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HEADQUARTERS
CARTHAGE,
June 22nd, 1844.
To
the
Mayor and Council of
the City of
Nauvoo:
GENTLEMEN.-After
examining carefully all the allegations on the part of
the citizens of
the
country in Hancock county, and the defensive
matters submitted to
me by the
committee of your citizens concerning the
existing disturbances, I
find that
there appears to be but little contradiction as to
important facts, so
that it
may be safely assumed that the immediate cause of
the existing
excitement is
the destruction of the press and Nauvoo Expositor,
and the
subsequent
refusal of the individuals accused to be accountable
therefore
according to the
general laws of this state, and the insisting on your
parts to be
accountable
only before your own municipal court, and according to
the ordinances
of your
city.
Many
other facts have been asserted on both sides as
tending to increase the
excitement; but as they mostly relate merely to
private persons, and
committed
by individuals, and tend simply to show the present
state of affairs, I
will
not further notice them in this communication.
The material
facts to be noticed are
that a newspaper called the Nauvoo Expositor was
established
in Nauvoo;
that this newspaper was
deemed
offensive to the people of that city; that the Common
Council, without
notice
or process to the owners, entered into a trial and
heard statements not
under
oath, and evidence which was under oath, in
relation to the
character, conduct
and designs of the owners and editors of the press;
that, upon hearing
such
statements and evidence, the Common Council
passed an ordinance or
resolution
declaring said press and paper to be a public
nuisance, and ordered the
same to
be abated as such; that a writ was issued by the Mayor
to the Marshal
of the
city for that purpose; that a military order was
issued at the same
time by the
Mayor, who is also Lieutenant-General of the Nauvoo
Legion, to the
Major-General in command of that Legion, for a force
sufficient to
ensure the
execution of the writ aforesaid.
It
appears
also the press was destroyed in obedience to the
foregoing
ordinance and
writ, according to a return on the same by the Marshal
in the following
words:
"The within press and type is destroyed and pied
according to order on
this 10th day of June, 1844, at about six o'clock
p.m.-J. P. GREENE, C.
M."
It
appears
also that the owners of the press obtained from a
justice of
the peace
at Carthage a warrant against the authors of this
destruction for
a riot; that
the constable charged with the execution of this
process, arrested some
of the
persons accused, who immediately obtained writs of habeas
corpus from
the Municipal Court of your city, by virtue of which
they were tried in
Nauvoo and
discharged from arrest, and that they have ever since
refused to be
arrested or
to submit to a trial at any other place or before
any other court,
except in
the city and before the Municipal Court aforesaid.
It
has
also been reported to me that martial law has been
declared in
Nauvoo; that
persons and properly have been and are now forcibly
imprisoned and
detained
there, and that the Legion has been ordered under arms
to resist any
attempt to
arrest the persons accused. I have not particularly
inquired into the
truth of
these latter reports; for although they may become
matters of great
importance
in the sequel, they are not necessary to be
ascertained and acted upon
at
present.
I
now express to you my opinion that your conduct in the
destruction of
the press
was a very gross outrage upon the laws and the
liberties of the people.
It may
have been full of libels, but this did not
authorize you to
destroy it.
There
are
many newspapers in this state which have been
wrongfully abusing me
for
more than a year, and yet such is my regard for the
liberty of the
press and
the rights of a free people in a republican
government that I
would shed the
last drop of my blood to protect those presses from
any illegal
violence. You
have violated the Constitution in at least four
particulars. You have
violated
that part of it which declares
that the printing presses shall be free, being
responsible for the
abuse
thereof, and that the truth may be given in evidence.
This
article of the Constitution contemplates that the
proprietors of a
libelous
press may be sued for private damages, or may be
indicted criminally,
and that
upon trial they should have the right to give
the truth in
evidence. In
this case the proprietors had no notice of the
proceeding.
The
Constitution
also provides that the people shall be protected
against
unreasonable searches and seizures of their property
and "That no man
shall be deprived of life, liberty or property, except
by the judgment
of his
peers (which means a jury trial) and the law of the
land,” which means
due
process of law and notice to the accused.
You
have also violated the Constitution and your own
charter in this: Your
Council,
which has no judicial powers, and can only pass
ordinances of a
general
nature, have undertaken to pass judgment as a court
and convict without
a jury
a press of being libelous and a nuisance to the city.
The
Council at most could only define a nuisance by
general ordinance,
and leave
it to the courts to determine whether individuals or
particulars
accused came
within such definition.
The
Constitution
abhors and will not tolerate the union of legislative
and
judicial
power in the same body of magistracy, because, as in
this case, they
will first
make a tyrannical law, and then execute it in a
tyrannical manner.
You
have
also assumed to yourselves more power than you are
entitled to in
relation
to writs of habeas under
your
charter. I know that you have been told by lawyers;
for the
purpose of
gaining your favor that you have this power to any
extent. In this they
have
deceived you for their own base purposes. Your charter
supposes that
you may
pass ordinances, a breach of which will result in the
imprisonment of
the offender.
