,'! -.1 . F4L I I :I | ! i >Ol ./ OEUI'L W * !/. ' •< t g , _ _J.J _ _(..• , ~, ~ I tS,iMO II i )iJ*J rifJAI i•' ~ ~ U, . i I / / > f./ j 10-bCMftp. *!#o !!) !>-.!* jMI aM f .it/. Mkam&HffW >rt THE BRADFORD"REPORTER. _____ . // " .1 H mHwteioßß ONE DOLLAR PER AMNUffI, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWAKDA; gatnrimij fllorninn, November 10, 1855, THOM AS 11. BENTON'S SECRET HISTORY OF THE INTRISUE To Defeat the Re-nomination OF rnimn ?Mi TOm For the Presidency, in 1844. Tl'ruui advance sheet* of licutou's Thirty Years' View, iu the press of the Messrs. Appletun.] ANNO 1*44. JOHN TVLEU, PRTBKHFFINTT. PRESIDENTIAL DEMOCRATIC CONTENTION* T BOLT) ivrnret K FOR THE X -MIXATTON" : OEV. JACK SON'S TEXAS LETTER : ITS SECRET HTSTORY. In the winter of 1842-3, nearly two years ln-fore the Presidential election, there apjiear w| in a Baltimore newspaper an elaborately ntui])osed letter 011 the annexation of Texas, written by Air. Gilmer, a member of Congress faun Virginia, urging the immediate annexa tion a.- inves-my to forestall the designs of Great Britain upon the young country. These designs, it was alleged, aimed at a pirlitical and military domination on our southwestern Iwr ,i( r, with a view to addition and hostile move ment- turuhiai us : and the practical part of the letter was an earnest amieal W the Ameri can people fo annex the Texas republic iiunic ihfitelv. a* tlie only means of preventing such •rrcat calamities'. This letter was a clap of tlmflder in a elenr sky. There was nothing in the political horizon to announce or portend it. Great Britain, had given no symptom of any disposition to war npon ns, or to excite insurrection among our slaves. Texas and Mexico were at war. to annex the country was to adopt the war. Far from hastening annex ation. an '-vent desirable in itself when it could be limn stlv done, a premature aud ill-judged attempt, upon groOiidlass pretexts, could only cW ami dely it. There was nothing in the! jwsit'wiiof Air. Gilmer to make liirn a prime mover in the annexation scheme ; and there was nui'di in Ids connections with Air. Calhoun to make him the refieeftw of that gentleman's opinions. The letter itself was a counterpart of the movement made by Air. Calhoun in the .Senate, in lBi>G, to bring the Texas question into the President ial cl.ctioii of that year ; it* arguments wure tin.' amplification of the -emiiial ideas tlieu presented by that gentle inn it: and i' was his known habit to ojierate tliromrii others. Air. Gilmer wtuf a close jiolit ieal trie id, and known ns a promulgator ®f his d-i trines—having been tho first to advocate nidi lieatiou in Virgin**. Putting all these c'm Mir.stances together, 1 believed. the moment I saw it, that 1 discerned die linger of Air. Calhoun in that letter, and that an enterprise of some kind was 011 foot for the next Presidential elect ion—thoairh still so far off. 1 therefore put au eye on the move ment, and liy observing the progress of tiie letter, the papers in which it was re-published, their comments, the encomiums which it re ceived, and the meetings in which it was i commended, I became satisfied that there was ; tn) mistake in referring il - origin to that gen- j tleman : and became convinced that this move- j uient was l lie resKinption of the premature and abortive attempt of 1836. Iu the coarse I of the summer of 1 5 43 it had been taken up J generally in the circle of Air. Calhoun's friends, ! and with a zeal and pertinacity wich betrayed ! the spirit of a presidential canvass. Coinci- ] dent with these symptoms, and indicative of a determined movement n the Texas question, was a pr<-ginut circumstance in the executive branch of the government. Air. Webster, who had been prevailed upon to remain in Air. Tyler's cabinet when all his colleagues of 1841 left their places, now resigned his place, also— imiucni, as it was well kuown, by the altered de] or; merit of titc President towards him ; and wa< 01,1-. < ded lir-t by Air. I/pgare, of South Carolina, and. 01 his early death, by Air. Up shur, of Virginia. .Mr. W-bster was inflexiUy ojiposed to the hx;:* innovation, and also to the presidential elevation of Mr. Calhoun ; the two gentlemen, | hi- successors, were lioth favorable to auoexa-1 '."U, and one (Mr. Upshur) extremely so to! -Mr 1 .idiom: ; so that here were two steps j Mkcu ia the sii-peetcd direction—-an obstacle removed and a facility substituted. This change in the head of the State departnieut, ujwu whatever motive produced, was indispensable to the success of the Texas movement, and cuuld only have becu made for some great vvuse never yet explained, seeing the service v 'iheh Air. Webster did Mr. Tyler iu reiuain tng Wit'u him when the other ministers withdrew. Another sign appeared iu the conduct of the I ftauLut himself. Ile was undergoing another 4'Uuuge. J.oiig a Democrat, aud successful in P-'tUug olliee at that, he had become a whig, a ' ! 