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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #56039 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/56039)
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-Project Gutenberg's Lincoln's Plan of Reconstruction, by Charles H. McCarthy
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Lincoln's Plan of Reconstruction
-
-Author: Charles H. McCarthy
-
-Release Date: November 23, 2017 [EBook #56039]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LINCOLN'S PLAN OF RECONSTRUCTION ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Lincoln’s Plan of Reconstruction
-
-
- _By_
- CHARLES H. McCARTHY
- =Ph.D.= (_Pa._)
-
-[Illustration]
-
- New York
- McCLURE, PHILLIPS & CO.
- MCMI
-
-
-
-
- _Copyright_, 1901 _by_
- McCLURE, PHILLIPS & CO.
-
-
- PUBLISHED NOVEMBER, 1901
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- Page
-
- =Introduction= xv
-
-
- I
- TENNESSEE
-
- Election and Policy of Lincoln 1
-
- East Tennessee 3
-
- Secession 8
-
- Federal Victories 10
-
- A Military Governor 11
-
- Origin of Military Governors in the United States 12
-
- Measures of Governor Johnson 17
-
- Negro Troops 20
-
- Nashville Convention of 1863 21
-
- Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction 23
-
- Steps to Restoration 27
-
- Nashville Convention of 1865 30
-
- Election of William G. Brownlow 32
-
- Nomination of Lincoln and Johnson 32
-
- Presidential Election in Tennessee 34
-
-
- II
- LOUISIANA
-
- Popularity of Secession 36
-
- Financial Embarrassment 37
-
- Capture of New Orleans 38
-
- Lincoln’s Advice 38
-
- General Shepley appointed Military Governor 39
-
- Election of Representatives to Congress 45
-
- Division among Unionists 47
-
- Military Operations 49
-
- Lincoln Urges Reconstruction 51
-
- Political Activity among Loyalists 53
-
- Title of Louisiana Claimants 58
-
- Opposition to General Banks 61
-
- Plan of Reconstruction proposed 66
-
- Election of 1864 70
-
- Inauguration of Civil Government 72
-
- Lincoln’s Letter on Negro Suffrage 73
-
- Constitutional Convention 75
-
- Congressional Election 76
-
-
- III
- ARKANSAS
-
- Indifference to Secession 77
-
- The Fall of Sumter 78
-
- Seizure of Little Rock 79
-
- Military Matters 79
-
- Threat of Seceding from Secession 82
-
- General Phelps appointed Military Governor 82
-
- Enthusiasm of Unionists 83
-
- Lincoln’s Interest in Arkansas 83
-
- Inaugurating a Loyal Government 84
-
- The Election of 1864 90
-
-
- IV
- VIRGINIA
-
- Secession 93
-
- Physical Features and Early Settlements 94
-
- Society and Its Basis 95
-
- The Counter-Revolution 97
-
- Convention at Wheeling 99
-
- Organizing a Union Government 100
-
- Legislature of Restored Virginia 103
-
- The State of Kanawha 105
-
- Attorney-General Bates on Dismemberment 105
-
- Making a New State 107
-
- Compensated Emancipation 108
-
- Formation of New State discussed in Congress 110
-
- Cabinet on Dismemberment 120
-
- Lincoln on Dismemberment 124
-
- Webster’s Prediction 126
-
- Inauguration of New State 128
-
- Reorganizing the Restored State 129
-
- Right of Commonwealth to Representation in Congress 131
-
- Rupture between Civil and Military Authorities 133
-
- The President Interposes 135
-
- Congress Refuses to Admit a Senator-Elect 138
-
-
- V
- ANTI-SLAVERY LEGISLATION
-
- Compensated Emancipation in Congress 142
-
- Contrabands 143
-
- The Military Power and Fugitive Slaves 144
-
- Lincoln on Military Emancipation 148
-
- Andrew Jackson and Nullification 151
-
- Lincoln on Compensated Emancipation 152
-
- Compensated Emancipation in Delaware 155
-
- Abandoned Slaves 160
-
- Border Policy Propounded 163
-
- General Hunter and Military Emancipation 168
-
- Slavery Prohibited in the Territories 170
-
- Attitude of Border States on Slavery 172
-
- Lincoln Resolves to Emancipate Slaves by Proclamation 177
-
-
- VI
- THEORIES AND PLANS OF RECONSTRUCTION
-
- The Presidential Plan 190
-
- Sumner’s Theory of State Suicide 196
-
- “Conquered Province” Theory of Stevens 211
-
- Theory of Northern Democrats 217
-
- Crittenden Resolution 220
-
-
- VII
- RISE OF THE CONGRESSIONAL PLAN
-
- Bill to Guarantee a Republican Form of Government 224
-
- Henry Winter Davis on Reconstruction 226
-
- House Debates on Bill of Wade and Davis 236
-
- Pendleton’s Speech on Reconstruction 257
-
- Provisions of Wade-Davis Bill 262
-
- Senate Debate on Bill of Wade and Davis 264
-
- President’s Pocket Veto 273
-
- Proclamation concerning Reconstruction 278
-
- Manifesto of Wade and Davis 279
-
-
- VIII
- AN ATTEMPT TO COMPROMISE
-
- President ignores Controversy with Congress 286
-
- Summary of Military and Naval Situation 288
-
- Attempt to Revive the Pocketed Bill 289
-
- House Debates on Ashley’s Reconstruction Bill 291
-
- Defeat of Ashley’s Bill 311
-
-
- IX
- THE ELECTORAL VOTE OF LOUISIANA
-
- Resolution excluding Electoral Votes of Rebellious States 314
-
- Amendment of Senator Ten Eyck 315
-
- Senate Debate on Ten Eyck’s Amendment 316
-
- Defeat of the Amendment in favor of Louisiana 334
-
- Senate Passes Joint Resolution 338
-
- Counting the Electoral Vote 339
-
- The President’s Message 339
-
-
- X
- SENATE DEBATE ON LOUISIANA
-
- Congressmen from Louisiana at the National Capital 341
-
- Proposal to Recognize Louisiana 343
-
- Powell’s Speech opposing Recognition 344
-
- Henderson’s Argument for Recognition 348
-
- Howard’s Argument in Opposition 358
-
- Reverdy Johnson’s Speech for Recognition 370
-
- General Discussion on Louisiana 374
-
-
- XI
- INCIDENTS OF RECONSTRUCTION
-
- The Thirteenth Amendment 384
-
- The Freedmen’s Bureau 385
-
- Volunteer Diplomats 389
-
- The Hampton Roads Conference 395
-
- Lincoln’s Letter to General Hurlbut 401
-
- Lincoln’s Letter to General Canby 402
-
- Lincoln’s Last Words on Reconstruction 403
-
-
- XII
- CULMINATION OF THE PRESIDENTIAL PLAN
-
- Lincoln and the South 407
-
- Inauguration of Andrew Johnson 408
-
- Arkansas after the War 409
-
- Condition of Tennessee 412
-
- Louisiana 417
-
- Reorganization of Virginia 425
-
- The Wreck of the Confederacy 431
-
- Andrew Johnson on Reconstruction in 1864 438
-
- Johnson’s Speeches after Accession to the Presidency 440
-
- Raising the Blockade 444
-
- The Executive Department Recognizes Virginia 445
-
- Restoration of North Carolina 448
-
- The President Hesitates 458
-
- Executive Policy in Mississippi 460
-
- Restoration of Georgia 465
-
- Texas 466
-
- The Reconstruction Conventions 468
-
- Temper of the South 472
-
- Mississippi Legislation relative to Freedmen 475
-
- Southern Reaction 482
-
- The President’s Change of Opinion 487
-
- Examination of Lincoln’s Plan 491
-
-
- APPENDIX A
-
- =Thirty-Seventh Congress= 499
-
-
- APPENDIX B
-
- =Thirty-Eighth Congress= 502
-
-
-
-
- Preface
-
-
-_Much of the material included in this volume was collected several
-years ago while the author was a graduate student at the University of
-Pennsylvania. The researches then commenced probably first suggested to
-him the lack in our political literature of an ample and interesting
-account of the return of the States. Students, librarians, and even
-professors of history knew no adequate treatise on the era of
-reconstruction, and their testimony was confirmed by the authority of
-Mr. Bryce, who happily describes the succession of events in those
-crowded times as forming one of the most intricate chapters of American
-history. No apology is offered, therefore, for considering in this essay
-so important and so long-neglected a theme as the rise of the political
-revolution that occurred before reunion was finally accomplished._
-
-_On the general subject several excellent monographs have recently
-appeared; these, however, are nearly all employed in discussing the
-second stage in the process of restoration, and, except incidentally,
-anticipate scarcely anything of value in the present work, which, so far
-at least as concerns any logical exposition, conducts the reader over
-untraveled ground. As the introduction indicates with sufficient
-accuracy both the scope and method of this study, nothing is required
-here beyond a concise statement of the author’s obligations._
-
-_Like many other students of American institutions, the writer
-cheerfully acknowledges his indebtedness to the works of Brownson, Hurd
-and Jameson, and, by transferring some of their opinions to his book,
-has shown a practical appreciation of their researches. In addition to
-these obligations, in which the author is not singular, he profited for
-four years by the lectures of Dr. Francis N. Thorpe, his professor in
-constitutional history. Except in a very few instances, where the name
-of an author was forgotten, credit for both suggestions and material is
-uniformly given in the references and footnotes._
-
-_For the selection, arrangement, and treatment of topics the author
-alone is responsible; he desires, however, to take this opportunity of
-acknowledging generous assistance received from three intimate friends:
-his colleague, Dr. Charles P. Henry, found time in the midst of arduous
-literary engagements to read the whole of the manuscript and to make
-many valuable suggestions, especially in matters of style and diction;
-the book is not less fortunate in having been critically read by Thomas
-J. Meagher, Esq., whose extensive and accurate knowledge of public as
-well as private law contributed to a more clear and scientific statement
-of many of the constitutional questions discussed; the technical skill
-and the superior intelligence of Mr. George M. Schell were of
-considerable assistance to the author in correcting the proofs of the
-entire book. Nor must he omit to record his appreciation of the courtesy
-of Mr. L. E. Hewitt, the efficient librarian of the Philadelphia Law
-Association. Finally the writer gratefully acknowledges his chief
-obligation to the scholarship of his former teacher, Dr. John Bach
-McMaster, who kindly interrupted the progress of his great historical
-work long enough to read a considerable portion of this essay. Indeed,
-it was the encouragement of that eminent author which first suggested
-the publication of these pages._
-
-_Before concluding his remarks the writer wishes to disclaim any
-sympathy with the progressive school of historical criticism, which
-derides the Constitution as a thing of the past and learnedly
-characterizes all veneration for its authority as the worship of a
-fetich. This book will have attained one of its principal purposes if,
-in the language of a distinguished surviving statesman of the war
-period, it will teach “the constant and ever-important lesson that the
-Constitution is always a more reliable guide for the legislator than
-those fierce passions which war never fails to excite.”_
-
- =Philadelphia=, September 14, 1901.
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
-
-So closely blended with the essential principles of our federal system
-of government were the causes of the Civil War that a clear
-understanding of its results appears to require some account of the
-origin, the independence and the permanent union of these States. Upon
-the eventful years between the Treaty of Paris and the Declaration of
-Independence, crowded as they are with work of note, one could linger
-with pleasure; this epoch, however, has already engaged the pens of so
-many writers, eminent as well as obscure, that a re-study of the
-blunders of England’s ministers and the revolt of her distant colonies
-might justly be regarded as a piece of presumption.
-
-Nor does it seem necessary to recite the familiar achievements of the
-succeeding period; for, perhaps, the portion of American history most
-attractive to the general reader is included between the 4th of July,
-1776, and the 4th of March, 1789. To these years belong the most
-conspicuous services of that giant race of leaders whose swords relieved
-a gallant people from oppression and whose wisdom established a form of
-government not, indeed, in universal harmony with popular prejudice, but
-admirably designed for the popular welfare.
-
-It was at the outset of what may properly be styled the national era
-that there appeared the remarkable group of statesmen who guided the
-infant Republic on its dim and perilous way. On their broad experience
-gleamed a vision of the future touching all their work with elements of
-immortality. By them was skillfully established a system of revenue and
-of finance adequate to all the exigencies of the time, and a foreign
-policy inaugurated which for generations together preserved unbroken
-harmony with the world outside. They doubled by wise and peaceful
-acquisition the area of that Union whose independence had been wrested
-from George the Third, and with no less wisdom prescribed the procedure
-and defined the jurisdiction of Federal courts.
-
-The forty years following March 4, 1789, form an epoch with
-characteristics of its own. This was the period of Virginian ascendency,
-the Adamses alone breaking the line of illustrious Presidents furnished
-by the Old Dominion. Introduced by an experiment in government which
-aroused the slumbering energies of the nation, its conclusion was marked
-by the disappearance from political life of the splendid ideals and rich
-traditions of the Fathers.
-
-The election of General Jackson coincides with the beginning of a new
-phase in American political and industrial development. It was not that
-the fame of a splendid military record had raised its possessor to an
-office for which long experience in governmental affairs had hitherto
-been thought indispensable, or that the selection of Presidents had
-passed from an intellectual few to the control of a much more numerous
-class who were willing to bestow on politics the attention and energy
-requisite for success in trade; but it was about this time that the
-imperious power of slavery entered upon its career of aggression.
-Philosophic statesmen of a previous epoch had ardently hoped that the
-institution would be permitted quietly to disappear; indeed, the
-greatest among them, though divided upon a multitude of political and
-economic questions, agreed in encouraging every movement designed for
-its extinction. These humane efforts, however, were not destined to win
-immediate success, and even with the coöperation of the General
-Government served only to demonstrate the difficulty of such an
-undertaking.
-
-After 1820 all the dangers which menaced the integrity of the Union
-were, with one notable exception, traceable to this cause. When Mr.
-Lincoln in his discussions with Senator Douglas declared that it was the
-sole cause of all the troubles which had disturbed the nation, he meant,
-probably, to assert no more than that in his own time it had been the
-most conspicuous one.
-
-Long before slavery became a subject of embittered controversy the
-doctrine of State Rights had agitated the country. As early as the
-summer of 1793 it had found in Justice Iredell an able advocate on the
-bench of the United States Supreme Court. For party purposes it was
-adopted five years later by Madison and Jefferson in the celebrated
-Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions, and during the second war with Great
-Britain these statesmen were startled to find New England Federalism
-vindicating its unpatriotic, if not treacherous, conduct in the exact
-language which they had invented to embarrass a former administration.
-With this instrument, too, Calhoun in 1832 shook the foundations of the
-Union. Both Northern and Southern statesmen of that generation, however,
-pushed the principle of State sovereignty as far only as their immediate
-object seemed to require.
-
-It is a popular mistake to suppose that beyond the limits of the South
-this erroneous doctrine found little favor in the minds of men; for on
-the eve of the War of 1812 a Governor of conservative Pennsylvania had
-armed her citizen-soldiers against Federal power.
-
-The illustrious Marshall could relate how, before the highest tribunal
-in the land, its champions with unwearied zeal renewed the battle for a
-hopeless cause. The eloquent voice of Webster hushed for a time the
-fretful agitation of South Carolina statesmen, and his genius fixed in
-imperishable literary form that interpretation of the Constitution which
-called forth the abundant resources of both the Nation and the States.
-In his conquering words lived those elevated thoughts that in future
-years sustained the defenders of the Republic.
-
-President Jackson, for the energy and promptness by which he defeated
-the projects of the Nullifiers, has been justly eulogized; but, when the
-excitement of the hour had passed away, the calmer judgment of even his
-admirers perceived that victory inclined rather to the side of Calhoun.
-
-Discussion of the abstract question of State sovereignty might,
-probably, have long continued without endangering the Union had the
-principle not been invoked to defend the institution of human servitude;
-yoked to that powerful interest it was inevitable that both should go
-down together in undistinguishable ruin.
-
-From the Protean fount of slavery flowed an hundred various streams
-coloring almost every important question in the tide of events. In the
-generation between the election of General Jackson and the inauguration
-of Mr. Lincoln its defeats were few, its triumphs numerous and
-important. Prosperity revealed its weaknesses and encouraged its
-experiments. The fruits of its greatest victory, the dismemberment of
-Mexico, revived those stormy scenes which thirty years before had for
-the first time been witnessed in an American legislative hall.
-Dissolution of the Union was once more threatened, and again averted by
-the genius and patriotism of the venerable triumvirate, who scarce
-outlived their noble work; but the compromise from which Clay, Calhoun
-and Webster expected a restoration of former tranquillity contained
-within itself the very seed-plot of even graver troubles.
-
-After 1850 the attachment of Southern men to their industrial system was
-played upon by ambitious politicians more and more, until the final
-overthrow of themselves and the government which they sought to
-establish for its preservation. It could be shown how before that time
-one war was prolonged for the protection, and another undertaken chiefly
-for the extension, of that aggressive institution; how its existence was
-supposed to require Federal interference with the mails and an
-abridgment of even the ancient right of petition. Every power of the
-national Government and all the resources of the cotton States had been
-employed for its advantage.
-
-The United States Supreme Court was the last agent within the Union by
-which its advocates sought to dignify and perpetuate human servitude,
-and so successful were their efforts that an enlightened and humane
-Chief Justice was but little misrepresented in language or in sentiment
-when political opponents ascribed to him the doctrine that “the negro
-has no rights which the white man is bound to respect.”
-
-The moral progress of the United States during the last forty years
-finds, probably, in no single event a better illustration than the
-change in public opinion upon the interesting question of human rights.
-When the majority opinion was delivered in the Dred Scott case it
-excited among members of the dominant political party but little
-surprise. The shock which a judicial utterance of such sentiments would
-give in our time to the ethical notions of the American people affords
-at once both a measure of the advance that has been made in the interval
-and an undoubted proof that progress has not been, as is commonly
-supposed, exclusively or even mainly along material lines. It is
-singular, too, that the first serious attempt of the Federal Supreme
-Court to set at rest a dangerous political question should have been
-followed by effects of so alarming a tendency.
-
-It is not intended to relate in these pages the origin or the fate of
-those compromises designed to avoid the inevitable conflict already in
-the closing months of President Buchanan’s administration casting
-ominous shadows in the pathway of the nation, nor to describe the
-uncertain policy of the General Government or attempt to determine the
-measure of its responsibility for the fearful rebellion which that
-hesitation encouraged.
-
-The skill and industry of a multitude of laborers have gathered from the
-field of conflict a harvest as bountiful as the result was satisfactory.
-We have general histories and bird’s-eye views, military accounts and
-naval accounts of the Civil War; memoirs and diaries, by actors more or
-less prominent in the events which they describe, and narratives of
-battles and of sieges. In this varied and ample field even a belated
-worker might hope to glean something of value; but this study, whatever
-it may discuss incidentally, will be chiefly concerned with the subject
-of Reconstruction, a phase of our political and constitutional
-development which, though beginning during the progress, lies mainly
-beyond the close of the Rebellion.
-
-The organization into a separate government of the late Confederate
-States, with their resolute struggle for independence, is the chief
-event in the extraordinary career of this favored nation. The story of
-their submission to Federal power and the return to their former places
-in the Union is not inferior either in interest or instruction to any
-political event recorded in history. This return is what is commonly
-known as Reconstruction. Though the term on its introduction into
-political discussion was frequently objected to as inaccurate, it has
-been generally adopted in the writings of publicists as well as in
-popular speech. The word “restoration,” which was at first preferred,
-was soon found to be inexact; for while former relations were resumed by
-the erring States, they came back, one with diminished territorial
-extent and all with domestic rights greatly abridged. They had, in fact,
-been _reconstructed_. It is true that even the loyal States did not
-emerge unscathed from this political revolution. In the South, however,
-the established industrial system had been swept completely away.
-
-The theme falls naturally under two heads, Presidential Reconstruction
-and Congressional Reconstruction. An account of the former, which
-extended from the summer of 1861 to the autumn of 1865, occupies the
-whole of this volume. Any adequate treatment of the latter, including as
-it does the eventful period from the meeting of Congress in December,
-1865, to the withdrawal of Federal forces from the South in 1877, will
-require a narrative somewhat more ample.
-
-The conspicuous landmarks of Reconstruction require no extraordinary
-talent to recognize and locate. It is the unfamiliar region between that
-is difficult accurately to map out. The failure hitherto to present in a
-single view the striking features of these neglected parts is chiefly
-responsible for the fact that Reconstruction remains one of the most
-obscure parts of our history. A candid and comprehensive account of the
-political events of the time appears to divest the subject of much of
-the difficulty commonly supposed to attend its investigation. From a
-sufficient body of essential facts the step to an understanding and
-exposition of every principle of moment is comparatively easy.
-
-Though the general design of this volume will be suggested to the
-student of American history by an inspection of its principal
-subdivisions, it may not be unnecessary for the benefit of the general
-reader to add a brief outline of the plan that has been adopted.
-
-Chapter I. relates the most important political events in the history of
-Tennessee from its attempted secession to the restoration, in March,
-1865, of a civil government loyal to the United States. Military
-movements in that Commonwealth have been noticed only so far as to
-render intelligible the successive steps by which that reorganization
-was accomplished.
-
-Chapters II. and III. bring the affairs of Louisiana and Arkansas,
-respectively, down to about the same time. Events in those States have
-been treated, so far as conditions permitted, in the same manner as in
-the case of Tennessee.
-
-Chapter IV. is concerned with the secession, restoration and
-dismemberment of Virginia. The formation out of a portion of that
-Commonwealth of the new State of West Virginia, both because of the
-grave constitutional question which arose on a division of the parent
-State and the intrinsic interest of the subject, has been considered
-with some degree of minuteness.
-
-In Chapter V., which discusses anti-slavery legislation, it will appear
-how Mr. Lincoln, though never an Abolitionist or even a radical
-Republican, became by pressure of military necessity an instrument in
-the hands of God to destroy an institution opposed by a long line of
-American statesmen and condemned by the light of the nineteenth century.
-
-The succeeding chapter considers the various theories and plans of
-restoration presented during the progress of the war. The rise of the
-Congressional plan, which ultimately prevailed, is treated separately in
-Chapter VII. Only the first stage of its development, however, falls
-within the limits of this inquiry, which ends with the meeting of the
-Thirty-ninth Congress in December, 1865.
-
-Chapters VIII., IX. and X. trace the progress of the controversy between
-the Legislative and the Executive branches of Government. The
-culmination of this difference, however, in the impeachment and trial of
-President Johnson is a phase of Congressional Reconstruction.
-
-The topics treated in the eleventh chapter, having frequently employed
-the pens of able and popular writers on the Rebellion, are considered in
-this study merely for the purpose of making it complete in itself; hence
-that section is little more than an epitome of what has already been
-said on those subjects.
-
-The twelfth and last chapter brings every part of the narrative up to
-December 4, 1865. To clearly comprehend the arduous task that confronted
-President Johnson this section includes a rapid survey of the wreck of
-the Confederate States. The principal part, however, is reserved for an
-account of the conventions assembled under his authority, the method of
-instituting loyal governments and the spirit and tendency of Southern
-legislation relative to freedmen. An examination of the Presidential
-plan of Reconstruction completes the volume.
-
-
-
-
- Lincoln’s Plan of Reconstruction
-
-
-
-
- I
- TENNESSEE
-
-
-While the celebrated joint debates with Senator Douglas in 1858, the
-Cooper Union and other addresses, marked Mr. Lincoln, in the new
-political party just rising to power, as the intellectual peer of able
-and trusted leaders like Sumner, Chase and Seward, his conservative
-opinions on the subject of slavery made his nomination by the Chicago
-Convention more acceptable to delegates from the border States. Though
-his competitors received, in the memorable contest which followed,
-almost a million votes in excess of the number cast for Mr. Lincoln and
-his associate, the fierce conflict among fragments of the Democratic
-party resulted, as is well known, in the choice of a decided majority of
-Republican electors.[1] This rather unexpected defeat of a political
-organization that had lost but two Presidential contests since its first
-success under Jefferson afforded Southern leaders a pretext for urging a
-dismemberment of the Union. Indeed, there is evidence that the more
-impetuous among them had, four years earlier, seriously determined, in
-case of Fremont’s election, upon a similar course.[2] Thus the present
-event, so far from being an universal disappointment to members of the
-defeated party, had been ardently hoped for by many.
-
-The choice of a minority party, and not at first possessing the entire
-confidence of even that minority, Mr. Lincoln, unable to divine the
-future, was compelled in dealing with the insurrection to proceed with
-the utmost caution. Washington himself, in organizing the Federal
-Government, had a task of less magnitude, and the renown of his military
-achievements silenced for a time even the boldest in opposition.
-President Lincoln’s victories, gained on a different field, gave no such
-unquestioned authority to his name. This peculiar situation forced him
-to adopt for the guidance of his administration a policy not altogether
-free from embarrassment to both himself and his successor. His purpose
-at that time appears to have been to meet the demands of the moment by
-the contrivances of the moment. Whether a different course would have
-been rewarded by earlier or by more complete success is a hazardous
-subject for speculation. If his theory of our national existence be
-liable to the multitude of objections which have grown up in these
-fruitful times of peace, no other has been suggested that is free from
-criticism. His political doctrine, too, had the advantage of always
-recommending measures scarcely less distinguished for enlarged views
-than those enlightened convictions which characterize his first
-inaugural address. Whatever may be concluded of its merits, the theory
-embraced at the outset exerted on many administrative acts of President
-Lincoln an influence that continued to be felt during his entire
-executive career; and without remembering this fact we shall not easily
-comprehend either the extent of his “Border Policy,” as the plan of
-compensated emancipation is often called, or his undoubted concern for
-persecuted Union men in the seceded States.
-
-The sufferings of loyal citizens in East Tennessee had early enlisted
-the President’s sympathies, and almost from the commencement of
-hostilities measures for their relief formed in his mind part of the
-plan of operations by the army under General Buell. Writing, January 6,
-1862, to that commander he gives reasons for suggesting the occupation
-of some point there rather than Nashville, and adds: “But my distress is
-that our friends in East Tennessee are being hanged and driven to
-despair, and even now, I fear, are thinking of taking rebel arms for the
-sake of personal protection. In this we lose the most valuable stake we
-have in the South.”[3] The cause of these outrages may be briefly
-explained in a digression.
-
-In no part of the late Confederate States was the slave interest more
-feeble than in the thirty counties comprising East Tennessee.[4] That
-portion of the State contained in 1860 slightly over 300,000
-inhabitants,[5] of whom only about one tenth were slaves, while in many
-counties they formed no more than one in seventeen of the population.
-Here and there, indeed, were persons of wealth some of whom owned a few
-negroes. But though a majority of the people looked upon domestic
-slavery as something foreign to their social life, they had no strong
-philanthropic impulse to oppose it. While quite willing to allow their
-countrymen elsewhere to keep bondmen at pleasure, they did not regard it
-any concern of theirs to assist either in extending or perpetuating
-human servitude. If the existence of the Union or of slavery was the
-issue, they would have hesitated little in deciding which should perish.
-Though, as we shall presently see, they were as intolerant of the
-Republican party as any community in the South, they were devotedly
-attached to the Union. The fact is partly explained by the industrial
-basis of society in this favored region.
-
-Cut off from Middle Tennessee by lofty ranges of the Cumberland, and
-from North Carolina by the Great Smoky, the Black and the Stone
-mountains, this extensive district is traversed in its entire length by
-the Tennessee and its chief tributaries, the Clinch and the Holston; as
-the great river flows down to Alabama it receives, before turning west
-and north to join the Ohio, the waters of many important and beautiful
-streams, some of which, as the French Broad and Nolachucky, are
-associated with deeds of note in the War for Independence; indeed, one
-of its crowning victories was chiefly won by settlers from the banks of
-the Watauga. Other names, like Hiwassee, are familiar to readers of
-later events in Tennessee history, and Chickamauga Creek was destined
-shortly to become more famous than any.
