./< E 713 /^ .G88 Copy 1 [ CyL^ ^;7^^r^ ^ ^. X 't' ■ 9\ Ai. ANNEXATION OF THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. SlVEECn HON. GALUSHA A. GROW, oi<' rK>risrsvi^\'^v.Ni/s., IIOl'SK OF l{i:i»I{I-]SENTATIV^ES, Tuesday, June 14, 1S9S. ^v^\.SIIr]^fG'^o^r. 1898. 4- ^t^ ^s- 38096 S I* KKCIl IIOX. (1 A LTSII A A. (i i:o\V. Tlio IIuiiso liiiviii^ unr i'ini.sir the benotit of its connnerc-.' in peaco and its itrotortion in war. It is a fact conceddl by everybody that for commerce between the west- ern shores of this coTitinent and Asia there must be some inter- mediate land for a coalint^ station for sliipseni^aKCil in commerce. The Hawaiian Islands hold such a jjosition, bein*^ for all i>ractical l)urposes about midway between tlie two continents, witli a land- locked harbor misurpassed in size and safety. To si'curo the possession of this harbor for tho future against all contiuKcncies the sovereignty of the islands is necessary, for whoever owns tho islands owns the harbor. All treaties whatsoever would fall witk a change of ownership. It is chiimod by tho opponents of annexation that there is an- other route; of eiiual commercial advantage ami le-s in distance from continent to continent by the way of Unala.ska. It is a route discovered in the argument of this question and not here- tofore discovered by commerce. I venture the assertion that few, if any, vessels in trade between the American and Asiatic conti- nents ever yet sailed on this route from Han Franci.sco to any port in Asia, unless it was one in the Arctic .seas. When pre.sented in this debate, it i-eminded me of the chap in New York who surprised the stockbrokers for a short time with a declaration that ho had found a railroad route between New York and Chicago ^'."JO miles shorter than any existing one, or any other that could bo constructed, and he could i)rove it by his map. When the map was produced, there was a heavy red straight line drawn from New York to Chicago, which crossed tho Alleghany Mountains at tho highest summit in the range. And this was liis shortest route. The map was correct, but the capital to build tho railroad was not in sight. Lines drawn on the map of a wide ocean representing the chan- nels of commerce are very well if commerce follows such lines. But if it does not, reasons wliy it miglit do so are of little conse- (juence. If tho re;xsons urged against anne.xation now had pre- vailed while the purchase of Alaska was pending, wn should not have thia new logical route at all, for Alaska itself would still bo Russian territory. There never has been any acejuisition of ter- ritory without more or less oi)position at tho time of the acciuisi- tion, and the reasons were very much tho .same as those now offered— unconstitutional and dangerous to the liberties of the country. I will not take the time of the House in di.scu.s.sing any consti- tutional (pieslion relative to tho acquisition of territory by this Government. Mr. Jefferson said in 1803 that there was no grant of power in the Constitution for such acquisition; yet, beginning with his Administration, we have acquired foreign territory in area more than three times as great as that claimed by the original thirteen colonies or which the Government owned at the time of the adoption of our present Constitution. For almost a century, beginning with Jefferson, the nation has been acquiring territory by treaty and by joint resolution and under Administrations of different political parties. If anything can be settled by the uniform practice of the Government, the power to acquire territory ought to be settled by this uniform, unbroken practice for almost a century, sustained t}y every branch of the Government and ratified universally by the people. I am content to follow this uniform, unbroken practice m the exercise of a power that must certainly rest somewhere in the Government, or it could not have been thus sustained by all de- partments of the Government for this long period. This question is not a law to be construed; it is a power of gov- ernment to be exercised. And by that exercise in the past and by that alone the nation has in this first hundred years of its exist- ence been enabled to expand from thirteen feeble colonies, hemmed in by the Atlantic Ocean in front, the Mississippi River m the rear, and Spanish and French dominion on the south, to forty-five independent Commonwealths, spanning a whole continent from ocean to ocean and extending through almost every zone. For the exercise of this power to acquire territory it only needs a clear, unequivocal commercial necessity for the American peo- ple and a willing consent of the people occupying the territory to be acquired. In such case, while there could be no question as to constitutional power, the circumstances existing at the time would determine as to the wisdom of its exercise. The great reason for the exercise of this power now by the Con- gress of the United States applies to Hawaii and not to any other portion of the earth. It does not apply to Mexico, Canada, Cuba, or any other territory on the American continent. For the rea- son that after Cuba shall have established a republic, the institu- tions of all these countries being substantially republican can not be a menace in any way to our liberties, and there are no great commercial necessities, nor can there be any, requiring any gov- ernment changes in our territorial relations with either of these nations. Hence in our commercial necessities Hawaii stands alone, separate and distinct from any other portion of the earth's surface, and in no way connected with any question that may hereafter arise as to other nations. The ultimate annexation of the Hawaiian Islands to the United States is not a new question. Every President except one for half a century has notified the nations of the earth