1 uh still greater success. Democracy had < MT;"d liim to the Senate ; whigtrism elevated ,0111 to the Vice-Presidency. He was now "Abmg back, a* shown in a previous chapter, toward- his original party, hut that wing of it ' h bail gone off with Air. Calhoun iu the ■ 'u':on war—a natural line of retrogrcs y'ii "ii hi- part, as lie had traveled it in his ;."oit from the democratic to the whig camp. l! ' pajiers ii, his interest became rampant for :i -. am] in t) 10 of the autumn, the ( ! >r became curreitt and steady that negytia ' ' *ere in progress for annexation, aud that ''"''''"y cortaii). -M'rivu;-/ at Washington at the cotnmcnce (•' "f the session of 1813 -'44, and descend - die steps of the Capitol in a throng of •( 'a u-rs 011 the evening of the first day's sit- 1 was accosted by Mr. Aaron V". Brown, j bj ['"mutative from Tennessee, with cxprcs- ? n ' a t eratification at meeting with •'(""Mill"; ami who Immediately showed the it .a' "' '- ra 'ifi.uitioii to be the opportunity ~r. ' l ' lu k to me on the subject 8 " b'Xus annexation. He spoke of it us f ;" I'* 1 '* "2 and probable event —compliinent- In . v early oppositiou to the relinquish PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. 'ij ,ww t,/. J*m-n fmoMi I 4 ir l. 4 • i inent of that couutry, and my subsequent ef forts to get it back, aud did me the Jiouor to say that as such original enemy to its loss aud early adyoeate of its recovery, I was a proper persou to take a prominent part iu now get ting it back. All this was very civil and quite reasonable, and at another time and un der other circumstances, would have been en tirely agreeable to me; but, pre-oceupied as my mind was with the idea of an iutriguo for the Presidency,, aud a laud and scrip specula tion which I saw mixiug itself up with it, aud fueling as if I was to le made au instrument in these schemes, I took fire at his words, aud answered abruptly and hotly : That it was, 011 the part of some, an intrigue for the T reside urn and a plot to disolte the Union—on the part (if others, a Texas scrip and land speculation ; and I hit I was against it. This auswer went into the newspapers, aud was much noticed at the time, aud immediate ly set up a high wall'betweeu me and the an-1 nexation party. I had no thought at the time that Air. Brown had beeu moved by any body to sound me, and presently regretted the warmth with which I had replied to him—espe cially as no part of what I had said was in tended to apply to him. The occurrence gave rise to some sharp words at one another after wards, which, so far as they were sharp on my part, I have since condemned, and do not now repeat. Some three months afterwards there appear ed iu the Richmond lUnquirtr a letter from Gen. Jaeksou to Air. Brown, iu answer to one i from Air. Brown to the General, covering aj copy of Mr. Gilmer's Texas letter, and asking I the favor of his (the General's) opinion upon I it: which lie promptly and decidedly gave, aud I fully in favor of its object. Here was a reve- j lation and a coincidence that struck me, aud ; put my mind to thinkiqg, and opened up a uew vein of exploration, into which I went to j work, and worked on nntil I obtained the se- j cret history of the famous "Jaeksou Texas' letter," (so it came to be called,) and which played so large a part iu the Texas annexation ' question, and in the Presidential election of j 1844, aud which drew so much applause upou the General from many who had so lately and so bitterly condemned hiru. This history I now propose to give, confining the narrative to the intrigue for the Presidential nomination, leav- j ing the history of the attempted annexation (treaty of 1844) for a separate chapter, or 1 rather chiipters, for it was. au euterju'ise of many aspects, according to the taste of diffo-, real actors, Presidential, disunion, speculation. The outline of this history—that of the let ter—is brief aud authentic ; and although | well covered up at the time, was kuown to too many to remain covered up long. It was part ly made known to me at the time, and fully siuce. It ruus thus : Mr. Calhoun, in 1841—'2,< had resumed his j design (intermitted in 1840) to stand for the ! Presidency, and determined