Mr. Stuart to Mr. Seward..
Washington,
September 13, 1862.
Sir: I have been instructed by Earl Russell to
communicate to you the accompanying copy of the instructions which it is
intended to furnish to the commanders of her Majesty’s cruisers who may
be employed in carrying out the provisions of the treaty recently
concluded between her Majesty’s government and the government of the
United States for the suppression of the African slave trade. I have the
honor likewise to enclose lists of the several ships employed on the
African, North American, and West Indian stations, whose commanders will
be authorized to act under the treaty, stating also the names of the
commanders and the force of each vessel; and I am to request that you
will furnish me with a similar list of United States cruisers. I am at
the same time desired to inform you that her Majesty’s government have
already mixed commission courts established at Sierra Leone and the Cape
of Good Hope, and that by the first mail from England in the present
month the officers in those courts were to be authorized and instructed
to adjudicate in the cases of any vessels that may be brought before
them under the provisions of the treaty. As regards the court to be
established at New York, Mr. Archibald, her Majesty’s consul at that
city, is to be appointed to the office of her Majesty’s judge, and Mr.
Ryder, now her Majesty’s arbitrator in the mixed commission court at the
Havana, is to be appointed in the same capacity at New York.
In making known these appointments to the United States government, I am
to state to you that her Majesty’s government are only now waiting the
appointment of officers on the part of the American government to the
courts to be established at the Cape of Good Hope and Sierra Leone, in
order to issue the necessary instructions to her majesty’s cruisers to
carry out the stipulations of the treaty between the two countries.
An officer, in whose discretion and judgment her Majesty’s government
have every confidence, was to be appointed in a few days after the date
of Lord Russell’s despatch to me (which was of the 30th ultimo) to the
command of her Majesty’s naval forces on the west coast of Africa, and
it is expected that that officer will take his departure from England
towards the end of this month. As it is considered important that he
should take out with him the instructions for the squadron to act under
the treaty, I am further instructed to ask you whether there will be any
objection on the part of the United States government to the necessary
instructions being sent out by him, or whether they would wish that the
operations of the squadrons should be delayed until they are assured of
the arrival at their post of the officers appointed on the part of the
United States government to the mixed commission courts on the African
coast.
I shall accordingly feel obliged to you if you will make me acquainted
with the decision of the United States government on this matter with as
little delay as possible.
I avail myself of this occasion to renew to you the assurance of my
highest consideration.
Hon. William H. Seward, &c., &c., &c.
[Page 290]
[Untitled]
Admiralty,
August 28, 1862.
Sir: With reference to your letters of the
5th June last and 14th instant, I am commanded by my lords
commissioners of the admiralty to acquaint you, for the information
of Earl Russell, that warrants have been prepared for transmission
to the several officers in command of her Majesty’s cruisers engaged
in the suppression of the slave trade on the coast of Africa and in
the North American and West Indian station, to act under the treaty
recently concluded between Great Britain and the United States of
America. An act of Parliament necessary for carrying the treaty into
effect, viz: the 25th and 26th Vic., cap. 40, has now passed, and,
in accordance with my letter of the 13th June last, warrants, with
copies of the treaty, are ready for transmission to the officers as
soon as my lords are informed that the mixed courts of justice are
established and ready to take cognizance of captures made by virtue
of the said treaty.
A list of the ships, with their force, to which these warrants will
be sent, is, at present, as stated in the enclosed list.
I am, &c.,
[Untitled]
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
By the commissioners for executing
the office of lord high admiral of the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland.
Whereas a treaty between Great Britain and the United States of
America, for the suppression of the slave trade, was signed at
Washington on the 7th April, 1862, instructions for cruisers, marked
A, and regulations for mixed courts of justice, marked B, being
annexed thereto, and declared to form an integral part thereof, and
the ratifications of the same were exchanged at London on the 20th
of May, 1862 ; and whereas the high contracting parties mutually
agreed thereby that ships of their respective navies, furnished with
the instructions contained in annex A to the treaty, might visit,
search, and send in for trial, merchant vessels of the two nations
suspected on reasonable grounds of being engaged in the illegal
traffic in slaves; and whereas we think fit that her Majesty’s ship
under your command should be one of those authorized to act under
the treaty—
We furnish you with a copy of the said treaty, and of its annexed,
marked A and B; and you are hereby expressly authorized, empowered,
and ordered to act in the suppression of the traffic in slaves
according to the said treaty.
