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Thomas Jefferson and the Effort to Establish Commercial Relations between the United States of America and the Habsburg Empire in the 1780s There was a mutual initiation on the part of the United States of America and the Habsburg Empire to conclude a treaty of commerce in the 1780s. Eventually, this attempt proved to be unsuccessful. In this paper I wish to raise two questions: 1. What were the reasons of this failure? How could it happen that the two countries did not conclude a commercial treaty despite the good intentions of both parties involved? 2. What kind of role did Thomas Jefferson and his ideas of political economy play during the negotiations? Did his ideas and political tactics have any role in the failure of the negotiations? This topic could interest the Hungarian scholarly community and the wider audience for several reasons. Firstly, Hungary was part of the Habsburg Empire at that time. It means that this was also one of the first efforts to establish commercial relations between the United States and Hungary. Secondly, this attempt is practically unknown in Hungary but it is not widely known in the United States either. The first effort to establish diplomatic and commercial relations between the two states was made by the Second Continental Congress as early as 1777 with the appointment of William Lee the commissioner of Congress to the courts of Berlin and Vienna. This attempt proved to be unsuccessful, but here and now I do not want to go, into the details of this mission since I have published it earlier. After the failure of William Lee’s effort, the accession of Joseph II to the throne of the Habsburg Empire in 1780 effected a change in the relationship of the two countries. Joseph wanted to enhance the economic competitiveness of his empire. In order to gain this end he intended to establish new commercial relations and the United States seemed to be an adequate partner. The Americans on their part were ready to react to the initiation of Joseph since they wanted to reorganize their external trade dominated by Britain before the American Revolution. Contemporary American commercial policy was heavily influenced by Thomas Jefferson, who was a leading member of the Confederation Congress in 1783-1784, and who represented the United States in Paris between 1784 and 1789. Commercial policy was an integral part of Jefferson’s political thought. He wanted to preserve the United States as the republic of freeholders. According to him, in contrast to the wage-workers employed in the industrial sector, freeholder farmers were the only group in society which could maintain its political and economic independence, since “Corruption of morals in the mass of cultivators is a phenomenon of which no age nor nation has furnished an example”. (Peterson, 290) Jefferson thought that the enormous land resources of the American West allowed the United States to remain the democracy of republican cultivators for centuries to come. But the surplus of agricultural products produced by the virtuous American farmers must be exported to other, mainly European countries, in order to import the industrial products needed by Americans in exchange for them. In this way, the well functioning system of commercial relations was a necessary prerequisite of the maintenance of republican political order, and formed an integral part of Jefferson’s political thought. In theory, Jefferson supported free-trade policy based on mutual advantages. It means that he wanted to break with mercantilist economic policy pursued by contemporary European powers. But he also realized that European powers would not be ready to respect the freetrade policy of the young American republic. He came to the conclusion that under such circumstances the adaptation of the formula of most favored nations could be an acceptable solution. The application of this formula meant that if the United States wanted to conclude a commercial treaty with a European power, the latter had to grant the same privileges for the United States it had already granted to other powers in the case of which the formula of the most favored nation had already been applied. Jefferson was the member of the committee of three elected by the Confederation Congress to compose a report regarding the commercial relations of the United States. The proposal of the committee submitted on December 20, 1783 reflected the views of Jefferson and was based on the formula of the most favored nations. Extensive commercial relations with the Caribbean possessions of different European powers were very important from the point of view of the economy of the thirteen mainland colonies before the American Revolution and the leaders of the United States wanted to preserve this crucial trade. But they were also well aware of the fact that European powers would not allow free trade policy regarding their colonies in the Caribbean. This is the reason why the report of the committee of three made some concessions regarding this important relation. According to the report the commercial treaties of the United States should form a coherent system based on the formula of the most favored nations, but it is also clear from it that the committee and Thomas Jefferson favored the conclusion of commercial treaties with European powers possessing colonies on the American continent, and they were ready to compromise regarding this fundamental relation. This conviction of Jefferson proved to be crucial from the point of view of the fate of the proposed commercial treaty with the Habsburg Empire. The report of the committee of three enumerated sixteen European states with which the United States should conclude treaties of amity and commerce, and we can find the name of the “court of Vienna” on this list. Jefferson and his fellow committee members proposed the appointment of a special committee to pursue the negotiations with the enumerated European powers, and this