Part 2 (1/2)
Humphreys made arrangements by which they received clothing and a money allowance ranging from twelve cents a day for a seaman up to eight dollars a month for a captain. Nothing, however, could be done in the way of peace negotiations. One of Humphreys' agents reported that the Dey could not make peace even if he really wanted to do so. ”He declared to me that his interest does not permit him to accept your offers, Sir, even were you to lavish millions upon him, 'because,' said he, 'if I were to make peace with everybody, what should I do with my Corsairs? What should I do with my soldiers? They would take off my head, for want of other prizes.'”
This was an honest disclosure of the situation. Humphreys wrote Jefferson that ”no choice is left for the United States but to prepare a naval force for the protection of their trade.” Captain O'Brien wrote, ”By all means urge Congress to fit out some remarkably fast sailing cruisers, well appointed and manned.” In January, 1794, accordingly, a committee of the House brought in a resolution for building four s.h.i.+ps of 44 guns and two of 20 guns each. The debate began on February 6, and for some time was altogether one-sided, with one speaker after another opposing the creation of a navy. Madison, as was now his habit, had doubts as to the propriety of the measure. He fancied that peace ”might be purchased for less money than this armament would cost.” Clark of New Jersey had ”an objection to the establishment of a fleet, because, when once it had been commenced, there would be no end to it.” He had ”a scheme which he judged would be less expensive and more effectual. This was to hire the Portuguese to cruise against the Algerines.” Baldwin of Georgia thought that ”bribery alone could purchase security from the Algerines.” Nicholas of Virginia ”feared that we were not a match for the Algerines.”
Smith of Maryland and Fitzsimmons of Pennsylvania championed the resolution, and Fisher Ames made some remarks on Madison's lack of spirit that caused Madison to define his position. He proposed as a subst.i.tute for the pending measure that money should ”be employed in such a manner as should be found most effectual for obtaining a peace with the Regency of Algiers; and failing of this, that the sum should be applied to the end of obtaining protection from some of the European Powers.” This motion warmed up the debate. Giles of Virginia came to Madison's support in a style that was not helpful. He ”considered navies altogether as very foolish things. An immense quant.i.ty of property was spread on the water for no purpose whatever, which might have been employed by land to the best purpose.” The suggestion that the United States should be a hermit nation was an indiscreet exposure of the logical significance of Madison's plan, and it perhaps turned the scale in favor of employing force.
The bill came up in the House for final pa.s.sage on March 10, 1794. Its opponents now sparred for time, but a motion to recommit in order to give opportunity for further consideration was defeated by 48 to 41. Giles made a final effort, by a long and elaborate address, in which he argued that the effect of fitting out a navy would be to involve the United States in war with all the European Powers. Moreover, a navy would be dangerous to American liberty. ”A navy is the most expensive of all means of defense, and the tyranny of governments consists in the expensiveness of their machinery.” He pointed to the results of British naval policy. ”The government is not yet destroyed, but the people are oppressed, liberty is banished.” The French monarchy had been ruined by its navy. He was ”astonished, with these fatal examples before our eyes, that there should be gentlemen who would wish to enter upon this fas.h.i.+onable system of politics.” In discussing the expense of maintaining a navy, he expressed his fear that it would eventually bring back the miseries of feudalism.
William Smith of South Carolina made a reply in which he defined the issue as being between defense and tribute; but Giles had the last word. He wanted to know whether it was maintained that the frigates it was proposed to build would ”boldly march upon land and break the chains of the prisoners?” He begged Congress not to do what ”would irritate the barbarians and furnish additional misery to the unfortunate prisoners.” In this closing struggle over the bill Giles fought single-handed. When he had quite finished, the bill was pa.s.sed by 50 yeas to 39 nays, a result which showed a decided gain in strength from the discussion.
