpone action, exposed
the untruthfulness of their representations of present peril to life and
property. The peril they saw was an anticipation growing out of guilty
intentions on their part and something which, though not then existing,
they knew would certainly follow their attempt to overthrow the Government
of the Queen without the aid of the United States forces.
Thus it
appears that Hawaii was taken possession of by the United States forces
without the consent or wish of the government of the islands, or of anybody
else so far as shown, except the United States Minister.
Therefore
the military occupation of Honolulu by the United States on the day mentioned
was wholly without justification, either as an occupation by consent or
as an occupation necessitated by dangers threatening American life and
property. It must be accounted for in some other way and on some other
ground, and its real motive and purpose are neither obscure nor far to
seek.
The United
States forces being now on the scene and favorably stationed, the committee
proceeded to carry out their original scheme. They met the next morning,
Tuesday, the 17th, perfected the plan of temporary government, and fixed
upon its principal officers, ten of whom were drawn from the thirteen
members of the Committee of Safety. Between one and two o'clock, by squads
and by different routes to avoid notice, and having first taken the precaution
of ascertaining whether there was any one there to oppose them, they proceeded
to the Government building to proclaim the new government. No sign of
opposition was manifest, and thereupon an American citizen began to read
the proclamation from the steps of the Government building almost entirely
without auditors. It is said that before the reading was finished quite
a concourse of persons, variously estimated at from 50 to 100, some armed
and some unarmed, gathered about the committee to give them aid and confidence.
This statement is not important, since the one controlling factor in the
whole affair was unquestionably the United States marines, who, drawn
up under arms and with artillery in readiness only seventy-six yards distant,
dominated the situation.
The provisional
government thus proclaimed was by the terms of the proclamation "to exist
until terms of union with the United States had been negotiated and agreed
upon". The United States Minister, pursuant to prior agreement, recognized
this government within an hour after the reading of the proclamation,
and before five o'clock, in answer to an inquiry on behalf of the Queen
and her cabinet, announced that he had done so.
When our
Minister recognized the provisional government the only basis upon which
it rested was the fact that the Committee of Safety had in the manner
above stated declared it to exist. It was neither a government de facto
nor de jure. That it was not in such possession of the Government property
and agencies as entitled it to recognition is conclusively proved by a
note found in the files of the Legation at Honolulu, addressed by the
declared head of the provisional government to Minister Stevens, dated
January 17, 1893, in which he acknowledges with expressions of appreciation
the Minister's recognition of the provisional government, and states that
it is not yet in the possession of the station house (the place where
a large number of the Queen's troops were quartered), though the same
had been demanded of the Queen's officers in charge. Nevertheless, this
wrongful recognition by our Minister placed the Government of the Queen
in a position of most perilous perplexity. On the one hand she had possession
of the palace, of the barracks, and of the police station, and had at
her command at least five hundred fully armed men and several pieces of
artillery. Indeed, the whole military force of her kingdom was on her
side and at her disposal, while the Committee of Safety, by actual search,
had discovered that there were but very few arms in Honolulu that were
not in the service of the Government. In this state of things if the Queen
could have dealt with the insurgents alone her course would have been
plain and the result unmistakable. But the United States had allied itself
with her enemies, had recognized them as the true Government of Hawaii,
and had put her and her adherents in the position of opposition against
lawful authority. She knew that she could not withstand the power of the
United States, but she believed that she might safely trust to its justice.
Accordingly, some hours after the recognition of the provisional government
by the United States Minister, the palace, the barracks, and the police
station, with all the military resources of the country, were delivered
up by the Queen upon the representation made to her that her cause would
thereafter be reviewed at Washington, and while protesting that she surrendered
to the superior force of the United States, whose Minister had caused
United States troops to be landed at Honolulu and declared that he would
support the provisional government, and that she yielded her authority
to prevent collision of armed forces and loss of life and only until such
time as the United States, upon the facts being presented to it, should
undo the action of its representative and reinstate her in the authority
she claimed as the constitutional sovereign of the Hawaiian Islands.
This protest
was delivered to the chief of the provisional government, who endorsed
thereon his acknowledgment of its receipt. The terms of the protest were
read without dissent by those assuming to constitute the provisional government,
who were certainly charged with the knowledge that the Queen instead of
finally abandoning her power had appealed to the justice of the United
States for reinstatement in her authority; and yet the provisional government
with this unanswered protest in its hand hastened to negotiate with the
United States for the permanent banishment of the Queen from power and
for the sale of her kingdom.