-
-Knoxville, in early times a capital of the State, was, in 1860, the
-metropolis of East Tennessee; Chattanooga, at the southern extremity of
-the valley, is separated from Bristol, on the Virginia line, by a
-distance of more than two hundred and forty miles; Cleveland and
-Greenville were towns of less importance. The absence of large cities
-makes it evident that manufacturing had not yet begun to attract serious
-attention. Like early settlers everywhere in America, the pioneers of
-Tennessee sought the most immediate returns from the products of the
-forests and fields around them. The rich mineral deposits, then either
-unknown or almost untouched, had not given rise to those great
-extractive operations which in our time have so stimulated the
-commercial life of East Tennessee. Vast cotton plantations, worked by
-multitudes of slaves, like those in the western portion of the State,
-had no existence in these mountain valleys, though occasionally small
-“patches” were cultivated for domestic use.
-
-Citizens of West Tennessee would naturally place upon the Federal
-Constitution an interested construction; their industries, they
-believed, required such an interpretation of that instrument as would
-place the institution of slavery beyond the reach of Congressional
-interference. While the people of East Tennessee, too, believed in the
-several sovereignty of the States, the question of slavery did not touch
-them so nearly. Indifferent to the subject themselves, they had little
-sympathy with those who had determined to break up the Union from a mere
-suspicion that their interests were menaced by the success of a new
-political party. But to ascribe to the want of interested motives their
-indifference to the great disturbing question of the time would be to
-assign but one and that, perhaps, not the chief cause.
-
-Except on its northern and southern boundaries this delightful region is
-practically isolated from several adjacent States as well as from the
-remainder of Tennessee. It was in this by-place of nature and amidst
-such a population that _The Manumission Intelligencer_, a weekly
-newspaper, made its appearance in 1819.[6] It was followed the next year
-by _The Emancipator_ of Elijah Embree, a Pennsylvania Quaker; this in
-turn was soon succeeded by a more celebrated publication, _The Genius of
-Universal Emancipation_, conducted by Benjamin Lundy. While these
-publications served to perpetuate and to extend, they did not create the
-sentiment of which they became exponents, for, several years before
-their appearance, an anti-slavery society flourished in Jefferson
-County. Its existence is noticed as early as 1814.[7] This anti-slavery
-feeling was part of the philosophic movement encouraged by nearly all
-Southern as well as Northern statesmen before the inauguration of
-General Jackson. A new industrial era, beginning about that time, put an
-end to the abolition societies in the South; and though Lundy’s paper
-was discontinued in Tennessee after 1824, events of frequent occurrence
-sustained the anti-slavery sentiments of the people.
-
-The Tennessee valley was a natural thoroughfare from Virginia to the
-south-west, and when slaves were purchased on the Potomac they were
-chained together, to prevent escape, and in that condition driven to the
-homes of their new masters.[8] The plaintive songs of captives as they
-were marched in lines along the valley highways often caused the free
-mountaineer to pause in his labors and reflect on what was passing
-before his eyes. He “saw slavery in its bitterness and without
-disguise.” The remembrance of such spectacles was apt to strengthen in
-him anti-slavery feelings that had come down from Revolutionary times.
-But whether Southern leaders ascribed the sentiment to an inherited
-tendency or regarded it as a consequence of this odious phase of the
-domestic slave-trade, they did not think it beneath the dignity of
-attention; for it was, doubtless, to create a sympathy for their
-institution that a “Southern Commercial Convention” was held at
-Knoxville in 1857. It was too late, however, to root out the convictions
-of two generations; the counsels of the wise were soon to be confounded
-and the fretful agitation of leaders soon to be hushed in the tempest of
-war.
-
-No Republican electoral ticket was presented in the great political
-battle of 1860 for the suffrage of Tennessee voters, and had any citizen
-openly advocated the election of Mr. Lincoln he would have had to endure
-insult or injury, or to abandon his home. This explains why the
-successful candidates received no vote in all the State. As “Parson”
-Brownlow, selecting extreme abolition and secession types,
-characteristically expressed it, his people were equally opposed to the
-William L. Garrisons and the William L. Yanceys of politics.[9] In this
-situation the supporters of Bell, Breckenridge and Douglas were left to
-contend for victory among themselves. Addresses of the time reveal not
-only the emotions of individual speakers, but the excited state of
-public opinion. The attitude of Constitutional Union men was vigorously
-stated in a debate at Knoxville by Nathaniel G. Taylor, an elector on
-the Bell and Everett ticket. “The people of East Tennessee,” said the
-orator, “are determined to maintain the Union by force of arms against
-any movement from the South throughout their region of country to assail
-the government at Washington with violence, and that the secessionists
-of the cotton States in attempting to carry out their nefarious design
-to destroy the Republic would have to march over his dead body and the
-dead bodies of thousands of East Tennessee mountaineers slain in
-battle.”[10]
-
-When Yancey came up from Alabama to “precipitate” this section into
-rebellion the intrepid Brownlow made a similar reply.[11] The energy or
-the elegance of such utterances may be questioned, but the deeds of
-loyal Tennesseeans during eventful years to follow are evidence alike of
-the sincerity of the speakers and their insight into the temper of the
-times.
-
-Except Tennessee, all the States that attempted secession did so by
-means of revolutionary bodies styled conventions; this description of
-them is justified both by the general powers of administration and
-government which they assumed and by the fact that the legislatures in
-convoking them transcended their authority, the members of every State
-legislature being “bound by oath or affirmation to support” the Federal
-Constitution, which forms a part of the fundamental law of each
-commonwealth. Though the Legislature of Tennessee, following the example
-of law-making bodies in other disloyal States, passed a “Convention
-Bill,” it was promptly defeated by a majority of 13,204 in a total vote
-of more than 120,000. Notwithstanding the constitutional prohibition
-that “no State shall enter into any treaty, alliance, or
-confederation,”[12] the Legislature on May 1 authorized Governor Harris
-to appoint commissioners to form a military league with the Confederate
-States. Six days later the relations entered into by these agents were
-ratified in a secret session, the State government thereby turning over
-temporarily to the President of the Confederacy its entire military
-force. These matters disposed of, the plans of disunionists were
-completed by the passage on the same day of a declaration of
-independence and an ordinance dissolving all Federal relations between
-Tennessee and the United States. Though this measure was to be voted
-upon a month later, the Legislature, as if anticipating the result,
-adopted and ratified the Confederate constitution. What was so ardently
-desired by secessionists was finally accomplished, and on June 24 the
-Governor declared his State out of the Union, the vote being 104,019
-for, and 47,238 against, separation.[13] The Tennessee Legislature did
-not assume the functions of a secession convention till after the
-commencement of hostilities; but from that date the forms of law ceased
-to be seriously regarded. While the disunion party scored a present
-triumph, loyalist leaders like Horace Maynard, Thomas A. R. Nelson and
-Andrew Johnson, at the imminent risk of injury or even of death, were
-speaking and working actively against the spirit of secession. The
-strong Union feeling thus excited resulted ultimately in local
-insurrections and in the meeting, June 17, of a convention at
-Greeneville in which a remonstrance was adopted and a committee
-appointed to petition the Legislature for the separation of East
-Tennessee and such counties of Middle Tennessee as were willing to
-coöperate in the formation of a new commonwealth. But the presence there
-during the following years of veteran Confederate armies prevented Union
-men from organizing a separate government, and saved the State from the
-fate of Virginia. All who were known to have had a connection, or who
-were suspected of sympathy, with this movement were especially obnoxious
-to the secession party, and at the hands of soldiers were subjected to
-many indignities. In various ways the feeling of opposition to the
-Confederacy was intensified, and it was not long before measures of
-retaliation were considered. Union people were quick to perceive the
-advantage which the South derived from the use of railways within the
-State, and, in expectation of assistance from Federal forces in
-Kentucky, five railroad bridges were burned. East Tennesseeans, however,
-were destined to be sorely disappointed in the matter of aid from the
-Union army; and, without effective organization or arms, were easily
-captured or dispersed. Of the former, many were sent as prisoners of war
-to Alabama, hundreds were crowded into loathsome jails in the State and
-others hanged, with circumstances of deliberate cruelty, near the scenes
-of their alleged crimes.
-
-These were among the outrages to which Mr. Lincoln referred in his
-letter to the Federal commander. By Horace Maynard a Representative, and
-Andrew Johnson a Senator, in Congress the President was kept very
-accurately informed of events in the State and often importuned to
-relieve their constituents. This he constantly endeavored to do, but his
-intentions were effectually defeated by the inactivity of General Buell,
-who cherished other plans for destroying his antagonist. More than two
-years were to elapse, from the time President Lincoln urged his policy,
-before Tennesseeans received any aid from Federal armies; long before
-that time they had been ruthlessly punished for their patriotism, and
-then their oppressors were chastised by the hand of an abler warrior
-than General Buell.
-
-Within a month from the date of President Lincoln’s letter of January 6
-General Grant had possession of Fort Henry and, ten days later, February
-16, received the surrender of Fort Donelson. Nashville, becoming unsafe,
-was evacuated on February 23, 1862; the State appeared for the first
-time to be slipping from the grasp of the Confederacy, and a question,
-hitherto more or less academic, presented itself for practical
-settlement. In the territory from which hostile armies were reluctantly
-retiring there would be involved a great derangement in the
-administration of local civil law from the necessary displacement there
-of all officials heretofore acting in obedience to the Confederate
-States.
-
-By other Union victories in the Spring of 1862 the same situation
-confronted the Federal Government in Arkansas, in North Carolina and in
-Louisiana. Indeed, this identical question arose as early as 1861 in
-Virginia and Missouri, but in the former the rebel government was
-abrogated by a delegate convention that restored a loyal government from
-which in due time sprang the separate State of West Virginia. In
-Missouri a lawfully chosen convention appointed a provisional government
-in sympathy with the Union. This subject, however, will be more
-conveniently discussed elsewhere.
-
-When General Johnston received tidings of the disaster at Donelson he
-retired with his army to Murfreesboro, leaving Nashville, which he was
-unable to protect, a scene of panic and dismay, first advising Governor
-Harris to secure the public archives and convoke the Legislature
-elsewhere. It was in these circumstances that President Lincoln, on the
-same day, February 23, nominated, and the Senate, March 5, 1862,
-confirmed, Andrew Johnson as military governor of Tennessee with the
-rank of brigadier-general. As the commission antedates the action of the
-Senate by two days the President, no doubt, consulted the leaders of
-that body relative to the contemplated nomination, and received
-assurance of its favorable consideration.
-
-Nothing in any way connected with the appointment of Senator Johnson,
-who was destined to act so conspicuous a part in the important and
-difficult work of reconstruction, can fail to be of interest, and any
-account of the execution of his office would be incomplete without some
-observations on the nature of his commission of which the following is a
-copy:
-
- =War Department=, _March 3, 1862_.
-
- _To the_ =Hon. Andrew Johnson=:
-
- =Sir=: You are hereby appointed military governor of the State of
- Tennessee, with authority to exercise and perform, within the limits
- of that State, all and singular the powers, duties, and functions
- pertaining to the office of military governor, including the power
- to establish all necessary offices, tribunals, etc.
-
- =Edwin M. Stanton=,
- _Secretary of War_.[14]
-
-Quoting the essential part of this document a recent coöperative work
-has this comment: “The office [that of military governor] was new to the
-laws and history of the State and country. Its powers and duties were
-limited only by the will of one man, the occupant.”[15] From the
-commission itself we derive our prime conception of both the nature of
-the office and the functions which it comprehended. The authority of the
-incumbent extended to the exercise, within the limits of Tennessee, of
-all “the powers, duties, and functions pertaining to the office of
-military governor.” Nothing in this language implies that the office was
-of recent creation. Nor is its nature to be discovered by a perusal of
-the supplemental authority contained in the President’s letter of
-September 19, 1863, to Governor Johnson, for the official conduct of the
-latter on his arrival in Nashville can not be seriously thought to have
-been influenced by instructions received nineteen months later. It is
-perfectly true, as Mr. Ira P. Jones, author of the chapter on
-Reconstruction in Tennessee, asserts, that the office of military
-governor had never been exercised within that State; but it is not a
-fact that it was new to the laws and history of the “country,” if by
-this indefinite expression he means the United States. During the war
-with Mexico the American people had been made familiar with military
-commissions and with military governors. Secretary Marcy prepared, June
-3, 1846, for General Stephen W. Kearny the following instructions:
-“Should you conquer and take possession of New Mexico and Upper
-California, or considerable places in either, you will establish
-temporary civil governments therein.”[16] To this direction general
-rules of conduct were added, and the letter authorized the assurance
-that “It is the wish and design of the United States to provide for them
-[the people of New Mexico] a free government with the least possible
-delay, similar to that which exists in our Territories.” By virtue of
-this authority General Kearny appointed Charles Bent governor of New
-Mexico. Mr. Polk in his Message of July 6, 1848, to Congress maintained
-that with the termination of war his power to establish temporary civil
-governments over New Mexico and California had ceased; the legality of
-their previous existence he justified by the law of nations. By cession
-to the United States, the government of Mexico no longer pretended to
-any control over them.[17] President Polk, differing from other leaders
-of his party, held that “until Congress shall act, the inhabitants will
-be without any organized government.”[18] But Congress, notwithstanding
-urgent appeals of the Executive, moved very deliberately in the matter
-of abolishing the office of military governor. In May, 1847, Colonel
-Richard B. Mason assumed the office of Governor and commander-in-chief
-of the United States forces in California. Two months after ratification
-of the treaty with Mexico he received notice of the fact, but no
-intimation that the civil government instituted by the President was
-discontinued. Without other instructions than an order to extend over
-California “the revenue laws and tariff of the United States” he, as
-well as his successor, General Riley, continued the existing government.
-
-After affirming the legality of its institution the United States
-Supreme Court (Cross _vs._ Harrison, p. 193, 16 Howard) says that the
-existing government did not cease as a consequence of the restoration of
-peace; the President might have dissolved it, but he did not do so.
-Congress could have put an end to it, but that was not done. “The right
-inference from the inaction of both is, that it was meant to be
-continued until it had been legislatively changed.” In fact it was so
-continued until the people in convention formed a government,
-subsequently recognized by Congress, when California was admitted during
-the autumn of 1850 as a State.
-
-The authority, then, of both political departments, as well as the more
-deliberate opinion of the judicial branch, of the General Government had
-established a precedent with which Mr. Lincoln was thoroughly familiar;
-for, by a singular coincidence, both he and Mr. Johnson were serving
-together in the Thirtieth Congress, which began its first session in
-December, 1847. They participated in, or were interested spectators of,
-all those stirring scenes that marked the beginning of one of the last
-legislative victories of slavery; so that this portion at least of
-American history was not strange to either the President or the Senator
-from Tennessee.
-
-The question whether Tennessee was within or without the Union will be
-reserved for more ample discussion farther on; it is sufficient to
-observe here that its territory was held by an adverse party and its
-government hostile to the national authority. If the administration of
-Colonel Mason and his successor in California was not regarded by
-President Lincoln as a sufficient basis for his action there was still
-left an undoubted foundation. The appointment was deemed an element of
-strength to the Union forces operating in Tennessee, and, in this view,
-the act was entirely within the power of the President as
-Commander-in-Chief of the army and navy of the United States. Though its
-wisdom may be questioned and its results dismissed with a sneer, it was
-not a novelty nor can his admirers claim for Mr. Lincoln the merit of
-its invention; and if in its origin the office had a bearing on the
-extension, its present application was not wholly unconnected with the
-abolition of slavery. The remaining pages of this chapter and the two
-succeeding ones will be employed in tracing rapidly the operation of the
-system of military governors in those States in which it was seriously
-attempted to be enforced.
-
-The movements of contending armies had already obliterated in many
-districts of Tennessee almost every trace of civil government, and when
-State officials hurried away to Memphis, where Governor Harris had
-reassembled the Legislature, they left behind them an uncontrolled mob
-which General Forrest found it necessary to charge with his cavalry to
-remove a portion of Confederate military stores that had not been
-distributed among the poor or perished in the prevailing anarchy.[19]
-General Grant had already, on February 22, from Fort Donelson, issued an
-order that “no courts will be allowed to act under State authority, but
-all cases coming within reach of the military arm will be adjudicated by
-the authorities the Government has established within the State. Martial
-law is therefore declared to extend over West Tennessee.” The order
-added, “whenever a sufficient number of citizens return to their
-allegiance to maintain law and order over the territory, the military
-restriction here indicated will be removed.”[20] Union troops under
-General Nelson having occupied the city on the 25th, Governor Johnson on
-his arrival, March 12, 1862, from his seat in the United States Senate
-was not under the necessity of employing the harsh discipline of General
-Forrest to restore order in the deserted capital. For this part of his
-career he was, however, severely censured by political adversaries in
-Tennessee. Detached from their historical settings, indeed, his acts
-could justly be described as tyrannical. But it is precisely these
-figures in the back-ground that are necessary to harmonize the whole and
-set before us in its proper light a truthful picture of the times. As
-his professions preceded his administrative acts it is proper to
-introduce this portion of the subject by quoting from a speech which he
-delivered in Nashville the evening after his arrival. Five days later,
-March 18, it was printed under the style of “An Appeal to the People” of
-Tennessee. After some general observations on the tranquil and
-prosperous existence of the State in the Union, and on the honors by
-which many of her sons had been distinguished, he noticed the fact that
-the very leaders of secession themselves had been the recipients of
-Federal bounty and patronage; had taken oaths to support the
-Constitution and yet labored to overturn Federal authority. Entering
-fairly upon his theme, he continued:
-
- Meanwhile the State Government has disappeared. The Executive has
- abdicated; the Legislature has dissolved; the Judiciary is in
- abeyance. The great ship of State ... has been suddenly abandoned by
- its officers and mutinous crew, and left to float at the mercy of
- the winds, and to be plundered by every rover upon the deep.
-
-Pausing to enumerate many acts of spoliation, he resumes:
-
- In such a lamentable crisis the Government of the United States
- could not be unmindful of its high constitutional obligation to
- guarantee to every State in this Union a republican form of
- government, an obligation which every State has a direct and
- immediate interest in having observed towards every other State....
- This obligation the national Government is now attempting to
- discharge. I have been appointed, in the absence of the regular and
- established State authorities, as Military Governor for the time
- being, to preserve the public property of the State, to give the
- protection of law actively enforced to her citizens, and, as
- speedily as may be, to restore her government to the same condition
- as before the existing rebellion.
-
-The “regular and established State authorities,” to whom Governor
-Johnson refers, were, of course, none other than those officials who
-administered affairs in Tennessee before the 6th of May. Of these some
-had actually abandoned their offices, while others had subordinated
-their functions to a power hostile to the constitution of the State. He
-proceeded:
-
- These offices must be filled temporarily, until the State shall be
- restored so far to its accustomed quiet, that the people can
- peaceably assemble at the ballot-box and select agents of their own
- choice....
-
- I shall, therefore, as early as practicable, designate for various
- positions under the State and county governments, from among my
- fellow-citizens, persons of probity and intelligence, and bearing
- true allegiance to the Constitution and Government of the United
- States, who will execute the functions of their respective offices
- until their places can be filled by the action of the people. Their
- authority, when their appointment shall have been made, will be
- accordingly respected and observed.... Those who through the dark
- and weary night of rebellion have maintained their allegiance to the
- Federal Government will be honored. The erring and misguided will be
- welcomed on their return. And while it may become necessary, in
- vindicating the violated majesty of the law, and in reasserting its
- imperial sway, to punish intelligent and conscious treason in high
- places, no merely retaliatory or vindictive policy will be
- adopted.[21]
-
-To all who in private and unofficial capacity had assumed an attitude of
-hostility to the Government amnesty was offered for all past acts and
-declarations upon condition of yielding obedience to the supremacy of
-the laws. This the Governor advised them to do. Though the “Appeal,”
-brief, clear and characterized by the best temper, is a state paper of
-decided merit, there were many classes still residing at the capital
-upon whom it made little impression. The mayor and the city council were
-ordered to take the oath of allegiance to the United States, and on
-their refusal were imprisoned. Of the harshness of this measure it need
-only be observed that the essence of government is to govern, and had
-the new executive failed on this occasion to assert authority his
-administration would have been wrecked at the outset. For printing
-seditious matter the press was placed under restraint, and within a few
-months it was found necessary to punish with unusual severity, even
-ministers of the gospel. Clergymen, with a few exceptions, were not only
-hostile to the Union but actually encouraged treason from their pulpits.
-These offenders Governor Johnson summoned to take the oath of allegiance
-or to depart from the State. They appeared before him, as commanded to,
-refused compliance, but asked time for deliberation; this being granted,
-to the full extent desired, and still persisting in their refusal they
-were placed in confinement. That they were not proceeded against with
-undue haste appears from an entry in a diary kept by one of Governor
-Johnson’s biographers which fixes the date as June 28.[22] Three months
-had fully elapsed since the arrival of Mr. Johnson before the ministers
-were punished for their seditious utterances. To prevent interference
-with his executive functions he sometimes imprisoned judges. Other
-measures no less arbitrary have been the subject of much criticism. He
-declared that whenever a loyal citizen was maltreated five or more
-sympathizers with the Rebellion should be arrested and dealt with as the
-nature of the case appeared to require. When the property of Union men
-was destroyed remuneration should be made them from the property of the
-disloyal. The President seems to have approved of these reprisals.
-Nothing more clearly shows the demoralized condition of society in
-Tennessee than the necessity of adopting measures similar to those
-employed eight centuries before by the Danish and Norman conquerors of
-England to protect their followers from private assassination by the
-natives. With the natural leaders of the people, including bankers,
-physicians and clergymen, encouraging treason, men of inferior
-intelligence and station could not be expected to remain peaceful and
-contented citizens, and as preachers of sedition seldom lack numerous
-and sympathetic audiences the spirit of lawlessness increased. The
-Governor himself was threatened with assassination in the public streets
-and in public meetings, but he set such menaces at defiance and on at
-least one occasion addressed an assembly with his pistol on a desk
-before him.
-
-But the repression of the disloyal and the restoration of order by no
-means included the whole of his duties. Functions not less important
-remain to be noticed. To the duties of governor and general he added
-those of quartermaster and judge. Though thousands of loyal people
-flocked to him for arms and supplies, he proved equal to every demand,
-and from their number raised an army that did gallant service in the
-field. He fed, clothed and sheltered the poor without regard to the army
-in which their natural protectors were serving. Thus redressing
-grievances, relieving want and reinstating courts he worked with an
-intelligent and tireless energy, and when the timid prudence of General
-Buell would have allowed Nashville to fall into the hands of the enemy
-“the courage of Governor Johnson,” said a panegyrist, “stood a bulwark
-for its defence.”[23] He had been scarcely three months in office when
-President Lincoln described him as “a true and valuable man,
-indispensable to us in Tennessee.” His zeal, his intense fidelity to the
-Union, his tremendous energy and undoubted courage peculiarly fitted him
-to rule in turbulent times. At the outset the only agencies left for the
-protection of life, liberty and property were force and arbitrary will;
-these he did not hesitate to employ.
-
-The foregoing account does not notice his activity in another field. His
-ultimate object, the establishment of civil authority throughout
-Tennessee, was kept constantly in view. To prepare for this event he
-addressed in May, 1862, large assemblies at Nashville and Murfreesboro,
-and in June at Columbia and Shelbyville.[24] This work, however, was
-brought suddenly to an end later in the summer by General Bragg’s raid
-into Kentucky.
-
-From what has been related it appears, and the opinion will grow
-stronger with the progress of this narrative, that in appointing a
-military governor of Tennessee President Lincoln intended no more than
-to revive an office already known to the people of the United States;
-and though Mr. Johnson was expected ultimately to reinaugurate a loyal
-government throughout the State, his office was regarded primarily as an
-inexpensive means of holding territory wrested from, and assisting in
-military operations against, an enemy. Indeed, it is only in this view
-that his administration of the office can be regarded as a success, and
-that it was so considered in the North his nomination on the ticket with
-Mr. Lincoln is undoubted proof.
-
-Besides several colored regiments, the records for 1863 show that 25,000
-Tennesseeans were then serving in the Union army, and every succeeding
-month increased their number.[25] That the political advantage to be
-gained by restoring a loyal government was not the only or even the
-principal purpose of the President may be fairly inferred from the
-following letter:
-
- I am told you have at least thought of raising a negro military
- force. In my opinion the country now needs no specific thing so much
- as some man of your ability and position to go to this work. When I
- speak of your position, I mean that of an eminent citizen of a slave
- state and himself a slaveholder. The colored population is the great
- available and yet un-availed of force for restoring the Union. The
- bare sight of 50,000 armed and drilled black soldiers upon the banks
- of the Mississippi would end the rebellion at once; and who doubts
- that we can present that sight if we but take hold in earnest? If
- you have been thinking of it, please do not dismiss the thought.[26]
-
-Besides supporting the view of the military governors taken above, this
-letter also makes it evident that the pressure of events had already
-convinced Mr. Lincoln that to save the Union it was necessary to possess
-the untrammeled use of every national resource.
-
-As early as June 8, 1862, the State was included in the department of
-General Halleck, who ten days later was requested by Mr. Lincoln to
-report any information of value relative thereto. The thought of a
-movement into East Tennessee was in the mind of the President again on
-June 30, when he informed the commander that he regarded the possession
-of the railroad near Cleveland fully as important as the taking of
-Richmond. Halleck, concurring in this opinion, telegraphed Buell that
-“the capture of East Tennessee should be the main object of the
-campaign,” the department commander believing its occupation would put
-an end to guerrilla warfare both in that region and Kentucky.
-
-The inactivity of General Rosecrans for six months after the battle of
-Murfreesboro left in the interior of the State a strong Confederate
-force whose presence discouraged all but the most pronounced loyalists;
-these, by means of meetings and speeches, kept a latent Union feeling
-alive. A convention, called by Brownlow, Maynard and others, was held at
-Nashville, July 1, 1863. Delegates were in attendance from forty
-counties; they took an oath of allegiance to the United States, and in a
-set of resolutions pronounced the various secession laws and ordinances
-void. Deeming it vitally important to choose a legislature, they invited
-Governor Johnson to issue writs of election as soon as expedient; with
-this request, however, he did not then think it prudent to comply.
-
-Other eyes were observing with interest the progress of events within
-the State. General Hurlbut, writing from Memphis, August 11, 1863,
-relative to the political situation in Arkansas, said he was satisfied
-that Tennessee was “ready, by overwhelming majorities, to repeal the act
-of secession, establish a fair system of gradual emancipation, and
-tender herself back to the Union. I have discouraged [he said] any
-action on this subject here until East Tennessee is delivered. When that
-is done, so that her powerful voice may be heard, let Governor Johnson
-call an election for members of the Legislature, and that Legislature
-call a Convention, and in sixty days the work will be done.”[27]
-
-This desirable event was not long delayed, for by brilliant though
-bloodless victories both Knoxville and Chattanooga early in the
-following month were in possession of Federal armies. Then President
-Lincoln wrote his letter of September 11, which, because of its great
-importance, deserves to be reproduced in full:
-
- All Tennessee is now clear of armed insurrectionists. You need not
- to be reminded that it is the nick of time for reinaugurating a
- loyal State government. Not a moment should be lost. You and the
- coöperating friends there can better judge of the ways and means
- than can be judged by any here. I only offer a few suggestions.
