Mr. Adams to Mr. Seward,

No. 1476]

Sir: I have the honor to transmit copies of the London Times* containing a report of the trial of the persons charged with the murder of a police officer in the prosecution of an attempt to rescue two prisoners at Manchester. In the course of the remarks made by two of these men, I perceive that they declare themselves American citizens, and complain that no attempt was made by me to interfere in their behalf.

Of one of these parties, Shore, or Shaw, I have never heard anything before, either directly or indirectly. So far as I know, he never made a sign to me of any kind.

With regard to the other man, Gould, he proves to be Michael O’Brien, the person who was arrested and tried at Liverpool for being accessory to the possession of some government rifles traced into the hands of the Fenian Irish in that place. As the evidence upon his examination seemed to me quite insufficient to justify the charge, I authorized Mr. Dudley to employ some one to protect him, and guard against the risk of political prejudice prevailing against him on account of a suspected connection with the Fenian agitation. The trial, however, was very fairly conducted, and the evidence not proving sufficient, as I supposed, he was acquitted and released. It was, however, quite strong enough to throw a doubt over his purposes, and to justify Mr. Dudley, the consul, who saw him, in giving him a friendly caution to avoid all further risks by returning at once to America.

In the present instance Mr. O’Brien wrote to me again soliciting assistance. But the circumstances seemed so entirely changed, the charges brought of so purely a criminal nature, and sustained by such strong evidence, that it did not seem to me to be a proper case to attempt to interfere with the usual course of law. It admits of little doubt that he was one of the chief parties engaged in the rescue by violence, and as such liable to suffer the penalty of the law. I presume at least three of the five persons convicted will be executed.

I learn from Mr. West that the trial of Colonel Nagle will be transferred to Sligo and postponed to the spring. This is alleged to be on the ground that the evidence to fix. upon him, as an alien, an overt act, must clearly prove this act to have been committed within the British jurisdiction. Thus a clear distinction appears to be made between him as a native of the United States, and Warren, who is a naturalized citizen. In this connection much stress is laid on the doctrine of our courts, and works of high legal authority, upon the indefeasibility of allegiance. It is much to be regretted that on this point there should always have been some conflict between the established policy of the executive department and the ruling of the federal judiciary.

There is a leader on the subject in the London Times of to-day, which I send herewith.

I have the honor to be, sir, your obedient servant,

CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS.

Hon. William H. Seward, Secretary of State, Washington, D. C.

[Untitled]

There is one incident of the Fenian trials at Manchester and Dublin which deserves special consideration. It is the fact that several of the prisoners claimed the privileges of American citizenship and the interference of Mr. Adams as the representative of their adopted [Page 172] government. After the verdict had been returned against him, and before sentence had been pronounced, Gould stated that he was a citizen of the United States of America, and if Charles Francis Adams had done his duty towards him, as he was paid for doing, he would not be in that dock answering questions. Shore declared that, “as an American citizen, he had of course expected to receive the protection of the ambassador of his own government.” Warren, on being indicted before the commission court at Dublin, applied through his counsel for a jury composed in part of American citizens, on the ground that his allegiance had been transferred to the United States. The lord chief baron rejected the application promptly and decisively, “the law of England being clear, and administered without variation from the earliest times—that the man who was once a British subject, as the prisoner admitted that he was, remained so forever.” Warren thereupon protested against being arraigned, tried, or judged by any British subject, instructed his counsel to withdraw from the case, and added: “I now place it in the hands of the United States; which has now become the principal.” Though cautioned by the court, he adhered to this resolution, and a gentleman presently appeared to watch the proceedings on behalf of the United States consul. The chief baron very properly declined to allow so irregular a course, but treated the prisoner with great consideration, and took care that his cause should not suffer for want of professional advocacy. He was convicted, however; and one of our Irish contemporaries, in commenting upon the case, has thought fit to impugn the decision of the lord chief baron on the legal question, whether he was entitled to “ignore the jurisdiction of the court,” or to claim a jury de medietate, as a foreigner. Upon the spirit and intent of the article headed “Only an American citizen,” in which this point is urged, we forbear to make any remark, but the point itself is one of real importance, and calculated to mislead unlearned persons, unless placed in its true light. The writer maintains that, if the chief baron’s ruling be sustained, George Washington, Franklin, and all the other early heroes of independe ace, remained to the last days of their lives subjects of Great Britain”—“impenitent rebels”— “at any time liable to be hung by the neck, if caught, and not entitled to the rights of prisoners of war.” “The question is,” as he states it, “whether an American citizen has any right to the privilege accorded by law to every other alien,” and, in particular, to that of being tried by a jury half composed of aliens; and upon this question, as he represents, “the two countries are now face to face.” We have yet to learn the authority for this last assertion, if it be meant that any claim of this kind has been preferred or sanctioned by the government of the United States. Its validity, however, does not depend on whether it has been pressed or not, and admits of being determined on principles which are well ascertained.