The debates in the Senate have not been preserved, but the Senate was so evenly divided that it took the casting vote of the Vice-President to pa.s.s the bill, which became law March 27, 1794. In order to get it pa.s.sed at all, a proviso had been tacked on that, if peace terms could be arranged, ”no farther proceeding be had under this Act.” In September, 1795, a treaty of peace with Algiers was finally concluded, after negotiations had been facilitated by a contingent fee of $18,000 paid to ”Bacri the Jew, who has as much art in this sort of management as any man we ever knew,” the American agents reported. It was a keen bargain, as Bacri had to propitiate court officials at his own risk, and had to look for both reimburs.e.m.e.nt and personal profit, too, out of the lump sum he was to receive in event of his success. It can hardly be doubted that he had the situation securely in hand before making the bargain. The money paid in Algiers for the ransom of the captives, for tribute and for presents to officials amounted to $642,500.00. But in addition the United States agreed to build a frigate for the Algerine navy and also supply naval stores, which with incidental expenses brought the total cost of the peace treaty up to $992,463.25. Moreover, the United States agreed to pay an annual tribute of 12,000 sequins,-about $27,500.
By the terms of the navy act, the United States had to stop building vessels for its own protection. Of those which had been authorized, the frigates Const.i.tution, United States, and Constellation were under way and were eventually completed. The timber, with material that had been collected for the other vessels, was sold, except what was needed for the frigate which was to be presented to the Algerines, and which was to be built at Portsmouth, N.H. The whole affair was a melancholy business that must have occasioned Was.h.i.+ngton deep chagrin. In his address to Congress, December 7, 1796, announcing the success of the negotiations for effecting the release of the captives, he observed that ”to secure respect to a neutral flag requires a naval force, organized and ready to vindicate it from insult or aggression.”
CHAPTER VI
FRENCH DESIGNS ON AMERICA
A few months before France declared war upon England, February 1, 1793, Edmond Genet was appointed French Minister to the United States. He landed at Charleston, April 8, and at once began activities so authoritative as to amount to an erection of French sovereignty in the United States. The subsequent failure of his efforts and the abrupt ending of his diplomatic career have so reacted upon his reputation that a.s.sociations of boastful arrogance and reckless incompetency cling to his name. This estimate holds him too lightly and underrates the peril to which the United States was then exposed. Genet was no casual rhetorician raised to important office by caprice of events, but a trained diplomatist of hereditary apt.i.tude and of long experience. His father was chief of the bureau of correspondence in the Department of Foreign Affairs for the French monarchy, and it was as an interpreter attached to that bureau that the son began his career in 1775. While still a youth, he gained literary distinction by his translations of historical works from Swedish into French. Genet was successively attached to the French Emba.s.sies at Berlin and Vienna, and in 1781 he succeeded his father in the Department of Foreign Affairs. In 1788, he was Secretary of the French Emba.s.sy at St. Petersburg, where his zeal for French Revolutionary principles so irritated the Empress Catherine that she characterized him as ”a furious demagogue,” and in 1792 he was forced to leave Russia. In the same year he was named Amba.s.sador to Holland, and thence was soon transferred to the United States.
It is obvious that a man of such experience could not be ignorant of diplomatic forms and of international proprieties of behavior. If he pursued a course that has since seemed to be a marvel of truculence, the explanation should be sought in the circ.u.mstances of his mission more than in the nature of his personality. When the matter is considered from this standpoint, not only does one find that Genet's proceedings become consistent and intelligible, but one becomes deeply impressed with the magnitude of the peril then confronting the United States. Nothing less than American independence was at stake.
It should be borne in mind that France, in aiding America against England, had been pursuing her own ends. In August, 1787, the French government advised its American representative that it had observed with indifference the movements going on in the United States and would view the break-up of the Confederation without regret. ”We have never pretended to make of America a useful ally; we have had no other object than to deprive Great Britain of that vast continent.” But, now that war with England had broken out again, it was worth while making an effort to convert America into a useful ally. Jefferson, while Minister to Paris, had been sympathetic with the Revolutionary movement. In 1789, the English Amba.s.sador reported to his government that Jefferson was much consulted by the leaders of the Third Estate. On the other hand, Gouverneur Morris, who was then living in Paris, sympathized frankly with the King. Nevertheless he was chosen to succeed Jefferson as the American Minister. In notifying him of the appointment, Was.h.i.+ngton let him know that there had been objections. ”It was urged that in France you were considered as a favorer of the aristocracy, and unfriendly to its Revolution.” Was.h.i.+ngton's reminder that it was his business to promote the interest of his own country did not have any apparent effect on Morris's behavior. He became the personal agent of Louis XVI, and he not only received and disbursed large sums on the King's account, but he also entered into plans for the King's flight from Paris. During the Reign of Terror which began in 1792, he behaved with an energy and an intrepidity honorable to him as a man; in general, however, his course tended to embroil and not to guard American interests.