committee would also have the right to sign the treaties on condition that the Confederation Congress would have the right to ratify them. The mandate of the special committee would have expired after two years and the committee of three proposed John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and John Jay as the members of it. This instruction also proved to be very important from the point of view of the commercial treaty with the Habsburg Empire, since the expiration of the mandate of the committee played a crucial role in the fiasco of it. The Confederation Congress adopted the proposal of the committee of three on May 7, 1784 with the exception of one point: instead of John Jay Congress elected Thomas Jefferson the third member of the special committee to conclude treaties of amity and commerce with European states. Meanwhile, the leaders of the Habsburg Empire also decided to initiate negotiations concerning the conclusion of a treaty of commerce with the Habsburg Empire. The empire had a seaside on the Adriatic Sea and the territory of present day Belgium also belonged to the empire at that time. Joseph thought that the new American state was also in a great need of new commercial partners to substitute Britain. Consequently, he initiated the conclusion of a treaty of commerce with the United States and he also urged the establishment of real commercial relations between the two states. Accordingly, Joseph II informed Count Mercy, his minister to the French Court that he considers commerce with the Americans extremely important on February 18, 1783. Joseph also indicated that he would welcome an American overture to establish diplomatic relations. It is clear that the initiation came from the Austrian side this time, but the diplomats of the Habsburg Empire wanted to avoid the impression that the Viennese court made the first step. According to contemporary European diplomatic etiquette the Emperor of Germany was considered to be the most prestigious monarch on the continent, the only emperor besides the tsar of Russia. Consequently, the Habsburg diplomats wanted to suggest that the first official step should be taken by the Americans. Nevertheless, by the summer of 1783 it became clear for the American diplomats in Europe that there was a definite will on the part of Joseph II to conclude a commercial treaty with the United States. Count Mercy the ambassador of the Habsburg Empire in Paris visited John Adams in his quarters on July 3. As Adams put it in his letter to Robert R. Livingston, who was the secretary of foreign affairs of the Confederation Congress, “we run over a variety of subjects, particularly the commerce which might take place between the United States and Germany by the way of Trieste and Fyume and the Austrian Netherlands”. But not Adams was the only American diplomat who informed Congress about the intentions of Joseph II. Benjamin Franklin also sent a letter to Livingston. He informed him that the emperor of Germany was ready to conclude a commercial treaty with the United States, if Congress would propose such a treaty. On the basis of the information provided by Franklin and Adams the Confederation Congress decided to make the official initiation the Viennese government wanted them to do. On October 29, 1783 Congress informed the ministers plenipotentiary of the United States of America at the court of Versailles that “You are instructed and authorized to announce to his Imperial Majesty the Emperor of Germany, or to his ministers, the high sense which the United States in Congress assembled entertains of his exalted character and eminent virtues, and their earnest desire to cultivate his friendship, and to enter into a treaty of amity and commerce for the mutual advantage of the subjects of his Imperial Majesty, and the citizens of these United States”. Franklin informed Count Mercy about the above mentioned decision of the Confederation Congress only on July 30, 1784, almost a year later. As he explained to the Austrian diplomat “the appointing and instructing commissioners for treaties of commerce with the powers of Europe generally, has by various circumstances been long delayed, but is now done, and I have just received advice that Mr. Jefferson late Governor of Virginia, commissioned with Mr. Adams our minister in Holland, and myself for that service”. Mercy replied to the letter of Franklin on the very same day. He agreed to transmit the letter of the Congress without delay to his court what he did on August 1, 1784. He wrote to his government about the intent of Congress to conclude a treaty of amity and commerce with the Habsburg Empire, and he told them that the American commissioners will arrive for this purpose in Paris by the end of August. He asked chancellor Kaunitz to instruct him what he should do. The chancellor answered the letter of Mercy in September. He informed the ambassador that the conclusion of a treaty of amity and commerce also depended on the opinion of the provincial governments, especially on the opinion of the government of the Austrian Netherlands. Nevertheless, he instructed the government of the later province to contact Mercy in Paris for this purpose. Kaunitz told Mercy that the Viennese government was open to every arrangement which could lead to the development of commerce between the two states. Mercy communicated the response of his court to Franklin on September 28, 1784. He informed the Doctor that “I have the honor to communicate to you that his Majesty the Emperor has agreed to the said proposition, and that he has directed the government general of the Low Countries to adopt measures to put it in execution. When the particulars respecting this matter shall be sent me I shall instantly communicate them”. At first sight everything seemed to be all right. The two parties expressed their definite will to conclude a treaty of amity and commerce with each other and they appointed the negotiators. Nevertheless, the two states never concluded