- The reinauguration must not be such as to give control of the
- State and its representation in Congress to the enemies of the
- Union, driving its friends there into political exile. The whole
- struggle for Tennessee will have been profitless to both State and
- nation if it so ends that Governor Johnson is put down and
- Governor Harris is put up. It must not be so. You must have it
- otherwise. Let the reconstruction be the work of such men only as
- can be trusted for the Union. Exclude all others, and trust that
- your government so organized will be recognized here as being the
- one of republican form to be guaranteed to the State, and to be
- protected against invasion and domestic violence. It is something
- on the question of time to remember that it cannot be known who is
- next to occupy the position I now hold, nor what he will do. I see
- that you have declared in favor of emancipation in Tennessee, for
- which may God bless you. Get emancipation into your new State
- Government—Constitution—and there will be no such word as fail for
- your case. The raising of colored troops, I think, will greatly
- help every way.[28]
-
-The reference in this communication to emancipation is explained by the
-fact that, in deference to the wishes of Andrew Johnson and other
-Tennessee loyalists, the President in his proclamation of January 1,
-1863, had not mentioned that State.[29]
-
-Believing that his commission as military governor did not confer upon
-him powers adequate to every emergency that might arise in the important
-work of restoring a loyal government Mr. Johnson, to supply this
-deficiency, prepared a letter which he submitted for the approval of
-President Lincoln, who amended or modified it to read as follows:
-
- In addition to the matters contained in the orders and instructions
- given you by the Secretary of War, you are hereby authorized to
- exercise such powers as may be necessary and proper to enable the
- loyal people of Tennessee to present such a republican form of State
- government as will entitle the State to the guaranty of the United
- States therefor, and to be protected under such State government by
- the United States against invasion and domestic violence, all
- according to the fourth section of the fourth article of the
- Constitution of the United States.[30]
-
-This supplemental authority is dated September 19, and the private
-letter enclosing it informs Governor Johnson why his draft was altered.
-
-It was about this time, while the President was thus urging Governor
-Johnson, that General Rosecrans, surrounded by a victorious enemy,
-inquired of Mr. Lincoln whether it would not be well “to offer a general
-amnesty to all officers and soldiers in the Rebellion?” In his reply
-next day the President, referring first, as was his wont, to the
-military situation, added, “I intend doing something like what you
-suggest whenever the case shall appear ripe enough to have it accepted
-in the true understanding rather than as a confession of weakness and
-fear.”[31] The removal soon after of General Rosecrans from his command
-and the fortunate appearance at Chattanooga of those great soldiers of
-the first rank, Grant, Sherman, Thomas and Sheridan, made at Lookout
-Mountain and Mission Ridge the occasion which the President so much
-desired, and on December 8, 1863, he issued his famous Proclamation of
-Amnesty and Reconstruction, a copy of which was transmitted with his
-third annual message to Congress. The impression which its candid tone
-produces on the mind of a student to-day was the impression made at the
-time of its appearance upon thoughtful and enlightened men everywhere.
-Nicolay and Hay in an interesting chapter of their valuable history
-describe the satisfaction, and even enthusiasm, with which it was
-received by the adherents of all parties in Congress. This proclamation,
-around which the later controversy raged, was authorized by act of
-Congress approved July 17, 1862, which, among other provisions,
-empowered the President “at any time” thereafter “to extend to persons
-who may have participated in the existing Rebellion in any State or part
-thereof, pardon and amnesty, with such exceptions and at such time and
-on such conditions as he may deem expedient for the public welfare.” The
-time for the exercise of this discretion Mr. Lincoln believed had now
-arrived. Like every measure conceived in his fruitful mind it had been
-maturely considered and was especially fortunate in being introduced by
-the concluding paragraphs of the message. The very note of sincerity
-itself rings in these weighty lines. Perhaps it was the suggestion of
-unuttered arguments that gave a temporary adherence to the Executive
-plan, which, we are told, was put forth because “It is now desired by
-some persons heretofore engaged in said rebellion to resume their
-allegiance to the United States, and to reinaugurate loyal State
-governments within and for their respective States.” The proclamation
-informed “all persons who have, directly or by implication, participated
-in the existing rebellion, except as hereinafter excepted, that a full
-pardon is hereby granted to them and each of them, with restoration of
-all rights of property, except as to slaves, and in property cases where
-rights of third parties shall have intervened, and upon the condition
-that every such person shall take and subscribe an oath, and
-thenceforward keep and maintain said oath inviolate; and which oath
-shall be registered for permanent preservation.” This oath bound the
-subscriber thenceforth to “faithfully support, protect, and defend the
-Constitution of the United States, and the union of the States
-thereunder”; to “abide by and faithfully support all acts of Congress
-passed during the existing rebellion with reference to slaves” unless
-repealed, modified or held void by Congress, or by decision of the
-Supreme Court; to support “all proclamations of the President made
-during the existing rebellion having reference to slaves, so long and so
-far as not modified or declared void by decision of the Supreme Court.”
-
-The classes excepted from the benefits of the amnesty were all persons
-“who are, or shall have been, civil or diplomatic officers or agents of
-the so-called Confederate Government; all who have left judicial
-stations under the United States to aid the rebellion; all who are, or
-shall have been, military or naval officers of said so-called
-Confederate Government above the rank of colonel in the army or
-lieutenant in the navy; all who left seats in the United States Congress
-to aid the rebellion; all who resigned commissions in the Army or Navy
-of the United States and afterward aided the rebellion; and all who have
-engaged in any way in treating colored persons, or white persons in
-charge of such, otherwise than lawfully as prisoners of war, and which
-persons may have been found in the United States service, as soldiers,
-seamen, or in any other capacity.”[32]
-
-The proclamation provided further that whenever, in any of the States in
-rebellion, “a number of persons, not less than one tenth in number of
-the votes cast in such State at the presidential election” of 1860,
-“each having taken the oath aforesaid and not having since violated it,
-and being a qualified voter by the election law of the State existing
-immediately before the so-called act of secession, and excluding all
-others, shall reëstablish a State government which shall be republican,
-and in nowise contravening said oath, such shall be recognized as the
-true government of the State and the State shall receive thereunder the
-benefits of the Constitutional provision which declares that ‘The United
-States shall guaranty to every State in this Union a republican form of
-Government, and shall protect each of them against invasion; and, on
-application of the legislature, or of the executive (when the
-legislature cannot be convened), against domestic violence.’”
-
-Any provision adopted by such State relative to its freed people “which
-shall recognize and declare their permanent freedom, provide for their
-education, and which may yet be consistent as a temporary arrangement
-with their present condition as a laboring, landless, and homeless
-class, will not be objected to by the national executive.” In
-constructing a loyal government in any State, it was thought not
-improper to suggest that “the name of the State, the boundary, the
-subdivisions, the constitution, and the general code of laws, as before
-the rebellion, be maintained, subject only to the modifications made
-necessary by the conditions hereinbefore stated, and such others, if
-any, not contravening said conditions, and which may be deemed expedient
-by those framing the new State government.”
-
-To avoid every occasion of misunderstanding it was expressly stated that
-the proclamation “has no reference to States wherein loyal State
-governments have all the while been maintained.” The President
-disclaimed any authority to admit members to seats in Congress, each
-House being “the judge of the elections, returns, and qualifications of
-its own members.”[33]
-
-In conclusion it was observed that “while the mode presented is the best
-the executive can suggest, with his present impressions, it must not be
-understood that no other possible mode would be acceptable.”[34]
-
-To get an enrollment of those willing to take the oath prescribed in the
-amnesty proclamation the President, about the middle of January, 1864,
-sent an agent to Tennessee, as he had already sent one to Louisiana and
-to Arkansas. About the same time Governor Johnson himself was
-considering the subject of reconstruction; and on the 21st, to begin
-proceedings, called a public meeting at Nashville. It was on this
-occasion that he said: “Treason must be made odious, traitors must be
-punished and impoverished;” slavery he pronounced dead and declared that
-reconstruction must leave it out of view. The meeting, which was largely
-attended, adopted resolutions recommending a constitutional convention
-and pledged support of only those candidates who favored immediate and
-universal emancipation. The Governor, however, was cautious, and,
-January 26, 1864, issued a call for an election, on the first Saturday
-of March following, for the choice of only county officers.
-
-The ex-Confederate and the loyalist having been placed by the amnesty
-proclamation on an equal footing, some dissatisfaction was aroused among
-unconditional Union men. To retain the confidence of this class and to
-set at rest the hostile feeling thus excited in the State, Governor
-Johnson framed the oath of allegiance more stringently than Mr. Lincoln
-had done. This variance occasioned discussion and delay and brought
-inquiries and protests to the President, who, to prevent confusion,
-telegraphed, February 20, 1864, Warren Jordan, of Nashville, as follows:
-
- In county elections you had better stand by Governor Johnson’s plan;
- otherwise you will have conflict and confusion. I have seen his
- plan.[35]
-
-A week later he assured the Hon. E. H. East, Secretary of State for
-Tennessee, that
-
- There is no conflict between the oath of amnesty in my proclamation
- of eighth December, 1863, and that prescribed by Governor Johnson in
- his proclamation of the twenty-sixth ultimo.[36]
-
-While it is perfectly true that no discrepancy existed between the
-proclamation of the President and that of the military governor, the
-latter required an additional test. This the communication to Mr. East
-does not discuss.
-
-To avoid, however, any possible mischief from this source Mr. Lincoln,
-March 26, issued a supplemental proclamation which explained that the
-amnesty applied only to “persons who being yet at large and free from
-any arrest, confinement, or duress, shall voluntarily come forward and
-take the said oath, with the purpose of restoring peace and establishing
-the national authority.”[37] Prisoners excluded from the amnesty offered
-in the proclamation of December 8, like all other offenders, might apply
-to the executive for clemency and have their applications receive due
-consideration. This oath, it was made known, could be taken before any
-commissioned officer of the United States, civil, military or naval, or
-before any officer authorized to administer oaths, in a State or
-Territory not in insurrection. Such officers were empowered to give
-certificates thereon to persons by whom the oath was taken and
-subscribed. The original records, after transmission to the Department
-of State, were to be there deposited and to remain in the Government
-archives. The Secretary of State was required to keep a register of such
-oaths and upon application to issue certificates in proper cases in the
-customary form.
-
-Meanwhile an election, the returns of which are extremely meagre, had
-been held on March 5 for the choice of county officers. Though the event
-was not without influence in confirming the faith of Unionists, it was
-chiefly of value in attracting the attention of the disloyal to the
-chances afforded by the proclamation of rehabilitating themselves in
-their former political rights. The result, however, was not so favorable
-as was expected by Governor Johnson or the President, and reconstruction
-in Tennessee once more sank to rest. From this condition it was again
-revived by the irrepressible Union men of the State. The East Tennessee
-convention of 1861, by appointing a permanent committee, had kept its
-organization alive. In April or May, 1864, this body called a convention
-at Knoxville to discuss reconstruction. Of this gathering one element
-favored the Crittenden Resolutions; the other, immediate emancipation.
-Probably it was this antagonism that prevented further action. The next
-we hear is that Brownlow and others signed a call for a second
-convention, which was held at Nashville on September 5. In this body
-forty or fifty counties were represented, some of them irregularly; that
-is, by volunteer delegates. This assembly recommended the election of a
-constitutional convention, the abolition of slavery in the State, and
-provided for taking part in the approaching Presidential election. The
-programme, however, was only partially carried out. On September 30,
-Governor Johnson issued a proclamation for holding the election, at
-which Union voters, so far as the unsettled condition of military
-operations permitted, cast their ballots for electors of President and
-Vice-President. It does not appear that in this election any attempt was
-made to choose a governor, a legislature or a constitutional convention;
-but that which met in July, 1863, constituted an executive committee,
-composed of five members from each division of the State, which after
-the Presidential election issued calls for a State convention at
-Nashville, December 19, 1864. “The people meet,” said the call, “to take
-such steps as wisdom may direct to restore the State of Tennessee to its
-once honored status in the great national Union.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“If you cannot meet in your counties, come upon your own personal
-responsibility. It is the assembling of Union men for the restoration of
-their own commonwealth to life and a career of success.”[38]
-
-Hood’s advance upon Nashville preventing a response to this address, the
-convention did not meet till January 9, 1865. The enemy had then been
-dispersed. The State being free from further alarms of war, the
-convention met and proposed important alterations in the State
-constitution.
-
-The first article provided: “That slavery and involuntary servitude,
-except as a punishment for crime, whereof the party shall have been duly
-convicted, are hereby forever abolished and prohibited throughout the
-State”; also that “The legislature shall make no law recognizing the
-right of property in man.” The old constitution of Tennessee prohibited
-the assembly from passing laws to emancipate slaves without the consent
-of the owner; that prohibition was now removed. “The declaration of
-independence and ordinance dissolving the federal relations between the
-State of Tennessee and the United States of America,” passed by the
-Legislature, May 6, 1861, was abrogated and declared “an act of treason
-and usurpation, unconstitutional, null and void.” All laws, ordinances,
-and resolutions of the usurped State government passed on and after the
-6th day of May, 1861, providing for the issuance of State bonds; also
-all notes of the Bank of Tennessee or any of its branches issued on or
-after May 6, 1861, and all debts created in the name of the State by
-said authority were declared unconstitutional, null and void. Future
-legislatures were restrained from the redemption of said bonds. It was
-further provided that “The qualification of voters and the limitation of
-the elective franchise may be determined by the general assembly, which
-shall first assemble under the amended constitution.”
-
-The convention completed its labors on January 26, 1865. The amendatory
-articles were submitted, February 22, to the people, and ratified by a
-vote of 21,104 to 40. The schedule provided in the event of ratification
-that the loyal people of the State should, on the 4th of March next
-thereafter, proceed by _general ticket_ to elect a governor and members
-to the general assembly to meet in the capitol at Nashville on the first
-Monday of April, 1865.
-
-A proclamation of Governor Johnson, issued on January 26, referred to
-the respectable character of the convention and commended its wisdom in
-submitting for the approval of the electors the result of its
-deliberations. His executive powers had been employed to enable the
-people freely to express their judgment on the grave question before
-them. Provision, he declared, would be made to collect the sentiments of
-loyal Tennesseeans in the army. The paper concludes with this vigorous
-exhortation: “Strike down at one blow the institution of slavery, remove
-the disturbing element from your midst, and by united action restore the
-State to its ancient moorings again, and you may confidently expect the
-speedy return of peace, happiness, and prosperity.”[39]
-
-About a month later, February 25, he had the happiness to congratulate
-the people of Tennessee on the favorable result of the election. By
-their solemn act at the ballot-box the shackles had been stricken from
-the limbs of more than 275,000 bondmen.
-
-The convention which proposed the constitutional amendments had, in
-anticipation of its ratification, nominated William G. [“Parson”]
-Brownlow for Governor, and recommended a full legislative ticket. The
-nominee of the convention was chosen March 4, almost without opposition,
-receiving 23,352 votes against 35 scattering. Having been elected on a
-general ticket the members of both the Senate and House of
-Representatives received the same support as the Governor. The
-Legislature met at Nashville, and in a few days thereafter Mr. Brownlow
-was inaugurated. Civil administration was thus formally begun.
-
-That the successive steps to restoration in Tennessee may be easily
-traced, the narrative has not been interrupted to relate even matters of
-undoubted importance. Almost a year before the occurrences described,
-the Republican national convention had assembled in the city of
-Baltimore, and on June 6, 1864, unanimously nominated Andrew Johnson for
-Vice-President on the ticket with Mr. Lincoln. Tidings of the fact
-aroused great enthusiasm when it became known in Nashville. In
-addressing an immense meeting called for that occasion Governor Johnson,
-among other things, said: “While society is in this disordered state,
-and we are seeking security, let us fix the foundations of our
-government on principles of eternal justice, which will endure for all
-time. There are those in our midst who are for perpetuating the
-institution of slavery. Let me say to you, Tennesseeans, and men from
-the Northern States, that slavery is dead. It was not murdered by me. I
-told you long ago what the result would be if you endeavored to go out
-of the Union to save slavery; and that the result would be bloodshed,
-rapine, devastated fields, plundered villages and cities; and therefore
-I urged you to remain in the Union. In trying to save slavery you killed
-it, and lost your own freedom.”[40]
-
-In his letter to Hon. William Dennison, accepting the nomination, he
-wrote:
-
- The authority of the Government is supreme, and will admit of no
- rivalry. No institution can rise above it whether it be slavery or
- any organized power. In our happy form of government all must be
- subordinate to the will of the people, when reflected through the
- Constitution and the laws made pursuant thereto—State or Federal.
- This great principle lies at the foundation of every government, and
- cannot be disregarded without the destruction of the government
- itself.
-
- In accepting the nomination I might here close, but I cannot forego
- the opportunity of saying to my old friends of the Democratic party
- _proper_, with whom I have so long and pleasantly been associated,
- that the hour has now come when that great party can justly
- vindicate its devotion to true democratic policy and measures of
- expediency. The war is a war of great principles. It involves the
- supremacy and life of the Government itself. If the rebellion
- triumphs, free government—North and South—fails. If, on the other
- hand, the Government is successful, as I do not doubt, its destiny
- is fixed, its basis permanent and enduring, and its career of honor
- and glory just begun. In a great contest like this, for the
- existence of free government, the path of duty is patriotism and
- principle. Minor considerations and questions of administrative
- policy should give way to the higher duty _of first preserving the
- Government_, and then there will be time enough to wrangle over the
- men and measures pertaining to its administration.[41]
-
-For reasons at which Mr. Lincoln hinted in his letter of March 26, 1863,
-few men in Congress exerted in the beginning of the war so decided an
-influence upon public opinion in the North as did Mr. Johnson. His
-conduct as military governor in no way diminished this popularity. His
-courage in that trying position no less than his devotion to the
-interests of the Union won him ardent admirers in every loyal State.
-
-Vice-President Hamlin appears to have been the victim of an intrigue
-which represented him as being no material source of strength to the
-government and as scarcely loyal to the administration. This injurious
-suspicion, which seems to have had no substantial basis in truth,
-happened to coincide with a growing conviction that the Republican party
-should strengthen itself by placing on the ticket with Lincoln some
-prominent leader of the opposition. In this connection the names of
-General Butler, John A. Dix, Daniel S. Dickinson and Andrew Johnson were
-mentioned. The last named was charged in his administration of the
-office of military governor with harshness and even with oppression.
-Investigation proved these rumors to be without foundation, and Mr.
-Lincoln was not displeased to find them groundless. It does not appear
-that he was especially favorable to Johnson, but he regarded him as
-indispensable to the Union cause in Tennessee; Johnson was a
-slave-holder, was somewhat more outspoken than Butler or Dix, and a more
-conspicuous representative of the large class known as War Democrats;
-above all he was an able exponent of Southern Union sentiment and he
-came from the very heart of the Confederacy. Perhaps no single element
-of strength made him more acceptable to the majority of the convention
-than this last consideration. Even these qualifications might not have
-singled him out for the distinction conferred were it not for the
-enthusiasm created by a remarkable speech of Horace Maynard, which
-mentioned Mr. Johnson as a man who “stood in the furnace of treason.”
-His administration as military governor had been distinguished for vigor
-and ability, and it does not appear that the radical Republicans then
-regarded his State without the Union. Some of his measures were
-undoubtedly severe, but the peculiar situation in Tennessee required the
-employment of methods not adapted to times of peace. Mr. Lincoln could
-not, of course, show his hand in the Baltimore convention. In fact he
-repeatedly declined to interfere.[42]
-
-On October 15, 1864, the ten electors on the McClellan ticket
-presented through Mr. John Lellyett, one of their number, a protest
-to the President against the proclamation published by Governor
-Johnson relative to the pending election. His paper, they asserted,
-contained provisions for holding elections which differed materially
-from the mode prescribed by the laws of Tennessee. The proclamation,
-it was alleged, would admit persons to vote who were not entitled by
-the State constitution to participate in the election; by another
-provision which authorized the opening of but one polling-place in
-each county, many legal voters would be unable to exercise the
-franchise. The unusual and impracticable test oath proposed, was
-stated as a further grievance, and they complained generally of
-military interference with the freedom of elections. To their
-representations Mr. Lincoln replied orally that General McClellan
-and his friends could manage their side of the contest in their own
-way. He could manage his side of it in his way.[43] In a written
-reply of the 22d, however, the President said that he perceived no
-military reason for interfering in the matter, and on the same
-occasion reminded the protestants that the conducting of a
-Presidential election in Tennessee under the old code had become an
-impossibility.[44]
-
-In their reply to the written communication of the President, they
-asserted that an orderly meeting of General McClellan’s friends had been
-broken up by Union soldiers, and a reign of terror inaugurated in
-Nashville. These acts having been countenanced by Governor Johnson, they
-announced the withdrawal of the McClellan electoral ticket in
-Tennessee.[45]
-
-In these circumstances the Union electors were, of course, chosen; but
-their votes, though offered, were not counted by Congress in the joint
-convention of February 8, 1865, for the reason that Tennessee was on
-November 8 preceding in such a state that no free election was held.[46]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- McPherson’s Political History of the United States, p. 1.
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 389–399; “Parson” Brownlow’s Book, pp. 54,
- 159, 160; Lalor’s Cyclopedia of Political Science, Political Economy
- and United States History, Vol. III. p. 698.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 112. The
- edition of Nicolay and Hay is used throughout.
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- The Loyal Mountaineers of Tennessee, p. 24.
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- More correctly, 301,056. Ibid.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- The Loyal Mountaineers of Tennessee, p. 32.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- Thirty years before President Lincoln published his Emancipation
- Proclamation Great Britain abolished slavery throughout her colonies.
- Naturally this action was viewed in no friendly spirit by the slave
- interest in America, for it brought the free negro to the very door of
- the Southern States, and though it was regarded as a menace to the
- “peculiar institution,” it was not until a positive loss was sustained
- that any controversy arose with England. In October, 1841, the brig
- _Creole_, of Richmond, with a cargo of 135 slaves left Hampton Roads
- for New Orleans. The negroes, under Madison Washington, killed one of
- the owners, took possession of the vessel and steered her into the
- port of Nassau. There those slaves not expressly charged with murder
- were set at liberty, and though the administration demanded their
- surrender they were not given up. The experience of the _Creole_ was
- not singular, several cases of a similar nature being recorded. These
- facts showed the danger of navigating the Bahama channel after 1833,
- and at least one reason for preferring the overland route down the
- Tennessee valley was an expectation of avoiding such accidents.—(See
- Wilson’s Rise and Fall of the Slave Power, Vol. I. pp. 443–444;
- Lalor’s Cyclopedia of Political Science, etc., Vol. I. pp. 709–710.)
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- Brownlow’s Book, p. 52.
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- The Loyal Mountaineers of Tennessee, pp. 80–81.
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- Brownlow’s Book, p. 67.
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- Art. I. sec. 10, Constitution of the United States.
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 5.
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- Misc. Doc. No. 55, H. of R., 1 Sess. 39th Cong., p. 5.
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- Why The Solid South? p. 170.
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- Cutt’s Conquest of California and New Mexico, p. 246.
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- Statesman’s Manual, Vol. IV. p. 1742.
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- The Lost Cause, p. 209.
-
-Footnote 20:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1862, p. 763.
-
-Footnote 21:
-
- Life and Speeches of Andrew Johnson, pp. 451–456. Boston: Little,
- Brown & Co. 1866.
-
-Footnote 22:
-
- Life, Speeches, and Services of Andrew Johnson, pp. 101–104.
- Philadelphia: T. B. Peterson & Brothers.
-
-Footnote 23:
-
- Memorial Addresses on the Life and Character of Andrew Johnson, pp.
- 76–80; Memoir by Frank Moore, pp. xxvi-xxvii in Life and Speeches of
- Andrew Johnson. Boston: Little, Brown & Co.
-
-Footnote 24:
-
- Life of Andrew Johnson, pp. 98–101; Philadelphia: T. B. Peterson &
- Brothers.
-
-Footnote 25:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 828.
-
-Footnote 26:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 318.
-
-Footnote 27:
-
- Abraham Lincoln, A History by Nicolay & Hay, Vol. VIII. p. 440.
-
-Footnote 28:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 405.
-
-Footnote 29:
-
- History of Abraham Lincoln, by Isaac N. Arnold, p. 303.
-
-Footnote 30:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 408.
-
-Footnote 31:
-
- Ibid., p. 419.
-
-Footnote 32:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 443.
-
-Footnote 33:
-
- Art. I. sec. 5, Constitution of the U. S.
-
-Footnote 34:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 443–444.
-
-Footnote 35:
-
- Ibid., p. 486.
-
-Footnote 36:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 487.
-
-Footnote 37:
-
- Ibid., pp. 504–505.
-
-Footnote 38:
-
- Misc. Doc. No. 55, p. 5, H. of R., 1 Sess. 39th Cong.
-
-Footnote 39:
-
- Misc. Doc. No. 55, p. 9, H. of R., 1 Sess. 39th Cong.
-
-Footnote 40:
-
- Life of Andrew Johnson, pp. 159–160.
-
-Footnote 41:
-
- Life of Andrew Johnson, pp. 160–161. New York: D. Appleton & Co.,
- 1866.
-
-Footnote 42:
-
- McClure’s Lincoln and Men of War Times, pp. 106–108; Blaine’s Twenty
- Years of Congress, Vol. II. p. 7; Hamlin’s Life and Times of Hannibal
- Hamlin, pp. 449–489 and 591–615.
-
-Footnote 43:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 438–439.
-
-Footnote 44:
-
- Ibid., p. 425.
-
-Footnote 45:
-
- Ibid., p. 441.
-
-Footnote 46:
-
- For a discussion of this subject see Chapter IX.
-
-
-
-
- II
- LOUISIANA
-
-
-The first movement toward reconstruction in Louisiana, as in the case of
-Tennessee, was bound up with the war powers of the President, and, no
-doubt, was made with some expectation of aiding his military plans. The
-thought of restoring a loyal government there proceeded quite naturally
-from the peculiar situation in the State. Though not so nearly unanimous
-for secession as South Carolina, her people acted with energy and
-promptness when they received tidings of “this last insult and outrage,”
-as the election of Mr. Lincoln was sensationally styled.[47] Three days
-were deemed sufficient for deliberation, and the convention, January 25,
-1861, passed an ordinance of secession. Two weeks before this assembly
-met at Baton Rouge, the arsenal and the forts, a public building and a
-revenue cutter had been seized by State troops from New Orleans. In the
-mint and the custom house of that city more than half a million dollars
-was secured for the Confederate States, and in accepting these funds the
-Montgomery Congress expressed its “high sense of the patriotic
-liberality” of Louisiana.[48] This act of generosity, however, loses
-much of its merit when it is remembered that both the coin and bullion
-in the mint, as well as the customs, belonged to the Federal government.
