To Thomas Jefferson from Robert Smith, 19 April 1804
From Robert Smith
Navy Department 19th April 1804
Sir
I have the honor herewith to transmit to you, for your consideration, a copy of the opinion on the conduct of Capt. Richd. V. Morris, formed & pronounced by the Court of Enquiry instituted agreeably to your directions for that special purpose
I have the honor to be with the greatest respect sir, yr mo: ob: st
Rt Smith
RC (DLC); in a clerk’s hand, signed by Smith; at foot of text: “President of the United States”; endorsed by TJ as received 23 Apr. and “Morris’s case” and so recorded in SJL. FC (Lb in DNA: RG 45, LSP). Enclosure: opinion of the court of enquiry, 13 Apr., appointed to examine the conduct of Richard Valentine Morris as commander of the Mediterranean squadron from January to June 1803; in the opinion of the court, Morris failed to conduct himself during this period “with the diligence or activity necessary to execute the important duties of his station” and “is censurable for his inactive and dilatory conduct of the squadron under his command”; the frequent and lengthy detention of Morris’s squadron at Malta and Gibraltar, and its sailing to Tunis and other Mediterranean ports “without necessity or any adequate object,” had left Tripoli unblockaded and American commerce unprotected (Defence of the Conduct of Commodore Morris during His Command in the Mediterranean [New York, 1804], 11-13; , 2:528-9).
In March 1804, Smith called the court of enquiry to discern the reasons for Morris’s “disobedience and neglect.” Consisting of Samuel Barron, Hugh G. Campbell, and John Cassin, the court convened in Washington on 3 Apr. (, 2:527-8; 3:484-5).