*H& A LETTER r FROM GOVERNOR REEDER OK The Approaching Election of President and the Candidates. New Yokk City, September 18, 185(5. Tu the Editors of the Evening Post : Gentlemen : The letter of your correspondent II . , and your editorial comments upon it of the 10th inst. seem in common courtesy to demand a re- pl y. Your correspondent does not err in saying that 1 desire the success of the Republican party and the election of their candidate, and that I am ready to contribute any honorable effort to bring it about. This is not the result of any preference as to men, but in spite of it. With Colonel Fremont I am unacquainted. I have never seen him, nor had any communication with him, direct or indirect, verbal or written. On the other hand, my feel- ings of friendship and admiration for Mr. Bu- chanan, as a man, are of no ordinary character, and are strengthened by years of friendly intimacy and reciprocal acts of kindness, uninterrupted to this time by a single misunderstanding or un- pleasant" feeling ; and I would at any time de- fend him promptly and indignantly against per- sonal attacks upon his reputation. I believe him to be a man of distinguished ability, of high integrity and valuable experience. He is sur- rounded, too, in Pennsylvania, by many political friends, whom personally I love and esteem, and to whom I am united by ties of long-cherished political and social intimacy, and the loss of whose friendship I should regard as a great calamity. For more than a quarter of a century I have steadily labored with the Democratic party, and never doubted that I should do so during my life. For years I have exerted myself to bring about Mr. Buchanan's nomination. In 1848 and 1852, I was one of those who carried for him the dele- gates of our district, and was his zealous and ardent supporter. On each occasion I was in the National Convention as one of his delegates. These ties are exceedingly strong and hard to sever, especially with one who is naturally of a conservative cast, and slow to change old habits of thought and action ; and I have resisted for months the convictions that were urging me to my present declaration. I have diligently sought reasons and arguments to save myself the pain of v breaking up old associations and alienating myself from my old friends, but all in vain. My love of country and hatred of oppression would not allow my feelings and inclinations either to delude my judgment, or still my conscience, and I am com- pelled to forfeit my self-respect by committing what I believe to be palpably wrong, or else to enrol myself in opposition to the Democratic party. I can see no reasonable hope of justice and sym- pathy for the people of Kansas in the success of the Democracy. In its ranks, and with the power to control its action, are found the border-ruffians of Misssoiiri and their accomplices of the South, who have trampled upon the constitution and all the essential principles of our government, robbed Kansas of its civil liberty and right of suffrage, laid waste its territory with fire and sword, and repudiated even civilization itself. In its platform I find the enunciation of princi- ples which would put the rope about the necks of men for exercising the constitutional right of petitioning Congress for a State government, as a redness of grievances far worse than those which led to the war of the Ke volution, and a declaration stigmatising as ' ' armed resistance to law' ' the moderate and justifiable self-defence of men shamefully and infamously oppressed by ruffian violence and outrage, beyond all human en- durance. I find the whole party of the nation assembled in National Convention, with but one individual dissent, expressing its "unqualified admiration" of an administration which has lent itself as the tool and accomplice of all the wrongs inflicted upon Kansas, and by its venality and imbecility brought the country to an intestine war. I find, all its representatives in Congress, with three individual exceptions, laboring in earnest zeal, by speech and vote, to cover up the iniquities of this administration and the border ruffians of Missouri, and to suppress a fair investigation of outrages which shock both humanity and repub- licanism, and defy the constitution and the laws. I find these same representatives, after the truth was elicited in spite of their efforts, still refusing to relieve the people from a code of laws imposed GOVERNOR REEPER ON THE APPROACHING ELECTION. upon them by :i foreign army, ami still refusing to admit them into the Union, only !'"r reasons which, in t tates, nad ■ ami i Weet. Eee.HJat.8oc. GOVERNOR REEDER ON THE APPROACHING ELECTION. would follow their example. He would thus be left without a party to support his administration, unless he should cast himself into the arms of the Republicans. We cannot, it seems to me, either ask or expect him to do this upon a question where pai ty lines are so plainly drawn before his election. Like all other men in the same situation, he must obey the party sentiment on which he is elected. That there are Democrats in Pennsylvania who are full of indignation against the conduct of the South in regard to Kansas, I am wfll aware, and that they would use their influence to redress her wrongs, I am well satisfied ; but they are too few in proportion to the whole