-Besides, there was then no scarcity of money in the State, for Northern
-enterprise had found for her cotton and her sugar profitable markets
-both at home and abroad. It was benefits of this sort, enjoyed in the
-Union, that enabled Governor Moore in January, 1861, to report to his
-Legislature an overflowing treasury.[49] This undoubted prosperity
-served only to aggravate the war fever. Enthusiasm in New Orleans was
-only less ardent and general than in Charleston. Business was almost
-suspended, and by the first of June no less than 16,000 residents of
-Louisiana were serving in the Confederate army.[50]
-
-President Lincoln’s proclamation of April 19 preceding had inaugurated a
-blockade of every port within the State. The early days of July
-witnessed the disappearance of Governor Moore’s boasted surplus, and
-during the summer New Orleans became bankrupt;[51] her foreign commerce
-was destroyed by the blockade, her credit had vanished. Though
-enlistments continued without interruption, signs of financial distress
-multiplied with the approach of winter. Rebellion, it was soon
-discovered, was not attended with unmixed blessings; bad government had
-produced its usual consequences, and when Governor Taylor, late in the
-summer of 1862, undertook to raise an army for the defence of his State
-he was surprised at the universal apathy; neglect and disaster had
-brought disunionists to a condition little short of hostility to the
-Richmond government.[52]
-
-Union men in southern Louisiana had not been unobservant of these signs;
-permanent residents of this portion of the State had, for the most part,
-maintained their loyalty to the General Government. Indeed, a decided
-majority of them in the election of 1860 had voted for Bell and Douglas,
-and though here, as elsewhere in the South, ardent secessionists were
-found, the proceedings in the convention took the Union men by
-surprise.[53] In the interval they had refrained from violence, but had
-not become reconciled to oppression.
-
-The importance of New Orleans to their cause had not been overlooked by
-Confederate authorities, and that city was held firmly in their grasp
-until the fleet of Captain Farragut, toward the close of April, 1862,
-steamed up in hostile array before its defences. The occupation by
-General Butler’s army of this strategic position ended in southern
-Louisiana the activity of the more extreme secessionists, and though
-some restlessness at the presence of Federal forces was pretended by
-even Union men, they had not until the surrender made any serious effort
-to help themselves. Under protection of the army, however, they
-commenced immediately to form Union associations for the purpose of
-developing the loyal sentiment in this part of the State. Resolutions
-recommending an election were passed by these organizations; newspapers
-discussed the question, and in various ways it was forced upon the
-attention of the President.[54] The more prudent and intelligent among
-them began under encouragement of Federal troops to consider measures
-for relief; the less practical commenced writing complaints to friends
-in the North.
-
-In a private letter of July 26, 1862, to Hon. Reverdy Johnson, then in
-New Orleans investigating General Butler’s relations with foreign
-consuls, Mr. Lincoln, noticing a reference to the restlessness of the
-people under the rule of General Phelps, asks the Maryland Senator to
-pardon him for believing the complaint “a false pretense.” A way to
-avert the inconveniences arising from military occupation was for the
-people of Louisiana “simply to take their place in the Union upon the
-old terms.”[55] Writing two days later to Cuthbert Bullett, a Southern
-gentleman who appears to have enjoyed his personal esteem and
-confidence, the President, after mentioning difficulties in the way of
-establishing civil authority in the State, suggested a method of
-avoiding them: “The people of Louisiana who wish protection to person
-and property,” he wrote, “have but to reach forth their hands and take
-it. Let them in good faith reinaugurate the national authority, and set
-up a State government conforming thereto under the Constitution. They
-know how to do it, and can have the protection of the army while doing
-it. The army will be withdrawn so soon as such State government can
-dispense with its presence; and the people of the State can then, upon
-the old constitutional terms, govern themselves to their own
-liking.”[56] If, however, Union men exerted themselves no further than
-criticism of the Federal Government, it was more than intimated that
-there were to be expected greater injuries than military necessity had
-yet inflicted.
-
-The pressure of events appears even then to have been forcing the
-President in the direction of emancipation. To August Belmont, of New
-York, who enclosed the complaints of a New Orleans correspondent, Mr.
-Lincoln, July 31, 1862, repeated in substance what had already been
-written to Mr. Bullett, and added: “Those enemies must understand that
-they cannot experiment for ten years trying to destroy the government,
-and if they fail still come back into the Union unhurt. If they expect
-in any contingency to ever have the Union as it was, I join with the
-writer [Mr. Belmont’s correspondent] in saying, ‘Now is the time.’”[57]
-
-The appointment in August, 1862, of General George F. Shepley as
-military governor may be regarded as the first act in the restoration of
-a loyal government for Louisiana. His selection, though probably
-intended as a private commendation of the judgment of General Butler,
-who had already designated him as Mayor of New Orleans, was never
-considered by that officer adequate atonement for the public censure
-implied in his removal, December, 1862, from command of the Department
-of the Gulf.
-
-Upon the Federal occupation of New Orleans and adjacent territory all
-functions of the disloyal government therein immediately ceased. As
-controversies were constantly arising the establishment of courts had
-become a necessity. At first these questions were for the most part
-adjudicated by General Butler himself, but the pressure of military and
-other affairs compelled him soon to refer their settlement to civilians
-or to army officers especially chosen for the purpose. This uncertain
-system of justice, though immeasurably better than none, led to the
-institution of courts each of which was known by the name of the officer
-holding it. Accused persons were brought to trial, and judgments
-executed by soldiers detailed for such duty. No formal record of
-proceedings in these tribunals appears to have been kept, though
-memoranda of judgments rendered were, no doubt, made by an officer who
-came eventually to be designated as clerk.
-
-For the decision of questions relating exclusively to the force under
-his command General Butler some time in June, 1862, organized a tribunal
-known as the Provost Court of the Army of the United States, over which
-Major Joseph M. Bell presided. Questions in no way connected with the
-military, especially matters of police and the punishment of crimes,
-were often submitted for its determination. Aggrieved persons, without
-reflecting upon the consequence of their acts, naturally appealed for
-redress to the holder of power. Thus the authority of this institution
-silently extended, and by the autumn of 1862 it exercised unquestioned
-jurisdiction over all criminal cases arising in the city of New
-Orleans.[58] In the absence of courts for adjudicating civil questions
-they, too, were referred to its consideration. All functions of
-government having been suspended by the capture of the city, it became
-the duty of the Federal commander, and his right by the laws of war, to
-provide, among other things, for the administration of justice.
-
-One of the early acts of General Shepley after his appointment as
-Military Governor was to establish a system of courts for the State.
-Most of the former officials having fled after the surrender, he was
-compelled practically to create new tribunals, and this task he greatly
-simplified by reviving those institutions of justice with which the
-people of Louisiana were already familiar. John S. Whittaker was
-accordingly appointed Judge of the Second District Court of the parish
-of Orleans. Besides possessing in civil matters the ordinary powers of a
-local court the old tribunal of that name had been a court of probates
-and successions. The new exercised all the powers of the old court. It
-should be remembered, however, that the latter derived its authority
-from the laws of Louisiana, while the former owed its existence to the
-war powers of the Federal Executive. Its jurisdiction extended to civil
-cases generally where the defendant resided in the parish of Orleans or
-was a non-resident of the State.[59]
-
-Judge Hiestand was appointed to the bench of the Fourth District Court
-of the parish of Orleans. Besides possessing the general authority of
-other district courts in that parish it entertained appeals from
-justices’ courts; indeed, these constituted a large part of its
-business.[60]
-
-The Sixth District Court of the parish of Orleans, revived soon after
-the capture of the city, is, because of the incumbent of that bench,
-Judge Rufus K. Howell, of greater interest than either of the preceding.
-Under a commission received from the State of Louisiana before its
-attempted secession he continued to preside over that tribunal while the
-disunion party ruled New Orleans, and performed his functions up to the
-very hour of its surrender to the Federal authorities. Having early
-taken the oath of allegiance to the national Government he was permitted
-to resume his functions.[61] Like the tribunals mentioned, this court
-retained and exercised all the powers that it possessed as originally
-constituted.
-
-These courts, instituted during September and October, 1862, entered
-upon the discharge of their duties about the 1st of November following.
-They were the only tribunals of civil jurisdiction in Louisiana, and
-that jurisdiction was limited, as against defendants resident of the
-State, to citizens of the parish of Orleans. As to inhabitants beyond
-the limits of that parish there was no court in which they could be
-sued. Though the Federal forces held several counties in this condition,
-their tenure fluctuated with the fortunes of war. A court was therefore
-needed whose jurisdiction would expand with the advance, and contract
-with the retreat, of the Union armies. The Provost Court was not deemed
-adequate, and indeed was never designed to meet such contingencies. To
-supply this deficiency a tribunal of very extensive powers, designated
-as “a court of record for the State of Louisiana,” was constituted by
-Executive order on October 20. Of this flexible institution Charles A.
-Peabody, of New York, a friend of Secretary Seward, was made provisional
-judge. Besides being empowered to select a prosecuting attorney, a
-marshal and a clerk, and to make rules for the exercise of his
-jurisdiction, he was authorized “to hear, try and determine all causes,
-civil and criminal, including causes in law, equity, revenue and
-admiralty, and particularly all such powers and jurisdiction as belong
-to the District and Circuit Courts of the United States, conforming his
-proceedings, so far as possible, to the course of proceedings and
-practice which has been customary in the Courts of the United States and
-Louisiana—his judgment to be final and conclusive.” These officers were
-to be paid out of the contingent fund of the War Department, and a copy
-of the Executive order, certified by the Secretary of War, was “held to
-be a sufficient commission” for the Judge.
-
-This institution, made up as to its _personnel_ in the North, was sent
-from New York with the great expedition of General Banks constituted and
-organized for immediate business to Louisiana. Though Judge Peabody,
-accompanied by Augustus de B. Hughes, Isaac Edward Clarke and George D.
-Lamont, who had been chosen, respectively, clerk, marshal and
-prosecuting attorney, arrived in New Orleans December 15, 1862, the
-opening of court was delayed till the 29th of that month by a change of
-administration in that Department.[62]
-
-In addition to the tribunals described many other courts were
-established about this time; of these the Supreme Court of Louisiana is
-the only one which appears to require especial mention. In former times
-under the State judicial system appeals had lain to this institution,
-and it was accordingly held that decisions of the courts now created
-were subject to its revision. In this manner many of their judgments
-were stayed and in suspense, so that the new district courts were of
-little practical benefit. The necessity of a tribunal to remedy this
-deficiency and adjudicate the accumulated cases of former years soon
-became apparent, and in April, 1863, Mr. Peabody was appointed Chief
-Justice of the State Supreme Court; associated with him on this bench
-were judges chosen from among the people of Louisiana.
-
-Nearly a week before his appointment of Judge Peabody, Mr. Lincoln, by
-the hand of Hon. John E. Bouligny, who had not left his seat in the
-House of Representatives when Southern delegations withdrew from
-Congress, sent to General Butler, Governor Shepley and other Federal
-officers having authority under the United States in Louisiana a
-communication requesting each of them to assist Mr. Bouligny in his
-effort to secure “peace again upon the old terms under the Constitution
-of the United States.”[63] This desirable end was to be attained by the
-election of “members to the Congress of the United States particularly,
-and perhaps a legislature, State officers, and United States senators
-friendly to their object.” Federal officers were instructed to give the
-people a chance to express their wishes at these elections. “Follow
-forms of law,” wrote the President, “as far as convenient, but at all
-events get the expression of the largest number of the people possible.
-All see how such action will connect with and affect the proclamation of
-September 22. Of course the men elected should be gentlemen of
-character, willing to swear support to the Constitution, as of old, and
-known to be above reasonable suspicion of duplicity.”[64]
-
-Loyal leaders, believing that Northern men holding office under the
-General Government in Louisiana would be set up as candidates,
-communicated their fears to the President, who sent to Governor Shepley
-a fortnight before the election a letter of which the essential portion
-is as follows:
-
- We do not particularly need members of Congress from there to enable
- us to get along with legislation here. What we do want is the
- conclusive evidence that respectable citizens of Louisiana are
- willing to be members of Congress and to swear support to the
- Constitution and that other respectable citizens there are willing
- to vote for them and send them. To send a parcel of Northern men
- here as representatives, elected, as would be understood (and
- perhaps really so), at the point of the bayonet, would be disgusting
- and outrageous; and were I a member of Congress here, I would vote
- against admitting any such man to a seat.[65]
-
-The note of sincerity is unmistakable throughout, and in those
-Representatives and Senators opposed to Executive policy the concluding
-sentences especially must have excited strange emotions when they
-re-read in after years their impassioned attacks in Congress upon that
-dark spirit who, it was gravely alleged, labored with might unquestioned
-to subordinate the Legislative branch of Government.
-
-The Union associations referred to appointed committees who waited upon
-General Shepley and demanded an election. This he hesitated to call
-until considerable pressure had first been exerted. The sentiments of
-the President concurring with the local feeling in New Orleans, Shepley
-finally yielded, and on November 14, 1862, issued a proclamation for an
-election to be held December 3d following. This election, in the
-language of his proclamation, was ordered “for the purpose of securing
-to the loyal electors” of both the First and Second Congressional
-Districts “their appropriate and lawful representation in the House of
-Representatives of the United States of America, and of enabling them to
-avail themselves of the benefits secured by the proclamation of the
-President of the United States to the people of any State, or part of a
-State, who shall on the first day of January next be in good faith
-represented in the Congress of the United States, by members chosen
-thereto at elections wherein a majority of the qualified voters of such
-State have participated.”[66]
-
-In addition to the qualifications prescribed by the laws of Louisiana,
-General Shepley required each elector to take an oath of allegiance to
-the United States, and from among the old and respected citizens of the
-State appointed sheriffs and commissioners of election, who performed
-their duties to the entire satisfaction of both candidates and voters.
-The army, for reasons given above, refrained from all manner of
-interference, and no Federal office-holder was a nominee.
-
-For the first time in many years, it was admitted, every qualified
-elector might freely cast his ballot without fear of intimidation or
-violence. In a total of 2,643 votes Benjamin F. Flanders was chosen,
-with little opposition, for the First, and Michael Hahn, by a safe
-majority, for the Second Congressional District. A larger vote was
-actually cast for Flanders than had been received by his predecessor,
-and in both districts 7,760 citizens, or about half the usual number,
-appeared at the polls. When it is remembered that four thousand soldiers
-who enlisted in Butler’s army from this part of the State did not
-participate in the contest, that many citizens from this section were
-serving in the Confederate army and that not a few Union men were exiles
-in the North or in Europe the vote in this election was by no means
-light.
-
-With credentials signed by Governor Shepley, Messrs. Hahn and Flanders
-appeared in Washington as claimants for seats in Congress. After a
-thorough investigation of the election and several ingenious arguments
-in opposition both were admitted, February 17, 1863, though not without
-considerable misgiving, as Representatives for the remainder of the
-term, which expired March 3 following. For their exclusion the
-opposition relied mainly upon these grounds:
-
-_First._ The election, it was asserted, was brought about by a threat of
-interference with slave property if the State was not represented in
-Congress by January 1, 1863; this was a measure of coercion, and the
-compliance of citizens in appearing at the polls was ascribed to selfish
-motives rather than to loyal and patriotic sentiments.
-
-_Second._ The existence of any vacancy in a constitutional sense was at
-least doubtful; and even if vacancies existed in these districts the
-authority of a military governor to call an election was denied.
-
-_Third._ It was objected that Governor Shepley had dispensed with the
-registry required by law and had empowered commissioners of election to
-decide upon the qualifications of voters; finally, by requiring an oath
-of allegiance to the United States, he had imposed upon electors a test
-unknown to the laws of Louisiana.[67]
-
-While the cases of Messrs. Hahn and Flanders were pending the edict of
-freedom had gone forth, for the President, as announced in his
-preliminary proclamation of September 22, had declared, January 1, 1863,
-“as a fit and necessary war measure,” that “all persons held as slaves
-within said designated States and parts of States, are and henceforward
-shall be free.”[68] Louisiana was named as one of the States in
-rebellion. From the operation of this measure, however, the city of New
-Orleans and thirteen parishes of the State were excepted.
-
-The admission, February 17, of Hahn and Flanders gave new life to the
-political reorganization of the State.[69] But with this revival of
-interest there was discovered among the supporters of the Federal
-Government a difference of opinion as to the best course to be pursued
-in the circumstances. This division of sentiment arose concerning the
-wisdom of retaining slavery in those parishes not included in the
-President’s proclamation. The Union associations, each appointing five
-delegates, organized what they termed a Free State General Committee
-with Thomas J. Durant as president. This body, holding anti-slavery
-views and assuming that rebellion had destroyed the fundamental law,
-took measures to elect delegates to a general convention for the purpose
-of framing a new constitution prohibiting slavery. Their plan was
-approved by General Shepley, who, June 12, 1863, appointed Mr. Durant
-Attorney-General for the State, with power to act as commissioner of
-registration.[70] He was ordered on the same day to make an enrollment
-of all free white male citizens of the United States having resided six
-months in the State and one month in the parish, who should each take
-the oath of allegiance and register “as a voter freely and voluntarily
-for the purpose of organizing a State government in Louisiana, loyal to
-the Government of the United States.”[71]
-
-The conservative element, though less active, was by no means
-indifferent to these measures, and sent to Washington a committee of
-planters to consult the President. They represented in a communication
-to him that they had “been delegated to seek of the General Government a
-full recognition of all the rights of the State as they existed previous
-to the passage of an act of secession, upon the principle of the
-existence of the State constitution unimpaired, and no legal act having
-transpired that could in any way deprive them of the advantages
-conferred by that constitution.” They further requested him to direct
-the Military Governor to order an election on the first Monday of
-November following for all State and Federal officers.[72] To this
-committee, composed of E. E. Malhiot, Bradish Johnson and Thomas
-Cottman, Mr. Lincoln, under date of June 19, 1863, replied “that a
-respectable portion of the Louisiana people desired to amend their State
-constitution, and contemplated holding a State convention for that
-object. This fact alone, as it seems to me, is a sufficient reason why
-the General Government should not give the committal you seek to the
-existing State constitution. I may add that while I do not perceive how
-such committal could facilitate our military operations in Louisiana, I
-really apprehend it might be so used as to embarrass them.”[73]
-
-It is evident, when we recall the letter of July 26, 1862, to Reverdy
-Johnson, that the President, then only contemplating emancipation, had,
-since his proclamation had gone forth, taken much more advanced
-ground.[74] The army was still his main reliance, and the wisdom of
-restoring a loyal government as well as the method of that restoration
-was regarded favorably or otherwise as it appeared to facilitate or
-embarrass military operations.
-
-Relative to an election in November he said, “There is abundant time
-without any order or proclamation from me just now.” Though their
-request was courteously denied, he assured the committee that the people
-of Louisiana should not lack an opportunity for a fair election for both
-Federal and State officers by want of anything within his power to give
-them.[75]
-
-The political reorganization of the State was at this point interrupted
-by the absence at Port Hudson of General N. P. Banks, then in command of
-the Department of the Gulf. So energetic and successful was the
-Confederate General Taylor that by July 10, when he received
-intelligence of the fall of Port Hudson and the surrender of Vicksburg,
-his mounted scouts had been pushed to within sixteen miles of New
-Orleans.[76] The surrender in these strongholds of more than 40,000 men
-was a crushing blow to the Richmond Government; enough troops were
-disengaged by these victories to overwhelm the enemy that menaced New
-Orleans, and General Taylor hurriedly concentrated his army in the
-valley of the Red River to observe the movements of the Federal
-commander. The Union picket line marked at this time the bounds of
-Governor Shepley’s civil jurisdiction; indeed, it was not greatly
-extended until the surrender of General E. Kirby Smith late in May,
-1865, after the engagement at Brazos. Eastern Louisiana, with Alabama
-and Mississippi, had passed a few weeks earlier under Federal control.
-
-The great numbers withdrawn from production in the South combined with a
-rigorous enforcement of the blockade had occasioned a cotton famine in
-the markets of the world. To relieve this condition an outlet was sought
-for the abundant crops of the Red River country; and this fact was
-probably, not without considerable influence, in determining the course
-of the expedition into Texas, which was intended to accomplish a very
-different though scarcely less important purpose.
-
-Though the vigilance of Mr. Adams, United States Minister to England,
-was rewarded by the abandonment in that country of any further attempt
-to build cruisers of the Alabama type, the Confederate naval agent by no
-means despaired of dealing still severer blows to the commerce of the
-North, and, attracted by promises which appear to have been authorized
-by the ruler of France, changed his field of activity from Liverpool to
-Bordeaux, where a ship-builder was engaged to construct two formidable
-rams. With the attempts to get these under the Confederate flag this
-essay is not concerned.[77] French interests in Mexico appeared at that
-time to require the cultivation of friendly relations with what some
-European States believed was destined to become a new power among the
-nations of the world; hence Napoleon’s encouragement to the Confederate
-representatives abroad. This situation was so seriously regarded by the
-Government at Washington that even at considerable sacrifice it was
-determined to plant the Union flag somewhere in Texas. To effect this
-object General Banks had considered and submitted to the War Department
-plans of his own; these, however, appear to have been reluctantly
-abandoned because of repeated instructions from General Halleck, and the
-movement toward Shreveport in the spring and early summer of 1864 was
-begun. From the protracted and envenomed controversy to which it gave
-rise among the officers on both sides its disastrous ending is familiar
-to all.[78]
-
-While this joint land and naval expedition was yet in contemplation Mr.
-Lincoln found time to inform the Federal commander of his opinions
-respecting the establishment of a civil government in Louisiana. In his
-letter of August 5, 1863, to General Banks he wrote:
-
- While I very well know what I would be glad for Louisiana to do, it
- is quite a different thing for me to assume direction of the matter.
- I would be glad for her to make a new constitution recognizing the
- emancipation proclamation, and adopting emancipation in those parts
- of the State to which the proclamation does not apply. And while she
- is at it, I think it would not be objectionable for her to adopt
- some practical system by which the two races could gradually live
- themselves out of the old relation to each other, and both come out
- better prepared for the new. Education for young blacks should be
- included in the plan. After all, the power or element of “contract”
- may be sufficient for this probationary period; and, by its
- simplicity and flexibility, may be the better.
-
- As an anti-slavery man, I have a motive to desire emancipation which
- pro-slavery men do not have; but even they have strong enough reason
- to thus place themselves again under the shield of the Union; and to
- thus perpetually hedge against the recurrence of the scenes through
- which we are now passing.
-
-He expressed his approval of the registry which he supposed Mr. Durant
-was making with a view to an election for a constitutional convention,
-the work of which, he hoped, would reach Washington by the meeting of
-Congress in December. Before concluding this letter he added: “For my
-own part, I think I shall not, in any event, retract the emancipation
-proclamation; nor, as executive, ever return to slavery any person who
-is freed by the terms of that proclamation, or by any of the acts of
-Congress.”[79]
-
-He again invites attention to the fact that if Louisiana should send
-members to Congress their admission would depend upon the respective
-Houses and not to any extent upon the wishes of the Executive.
-
-Copies of this communication he intended to send to Hahn, Flanders and
-Durant. Three months later, when the gentleman last named informed him
-that nothing had yet been done toward the enrollment, Mr. Lincoln wrote
-immediately to General Banks a letter which at once reveals both the
-extent of his interest in this subject and his extreme disappointment on
-learning that his wishes had been but little regarded. Flanders, then in
-Washington, confirmed the account of Durant. “This disappoints me
-bitterly,” said the letter of November 5, 1863, and though the President
-did not blame either General Banks or the Louisiana leaders for this
-apparent neglect he urged them “to lose no more time.” “I wish him
-[General Shepley], ...” continued the letter, “without waiting for more
-territory, to go to work and give me a tangible nucleus which the
-remainder of the State may rally around as fast as it can, and which I
-can at once recognize and sustain as the true State government. And in
-that work I wish you and all under your command to give them a hearty
-sympathy and support.
-
-“The instruction to Governor Shepley bases the movement (and rightfully,
-too) upon the loyal element. Time is important. There is danger, even
-now, that the adverse element seeks insidiously to preoccupy the ground.
-If a few professedly loyal men shall draw the disloyal about them, and
-colorably set up a State government, repudiating the Emancipation
-Proclamation and reëstablishing slavery, I cannot recognize or sustain
-their work. I should fall powerless in the attempt. This Government in
-such an attitude would be a house divided against itself.
-
-“I have said, and say again, that if a new State government, acting in
-harmony with this government, and consistently with general freedom,
-shall think best to adopt a reasonable temporary arrangement in relation
-to the landless and homeless freed people, I do not object; but my word
-is out to be for and not against them on any question of their permanent
-freedom. I do not insist upon such temporary arrangement, but only say
-such would not be objectionable to me.”[80]
-
-It should be remembered that Thomas J. Durant, who was authorized to
-make the enrollment as well as to appoint “registers” to assist him, was
-spokesman of the wealthy and influential class of planters, or the
-conservative element whose interests opposed any disturbance of existing
-conditions. He appears to have drawn for the President a somewhat gloomy
-picture of the political situation in Louisiana, and finally to have
-protested against the government organized by the adverse party. The
-outlook there, however, was not so discouraging as represented; for as
-early as October 9 Governor Shepley had renewed his order for the
-registration, modifying the former one so far as to include “all loyal
-citizens.”
-
-Interest was somewhat quickened by the announcement of certain
-conservative leaders of an intention to hold a voluntary election in
-conformity with the old constitution and laws of the State. On October
-27, 1863, an address signed by the president and vice-president of the
-Central Executive Committee was published in the papers of New Orleans.
-This appeal, directed to the loyal citizens of Louisiana, begins:
-
- The want of civil government in our State can, by a proper effort on
- your part, soon be supplied, under laws and a constitution formed
- and adopted by yourselves in a time of profound peace. It is made
- your duty, as well as your right, to meet at the usual places, and
- cast your votes for State and parish officers, members of Congress,
- and of the State Legislature.
-
- * * * * *
-
- The day, as fixed by our laws, is Monday, the 2d day of November
- next, 1863. There is nothing [proceeds the address] to prevent your
- meeting on the day fixed by law, and selecting your agents to carry
- on the affairs of government in our own State. The military will not
- interfere with you in the exercise of your civil rights and duties,
- and we think we can assure you that your action in this respect will
- meet the approval of the National Government.
-
-The failure of those citizens addressed to exercise their rights, it was
-asserted, would subject “the country” to the danger of being thrown as
-“vacated” territory into the hands of Congress.[81]
-
-The Free State Committee having been invited to coöperate, a
-correspondence ensued between the rival organizations; but, on the
-ground that this movement was both illegal and unjust, the Free State
-men declined to participate in the election. In their reply the latter
-assert that “There is no law in existence, as stated by you [The
-Executive Central Committee], directing elections to be held on the
-first Monday of November.
-
-“The constitution of 1852, as amended by the convention of 1861, was
-overthrown and destroyed by the rebellion of the people of Louisiana,
-and the subsequent conquest by the arms of the United States does not
-restore your political institutions.”[82]
-
-The reply then proceeds to discuss the injustice of the movement, and
-upon this subject its reasoning is entitled to more respect. As to the
-status of the constitution of 1852, it is not easy to comprehend how the
-secession convention, a body universally regarded as revolutionary,
-could amend, in the manner attempted, the fundamental law, seeing that
-this revolution was not yet crowned with success.
-
-Though no general election was held in response to this address, voting
-took place in two parishes, and certain persons were chosen as
-Representatives in Congress. Before giving an account of this election
-of November 2, 1863, it may be proper to notice a petition submitted by
-the free colored people of New Orleans to Governor Shepley praying to be
-registered as voters so that they could “assist in establishing in the
-new Convention a Civil Government” for their “beloved State of
-Louisiana.” This address, prepared at a meeting on November 5, and not
-without ability, recites in appropriate language the services rendered
-by free colored men to both the Nation and the State. It is sufficient
-to observe here that their prayer was not granted. The paper itself will
-be considered in discussing the successive steps which led to the
-complete enfranchisement of the race.[83]
-
-The preceding chapter has noticed President Lincoln’s Amnesty
-Proclamation of December 8 as well as that part of the accompanying
-message to Congress discussing his plan for restoring Union governments
-in the insurgent States. The House had not completed its organization
-for the Thirty-eighth Congress when Thaddeus Stevens, a Representative
-from Pennsylvania, either from curiosity or an anxiety to oppose, as he
-conceived, the policy of the President, inquired what names had been
-omitted in the call of members. At a later stage of its first meeting,
-December 7, 1863, he again referred to this subject by asking to have
-read the credentials of persons claiming to be Representatives “from the
-so-called State of Louisiana.” The acting clerk facetiously promised
-compliance, and read a certificate signed by Mr. John Leonard Riddell
-naming A. P. Field, Thomas Cottman and Joshua Baker as persons elected
-to represent respectively the First, Second and Fifth Congressional
-Districts of the State.[84]
-
-On a resolution “That A. P. Field is not entitled to a seat in this
-House from the State of Louisiana,” reported January 29, 1864, from the
-Committee of Elections, his right to admission was fully discussed.
