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enabled him to contribute to the good relations between the country of his birth and that of his adoption. In 1852 he gave the first effective impulse "to the foundation on a broad basis of the Boston public library by a gift of $50,000, which he afterward more than doubled by the purchase and donation of books." The reading room in the new Boston public library, as was that in the old, is called Bates Hall, in memory of Joshua Bates. There are also two portraits of him in the library, one of which hangs in the trustees' room. It may be remarked that Mr. Bates's only child, a daughter, was the wife of M. Van de Weyer, the Belgian minister in London, who was suggested by the British commissioner as a desirable person for umpire.

As umpire, Mr. Bates, if possible, more than fulfilled the expectations formed of him, and materially contributed to the happy results of the commission. On many of the most important and delicate questions before the board it became his duty to give the final decision. Though this circumstance rendered his labors arduous and his responsibility great, he decided all questions that came before him with promptitude, and with a sound, impartial, independent judgment, and, although provision was made by the convention for the compensation of the umpire, he declined to receive for his services any remuneration whatever.

On the part of the United States the comThe Commissioners. missioner was Nathaniel G. Upham, of New Hampshire, a neighbor of President Pierce, by whom he was appointed, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, on March 23, 1853. Mr. Upham was a native of New Hampshire, having been born at Deerfield on January 8, 1801; he died at Concord in 1869. A graduate of Dartmouth College, he adopted the profession of the law, and was for some years a judge of the supreme court of New Hampshire. Besides acting as commissioner under the present convention, he was umpire of the commission under the treaty between the United States and New Granada of September 10, 1857.

On the part of Great Britain the commissioner was Edmund Hornby, who was appointed by the Queen on August 26, 1853.

A Memorial of Joshua Bates from the City of Boston: Boston, 1865. 2 Handbook of the New Public Library in Boston, 73.

Mr. Hornby was trained to the law and admitted as a barrister. In 1855, after his service under the present convention, he was appointed a commissioner on behalf of England to control the expenditure of the Turkish loan. He also became judicial assessor to the British consulate-general at Constantinople. During the Crimean war he was sole arbitrator in all questions arising between the British Government and the contractors for supplies to the army in the East. From 1857 to 1864 he was judge of the supreme consular court of the Levant at Constantinople. In 1862 he was knighted, and in 1865 he became judge of the British supreme court of China and Japan. He was retired on a pension in 1876, and has lately died. His last published work was a pamphlet containing an interesting plan for an international court of arbitration.' The object of the tribunal, as described by the author, would be not only to decide particular disputes, but also to build up the system of international law. In this aspect the tribunal would form a college as well as a court. For the purpose of constituting it, nations would be divided into three classes, according to their respective resources. Each nation would be invited to nominate, for a period of at least ten years, a member, not necessarily of its own nationality and not as its representative, but as a person possessing proper qualifications for membership. It would be left open to nations of the second and third classes to nominate or not while adhering to the scheme. The locality of the tribunal should be permanent, and on quasineutral ground, such as Switzerland. Its site should be declared extraterritorial, and its members and staff invested with ambassadorial privileges. The members should have the title of senators or of jurisconsults, preferably the former, and rank next to sovereign rulers; and they should choose from their number a president annually, by secret ballot, the person so chosen to be eligible for reelection by a twothirds vote. They should be absolved from allegiance to any earthly power, and forbidden to accept during life any title, rank, decoration, or place from any one. For at least nine months in each year they should reside at or near the seat of the tribunal; their salaries should not be less than £10,000 a year, and, if not renominated, they should receive a retiring

'An International Tribunal, by Sir Edmund Hornby: London, 1895. 5627-26

pension of £3,000. The tribunal should also have a chief secretary, appointed for life, but removable by a two-thirds vote of the senators. This secretary would have charge of the general staff; his salary should be £5,000 and his retiring pension £2,500. All expenses of the tribunal, including the cost of suitable buildings, should be paid out of a common fund, to which each first class power should contribute the same amount, and the second and third class powers each a half and a third as much, respectively. To the tribunal so created and maintained would be referred "any and every question between the adhering powers on every failure by ordinary diplomatic effort to effect a settlement." When necessary, a committee of the senators, not including the nominees of the parties interested, might establish a modus vivendi pending a final decision. This decision should represent the absolutely free judgment of each senator, and in order to avoid the exercise of personal influence by one arbitrator over another in the rendition of final judg ments, each senator should, after the discussions were ended, himself prepare a draft judgment which would be deposited in a common receptacle, like the Lion's Mouth at Venice, from which it would be taken and printed anonymously. Each senator, after he had been furnished with printed copies of all the draft judgments, would then settle and prepare his own final judgment, which would be deposited and printed in the same manner as the draft. The majority would become the judgment of the tribunal. The publication of the several judgments, unsigned or signed, would be within the control of the tribunal. If, in case each adhering nation should nominate a member, the number of senators should become very large, a tribunal of first instance might in each case be formed of seven members, two of whom should be of the nationality of the disputants, the judgment of such tribunal to be subject to the revision of the rest of the senators. Such was Sir Edmund Hornby's "broad outline of an international court or college for the determination of disputes between nations, and for the gradual development of a system of international law."