Our country
was in danger of occupying the position of having actually set up a temporary
government on foreign soil for the purpose of acquiring through that agency
territory which we had wrongfully put in its possession. The control of
both sides of a bargain acquired in such a manner is called by a familiar
and unpleasant name when found in private transactions. We are not without
a precedent showing how scrupulously we avoided such accusations in former
days. After the people of Texas had declared their independence of Mexico
they resolved that on the acknowledgment of their independence by the
United States they would seek admission into the Union. Several months
after the battle of San Jacinto, by which Texan independence was practically
assured and established, President Jackson declined to recognize it, alleging
as one of his reasons that in the circumstances it became us "to beware
of a too early movement, as it might subject us, however unjustly, to
the imputation of seeking to establish the claim of our neighbors to a
territory with a view to its subsequent acquisition by ourselves". This
is in marked contrast with the hasty recognition of a government openly
and concededly set up for the purpose of tendering to us territorial annexation.
I believe
that a candid and thorough examination of the facts will force the conviction
that the provisional government owes its existence to an armed invasion
by the United States. Fair-minded people with the evidence before them
will hardly claim that the Hawaiian Government was overthrown by the people
of the islands or that the provisional government had ever existed with
their consent. I do not understand that any member of this government
claims that the people would uphold it by their suffrages if they were
allowed to vote on the question.
While naturally
sympathizing with every effort to establish a republican form of government,
it has been the settled policy of the United States to concede to people
of foreign countries the same freedom and independence in the management
of their domestic affairs that we have always claimed for ourselves; and
it has been our practice to recognize revolutionary governments as soon
as it became apparent that they were supported by the people. For illustration
of this rule I need only to refer to the revolution in Brazil in 1889,
when our Minister was instructed to recognize the Republic "so soon as
a majority of the people of Brazil should have signified their assent
to its establishment and maintenance"; to the revolution in Chile in 1891,
when our Minister was directed to recognize the new government "if it
was accepted by the people"; and to the revolution in Venezuela in 1892,
when our recognition was accorded on condition that the new government
was "fully established, in possession of the power of the nation, and
accepted by the people."
As I apprehend
the situation, we are brought face to face with the following conditions:
The lawful
Government of Hawaii was overthrown without the drawing of a sword or
the firing of a shot by a process every step of which, it may be safely
asserted, is directly traceable to and dependent for its success upon
the agency of the United States acting through its diplomatic and naval
representatives.
But for
the notorious predilections of the United States Minister for annexation,
the Committee of Safety, which should be called the Committee of Annexation,
would never have existed.
But for
the landing of the United States forces upon false pretexts respecting
the danger to life and property the committee would never have exposed
themselves to the pains and penalties of treason by undertaking the subversion
of the Queen's Government.
But for
the presence of the United States forces in the immediate vicinity and
in position to afford all needed protection and support the committee
would not have proclaimed the provisional government from the steps of
the Government building.
And finally,
but for the lawless occupation of Honolulu under false pretexts by the
United States forces, and but for Minister Stevens' recognition of the
provisional government when the United States forces were its sole support
and constituted its only military strength, the Queen and her Government
would never have yielded to the provisional government, even for a time
and for the sole purpose of submitting her case to the enlightened justice
of the United States.
Believing,
therefore, that the United States could not, under the circumstances disclosed,
annex the islands without justly incurring the imputation of acquiring
them by unjustifiable methods, I shall not again submit the treaty of
annexation to the Senate for its consideration, and in the instructions
to Minister Willis, a copy of which accompanies this message, I have directed
him to so inform the provisional government.
But in the
present instance our duty does not, in my opinion, end with refusing to
consummate this questionable transaction. It has been the boast of our
government that it seeks to do justice in all things without regard to
the strength or weakness of those with whom it deals. I mistake the American
people if they favor the odious doctrine that there is no such thing as
international morality, that there is one law for a strong nation and
another for a weak one, and that even by indirection a strong power may
with impunity despoil a weak one of its territory.
By an act
of war, committed with the participation of a diplomatic representative
of the United States and without authority of Congress, the Government
of a feeble but friendly and confiding people has been overthrown. A substantial
wrong has thus been done which a due regard for our national character
as well as the rights of the injured people requires we should endeavor
to repair. The provisional government has not assumed a republican or
other constitutional form, but has remained a mere executive council or
oligarchy, set up without the assent of the people. It has not sought
to find a permanent basis of popular support and has given no evidence
of an intention to do so. Indeed, the representatives of that government
assert that the people of Hawaii are unfit for popular government and
frankly avow that they can be best ruled by arbitrary or despotic power.