-
-Under the apportionment of 1850 that State sent four, and by the census
-of 1860 became entitled to five, Representatives. By an act of Congress
-approved July 14, 1862, each State entitled to more than one member in
-the lower House was to be divided into as many districts as it had been
-allotted Representatives.
-
-But, said Chairman Dawes, as Louisiana had never been so divided no
-person in that State had been chosen according to Federal law. The
-election under which Mr. Field claimed a seat occurred in the old First
-Congressional District, which, with a great portion of the city of New
-Orleans, included two adjacent parishes, Placquemines and St. Bernard.
-On November 1, General Shepley issued a military order forbidding the
-election, and none was held in New Orleans. In the two outlying
-parishes, however, under the auspices of a citizens’ committee, to which
-returns were made, a few voters appeared at the polls. In the parish of
-St. Bernard, the only locality in which the House had any proof that
-electors participated, Mr. Field received one hundred and fifty-six
-votes, and though no evidence in support of his statement had been
-offered, about the same number, he alleged, had been cast for him in
-Placquemines.
-
-The question was, proceeded Mr. Dawes, whether a gentleman with this
-constituency could be in any sense considered as having been elected.
-There were in his district over 10,000 qualified voters, and of these
-the claimant received the support of only one hundred and fifty-six;
-hence nearly ten thousand electors expressed no opinion, armed
-interference having prevented 9,844 of them from indicating a
-preference. There was no evidence that this majority acquiesced in what
-was done by one hundred and fifty-six men in a corner of St. Bernard
-parish where an election was permitted. If no other objection existed,
-the State had not been districted as required by the Act of July, 1862;
-this consideration of itself appeared to the Committee a reason
-sufficient for his exclusion. Further, his certificate was signed by one
-John Leonard Riddell, himself chosen Governor at the same time and in
-the same parishes. His term, according to the laws of Louisiana, did not
-commence till January 1, 1864, and it was not easy to comprehend how he
-came to regard himself as Executive of the State on November 20, 1863,
-when he signed the certificate presented by the claimant. Mr. Riddell,
-indeed, had not then been inaugurated.
-
-Had not Congress failed to divide the State, the suppression of this
-election would have been without justification and have deserved the
-condemnation of the House. It, however, did not conform to the laws of
-Louisiana, for the votes were not cast nor were they counted or
-canvassed as prescribed thereby. This, in substance, was the argument of
-Mr. Dawes.
-
-By other members attention was invited to the fact that under the same
-laws and conditions an election had been held in Louisiana a year
-before, and in consequence two Representatives admitted. To this
-observation Mr. Stevens replied that Hahn and Flanders, the members
-referred to, had been seated by the power of the House without, as he
-then supposed, any law or right. Henry Winter Davis alone among all who
-spoke on the question approved the action of the Military Governor on
-the ground that there was no legal right to hold an election, and the
-attempt of any number of persons to do so was an usurpation of sovereign
-authority which was properly prevented. Other Representatives, however,
-strongly condemned this act of Governor Shepley and at least one desired
-the House to express as an amendment to the resolution its disapproval
-of his conduct. Though not the question in debate, there could be no
-mistaking upon this point the sentiments of a majority of the members.
-
-Mr. Field, permitted to address the House, observed that it was the
-fault of the General Government that Union men in Louisiana had not been
-aided by the previous administration. If they had been, the blood of
-Illinois and Massachusetts patriots would not have sprinkled the soil of
-his State.
-
-To show that some sort of government existed there he caused the clerk
-to read a list of one hundred and twenty-five officers acting in those
-parishes included within Federal military lines, and added that though
-New Orleans since its capture paid annually in taxes, collected through
-Governor Shepley, two and a half million dollars, besides a considerable
-sum in internal revenue, her people were represented neither in the
-local nor the national Government.
-
-The constitution of Louisiana, he said, required that qualified electors
-should be white males who had attained the age of twenty-one years, and
-been residents of the State for twelve months immediately preceding the
-election. The provision was so modified by Governor Shepley that persons
-of this description were allowed to vote after a residence of six
-months. Mr. Field did not know whence was derived the authority to amend
-constitutions.
-
-To secure his coöperation in establishing a loyal government Union men
-met as early as September 19 in convention at New Orleans, and appointed
-a committee of nine to present an address to the Military Governor
-inviting his assistance. He declined, however, after a lengthy interview
-to order an election for Representatives until the State had first been
-divided. In fact, until instructions which he had requested, were
-received from Washington he refused to order any election whatever,
-though he volunteered to forward to Mr. Lincoln any communication which
-they desired to address him on that subject. Besides its correspondence
-with Governor Shepley, the New Orleans convention on September 21 had
-sent a letter to General Banks, the Department commander, to secure if
-possible his approval of their movement.
-
-Notice, dated October 20, was given that an election would be held,
-November 2, at the usual places in the parish of St. Bernard, and the
-State and Federal offices to be filled, as well as the precise places at
-which voters could cast their ballots, were mentioned. Since the
-military authorities had refused to assist them, and had then issued no
-order against an election, loyal men thought it not improper to express
-their opinions at the polls. As the Free State people considered
-Louisiana out of the Union they declined to participate, and though
-General Banks in obedience to instructions from the President had
-subsequently ordered an election they maintained the same attitude. The
-claimant’s party did not oppose this order; for if unable to restore
-their State in the manner most acceptable they were willing to coöperate
-in any method likely to accomplish that object.
-
-Precisely what number of voters would be called a constituency Mr. Field
-had not been informed. In the portion of his Congressional District
-included in St. Bernard and Placquemines parishes there were only 2,400
-electors, and the President’s plan required only one tenth of the number
-of votes cast in 1860. Though the election of November 2 preceded the
-Executive proclamation, that fact should not make it void. The electors
-in New Orleans were not free to express a choice, and even if it had
-been otherwise the vote in the First District must have been greatly
-diminished since 1860, for he was assured by two paymasters that 7,000
-men had been recruited there for the Union army.
-
-Some members admitted that the national Government had not given
-sufficient protection to Union men in Louisiana, and therefore should
-not now take advantage of that neglect to also deprive them of
-representation in Congress. These believed that if Mr. Field had
-received a majority of the votes in his district any informality in the
-election should be overlooked, for the right to representation in
-Congress grows out of the Constitution, and regulations governing such
-elections are matters of mere convenience. The fact that no State
-organization existed there did not create a legal impediment, and it was
-no objection that Louisiana had not been redistricted, for the
-additional member was not imposed as a burden but as a right which she
-was free to exercise or not; besides, the greater representation
-includes the less.
-
-Notwithstanding these considerations, and strong, though not universal,
-testimony to the claimant’s loyalty, he was denied admission, February
-9, 1864, by a vote of 85 to 48.[85] His case, however, was not exactly
-similar to that of Messrs. Hahn and Flanders, as stated by one
-Representative, for they had received, in the circumstances, a
-comparatively large vote.
-
-To this end came the movement of the planters designed primarily to
-counteract that inaugurated by the Free State Committee, which also, as
-we shall see, was soon at variance with the military authorities.
-Important changes had occurred in the shifting politics of his State
-before the House had taken final action in the case of Mr. Field; these
-will be briefly related.
-
-Military necessity had led the President to issue, December 8, 1863, his
-Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction proposing, though not rigidly
-insisting upon, a plan for reinaugurating State governments wherever
-there existed such a loyal nucleus as could effectively assist in
-overthrowing the rebellion. In discussing the affairs of Tennessee that
-plan has been quoted at such length as to require no further mention in
-this place.[86]
-
-General Banks on January 8, 1864, announced his intention of ordering an
-election of State officers. He was urged at this point by the Free State
-Committee to allow their election to go on, but he refused to yield even
-under pressure of an immense public meeting favorable to their
-object.[87] Without his coöperation their plan was doomed to failure,
-and when entreaties did not avail to move him they promptly inveighed
-against his methods and his motives in the columns of _The National
-Intelligencer_ at Washington. In a letter dated New Orleans, January 9,
-1864, a correspondent writes:
-
- President Lincoln has started a Missouri case in Louisiana, and has
- made Banks our master; and Banks is another Schofield, only worse
- than he. Our mass meeting last evening was a complete success; but
- its object will be defeated by Banks, who, under orders direct from
- the President, declares his purpose to order an election for a
- convention; thus playing into the hands of Cottman, Riddle, and
- Fields, and their crew. The Union men—the true Union men—are
- thunderstruck by the course of the President in this matter.
-
- We were not informed of the President’s orders to General Banks
- until the hour of the meeting last night, and the meeting was not
- informed at all. General Shepley, who is generally liked, and who
- has done all he could to promote the free State cause, and to
- organize a free State government, will resign, and the election
- ordered by Banks will be purely at military dictation, and will be
- so regarded.
-
-The correspondent does not know the secret springs of all these acts of
-the President, but thinks he has probably been deceived by base and
-interested men. “Banks,” he believes, “has the unchanged confidence of
-Mr. Lincoln.” The writer concludes by asking whether it is not possible
-to get the President to countermand his orders to Banks immediately,
-“and let the people manage matters as they have begun to do?”[88] To
-prove that no line of policy would be acceptable to the Free State
-Committee Mr. Field, in his remarks before the House, read in full the
-communication from which these excerpts are taken.
-
-To comprehend clearly the nature of the controversy which so suddenly
-arose between the Free State General Committee and the Federal commander
-in Louisiana it may be necessary to explain with some detail the precise
-attitude of that organization relative to the question at issue between
-the adverse parties. In discussing the respective merits of the State
-constitutions of 1852 and 1861 the organ of the Free State men says:
-
- The question is altogether immaterial; for, in the conflict of arms
- incident to this rebellion, the predominant ideas of the good people
- of Louisiana have far preceded either constitution; and to
- reorganize now the State on the slave basis, which both
- constitutions and the laws passed under them recognized, has become
- an utter impossibility. Free soil and free speech have grown up into
- absolute necessities, directly resulting from the war, which has
- converted into dust and ashes all the constitutions which Louisiana
- has ever made, embodying the ideas of property in our fellow-man,
- and all the baneful results of this system of African slavery. The
- present war is nothing but the conflict of the ideas of slavery and
- liberty.... We cannot have peace until public opinion is brought
- quite up to this point. We cannot reorganize the civil government of
- our city, and still less that of our State, and get rid of the
- fearful incubus of martial law now pressing down our energies by its
- arbitrary influence, unless we believe, give utterance to and
- establish the fundamental principle of our national government: “all
- men are created free and equal.” We know of no better way to effect
- this than by calling a convention as soon as possible, to declare
- the simple fact that Louisiana now is and will forever be a free
- State.[89]
-
-The party favoring this method insisted that in August, 1863, when
-General Shepley was in Washington, their plan in all its parts was
-adopted in a Cabinet meeting, and that a special order issued from the
-War Department directing the Military Governor to carry it into
-execution. The movement for reorganizing the State would thus be placed
-under control of the steadfast opponents of slavery. They further
-claimed that Mr. Lincoln then preferred the calling of a convention to
-an election of State officers under the old constitution. His letter of
-August 5, 1863, to General Banks certainly leaves no doubt as to his
-sentiments at that time, for he expressed his approval of the enrollment
-being taken by Durant with a view to an election for a constitutional
-convention, the mature work of which, he thought, should reach
-Washington by the meeting of Congress. The impossibility of so
-expediting registration outside of New Orleans as to be ready for an
-election at that early date was explained to the President by the Free
-State Committee.
-
-Mr. B. F. Flanders returning from Washington in October, 1863, reported
-the President as saying, in reply to an objection that enough territory
-and population were not under protection of the Union army to justify an
-election, that so great was the necessity for immediate action that he
-would recognize and sustain a State government organized by any part of
-the population of which the National forces then had control, and that
-he wished Flanders on his return to Louisiana to say so.[90]
-
-The registration under Governor Shepley, though frequently interrupted,
-had proceeded, and the Free State Committee, to insure the success of
-their object, conferred with him for the purpose of holding, about
-January 25, 1864, an election for delegates to a State convention which,
-as already observed, intended to frame a new constitution abolishing
-slavery everywhere throughout the State. The announcement, then, on
-January 8, 1864, by General Banks of his intention to order an election
-of State officers under the old constitution was regarded by them as a
-decision for their adversaries. Their objections to the proclamation
-itself will be noticed in the proper place. It provided not only for an
-election of State officers on February 22 following, but also for the
-choice of delegates to a convention to be held in April for a revision
-of the constitution. The paramount objection of the Free State men was
-that the election of State officers would, under the course of General
-Banks, precede that for delegates to the convention, the point at which
-they desired to begin the work of reëstablishing a civil government for
-the State.
-
-To Thomas Cottman, who accompanied Mr. Field to Washington claiming a
-seat in Congress as Representative from the Second Louisiana District,
-Mr. Lincoln, on December 15, wrote:
-
- You were so kind as to say this morning that you desire to return to
- Louisiana, and to be guided by my wishes, to some extent, in the
- part you may take in bringing that State to resume her rightful
- relation to the General Government.
-
- My wishes are in a general way expressed, as well as I can express
- them, in the proclamation issued on the eighth of the present month,
- and in that part of the annual message which relates to that
- proclamation. It there appears that I deem the sustaining of the
- Emancipation Proclamation, where it applies, as indispensable; and I
- add here that I would esteem it fortunate if the people of Louisiana
- should themselves place the remainder of the State upon the same
- footing.[91]
-
-Though this letter expressed as one of Mr. Lincoln’s strongest wishes a
-hope that all Union men in Louisiana would “eschew cliquism,” he was
-destined to be disappointed, for at this very time letters from General
-Banks, dated December 6 and 16, informed him that Governor Shepley, Mr.
-Durant and others had given him to understand that they were charged
-exclusively with the work of reconstruction in Louisiana and hence he
-had not felt authorized to interfere. Other officers had set up claims
-to jurisdiction conflicting and interfering with his own powers of
-military administration. Annoyed that a misunderstanding was delaying
-work which he had been urging for a year, the President, on the 24th of
-December, wrote General Banks as follows:
-
- I have all the while intended you to be master, as well in regard to
- reorganizing a State government for Louisiana, as in regard to the
- military matters of the department; and hence my letters on
- reconstruction have nearly, if not quite, all been addressed to you.
- My error has been that it did not occur to me that Governor Shepley
- or any one else would set up a claim to act independently of you;
- and hence I said nothing expressly upon the point.
-
- Language has not been guarded at a point where no danger was thought
- of. I now tell you that in every dispute with whomsoever, you are
- master.
-
- Governor Shepley was appointed to assist the commander of the
- department, and not to thwart him or act independently of him.
- Instructions have been given directly to him, merely to spare you
- detail labor, and not to supersede your authority. This, in its
- liability to be misconstrued, it now seems was an error in us. But
- it is past. I now distinctly tell you that you are master of all,
- and that I wish you to take the case as you find it, and give us a
- free State reorganization of Louisiana in the shortest possible
- time. What I say here is to have a reasonable construction. I do not
- mean that you are to withdraw from Texas, or abandon any other
- military measure which you may deem important. Nor do I mean that
- you are to throw away available work already done for
- reconstruction; nor that war is to be made upon Governor Shepley, or
- upon any one else, unless it be found that they will not coöperate
- with you, in which case, and in all cases, you are master while you
- remain in command of the department.[92]
-
-This letter making General Banks “master” of the situation in Louisiana
-the President concluded by thanking him for his successful and valuable
-operations in Texas. But before receiving this extensive authority and
-the undoubted assurance of Mr. Lincoln’s confidence the commander, on
-December 30, submitted to the President a plan of reconstruction based
-upon the Proclamation and the Message of the 8th of that month. For
-evident reasons this communication deserves to be reproduced almost
-entire:
-
- I would suggest [says General Banks], as the only speedy and certain
- method of accomplishing your object, that an election be ordered, of
- a State government, under the constitution and laws of Louisiana,
- except so much thereof as recognizes and relates to slavery, which
- should be declared by the authority calling the election, and in the
- order authorizing it, inoperative and void. The registration of
- voters to be made in conformity with your Proclamation, and all
- measures hitherto taken with reference to State organization, not
- inconsistent with the Proclamation, may be made available. A
- convention of the people for the revision of the constitution may be
- ordered as soon as the government is organized, and the election of
- members might take place on the same or a subsequent day with the
- general election. The people of Louisiana will accept such a
- proposition with favor. They will prefer it to any arrangement which
- leaves the subject to them for an affirmative or negative vote.
- Strange as this may appear, it is the fact. Of course a government
- organized upon the basis of immediate and universal freedom, with
- the general consent of the people, followed by the adaptation of
- commercial and industrial interests to this order of things, and
- supported by the army and navy, the influence of the civil officers
- of the Government, and the Administration at Washington, could not
- fail by any possible chance to obtain an absolute and permanent
- recognition of the principle of freedom upon which it would be
- based. Any other result would be impossible. The same influence
- would secure with the same certainty the selection of proper men in
- the election of officers.
-
- Let me assure you that this course will be far more acceptable to
- the citizens of Louisiana than the submission of the question of
- slavery to the chances of an election. Their self-respect, their
- _amour propre_ will be appeased if they are not required to vote for
- or against it. Offer them a government without slavery and they will
- gladly accept it as a necessity resulting from the war. On all other
- points, sufficient guarantees of right results can be secured; but
- the great question, that of immediate emancipation, will be covered
- _ab initio_, by a conceded and absolute prohibition of slavery.
-
- Upon this plan a government can be established whenever you wish—in
- thirty or sixty days; a government that will be satisfactory to the
- South and the North; to the South, because it relieves them from any
- action in regard to an institution which cannot be restored, and
- which they cannot condemn; and to the North, because it places the
- interests of liberty beyond all possible accident or chance of
- failure. The result is certain.[93]
-
-Upon receiving this communication the President, who cherished no plan
-of restoration to which exact conformity was indispensable, expressed,
-January 13, 1864, in a letter to General Banks his gratitude for the
-zeal and confidence manifested by him on the question of reinaugurating
-a free State government in Louisiana. He hoped, because of the authority
-contained in the letter of December 24, that the Department Commander
-had already commenced work. “Whether you shall have done so or not,”
-continues the letter, “please, on receiving this, proceed with all
-possible despatch, using your own absolute discretion in all matters
-which may not carry you away from the conditions stated in your letters
-to me, nor from those of the message and proclamation of December 8.
-Frame orders, and fix times and places for this and that, according to
-your own judgment.”[94]
-
-This letter repeats the idea of subordination to General Banks of all
-officials in his department holding authority from the President, and
-stated that the bearer of the communication, Collector Dennison, of New
-Orleans, understood the views of the commander and was willing to assist
-in carrying them out. Before Mr. Dennison arrived in New Orleans,
-however, General Banks had already, in his proclamation of January 11,
-1864, fixed a date for the election. This action was determined, said
-the Department Commander, upon ample assurance “that more than a tenth
-of the population desire the earliest possible restoration of Louisiana
-to the Union”; hence he invited “the loyal citizens of the State
-qualified to vote in public affairs ... to assemble in the election
-precincts designated by law, ... on the 22d of February, 1864, to cast
-their votes for the election of State officers herein named, _viz._
-Governor, Lieutenant-Governor, Secretary of State, Treasurer,
-Attorney-General, Superintendent of Public Instruction and Auditor of
-Public Accounts—who shall, when elected, for the time being, and until
-others are appointed by competent authority, constitute the civil
-government of the State, under the constitution and laws of Louisiana,
-except so much of said constitution and laws as recognize, regulate or
-relate to slavery, which being inconsistent with the present condition
-of public affairs, and plainly inapplicable to any class of persons now
-existing within its limits, must be suspended, and they are therefore
-and hereby declared to be inoperative and void. This proceeding is not
-intended to ignore the right of property existing prior to the
-rebellion, nor to preclude the claim for compensation of loyal citizens
-for losses sustained by enlistment or other authorized acts of
-Government.”[95]
-
-The qualifications of voters in this election were to be determined by
-the oath of allegiance prescribed by the President’s proclamation
-together with the condition annexed to the elective franchise by the
-constitution of Louisiana. Officers elected were to be duly installed on
-the 4th of March.
-
-So much of the registration effected under direction of Governor Shepley
-and the several Union Associations as was not inconsistent with the
-proclamation and other orders of the President was approved. The
-proclamation further announced that arrangements would be made for the
-early election of members of Congress for the State, and, that the
-organic law might be made to conform to the will of the people and
-harmonize with the spirit of the age, an election of delegates to a
-convention for the revision of the constitution would be held on the
-first Monday of April following.
-
-This proclamation declared, among other things, that
-
- The fundamental law of the State is martial law.... The Government
- is subject to the law of necessity, and must consult the condition
- of things, rather than the preferences of men, and if so be that its
- purposes are just and its measures wise, it has the right to demand
- that questions of personal interest and opinion shall be subordinate
- to the public good. When the national existence is at stake, and the
- liberties of the people in peril, faction is treason.
-
- The methods herein proposed submit the whole question of government
- directly to the people—first, by the election of executive officers,
- faithful to the Union, to be followed by a loyal representation in
- both Houses of Congress; and then by a convention which will confirm
- the action of the people, and recognize the principles of freedom in
- the organic law. This is the wish of the President.[96]
-
-On February 13, nine days before the election, General Banks issued an
-order relative to the qualifications of electors. It provided, in
-addition to the declarations on that subject in his proclamation, that
-Union voters expelled from their homes by the public enemy might cast
-their ballots for State officers in the precincts where they temporarily
-resided and that qualified electors enlisted in the army or navy could
-vote in those precincts in which they might be found on election day. If
-without the State, then commissioners would be appointed to receive
-their ballots wherever stationed, returns to be made to General
-Shepley.[97]
-
-For governor three candidates were nominated—B. F. Flanders, a
-representative of the Free State Committee; Michael Hahn, the choice of
-those who approved the measures of General Banks, and J. Q. A. Fellows,
-a pro-slavery conservative who favored “the Constitution and the Union
-with the preservation of the rights of all inviolate.” The friends of
-Hahn would deny to persons of African descent the privileges of
-citizenship, whereas the supporters of Flanders generally would extend
-to them such rights and immunities.[98]
-
-On Washington’s birthday, as announced in the proclamation of General
-Banks, an election was held in seventeen parishes, Hahn receiving 6,183,
-Fellows 2,996 and Flanders 2,232 votes, a total of 11,411, of which 107
-were cast by Louisiana soldiers stationed at Pensacola, Florida.[99]
-
-Writing February 25 to the President General Banks says:
-
- The election of the 22d of February was conducted with great spirit
- and propriety. No complaint is heard from any quarter, so far as I
- know, of unfairness or undue influence on the part of the officers
- of the Government. At some of the strictly military posts the entire
- vote of the Louisiana men was for Mr. Flanders, at others for Mr.
- Hahn, according to the inclination of the voters. Every voter
- accepted the oath prescribed by your proclamation of the 8th of
- December.... The ordinary vote of the State has been less than forty
- thousand. The proportion given on the 22d of February is nearly
- equal to the territory covered by our arms.[100]
-
-The friends of the Free State General Committee in a protest pronounced
-the result of the election “the registration of a military edict,” and
-“worthy of no respect from the representatives and Executive of the
-nation.” To the question whether this election had in the meaning of the
-President reëstablished a State government they promptly answered in the
-negative, for the commanding general recognized the Louisiana
-constitution of 1852 and ordered an election under it in which the votes
-of the people had nothing to do with reëstablishing government; his
-proclamation, by recognizing the existence of the old constitution, made
-the reëstablishment beforehand for them. The Governor and
-Lieutenant-Governor, together with the other executive officers chosen,
-did not, they argued, constitute a State government; for all the
-constitutions of Louisiana, including that of 1852, described the
-government as consisting of three departments: executive, legislative
-and judicial.
-
-Though not avowed, the reason of Banks’ failure to order an election for
-members of the Legislature was plain, for there was not, they claimed,
-within the Union lines a sufficient number of parishes to elect a
-majority of that body, and less than a majority was, by the
-constitution, not a quorum to do business; so that no officer elected
-could be legally paid, for that could be done by only a legal
-appropriation. The same constitution, they said further, provided that
-Justices of the Supreme and District Courts, as well as justices of the
-peace, should be elected by the people. The present incumbents had been
-simply appointed by General Shepley. Should Mr. Hahn under pretence of
-being civil governor undertake to appoint judicial officers, the act
-would be a mere usurpation.
-
-Not only, they declared, had no State government been established by
-this election, but still further, the proclamation of the President had
-not in the matter of electors been complied with; for Article XII. of
-the constitution of 1852 says: “No soldier, seaman, or marine in the
-army or navy of the United States ... shall be entitled to vote at any
-election in this State.” Yet, continued the protestants, it was a
-notorious fact that the general commanding permitted soldiers recruited
-in Louisiana, and otherwise qualified, to vote, and that many availed
-themselves of the privilege. Again, they went on to say, the Legislature
-by act of March 20, 1856, provided for the appointment in New Orleans of
-a register of voters whose office should be closed three days before an
-election, and no one registered during that period. Now prior to the
-late election, the register having closed his office according to law,
-orders were at once given to two other officers, recorders of the city,
-who had no such powers or functions by law, to register voters, which
-they did night and day, and persons so registered were allowed to vote.
-
-Referring to the declared intention of General Banks to order an
-election of delegates to a constitutional convention, and by a
-subsequent order fix the basis of representation, the number of
-delegates and the details of the election, they said: “This will put the
-whole matter under military control, and the experience of the last
-election shows that only such a convention can be had as the
-overshadowing influence of the military authority will permit. Under an
-election thus ordered, and a constitution thus established, a republican
-form of government cannot be formed. It is simply a fraud to call it the
-reëstablishment of a State government. In these circumstances, the only
-course left to the truly loyal citizens of Louisiana is, to protest
-against the recognition of this pretended Government, and to appeal to
-the calm judgment of the nation to procure such action from Congress as
-will forbid military commanders to usurp the powers which belong to
-Congress alone, or to the loyal people of Louisiana.”[101]
-
-But neither the protest nor the criticism of Free State men availed to
-arrest the march of events, and in the presence of a vast multitude
-Michael Hahn, who had received a majority of all the votes cast, was
-inaugurated Governor amidst great enthusiasm on March 4. To the oath
-prescribed in the amnesty and reconstruction proclamation of December 8,
-1863, given above, was added the following:
-
- And I do further solemnly swear, that I am qualified according to
- the constitution of the State to hold the office to which I have
- been elected, and that I will faithfully and impartially discharge
- and perform all the duties incumbent on me as Governor of the State
- of Louisiana, according to the best of my abilities and
- understanding, agreeably to the Constitution and Laws of the United
- States, and in support of and according to the constitution and laws
- of this State, so far as they are consistent with the necessary
- military occupation of the State by the troops of the United States
- for the suppression of the rebellion, and the full restoration of
- the authority of the United States.[102]
-
-This language clearly indicates the legal theory upon which General
-Banks was proceeding, and citizens understood that Mr. Hahn represented
-a popular power entirely subordinate to the armed occupation of the
-State.
