Mr. Eustis to Mr. Adee.

No. 362.]

Sir: My telegrams of August 23 and 26 informed you that, in compliance with the Department’s telegraphic instructions of August 22, the second secretary of the embassy, Mr. N. B. Eustis, and our legal adviser, Mr. Alexander, had proceeded to Clairvaux, where Mr. Waller is confined, and had obtained from him a sworn statement of all the circumstances relating to his trial. This statement is herewith inclosed, and I trust you will find it covers all the points of the case you had in view.

The representatives of the embassy were given all desirable facilities to communicate with the prisoner, whose state of health was satisfactory. He is no longer subject to the Malagasy fever, but his constitution is feeble and the director of the prison has recommended his removal before next winter to a milder place than Clairvaux. In answer to a question addressed to him he stated that he had no complaint to make as to his treatment in his present place of confinement. He is placed on the invalid list, which enables him to get the best food furnished to prisoners. He has received all the letters addressed to him through this embassy, and is allowed to communicate with whom he likes through the same channel. The secretary informed him of the action of the Department with regard to the return of his family to the United States, and assured him that this embassy would take care of them.

In view of your telegraphic instructions received August 25, concerning the possible search of Mrs. Waller’s effects upon her arrival in France, I have asked, as a favor, that all facilities be granted her by the custom-house officers at Marseilles, and have also requested our consul at that port to use every effort to carry out your intention.

With copies of the telegrams above referred to, I inclose herewith copy and translation of a note from Mr. Hanotaux, dated August 26, stating that he has asked the minister of war to ascertain by telegraph from Madagascar when the Waller papers would reach Paris, and that General Zurlinden had sent a cable to that effect.

In my telegram of the 19th I stated that these papers were expected here at the end of the present month, and I find that such is still the opinion and hope entertained at the foreign office. But I have serious doubts in this respect. From all the information I have been able to gather it is impossible for me to determine exactly where these papers are.

Captain Campion, whose statement you mention in your Nos. 468 and 487, did send them to the admiral commanding, for transmission to the [Page 278] navy department at Paris, but it appears the admiral only forwarded the charges and sentence of the court, with certain correspondence with our consul and other parties. It is supposed that when, later on, he got the request to send these papers, he remained under the impression that the sentence and correspondence, which he had already forwarded and which had not yet reached Paris, were all that was required. I am assured that the long delays of which I have been complaining are caused by the difficulties attending the postal and telegraphic communications with Madagascar and by the above-mentioned misunderstanding.

I send a letter addressed to me by Mr. E. G. Woodford. I wrote to him that the State Department expressed its appreciation of his generous assistance to Waller’s family, and he authorized me to make whatever use of his letter I thought proper.

I have, etc.,

J. B. Eustis
.
[Inclosure 1 in No. 362—Translation.]

Mr. Hanotaux to Mr. Eustis.

Mr. Ambassador: As I had the honor of telling your excellency in the course of our last conversation, I had pointed out to the minister of war the interest I had in being informed as promptly as possible as to the date when the papers in the Waller case would reach Paris, and I had requested my colleague to ask for this information by telegraph of the commander of the expeditionary corps at Madagascar in case he should not be able to furnish it himself.

General Zurlinden has just made known to me that the documents in question had been kept in the archives of the naval division of the Indian Ocean, and that he had requested by cable the superior commanding officer at Majunga to ascertain from Rear-Admiral Bienaime at what date these papers had been sent.

Please accept, etc.,

G. Hanotaux
.
[Inclosure 2 in No. 362.]

Mr. Waller’s deposition.

John L. Waller, being duly and publicly sworn, doth depose and say:

I was born in New Madrid, Missouri, on the 12th of January, 1850. I am a citizen of the United States.

In the month of February, 1891, I was appointed consul of the United States at Tamatave, in Madagascar, and I continued in said office until the 26th of January, 1894. From that date I continued to reside in Madagascar, at Antananarivo, until 20th September, 1894. I then started to go home to America and went to Tamatave. I arrived in Tamatave about the 1st of October, 1894, and remained there until I was arrested, which was on March the 5th, 1895. I remained there until I had settled up my business.

I was arrested on March the 5th, 1895, by the French naval authorities, who had proclaimed martial law at Tamatave. I was charged with having communicated with the enemy to the detriment of the military and political situation of France.