a treaty in the 1780s. In the second part of my presentation I will try to explain why. At this stage of the story Thomas Jefferson became the major player. As it was mentioned before Jefferson was elected as one of the members of the committee to negotiate commercial treaties on May 7, 1784. He arrived in Paris on August 6, 1784, and by 1785 he became the substitution for Benjamin Franklin as the minister plenipotentiary of the United States at the Court of Versailles. Jefferson received a very interesting letter from an old friend from Vienna in September 1785. Actually this old friend was the only twenty-eight years old. Marquis Lafayette who had the opportunity to meet Joseph II and Chancellor Kaunitz in Vienna. He wrote to Jefferson that on the basis of his conversation with the latter “I am apt to think he may order his ambassadors to talk with you or Mr. Adams”. The reaction of Jefferson to this letter is very important from our point of view. He sent a copy of the letter of Lafayette to John Adams in London on September 24, 1785, but he made a very interesting comment to it: “In the present unsettled state of American commerce, I (want to) avoid all further treaties except with American powers. If Count Merci therefore does not propose the subject to me, I shall not to him, nor do more than decency requires if he does propose it”. It is clear from this excerpt that Jefferson did not want to initiate or continue the negotiations with the Austrian ambassador. It is interesting because their instructions definitely instructed them to negotiate a treaty with the Viennese court. We have to pose the question, why Jefferson started to pursue such a dilatory tactics? Why did he want to avoid the conclusion of a commercial treaty with the Habsburg Empire? We can find the answer to this question in the definite change that is clearly visible in the political economic thought of Jefferson. Due to the mercantilist economic policy of the European powers the American initiation to conclude commercial treaties on the basis of free trade or the formula of the most favored nations proved to be unsuccessful on the whole. Congress enumerated sixteen European countries as possible commercial partners of the United States, but by the fall of 1785 the American commissioners could conclude a single treaty with Prussia. This failure forced Jefferson to reconsider his ideas regarding the commercial treaties with European countries. By this time he thought that the commercial treaties of the United States should form an integral system in which no European countries or territories ruled by European powers could possess special privileges. Now, Jefferson started to argue that the United States should grant special privileges to those European countries the markets of which are crucial from the point of view of American commerce. As I have mentioned before, the Caribbean possessions of such European powers as Britain, France, the Netherlands or Spain played very important role in American export trade before the American Revolution, and the Confederation Congress allowed the American commissioners to make concessions regarding this crucial relation. Jefferson clearly strengthened this policy and he started to prefer the conclusion of commercial treaties with European countries with possessions on the American continent. And during these negotiations he was ready to adapt to the European laws of game and to grant mutual privileges to the parties involved in the negotiations. According to Jefferson European countries would have access to the ports of the United States only on condition if they would open their possessions in the New World for American shipping. He wanted to find a solution to the post revolutionary crises of American trade and he also intended to make a breakthrough regarding the conclusion of commercial treaties. From this point of view, the conclusion of Commercial treaties with European countries with American colonies seemed to be much more preferable for Jefferson than a treaty with the Habsburg Empire which did not have possessions in the New World and the commerce of which with the United States was negligible. By every indication Lafayette’s visit in the capital of the Habsburg Empire had a definite impact on the decision makers in Vienna. On January 12, 1786 Count Mercy took the step Jefferson wanted to avoid or at least wanted to postpone: he proposed the subject of the commercial treaty to the American ambassador. As it is clear from a letter of Jefferson to John Adams the Austrians were still waiting for the reply of the Americans to the letter of Mercy to Franklin on September 28, 1784. Jefferson told Mercy that “I knew well that Doctor Franklin had written as he mentioned, but that this was the first mention I had ever heard made of any answer to the letter, that on the contrary we had always supposed it was unanswered and had therefore expected the next step from him.” As it is clear from another letter of Jefferson to John Adams Jefferson simply did not tell the truth. Both Americans were well aware of the answer of Mercy. As Jefferson put it “you remember as well as myself wherein Count Mercy informed us the Emperor was disposed to enter into commercial arrangements with us and that he would give orders to the government of the Austrian Netherlands to take the necessary measures”. But it is also true on the other hand that at the end of his reply Mercy added that “when the particulars respecting this matter shall be sent me I shall instantly communicate them”. This sentence really indicates that the next communication should have come from the Austrian side. The situation was a clear deadlock: the Americans could suppose with good reason that the next step should be taken by the other side. But it is also true, that according to the new dilatory tactics of Jefferson they did not want to make any initiation. On their part the Austrians thought that the next step should be taken by the Americans, and they