State of the Union Addresses of John Quincy Adams eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 106 pages of information about State of the Union Addresses of John Quincy Adams.

State of the Union Addresses of John Quincy Adams eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 106 pages of information about State of the Union Addresses of John Quincy Adams.

A report from the Post Master General is also submitted, exhibiting the present flourishing condition of that Department.  For the first time for many years the receipts for the year ending on the first of July last exceeded the expenditures during the same period to the amount of more than $45,000.  Other facts equally creditable to the administration of this Department are that in two years from July 1st, 1823, an improvement of more than $185,000 in its pecuniary affairs has been realized; that in the same interval the increase of the transportation of the mail has exceeded 1,500,000 miles annually, and that 1,040 new post offices have been established.  It hence appears that under judicious management the income from this establishment may be relied on as fully adequate to defray its expenses, and that by the discontinuance of post roads altogether unproductive, others of more useful character may be opened, ’til the circulation of the mail shall keep pace with the spread of our population, and the comforts of friendly correspondence, the exchanges of internal traffic, and the lights of the periodical press shall be distributed to the remotest corners of the Union, at a charge scarcely perceptible to any individual, and without the cost of a dollar to the public Treasury.

Upon this first occasion of addressing the Legislature of the Union, with which I have been honored, in presenting to their view the execution so far as it has been effected of the measures sanctioned by them for promoting the internal improvement of our country, I can not close the communication without recommending to their calm and persevering consideration the general principle in a more enlarged extent.  The great object of the institution of civil government is the improvement of the condition of those who are parties to the social compact, and no government, in what ever form constituted, can accomplish the lawful ends of its institution but in proportion as it improves the condition of those over whom it is established.  Roads and canals, by multiplying and facilitating the communications and intercourse between distant regions and multitudes of men, are among the most important means of improvement.  But moral, political, intellectual improvement are duties assigned by the Author of Our Existence to social no less than to individual man.

For the fulfillment of those duties governments are invested with power, and to the attainment of the end—­the progressive improvement of the condition of the governed—­the exercise of delegated powers is a duty as sacred and indispensable as the usurpation of powers not granted is criminal and odious.

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State of the Union Addresses of John Quincy Adams from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.