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Lorsque le document est trop grand pour dtre reproduit en un seul cliche, il est filmi d partir de Tangle sup^rieur gauche, de gauche h droite. et de haut en bas, en prensnt le nombre d'images n^cessaire. Les diagrammes suivants illustrent la mdthode. 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 S 6 A N S AV E 11 TO Tilt STIIICTIRES OF MK. THOMAS FAl.("0>sER OF MNCOJ.N'.S INN, ON Tin: IIISTORV OF OliKGDN AM) CALIFUKNIA, BV ROHEKT (JREKNHOW. Ln |)ul)lisliinir the second edition of my I listory of Oregon ;iinl CidiCornia, I lliink it proper to present some observations, in answer to tlie stric- tures on the first edition, made by Mr. T. Falconer, of Lincoln's Inn, in his work " On the disrorcri/ of the Mis^i.-sijipi, mid on the South-west- ern, Oreiron, and Norlh-wcslcrn Boundanj of tin: United Slates,'" which appeared in LoikKmi in October, IN 1 I. These strictures are sli^litly noticed 111 the preface to my second edition ; l);il oliserviiig the importance as- signed to them in London, I have been induced to answer them more par- ticularly here. iMr. I'alcoiier'sbook is a small duodecimo, containing ninety-six pages of original matter, and as many more of translations from docuinriits toun 1 by him in the Archives of the .Marine Department of France, relative to the dis- covery and settlement of J^ouisiana. U{ these documents, tlic greater and more valuable portion are already well known in the United States;* and ji number still greater of more interesting |)apers, on the same subject, from the same and other Archives, now lie in manuscript before nie, wliich have evidently escaped Mr. Falconer's researclu's. i?ut while llius examining ar- chives, and briiiginir liidden (bcuments to light, Mr. Falconer has most singularly neglt.'cted to cast his ey(>s over works .•hic'i have been lonir I'e- fore the workl : and of this neglect, liis book is in fact the fruit ; for he has tiius been enabled to make many discover!' ■, new U) himself, and to Imild on them along series of arguments, wiisdiwant nothing but a foundation of truth to render t em irrefragable. Some of his principal diseovi'ries of this kind I will now proceed to notice ; and they will serve to show how much coiilidence is to be placed on his work, as evidence in tlie important ipiestions of territorial right, now under discussion between the IJritish and American governments. 'I'he first thirty-eight pages are devoted by Mr. Falconer to ''an ab- stract of the events connected with the discovery, occupation, and settle- " Sec Spnrks's Lil'o ol'Lii Sullo, uiid White's Ni-w Uecoiiilufion. \ "4 ANSWKU. mcnt of Louisiunn, iunl o\' ils traiisfi'v to flio liiiitcd Slates." Upon tins traiisl'iT, he says, |iag<' lUi : — "On October Isl, INOO, Louisiana was retroeedod l)y Spain to France, ' witli tile same extent iliat it now lias in tlii' liands of Spain, and that it had, wiien FiaiRu; possessed it, and such as it slionid he after tht^ tri'aties suhsefiucntly entered into between Spain aiid otliev States.' It was aii act of retrocession, hut it transferred so inucli k-ss tlian l'"rance ori<,nnally held, as had been shorn from it by the treaty of I7().'{, which gave to Great Britain, tind tliroui:h (Jreat IJritain to the United Slates, nearly the entire eastiM-n bank of the Mississipjii." This all eorrecl ; now for the transfer of Louisiana to the United States, respecting which, Mr. Falconer lias made a most notable discov- ery. Continuing, he savs : — "In iNOo, France sold Louisian;i lo the United States for eleven mil- hons of dollars. The j)iiicliase included all lands 'on the east [iiiucre west] side of the Mississi|)pi river, not then belonging to the United States, as t'ar as the greU chain of mountains which divitle the waters flowing into the Pacific, ;.nd those falling into the Atlantic ocean ; and from the said chain of mountains to the Pacific Ocean, i)etwe(,'n the ter- ritory claimed by Oreat Hr.cain on one side, and by Spain on the other." — {Histonj of the Federal Government, bij Alden Bradford, Boston. 1810. p. l.SO.) No point was mentioned where the line in the chain of mountains was to commence, nor where the tract of lain! lay, forming a portion of Louisiana, lying between the territory claimed by Spain and Great Hritain. France had nothing to sell but what constituted Louisiana after the cession made to great Uritain, in 17();i. There was nt rertlieless inserted in this treaty of sale, a reference to a perfeethj undt fined line to the racific, having no defined jxiint of commencement, and referring to territory having no definable boundary on llie north, or the south, or on the east." In a note to the passage quoted in this paracrajjli, Mr. Falconer says: — " Mr. GreiMiliow, in liis elalxu-ate work on the Oregon ([uestion, has omitted all notice of this very important passage." This note siirpristMl nie not a little, as I was tinablc to see the iirpor- tance of a passage c, us nieniioned in the treaty o( INOIJ, ' iyini,' !Ktwce;i tin; territcjry claimed by Cireat Uritain on the one side, and Spain on tiie other.''" — and (pa whole quesli(ju as to llu; su|)( riority of the Spanish, or of th<' British claim to the territory about Nootka. lie