party of the Union to sustain his administration in a war with his party. They have as yet been unable to make their opinions appear and be felt in the party, and, of course, cannot do so hereafter. I honor their good intentions, but I cannot believe in their power. I repeat that I have been forced to these con- clusions after no slight struggle with my feelings and inclinations. Should Mr. Buchanan be elected, and his administration be different from what my judgment compels me to believe, I shall give it my cordial approbation, and my feeble though willing support. As I believe now, I must regard the Democratic party as fully committed to Southern sectionalism, towards which, for some time past, it has been rapidly tending, and I quit it, well assured that my duty to my country de- mands at my hands the sacrifice of personal feeling. Very truly yours, A. H. Reeder. SECRETARY MARCY'S OPINION [Extract from the Annual Report of the Secretary of War, December 5, 1846.] War Department. Dec. 5, 1846. a • s a « « « In May, 1845, John C. Fremont, then a brevet captain in the corps of Topographical Engineers, and since appointed a lieutenant colonel, left here under orders from this Department to pursue his explorations in the regions beyond the Rocky Mountains. The objects of this service were, as those of his previous explorations had been, of a scientific character, without any view whatever to military operations. Not an officer or soldier of the United States army accompanied him ; and his whole force consisted of sixty-two men, 'em- ployed by himself for security against the Indians, and for procuring subsistence in the wilderness and desert country through which he was to pass. One of the objects he had in view was to discov- er a new and shorter route from the western base of the Rocky Mountains to the north of the Colum- bia River. This search, fir a part of the distance, would carry him through the unsettled, and after- ward through a corner of the settled parts of Cal- ifornia. He approached these settlements in the winter of 1845-'6. Aware of the critical state of affairs between the United States and Mexico, and determined to give no cause of offence to the authorities of the province, with commendable prudence he halted his command on the frontier, one hundred miles from Monterey, and proceded alone to that city to explain the object of his com- ing to the commandant general, Castro, and to obtain permission to go into the valley of San Joaquin, where there was game for his men and grass for his horses, and no inhabitants to be mo- lested by his presence. The leave was granted ; but scarcely had he reached the desired spot for refreshment and repose, before he received infor- mation from the American settlements, and by expresses from our Consul at Monterey, that Gen- eral Castro was preparing to attack him with a comparatively large force of artillery, cavalry and ' ' pretext that under the cover of a scientific mission he was exciting the American settlers to revolt. In view of this danger, and to be in a condition to repel an attack, he then took a position on a mountain overlooking Monterey, at a distance of about thirty miles, entrenched it, raised the flag of the United States, and with his own men, sixty-two in number, awaited the ap- proach of the commandant general. From the 7th to the 10th of March, Colonel Fremont and his little band maintained this posi- tion. General Castro did not approach within at- tacking distance, and Colonel Fremont, adhering to his plan of avoiding all collisions, and deter- mined neither to compromit his government nor the American settlers, ready to join him at all haz- ards, if he had been attacked, abandoned his posi- tion, and commenced his march for Oregon, intend- ing by that route to return to the United States. Deeming all danger from the Mexicans to be passed, he yielded to the wishes of some of his men who desired to remain in the country, discharged them from his service, and refused to receive others in their stead, so cautious was he to avoid doing any- thing which would compromit the American set- tlers, or give even a color of offence to the Mexi- can authorities. He pursued his march slowly and leisurely, as the state of his men and horses re- quired, until the middle of may, and had reached the northern shore of the greater Tlamath lake, within the limits of the Oregon Territory, when he found his further progress in that direction ob- structed by impassable snowy mountains and hos- tile Indians, who had been excited against him by General Castro, had killed and wounded four of his men, and left him no repose either in camp or on his march. At the same time, information reached him that General Castro, in addition to his Indian allies, was advancing in person against him, with artillery and cavalry, at the head of four or five hundred men ; that they were passing around the head of the bay of San Francisco to a rendezvous on the north side of it, and that the SECKETAKY MA ROY'S OPDJION OF OOL. FREMONT. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS American settlers in the vail, v of tile Sacramento van oomprehended In the scheme of destruction meditated against his own part] , ■ ■r these circumstances, lit- determined to torn upon his Mexican pursuers, and seeksafet] both for his own party and the American w ttlers, not merely in the defeat of Castro, bul Lntl overthrow of the Mexican authority in California, and the establishment of an independent men! in that extensive department, li the 6th of June, and before the commencement of the war between the United States and Mexico could have there been known, thai this resolution was taken ; and. by the 5th of July, ted into e'Jtrt if a serial of rapid attack*, by a imaU body of under the conduct of an intrepid leader, '/uicA- mdabh to direct tht pi for accomyUslnmj such a daring < »ii the 1 lth of June s convoy of 200 horses for > astxo'scamp, with an officer and fourteen men, were surprised and captured by twelve of Fre- mont's party. On the 16th, at daybreak, thi mi] itary post of Sanoma was also surprised and taken, with nine brass cannon, 250 stand of muskets and several officers, and Borne men and munitions of war. Leaving :i small garrison at Sanoma, Colonel Fremont went to the Sacramento to rouse the American settlers; but scarcely bad he arrived there when an express reached him from the gar- rison at Sanoma, with information that Casti-.'s whole force was crossing the hay to attack that place. This intelligence was received in the after- noon of the 28dof June, while he was on the American fork of the Bacramento, 80 miles from the little garrison at Sanoma, and at. -l o'clock on she morning of the 25th he arrived at that place with 90 riflemen from the American settlers in that valley. The enemy had not vet appeared. - were sent out to reconnoitre, and a party of by f-11 in with a squadron of seventy dra- goons, (all of Castro\ force which had crossed the bay,) attacked and defeated it. killing and wound- ing five, without harm to themselves; the Mexi- can command.-r. De la Torre, barely escaping, with thelos8ofhis transport boats and nine pi artillery spiked. Tb mtry north of the Bay of Ban Francisco, ' leared "i the enemy, Colonel Fremont re- turned to Sanoma on the evening of the lth of July, and on the morning of the 5th called the people together, explained to them the condition of things in the province, and recommended an immediate declaration o|' independence. The de- claration was made, and I,- | | ,,, t.ake the chief direction of atlaiis. Tie- ;,tta. k o,, i asl CO wa- tic- n, ■.. t object, He wan at Santa Clara, an entrenched post on the up- per or south side of ti. ,, „i,|, and two |,i, ... of field art ilh I] \ . A cir- cuit of more than a hundred I the Ira suit wi Semen So||, w settlen he Lear and wa „ HI II II llll II In "li' 1 011 898 297 6 7 the pur- >unted ri- t in per- kmerican s. Here * ta Clara. uad de los Angeles, (the City of the Angels,) the seat of the Governor Genera] of the Cafifornias, and distant ■100 miles It was instantly resolved to pursue him \t the moment of departure the gratifying intelligence was received that war with Me\ic. bad commenced : that Monterey had been taken bj our naval force, and the Bag of the Uni- ted States there raised on the 7th of July; and that the licit would co-operate in the pursuit of ('astro ami his forces. The flag of independence was hauled down, and that of the United State- hoisted, amidst the hearty greetings and to the joy of the American settlers and the force.-, under the command of Colonel Fremont. The combined pursuit was rapidly continued: and on the 12th of August, Commodore Stockton and Colonel Fremont, with a detachment of ma- rines from the squadron and some riflemen, enter- ed the City of the Angels, without resistance or objection ; the Governor General, Pico, the Com- mandant General, Castro, and all the Mexican au- thorities, having fled and dispersed. Commodore Stockton took possession of the whole country as a conquest of the United States, and appointed Colonel Fremont Governor, under the law of na- tions ; to assume the functions of that office when he should return to the squadron. Thus, in the short space of sixty days from tin first decisive movement, this conquest was achieved, by a small hody of men, to an extent beyond their own expectation ; for the Mexican authorities pro- claimed it a conquest, not merely of the northern part, hut of the whole province of the Californias. The Commandant General, Castro, on the 9th of August, from his camp at the Mesa, and next day '•on the road to Sonora," announced this result to the people, toe-ether with the actual Bight and dis- persion of the former authorities ; and at the same time he officially communicated the fact of the conquest to the French, Knglish and Spanish Con- Buls in California ; ami, to crown the whole, the official paper of the Mexican government, on the 16th of < Ictober, in laying these official communi- cations before the public, introduced them with the emphatic declaration, "The loss of the Califor- is consummated." The whole province was yielded up to the United states, and is now in our military occupancy, a small part of the troops ■ nt out to subject this province will constitute, it. lund. B Sufficient force to retain our poseS- sion. and the remainder will be disposable for oth- er ohj.ects of the war. W. L. MATtCY. To r, ii. PBasinm oi tbm Dneckd States. I bj the Young Men's Fremont and Dnyton Ce Otral Union, of the I it y of New-York. campaign Beading Boom, Btuyvt ant Institute, 669 Broadwaj ; open daily from s ,\. M. toll P.M. J"i. New-York.