to make the au- i nexation—immediate annexation—the con-! trolling issue iu the election. The death of; President Harrison in 1841, aud the retreat of j his whig ministers, and the accession of his friends to power in the person of Air. Tyler, ! (then setting ba< k iu his old love,) and in the ! persons of some of his cabinet, opcued up to his view the prospect of a successful enterprise iu that direction ; and he fully embraced it, and without discouragement froiu the similar budding hopes of Air. Tyler himself, which it was known would be wUlwut fruit, except what Mr. Ualhouu would gather—the ascendant of his gcuius assuring him the mastery w hen he should chouse to assume it. His real couipo-; titers (foreseen to be Air. Vau liureu and Mr. Clay ; were sure to be against it—immediate annexation—and they would have a heavy current to encounter, all the South and West being for the annexation, and a strong interest also, iu other parts of the Union. There was a baris to build ujxtn iu the honest feelings of the people, and inllauiatory argument* to excite theui ; and if the opinion of General Jaeksou could be obtained in its favor, the ' election of tlie aunexatiou euudidate was deem ed certain. With this view the Giluier Jotter was com posed and published, and sent to him—and was ; admirably conceived for its purpose. It took the veteran patriot on the side of his strong feelings—Jove of country and the Union—dis- j trust of Urcut Hritaiu—and u southern sus ceptibility to the dangers of a servile iusurrco ; tion. It carried him back to the theater of his glory—the Lower Mississippi—and awn- i kened his apprehensions for the safety of the ! most vulnerable poiut of our frontier. Justly ' and truly, but with a relitiemeut of artilice in this case, it presented annexation as a. strength- i ening plaster to the Union, while ready intend ed to sectionalizc it, and to effect disunion if! annexation failed. This idea of strengthening' the Union had, and in itself deserved to have, an invincible charm for the veteran patriot. Resides, the recovery of Texas was in the line of his policy, pursued by him as a favorite ob ject during his administration ; and this desire to get back the country, patriotic in itself, was entirely compatible with Ills acquiescence in its relinquishment as a temporary sacrifice in 1810 ;an acquiescence induced by the "domes tic" reason communicated to him by Mr. Mon roe. The great point in sending the Gilmer letter to him, with its portents of danger from Rri tish designs, was to obtain from him an opinion iu favor of "immediate" annexation. No other opinion would do any good. A future annexation, no matter how soon after 1844, would cam* the question beyond the Presiden tial election, and would fall in with the known opinions of Mr. Van Bnren and Mr. Clay, and most other American statesmen, the common sentiment Iteing for annexation when it could be honestly accomplished. Such annexation would make no issue at all. It would throw Texas out of the question. Immediate was, therefore, the game ; and to bring Clew Jack son to that point was the object. To do that the danger of Hritish occupation was present ed as being so imminent as to admit of no de lay, and so disastrous in its consequences as to preclude all consideration of present objections. It was a bold conceptiou, and of critical cje- " REAJU)LESS OF DENUNCIATiOK FROM ANY QUARTER." cation. Jackson was oue of the last men iu the world to be tampered with—one of the last to be useß against a friend or for a foe— the very last to wish to see Mr. Calhoun Presi dent—and the very first in favor of Mr. A 7 an Buren. To turn hira against his nature aud his feelings in all these particulars was a peri lous enterprise ; but it was attempted—aud accomplished. It has already been shown that the fetter of Mr. Gilmer was skilfully composed for its pur pose : all the accessories of its publication and transmission to (ion. Jaeksou were equally skilfully contrived. It was addressed to a friend iu Alarylaud, which was iu the opposite direct ion from the locus of its origin. It was drawn out on the call of a friend : that is the technical way of getting a private letter before the public. It was published in Baltimore—a city where its writer did not live. Aud thus ! the acesssories of the. publication were eom | plete, and left the mind without suspicion that j the letter had germinated in a warm southern I latitude. It was then ready to start on its | mission to (Jen. Jackson ; bnt how to get it there, without exciting suspicion, was the ques- Certainly