The commissioners appointed as secretary or clerk Nathaniel L. Upham.

The Agents.

The convention provided that the commissioners should, if required, hear "one person on each side, on behalf of each government, as counsel or agent for such government, on each and every

separate claim;" and each government was authorized "to name one person to attend the commissioners as agent on its behalf, to present and support claims on its behalf, and to answer claims made upon it, and to represent it generally in all matters connected with the investigation and decision thereof." To discharge this duty on the part of the United States President Pierce, on the 19th of April, 1853, appointed John Addison Thomas, of New York.'

Mr. Thomas, who was born in Tennessee in 1811, graduated at West Point, where he was successively an assistant instructor in infantry tactics, assistant professor of geography, history, and ethics, and commandant. In 1846 he resigned a captaincy in the Army to practice law in New York City. Later in the same year, the Mexican war having broken out, he became colonel of the Fourth New York Regiment; but it was not mustered into service. After serving as agent under the present convention, he became Assistant Secretary of State of the United States, a post which he held till April 4, 1857.

As agent on the part of Great Britain, the Queen appointed James Hannen, whose commission bore date November 16, 1853, and whose recent death has deprived the English bench of one of its most illustrious members.

His commission was as follows:

"Franklin Pierce, President of the United States of America, to all who shall see these presents, greeting:

"Know ye, that reposing special trust and confidence in the integrity and ability of John A. Thomas, of New York, I do appoint him to be agent of the United States under the convention with her Britannic Majesty of February 8, 1853, on the subject of claims, and do authorize and empower him to execute and fulfil the duties of that office according to law.

"And to have and to hold the said office with all the powers, privileges, and emoluments thereunto of right appertaining unto him, the said John A. Thomas, during the pleasure of the President of the United States.

"In testimony whereof I have caused these letters to be made patent and the seal of the United States to be hereunto affixed.

"Given under my hand, at the City of Washington, the nineteenth day of April, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fiftythree, and of the independence of the United States of America the seventyseventh. "FRANKLIN PIERCE,

"By the President:

"WILLIAM L. MARCY,

"Secretary of State."

(S. Ex. Doc. 103, 31 Cong. 1 sess. 19.)

Private Counsel.

It is proper here to state that in various cases the commissioners heard private counsel for claimants, such counsel being introduced to the board by the agent of the government of which the claim ant was a citizen. Among the counsel who so appeared were Messrs. Cairns, Reverdy Johnson, J. C. Bancroft Davis, and Rolt, Q. C.

Organization of Commission.

The office of the commission was established at 9 Wellington Chambers, Lancaster Place, Waterloo Bridge, London. Here the commissioners, on September 15, 1853, held their first formal meeting. At this meeting they exchanged their commissions and, after subscribing the declaration required by the convention' and deliberating on the question of an umpire, they severally addressed to their respective governments a communication, stating the time and place of the meeting and requesting that notice be given to claimants of the pendency of the commission. At a subsequent session of the board it was determined that meetings would be held daily from 12 to 3 o'clock until otherwise ordered. Rules also were adopted for the regulation of business and the government of procedure.

pire and Commis

sioners.

Several cases were partially heard before Cooperation of Um- the umpire was selected. Subsequently, when certain cases were finally heard and the commissioners were unable to agree, the umpire attended and the cases were argued before him. In many cases, however, the hearing was held by the commissioners in the first

"We, the undersigned commissioners, appointed in pursuance of a convention for the adjustment of certain claims of citizens of the United States on the British government, and of British subjects on the government of the United States, concluded at London the eighth day of February, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-three, do severally and solemnly declare that we will impartially and carefully examine and decide, to the best of our judgment and according to justice and equity, without fear, favor, or affection to our countries, upon all such claims as shall be laid before us on the part of the governments of the United States and of her Britannic Majesty respectively.

"In witness whereof we have, this fifteenth day of September, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-three, made and subscribed this our solemn declaration.

"NATHANIEL G. UPHAM, "Commissioner on the part of the United States.

"EDMUND HORNBY,

"Commissioner on the part of her Majesty."

(S. Ex. Doc. 103, 34 Cong. 1 sess. 14.)

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