125.0084/39

The Secretary of State to the Vice Consul at Aden ( Park )

Sir: The Department duly received Mr. Totten’s despatch No. 5 of June 17 last,6 transmitting a sealed envelope containing two letters addressed to the President by His Imperial Highness, Ras Taffari Makonnen, Prince Regent of the Empire and Heir to the Throne of Ethiopia. One of these letters concerned two elephant tusks which the Prince sent as a personal gift to the President,6 and the other related to the establishment of a diplomatic mission at Addis Ababa.7

The Department now encloses the President’s replies to the communications from the Prince, together with office copies thereof, as well as copies for the files of the Consulate.

The office copies should be transmitted to the appropriate office of the Ethiopian Government and the original letters transmitted to their destination in the manner that may be most agreeable to His Imperial Highness.

I am [etc.]

For the Secretary of State:
J. Butler Wright
[Enclosure]

President Coolidge to Ras Tafari Makonnen, Prince Regent of Ethiopia

Great and Good Friend: It affords me great pleasure to learn from Your Highness’s letter of May 24, 1926, that my special emissary [Page 591] to Your Highness, Mr. Ralph James Totten, was so fortunate and so diligent in the performance of his duties as to gain your friendly support and esteem.

With respect to the subject of Mr. Totten’s mission, i. e. the question of the reappointment near the Government of Ethiopia of an official representative of the United States, I am pleased to inform Your Highness that, upon the receipt of Mr. Totten’s account of his visit to Your Highness’s capital and on the recommendation of my Secretary of State, I proposed to the Congress of the United States the appropriation of funds for the salary of a Minister Plenipotentiary and Envoy Extraordinary to Ethiopia to be available as from July first, 1927, the beginning of this Government’s next fiscal year. Therefore, should this proposal be favorably acted upon by the Congress, it is my intention to take the necessary further steps in this matter.

In informing Your Highness regarding these matters, I desire again to assure you of my own good wishes and of my sincere desire to promote, in so far as I may be able, the cordial understanding now happily existing between our two governments and peoples.

Your Good Friend,

Calvin Coolidge

By the President:
Joseph C. Grew,
Acting Secretary of State.


  1. Not printed.
  2. Not printed.
  3. Letter of May 24, 1926, quoted in part on page 587.