f) . * ' !. ^ ,/... V^\** ^°.-^-'*/ \;'^^-y v*^' ^^-t'3 ,-^" i /..^'•,^ '-^0^ 1<'^^^M^\ ^oV^ : .^-^K ^ :,Vv,\ -.^'Jmk-/^... ,.^\iv:.„\ ./,>^SJk-> • ^..^^ :'M£^ %„./ /^I^\ ^^..** .•• ^aq^ v-^' ^C^^' "^0 \ \.^^ •' %^o^ I ^""^^ THE GALPHIN CLAIM. SPEECH OF MR. B.^TANLV, OF NORTH mwim, In the House of Representatives, Saturday, July G, 1850. The report of the Select Committee, made on the letter of the Secretary of War, conccrftine the on v- ment of the Galphin claim, being under consideruiion, Mr. STANLY said: I regret very mucli, Mr.. Speaker, that the House refused to lay on the tabh^ th*' report of the Galphin claim. 1 voted in a small minority to dispose of this matter by laying it on the table, and I did so \vith the view of "^enabling the House to pro- ceed with the public business. The appropriation bills, which are indispensable for the support of the Ciovern- ment, are not yet acted on. California is still cruelly kept out of tfie Union. Thou- sands of laboring men in our country are begging us to protect them from the effects of the British tariff of 1846— a tariff which we are informed gives great .>iatisfviction to England. Hundreds of honest claimants are supplicating us to act uj)on bills re- ported for their relief. All these matters are demanding our attention, while we are wasting our time in ridiculous efforts to make, or to prevent making, party capital out of the Galphin report. Let the Government stand still — let California wait let the British lion complacently smile at the folly of the Americans, who, boasting of their freedom, are making themselves as dependent on England as if we were still her colonies — let honest creditors suffer — the Galphin claim alone demands all our patriotic consideration. If gentlemen on the other side of this Hall, who have elected their Speaker and their Clerk, and have control here, will insist in thus spending time, it is becoming and proper that we look into other matters of improper conduct among their friends. But, first, a few words on the Galphin claim. I regret, as every gentleman in the country must, that the Secretary of War continued to act as agent ol" this claim while he held his place in the Cabinet. It is a matter of taste and of delicacy, about which we may differ, as it seems we do differ. But I thijik there is an opinion nearly unanimous that it was not becoming in Mr. Crawford to act as an agent of this claim while he was in the Cabinet. As a member of a party, his conduct was inconsiderate, if not unkind, towards the other members of the Cabinet. But no honorable man has imputed anything dishonorable to Mr. Crawford. His conduct has been unfortunate and unwise, but his integrity stands fair and unimpeached. The Whig party are no more to blame for this act of his than the Democratic party is for Mr. Van Buren's bad conduct, or for the indelicacy or impropriety which marked the conduct of General Cass, in obtaining sixty-eiglit thousand dollars for extra allowances, which Congress never authorized to be paid; nor for his forming a company, while in the Cabinet, to speculate in public lands. Neither the conduct of Mr. Crawford nor of General Cass has been criminal. Both, in my judgment, have been unjustifiable. As Secretary of War, General Cass could have advantages which citizens of the country could not have. He had opportunities of enabling his company to monopolize the choice tracts of land, to know when they would be in market, and then to raise the price and sell them to settlers who were compelled to purchase. The Whig party have not endorsed, and never will endorse or sanction, Mr. Crawford's conduct. The Democratic party made General Cass their standard- bearer, "unanointed and unaneled," with all these sins on his head. When they shout ^'Galphin, Galphin," are we not justified in retorting, sixty-eight thousand dollars extra allowances — speculations in public lands? I do not intend to assail General Cass personally. I only refer to well-known facts. No Whig, w'ho has any self-respect, or any regard for public opinion, will violate all the decencies of life by utterino- calumnies in relation to this gentleman. And he who imputes dishonesty to either Mr. Crawford or Mr. Cass, merits and will receive the contempt of all fair- minded men. They will both comfort themselves with the rellection — t^ " 'Tia but the fate of place, and the rough brake That virtue must go through." It is only to be