In the face of the European coalition against revolutionary France, the principle of action was that announced by Danton,-”to dare, and to dare, and without end to dare.” Genet therefore went on his mission to America keyed to measures which were audacious but which can hardly be described as reckless. By plunging heavily he might make a big winning; if he failed, he was hardly worse off than if he had not made the attempt. To draw the United States into the war as the ally of France was only one part of his mission. He was also planning to reestablish the French colonial empire, the loss of which was still an unhealed wound. Canada, Louisiana, and the Floridas were all in his mind. In Louisiana, France regarded conditions as being so favorable that Genet was instructed to make special efforts in that quarter. Spain, which had entered the coalition against republican France, held the lower Mississippi. Spain was therefore the common enemy of France and of the American settlements west of the mountains. Ought not then those two republican interests to work together to expel Spain and to seize Louisiana? Moreover, there was a belief, not without grounds, that the older States which formed the American union were indifferent to the needs and interests of the country west of the Alleghenies and would be more relieved than afflicted if it should take its destinies into its own hands. Such considerations animated a group of Americans in Paris, among whose prominent members were Thomas Paine, the pamphleteer, Joel Barlow, the poet, and Dr. James O'Fallon, a Revolutionary soldier now interested in Western land speculation. All were then ardent sympathizers with the French Revolution, and they entered heartily into the design of stirring up the Western country against Spain. The project attracted some frontier leaders, among them George Rogers Clark, famous for his successful campaigns against the hostile Indians and the British during the Revolutionary War. He was to lead a force of Western riflemen against the Spanish posts in Louisiana, and Genet brought with him blank brevets of officers up to the grade of captain for bestowal on the Indian chiefs who would cooperate. The expenses of the expedition were to be met by collections which Genet expected to make from the treasury of the United States on account of sums due to France.
The project of using the United States as a French base could claim legal rights under the treaties of 1778 between France and the United States. There were two treaties, both concluded on the same day. One, ent.i.tled a treaty of amity and commerce, was a mutual conveyance of privileges; it provided that the s.h.i.+ps of war of each country should defend the vessels of the other country against all attacks that might occur while they were in company. Besides this right of convoy, each country had the right to use the ports of the other, either for s.h.i.+ps of war or for privateers and their prizes, ”nor shall such prizes be arrested or seized when they come to and enter the ports of either party; nor shall the searchers or other officers of those places search the same, or make any examination concerning the lawfulness of such prizes, but they may hoist sail at any time, and depart.” All vessels of either country had the right to take refuge in the ports of the other, whether from stress of weather or pursuit of enemies, ”and they shall be permitted to refresh and provide themselves at reasonable rates, with victuals and all things needful for the sustenance of their persons or reparation of their s.h.i.+ps, and conveniency of their voyage; and they shall no ways be detained or hindered from returning out of the said ports or roads, but may remove and depart when and whither they please, without any let or hindrance.” It was expressly provided that such hospitality should not be extended to vessels of an enemy of either country. The accompanying instrument, ent.i.tled a treaty of alliance, was a mutual guarantee of territorial possessions, ”forever against all other powers.” These broad rights and privileges were supplemented by the convention of 1788 on consular functions, which facilitated the organization of a consular jurisdiction competent to deal with cases arising from the treaties. There was still due to France on loans contracted during the Revolution a remainder of about $2,300,000 payable by instalments, subject to the proviso that ”Congress and the United States” had ”the liberty of freeing themselves by antic.i.p.ated payments should the state of their finances admit.” It was planned to get the United States to reciprocate the past favors of France by favoring her now, if not by direct payments of money, at least by acceptances which Genet could use in purchasing supplies. The fact that whatever in the way of money or accommodations was obtained in the United States would be used in business in that country was counted upon to facilitate the transaction.