Very few propositions of international law are better established or more familiar than the axiom, that a natural-born subject cannot transfer his allegiance from one sovereign to another at pleasure. How far he may be enabled to do so by the laws of his native or of his adopted country cannot be laid down with equal precision, inasmuch as there is no definite and comprehensive maxim on the subject universally adopted by the municipal legislation of all civilized countries. But no doubt whatever exists as to the doctrine of our own law, which is here identical with that of the United States. In the words of Lord Stowell, a person born in England, but naturalized in a foreign state, “is subject to all the obligations imposed on him by his nativity. He cannot shake off his allegiance to his native country or divest himself altogether of his British character by a voluntary transfer of himself to another country,” even for the purpose of trading in contraband goods with an enemy of Great Britain. In the words of Chancellor Kent, “from an historical review of the principal decisions in the federal courts, the better opinion would seem to be that a citizen cannot renounce his allegiance to the United States without the permission of government, to be declared by law, and that, as there is no existing regulation on the case, the rule of the English common law remains unaltered.” General Halleck, one of the highest and latest American authorities on international law, fully embraces the consequences of this rule, and, as he observes, even those writers who are in favor of limiting it, allow that “the renunciation of nationality does not release him who avails himself of it from any of the obligations which he owes either to his country or to his countrymen, nor can it ever be appealed to as a mask to cover crime.” Mr. Webster, in one instance, went still further, and granted that France, which, like England and the United States, does not permit her citizens to renounce their allegiance, might lawfully claim the services of a Frenchman naturalized in America, “when found within French jurisdiction.” The resistance of the United States to the impressment of naturalized seamen by Great Britain in the early part of this century is in no degree inconsistent with this position, since it was founded not on a denial of our right to claim their services, but on a denial of our right to enforce that claim by search. Indeed, whatever differences may be found in the codes of different nations with respect to the power of citi zens to shake off the duties with the privileges of allegiance, we believe the annals of criminal justice may be searched in vain for a precedent in favor of the right asserted by our contemporary—that is, the right of a natural-born subject, indicted for treason or murder in this country, to plead naturalization in America, and to be tried, if at all, as an alien. It was assuredly not for the benefit of persons thus circumstanced that Edward I allowed foreign merchants, presumed to be ignorant of our language, the doubtful advantage of a mixed jury, coupled, as history tells us, with the hardship of a mutual liability for each other’s [Page 173] crimes. It is, perhaps, scarcely worth while to consider how a court of law would have dealt with Franklin or Washington, had they been indicted as “impenitent rebels” after the war of independence. Suffice it to say that, for obvious reasons, affirmed and explained in a memorable judgment on this very subject, all ties of natural allegiance are severed by a treaty of peace wherein the Crown expressly relinquishes its authority over a seceding colony.

The moral aspect of the claims so presumptuously advanced is too clear to admit of a moment’s doubt. If there be one class of Fenian conspirators rather than another which deserves no mercy at the hands of the government, it is a class of American filibusters who have long infested Dublin, and are beginning to infest our own great cities. It is possible to feel some compassion for the silly Irish youths who are first seduced into playing at sedition, and then led on by appeals to their pride and their fears into overt acts of treason. It is even possible to feel compassion for an educated Irishman who becomes a Fenian with his eyes open, taking his life in his hand, under the influence of a patriotic hallucination. For the restless adventurers whom the close of the American war has let loose upon the world, and who fancy they can here perpetrate with impunity deeds for which they would be hanged at home, with or without law, we can feel no compassion at all, on whichever side of the Atlantic they may have been born. There were peculiar reasons which justified the government in sparing more than one of them on a former occasion, but those reasons exist no longer. We must deal with them as the government whose protection they invoke would deal with ruffians guilty of like outrages in the streets of New York. They have already had fair warning, and they may be assured that if they should fall into the hands of justice no American minister will intercede for them, and no English minister will venture to reprieve them.

  1. The report of the trial as contained in the London Times was published in House Ex. Doc. No. 157, page 99, 2d Sess. 40th Congress.