Air. (iiluicr would have been j the natural agent for the transmission of his: owu letter : but he stood too close to Mr. Cal honn—was too mnMi his friend and intimate— to make that a safe adventure. A medium was wanted, which would be a conductor of the letter aud a uou couductor of suspicion ; and it was found in the person of Mr. Aaron V. Brown. But he was the friend of Mr. Van Buren, and it was ngeessarv to approach ' him through a medium also, and one wnsfoutid | in one of Air. Gilmer's colleagues—believed to be Air. Hopkins, of the House, who came from near the Tennessee line ;. aud through him the letter reached Mr. Brown. And thus, conceived by one, written bv another, published by a third, aud transmitted through two successive mediums, the missive went upon its destination, and arrived safely in the hands of General Jackson. It had a complete success. He answered it promptly, warmly, decidedly, affirmatively. So fully did it put him up to the point of " immediate" an-j nexation that his impatience outstripped ex pectation. lie counselled haste—considered 1 the present the accepted time—and urged the j seizure of the "golden opportunity" which, if' lost now, might never return. The auswer was ' dated at the Hermitage, March 12, 184J, and was received at Washington as soon as the i mailcottld fetch it. Of course it came to Mr. Brown, to whom it belonged, and to whom it was addressed ; but I did not hear of it iu his 1 hauds. Aly first information of it was iu the bauds of Air. Gilmer, iu the hall of the House, j immediately after its hrrival—lie crossing the J hall with the letter in his hand, greatly elated, 1 and showing it to a confidential friend, with many expressions of now confident triumph j over Air. Van Buren. The friend was permit- j ted to read the letter, but with the understand ing that nothing was to be said about it at that time. Air. Gilmer then explnnal to his frie.nl the ■purpose for v/tirh this letter hid hem urilled j aud sent la (It neral J c! son, and the use that i tens intended to he mode of his answer, (if farordhfe to the drsignrof the anther.*,) irhirh teas this: it tens to be prod need in the nomiua- | ting e/mven'iou to overthrow Air. lon Buren i and girc JL/r,. Calhoun the uo mi not ion, both of whom ire re to be interrogated beforehand ; and j os if was well hut trn lrhat the answer would be Calhoun for and Van Buren against immr- j diutc a*iteration -and JoeksoH's answer rotn- cuhuff wUh Calhoun's, would turn the scale in Jus fa cor, "and blow I an Buren shy high." This was the plan, and this the ftate of the game, at the end of* February, 1843; but a J great deal remained to be done to perfect tlie scheme. Tlie sentiment of the democratic par ty was nearly unanimous for Air. A'an Buren, aud time was wanted to undermine that senti ment. I'uLlic opinion was uot yet ripe lor im mediate annexation, and time was wanted to ! cffltfvate that opinion There was no evidence of any British domination or abolition plot in Texas, aud time was wanted to import one from London. All these operations required time—more of it than intervened before the customary period for the meeting of the con vention. That period had been the month of December preceding the year of the election, and Baltimore the place lor these assemblages sjnee Congress presidential caucuses had been broken down—that near position to Washing ton being chosen for the convenient attendance of that part the members of Congress who charged themselves with these elections, if December remained the period for the meeting, there would be 110 time for the large operations which required to be performed ; for, to get the delegates there in time, they must be elec ted beforehand, during the summer—so that the working season of the intriguers would )K -reduced to a few months, when upwards of a year was required. To gain that time was tlie first object, and a squad of members, some in the interest of Mr. Calhoun, some professing friendship to Air. A'an Buren, but secretly bos tile to him, sat privately in the Capitol, almost nightly, corrcs]H)uding with all parts of the country to get the convention jx>tpoued. All sorts of patriotic motives w ere assigned for this desired postponement, as that it would be more convenient for the delegates to attend —nearer to the time of election—more time for public opinion to mature ; and most favorable to de liberate decision. Bui another device was fall en upon to obtain delay, the secret of which was not put into the letters, nor confided to the bixly of the nightly committee. It