Washington, 28th December, 1860.
Sir: We have the honor to transmit to you a copy of
the full powers from the Convention of the People of South Carolina, under
which we are “authorized and empowered to treat with the Government of the
United States for the delivery of the forts, magazines, light houses and other
real estate, with their appurtenances, within the limits of South Carolina, and
also for an apportionment of the public debt and for a division of all other
property held by the Government of the United States as agent of the confederated
States, of which South Carolina was recently a member; and generally to
negotiate as to all other measures and arrangements proper to be made and
adopted in the existing relation of the parties, and for the continuance of
peace and amity between this commonwealth and the Government at Washington.”
In the execution of this trust, it is our duty to furnish
you, as we now do, with an official copy of the Ordinance
of Secession, by which the State of South Carolina has resumed the powers
she delegated to the Government of the United States and has declared her
perfect sovereignty and independence.
It would also have been our duty to have informed you that
we were ready to negotiate with you upon all such questions as are necessarily
raised by the adoption of this ordinance, and that we were prepared to enter
upon this negotiation with the earnest desire to avoid all unnecessary and
hostile collision, and so to inaugurate our new relations as to secure mutual
respect, general advantage and a future of good will and harmony beneficial to
all the parties concerned.
But the events of the last twenty-four hours render such an
assurance impossible. We came here the representatives of an authority which
could, at any time within the past sixty days, have taken possession of the
forts in Charleston harbor, but which, upon pledges given in a manner that, we
cannot doubt, determined to trust to your honor rather than to its own power.
Since our arrival here an officer of the United States, acting, as we are
assured, not only without but against your orders, has dismantled one fort and
occupied another, thus altering, to a most important extent, the condition of
affairs under which we came.
Until these circumstances are explained in a manner which
relieves us of all doubt as to the spirit in which these negotiations shall be
conducted, we are forced to suspend all discussion as to any arrangements by
which our mutual interests might be amicably adjusted.
And, in conclusion, we would urge upon you the immediate
withdrawal of the troops from the harbor of Charleston. Under present
circumstances, they are a standing menace which renders negotiation impossible,
and, as our recent experience shews, threatens speedily to bring to a bloody
issue questions which ought to be settled with temperance and judgment.
We have the honor, Sir, to be,
Very respectfully,
Your obedient
servants,
R.
W. BARNWELL,
J.
H. ADAMS,
JAMES
L. ORR,
Commissioners.
To the President
of the United States.
SOURCE: The Correspondence
Between the Commissioners of the State of So. Ca. to the Government at
Washington and the President of the United States, p. 3-4
No comments:
Post a Comment