[Private and confidential.], September 11, 1862.
[Private and confidential.]
September 11, 1862.
Sir: I have the honor to forward for your
consideration the enclosed copies of letters, the one (marked A) from
the French and Spanish consul at Galveston, the other (marked B) being
my reply thereto.
As the proceeding of the said consul would seem to indicate an incipient
intrigue, I have deemed it proper to advise you thereof on the
threshold.
I have the honor to be, with great respect, your obedient servant,
His Excellency Jefferson Davis,
President, &c., Richmond, Va.
Consulate Agency for France and Vice Consulate
for Spain in Galveston
August 18,
1862.
Sir: Will you be kind enough to inform me
confidentially of your personal opinion
on the following questions:
1st. The annexation of the republic of Texas to the United States was
or was not a good political measure?
2d. The act of disunion and of the junction of the State of Texas to
the southern States was or was not another good or bad politic taken
by the State? and
3d. The re-establishment of the old republic of Texas will or will
not be beneficial to our beloved adopted country ?
Your answer to these questions, sir, will serve me as a guide in my
political correspondence with the governments which I have the honor
to represent.
I have the honor, sir, and with very much respect, to be your
obedient servant,
B. THERON, French and Spanish
Consul.
His Excellency F. R. Lubbock, Governor of the State of Texas.
I certify the above and foregoing to be a true copy of the original
now on file in the executive department at Austin, Texas.
Secretary.
B.
Austin, Texas,
Sept. 9, 1862.
Sir: Your communication of 19th ultimo is
before me, and contents duly noted.
In answer to your first interrogatory, permit me to say that the
annexation of Texas to the United States was a good political
measure.
As to your second question, I answer most emphatically that “the act
of disunion and of the junction of the State of Texas to the
southern States was a good and proper political step.”
In reply to your third inquiry, I have to say “the re-establishment
of the old republic of Texas will not be beneficial to our beloved
adopted country.”
Texas has linked her fate with that of her sisters of the south. She
will be true, steadfast, and victorious.
I have the honor to be yours, very respectfully,
F. R. LUBBOCK.
B. Theron, Esq., French
and Spanish Consul, Galveston.
True copy of the original.
Secretary.
B.
Sir: On to-day Mons. Tabouelle, French
vice-consul at Richmond, sought an introduction to me in the senate
chamber, and stated that he desired to obtain from me certain
statistical information in regard to Texas. I told him that I did
not then have the time to give him the desired information, but if
he would call at my room I would take pleasure in giving him any
information which I possessed. He promised to call this evening,
which he did, and has just left my room. I deem it proper to give
you the substance of the conversation between us, as it had a
connexion with the subject-matter of the correspondence between the
governor of Texas and the French consular agent at Galveston, of
which you advised General Wigfall and myself a few days since.
After I had furnished him with information in regard to the area,
population, debt, taxes, and agricultural productive capacity of
Texas, he remarked that the resources of the State were magnificent,
and capable of supporting a powerful and
independent people, and then asked me whether I thought it would not he to the interest of the State
to assume an independent nationality. I told him that the
people of Texas, being mostly emigrants from the old southern
States, were strongly attached to those States and to our federative
system of government, which I at some length explained to him. I
told him that they never could have been induced to secede from the
United States but to preserve that form of government, which was in
danger of being destroyed. I further stated to him that not only the
affections and sympathies, but also the interests of the people of
Texas bound them to the States of the confederacy; that their
institutions, pursuits, and agricultural products were the same, and
that mutual safety required harmony amongst them, which could only
be insured by a confederacy; that as a separate and independent
State Texas would be weak and incapable of self-defence; that we
were sensible that we would be subject to be involved in collisions
with our sister southern States; that the similarity of institutions
and production, which are now bonds of union and the cause of
harmony, would become causes of rivalries, jealousies, and perhaps
wars between the States; that in the confederacy we would not be a
weak and dependent people, incapable of resenting insult or
repelling aggression. The subject was then waived, and we talked of
other matters.
But for the fact you had called my attention to the correspondence
between the governor of Texas and the French consular agent at
Galveston, this conversation would perhaps have made no impression
upon my mind; but as an introduction to me was sought by the
vice-consul, with the view to obtain statistical information in
regard to Texas, and the subject of the separate independence of that State was thus
introduced by him, it struck me that it was not casual or
accidental. He furthermore stated to me that he had written to the
consular agent at Galveston for information upon the resources of
Texas, and had received from him a specimen or sample of Texas wool
which he either had or intended to send to France.
I have deemed it proper to communicate the foregoing to you, as
affording confirmatory evidence to the conclusion that it is the
object of Louis Napoleon, and perhaps of other of the European
powers, to induce Texas to assume an independent nationality. The
fact communicated by you to General Wigfall and myself put me on my
guard, and caused me to be more explicit and specific than I might
otherwise have been, for the purpose of dissipating such a design if
it exists, and to induce whatever steps that may be taken to be for
the benefit of the entire confederacy.
I am, sir, respectfully, your obedient servant,
His Excellency Jefferson Davis, President, &c.
C.