Mr. Taylor to Mr. Gresham.

No. 227.]

Sir: A reasonable time having elapsed since the payment of the Caroline indemnity, I have addressed to the minister of state a formal [Page 596] demand for the return of the missionaries according to your instructions, which I have endeavored to follow in every particular.

I inclose herewith a copy of my note, hoping that it may meet with your approval. I suppose the check for the $17,500, mailed to you on the 13th (No. 209) of July, has been duly received, although there has been no acknowledgment of it.

I am, etc.,

Hannis Taylor.
[Inclosure in No. 227.]

Mr. Taylor to Señor Moret.

Excellency: It now becomes my duty, under special instructions from my Government, to call your attention to that aspect of the affair at Ponape which still remains for adjustment.

In my note to you of July 14 I had the honor to acknowledge the receipt of the sum of $17,500 in American gold in settlement for certain pecuniary losses sustained by the missionaries at Ponape during the troubles of 1887 and 1890, according to the agreement of my Government as expressed to you in my note of January 9, 1894, upon that subject. In that note, in reply to yours of the 12th of October, 1893, I expressed the willingness of my Government to accept the indemnity for the pecuniary aspect of the matter without thereby waiving, either expressly or by implication, its coincident demand for the return of the despoiled American citizens to the spot where they have established vested and recognized rights through half a century of residence and tenure. That aspect of the matter, as your excellency will remember, was postponed for the moment under the assurance contained in your note of the 12th of October, 1893, that “the Government of His Majesty, ratifying what it has already promised, will be specially careful, as soon as the reports from the superior authorities of the Philippines (who have again been consulted) permit it, to announce to the Washington Government the date at which the missionaries may effect their return to Ponape without any risk.”

It is now with the greatest satisfaction that my Government is able to announce to you, what of course you already know, that Señor Don Juan de la Concha, the present governor of the Carolines, has expressed himself very fully and formally upon this subject to the effect that he is willing to grant permission to the said missionaries to return to the field of their labors, with full protection both as to life and property, the moment that he is permitted to do so by His Majesty’s Government at Madrid; that he only awaits inquiries from that source in order to urge the return of the missionaries most heartily. This opinion and resolution of the governor of the Carolines, which has been duly and officially communicated to my Government, has no doubt by this time been communicated to your excellency. As the views thus expressed by the governor of the Carolines removes the last obstacle to the return of the missionaries, my Government directs me to ask of your excellency to grant at once the necessary permission, so long delayed, for their return.

I seize, etc.,

Hannis Taylor.