The law
of nations is founded upon reason and justice, and the rules of conduct
governing individual relations between citizens or subjects of a civilized
state are equally applicable as between enlightened nations. The considerations
that international law is without a court for its enforcement, and that
obedience to its commands practically depends upon good faith, instead
of upon the mandate of a superior tribunal, only give additional sanction
to the law itself and brand any deliberate infraction of it not merely
as a wrong but as a disgrace. A man of true honor protects the unwritten
word which binds his conscience more scrupulously, if possible, than he
does the bond a breach of which subjects him to legal liabilities; and
the United States in aiming to maintain itself as one of the most enlightened
of nations would do its citizens gross injustice if it applied to its
international relations any other than a high standard of honor and morality.
On that ground the United States can not properly be put in the position
of countenancing a wrong after its commission any more than in that of
consenting to it in advance. On that ground it can not allow itself to
refuse to redress an injury inflicted through an abuse of power by officers
clothed with its authority and wearing its uniform; and on the same ground,
if a feeble but friendly state is in danger of being robbed of its independence
and its sovereignty by a misuse of the name and power of the United States,
the United States can not fail to vindicate its honor and its sense of
justice by an earnest effort to make all possible reparation.
These principles
apply to the present case with irresistible force when the special conditions
of the Queen's surrender of her sovereignty are recalled. She surrendered
not to the provisional government, but to the United States. She surrendered
not absolutely and permanently, but temporarily and conditionally until
such time as the facts could be considered by the United States. Furthermore,
the provisional government acquiesced in her surrender in that manner
and on those terms, not only by tacit consent, but through the positive
acts of some members of that government who urged her peaceable submission,
not merely to avoid bloodshed, but because she could place implicit reliance
upon the justice of the United States, and that the whole subject would
be finally considered at Washington.
I have not,
however, overlooked an incident of this unfortunate affair which remains
to be mentioned. The members of the provisional government and their supporters,
though not entitled to extreme sympathy, have been led to their present
predicament of revolt against the Government of the Queen by the indefensible
encouragement and assistance of our diplomatic representative. This fact
may entitle them to claim that in our effort to rectify the wrong committed
some regard should be had for their safety. This sentiment is strongly
seconded by my anxiety to do nothing which would invite either harsh retaliation
on the part of the Queen or violence and bloodshed in any quarter. In
the belief that the Queen, as well as her enemies, would be willing to
adopt such a course as would meet these conditions, and in view of the
fact that both the Queen and the provisional government had at one time
apparently acquiesced in a reference of the entire case to the United
States Government, and considering the further fact that in any event
the provisional government by its own declared limitation was only "to
exist until terms of union with the United States of America have been
negotiated and agreed upon," I hoped that after the assurance to the members
of that government that such union could not be consummated I might compass
a peaceful adjustment of the difficulty.
Actuated
by these desires and purposes,and not unmindful of the inherent perplexities
of the situation nor of the limitations upon my power, I instructed Minister
Willis to advise the Queen and her supporters of my desire to aid in the
restoration of the status existing before the lawless landing of the United
States forces at Honolulu on the 16th of January last, if such restoration
could be effected upon terms providing for clemency as well as justice
to all parties concerned. The conditions suggested, as the instructions
show, contemplate a general amnesty to those concerned insetting up the
provisional government and a recognition of all its bona fide acts and
obligations. In short, they require that the past should be buried, and
that the restored Government should reassume its authority as if its continuity
had not been interrupted. These conditions have not proved acceptable
to the Queen, and though she has been informed that they will be insisted
upon, and that, unless acceded to, the efforts of the President to aid
in the restoration of her Government will cease, I have not thus far learned
that she is willing to yield them her acquiescence. The check which my
plans have thus encountered has prevented their presentation to the members
of the provisional government, while unfortunate public misrepresentations
of the situation and exaggerated statements of the sentiments of our people
have obviously injured the prospects of successful Executive mediation.
I therefore
submit this communication with its accompanying exhibits, embracing Mr.
Bount's report, the evidence and statements taken by him at Honolulu,
the instructions given to both Mr. Blount and Minister Willis, and correspondence
connected with the affair in hand.
In commending
this subject to the extended powers and wide discretion of the Congress,
I desire to add the assurance that I shall be much gratified to cooperate
in any legislative plan which may be devised for the solution of the problem
before us which is consistent with American honor, integrity, and morality.
GROVER CLEVELAND
Executive Mansion,
Washington, December 18, 1893
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