-
-On March 13, 1864, the President wrote the following private letter to
-Governor Hahn:
-
- I congratulate you on having fixed your name in history as the first
- free-state governor of Louisiana. Now you are about to have a
- convention, which, among other things, will probably define the
- elective franchise. I barely suggest for your private consideration
- whether some of the colored people may not be let in—as, for
- instance, the very intelligent, and especially those who have fought
- gallantly in our ranks. They would probably help, in some trying
- time to come, to keep the jewel of liberty within the family of
- freedom. But this is only a suggestion, not to the public, but to
- you alone.[103]
-
-Speaking of this personal note Mr. Blaine says: “It was perhaps the
-earliest proposition from any authentic source to endow the negro with
-the right of suffrage, and was an indirect but most effective answer to
-those who subsequently attempted to use Mr. Lincoln’s name in support of
-policies which his intimate friends instinctively knew would be
-abhorrent to his unerring sense of justice.”[104]
-
-At the suggestion of General Banks, the President two days later
-invested Mr. Hahn until further order “with the powers exercised
-hitherto by the military governor of Louisiana.”[105]
-
-From the sentiments of the Free State party it requires little insight
-into human affairs to foretell that in some manner they would soon be
-found in opposition. Their candidate, Mr. B. F. Flanders, who received
-fewer votes than either of his competitors, was a prominent official in
-the Treasury Department, and from this vantage ground, without, so far
-as appears, rebuke from Secretary Chase, began to stir up in Congress a
-feeling of hostility to the new government in Louisiana. Precisely why
-Mr. Lincoln decided to take into his own hands the entire subject of
-reconstruction may be collected without difficulty from what has already
-been said; but that this determination was confirmed by his knowledge of
-an alliance between the Free State leaders and the “Radicals” in
-Congress there can be little doubt.
-
-The Department Commander in a general order gave notice on March 11 that
-an election would be held on the 28th of that month for the choice of
-delegates to a State convention to meet in New Orleans “for the revision
-and amendment of the constitution of Louisiana.”[106] Five days later,
-March 16, Governor Hahn, in a proclamation to the sheriffs and other
-officers concerned, authorized the election and commanded them to give
-due notice thereof to the qualified voters of the State and to make
-prompt returns to the Secretary of State in New Orleans.[107]
-
-Pursuant to these notices the election was held on the 28th, and
-resulted in the choice of ninety-seven members, two of whom were
-rejected because of irregular returns. The entire State was entitled to
-150 delegates. The parish of Orleans was represented by sixty-three
-members, leaving to the country parishes but thirty-two. Of the vote,
-which was exceedingly light, no return appears to have been published.
-Because of their recent defeat no nominations were made by the Radicals,
-and this fact, together with heavy rains on election day, was assigned
-by Governor Hahn in a letter to the President as an explanation of the
-meagre vote. The Parish of Ascension, which in 1860 had a population of
-3,940 whites, elected her delegates by 61 votes; Placquemines, which by
-the same census had 2,529 white inhabitants, cast 246, while the single
-delegate from Madison was chosen by only twenty-eight electors.[108]
-
-General Banks informed a committee of Congress that all that section of
-the State as far up as Point Coupée voted; some men from the Red River
-cast their ballots at Vidalia. In his statement he declared that “The
-city of New Orleans is really the State of Louisiana”; yet at that time
-it contained less than half the population of the State.[109]
-
-The constitutional convention, which assembled April 6, 1864, was
-organized on the 7th with E. H. Durell as president, and after a session
-of more than two and a half months adjourned July 25. A proclamation of
-the Governor appointed the 5th of September as the time for taking a
-vote on the work of the convention. The result was 6,836 for the
-adoption, and 1,556 for the rejection of the constitution. Besides these
-there were a number of electors who did not vote on either side of the
-question.[110]
-
-Of the work of the convention General Banks spoke as follows:
-
- In a State which held 331,726 slaves, one half of its entire
- population in 1860, more than three fourths of whom had been
- specially excepted from the Proclamation of Emancipation, and were
- still held _de jure_ in bondage, the convention declared by a
- majority of all the votes to which the State would have been
- entitled if every delegate had been present from every district in
- the State:—
-
- Instantaneous, universal, uncompensated, unconditional emancipation
- of slaves!
-
- It prohibited forever the recognition of property in man!
-
- It decreed the education of all the children, without distinction of
- race or color!
-
- It directs all men, white or black, to be enrolled as soldiers for
- the public defence!
-
- It makes all men equal before the law!
-
- It compels, by its regenerating spirit, the ultimate recognition of
- all the rights which national authority can confer upon an oppressed
- race!
-
- It wisely recognizes for the first time in constitutional history,
- the interest of daily labor as an element of power entitled to the
- protection of the State.[111]
-
-At the same election, that of September 5, the following persons were
-chosen Representatives in Congress: M. F. Bonzano, A. P. Field, W. D.
-Mann, T. M. Wells and R. W. Taliaferro. A Legislature was elected at the
-same time, the members of which were almost entirely in favor of a free
-State, and by this body seven electors of President and Vice-President
-were appointed. On October 10th two United States Senators were
-elected—R. King Cutler for the unexpired term ending March 4, 1867, and
-Charles Smith for the vacancy created by the resignation of Judah P.
-Benjamin, and ending March 4, 1865.[112]
-
-It is matter of familiar history that the State government thus
-organized was never recognized by Congress. The question was presented
-to that body December 5, 1864, at the opening of the second session of
-the Thirty-eighth Congress, when the claimants above named appeared in
-Washington applying for admission to seats, and again in January and
-February, 1865, upon consideration of a joint resolution declaring
-certain States not entitled to representation in the Electoral College.
-As in the case of Tennessee, however, the vote offered by Louisiana was
-not counted.
-
-The agency of the President in setting up this civil government, and the
-successive steps in its accomplishment have been related with some
-degree of minuteness, so that the nature of the controversy between the
-Executive and the Legislative branches of the Government may be better
-understood. Whether Mr. Lincoln exceeded his constitutional authority
-will be considered when an account has been presented of the result of
-his efforts to restore civil government in the States where Federal
-authority had been overthrown.
-
------
-
-Footnote 47:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 427.
-
-Footnote 48:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 4n.
-
-Footnote 49:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 25; Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 428.
-
-Footnote 50:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 432.
-
-Footnote 51:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 52:
-
- Taylor’s Destruction and Reconstruction, pp. 102–103.
-
-Footnote 53:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 1.
-
-Footnote 54:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 589.
-
-Footnote 55:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II., pp. 214–215; Ann.
- Cycl., 1862, p. 650.
-
-Footnote 56:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II., p. 216.
-
-Footnote 57:
-
- Ibid., pp. 217–218.
-
-Footnote 58:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 586.
-
-Footnote 59:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 586.
-
-Footnote 60:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 61:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 586.
-
-Footnote 62:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 587; Ibid., pp. 770–776. Scott’s Reconstruction
- During the Civil War, pp. 325–326, 328–331, 376.
-
-Footnote 63:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 247.
-
-Footnote 64:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 65:
-
- Ibid., p. 255.
-
-Footnote 66:
-
- Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 835.
-
-Footnote 67:
-
- Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 831–837, 1030–1036.
-
-Footnote 68:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 228–229.
-
-Footnote 69:
-
- Blaine’s Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. II. p. 39; Nicolay and Hay’s
- Lincoln, Vol. VIII. p. 419.
-
-Footnote 70:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 589.
-
-Footnote 71:
-
- N. & H., Vol. VIII. p. 420.
-
-Footnote 72:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 590; Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol.
- II. p. 536.
-
-Footnote 73:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 356.
-
-Footnote 74:
-
- Ibid., pp. 214–215.
-
-Footnote 75:
-
- Ibid., p. 356.
-
-Footnote 76:
-
- Taylor’s Destruction and Reconstruction, ch. x; also the general
- history of military operations in the Red River country.
-
-Footnote 77:
-
- Bulloch’s Secret Service of the Confederate States in Europe, Vol. II.
- chs. i and ii.
-
-Footnote 78:
-
- N. & H., Vol. VIII. pp. 285–286; Conduct of the War, Vol. II. pp.
- 1–401 (_passim_).
-
-Footnote 79:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 380.
-
-Footnote 80:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 436.
-
-Footnote 81:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 591.
-
-Footnote 82:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 83:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, pp. 591–592.
-
-Footnote 84:
-
- Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 5–6.
-
-Footnote 85:
-
- Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 411–415, 543–547.
-
-Footnote 86:
-
- See pp. 24–28 _ante_.
-
-Footnote 87:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, pp. 592–593.
-
-Footnote 88:
-
- Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 543.
-
-Footnote 89:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 590.
-
-Footnote 90:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 591.
-
-Footnote 91:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 458–459.
-
-Footnote 92:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 465–466.
-
-Footnote 93:
-
- N. & H., Vol. VIII. pp. 428–430.
-
-Footnote 94:
-
- Ibid., p. 469.
-
-Footnote 95:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 592.
-
-Footnote 96:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, pp. 592–593.
-
-Footnote 97:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 476.
-
-Footnote 98:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 99:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 476.
-
-Footnote 100:
-
- N. & H., Vol. VIII. pp. 432–433.
-
-Footnote 101:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, pp. 593–594.
-
-Footnote 102:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 477.
-
-Footnote 103:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 496.
-
-Footnote 104:
-
- Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. II. p. 40.
-
-Footnote 105:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 498.
-
-Footnote 106:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 478.
-
-Footnote 107:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 108:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1864, pp. 478–479.
-
-Footnote 109:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 110:
-
- Ibid., p. 479.
-
-Footnote 111:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 479.
-
-Footnote 112:
-
- Ibid.
-
-
-
-
- III
- ARKANSAS
-
-
-The people of northern Arkansas were strongly attached to the Union, and
-until December 20, 1860, when a commissioner from Alabama addressed its
-Legislature, no secession movement took place within the State. Her
-geographical position classed her with the Western, her productions
-bound up her interests with the Southern, States.[113] As late as
-January 5, 1861, resolutions opposing separate action were adopted
-almost unanimously by the largest meeting ever held at Van Buren. Mr.
-Lincoln’s election was not then deemed a sufficient cause to dissolve
-the Union. Citizens of every party favored all honorable efforts for its
-preservation, and demonstrations to the contrary were regarded as the
-work of only an extreme and inconsiderable faction.[114] So rapid,
-however, was the succession of events that scarcely two weeks had
-elapsed when she exhibited signs of resting uneasily in the Union; for
-on January 16 a bill submitting to popular vote the question of holding
-a convention passed the Legislature.[115] At the election of delegates
-to this assembly 23,626 votes were cast for the Union, against 17,927
-for the secession, candidates. Though this convention, which assembled
-March 4, was organized by the choice of Union officers, the proposal to
-hold it had been carried by a majority of 11,586 in the election of
-February 18. While secession was strongly urged, a conditional ordinance
-was defeated by a vote of 39 to 35.[116] At Van Buren and Fort Smith
-salutes of thirty-nine guns were fired in honor of the loyal members.
-The inaugural of President Lincoln, received two days after organizing,
-produced a somewhat unfavorable impression. On the 17th an ordinance,
-reported by a self-constituted committee of seven secessionists and
-seven coöperationists, was unanimously adopted.[117] This provided for
-an election on the first Monday of August, when the qualified voters in
-the State could cast their ballots either for “secession” or
-“coöperation.” The result, though not wholly satisfactory to either
-party, afforded time for deliberation.
-
-Tidings of the fall of Sumter, together with the President’s
-proclamation and a requisition for troops from the Secretary of War,
-interrupted the brief interval of repose following the adjournment of
-the convention. In these circumstances the State was compelled to make a
-choice of sides. Governor Rector’s reply, April 22, to this requisition
-shows him to have been ardently in favor of disunion; the president of
-the convention, concurring in this sentiment, issued a call for that
-body to reassemble May 6, when an ordinance of secession was promptly
-passed with but one dissenting vote.[118] By a resolution the convention
-authorized the Governor to call out, if necessary, 60,000 men, and
-ordered the issue of $2,000,000 in bonds. Another ordinance confiscated
-debts due to persons in non-slaveholding States.[119]
-
-The first military movement, after the ordinance of secession had been
-carried, aimed to secure Federal property within the State, and their
-value to the South singled out for seizure the arsenals at Fort Smith
-and Little Rock. The latter city on February 5 was thrown into a great
-turmoil of confusion and excitement by the unexpected arrival of a body
-of troops from Helena with the avowed purpose of taking the arsenal;
-more soldiers arrived during that and the succeeding day until about 400
-had assembled. Though the Governor, in response to their inquiry,
-informed the city council that this force was not there by his order,
-the troops believed they were acting under his command; at any rate they
-came to take the arsenal and were not to be diverted from their object.
-To prevent a collision, which must have followed a refusal of the
-commanding officer to surrender to a body of men disavowed by their
-Governor, the latter was easily persuaded to assume the responsibility
-of the movement and he consented to demand its surrender in the name of
-the State. This demand Captain Totten asked until three o’clock the next
-day to consider; then he made known his readiness to evacuate the
-arsenal, which about noon of the following day was delivered to the
-State authorities.[120]
-
-The delegates of Arkansas on May 18 took their seats in the Confederate
-Congress.[121] The convention, it will be observed, assumed at the
-outset the functions of a law-making body, and, because of further
-extending its authority by the appointment of a Military Board, soon
-came into conflict with both the Governor and the Legislature. When the
-convention empowered the former to call out, if necessary, 60,000 men it
-divided the State into two districts, an eastern and a western. General
-Bradley was elected to the command of the former and General Pearce,
-late of the United States Army, to that of the latter division. Before
-General McCulloch, stationed in the Indian Territory, could assume any
-offensive operations the Federal General, Lyon, in pursuit of Jackson,
-approached the southern boundary of Missouri; upon this the Military
-Board called out ten regiments for defence. On June 21 it despatched to
-Richmond a messenger who proposed to transfer to the Confederate
-Government all the State troops with their arms making, however, a
-condition precedent: they were to be employed for the protection of
-Arkansas; but as the Secretary of State could make no promise as to
-their future disposition the transfer was not then effected.[122] On
-July 4 a second effort was made by a member of the Military Board who
-visited General Hardee, with whom an arrangement was completed by which
-a vote should be taken among the troops. If a majority of each company
-consented, those so consenting were to be turned over as a company. If a
-majority declined, the company was to be disbanded altogether. One
-entire company was thus mustered out, and from various motives two or
-three hundred soldiers returned home. This was from the eastern
-division. The western was not so easily disposed of. The Military Board
-after the battle of Springfield directed General Pearce to turn over his
-force to Hardee, who became angry when the agent proposed to submit the
-question of transfer, and refused to allow it to be done; this
-insubordinate conduct he followed up by writing an abusive letter to the
-Board. Pearce then separated his troops from McCulloch’s command and
-marched them back to Arkansas, where they were informally disbanded and
-sent home. Fearing such a result, the Board had ordered General Pearce
-to do nothing further in the matter, but their despatches arrived too
-late.[123]
-
-Governor Rector’s account shows Arkansas troops, claimed to be 22,000 in
-number, to have been at that time in a state of complete
-demoralization.[124] The Germans and the Irish, as well as their
-descendants, showing little inclination to enlist, the Governor ascribed
-their indifference to a want of opportunity for promotion in the
-service. If this was not the cause, then, he thought, authority should
-be given to draft a regiment of each race.[125]
-
-More than a third of the voting population was in the field, and as late
-as October they had received no pay except Arkansas war bonds, the
-worthlessness of which occasioned much murmuring. This discontent was
-heightened somewhat by the poor equipment of the regiments, many
-soldiers being without blankets or shoes.[126] There were other symptoms
-of unrest within the State. On the charge of attempted insurrection two
-negro men and a girl were hanged in Monroe County.
-
-All this occasioned much uneasiness, but the chief cause of alarm was
-the Union sentiment known to exist in the State. In October twenty-seven
-persons were brought to Little Rock as members of a secret Union
-organization in Van Buren County and placed in jail to await a civil
-trial. Many others also were taken about this time, and it was estimated
-that the “Peace and Constitutional Society” numbered 1,700 members in
-Arkansas.[127]
-
-The activity of Federal armies in the West excited so much apprehension
-that Governor Rector on the 18th of February, by proclamation, called
-into immediate service every man in the State subject to military
-duty.[128] A Confederate force under Price was driven into Arkansas by
-General Curtis on the same day, and within a week the commandant at
-Pocahontas issued an appeal to every man “to turn out promptly, shoulder
-his musket, and drive the vandals from the State.” The Richmond
-Government being unable to assist Arkansas, she was forced to rely upon
-her own resources and such aid as might be obtained from Missouri, the
-Indian Territory and Texas.[129]
-
-Disaster and a conviction of neglect led the Governor in May, in an
-address to the people, to express his indignation and threaten to secede
-from secession. He said:
-
- If the arteries of the Confederate heart do not permeate beyond the
- east bank of the Mississippi, let southern Missourians, Arkansians,
- Texans and the great West know it and prepare for the future.
- Arkansas lost, abandoned, subjugated is not Arkansas as she entered
- the Confederate Government. Nor will she remain Arkansas, a
- Confederate State, desolated as a wilderness. Her children, fleeing
- from the wrath to come, will build them a new ark, and launch it on
- new waters, seeking a haven somewhere of equality, safety and
- rest.[130]
-
-After the battle of Pea Ridge General Curtis moved to White River, and
-on May 1 occupied Batesville, where he witnessed many demonstrations of
-attachment to the Union. Judges of courts, clergymen and other leading
-citizens came forward and voluntarily took the oath of allegiance to the
-United States. A threatened advance of the Union forces upon Little Rock
-created the greatest excitement there, and the Governor by proclamation
-ordered the militia to repair immediately to its defence; but not
-finding himself sufficiently supported he fled.[131] The concentration
-at Corinth of all available Confederate strength was the cause of the
-weakness of Arkansas at this time. Ten regiments had also been withdrawn
-from the army of General Curtis to reënforce the Federal troops in
-Mississippi. This left him in no condition to march upon the State
-capital, and for the time it was saved. Twelve thousand poorly equipped
-men had assembled there in response to the appeal of Governor Rector.
-
-After the occupation of Helena by Federal troops Mr. Lincoln appointed
-John S. Phelps, of Missouri, military governor.[132] On August 19, 1862,
-he left St. Louis for Helena; but as the contemplated movement was not
-then made his office was of little importance. From the Union refugees
-at that point two regiments of Arkansas men were organized. The fall of
-Vicksburg in July, 1863, however, enabled the Union army to assume
-offensive operations, and the summer had not greatly advanced before a
-strong column was moving on Little Rock, the capture of which, September
-10, 1863, was a fatal blow to Confederate authority throughout the
-State.
-
-Amidst all its distresses the northern section of Arkansas had
-maintained its loyalty. Recent reverses to Confederate arms encouraged
-desertion from their ranks, Union sympathizers became active, and
-movements begun by them were joined by numbers who now regarded the
-Confederate cause as lost. Many, however, fearing a restoration of that
-authority, hesitated to identify themselves with the more pronounced
-loyalists. A newspaper favorable to the General Government was
-established at the capital. Meetings were held, and resolutions pledging
-unconditional support of the Union cause adopted. Citizens, both white
-and black, were organized, and by December, 1863, eight regiments of
-Arkansas troops had enlisted in the Federal service.[133]
-
-A still more encouraging symptom was the return of eminent persons who
-now came forward to advocate the Union cause. Prominent among these was
-Brigadier-General E. W. Gantt, of the Confederate army, recently a
-prisoner of war and pardoned under the Amnesty Proclamation of the
-President. Toward the close of 1863 he thus describes the feeling of the
-people:
-
- The Union sentiment is manifesting itself on all sides and by every
- indication—in Union meetings—in desertions from the Confederate
- army—in taking the oath of allegiance unsolicited—in organizing for
- home defence, and enlisting in the Federal army. Old flags that have
- been hid in the crevices of rocks, and been worshipped by our
- mountain people as holy relics, are flung to the breeze, and
- followed to the Union army with an enthusiasm that beggars all
- description. The little county of Perry, that votes only about 600,
- and which has been turned wrong side out in search of conscripts by
- Hindman and his fellow-murderers and oppressors, with their retinue
- of salaried gentlemen and negro boys, sent down a company of
- ninety-four men. Where they came from, and how they kept their old
- flag during these three years of terror, persecution and plunder, I
- can’t tell. But they were the proudest-looking set of men I ever
- saw, and full of fight.[134]
-
-The retreat of General Banks from the Red River country changed greatly
-the aspect of Federal affairs in Arkansas, for it allowed all the
-Confederate forces in the vicinity to concentrate against the small army
-of General Steele, compelling him to act on the defensive at Little
-Rock. The State coming once more to a considerable extent under
-Confederate control, loyalists became scarce and gradually lost energy
-and hope.
-
-Local reverses, however, were not allowed to interrupt the comprehensive
-policy of the President, and early in 1864 preparations were made to
-reorganize the State government. This movement, like those in Tennessee
-and Louisiana, was based upon the Amnesty and Reconstruction
-Proclamation of December 8, 1863. Even before this step had been taken
-the President was already moulding the diverse elements into a power
-that would ultimately undermine Confederate influence in the State. In
-the preceding summer, July 31, 1863, he had written General S. A.
-Hurlbut:
-
- I understand that Senator Sebastian, of Arkansas, thinks of offering
- to resume his place in the Senate. Of course the Senate, and not I,
- would decide whether to admit or reject him. Still I should feel
- great interest in the question. It may be so presented as to be one
- of the very greatest national importance; and it may be otherwise so
- presented as to be of no more than temporary personal consequence to
- him.
-
- The emancipation proclamation applies to Arkansas.... I think I
- shall not retract or repudiate it. Those who shall have tasted
- actual freedom I believe can never be slaves or quasi-slaves again.
- For the rest, I believe some plan substantially being gradual
- emancipation would be better for both white and black. The Missouri
- plan, recently adopted, I do not object to on account of the time
- for ending the institution; but I am sorry the beginning should have
- been postponed for seven years, leaving all that time to agitate for
- the repeal of the whole thing. It should begin at once, giving at
- least the new-born a vested interest in freedom which could not be
- taken away. If Senator Sebastian could come with something of this
- sort from Arkansas, I, at least, should take great interest in his
- case; and I believe a single individual will have scarcely done the
- world so great a service. See him, if you can, and read this to him;
- but charge him to not make it public for the present.[135]
-
-Union officers in the West were urged by Mr. Lincoln in October, 1862,
-to assist and encourage repentant rebel communities to elect both State
-officers and members of Congress.[136] As this involved a recognition of
-existing governments it need scarcely be observed that the march of
-events forced the President later to occupy somewhat different ground;
-nor is it more necessary to add, that to his main purpose, to undermine
-secession and restore the Union, he adhered inflexibly. With this
-fundamental object all his acts harmonize.
-
-At the time of her secession, W. K. Sebastian represented Arkansas in
-the United States Senate and abandoned his seat; he was now ready to
-assist in restoring his State to her old status. Of these evidences of
-disintegration in Confederate interests within the State the President
-was very exactly informed, and it was because of his conviction that
-many persons hitherto supporting that cause were either wavering in
-their allegiance or had become hostile to secession that he wrote,
-January 5, 1864, to General Steele:
-
- I wish to afford the people of Arkansas an opportunity of taking the
- oath prescribed in the proclamation of December 8, 1863, preparatory
- to reorganizing a State Government there. Accordingly I send you by
- General Kimball some blank books and other blanks, the manner of
- using which will, in the main, be suggested by an inspection of
- them; and General Kimball will add some verbal explanations.
-
- Please make a trial of the matter immediately at such points as you
- may think likely to give success. I suppose Helena and Little Rock
- are two of them. Detail any officer you may see fit to take charge
- of the subject at each point; and which officer, it may be assumed,
- will have authority to administer the oath. These books, of course,
- are intended to be permanent records. Report to me on the
- subject.[137]
-
-A week had scarcely elapsed when Mr. Lincoln approved the suggestions of
-General Banks relative to reinaugurating a civil government for
-Louisiana, and, doubtless, he knew no reason why similar work might not
-be going on simultaneously in Arkansas; therefore he repeated to General
-Steele what in substance he had already communicated to the Federal
-commander of the Department of the Gulf. His instructions, dated January
-20, 1864, and quoted below, are self-explanatory, and in no important
-particular differ from the Louisiana Plan:
-
- Sundry citizens of the State of Arkansas petition me that an
- election may be held in that State, at which to elect a governor
- thereof; ... that it be assumed at said election and thenceforward
- that the constitution and laws of the State, as before the
- rebellion, are in full force, except that the constitution is so
- modified as to declare that “there shall be neither slavery nor
- involuntary servitude, except in the punishment for crime whereof
- the party shall have been duly convicted; but the General Assembly
- may make such provision for the free people as shall recognize and
- declare their permanent freedom, provide for their education, and
- which may yet be consistent, as a temporary arrangement, with their
- present condition as a laboring, landless, and homeless class;” and
- also except that all now existing laws in relation to slaves are
- inoperative and void; that said election to be held on the
- twenty-eighth day of March next at all the usual voting places of
- the State, or all such as voters may attend for that purpose; that
- the voters attending at each place at 8 o’clock in the morning of
- said day, may choose judges and clerks of election for that place;
- that all persons qualified by said constitution and laws, and taking
- the oath prescribed in the President’s proclamation of December the
- 8th, 1863, either before or at the election, and none others, may be
- voters, provided that persons having the qualifications aforesaid,
- and being in the volunteer military service of the United States,
- may vote once wherever they may be at voting places; that each set
- of judges and clerks may make return directly to you on or before
- the eleventh day of April next; that in all other respects said
- election may be conducted according to said modified constitution
- and laws; that on receipt of said returns, you count said votes, and
- that if the number shall reach or exceed five thousand four hundred
- and six, you canvass said votes and ascertain who shall thereby
- appear to have been elected governor; and that on the eighteenth day
- of April next, the person so appearing to have been elected, and
- appearing before you at Little Rock to have, by you, administered to
- him an oath to support the Constitution of the United States and
- said modified constitution of the State of Arkansas, and actually
- taking said oath, be, by you, declared qualified, and be enjoined to
- immediately enter upon the duties of the office of governor of said
- State; and that you thereupon declare the constitution of the State
- of Arkansas to have been modified and amended as aforesaid by the
- action of the people as aforesaid.
-
- You will please order an election immediately, and perform the other
- parts assigned you, with necessary incidentals, all according to the
- foregoing.[138]
-
-By discussion and organization the elements opposed to the Richmond
-Government aroused so much enthusiasm that Unionists anticipated the
-wishes of the President by meeting, January 8, 1864, in convention at
-Little Rock. This assembly, composed of forty-four delegates
-representing, as they claimed, twenty-two of the fifty-four counties in
-the State, was made up of members elected at various mass meetings by
-very meagre votes. This at least was an objection then urged by those
-who were adverse to the purposes of the convention. They further stated
-that many of the counties represented were without the Federal military
-lines. It was admitted that if these counties lay beyond Union lines
-neither were they occupied by Confederate forces, and that generally the
-delegates were gentlemen of character and patriotism.[139]
-
-In a published address the convention stated frankly:
-
- We found after remaining at Little Rock about a week, under a
- temporary organization, that delegates were present from twenty-two
- counties, elected by the people, and that six other counties had
- held elections, and that their representatives were looked for
- daily. We then organized the Convention permanently, and determined
- that while we could not properly claim to be the people of Arkansas
- in Convention assembled, with full and final authority to adopt a
- constitution, yet, being the representatives, by election, of a
- considerable portion of the State, and understanding, as we
- believed, the sentiment of nearly all our citizens who desire the
- immediate benefits of a government under the authority of the United
- States, we also determined to present a constitution and plan of
- organization, which, if adopted by them, becomes at once their act
- as effectually as if every county in the State had been represented
- in the Convention.[140]
-
-An amended constitution was adopted by this convention on January 22. By
-it the act of secession was declared null and void; slavery was
-abolished immediately and unconditionally, and the Confederate debt
-wholly repudiated.[141] These important changes in the fundamental law
-of the State indicate the sentiments of the delegates. Isaac Murphy was
-appointed Provisional Governor; C. C. Bliss, Lieutenant-Governor and R.