had so happened that the opposite parly—the AVhigs —since the rout of the Congress Presidential caucuses, had also takeu the same time ami place for their conventions—December aud Baltimore —and doubtless for the saiue reason, that of the more convenient attending of the Presidentsuakiug members of Congress ; and I this led fo au intrigue with the whigs, the ! knowledge of which was confined to a very few. It was believed that tiie democratic convention could be the mure readily put off U* the whigs would do the like—aud do it first. There was a committee within the commit- tee—a little uest of head managers—who un dertook this collusive arraugement with the wnigs. They proposed it to them, professing to act iu tho interest of Air. Calhoun, though in fact against him as well as against Mr. Van Buren. The whigs readily agreed to this pro posal. beeanse, being themselves then unani mous for Air. Clay, it made 110 difference at what time he should be nominated ; and be lieving they could more easily defeat Air. Cal houn than Air. Van Buren, they preferred him for an antagonist. They tl re re fore agreed to the delay, and both conventions were put Off, (aud the whigs first, to enable the democrats to plead it,) from December, 1843, to May. 1844. Time for operating having now l>een gained,the night squad in the Capitol redoubled their activity to work upon the people. Let ter writers and newspapers were secured.— Good, easy members were plied with specious reasons—slippery ones were directly approach ed. A'isitors from the states were* beset and indoctrinated. Men were picked out to ope rate on the selfish and the calculating ; and myriads of letters were sent to the states to editors and politicians. All these agents work- j ed to a pattern, the primary object being to undo public sentiment in favor of Air. Yan~Bu reu, and to manufacture one, ostensibly iu fa-' vor of Air. Calhoun, but in reality without l>e ing for him—tliev being for any oue of four, 1 (Mr. Cass, Air. Buchanan, Colonel Johnson, Mr. Tyler,) in preference to either of them.— They were for neither, and the only difference was that Mr. Calhoun believed they were for him : Air. Van Buren knew they were against him. They professed friendship for him ; and that was necessary to enable thein to under mine him. The stress of the argument against him was that he could not be elected, aud the effort was to make good that assertion. Now ! or never, was the word with respect to Texas. Some of the squad sympathised with thespecu- j lators iu Texas lands aud scrip ; and to these I Air. Calhoun was no more palatable than Air. ; Van Buren. They were both above plunder, j Some wanted office, and knew that neither of these gentlemen would give it to them. They had a difficult ns well as tortuous part topluy. Professing democracy, they colluded with whigs. Professing friendship to Air. Van Buren, they co-operated with Mr. Calhoun's friends to de feat him. Co-operating with Mr. Calhoun's friends, they were against his election They were for any lody in preference to either, anil especially for men of easy temperaments whose principles were not entrenched behind strong wills. To nndo public sentiment in favor of | Mr. Van Buren was their labor : to get un pledged aud uuinstructed delegates into con vention, and to get those released who had been appointed under instructions, was the con summation of their policy. A convention un trammelled by instructions, independent of the j people and open to the machinations of a few IKiliticmus, was what was wanted. The efforts to accomplish these juirposes were prodigious, aud constituted tlie absorbing night and day work of the members engaged in it. After all, they had but indifferent success—more with politicians and editors than with the people.- Air. Van Buren was almost universally prefer*- red. Delegates were generally instructed to support, his nomination. Even in the southern states, in direct question between himself and Air. Calhoun, lie was preferred—as iu Alabama and Mississippi. No delegates were released from their instructions by any competent au thority, and only a few in any, by clusters of load j>oliticians, convenient to the machinations of the committce-iii theCapitol—asat Shockoe Hill, Biclnnond, Virginia, where Mr. Ritchie, editor of the Bnquirer, (whose proclivity to be deceived in u crisis was generally equivalent in its effects to positive treachery,) led the way— himself impelled by others. The labors of the committee, though intend ed to be secret, aud confined to a small circle, and chiefly carried on in the night, were sub ject to be discovered ; and were so ; and the discovery led to sonic public denunciations.