that the people of these islands could never unite their destinies with any nation except our own. When England, in 1843, took possession of these islands, Mr. Legare. then Secretary of State, notified the Govern- ment of Great Britain of our position, and she withdrew. Later, when France attempted to take possession, Mr. Webster, then Secretary of State, repeated to France in substance Mr. Legare s dispatch to England, and France withdrew. For fifty years every President except Cleveland has notified the world that no other nation would be permitted to estabhsh their sovereignty over these islands, and that the people thereon must be allowed to control their own destiny. Grover Cleveland 3137 was the first official in the adiniuiHtration of thin ( tovcrnuK'nt to attcnipt a reversal uf its hi^^t^)rical nolii-y rt-Utivo to Hawaii. lio undertook to n'storu ovor that p<'oi>U' a monarchy over- thrown hy its lihirty-lovint,' subjects and, usiuj,' tho ruvi-uuc cut- ters and war sliijis o't tlie nation with shoUvd trims as a m>nacc-in the harbor of Hawaii, lie directed his ;iciredit«-- ject submission at the foot of t ho restored throne, kiss the extendeerly belong by them.selves and are to be settled in view of the circum- stiinccs and conditions existing at the tim- of their settlement. In the discu-ssion on the (question Ix'.'ore us wo have heard much about wars and their dangers to liberty. War prosocute«l for selfish ends in upholding despotic dynasties or for tlio m< re ex- tension of territorial domiuion is an unmitigated, inexcusable barbarism. But wars, with all their miseries and woes, in the interest of humauitv. in behalf of struggling raecs or nationalities, to secure or regain their inalienable rights, have been of great benefit to 34}7 luaiikiiul. In the world's decisive ]).'itt.les from Marathon to Get- tysburg, such battles as have changed for all time the current of human events and the destiny of empires, great battalions have always marched in the rear of great ideas. The generation of the American people now fast passing away have had not a little home experience in the horrors of war. They have seen their country shrouded in the sable habiliments of mourning and woe and flooded with widows' and orphans' teai-s. And to the end of this generation an occasional tear for the un- returning brave will glisten in the eye of bereavement around disconsolate firesides. But the new Republic is worth over the old the priceless sacrifice of blood and sorrow which it cost. While "'peace has its victories no less renowned than war," yet most of the mighty achievements in the onward progress of the race to a better civilization have been wrought by the sword. It seems to be a part of the plans of Divine Providence that every marked advance in civilization must begin in mighty con- vulsions. The moral law was first proclaimed in the thimders of Sinai, and the earthly mission of the Saviour of mankind closed with the rending of mountains and the throes of the earthquake. The Goddess of Liberty herself was born in the shock of battle, and amid its carnage has carved out some of our grandest vic- tories, while o'er its crimson fields the race has marched on to higher and nobler destinies. As the lightnings of heaven rend and destroy only to purify and reinvigorate, so freedom's cannon furrows the fields of decaying empires and seeds them anew with human gore, from which springs a more vigorous race to cherish the hopes and guard the rights of mankind. The millennium, long promised, when the lion and the lamb will lie down together and a little child shall lead them, will some time come. But not till all governments are based on the consent of the governed and every human being is in the enjoy- ment of liberty protected by law. Then, and not till then, can the sword be beat into plowshares and the spear into pruning hooks. Until that time tiie ear of humanity will be pained with the roar of hostile cannon and the angels must weep over the martyred brave. When tlie smoke vanished from the last battlefield of the Amer- ican civil war and its armed hosts returned to their homes, lay- ing aside their armor for the implements of the various avocations of peace, there was a universal belief that the Republic had seen its last war. It was not thought then that any circumstances could possibly ever arise for the Government to call its citizens again from their peaceful pursuits to the tented field. But such a summons has gone forth, and the drumbeat and tramp of marching armies are again heard, and the thrilling reports of un- precedented naval victories come floating over the seas. This nation is at war with Spain to end her brutal warfare upon women and children and to put a stop to the infliction of her cruel atrocities upon a neighboring people, and because she failed to maintain in the Island of Cuba a government able and willing to protect the lives of American seamen under the flag of their country on a mission of peace to her ports. In justice to the memory of the hero martyrs who died under the flag of their country by Spanish treachery, and in behalf of the claims of a common humanitj', of a people doomed to extermina- tion by starvation and the sword, this nation demanded that Spain Bhould witlidrnw lifr Hag mid forever abnndun her sovereignty ovor tlin Islaiiil of C'libn. For this 1)Uij)oho tlio President was authorized tointrrveno with the Army and tho Nuvy of Iho United States and Ktop thiHdonhly eruel and It.irliarous warfare. WIk-u that Hhall havo Leen ihjne the iie.)i)leof Cuba can tlien eBtalilinh for theni.se vea a fnH- and indei)endent j,'overnnient to ho recognized by Iho L'uilod . States of Anioriea as a sister rej)nblic. In tho (bschargo of thi.s national obbpation to hurannity and to liberty, as well as tho hi;(her oblipition ami duty of J)rotectin^; tlio lives of American .