These facts form the background against which Genet's activities should be viewed. He came with deliberate intent to rush the situation, and armed with all needful powers for that purpose, so far as the French government could confer them. According to a dispatch from Morris to the State Department, Genet ”took with him three hundred blank commissions which he is to distribute to such as will fit out cruisers in our ports to prey on the British commerce.”
At Charleston, Genet received an enthusiastic reception. The Revolutionary commander, General Moultrie, who was then governor of South Carolina, entered so cordially into Genet's plans that in his first dispatch home, Genet was able to say to his government that Moultrie had permitted him to arm privateers and had a.s.sisted the various branches of his mission in every possible way. Such was Genet's energy that within five days after his arrival he had opened a recruiting station at which American seamen were taken into the French service; he had commissioned American vessels as French privateers; and he had turned the French consul's office into an admiralty court for which business was provided by the prizes that were being brought in.
After seeing under way all matters that he could attend to in Charleston, Genet moved on to Philadelphia, and received on his way thither such greetings as to give to his journey the character of a triumphal progress. Meanwhile, L'Ambuscade, the French frigate which had brought Genet to Charleston, was proceeding to Philadelphia, taking prizes on her way and sending them to American ports. In Delaware Bay she captured the Grange, an English merchantman lying there at anchor, and took this vessel with her to Philadelphia as a prize. As Genet neared Philadelphia on May 16, L'Ambuscade gave notice by firing three guns, at which signal a procession was formed to meet Genet at Gray's Ferry and escort him to his lodgings. He found awaiting him a letter from George Rogers Clark, which gave an account of his plans for the invasion of Louisiana and the capture of New Orleans, and which announced his readiness to start if he were a.s.sisted by some frigates and provided with three thousand pounds sterling to meet expenses. Genet received reports from other agents or friendly correspondents in the Spanish territory, and so active was he in forwarding the objects of his mission that on June 19 he was able to write to his government, ”I am provisioning the West Indies, I excite the Canadians to break the British yoke, I arm the Kentukois and prepare a naval expedition which will facilitate their descent on New Orleans.”
These claims were well founded. Genet did, in fact, make an effective start, and had he been able to command funds he might have opened a great chapter of history. George Rogers Clark was the ablest and most successful commander that the frontier had yet produced, and such was the weakness of the Spanish defenses that had his expedition been actually launched as planned, the conquest of Louisiana might indeed have been accomplished. It was not any defect in Genet's arrangements that frustrated his plans, but his inability to raise money and the uncertainty of his position as the agent of a government which was undergoing rapid revolutionary change.
News that the French Republic had declared war against Great Britain reached the United States early in April, 1793. Was.h.i.+ngton, who was then at Mount Vernon, wrote to Jefferson that ”it behooves the Government of this country to use every means in its power to prevent the citizens thereof from embroiling us with either of those Powers, by endeavoring to maintain a strict neutrality,” and he requested that the Secretary should ”give the subject mature consideration, that such measures as shall be deemed most likely to effect this desirable purpose may be adopted without delay.” On arriving at Philadelphia a few days later, Was.h.i.+ngton was met by a distracted Cabinet. The great difficulty was the conflict of obligations. The United States had a treaty of alliance with France; it had a treaty of peace with Great Britain. The situation had become such that it could not sustain both relations at the same time. If the United States remained neutral, it would have to deny to France privileges conferred by the treaty which had been negotiated when both countries were at war with Great Britain. How far was that treaty now binding? It had been made with ”the Most Christian king,” whose head had been cut off. Did not his engagements fall with his head? That was the very position taken by the government of the French Republic, which had a.s.serted the right to decide what treaties of the old monarchy should be retained and what rejected. As an incident of the present case, the question was to be decided whether the amba.s.sador of the French Republic should be received.
Such were the issues that Was.h.i.+ngton's Administration had to face, at a time when the whole country was thrilling with enthusiasm in behalf of the French Republic. Chief Justice Marshall left on record his opinion that this feeling ”was almost universal,” and that ”a great majority of the American people deemed it criminal to remain unconcerned spectators of a conflict between their ancient enemy and republican France.”
