Mr. Terrell to Mr. Olney.

No. 761.]

Sir: I have the honor to inclose herewith translation of a note I have received from the minister for foreign affairs, denying complicity of the Ottoman troops in the recent outrages at Marash.

[Page 1448]

I have written to Marash to inquire of Mr. Lee the circumstances under which the missionaries sent their “address of thanks” to the military commandant, and requesting that a copy of the same be forwarded to me.

I have, etc.,

A. W. Terrell.
[Inclosure in No. 761.—Translation.]

Tevfik Pasha to Mr. Terrell.

Mr. Envoy: I have received the note, No. 101, which your excellency was pleased to address to me on the 4th of December, relating to the pillage of the American seminary and boarding school at Marash and to the fire in the seminary.

The governor-general of the vilayet of Aleppo being questioned on this subject, answers by telegraph that the above-mentioned seminary and boarding school, which were already guarded by the mounted gendarmerie, were, on the day of the disturbance, also protected by troops in sufficient number.

As for the fire, which started in the interior or the school itself, it was, thanks to the immediate measures adopted by the local authorities, put out, after having destroyed only one wing of the building and occasioned a loss which may be estimated at the very most at 150 Turkish pounds.

On the 20th of November (old style) Capt. Abdul Kadir Effendi, who was charged with the protection of the missionaries, on being notified by them that a fire had just broken out in the seminary, established the fact that [a constaté que] a certain quantity of charcoal and hay piled up in the stable had been set on fire. Happily, this attempt in like manner failed and caused no damage.

As for the alleged pillage of the seminary and boarding school by soldiers of the Imperial army, that is an entirely uncalled-for calumny, and your excellency will be the first to acknowledge the groundlessness of this allegation when you learn that the missionaries themselves sent an address of thanks to the military commandant for the aid and protection which had been afforded them on the day of the fire by the Imperial troops. Their seminary and school are still looked after by the gendarmerie.

An answer in the same sense as the preceding has already been given by the Imperial authorities of the vilayet to the United States consul in the capital of the province, who had sent a statement to them, together with a letter on the subject from the commander of the American war vessel which was then at Alexandretta.

Such being the facts in their true light, I feel sure that your excellency, with your sentiments of equity and enlightened appreciation, will bring them to the knowledge of your Government for its full edification.

Receive, etc.,

Tevfik.