-T. J. White, Secretary of State. These officers were inaugurated on the
-same day that the convention adopted the constitution; this by its
-schedule was to be submitted to a popular vote at an election to be held
-March 14, when State officers and Representatives in Congress would also
-be chosen.[142]
-
-Ignorant that the movement to restore a civil government had proceeded
-so far, Mr. Lincoln had sent his instructions to General Steele. As
-these had been carefully considered it was feared the work of the
-convention would differ in some essential particular from the plan
-outlined for the Federal commander. To prevent such a consequence the
-President wrote General Steele again on January 27 as follows:
-
- I have addressed a letter to you and put it in the hands of Mr.
- Gantt and other Arkansas gentlemen, containing a program for an
- election in that State. This letter will be handed you by some of
- these gentlemen. Since writing it, I see that a Convention in
- Arkansas having the same general object, has taken some action,
- which I am afraid may clash somewhat with my program. I therefore
- can do no better than to ask you to see Mr. Gantt immediately on his
- return, and with him do what you and he may deem necessary to
- harmonize the two plans into one, and then put it through with all
- possible vigor. Be sure to retain the free-State Constitutional
- provision in some unquestionable form and you and he can fix the
- rest. The points I have made in the program have been well
- considered. Take hold with an honest heart and a strong hand. Do not
- let any questionable man control or influence you.[143]
-
-The President’s interest in the proceedings of the convention and his
-anxiety about the outcome of its deliberations appear in a letter to
-General Steele written three days after the above.[144] So favorable
-were his impressions of the progress reported that he believed the best
-his subordinate could do “would be to help them on their own plan”; of
-this, however, General Steele, who was on the ground, was to be the
-judge. To Governor Murphy he telegraphed, February 6, that his order
-concerning an election was made in ignorance of any action which the
-convention might take; also that his subsequent communication to General
-Steele directed that officer to assist, not to hinder, the
-delegates.[145] General Thayer also was informed that the apparent
-conflict between the President and the convention was altogether
-accidental.[146] On February 17, Mr. Lincoln explained the situation
-more fully to William M. Fishback:
-
- When I fixed a plan for an election in Arkansas I did it in
- ignorance that your convention was doing the same work. Since I
- learned the latter fact I have been constantly trying to yield my
- plan to them. I have sent two letters to General Steele, and three
- or four despatches to you and others, saying that he, General
- Steele, must be master, but that it will probably be best for him to
- merely help the convention on its own plan. Some single mind must be
- master, else there will be no agreement in anything, and General
- Steele, commanding the military and being on the ground, is the best
- man to be that master. Even now citizens are telegraphing me to
- postpone the election to a later day than either that fixed by the
- convention or by me. This discord must be silenced.[147]
-
-The President evidently had learned something from his recent experience
-with his friends and subordinates in Louisiana. General Steele from his
-headquarters at Little Rock issued on February 29 the following address
-to the people of Arkansas:
-
- The convention of your citizens, held at Little Rock during the last
- month [says this proclamation], has adopted a constitution and
- submitted it to you for your approval or rejection. That
- constitution is based upon the principles of freedom, and it is for
- you now to say, by your voluntary and unbiased action, whether it
- shall be your fundamental law. While it may have defects, in the
- main it is in accordance with the views of that portion of the
- people who have been resisting the fratricidal attempts which have
- been made during the last three years. The convention has fixed the
- 14th day of March next on which to decide this great question, and
- the General commanding is only following the instructions of the
- Government when he says to you that every facility will be offered
- for the expression of your sentiments, uninfluenced by any
- considerations save those which affect your own interests and those
- of your posterity.... The election will be held and the return be
- made in accordance with the schedule adopted by the convention, and
- no interference from any quarter will be allowed to prevent the free
- expression of the loyal men of the State on that day.[148]
-
-The election pursuant to this notice began March 14, 1864, the polls
-remaining open for three days. For the constitution 12,177, and against
-it 226, votes were cast.[149] Isaac Murphy, against whom there was no
-opposing candidate, was chosen Governor by 12,430 votes cast by the
-citizens of more than forty counties. As early as March 18 the President
-appears to have received from the Governor-elect some favorable
-tidings,[150] and on April 27, when more complete returns had reached
-him from the same source, he expressed in a telegram his gratification
-at the large vote, more than double that required by the Louisiana Plan,
-and also at the intelligence that the State government, including the
-Legislature, was organized and in working order.[151]
-
-Besides a Governor five other officers of the executive and several
-members of the judicial branch of government together with many county
-officials were chosen.[152] At the same time three Representatives in
-Congress, T. M. Jacks, A. A. C. Rogers and J. M. Johnson, were elected
-from the First, Second and Third Districts respectively. The
-Legislature, composed of twenty-three Senators and fifty-nine members of
-Assembly, met on the 11th of April, and during the session, which ended
-June 1 succeeding, appointed William Fishback and Elisha Baxter United
-States Senators to fill vacancies caused by the secession of the late
-incumbents, R. W. Johnson and William K. Sebastian. After investigation
-by a committee of Congress, however, they were declared not entitled to
-seats; but as each possessed such a title to membership as to justify
-inquiry they were paid mileage. This consideration they were denied
-when, without new action, they subsequently presented themselves at a
-special session of the Senate; on that occasion they were accompanied by
-William D. Snow, who had been chosen to succeed Fishback. It was agreed,
-March 9, 1865, to postpone till the next session of Congress
-consideration of the credentials of Mr. Snow. The House, without
-admitting as Representatives the three claimants for seats, had
-consented to allow them mileage. Arkansas, unlike Louisiana and
-Tennessee, did not participate in the Presidential election of 1864,
-because of a feeling that its electoral vote would not be received even
-if offered. This course appears to have been adopted on the suggestion
-of their representatives, who returned with such a conviction from a
-sojourn in Washington.[153]
-
-A succeeding chapter, in tracing the origin and progress of the
-controversy between the Executive and Legislative branches of
-Government, will describe more fully the attitude of Congress toward Mr.
-Lincoln’s efforts at reconstruction and afford an opportunity for
-discussing both the nature of the conventions by which civil government
-had been restored in Tennessee, Louisiana and Arkansas, and the
-constitutionality of the various Executive acts by which this
-reëstablishment was assisted.
-
------
-
-Footnote 113:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 22.
-
-Footnote 114:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 115:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 4.
-
-Footnote 116:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 22.
-
-Footnote 117:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 118:
-
- Ibid., p. 23.
-
-Footnote 119:
-
- Ibid., pp. 23–24.
-
-Footnote 120:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 24.
-
-Footnote 121:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 122:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 24.
-
-Footnote 123:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 124:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 125:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 25.
-
-Footnote 126:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 127:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 128:
-
- Ibid., 1862, p. 11.
-
-Footnote 129:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1862, p. 11.
-
-Footnote 130:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 131:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 132:
-
- N. & H., Vol. VI. p. 346.
-
-Footnote 133:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 15.
-
-Footnote 134:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 15.
-
-Footnote 135:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 379.
-
-Footnote 136:
-
- Ibid., p. 247.
-
-Footnote 137:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 467.
-
-Footnote 138:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 472–473.
-
-Footnote 139:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 29; Hough’s American Constitutions, Vol. II. p.
- 81.
-
-Footnote 140:
-
- Quoted in N. & H., Vol. VIII. p. 414.
-
-Footnote 141:
-
- Hough’s Amer. Cons., Vol. II. p. 81.
-
-Footnote 142:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 29.
-
-Footnote 143:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 475.
-
-Footnote 144:
-
- Ibid., p. 476.
-
-Footnote 145:
-
- Ibid., p. 479.
-
-Footnote 146:
-
- Ibid., p. 482.
-
-Footnote 147:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 483–484.
-
-Footnote 148:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1864, pp. 29–30.
-
-Footnote 149:
-
- Ibid., p. 30.
-
-Footnote 150:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 501.
-
-Footnote 151:
-
- Ibid., p. 515.
-
-Footnote 152:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 30.
-
-Footnote 153:
-
- See remarks of Senator Pomeroy, February 2, 1865, Congressional Globe,
- Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 555.
-
-
-
-
- IV
- VIRGINIA
-
-
-The Federal Government, as already observed, was constrained at an early
-stage of the Civil War to define its attitude toward loyal citizens of
-the seceding States. The earliest indications of the policy adopted may
-be discerned in the case of Virginia, which presents the only instance
-of a people in any of the insurrectionary States organizing open
-resistance to revolution. All departments of government in that
-Commonwealth having gone over to rebellion, the loyal minority were left
-without any organization for the conduct of domestic affairs. In these
-circumstances they called a convention which by an original act of
-sovereignty reconstituted the government. The progress of the conflict
-was attended in that State by consequences not elsewhere observed, and
-it is chiefly because of this fact that a slight departure from exact
-chronological order is believed to be justified. The principles which
-guided the Administration will be easily comprehended by considering
-their application to the novel and somewhat embarrassing questions that
-arose before rebellion was finally crushed within the borders of that
-once glorious Commonwealth.
-
-“The Convention of Virginia” which, by authority of the Legislature,
-assembled at Richmond, February 13, 1861, passed on April 17 following
-an ordinance of secession from the United States.[154] Though the
-injunction of secrecy was never removed from this proceeding, the tally,
-discovered soon after among the private papers of a member, shows that
-88 delegates favored and 55 opposed the measure; one was excused from
-voting, eight were either absent or silent.[155] This strong opposition
-is explained in part by the physical characteristics of the State.
-
-The principal chain of the Alleghanies formed in the western portion of
-the Old Dominion a lofty range which parts the streams finding their way
-into the Ohio and the Potomac from those that reach the lower waters of
-Chesapeake Bay or the sounds of North Carolina. The country southeast of
-this ridge, including the Shenandoah Valley, the Piedmont district, the
-middle division and the tide-water region, contained about three fourths
-of the white inhabitants, and something less than three fourths of the
-area, of Virginia. In this section were found many large tobacco
-plantations cultivated almost exclusively by negroes. Indeed, it was in
-the light soil of the tide-water counties of Virginia that English
-settlers in America first attempted, nearly two and one half centuries
-before, the memorable experiment of African slave labor. Soon after
-1808, when their importation was prohibited by act of Congress, slaves
-were bred in Virginia to supply the demand of Southern markets, and by
-1860 the bondmen in that Commonwealth had become almost two thirds as
-numerous as the master race.[156] It is sufficiently accurate to say
-that the triangular district bounded on the north by the winding course
-of the Potomac, by the parallel of 36° 31′ on the south and stretching
-from the Atlantic to the crest of the Alleghany mountains, comprised all
-that part of “the good old commonwealth” which was then either
-historically important or interesting. This prolific soil was the
-birthplace of many of America’s most illustrious sons; its inhabitants
-for the most part were proud to trace their descent from the earliest
-settlers along the James; many were wealthy, and all had long been
-distinguished for their hospitality.
-
-Beyond this favored region the country, which slopes gradually down to
-the upper Potomac and the Ohio, is marked by a succession of parallel
-ranges separated by fertile valleys; but like the large tract which
-encircled the Adirondacks and a similar one in northern Pennsylvania,
-the Virginian wilderness remained untouched by the ceaseless tide of
-immigration which at the close of the Revolution swept westward from the
-Atlantic seaboard. For this uninviting region the second Federal census
-indicates less than two inhabitants to the square mile; by 1810 pioneers
-from the line of the Ohio river encroached on its silent forests. At the
-next census, however, a portion was still unoccupied, but in the
-succeeding decennial period it received from various points, chiefly
-from Pennsylvania, Ohio and New England, many enterprising and thrifty
-settlers. The sixth census, that of 1840, represents the entire tract as
-sparsely inhabited.[157] Its abundant resources, then but little
-developed, subsequently gave rise to a great variety of profitable
-industries, and it advanced rapidly in population. Extensive
-plantations, however, were few; the number of slaves, owing somewhat to
-the facility for escape, had always been small, and in the ten years
-preceding the outbreak of hostilities had actually diminished by upwards
-of two thousand.[158] Though it then contained nearly one fourth of the
-whites, it included no more than one thirtieth of the negroes in the
-State. Their labor, too, except in other than agricultural occupations,
-afforded little remuneration. In consequence of its productions as well
-as its location both the interests and sympathies of the people were
-with the adjoining States of Ohio and Pennsylvania.
-
-But, apart from geographical considerations, northwestern Virginia had a
-grievance of long standing: for years its inhabitants had complained
-that they were not fairly represented in the Legislature, and the
-immunity from taxation enjoyed by their fellow-citizens east of the
-mountains was a discrimination too gross to escape attention. The slave
-oligarchy, they declared, possessed and wielded for its own advantage
-the political power of the State. The question of its dismemberment had
-been discussed as early as 1829–30, when the mountain sons of Virginia
-were on the verge of revolution. The East then yielded a pittance of
-power, which, though far short of the demands of justice, reconciled
-western Virginians for the time. In 1850 they were again on the point of
-insurrection. On this occasion adequate representation was conceded in
-the lower though withheld in the upper chamber of the General Assembly,
-the dominant party thus retaining control of that body as well as the
-benefits of a constitutional provision by which slaves under the age of
-twelve years were exempt from taxation, and of those liable to
-assessment none could be valued at more than three hundred dollars even
-if worth in the market a thousand dollars or upwards.[159] Moreover,
-much of the public revenue was expended upon internal improvements for
-the eastern section of the State. The Shenandoah Valley, at one time
-showing signs of discontent, was bound by the construction of railways,
-in social as well as in commercial life, more firmly to Richmond. In
-short, the Alleghanies formed a barrier almost completely cutting off
-intercourse between the two divisions. Their relations were well
-expressed by Governor Pierpont, who told Senator Wade that there was no
-communication whatever between the people except the furnishing a few
-members to the Legislature and a few inmates of the penitentiary.[160]
-Their different interests tended to alienate the sections; the hand of
-nature had traced the line of separation.
-
-Now, however, that a crisis was impending, the Richmond authorities, to
-harmonize every element within their Commonwealth, were willing to
-forego this privilege; to share the burdens of State administration, to
-meet State liabilities, and generally to place themselves on a footing
-of equality with their fellow-citizens along the Ohio. This concession,
-by a majority of 50,000, was actually extorted in an election from the
-prudence or the fears of disunionists whose magnanimity was duly
-emphasized by Governor Letcher in an appeal to the people of the
-northwest.[161] The latter refused, notwithstanding, to acquiesce in the
-action of the secession convention which, so far as it was able to do
-so, carried their State, as a political organization, out of the Union.
-
-It may be affirmed generally that the professional politicians and large
-property owners of this region were disloyal;[162] State officials with
-surprising unanimity were ardent advocates of secession and active in
-committing their Commonwealth to its support. An overwhelming proportion
-of the plain people, however, were devotedly attached to the Union and
-determined on its preservation. Therefore when the Richmond State
-government attempted to execute its laws in these parts it encountered
-the most spirited resistance. Especially was this true in the Pan Handle
-counties, where opposition was promptly organized.
-
-Probably the first consultation upon the grave questions that had arisen
-was held at the Court House in Wellsburgh, Brooke County, where a large
-number of citizens from that and the adjacent county of Hancock
-assembled to hear the report of Mr. Campbell Tarr, their delegate to
-Richmond. From Harrison came Hon. John S. Carlile, who, like Mr. Tarr,
-narrowly escaped with his life from that city, where he had represented
-his county in the convention. They reported the proceedings of that body
-and urged immediate preparation to resist. As a result of this
-discussion a committee of four was appointed to procure arms and
-ammunition in Washington. _En route_ thither they had an interview at
-Harrisburg with Governor Curtin, who not only expressed sympathy with
-their object, but promised assistance if necessary. On arriving at the
-national capital they called upon Hon. Edwin M. Stanton, who was a
-native of Steubenville, Ohio, and a warm personal friend of each member
-of the committee. They were immediately presented to Mr. Cameron,
-Secretary of War, who, on learning the purpose of their visit,
-manifested some hesitation as to his legal right to comply with their
-request. Upon this Mr. Stanton declared with emphasis that “the law of
-_necessity_ gives the right,” and added, “let them have arms and
-ammunition; we will look for the book law afterwards.”[163] Two thousand
-rifles with suitable ammunition were then furnished, and as security for
-their proper use Mr. Stanton tendered his own name. From Wellsburgh,
-where they were temporarily kept in expectation of a rebel attack, these
-arms were sent for distribution to Wheeling.
-
-United States troops from Ohio and Indiana together with local
-volunteers soon drove the Confederate forces from this region, and
-subsequently, though often menaced, it was almost exempt from the
-ravages of war.[164] Thus encouraged, Union men resolved to form a
-political organization coextensive with Virginia or to establish a
-separate and distinct State. Preliminary movements toward that end were
-promptly inaugurated, and, April 22, 1861, five days after the passage
-of the ordinance, nearly 1,200 citizens of Clarksburgh denounced in a
-public meeting the action of the secession convention and recommended
-the people of northwestern Virginia to assemble on May 13 at Wheeling.
-On the 4th a Union mass meeting had been held at Kingwood, near the
-northern border. The separation of western from eastern Virginia was
-declared by this body to be essential to the maintenance of their
-liberties. They also resolved to elect a Representative to Congress. On
-the following day there convened at Wheeling another assemblage, which
-considered the question of separating from that portion of the State in
-rebellion. About the same time other gatherings were held in different
-localities.
-
-There were thousands of eager and earnest patriots in the city of
-Wheeling on May 13, when nearly four hundred delegates, mostly appointed
-by primary meetings, and representing twenty-six counties, assembled to
-deliberate on the situation. The best method of organizing opposition to
-treason was the question: how to inaugurate a government which the
-Federal authorities would recognize and protect?[165] On this important
-subject there is said to have been considerable diversity of opinion;
-the decision finally reached was based upon a suggestion by one of the
-members that since Governor Letcher and other State officers, by
-adhering to the pretended ordinance of secession, had forfeited their
-powers, and the existing constitution made no provision for such an
-emergency, the only way was to ask the people, the source of all
-political power, to send delegates to a convention authorized to supply
-their places with loyal men. This proposal was presented to the meeting
-and adopted with great unanimity.[166] A General State Committee,
-empowered to appoint sub-committees in all counties where practicable,
-was then named, and a stirring address put forth. It announced their
-purpose and urged all loyal citizens to elect representatives to a
-second convention. Copies of this appeal were sent to influential
-citizens throughout the State, and it was agreed after a session of
-three days to choose on May 26 delegates to the proposed convention.
-
-This election having been held at the time appointed, representatives
-from nearly forty counties assembled at Wheeling on June 11. The
-convention, numbering 98 members, organized by selecting for its
-president Hon Arthur I. Boreman. Before proceeding to business the
-following oath was administered to the delegation from each county: “We
-solemnly declare that we will support the Constitution of the United
-States and the laws made in pursuance thereof, as the supreme law of the
-land, anything in the Ordinance of the Convention that assembled in
-Richmond on the 13th day of February last to the contrary
-notwithstanding, so help us God.”[167] The State government was
-reconstituted on the 13th by an ordinance declaring vacant all places,
-whether legislative, executive or judicial, whose incumbents had
-espoused the cause of secession. This class, as already observed,
-included nearly every official in Virginia. These vacancies the
-convention supplied by the appointment of loyal men. In the constitution
-they made an important alteration which prescribed the number of
-delegates necessary to constitute a quorum in the General Assembly. All
-State, county and town officials were required to take an oath of
-allegiance which pledged support of both the Federal Constitution and
-the restored government of Virginia. On June 17 a declaration of
-independence was adopted without one dissenting voice; it denounced the
-usurpation of the Richmond convention, which had assumed to place the
-resources of Virginia at the disposal of the Confederate Government, to
-which power it repudiated allegiance. Resolutions expressing a
-determination never to submit to the ordinance of secession, but to
-maintain the rights of Virginia in the Union, were then passed. All
-persons in arms against the national Government were commanded to
-disband and to return to their allegiance. Though the members seriously
-endeavored to reorganize their government, it was with an express
-declaration that a division of the Commonwealth was a paramount object
-of their labors, and they decided, June 20, by a unanimous vote in favor
-of ultimate separation.
-
-Under an ordinance previously adopted Hon. Francis H. Pierpont was
-chosen Governor on the same day; a lieutenant-governor, an
-attorney-general and an executive council of five were also appointed.
-Other administrative offices were subsequently filled. The new
-incumbents were to exercise their functions for six months or until
-successors should be elected and qualified. The convention on June 25,
-subject in an emergency to be reassembled by the Governor and Council,
-then adjourned to August 6, 1861.
-
-Before concluding this session the convention directed all members
-willing to swear fealty to the Union, who were elected to the assembly
-on May 23 preceding, to meet on the 1st of July at Wheeling. At the time
-of their election these representatives were destined for Richmond. In
-addition to those regularly chosen under the old law of the
-Commonwealth, others pursuant to an ordinance of the convention were
-elected to fill vacancies. All were to qualify themselves by taking an
-oath or affirmation of allegiance to the United States and to the
-reorganized government of Virginia. These members, chiefly from the
-western counties, were to compose the law-making body, which was
-invested with all the powers and duties pertaining to the General
-Assembly.
-
-The new Governor was inaugurated on June 20, and, after taking the oath
-of office, said: “We have been driven into the position we occupy to-day
-by the usurpers at the South, who have inaugurated this war upon the
-soil of Virginia, and have made it the great Crimea of this contest. We,
-representing the loyal citizens of Virginia, have been bound to assume
-the position we have assumed to-day for the protection of ourselves, our
-wives, our children, and our property. We, I repeat, have been driven to
-assume this position; and now we are but recurring to the great
-fundamental principle of our fathers, that to the loyal people of a
-State belongs the law-making power of that State. The loyal people are
-entitled to the government and governmental authority of the State. And,
-fellow-citizens, it is the assumption of that authority upon which we
-are now about to enter.”[168]
-
-“It was not the object of the Wheeling convention,” he declared on a
-later occasion, “to set up any new government in the State, or separate,
-or other government than the one under which they had always
-lived.”[169]
-
-From these utterances his hearers must have concluded that the
-reorganized government was not for a part but for the whole of Virginia.
-Indeed, it was to the discernment of Mr. Pierpont that Virginia
-loyalists were chiefly indebted for a legal solution of the intricate
-problem that confronted them. While Carlile and others were urging a
-counter-revolution, Mr. Pierpont was carefully studying the provisions
-of the Federal Constitution. The clause of that instrument which
-guarantees a republican form of government was designed, he believed, to
-meet just such an emergency as had arisen. Though this conservative
-suggestion was not at first received with much favor, it continued
-gradually to win adherents until its propriety was universally
-recognized.[170] By thus proceeding along constitutional lines a State
-government in all its branches was soon established in every county not
-occupied by an armed foe.
-
-The Legislature of the restored State assembled, July 2, at Wheeling and
-assumed the full exercise of its powers. Two United States Senators,
-Waitman T. Willey, whose fidelity many considered doubtful, and John S.
-Carlile, an able, eloquent and then a trusted leader, were elected, July
-9; the former to fill the vacancy occasioned by the withdrawal of James
-M. Mason, the latter to succeed Robert M. T. Hunter, who also had
-abdicated his seat in Congress. Both were admitted, though not without a
-vigorous protest from the minority, to seats at the first session of the
-Thirty-seventh Congress, which met on July 4, 1861.
-
-Their certificates were presented, July 13, by Andrew Johnson. Senator
-Bayard entered a protest. Their admission, he said, would be a
-recognition of an organization that was not the regular government of
-the Commonwealth. Mr. Letcher was still Governor of Virginia, his term
-not having expired. The Senate had no authority to create a new State
-out of a part of an existing one. He then moved to refer their
-credentials to the Committee on the Judiciary. His colleague, Mr.
-Saulsbury, objected, that Mason and Hunter were not expelled until July
-11, whereas the claimants were appointed two days previously, at a time
-when no vacancies had occurred. To this Senator Johnson replied that the
-vacancies did in fact exist at the time of their election, July 9, and
-that the expulsion of Mason and Hunter was not merely a declaration that
-vacancies existed, but their seats were regarded as filled, and the
-occupants expelled from the floor of the Senate.
-
-Mr. Bayard denied that, even if Mason and Hunter were guilty of the
-alleged crimes, there was any power in either the Governor or
-Legislature to terminate their appointments; they might die, they could
-be removed by expulsion, but vacancies could not be anticipated by the
-Legislature of Virginia. The name of Mr. Pierpont could convey no
-authority to their credentials. On the question of reference five
-Senators voted in the affirmative, thirty-five in the negative. The oath
-was therefore administered and they took their seats, July 13, at the
-special session which began on the 4th.[171]
-
-A resolution was passed by the House of Delegates of the reorganized
-government instructing the Senators and requesting their Representatives
-in Congress to vote the necessary appropriation of men and money for a
-vigorous prosecution of the war, and to oppose all compromise. A stay
-law was also enacted by the Legislature, and a bill passed which
-authorized the Governor to organize a patrol in such counties as might
-require it; two hundred thousand dollars were appropriated for military
-purposes.
-
-On August 6, 1861, the Wheeling convention reassembled. Hitherto in all
-its proceedings relative to a reorganization there had been great
-unanimity, but when the delegates returned they were conscious of a
-strong popular sentiment in favor of erecting a new State, a subject
-that had been introduced, though not much discussed, before adjournment.
-This determination among their constituents seriously troubled many of
-the members. Political aspirations had been awakened; many of them had
-enjoyed the benefits of the humbler offices under the mother State; the
-Union forces, it was confidently expected, would soon crush the
-insurrection in Virginia, and the reorganized government, with
-themselves at its head, would be acquiesced in by their recent
-oppressors. To their ambition this hope was far more flattering than the
-prospect of administering the affairs of a comparatively small State on
-the western frontier of the Old Dominion. Then, too, the idea of
-dismemberment was certain to wound Virginia State pride. Moreover, the
-movement to form an independent commonwealth, when the reorganized
-government itself had been scarcely recognized, would look premature.
-Sentiments of this nature had begun to possess the minds of many
-delegates about the time of their return.
-
-In compliance with what appeared to be a popular demand, however, these
-considerations were disregarded, and the convention by a vote of 50 to
-28 passed an ordinance authorizing the formation out of the Commonwealth
-of Virginia of a new State to be called Kanawha, which was to embrace
-thirty-nine counties between the Alleghanies and the Ohio, provided the
-people thereof, at an election to be held on October 24, should express
-themselves in favor of such a measure; on certain prescribed conditions
-other contiguous counties could be annexed. At the election which was to
-decide this important question delegates to a constitutional convention
-were also to be chosen, and, if separation was approved by the people,
-these representatives were to assemble at Wheeling on November 26 and
-organize themselves into a convention. Any constitution which they might
-adopt was to be submitted to the qualified electors of the counties
-concerned. The new commonwealth was to assume a just proportion of
-Virginia’s public debt as it existed prior to January 1, 1861; private
-rights derived from her laws were to be valid under the proposed State,
-and were to be determined by the laws then existing in Virginia.[172]
-
-The convention, as previously noted, reassembled on August 6. Three days
-later one A. F. Ritchie, a member from Marion County, forwarded to
-Attorney-General Bates at Washington a letter which requested and
-received an immediate reply. Mr. Ritchie published the response, of
-which this is the important part:
-
- The formation of a new State out of Western Virginia is an original,
- independent act of _revolution_. I do not deny the power of
- revolution (I do not call it right, for it is never prescribed; it
- exists in force only, and has and can have no law but the will of
- the revolutionists). Any attempt to carry it out involves a plain
- breach of _both the constitutions_—of Virginia and of the Nation.