-eatnen, under tho lla.if ol their country wherever it floats, tliis nation h;us intervened witli it.s ^reat power for till) acccjiiiplislmieiit of sucli a jjurpose. And wlien it hIihII have beenacconiplislied, tho vindication of tJie patriot heroes who found a watery K'avo in tlio harbor of Havana will bo the expul- sion forever of Spanish sovereif,'nty from tho American Continent. And these heroes will not tlien have died in vain. Tb« tablet that will bear their memory through all time can then bo in- scribed: Whether on tho scaflTuld high Or in tho hatlli-'M van, Tlio 111 test phK'o whoro man can die Is whoro uo dies for umnl Tho objects to bo obtained, and the only ones ox]»ected when Conprrces passed tho declaration of war against Spain, were con- fined to tho Island of Cuba. And the gentleman from .Missouri [Mr. Bland] and the gentleman from Tennessee [Mr. Rkhakd- sox I quoted the declared purpose in that declaration of war to sustain their positions against any acquisition of territory as a result of the war. I agree with tlicm that when that declaration of war passed there was no purpose or thought by anybixly of ac(iuiring additional territory as a result of tliis war. Humanity alone controlled in the passage of this declaration. But a nation which appeals to battle for the settlement of any question must bo ready to meet any and all responsibilities resulting therefrom, whether foreseen or not. The same Congress of tho United States which authorized the equipment of 500,f)iX) men to preserve this Union declared by re-so- lution that the war was not to be prosecuted for tho emancipation of slaver}'. Yet the first gun fired in that conflict was the death knell of hnman bondage, and the sun in hus course across the con- tinent from ocean to ocean uo longer rises on a master or seta on a slave. In our national di stiny what new pathways may be blazed out bv American cannon on land and battle sliips on tho seas no pro- phetic ken can now foresee. And how and in what way the Amer- ican people ought to discharge the new, unforsei-n, unexpected responsibilities cast ui)on them in far off Asia no human siigacity can now foretell. If the intervention of this nation in the affairs of Spain in bo- half of humanity and liberty in Cuba ehall result, in the provi- dences of God, in the emancipation of ten millions of i>eoiile in her colonics from her despotic rule, shall the American people shrink from these new responsibilities in behalf of lil)rrty and humanity? Has tho rule of Spain in the Philippines l)oen any more humane than in Cuba? Through a long liistory her cruelty in peace and brutality in war have jiroduced at intervals long or :!437 LIUKHKY Uh UUNUKtbb 013 744 611 P short tlie Alvas and the Weylers, counterpai'ts of the Neros and Caligulas of pagan Rome in the zenith of her briital shows of dying gladiators and women and children torn to pieces by wild beasts in the arena of her Coliseum, a gala-day spectacle for Roman hohdays. Within a week after the declaration of war against Spain by the Congress of the United States 8,000,000 of people in the Philip- pines that had been subjected for four hundred years to the des- potic, cruel rule of Spain, such as she had exercised over the Island of Ciiba, were liberated from their thraldom by a naval victory in battle unparalleled in the world's history, unexpected and iiu- thought of when the declaration of war against Spain passed. Commodore Dewey, with a squadron of the American Navy, cruising in Asiatic waters on the customary mission of his Gov- ernment to friendly nations, suddenly finds himself shut out of the ports and harbors of every nation by the enforcement of the international law of strict neutrality between bellisrerents. With the Stars and Stripes flying at the masthead of his squadron he enters a harbor of Spain, destroying its land fortifications and sinking a formidable navy moored there for their defense, with- out the loss of a man or a ship, and with slight injury to either. Does anyone who believes in the control of an overruling Providence in the affairs of men believe that such a victory was a mere accident? There is a divinity in the destiny of nations as well as in the lives of individuals — That shapes our ends, rough hev/ them how we will. In the retributions for organized national wrongs it is fixed in the immutable decrees of that overruling Providence that nations which incorporate into their institutions, their customs, or their laws a barbarism that blunts the sense of justice and chills the humanity of their people will soon or late surely die. It is the great fact stamped on all the crumbling ruins that strew the path- way of empires. If we divest ourselves of the egotistical belief so congenial to human nature that the generation of thejn'eseut is wiser than any that will succeed it, we can then safely intrust the settlement of all public questions to the considerate judgment of the generation that may be called upon to settle them, in full confidence that it will be done quite as wisely and as well as it would be if done by ourselves. Let the present generation with bold and manly hearts meet its own responsibilities to liberty and humanity, and settle them in its own best judgment in view of surrounding circum- stances, without reference to supposed conjectural conditions iu the future. Trust no future, howe'or pleasant I Let the dead past bury its dead! Act. act in the living present! Heart within, and God o'erhead! The starry banner of our fathers, baptized in patriot blood in the first and second war of American independence, and re- christened in the mighty conflict of arms in the history of the race, will henceforth, over whatever portion of the earth's surface it may float, be the emblem of liberty, justice, and the inalienable rights of mankind. 3427 o