DEPARTMENT OF STATE,
Washington, June 7,
1862.
Mr. ROEST VAN LIMBURG, &c.:
SIR: I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your
note of yesterday and of this date on the subject of the proceedings of
Major-General Butler with reference to the consul of the Netherlands at New
Orleans. The first of these communications presents several points which merit
special notice, but I prefer to reserve a reply to them in detail until I shall
have received information in regard to the instructions upon the subject which
you expect from your Government.
In answer to your note of this date I have to remark that in
conformity with that conciliatory disposition which it has been my purpose to
show and which you very liberally acknowledge, I have no objection to your
writing to the consul that it is the President's expectation that, he will resume
and continue in the discharge of his official functions until there shall be
further occasion for him to relinquish them.
I avail myself of this occasion, sir, to offer to you a
renewed assurance of my very high consideration.
WILLIAM H. SEWARD.
SOURCE: The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of
the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series III, Volume
2 (Serial No. 123), p. 137
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