No. 391.
Mr. Bayard to Mr. McLane.

No. 344.]

Sir: There is on file in your legation certain correspondence relative to the case of Alfred Pierre Jacob, between 1879 and 1884, and the facts of his case may be conveniently consulted in the volume of Foreign Relations for 1884, where the latest phases thereof are summarized.

I inclose herewith a copy of a letter recently addressed to me by Mr. Jacob, in which he renews his request to procure the erasure of his name from the rolls of the French military service and the recognition of his citizenship. I also inclose for your information a copy of my reply to Mr. Jacob.

In the present aspect of the question between this Government and that of France, concerning the establishment of the status of American citizenship on the part of those who by birth or descent may also be claimed as French citizens, it does not seem necessary or proper for this Government to make any formal application in the sense of either of the alternatives suggested by Mr. Ferry in his note of May 1, 1884, to Mr. Morton, but in view of the fact that no practical issue remains in this particular case, inasmuch as Mr. Jacob has served his term, and in view, moreover, of the good disposition shown by Mr. Ferry and by the then minister of war, in 1884, it is hoped that the French Government will erase Mr. Jacob’s name from the list of reserves, and to this end you are instructed to employ your good offices.

I am, etc.,

T. F. Bayard.
[Inclosure 1 in No. 344.]

Mr. Jacob to Mr. Bayard.

Dear Sir: About four years ago on returning to the United States after my release from the French army, into which I had been forced notwithstanding my rights as an American citizen, I applied to the Government at Washington in order to have the matter settled.

[Page 544]

The following is a summary of my statements: I was horn at Philadelphia on July 10, 1858, and my father was naturalized when I was a boy; I remained in said city until the age of nineteen, when I sailed for France with my parents intending to remain there several years to acquire experience in my profession of civil engineer.

While at Paris I was drafted and forced into the army despite the protests of the American minister at Paris.

After completing the required time of four years I returned to my native country and complained to the Government of the way in which I had been treated abroad, asking that immediate steps be taken to have my name erased from the army rolls.

In reply to my letter of January 9, 1884, I received from the Department of State a letter dated January 22, 1884, and a second letter dated May 28, 1884, which informed me that I had only two ways of establishing in France my change of nationality.

(1)
By applying directly to the French Government for permission to acquire another citizenship.
(2)
By obtaining from a court of justice a declaration that I had lost my French citizenship.

To this I replied by letter of July 12, 1884, that I did not consider that I should be obliged to ask the permission of a foreign government to acquire that which had long since been acquired by right of birth, and that I did not ask for a change of nationality but for a recognition of my rights as a citizen of the United States.

I received in reply a letter dated July 22, 1881, in which I was informed that, being an American citizen, this Government did not deem it necessary for me to take any steps in France to establish my American citizenship, but would extend to me as such all proper protection. And that is where the matter now stands; my name is still on the army rolls, and I am therefore still liable to military duty. I am about to be called upon to represent American interests at the Paris Exhibition; can I safely do so? And will the Government of the United States have the power to extend to me the proper protection due to citizens abroad?

It seems to me that, under the existing circumstances, unless my name is definitely erased from the rolls, I will have trouble.

Since my return to this country I have, of course, ignored everything concerning military duty in France.

You will greatly oblige me by securing the erasure of my name from the rolls and the recognition of my citizenship.

I am, etc.,

Alfred P. Jacob.
[Inclosure 2 in No. 344.]

Mr. Adee to Mr. Jacob.

Sir: Your letter of the 14th May has been, received. You therein refer to the correspondence had in 1884 concerning your service in the French army, and your request then made for the cancellation of your name in the French army list on the ground that you, although born of French parentage, were lawfully a citizen of the United States in pursuance of the statutes applicable to the case: and you now repeat your request that your name be definitely erased from the French rolls. You ask this in view of the fact that you are about to be called upon to represent American interests at the Paris Exhibition and desire to know whether you can safely do so.

Upon an examination of the facts in your case, which sufficiently appear in the published correspondence found in the “Foreign Relations” for 1884, a copy of which I herewith send you, it will be seen that having served out your full term of conscription in the French army, no practical issue remains beyond the circumstance of your name being borne upon the rolls of the reserves. From the note of Mr. Jules Ferry to Mr. Morton, of May 1, 1884 (which has heretofore been communicated to you), it appears that the French authorities were favorably disposed in your case, and that they suggested as a most expeditious method an application by you to the minister of justice for a recognition of your change of allegiance, which application, it was stated, would have the active support of the then minister of war.

A copy of your letter, with proper instructions in the premises, will be sent to Mr. McLane, the United States minister at Paris.

I am, etc.,

Alvey A. Adee,
Second Assistant Secretary.