Page:Speeches, correspondence and political papers of Carl Schurz, Volume 4.djvu/84

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
50
The Writings of
[1880

much to allay. Of this you know better than I. I shall be glad to know how the field looks to you now. With thanks for your very effective work, and with kind regards.




TO JAMES A. GARFIELD

Department of the Interior,
Washington
, Nov. 3, 1880.

My dear Garfield: I congratulate you and the country most sincerely on your success. Quod felix faustumque sit. Your real troubles will now begin. But, as I have frequently taken occasion to say during the campaign, President James A. Garfield will have only to act according to the teachings of Member of Congress Garfield to give this country one of the most wholesome Administrations it ever had. Accept my cordial wishes.




TO JOHN D. LONG[1]

Washington, D. C., December 9, 1880.

I have read a full report of the speeches delivered on the resolutions passed at a meeting over which you presided, held in Boston, on the 3d of December, for the purpose of expressing sympathy with the Poncas.

That meeting was held in the interest of justice. It demanded justice for that Indian tribe. But it seems that not one of the speakers remembered that measure of justice which is due to the officers of the Government whose names were connected with that deplorable affair. Permit me to demand justice for them also. To this end it is necessary to pass once more in rapid review the salient points of the case. The old Ponca reserve in southeastern Dakota, a tract of 96,000 acres, was confirmed to that tribe by various treaties. In 1868 a treaty

  1. Governor of Mass. An open letter on the removal of the Poncas.