[Page 291]
List of her Majesty’s ships employed
in the suppression of the slave trade at Cape of Good Hope and
West Coast of Africa.
| Ship’s name. |
Guns |
Commanding officer’s name. |
Remarks. |
| Narcissus |
39 |
Captain J. G. Bickford |
Flag-ship. |
| Orestes |
21 |
Captain Att Gardner |
|
| Gorgon |
6 |
Commander J. E Wilson |
|
| Airtel |
7 |
Commander W. E. Chapman |
|
| Penguin |
5 |
Lieutenant J. G. G.
McHardy |
Tender to Narcissus. |
| Rattlesnake |
19 |
Captain Arthur P. Wilmot |
Commodore. |
| Brisk |
16 |
Captain John P. Luce |
|
| Zebra |
17 |
Commander A. H. Haskius |
|
| Rapid |
11 |
Commander E. J. Jago |
|
| Wrangler |
5 |
Commander Hendry Beamish |
|
| Ranger |
5 |
Commander H. R. Wratislaw |
|
| Torch |
5 |
Commander Fred. H. Smith |
|
| Espoir |
5 |
Commander Sholto Douglass |
|
| Philomel |
5 |
Commander Levison
Wildman. |
|
| Griffen |
5 |
Commander J. L Perry |
|
| Dart |
5 |
Commander F. W. Richards |
|
| Lee |
5 |
Commander Edwin J.
Symonds |
|
| Mullet |
5 |
Commander E. H. Simpson |
|
| Bloodhound |
3 |
Lieutenant John G. Stokes |
|
| Antelope |
5 |
Lieutenant E.
O’Dallingham |
|
| Investigator |
2 |
Lieutenant B. L. Lefroy |
|
| Wye |
2 |
Master Comm’g T.
G. Roberts |
|
List of her Majesty’s ships employed
in the suppression of the slave trade at North America and West
Indies.
| Ship’s name. |
Guns. |
Commanding officer’s name. |
Remarks. |
| Hero |
89 |
Captain A. P. Ryder |
|
| Nile |
78 |
Captain E. K. Barnard |
Flag-ship. |
| Orland |
46 |
Captain G. G. Randolph |
|
| Immortality |
35 |
Captain George Hancock |
|
| Ariadne |
26 |
Captain E. W. Vaunttat |
|
| Phæton |
39 |
Captain Edward Tatham |
|
| Challenge |
22 |
Captain J. T. Kennedy |
|
| Cadmus |
21 |
Captain John F. Ross |
(Acting.) |
| Jason |
21 |
Captain E. P. B. Van
Donop |
|
| Vesuvius |
6 |
Captain R. V. Hamilton |
|
| Desperate |
8 |
Captain R. V. Thrupp |
|
| Rinaldo |
17 |
Commander W. N. W. Hewitt |
|
| Greyhound |
17 |
Commander H. D. Hickley |
|
| Baracouta |
6 |
Commander C. T. Malcolm |
|
| Spiteful |
6 |
Commander W. E. T. Wilson |
|
| Styx |
6 |
Commander Hon. W. J. Ward |
|
| Medea |
6 |
Commander Darcy L Purton |
|
| Petrel |
11 |
Commander G. W. Watson |
|
| Landrail |
5 |
Commander T. H. Martin |
|
| Cygnet |
5 |
Commander W. S. De
Kautrow. |
(Acting.) |
| Steady |
5 |
Commander H. D. Grant |
|
| Glover |
5 |
Commander Hon. A. L.
Corry |
|
| Nimble |
5 |
|
Tender to Nile. |