Was.h.i.+ngton acted with his customary deliberation. On April 18, 1793, he submitted to the members of his Cabinet thirteen questions. Jefferson, who held that the French treaty was still operative, noted that the questions reached him in Was.h.i.+ngton's own handwriting, ”yet it was palpable from the style, their ingenious tissue and suite, that they were not the President's, that they were raised upon a prepared chain of argument, in short, that the language was Hamilton's and the doubts his alone.” In Jefferson's opinion they were designed to lead ”to a declaration of the Executive that our treaty with France is void.” Jefferson was right as to Hamilton's authors.h.i.+p. At a time when Jefferson had no advice to give save that it would be well to consider whether Congress ought not to be summoned, Hamilton had ready a set of interrogatories which subjected the whole situation to close a.n.a.lysis. The critical questions were these:
”Shall a proclamation issue for the purpose of preventing interferences of the citizens of the United States in the war between France and Great Britain, &c.? Shall it contain a declaration of neutrality or not? What shall it contain?
”Are the United States obliged, by good faith, to consider the treaties heretofore made with France as applying to the present situation of the parties? May they either renounce them, or hold them suspended till the government of France shall be established?”
To the interrogatories framed by Hamilton, Was.h.i.+ngton added one which presented the point raised by Jefferson-”Is it necessary or advisable to call together the two Houses of Congress, with a view to the present posture of European affairs? If it is, what shall be the particular object of such a call?”
The Cabinet met on April 19. On the question of a proclamation of neutrality Jefferson argued that such a proclamation would be equivalent to a declaration that the United States would not take part in the war, and that this matter did not lie within the power of the Executive, since it was the province of Congress to declare war. Congress ought therefore to be called to consider the question. Hamilton, who held that it was both the right and the duty of the President to proclaim neutrality, was strongly opposed to summoning Congress. In a brief record of the proceedings he remarked that ”whether this advice proceeded from a secret wish to involve us in a war, or from a const.i.tutional timidity, certain it is such a step would have been fatal to the peace and tranquillity of America.” The matter was finally compromised by an unanimous agreement that a proclamation should be issued ”forbidding our citizens taking any part in any hostilities on the seas with or against any of the belligerent powers; and warning them against carrying to any such powers any of those articles deemed contraband, according to the modern usage of nations; and enjoining them from all acts and proceedings inconsistent with the duties of a friendly nation toward those at war.” Jefferson's scruples having been appeased by avoiding the use of the term ”neutrality,” it was now unanimously decided that Congress should not be called. It was further decided that the French Minister should be received. Jefferson and Randolph, however, were of opinion that he should be received without conditions, while Hamilton, supported by Knox, held that the Minister ought to be apprised of the intention to reserve the question whether the treaties were still operative, ”lest silence on that point should occasion misconstruction.” The even division of the Cabinet on this point was in practical effect a victory for Jefferson. The Cabinet was unable to reach any decision in the matter of treaty obligations. Jefferson held that they were still operative; Hamilton, that they were ”temporarily and provisionally suspended.” Knox sided with Hamilton, and Randolph, although he at first sided with Jefferson, was so shaken in his opinion by Hamilton's argument that he asked further time for consideration. Eventually written opinions were submitted by Hamilton, Jefferson, and Randolph, confirming the views they had previously expressed, and, as Knox concurred with Hamilton, the Cabinet was still evenly divided on that fundamental question.
The proclamation, on the lines upon which all had agreed, was draughted by Randolph who showed it to Jefferson in order to a.s.sure him that ”there was no such word as neutrality in it.” Jefferson, whose own account this is, did not mention that he raised any objection to the wording of the proclamation at the time, though a few months later he referred to it in his private correspondence as a piece of ”pusillanimity,” because it omitted any expression of the affection of America for France. The proclamation was issued on April 22, two weeks after the arrival of Genet at Charleston. The procedure that had been adopted at Jefferson's instance avoided none of the difficulties that a declaration of neutrality would have encountered but rather increased them by putting the Government in a false position. The mere omission of the term did not prevent it from being known as a neutrality proclamation. It was at once so designated and has always been so considered. Jefferson himself, in advising the American foreign representatives of the policy of the Government, said that it would be ”a fair neutrality”; and, in writing to Madison a few days after the proclamation had been issued, he remarked, ”I fear a fair neutrality will prove a disagreeable pill to our friends, though necessary to keep us out of the calamities of war.”