— The two senators from Ohio, Messrs. William Allen aud Tappan, and ten of the representa tives from that state, published a card in the Chic newspaper, denouncing it as a conspira cy to defeat the will of the people.- The whole delegation from South Carolina, (Messrs. Mc- Dullie and Kuger, senators, and the seven re presentatives,) fcuriug that they might be sus pected on account of their friendship for Air. Calhoun, published a card denying all eonnec- : tion with the committee ; an unnecessary pre caution, us their characters were above that suspicion. Ail any other members published ! cards, denying their participation in these ! meetings ; and some, admitting the participa- : tion, denied the intrigue, and truly, as it con cerned themselves ; for all the disreputable part was kept secret from them—especially the | collusion with the whigs, aud all the mysteries j of the Giluier letter. .Many of them were sin- j cere friends of Air. Van Buren, but deceived ntnl cheated themselves while made the instru ment of deceiving and cheating others. It was probably one of the most elaborate pieces of j political cheatcry that lias ever been performed j in a free country, and well worthy to be stu- | died by all who would wish to extend their knowledge of the manner in which Presidential elections may be managed, and who would wish to sec the purity of elections preserved aud vin dicated. About this time came an occurrence well calculated to make a pause, if anything could make a pause, in the working of political am bition. The exjdosiou oi' the great gun 011 board the Princeton steamer took place, kill ing, among others, two of Mr. Tyler's cabinet, (Air. Upshur and Air. Gilmer,) both deeply en gaged in the Texas project—barely failing to kill Air. Tyler, who was called back iu the cri tical moment, aud who had embraced the Tex as scheme with more than vicarious zeal ; and j also bart'ly failing to kill the writer of this View, who was standing at the breech of the gun, closely observing4ts working as well as that of the Texas game, and who fell among llie killed and stunned,fortunately to rise again. Commodore Kennnii, Air. Virgil Alaxcy, Mr. Gardiner, of New-York, father-in-law (that was to be) of the President, were also killed ; a dcuteu scautcu were wonnded, ami Cummodora Stockton burnt and scorched as he stood at the side of the gun. Such an occurrence was well calculated to impress upou the survivors tl\e truth of the divine lesson : " What shad ows we are—what shadows we pursue." But it had no effect upon the pursuit of the Presi dential shadow. Instantly Mr. Calhoun was invited to take Mr. Upshur's place in the De partment of State, and took it with an alacrity aud with a patrouiziug declaration which show - ed his zeal for the Texas movement, and as good as avowed its paternity. He declared he took the place for the Texas negotiation, alone, and would quit it as soon as that negotiation should be finished. In brief, the negotiation, instead of pausing in the presence of so awful a catastrophe, seemed to derive new life from it, and to go forward_w!£h acccleratetkimpetu osity. Mr. Calhoun put his pager nativity in to it : politicians, became more vehemeutr— newspapers more clamorous : the interested classes, (laud and scrip speculators) swarmed at Washington, and Mr. Tyler embraced the scheme with a fervor which iuduced the suspi cion that lie had adopted the game for his own, ami intended to stand a cast of the Presiden tial die upon it. The machinations of the committee, though greatly successful with individuals aud with the politicians with whom they could communicate, did uot"reach the masses, who remained firm to Air. Van Buren ; and it became necessary to fall upon some new means of acting upon theui. This led to a diferent use of the Jack sou Texas letter from what had been intended. It was intended to have been kept in the back ground, a secret in the hauds of its possessors, until the meeting of tlie convention—then sud denly produced, to torn the scale between Mr. Calhoun and Air. Van Buren, and this design had been adhered to for about the space of a year, ami the letter kept close ; it was then re curred to as a means of rousing the masses. Jacksou's name was poteutial with the |ieo ple, and it was deemed indispensable to bring i it to bear upou thetu. The publication of the letter was resolved upon, and the Globe news paper selected for the purpose, and Mr. Aaron 