For
the purpose of insuring more speedy relief to such
persons, authority
was given
to the Municipal Court to issue writs of habeas
corpus in all
cases
arising under the ordinances of the city.
It
was
never supposed by the Legislature, nor can the
language of your
charter be
tortured to mean that a jurisdiction was intended to
be conferred which
would
apply to all cases of imprisonment under the general
laws of the state
or of
the United States, as well as the city ordinances.
It
has also been reserved to you to make the discovery
that a newspaper
charged to
be scurrilous and libelous may be legally abated or
removed as a
nuisance. In
no other state, county, city, town or territory
in the
United States has ever such a thing been thought of
before. Such an act
at this
day would not be tolerated even in England. Just such
another act in
1830
hurled the king of France from his throne, and caused
the imprisonment
of four
of his principal ministers for life. No civilized
country can tolerate
such
conduct; much less can it be tolerated in this
free country of the
United
States.
The
result
of my deliberations on this subject is, that I will
have to
require you and
all persons in Nauvoo accused or sued to submit in all
cases implicitly
to the
process of the court, and to interpose no obstacles to
an arrest,
either by
writ of habeas corpus or otherwise; and that
all of the people
of the
city of Nauvoo shall make and continue the most
complete submission to
the laws
of the state, and the process of the courts and
justices of the peace.
In
the particular case now under consideration, I require
any and all of
you who
are or shall be accused to submit yourselves to be
arrested by the same
constable, by virtue of the same warrant and be tried
before the same
magistrate whose authority has heretofore been
resisted. Nothing short
of this
can vindicate the dignity of violated law and allay
the just excitement
of the
people.
I
am
anxious to preserve the peace. A small indiscretion
may bring on a
war. The
whole country is now up in arms, and a vast number of
people are ready
to take
the matter into their own hands. Such a state of
things might force me
to call
out the militia to prevent a civil war. And such is
the excitement of
the country
that I fear the militia, when assembled, would be
beyond legal control.
You
are
wrong in the first instance, and I can call out no
portion of the
militia
for your defense until you submit to the law. You have
made it
necessary that a posse
should be
assembled to execute legal
process; and that posse,
as fast as
it assembles is in danger of
being imbued with the mobocratic spirit. If you, by
refusing to submit,
shall
make it necessary to call out the militia, I have
great fears that your
city
will be destroyed, and your people many of them
exterminated.
You
know the excitement of the public mind. Do not tempt
it too far. A very
little
matter may do a very great injury; and if you are
disposed to continue
the
causes of excitement and render a force necessary
to coerce
submission, I
would say that your city was built, as it were, upon a
keg of powder
which a
very little spark may explode.
It
is my intention to do all I can to preserve the peace,
and even, if
obliged, to
call the militia to prosecute the war so as not to
involve the innocent
and
comprehend all in the same punishment. But excitement
is a matter which
grows
very fast upon men when assembled. The affair, I
much fear, may assume a revolutionary character, and
the men may
disregard the
authority of their officers.
I
tell you plainly that if no such submission is made as I
have
indicated, I
will be obliged to call out the militia; and if a few
thousand will not
be
sufficient, many thousands will be.
I
sincerely
hope that your people may do nothing which will make
such a
proceeding necessary. I hope also that they will be well
disposed to
co-operate
with me in allaying the excitement of the public mind.
Immediately
discharge
such persons as you have under martial law. Let them go
without
molestation.
Abstain from all injury to private property. Let
people go where
they please
without swearing them first to take no part against you.
All such
proceedings
tend only to inflame the public mind, and raise up ten
men disposed to
fight
you for everyone thus foolishly disabled.
Your
committee
assures me that you are sincerely desirous of
preserving
the peace; and
if so, I hope you will co-operate with me in everything
necessary to
allay the
excitement in the minds of the people.
The
following-named persons are reported to me as being
detained against
their will
by martial law: John A. Hicks, H. O. Norton, A. J.
Higbee, John Eagle,
P. J.
Rolf, Peter Lemon, and T. J. Rolf. It will tend greatly
to allay
excitement if
they shall be immediately discharged and suffered
to go without
molestation.
It
is
also reported here, and generally believed, (but whether
true or not
I have
not yet learned) that there are many foraging parties
abroad from
Nauvoo
committing depredations upon the cattle and
properly in the
vicinity. These
acts, if correctly reported, must absolutely cease
immediately, if you
expect
any person here to have the power to preserve the peace.
In
case the persons accused should make no resistance to
arrest, it will
be against
orders to be accompanied by others. If it should become
necessary to
have
witnesses on the trials, I will see that such persons
shall be duly
summoned, and
I will also guarantee the safety of all such
persons as may thus be
brought
to this place from
Nauvoo
either for trial or as witnesses for
the accused.
If
the individuals accused cannot be found when required by
the
constable it will
be considered by me as an equivalent to a refusal to be
arrested, and
the
militia will be ordered accordingly.
I am,
gentlemen, with great respect, your obedient servant,
THOMAS
FORD,
Governor
and
Commander-in-Chief. |