judicial tribunal. I would respectfully suggest that although the 
crime charged to have been committed in this case is held odious, as 
being in conflict with our opinions on the subject of national 
sovereignty and personal freedom, there is no prohibition of it or 
punishment for it provided in any act of Congress. The expediency of 
supplying this defect in our criminal code is therefore recommended to 
your consideration. 
I have scrupulously avoided any interference in the wars and 
contentions which have recently distracted Europe. During the late 
conflict between Austria and Hungary there seemed to be a prospect 
that the latter might become an independent nation. However faint that 
prospect at the time appeared, I thought it my duty, in accordance with 
the general sentiment of the American people, who deeply sympathized 
with the Magyar patriots, to stand prepared, upon the contingency of 
the establishment by her of a permanent government, to be the first to
welcome independent Hungary into the family of nations. For this 
purpose I invested an agent then in Europe with power to declare our 
willingness promptly to recognize her independence in the event of her 
ability to sustain it. The powerful intervention of Russia in the contest 
extinguished the hopes of the struggling Magyars. The United States 
did not at any time interfere in the contest, but the feelings of the nation 
were strongly enlisted in the cause, and by the sufferings of a brave 
people, who had made a gallant, though unsuccessful, effort to be free. 
Our claims upon Portugal have been during the past year prosecuted 
with renewed vigor, and it has been my object to employ every effort of 
honorable diplomacy to procure their adjustment. Our late charge 
d'affaires at Lisbon, the Hon. George W. Hopkins, made able and 
energetic, but unsuccessful, efforts to settle these unpleasant matters of 
controversy and to obtain indemnity for the wrongs which were the 
subjects of complaint. Our present charge' d'affaires at that Court will 
also bring to the prosecution of these claims ability and zeal. The 
revolutionary and distracted condition of Portugal in past times has 
been represented as one of the leading causes of her delay in 
indemnifying our suffering citizens. But I must now say it is matter of 
profound regret that these claims have not yet been settled. The 
omission of Portugal to do justice to the American claimants has now 
assumed a character so grave and serious that I shall shortly make it the 
subject of a special message to Congress, with a view to such ultimate 
action as its wisdom and patriotism may suggest. 
With Russia, Austria, Prussia, Sweden, Denmark, Belgium, the 
Netherlands, and the Italian States we still maintain our accustomed 
amicable relations. 
During the recent revolutions in the Papal States our charge d'affaires at 
Rome has been unable to present his letter of credence, which, indeed, 
he was directed by my predecessor to withhold until he should receive 
further orders. Such was the unsettled condition of things in those 
States that it was not deemed expedient to give him any instructions on 
the subject of presenting his credential letter different from those with 
which he had been furnished by the late Administration until the 25th 
of June last, when, in consequence of the want of accurate information 
of the exact state of things at that distance from us, he was instructed to 
exercise his own discretion in presenting himself to the then existing
Government if in his judgment sufficiently stable, or, if not, to await 
further events. Since that period Rome has undergone another 
revolution, and he abides the establishment of a government 
sufficiently permanent to justify him in opening diplomatic intercourse 
with it. 
With the Republic of Mexico it is our true policy to cultivate the most 
friendly relations. Since the ratification of the treaty of Guadalupe 
Hidalgo nothing has occurred of a serious character to disturb them. A 
faithful observance of the treaty and a sincere respect for her rights can 
not fail to secure the lasting confidence and friendship of that Republic. 
The message of my predecessor to the House of Representatives of the 
8th of February last, communicating, in compliance with a resolution of 
that body, a copy of a paper called a protocol, signed at Queretaro on 
the 30th of May, 1848, by the commissioners of the United States and 
the minister of foreign affairs of the Mexican Government, having been 
a subject of correspondence between the Department of State and the 
envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary of that Republic 
accredited to this Government, a transcript of that correspondence is 
herewith submitted. 
The commissioner on the part of the United States for marking the 
boundary between the two Republics, though delayed in reaching San 
Diego by unforeseen obstacles, arrived at that place within a    
    
		
	
	
	Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code
 
	 	
	
	
	    Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the 
Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.
	    
	    
