export duties on her shipments nor import duties on
those coming here. There would be no import duties
upon the supplies, machinery,
etc., going from
the States. The effect that would have been produced
upon Cuban commerce, with these advantages to a rival,
is observable at a glance. The Cuban question
would have been settled long ago in favor of “free
Cuba.” Hundreds of American vessels would
now be advantageously used in transporting the valuable
woods and other products of the soil of the island
to a market and in carrying supplies and emigrants
to it. The island is but sparsely settled, while
it has an area sufficient for the profitable employment
of several millions of people. The soil would
have soon fallen into the hands of United States capitalists.
The products are so valuable in commerce that emigration
there would have been encouraged; the emancipated
race of the South would have found there a congenial
home, where their civil rights would not be disputed
and where their labor would be so much sought after
that the poorest among them could have found the means
to go. Thus in cases of great oppression and
cruelty, such as has been practiced upon them in many
places within the last eleven years, whole communities
would have sought refuge in Santo Domingo. I
do not suppose the whole race would have gone, nor
is it desirable that they should go. Their labor
is desirable—indispensable almost—where
they now are. But the possession of this territory
would have left the negro “master of the situation,”
by enabling him to demand his rights at home on pain
of finding them elsewhere.
I do not present these views now as a recommendation
for a renewal of the subject of annexation, but I
do refer to it to vindicate my previous action in
regard to it.
With the present term of Congress my official life
terminates. It is not probable that public affairs
will ever again receive attention from me further
than as a citizen of the Republic, always taking a
deep interest in the honor, integrity, and prosperity
of the whole land.
U.S. GRANT.
[Footnote 115: See pp. 390-391.]
[Footnote 116: See pp. 394-395.]
[Footnote 117: See pp. 392-394.]
SPECIAL MESSAGES.
EXECUTIVE MANSION, December 6, 1876.
To the Senate and House of Representatives:
I have the honor to transmit herewith a letter (accompanied
by testimony) addressed to me by Hon. John Sherman
and other distinguished citizens, in regard to the
canvass of the vote for electors in the State of Louisiana.
U.S. GRANT.
EXECUTIVE MANSION, December 14, 1876.
To the House of Representatives:
In answer to a resolution of the 7th instant of the
House of Representatives, asking to be informed whether
any, and what, negotiations have or are being made
with the Sioux Indians for their removal to the Indian
Territory, and under what authority the same has been
and is being done, I submit herewith a report received
from the Secretary of the Interior, which contains,
it is believed, all the information in possession
of his Department touching the matter of the resolution.