did not hurry to give the necessary orders to the government of the Austrian Netherlands. Mercy was still waiting for his authorization regarding the hereditary provinces of the Habsburg Empire, when Jefferson left for London to visit John Adams at the end of February 1786. Jefferson’s visit of England is most well-known for his tour of famous English gardens, but one of the official aims of it was the conclusion of a treaty with Portugal, and he considered treaties with powers with American dominions more important. His departure for London was another proof of his dilatory tactics and of the fact that he considered the conclusion of a commercial treaty with the Habsburg Empire of secondary importance. Jefferson left London on April 26, 1786, but while he was in England Mercy had received his full powers to negotiate a commercial treaty. Everything seemed to be all right again. Now, the only problem was that the commission of the American diplomats to conclude commercial treaties with European powers was close to expiration. Congress declared in May 1784 that “such commission be in force for a term not exceeding two years”. Mercy approached Jefferson with his full powers at the beginning of May and the commission of the American diplomats officially expired a few days later on May 12, 1786. Jefferson informed the Imperial ambassador about it, but Mercy did not despair. According to Jefferson he supposed “Congress would have no objections to renew them, proposed that I should write to them on the subject, and in the mean time desired our project and observed that we might be proceeding to arrange the treaty, so as that it should be ready for signature on the arrival of our powers.” But Congress did not judge it proper to renew the commission of Jefferson and his fellow commissioners. The reasons of it are clear from the letters of John Jay who was the secretary of foreign affairs of the Confederation Congress. As Jay explained to Jefferson in his letter of August 18, 1786 “It has happened from various circumstances that several reports on foreign affairs still lay before Congress undecided upon. The want of an adequate representation for long intervals, and the multiplicity of business which pressed upon them when that was not the case, has occasioned delays and omissions which however unavoidable are much to be regretted”. Jay also added that “I have advised Congress to renew your commission as to certain powers, our treasury is ill supplied, some states pay nothing and others very little… The people generally uneasy in a certain degree, but without seeming to discern the true cause”. Jay also informed Jefferson about his opinion about the “true cause” of problems and difficulties: “I have long thought and become daily more convinced that the construction of our federal government is fundamentally wrong. To vest legislative, judicial and executive powers in one and the same body of men, and that too in a body daily changing its members, can never be wise. In my opinion those three great departments of sovereignty should be forever separated, and so distributed as to serve as checks on each other”. In another letter to Jefferson on February 9, 1787 Jay informed Jefferson that regarding the renewal of the commission of the American diplomats in Europe “I am… at loss to judge what they will direct respecting treaties of commerce with the emperor and other European powers. For my part I think and have recommended that commissions and instructions should be sent you and Mr. Adams for those purposes. In my opinion such treaties for short terms might be advantageous. The time is not yet come for us to except the best”. It is clear from his letters that Jay blamed the wrong structure of the federal government for the problems of foreign policy and for the delay regarding the renewal of the commission of the American diplomats in Europe. The commission of Jefferson and John Adams concerning the conclusion of treaties of amity and commerce with foreign powers had never been renewed. American politics started to move towards the elaboration of a new federal constitution and a new governmental structure, and under such circumstances the Confederation Congress did not want to make decisions for the long run. The matter was dropped by the Confederation Congress consequently the Habsburg Empire couldn’t conclude a treaty with the United States. It is also true on the other hand that Joseph II was also forced to confront more and more difficulties. His reforms provoked resistance movements in all parts of his empire. This led to open rebellion in the Austrian Netherlands and brought Hungary to the brink of an open revolt. Joseph also started a war against the Ottoman Empire which proved to be a complete disaster. All these difficulties diverted the attention of Joseph from the commercial treaty with the United States. To sum it up there were several reasons why the United States of America and the Habsburg Empire did not conclude a commercial treaty in the 1780s. 1. No doubt that some misunderstandings and the communication gap in transatlantic communication played some role in it; 2. Ineffective administrations on both sides also had an impact; 3. The growing difficulties of Joseph II and the Austrian government in Europe was another factor; 4. A new governmental structure in the United States was in the making and under such circumstances the Confederation Congress did not want to renew the commission of his commissioners in Europe; 5. The changing attitude of Thomas Jefferson concerning the system of commercial treaties of the United States also played an important role since it occurred at the very same time when the negotiations with the Habsburg Empire arrived at a crucial stage. The death of Joseph and the outbreak of the French Revolution made an end of enlightened reforms in the Habsburg Monarchy for decades. The two states concluded the first commercial treaty only in 1829 and established diplomatic relation only in 1838.