them, chiefly for purposes of military and naval strategy
in carrying out European policy and designs in regard
to this continent. In our Revolutionary War ports
and harbors in the West India islands were used by
our enemy, to the great injury and embarrassment of
the United States. We had the same experience
in our second war with Great Britain. The same
European policy for a long time excluded us even from
trade with the West Indies, while we were at peace
with all nations. In our recent civil war the
rebels and their piratical and blockade-breaking allies
found facilities in the same ports for the work, which
they too successfully accomplished, of injuring and
devastating the commerce which we are now engaged in
rebuilding. We labored especially under this disadvantage,
that European steam vessels employed by our enemies
found friendly shelter, protection, and supplies in
West Indian ports, while our naval operations were
necessarily carried on from our own distant shores.
There was then a universal feeling of the want of an
advanced naval outpost between the Atlantic coast
and Europe. The duty of obtaining such an outpost
peacefully and lawfully, while neither doing nor menacing
injury to other states, earnestly engaged the attention
of the executive department before the close of the
war, and it has not been lost sight of since that
time. A not entirely dissimilar naval want revealed
itself during the same period on the Pacific coast.
The required foothold there was fortunately secured
by our late treaty with the Emperor of Russia, and
it now seems imperative that the more obvious necessities
of the Atlantic coast should not be less carefully
provided for. A good and convenient port and harbor,
capable of easy defense, will supply that want.
With the possession of such a station by the United
States, neither we nor any other American nation need
longer apprehend injury or offense from any transatlantic
enemy. I agree with our early statesmen that
the West Indies naturally gravitate to, and may be
expected ultimately to be absorbed by, the continental
States, including our own. I agree with them also
that it is wise to leave the question of such absorption
to this process of natural political gravitation.
The islands of St. Thomas and St. John, which constitute
a part of the group called the Virgin Islands, seemed
to offer us advantages immediately desirable, while
their acquisition could be secured in harmony with
the principles to which I have alluded. A treaty
has therefore been concluded with the King of Denmark
for the cession of those islands, and will be submitted
to the Senate for consideration.
It will hardly be necessary to call the attention of Congress to the subject of providing for the payment to Russia of the sum stipulated in the treaty for the cession of Alaska. Possession having been formally delivered to our commissioner, the territory remains for the present in care of a military force, awaiting such civil organization as shall be directed by Congress.