The history of the whole matter is as follows:

On the 20th of January, 1895, the English mail steamer arrived at Tamatave, bringing me a letter from my wife. The ship arrived very early in the morning. I went to the post-office and received the letter from the post-office clerk. I understood that’ an order had been issued that all letters arriving should be given to the naval authorities of France. I had only heard this as a rumor. On opening the letter I found enclosed in it [one] from a young Hova friend of mine named Ratzmannia, whom I had engaged to work for me on my concession in Madagascar, as he spoke both his native tongue and French and English, and who was assisting my wife to collect some money owed to me. He stated, among other things, that I had promised before leaving [Page 279] Antananarivo, which was before hostilities had been declared by the French, that I had agreed that on my arrival in London or in America to send to him and his father and brother each one Colt’s revolver. He said he would be glad to send those revolvers at once; that as Paul Bray, my stepson, was in Mauritius he perhaps could secure them there. This part of the letter I cut out and destroyed it because I feared if the letter fell into the hands of the French or of others who did not understand the arrangement they might infer that I was acting in a hostile way to the French.

On the 20th of January, 1895, I wrote to my wife and the young Hova, but I dated the letter the 23rd, as the steamer was billed to sail on that day. The ship, however, sailed on the 20th, and I did not change the date. This letter was sent via Mauritius, inclosed in a letter to George E. Tessier, a merchant there. A few days after the departure of the steamer a friend of mine on the street—I don’t know his real name, but he is always called Koko and he speaks English and French—asked me how I liked the new order issued by the naval authorities in regard to the mailing of letters. I told him I knew of no order. He showed me a printed circular, printed in French and issued by the naval authorities of France. He translated this to me, and it was an order forbidding any mail to be sent to Antananarivo except through the French post at Tamatave. This was the first information I had of this order. I am unable to read French. The order was issued on the 18th instant. After hearing this I thought of the letter I had sent out on the 20th. I went to John Dublin’s, where I lived, and wrote two letters to John Tieber, in Mauritius, calling his attention to the fact that I had written those letters and requested him to call at the post-office and claim them and hold them for me. I wrote two letters because the first one was not satisfactory to me. I did not send these letters, as I had no opportunity, and they were seized by the authorities.

In the letter to my wife I stated that it was a Godsend that these had not fallen into the hands of the French, as I feared if they had the French would have shot Paul on account of the statement made about the revolvers. On the 7th and 8th of February I went down on the beach where the people were landing from a French ship that had just arrived. I was standing quietly among a large crowd, when Captain Levesot, of the military authorities, came to me and ordered me to leave the beach, although there were many police there. I heard nothing more until I was arrested on March 5th. On that day the police came and arrested me and seized my papers and correspondence. I was taken to the office of Captain Levesot, who stated to me by an interpreter that he had a very bad case against me, and that the best thing I could do was to confess the whole thing. He, having mistaken the name of Ratzmannia for Ramannia, the latter a former merchant of Tamatave, asked me where Ramannia’s letter was. I told him I had received no letter from Ramannia. He said it was false, and that I had received a letter from him. I found, on examination, the mistake the Captain was making as to the names. I was then turned over to the police at the military jail. About three days afterwards the prosecuting attorney came with his interpreter. He said he had come to make a preliminary examination. I then asked for counsel to assist me, which to that time had been denied.

My request was refused, and they commanded that I should tell all I knew about the case and my connection with it. The statements made to them are in French and signed by me. I was suffering from fever, and don’t remember what I said. I was torn to pieces on account of not having counsel. The prosecuting attorney told me that I could only have counsel after he had finished with me, and that then I could have whom I pleased, except my stepson Bray. This examination continued three hours that afternoon, and two days afterwards they came again and continued the examination for three hours more. During all this time I was under guard and without counsel. Three or four days after, they came to me and told me that they had taken Bray’s testimony and Mr. Poupard’s, which they then proceeded to read to me. Also, they read the testimony of Captain Levesot. I objected to this testimony having been taken without my having an opportunity to cross-examine the witnesses. This ended the matter until I appeared in court on March 20th. The court consisted of French naval officers. The following witnesses appeared and testified as follows:

John A. Poupard testified that he had reason to believe that I would have had him expelled from the country during the time I was consul. He knew nothing of these letters.

Bray said he knew me; was my step-son, and that he did not have the handling of my mail; that I attended to that myself. That he did not know Draper and Purdy.

Captain Levesot testified as to the circumstances under which he got the letters inclosed to Tessier. He had made up his mind that they were criminal and that then he ordered my arrest.