1 V. Brown to have it doue. All this was ju-' dicious and regular. The Globe had been the organ of General Jackson, and therefore the most proper paper to bring his sentiments be- j fore the public. It was the advocate of Air. Van Buren's election, and therefore would pre vent the suspicion of siuistrous design upou him. Air. Brown was the legal owner of the letter, and a professing frieud of Air. A'an Bu ren, aud, therefore, the proper person to carry it for publication. He did so ; but the editor, Mr. Blair, see ing uo good that it could do to Air. Van Bu ren, but, 011 the contrary, harm, and being sin cerely his friend, declined to publish it ; aud, after examination, delivered it back to Mr. Brown. Shortly thereafter, to wit, on the 22d of March, 1844, it appeared in the Richmond Enquirer, post-dated, that is to say, the date of 1848 changed into 1844—whether by de sign or accident is uot known ; but the post | date gave the letter a fresher appearance, and a more vigorous application to the Texas ques tion The fact that this letter had got back to Air. Brown, after having been given up to ! Air. Gilmer, proved that the letter travelled | in a circle while kept secret, and weut from hand to baud among the initiated as Deeded j for use. The time had now come for the interroga tion of the candidates, and it was doue with all the tact which the delicate function required. The choice of the interrogator was the first point. He must be a friend, ostensible if not real, to the party interrogated. If real, he must himself be deceived, aud made to believe that lie was performing a kindly service ; if not, he must still have the appearauce. And for Mr. Van Buren's benefit a suitable i>er foruier w as found in the person of Mr. Harnett, a representative in Congress from Alississippi, whose letter was a model for the oeoasion.aud, iu fact, has beeu well followed since It abound ed in professions of friendship to Air. Van Bit ren—approached him.fur his ow 11 good—soHght his opinion from tlie best of motives ; and urg ed a categorical reply, for or against, immedi ate annexation. The sagacious Air. A'an 811- reu was no diqie of this contrivance, but took counsel from w hat was due to himself; and answered w itk candor, decorum and dignity. He was against immediate annexation,because it was war with Alexico, but for it when it could be doue peaceably and houorably : and he was able to prcseut a very fair record, hav ing been in favor of getting back the country, (in away to avoid difficulties with Alexico,) when Secretary of State, under Uresident Jack son. llis letter was scut to a small circle of friends at Washington before it was delivered to its address ; but to be delivered immediate ly ; which was doue, and soon went into the papers. Air. Calhoun had superseded the ne cessity of interrogation iu his letter of accep tance of the ritate Department ; he was a hut annexationist, although there was an ugly re cord to be exhibited against him. In his al most thirty years of public life he had never touched Texas, except for Iris own purposes.—- In 1810, as one of Mr. Alouroe's lie had concurred in giving it away, in order to conciliate the anti-slavery interest in the north east by curtailing slave territory in the south west. Iu 1536, he moved her immature an nexation, iu order to bring the question into the Urcsideutial election of that yeur, to the prejudice of Air. A an liureu ; and urged in stant action, because delay was dangerous.— Having joined Air. Van Buren after his elec tion, and expecting to become his successor, he dropped the annexation for which lie had been so impatient, aud lot the election of 1840 pass by without bringiug it into the canvass and now revived it for the overthrow of Mr. Van Buren and for the excitement of a sectional controversy, by placing the annexation on strong sectional grouuds. And now, at tlie approach of tho election iu 1844, after ycare of silence, lie becomes the head advocate of an nexation ; and with all this forbiddiug record against him, by help of General Jacksou's let ter, and the general sentiment ju favor of an uexatiuu, and the fictitious alarm of British abolition and hostile designs, he wa abla to VOL. XVI. —XO. eurcd above the horizon as a Presi dential candidate, and needed no interrogato ries to bring out his declaration for immediate annexation, although he hud voted against jVlr. Clay's resolution condemning the sacrifice of the province. In a word, tlie Texas hobby was nmltitudinously mounted and violently rid den, and most violently by those who had been most iudiffereut.to it before. Mr. Clay ami Mr. Calhoun were the only candidates that an swered like statesmen, and they were both dis tanced. The time was approaching for the conven tion to meet, and, consequently for the con clusion of the treaty of annexation, which was to lie a touchstone in it. It was signed the 12th of April, and was to have bceu sent to the Senate immediately, but was delayed by a circumstance which created alarm—made a balk—and required a new turn to be taken.