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PRESIDENT MARIBEAU LAMAR

THE SECOND ELECTED PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF TEXAS
JOURNALS OF THE FOURTH CONGRESS OF THE REPUBLIC OF TEXAS
1839-1840 Vol.1


President Maribeau Lamar’s Annual Message to Congress   Page 15

“…The white man and the red man cannot dwell in harmony together. Nature forbids it.
 They are separated by the strongest possible antipathies, by color, by habits, by modes of thinking, and 
indeed by all the causes which engender hatred, and engender strife , the inevitable consequences of 
juxtaposition.  Knowing these things, I experience no difficulty in deciding on the proper policy to be pursued 
toward them. It is to push a vigorous war against them; pursuing them to their hiding places without mitigation or 
compassion, until they shall be made to feel that flight from our borders without the hope of return, is preferable 
to the scourges of war.”


President Maribeau Lamar’s Inaugural Address to Congress
The Papers of Mirabeau Buonaparte Lamar


“…an extermination war upon their warriors; which will admit of no compromise and have no termination except 
in their total extinction or total expulsion.”

Col. H. Mcleod’s  letter of December 1, 1838 to Lamar: “…Let us drive these wild Indians off, and  establish  a  
line of block houses, and we have done all we can now--If the U States will not remove their own Indians, to wit, 
Cherokees, Shawnees, Delawares,  Kickapoos ,  Choctaws, Alabamas, & Coshattes, to say nothing of these 
Caddoes who they have literally ordered & driven into our territory--I say if the U.S. is faithless enough to 
refuse to remove them We must await a more auspicious moment than the present, to exterminate them--” (The 
Lamar Papers Pg. 309)

In Col. H. Mcleod’s  October 25, 1838 letter to Lamar , he lays out the plan for genocide, “…General Rusk 
proposes to concentrate the effective force of the Eastern Section of the Country, upon the Indian territory , 
and exterminate the race--” (The Lamar Papers Pg. 270)


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