There was another witness, whose name I don’t remember, who testified that he did not know Purdy and Draper, although he had lived in the country for several months, and that he did not know me except by reputation.

The two letters were not read in open court. In one of my letters to my wife [Page 280] before my arrest I mentioned that I had entered into an arrangement with Purdy and Draper by which they were to use their best efforts with the French authorities at Antananarivo to have them register at least 40 square miles of my concession, and that I handed them $25, with an arrangement to give them $75 more when the work was done, if they succeeded. Later on there were several miners at Tamatave, one of whom told me that these men were not my friends; that they hated and had already robbed me of $25, and had the papers for $75 more; that the French would give them a damned sight more to assist them than I could afford to give them. This letter was not in evidence against me.

In my letter to my wife of the 23rd, which was produced against me, I again warned her of these men, speaking of them as P. and D. These men were not present at my trial, and the only mention of them there was whether or not the witnesses knew them.

And though I asked for counsel and time to arrange my defense, trying to get these men and Tessier as witnesses, I was refused.

I was refused a revision of my case, and was sentenced to twenty years’ imprisonment.

John L. Waller.


[seal.]
Newton B. Eustis,
Secretary U. S. Embassy, Paris, France
.
[Inclosure 3 in No. 362.]

Mr. Woodford to Mr. Eustis.

Sir: I have the honor to inform you that as I shall only be in London about a month I thought it might be of service to you to place at your disposal what I know about the Waller case, as there may be some facts which I overlooked during our hurried interview of the 15th instant.

I arrived at Tamatave on March 11 by the French mail boat, and was at once notified that Mr. Waller had been placed under arrest by the French authorities under a charge of having communicated with the Hovas. Among the correspondence of Waller’s upon which the charge had been made, it appeared that an article, or rather interview of my own, reported by the New York Sun of October 7, 1894, had been also captured. The French authorities made every possible effort to prevent my landing, but upon application to the American consul I proceeded on shore, and for purposes of personal safety and a desire to avoid any entanglement, I resided at the consulate during my enforced stay until April 4.

It being my intention to proceed to the capital of Madagascar on my private business, the high-handed action of the French authorities in their treatment of Waller had for me a keen personal interest, more especially as rumors were about that he was to be shot, and during the first week of my arrival I gave considerable thought to the legal position assumed by the French and to Waller’s position as an American citizen. Mr. Wetter, the acting consul, gave me access to the intercepted correspondence upon which the charge was based, and I gave them a number of days’ careful consideration. The letters consisted of communications to his wife, who, at the time, was at the capital, and consisting in a great measure of private matters, such as would be expected from the circumstances that he was in financial embarrassments. Considerable portion of the letters contained a most graphic description of the terrible outrages and excesses committed by the French troops at their occupation.

I formed the opinion at the time that there was absolutely nothing in any of these letters, either written by himself or his Hova friends, that gave the slightest shadow of excuse for the action of the French military authorities. Waller was absolutely defenseless, neither was there any possibility of communicating with the capital, and the impression that I formed at the time was that it would have been absolutely useless on my part to advance the funds for legal assistance, as I was firmly of the opinion that he was condemned in advance. I had known Waller during my former visit to Madagascar in 1891, and was aware that his action at that time in applying for his exequatur direct to the Queen had given considerable umbrage to the French, and I was also well aware that a grant by the Hovas to him of a valuable land concession in the south had done more to bring about the present French invasion than any other circumstances. His color acted also to his disadvantage.

His trial took place on Monday, March 18, and on the documentary evidence solely he was convicted and sentenced to twenty years’ imprisonment. I visited Waller in jail on the 19th, and was very favorably impressed by his conversation and his [Page 281] general demeanor. About this time his stepson, Paul Bray, received notification that he was to be exiled to Zanzibar. I gave him all the advice and assistance I could, having due regard to my own dangerous and peculiar position, and he and his father left on the French steamer Djemnah on Monday, March 25. I managed to leave Tamatave for a port 70 miles to the south on April 4, and arrived at Antananarivo on the 16th of April. The following day I met Mrs. Waller, whom I found to be in destitute circumstances and in ignorance of her husband and son’s fate. She at the time was the guest of a Hova gentleman, and was naturally in a great state of anxiety. She had four children dependent upon her; three daughters of 22, 16, and 8 years, respectively, and one son of 11, and I made provision for their temporary relief during my stay. Mrs. Waller gave me access to all her letters and documents, and I also met and examined the Hovas who had written to Waller, and obtained from them sworn statements of their connection with Waller. It was quite apparent to me from the first examinations and interviews that I made that Waller had been outrageously treated. In no way had he acted otherwise than in accordance with his rights as a man and his treaty rights as an American citizen.

