I am sure that in no case except in an application for pension would an
attempt be made in the circumstances here developed to attribute death
from apoplexy to a wound in the knee received nineteen years before the
apoplectic attack.
GROVER CLEVELAND.
EXECUTIVE MANSION, _July 31, 1886_.
_To the House of Representatives_:
I return without approval House bill No. 9106, entitled "An act granting
a pension to Rachel Barnes."
William Barnes, the husband of the beneficiary named in this bill,
enlisted in the United States infantry in February, 1838, and was
discharged February 24, 1841.
In 1880 he applied for a pension, alleging that while serving in Florida
in 1840 and 1841 he contracted disease of the eyes. He procured
considerable evidence in support of his claim, but in 1882, and while
still endeavoring to furnish further proof, he committed suicide by
hanging.
The inference that his death thus occasioned was the result of
despondency and despair brought on by his failure to procure a pension,
while it adds a sad feature to the case, does not aid in connecting his
death with his military service.
That this was the view of the committee of the House to whom the bill
was referred is evidenced by the conclusion of their report in these
words:
And while your committee do not feel justified under the law as at
present existing in recommending that the name of the widow be placed
upon the pension roll for the purpose of a pension in her own right as
widow of the deceased soldier and by reason of the soldier's death,
they do think that she should be allowed such pension as, had her
husband's claim been favorably determined on the day of his decease,
he would have received.
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