then enters upon the examination oi'the rights derived from discovery and occupation ot' a country, and (pioles a larife portion ol' the ohscu'va- tions, in pages 1N7 to INJ) ot' my history, omittinir, however, some which have an imporlaut 'xMring on the subject. Here be contends that "a set- tlement nuist he understood to mean thi' estahllshment of the laws or government of the persons making the settlement, with the consent and authority of the nation to which they lieloiiij: ;"' that, "discoveries actually aGCompatu\' on his |iage OM, so far as I can unravel its meaning, for it is reiulereil somewhat doui»tful l>y omissions, is as direct and positive misrepresentation of my views, as expressed in page 281 of the history to which it refers. At page S."), Mr. Falcone'' writes : "On the iiorih and north-western boundary of tiie United States, 'Louisiana, it is said, stretcln'd from the (iulf id' Mexico, to the iiorlhward and north-weslwanl, to an undefmed ex- tent.' (Oreenhow, |). •■HG.) It van be most distinctly demonstrated, that tiiero is not the slightest foundation for this statement." Now in the first place Mr. Falconer has entirely mis(|uoted my expros- sions. Specially reterring to the state of things at the commencement of this century, I say *■' tlic territories of the Inited States were at that time, all included between tlie Atlantic Ocean on the east, and the Mississippi river on liie west. In the north were the British Provinces; in the wv.sl lay Florida belonging to Spain ; ;ind beyond the Mississippi the Spaniards claimed the vast rrgioii, called Louisi.'uia, stretciiing from the ( !ulf of Mex- ico, nortliward ;uid north-westward to ;in uiuli'lined extent.'' These observations, I reueat, refer only to the state of things in IH(H), when Louisi;uia embraced no territory east of the Mississippi, except New Orleans and its vicinity ; and nothing which I have seen has induced nie to doubt their entire accuracy. His conclusions on the subject are thus summed up in page 87 : " First then, as a sid)ordiiiati' province partly fornK.'d out of I'anada, Louisiana extend(';olitilion:< with (ircal Britain,''^ (mistakui^f, as the context a!)undantly siiow« the Clommissaries appointed under the treaty of Aix la Chapellc, f rieiiipotentiaries who sii^ned the treaty of Paris :) and as incontes- ta ovini; " thai the coiinlri/ north and north-west of the Mississippi^ 1 i ..led as the proeinee of Canada.'''' The quotations from M. DuUot de Mofras, are made from some articles by him on ( )re!jon, wliicli appeared in the Paris .lournal des 1 )ehats. This gentleman lias since puhlished, und( r the auspiees of the French govern- ment, a work on t^reiion and California, professinir to lu; ttie results of personal examination of those countrit s, and of subse(juciit laliors and re- searclies ; i)iit in reality containing little else than extracts from my his- torj', with alterations to suit the views of the author. The conclusions of M. de Mofras are — that Canada certainly extended to the Pacific — that the Canadians are now as yood FVenchmcn as in the da\s of Beauharnais — that they will soon throw olf the defesfed yokeof (Ireat Britain, and will then forma grand Franco Canadian Hmpire, extending from the At- lantic to the Pacific, and emhracing Oregon, which will be bound to France by every tie of religion, feeling and policv. It will be uniiecessury to pursue farther, the evidence of Mr. F^alconer's ""Enfin, 'l;uis nnc ciirtp },'rav^'e en 1757, at nmipxec mix Menioirps dos Commis- sniri'S des Rois kV' Fiaiice et d'Anj-lt'tcrrc en Aiiu'riqiU', en pout coristiitcr, que Id Novcllc Fruiii'L' s'lti'iulait iusqiii- a l;i nicr Piiciliqiu' ; et I'dii y tronvc, ii hi cote oucst (If rAmr'rii|ii(', sous le .1(1'' ilfirii', unc i;ran(l riviert-, truefL' (l.iiis iiiu- u this point, I will simply refer him to the letters addressed hy Messrs. Pelly and Simpson, tl>e governors of the Hudson's IJay Company, to the Colniiiul Department, in IKH, soliciting a renewal of their charter, as puMished hy order of parliament in IHIO, where he will find, that those pentliMnen claimed and received the aid and consideration of i^ovvrnment for their encn;!/ and success in ejiiellimr the Americans from the Colum- bia reiiions^ and J'crming silt/cmeuts there, by means of lohich they ivere rapidly converlinir Oregon into a British colony. Since that period things liave changed ; and nothing hut prudence is required, on the i)art of the American government, to convert OreTOU, ere long, into a State of the Federal Union. ROBERT GREENHOVV. Washington, April, 1845. •; I ♦ "^.-.^a . O -I V I (• I ' //■ '''-■I, ""/,. "o ^'W ""■M, I i / / 7'tt P t~-""i" ■* / r I (' I- M. ^ ~^ /•■ lh-l;h -A tilt nuin.,i I r i:,lini /IJ,. 'j J u u 1 £ p D ir/ J D j'J :; d / !D S.LSJJ "''fUVi'T.l the ^!lli.Uin'n;in*(((taUt\n'nia/iVrCl|iOU.^^^^^^^^ CCmm '// //v vOH'ri:! -^VK.ST ('0.\,S'r OK A>M'i uirA / / /J/uim /'I i,:fi,i,- //. /I'liii/f/i;',/ /uii/iri,.! />\ /:'./■' II', 'cJiiiir,/ /'//.■„/,/' (in Null- /*:'/■ /' ■,.:» ."/ iiv'//,/- /./ litninitiulp Wisl .'»,'» luini \V;ik1hh«'Iiiii in f/'/;i' riiihi .inli'ti' t'i'fnff'ii/ fit l.nw \*<. *■ ■"■ ll^rrsii' -J ^'/>/ Y «!:: .:.)" 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