About the time that I concluded my business with the Hova Government and was preparing to return to Europe, I considered that it was nothing less than my duty, as the only American in the capital, to remove them from a place where it was impossible for them to earn a subsistence and where there was a possibility of their being subjected to outrage or death in the possible event of the French filibustering expedition sacking the capital, and I therefore provided that Mrs. Waller should be taken to the coast, and from there sent to the nearest port where she could obtain cable communication and an opportunity to obtain redress, together with the release of her husband, she being practically the only person able to give the necessary details.

Escape from Madagascar at this time was most uncertain, as it was not known what the movements of steamers or vessels were, or that the French might not at any moment blockade the Madagascar coast, thus entailing months of delay and the terrible risks attendant upon a residence in the deadly swamps that lie near the coast. I succeeded on Tuesday, June 11, in placing them on board the steamer Pembroke Castle at a port called Vatomandry, and must here bear tribute to her courage and her children’s in crossing the bar with me during a terrible surf, which discouraged a great number of intending passengers.

On the 12th instant I arrived in the port of Tamatave, where we lay at anchor for seven hours. Owing to the formalities of the French authorities and a strong wind which was blowing, I found it impossible to communicate with the shore, but found much to my satisfaction that the gunboat Castine was at anchor. I was somewhat apprehensive that the French authorities might endeavor to remove me forcibly from the vessel or otherwise delay or inconvenience me, as they had acted in a very high-handed manner in the previous war with a missionary, Shaw. At a late period in the day the captain of the Castine, accompanied by the consul, came on board and informed me that if I went on shore I would either be killed or arrested. As I had not the faintest intention of subjecting myself to any such possibilities, the advice was needless.

I laid the facts of the matter before the captain of the Castine and the consul at a special interview on board, and requested their advice and assistance as to what I had best do with Mrs. Waller and her family, pointing out to them that the call upon my ready cash had been unexpected, and that in a measure I had thought that under the circumstances Mrs. Waller and family might have been transferred to the Castine, and that although their passages were paid to Mauritius, and I had still funds on hand, it was rather a difficult job for me to drag five helpless people about with me. The captain of the Castine informed me that he had no instructions; that he would be a short time on the Madagascar coast, and would then cruise to South America. He kindly gave me $10 for Mrs. Waller, and I shortly afterwards sailed and arrived at Port Louis on Friday, June 14, with about sufficient funds to land them and take them to a hotel. I was very ill after my arrival with continuous attacks of fever, but, however, I arranged for them at the time and during the four weeks I remained in the island waiting for a steamer.

As it was impossible for me to sail direct by any of the French boats, I was compelled to return to Europe via Colombo and Marseilles. I left Mrs. Waller all I could, and was very glad, on my arrival in Paris, to learn that the Government had sent for her, and that she was now on her way to the United States.

I may mention that during the time I was in Tamatave, prior to Waller’s conviction, Mr. Wetter did everything that a man could to assist Waller, and, as far as he and I could judge, the case was unique, and under the circumstances could only be referred to Washington for consideration by the State Department. Mr. Wetter was at considerable private expense over matters not provided for in the consular regulations—I mean cash disbursements—and prepared a complete report with copies of all the documents in connection with the matter. He read me portions of this report, and [Page 282] I accompanied him when they were mailed in time to catch the same steamer upon which Waller and Bray sailed. Of course, during the whole time that I was in the interior of Madagascar I was cut off from all news of the outer world, and neither at Port Louis nor Colombo could I obtain any American papers, and even up to the present I have had no time to make myself acquainted with what has transpired during the past five months. I wish you, therefore, to understand that I am endeavoring to give you a recital of the facts that occurred to my knowledge, uninfluenced by anything but a sincere desire to see justice done to an American citizen, and in the hope and confidence that the arrogant acts of the French in Madagascar will receive the consideration of the State Department.

I have personally invested a considerable amount of money in Madagascar enterprises, to find myself harassed and subject to heavy loss by this nation.

Apart from any business considerations which I may have in the island of Madagascar, I shall be pleased at any time to do all that lays within my power to obtain redress for this unfortunate man and his family, and to obtain for American citizens trading abroad security from the aggressions to which they are at present being subjected.

I have, etc.,

E. G. Woodford
.