— Mr. Van Buren had not yet answered the in terrogatories put to him through Mr. Harnett, or rather his auswer had uot yet been publish ed. Uneasiness began to be felt, lest, like so many others, he should fall into the current, auil auswer ia a may that would enable hira to swiui with it. To relieve this uncertainty Mr. Blair was applied to by Mr. Hubert J. Walker to write to him, and get his auswer. This was a very proper chanuel to apply through. Mr. lUuir, as the fast friend of Mr. Van Buren, had the privilege to solicit him. Mr. Calhoun, as the political adversary of Mr. Van Buren, could not ask Mr. Blair to do it. Mr. Walker stood in a relation to be ready lor the work all round ; as a professing friend of Mr. Van Bu ren, though co-operating with Mr. Calhoun and all the rest against him, he could speak with Mr. Blair on a jioint which seemed to ho for Mr. Yau Buren's benefit. As co-operating with Mr. Calhouu, he could help hiui against an adversary, though iuteuding to give him the go-by iu the eud. As being iu all the Texas mysteries, he was a natural person to ferret out information on every side. He it was, then, to whose jrnrt it fell to get the de sired answer from Mr. Vun Buren, and through the instrumentality of Mr. Blair. Mr. Biuic wrote as solicited, not seeing any trap in it ; but had received no answer up to the time that the treaty was to go the Senate. Ardeut for Texas, and Ijclieving iu the danger of delay,he wrote and published in the Globe a glowing ar ticle in favor of immediate annexation. Tliat article was a poser and a dumb-founder. It threw the treaty nil aback. Considering Mr. Blair's friendship for Mr. Van Buren and their confidential relations, it was concluded that this article could not have been published with out his consent —that it sjioke Ms aentiraents— and was in fact his auswer to the letter which had been sent to hira. Here was an ngly balk. It seemed as if the long intrigue had miscar ried—ns if the plot was going to work out the contrary way, and elevate tlie man it was in tended to put down. In this unexpected con juncture a new turn became indisjK-nsable— and was promptly taken. Mention has been made in the forepart of this chapter of tlie necessity which was felt to obtain something from liowlon to bolster up the accusat ion of that formidable abolition plot which (J nut Britain was hatching in Texas, and on the alleged existence of which tht whole argument for Immediate annexation re posed. The desired testimony had been got, and oracularly given to the public, as being derived from a " j'rirate Idler from a citizen of Menjjl'tiid, then in JL&ndon." The name of this Maryland citizen was not given, but his respectability and reliability were fully vouched; and the testimony passed for true. It was to the point in charging upon the British govern ment, with names ami circumstances, all that Imd l>een alleged ; and adding that her aboli tion machinations were then in full progress. Tins went back to London, immediaelv trans mitted there by the British Minister at Wash ington, Sir Richard l'akcnham ; ami being known to be false, and felt to be scandalous, drew from the British Secretary of State (Lord Aberdeeu) an indignant, prompt aud peremp tory contradiction. This contradiction was given iu a despatch, dated December 26th, 1843. It was communicated by Sir Richard rakenhaiu to Mr. Upshur, the United States Secretary of State,on the 20th day of Februa ry, 1841—a few days before tlie lamentable death of that gentleman by the bursting of the Princeton gun. This despatch, liaviug no ob ject but to contradict an unfounded imputa tion, required no answer—and received tionc. It lay in the Department of State unacknowl edged until after the treaty had been 'signed, and until the day of the appearance of that redoubtable article in the Globe which had been supposed to he Mr. Van Buren's answer to the problem of immediate annexation. Then it was taken up, aud, on the 18tlx April, was elaborately answered by Mr. Calhoun in a despatch to tlie British minister—not to argue [rftß ror-RTH TAOK ]