regretted that they did not further reflect, that "Things done well, And with a care, exempt themselves from fear; Things done without example, in their issue Are to be feared." They are to be blamed for a bad example; they forgot that "all things are lawful unto me, but all things are not expedient." A few words more on the (jalphin claim. The act for the relief of Galphin is in the following words: " Bt xi encated, Sfc, Sfc, That the Secretary of the Treasury be, and he is hereby, autliorized and required to examine and adjust the claim of the late George Galphin, under the treaty made by the Gov- ernor of Georgia loith the Creek and Cherokee Indians, in the year 1773, and to pay the amount which may befouna due to iVIiHedge Galphin, executor of the said George Galphin, out of any money in the Trea- sury not otherwise appropriated. "Approved August 14, 1848." The wrong in this case, if any wrong has been done, was in passing this act. I do not understand it is denied that George Galphin had a claim. It is admitted that, under the ireaty referred to, the claim of Galphin was acknowledged to be due. Then the act of Congress authorized and "re^zmW the Secretary of the Treasury to adjust the claim "under the treaty n:iade by the Governor of Georgia, with the Creek and Cherokee Indians, in 1773," and "to pay the amount which may be found due." The Secretaries who paid the principal and interest, (Mr. Walker and Mr. Mere- dith,) were not to be blamed for obeying an act of Congress. Congress is to blame, not the Secretaries, if blame rests anywhere. And let it not be forgotten, Mr. Speaker, that Mr. Polk approved this bill; he seems to have been informed of the merits of the claim. How this is, can be explained, perhaps, by the honorable member from South Carolina, the chairman of the Galphin coinmittee, (Mr. Burt,) when he addresses the House, That gentleman now thinks, "that the claim of the representatives of George Galphin was not a just demand against the United States." The gentleman did not think so in August, 1848; for I have before me a letter, pub- lished evidently by authority, from a Georgia paper, which, as part of the history of this case, I read to the House. [Here is the article which Mr. S. had before him:] From the Augusta (Ga.) Chronicle and Sentinel. THE GALPHIN CLAIM— MR. BURT. You are requested to publish the following letter. The original has been sent to Washington : " Washington, 14th August, 1848. " Dear Sir : I have the pleasure to say that the bill in which you are interested has just been signed by the Speaker of the House, and will be approved by the President. " With great respect, your obedient servant, "Dr. M. Galphin." " ARMISTEAD BURT. Frail memories require remembrances. They are now supplied, because they are refreshing. The bill for the relief of Galphin passed on Saturday, the 12th of August. It was approved on the 14th, (Sunday intervened.) Whose " heifer was ploughed" with in the mean time? The "will" of the then President was spoken of as a "lixed fact." His approval was known in advance, or the guessing was so close as to have astonished the artistic skill of the East. As "a dolphin of the woods and a wild boar of the seas," we subjoin the following resolution: "That the claim of the representatives of George Galphin was not a just demand against the United States." Verily, "the pleasure" of '48 acidified in '50. It had a vinegar twang, and fit only for common "pickling." In good sooth, the "will" of the President was pinched, in 1848, into an "approved" form. In 1850 it has been snubbed or smashed. Oddsbodkins! Mr. Burt is clever on a congratulation and resolution. Let us be thankful, and watch. Omega.] Now, sir, it does seem that the gentleinan from South Carolina had informed the President, Mr. Polk, of the merits of this bill. Mr. Burt (Mr. Stanly yielding the floor for explanation) desired to say a single I ri,l'n ?rn M fK P ^^ Was faintly ,„ h,s remembrance that such a letter as the gen- tleman fro n North Carol.na had read was hastily written by him, at his desk in this Hall, for the purpose ol saving the mad. But he considered it duo to the Presid. n !k TV I A T'""' ^'''' ^ ''^'^ '^'^'^ ♦''^^ *^'^'h functionary on the subject, and that he had no peculiar means of information. What he wrote was a mere expres- sion of opinion. * Mr. Stanly. But the -entleman had evidently watched the pro^^\ ^^w^w ^^--^ ^ ,. ^ -. • -^ c'* ^7 J l.^ cv