- And hence it is plain that you cannot take such a course without
- weakening, if not destroying, your claims upon the sympathy and
- support of the General Government, and without disconcerting the
- plan already adopted by both Virginia and the General Government for
- the reorganization of the revolted States and the restoration of the
- integrity of the Union.
-
- That plan I understand to be this: When a State, by its perverted
- functionaries, has declared itself out of the Union, we avail
- ourselves of all the sound and loyal elements of the State—all who
- own allegiance to and claim protection of the Constitution—to form a
- State government as nearly as may be upon the former model, and
- claiming to be the very State which has been in part overthrown by
- the successful rebellion. In this way we establish a constitutional
- nucleus around which all the shattered elements of the commonwealth
- may meet and combine, and thus restore the old State in its original
- integrity.
-
- This, I verily thought, was the plan adopted at Wheeling, and
- recognized and acted upon by the General Government here. Your
- convention annulled the revolutionary proceedings at Richmond, both
- in the Convention and the General Assembly, and your new Governor
- formally demanded of the President the fulfillment of the
- constitutional guaranty in favor of Virginia—Virginia as known to
- our fathers and to us. The President admitted the obligation, and
- promised his best efforts to fulfill it. And the Senate admitted
- your Senators, not as representing a new and nameless State, now for
- the first time heard of in our history, but as representing “the
- good old commonwealth.”
-
- Must all this be undone, and a new and hazardous experiment be
- ventured upon, at the moment when dangers and difficulties are
- thickening around us? I hope not.... I had rejoiced in the movement
- in Western Virginia, as a legal, constitutional, and safe refuge
- from revolution and anarchy; as at once an example and fit
- instrument for the restoration of all the revolted States.
-
- I have not time now to discuss the subject in its various bearings.
- What I have written is written with a running pen and will need your
- charitable criticism.
-
- If I had time to think, I could give persuasive reasons for
- declining the attempt to create a new State at this perilous time.
- At another time I might be willing to go fully into the question,
- but now I can say no more.[173]
-
-Mr. Ritchie, who had opposed a dismemberment of the old Commonwealth,
-was anxious, no doubt, to justify his vote by the endorsement of an
-eminent public character, and it is not improbable that before finally
-determining his action in so important a matter he was desirous of the
-opinion of some member of the Administration. Mr. Bates’s communication
-is dated the 12th; the convention did not adjourn till the 25th of
-August. At any time prior to January 1, 1862, it was subject to be
-reassembled by its president or by the Governor.
-
-The election of October 24, by a vote of 18,408 to 781, decided in favor
-of a division of the Commonwealth.[174] At the same time fifty-three
-delegates, representing forty-one counties, were chosen to frame a
-constitution for the proposed State. Of this convention John Hall was
-elected president and Ellery R. Hall secretary. The task before it, by
-no means an easy one, was to draft a fundamental law that would secure
-the approval of the people of western Virginia, of the Legislature of
-the restored State and of Congress. After a session of nearly three
-months it adjourned, February 18, 1862. Commissioners to convoke this
-body, should its work be recognized by Congress, had first been
-appointed. On December 3 preceding the name of the new State was changed
-to West Virginia.
-
-In the convention were many members who desired silence on the subject
-of slavery; others saw clearly that to ignore the cause of their present
-troubles would ensure a rejection of their work by Congress. This
-element felt assured that the temper of the national Legislature would
-not indulge the slave power by giving it two additional Senators besides
-an increase of strength in the Electoral College. There was also a
-sentiment which desired a postponement of the disturbing question until
-all others had first been determined. The friends of gradual
-emancipation were warned by leading Republicans in Congress that the
-constitution would not be recognized without a satisfactory provision on
-this subject. The “peculiar institution,” however, still possessed
-influence enough to defeat such a purpose, and the convention adjourned
-without inserting any expression concerning slavery. Still, the friends
-of emancipation did not despair. Mr. Parker, one of these, caused to be
-printed in Ohio instructions to their assemblymen to make the following
-provision a part of their constitution if the speedy admission of the
-new State into the Union should appear to require it: “All children born
-of slave mothers in this State, after the constitution goes into
-operation, shall be free, males at the age of twenty-eight years, and
-females at the age of eighteen years, and the children of such females
-to be free at birth.”[175]
-
-This unauthorized action of Mr. Parker, in connection with appeals
-through the newspapers, was not without effect. At their county-seat the
-citizens of Upshur passed, among other resolutions, the following: “That
-we, the citizens of Upshur County, do endorse and accept the policy
-recommended by the present Chief Magistrate of the United States,
-(Abraham Lincoln) in his message of the 6th of March, 1862, to Congress,
-in regard to the emancipation of the slaves of the border States, as the
-policy that should be adopted by the people of West Virginia; and we do
-now pledge ourselves to advocate, defend and carry out the said policy,
-as the most promotive of our liberty, safety and prosperity in the
-Union.”[176] Another resolution, adopted on this occasion, declared that
-the meeting expected the convention would have given the people an
-opportunity of expressing their sentiments on slavery in the proposed
-State. The convention, they complained, did not reflect the popular
-will.
-
-The Union men and the loyal press of other counties followed the example
-of Upshur by approving the measure or copying the “Instructions.” Thus
-at the time of voting on the constitution an informal poll on slavery
-was obtained in twenty counties.
-
-A faction in the convention proposed to annex the Shenandoah Valley with
-its large negro population; the success of such a plan, it was well
-understood, would ensure a rejection of the new State by Congress. To
-anticipate somewhat the events presently to be narrated it may be
-remarked at this point that the adversaries of the measure in Washington
-employed precisely the same tactics to defeat the movement for erecting
-an independent State.
-
-The new establishment under Pierpont was regarded as representing the
-old Commonwealth. On December 2, 1861, the reorganized Legislature again
-assembled. The Governor recommended a repeal of the stay laws and
-confiscation of the property of secessionists. He congratulated the
-people that they had contributed their full quota, about 6,000 men, to
-the Union army.
-
-The adversaries of slavery endeavored to obtain the consent of the
-restored Legislature to the condition that the gradual emancipation
-clause should become a part of the constitution as soon as ratified by
-the people. If Congress at its present session would give its consent
-and admit the new State on the same condition, the people, they
-declared, could be trusted to ratify afterward.
-
-An election held April 3, 1862, gave, including the soldiers’ vote,
-28,321 for and 572 against the constitution, no returns being received
-from ten counties.[177] The vote for gradual emancipation, where an
-expression was had, was almost equal to that given for the constitution,
-both being nearly unanimous. The former received 6,052 for and 610
-against it. How far this informal expression of opinion influenced
-Congress will presently be noticed.
-
-At an extra session of the Legislature, convoked by Governor Pierpont,
-an act, in almost the identical language of that assenting to the
-formation of Kentucky, was passed, May 13, 1862, giving consent to the
-erection within the jurisdiction of Virginia of a new State to include
-forty-eight named counties; the second section of this act provided that
-Berkeley, Jefferson and Frederic counties could be annexed whenever a
-majority of their votes, at an election to be held for that purpose,
-should ratify the constitution. The act, together with a certified
-original of the constitution, was to be transmitted to their Senators
-and Representatives in Washington, who were requested to use their
-endeavors to obtain the consent of Congress to the admission of West
-Virginia into the Union.
-
-On June 23, 1862, Mr. Wade, from the Committee on Territories, reported
-to the United States Senate a bill for the admission of West Virginia
-into the Union, and three days later requested its consideration. It
-stipulated, among other things, that “the convention thereinafter
-provided for shall, in the constitution to be framed by it, make
-provision that from and after the fourth day of July, 1863, the children
-of all slaves born within the limits of the State shall be free”; it
-also allotted to the new Commonwealth as many Representatives in
-Congress as her population would justify under the apportionment then
-existing.
-
-Charles Sumner observed that the former was the imposition of a
-condition which proposed to recognize the existence of slavery during
-that generation. “Short as life may be,” he declared, “it is too long
-for slavery.” By the admission of West Virginia a new slave State would
-be added; he moved, therefore, to substitute for this requirement the
-Jeffersonian interdict that “within the limits of said State there shall
-be neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, otherwise than in
-punishment of crime whereof the party shall be duly convicted.”
-
-Mr. Hale justly remarked that after consenting to the admission of so
-many States with pro-slavery constitutions it would be a singular fact
-if the first that ever applied with a provision for prospective
-emancipation should be rejected.
-
-Senator Collamer believed that if West Virginia was to enter on a
-footing of perfect equality with other members of the Union she should,
-like them, have the right to regulate domestic questions, including
-slavery, in her own way. The condition imposed by the bill denied her
-that right.
-
-Mr. Wade disliked the proposition as it stood, because it was very
-objectionable to him “to say that a man born on the 4th day of July,
-1863, shall be free, and one born the day before shall be forever a
-slave.” “I should much prefer,” he added, “to have it graduated so that
-all born after the adoption of this constitution shall be free, and that
-all between certain ages shall be free at a certain period.” At this
-point Sumner’s amendment was lost by a vote of 24 to 11.
-
-Mr. Carlile, of Virginia, who was foremost in organizing resistance to
-secession, had from the beginning assumed the appearance of a friend,
-but, after giving direction to the movement for separation, acted as an
-adversary to the new State; he opposed all conditions on its admission
-and expressed a preference that it be permitted to enter on the
-constitution submitted by its people. He would never “consent to have
-the organic law of a State framed for its people by the Congress of the
-United States.” There were 47,000 voters in the counties to be embraced
-within the proposed State; of that number only about 19,000 had voted on
-the constitution. At the last moment he delivered with his usual
-eloquence a strong argument against admission. An amendment which he
-submitted would have the effect certainly to postpone, perhaps
-altogether to defeat, the measure in the Senate. Failing to secure its
-adoption, he urged a postponement till December following; this motion,
-however, was voted down.
-
-So surprised were his associates at this unexpected opposition that they
-inquired pointedly why these belated arguments had not been presented to
-the Committee on Territories when the measure was before them. Mr. Wade,
-its chairman, was especially severe in his condemnation of Carlile’s
-extraordinary course, for it was the reasoning of the Virginia Senator
-that had won their support; he had searched the precedents and submitted
-cheerfully to all the labors imposed by the Committee. Now by his
-opposition he brought everything to a stand-still.
-
-His colleague, Mr. Willey, who had been converted in a rather advanced
-stage of the movement, declared that it was not the desire to be free
-from that part of the Commonwealth in rebellion that was responsible for
-the present attitude of western Virginia; the insurrection only
-precipitated the attempt to settle a controversy which was older than
-he. To enforce his remarks he added that great numbers of her citizens
-had determined to fix their abodes elsewhere unless West Virginia became
-an independent State. During this discussion the Senate had before it
-the constitution framed by the convention which met November 26, 1861,
-in the city of Wheeling.
-
-After a vigorous address by Benjamin F. Wade, who had recently
-investigated the subject, and whose ardor had been aroused by a
-deputation of West Virginians then in Washington, the bill by a vote of
-23 to 17 passed the Senate, July 14, 1862.[178]
-
-By Mr. Brown, of Virginia, a similar measure had already been introduced
-into the House on June 25. It was read twice and referred to the
-Committee on Territories.[179] When called up on July 16 succeeding it
-was agreed to postpone consideration of the bill until the regular
-session in December,[180] and on the 9th of that month, when
-Representative Bingham asked that it be put on its passage, discussion
-of the subject was resumed.
-
-Representative Conway said that if the application of West Virginia came
-in the proper manner he would be happy to vote for its admission; he
-regretted, however, that at the beginning of the rebellion a territorial
-government had not been organized there; Congress could then have passed
-an enabling act, and the State could be received in a manner to admit of
-no dispute. The question turned, he declared, on whether the State of
-Virginia, of which a Mr. Pierpont was Governor, was the lawful State.
-This he denied. A number of persons without authority met at Wheeling
-and organized a government. This establishment the President had
-recognized; one branch of Congress by admitting its Senators had also
-conceded its legality. These precedents, however, should not be binding
-on the House. Neither mobs nor mass-meetings, he asserted, make laws
-under our system, and such bodies had no authority to appoint Mr.
-Pierpont.
-
-The President intended, Mr. Conway believed, to form similar
-organizations in all the seceded States. “A policy seems about to be
-inaugurated,” he added, “looking to an assumption of State powers by a
-few individuals, wherever a military or other encampment can be effected
-in any of the rebellious districts. The utter and flagrant
-unconstitutionality of this scheme—I may say, its radically
-revolutionary character—ought to expose it to the reprobation of every
-loyal citizen and every member of this House. It aims at an utter
-subversion of our constitutional system. Its effect would be to
-consolidate all the powers of the Government in the hands of the
-Executive. With the admission of this new State, the President will have
-substantially _created_ four Senators—two for Virginia and two for West
-Virginia.” In referring to an extension of this system he declared that
-the President and a few friends could exercise Federal authority in all
-those States. “The true policy of this Government, therefore, with
-regard to the seceded States, is to hold them as common territory
-wherever and whenever our arms are extended over them. This obviates the
-terrible dangers which I have alluded to, and is in harmony with the
-highest considerations of public utility, as well as with sound legal
-principles.”[181]
-
-Mr. Conway directed his criticisms against the President because he
-believed the Executive was first to recognize the new government. The
-action of the Senate was based upon this precedent, it being assumed
-that recognition was an Executive function.
-
-Mr. Brown, who introduced the bill at the preceding session, related
-concisely the essential facts already placed before the reader. He
-reminded Representative Conway that, though a State could not commit
-treason, or any other crime, the officials of government could do so;
-that the legislative powers, being incapable of annihilation, returned
-to the people; that the spontaneous assembly at Wheeling merely
-organized and proposed a plan by which regular elections were to be held
-to fill vacancies caused by the withdrawal of disloyal representatives.
-A day was fixed, and wherever throughout the State loyal citizens chose
-to hold an election they could do so. The body thus elected assumed the
-legislative functions of the people.
-
-In answer to an inquiry he replied that about five counties outside of
-West Virginia were represented in the Legislature which consented to the
-erection of the new State, and all the counties in the State were
-expressly invited to send representatives to the General Assembly. If
-they were loyal they should have coöperated; if not, they should have no
-voice in either the State Legislature or Congress. He referred in his
-remarks to a telegram which he had that morning received from Wheeling.
-It contained a resolution passed by the Assembly asking the House of
-Representatives to approve the bill for the admission of West Virginia,
-which had been favorably acted upon by the Senate at the preceding
-session.
-
-“It has been asserted,” he said in conclusion, “and understood in some
-quarters, that the organization of the government at Wheeling was for
-the purpose of forming a new State. I am prepared to say that when the
-convention originally met in Wheeling, although there were a few
-radicals there who wanted to form a new State without reinstating the
-old State of Virginia, we voted them down, and commenced the exercise of
-our original rights as freemen to build up the loyal government of
-Virginia; and although we designed eventually to ask for this
-separation, and it was what we anxiously desired, yet we determined to
-be a law-abiding people, and ask for what we desired through the forms
-of law.”[182]
-
-Representative Colfax in giving the reasons which should govern his vote
-stated that the restored government had been recognized by the Senate,
-by the President as well as other executive officers, and that the
-House, by admitting Mr. Segar, elected pursuant to a proclamation of
-Governor Pierpont, had also recognized the reorganized State. Even the
-political party in opposition voted for that member’s admission. He also
-remarked that the new State came knocking at the door for admission with
-the tiara of freedom on her brow.[183]
-
-Mr. Olin, who opposed the bill at the preceding session, said: “I shall
-vote for it now with reluctance. I shall vote for it mainly upon the
-ground that the General Government, whether wisely or unwisely I will
-not undertake to say, has encouraged this movement to create a division
-of the State of Virginia.”[184] The people of West Virginia, with their
-experience of the evils which slavery brought on them, should not have
-permitted that institution to exist for an hour in their new government.
-For this deficiency, however, the bill provided a partial remedy.
-
-Crittenden observed that it was the party applying for admission that
-gave its consent to a division of the State.[185] To this objection
-Representative Blair replied that there were counties outside of West
-Virginia which had assented to dismemberment. Other members, who had
-hitherto been hostile, now consented to support the measure from a
-conviction that it would weaken rebellion.
-
-Representative Dawes said that the primary elections which sent
-delegates to the Wheeling convention discussed not a reorganization of
-the Virginia government, but the formation of an independent State in
-western Virginia. To accomplish that, he said, the only way was to
-restore the government of the entire Commonwealth. That government then
-had two things to do: to set up a new State within itself and secondly
-to give its consent thereto. This suggestion, he understood, emanated
-from Washington.[186]
-
-In reference to the admission, Thaddeus Stevens said:
-
- I do not desire to be understood as being deluded by the idea that
- we are admitting this State in pursuance of any provisions of the
- Constitution. I find no such provision that justifies it, and the
- argument in favor of the constitutionality of it is one got up by
- those who either honestly entertain, I think, an erroneous opinion,
- or who desire to justify, by a forced construction, an act which
- they have predetermined to do.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Now, to say that the Legislature which called this seceding
- convention was not the Legislature of Virginia, is asserting that
- the Legislature chosen by a vast majority of the people of a State
- is not the Legislature of that State. That is a doctrine which I can
- never assent to. I admit that the Legislature were disloyal, but
- they were still the disloyal and traitorous Legislature of the State
- of Virginia; and the State, as a mere State, was bound by their
- acts. Not so individuals. They are responsible to the General
- Government, and are responsible whether the State decrees treason or
- not. That being the Legislature of Virginia, Governor Letcher,
- elected by a majority of the votes of the people, is the Governor of
- Virginia—a traitor in rebellion, but a traitorous governor of a
- traitorous State. Now, then, how has that State ever given its
- consent to this division? A highly respectable but very small number
- of the citizens of Virginia—the people of West Virginia—assembled
- together, disapproved of the acts of the State of Virginia, and with
- the utmost self-complacency called themselves Virginia.
-
- * * * * *
-
- I hold that none of the States now in rebellion are entitled to the
- protection of the Constitution, and I am grieved when I hear those
- high in authority sometimes talking of the constitutional
- difficulties about enforcing measures against this belligerent
- power, and the next moment disregarding every vestige and semblance
- of the Constitution by acts which alone are arbitrary. I hope I do
- not differ with the Executive in the views which I advocate. But I
- see the Executive one day saying “you shall not take the property of
- rebels to pay the debts which the rebels have brought upon the
- Northern States.” Why? Because the Constitution is in the way. And
- the next day I see him appointing a military governor of Virginia, a
- military governor of Tennessee, and some other places. Where does he
- find anything in the Constitution to warrant that?
-
- If he must look there alone for authority, then all these acts are
- flagrant usurpations, deserving the condemnation of the community.
- He must agree with me or else his acts are as absurd as they are
- unlawful; for I see him here and there ordering elections for
- members of Congress wherever he finds a little collection of three
- or four consecutive plantations in the rebel States, in order that
- men may be sent in here to control the proceedings of this Congress,
- just as we sanctioned the election held by a few people at a little
- watering place at Fortress Monroe, by which we have here the very
- respectable and estimable member from that locality with us. It was
- upon the same principle.
-
- ... I say, then, that we may admit West Virginia as a new State, not
- by virtue of any provision of the Constitution, but under our
- absolute power which the laws of war give us in the circumstances in
- which we are placed. I shall vote for this bill upon that theory,
- and upon that alone; for I will not stultify myself by supposing
- that we have any warrant in the Constitution for this proceeding.
-
-The Union, he declared, could never be restored as it was. His consent
-would never be given to restore it with a constitutional provision
-protecting slavery. An additional reason for giving his vote in favor of
-the bill was that there was a provision which would make West Virginia a
-free State.[187]
-
-“No right of persons, no right of property,” said Mr. Noell, “no social
-or domestic affairs, could be regulated or controlled by the people of
-western Virginia, under the circumstances in which they were placed,
-without recognizing the ordinance of secession, and acting as a State
-within the Southern Confederacy.”[188] This showed both the necessity of
-reorganizing the government of Virginia and the recognition by Federal
-authorities of the establishment so constituted.
-
-Mr. Segar declared that eleven of the forty-eight counties to comprise
-the new State had not participated in its establishment, being
-represented neither in the reorganized Legislature nor the Wheeling
-convention; three others were unrepresented both in the House of
-Delegates and the conventions; ten cast no vote on the constitution and
-three had interests, social and commercial, which bound them up with the
-East. Then, too, the people of West Virginia made a fundamental law
-recognizing slavery; an anti-slavery constitution was to be imposed on
-them as a condition of admission.[189]
-
-An able argument by Representative Bingham, of Ohio, who had charge of
-the bill, concluded the debate on December 10, 1862, when it passed by
-96 yeas to 55 nays.[190]
-
-With the President rested the fate of this important measure; if he
-vetoed it there would, probably, not be found a two thirds majority in
-its support. Many members, as will be seen from the preceding abridgment
-of the debates, yielded only a reluctant support.
-
-On December 23, 1862, Mr. Lincoln sent to his constitutional advisers
-the following note:
-
- =Gentlemen of the Cabinet=:
-
- A bill for an act entitled “An act for the admission of the State of
- West Virginia into the Union and for other purposes” has passed the
- House of Representatives and the Senate, and has been duly presented
- to me for my action.
-
- I respectfully ask of each of you an opinion in writing on the
- following questions, to wit:
-
- 1st. Is the said act constitutional?
-
- 2d. Is the said act expedient?[191]
-
-To this request six members of the Cabinet responded by submitting their
-written opinions. Three—Seward, Stanton and Chase—answered both
-questions in the affirmative. Bates, Blair and Welles replied in the
-negative; the remaining place in the Cabinet was vacant owing to the
-resignation of Caleb B. Smith, Secretary of the Interior, who had been
-raised to the Bench in Indiana. His successor had not yet been
-appointed.
-
-Upon the constitutional point Mr. Seward said: “It seems to me that the
-political body which has given consent in this case is really and
-incontestably the State of Virginia. So long as the United States do not
-recognize the secession, departure, or separation of one of the States,
-that State must be deemed as existing and having a constitutional place
-within the Union, whatever may be at any moment exactly its
-revolutionary condition. A State thus situated cannot be deemed to be
-divided into two or more States merely by any revolutionary proceeding
-which may have occurred, because there cannot be, constitutionally, two
-or more States of Virginia.... The newly organized State of Virginia is
-therefore, at this moment, by the express consent of the United States,
-invested with all the rights of the State of Virginia, and charged with
-all the powers, privileges, and dignity of that State. If the United
-States allow to that organization any of these rights, powers, and
-privileges, it must be allowed to possess and enjoy them all. If it be a
-State competent to be represented in Congress and bound to pay taxes, it
-is a State competent to give the required consent of the State to the
-formation and erection of the new State of West Virginia within the
-jurisdiction of Virginia.”
-
-“Upon the question of expediency,” he wrote, “I am determined by two
-considerations. First. The people of Western Virginia will be safer from
-molestation for their loyalty, because better able to protect and defend
-themselves as a new and separate State than they would be if left to
-demoralizing uncertainty upon the question whether, in the progress of
-the war, they may not be again reabsorbed in the State of Virginia, and
-subjected to severities as a punishment for their present devotion to
-the Union. The first duty of the United States is protection to loyalty
-wherever it is found. Second. I am of opinion that the harmony and peace
-of the Union will be promoted by allowing the new State to be formed and
-erected, which will assume jurisdiction over that part of the valley of
-the Ohio which lies on the south side of the Ohio River, displacing, in
-a constitutional and lawful manner, the jurisdiction heretofore
-exercised there by a political power concentrated at the head of the
-James River.”[192]
-
-Mr. Chase, in discussing the constitutional question, said in part: “The
-Madison Papers clearly show that the consent of the Legislature of the
-original State was the only consent required to the erection and
-formation of a new State within its jurisdiction. That consent having
-been given, the consent of the new State, if required, is proved by her
-application for admission.... The Legislature of Virginia, it may be
-admitted, did not contain many members from the eastern counties; it
-contained, however, representatives from all counties whose inhabitants
-were not either rebels themselves, or dominated by greater numbers of
-rebels. It was the only Legislature of the State known to the Union. If
-its consent was not valid, no consent could be. If its consent was not
-valid, the Constitution, as to the people of West Virginia, has been so
-suspended by the rebellion that a most important right under it is
-utterly lost.”
-
-Relative to the question of expediency, he writes: “The act is almost
-universally regarded as of vital importance to their welfare by the
-loyal people most immediately interested, and it has received the
-sanction of large majorities in both Houses of Congress. These facts
-afford strong presumptions of expediency.... It may be said, indeed,
-that the admission of West Virginia will draw after it the necessity of
-admitting other States under the consent of extemporized legislatures
-assuming to act for whole States, though really representing no
-important part of their territory. I think this necessity imaginary.
-There is no such legislature, nor is there likely to be. No such
-legislature, if extemporized, is likely to receive the recognition of
-Congress or the Executive.”[193]
-
-Mr. Stanton responded more briefly than either Secretary Seward or
-Secretary Chase, observing, among other things: “I have been unable to
-perceive any point on which the act of Congress conflicts with the
-Constitution. By the erection of the new State, the geographical
-boundary heretofore existing between the free and slave States will be
-broken, and the advantage of this upon every point of consideration
-surpasses all objections which have occurred to me on the question of
-expediency. Many prophetic dangers and evils might be specified, but it
-is safe to suppose that those who come after us will be as wise as
-ourselves, and if what we deem evils be really such, they will be
-avoided. The present good is real and substantial, the future may safely
-be left in the care of those whose duty and interest may be involved in
-any possible future measures of legislation.”[194]
-
-One or two excerpts from the opinion of Mr. Welles will indicate the
-course of his argument in the negative: “Under existing necessities, an
-organization of the loyal citizens, or of a portion of them, has been
-recognized, and its Senators and Representatives admitted to seats in
-Congress. Yet we cannot close our eyes to the fact that the fragment of
-the State which, in the revolutionary tumult, has instituted the new
-organization, is not possessed of the records, archives, symbols,
-traditions, or capital of the Commonwealth. Though calling itself the
-State of Virginia, it does not assume the debts and obligations
-contracted prior to the existing difficulties. Is this organization,
-then, really and in point of fact anything else than a provisional
-government for the State? It is composed almost entirely of those loyal
-citizens who reside beyond the mountains, and within the prescribed
-limits of the proposed new State. In this revolutionary period, there
-being no contestants, we are compelled to recognize the organization as
-Virginia. Whether that would be the case, and how the question would be
-met and disposed of, were the insurrection this day abandoned, need not
-now be discussed. Were Virginia, or those parts of it not included in
-the proposed new State, invaded and held in temporary subjection by a
-foreign enemy instead of the insurgents, the fragment of territory and
-population which should successfully repel the enemy and adhere to the
-Union would doubtless, during such temporary subjection, be recognized,
-and properly recognized, as Virginia. When, however, this loyal fragment
-goes farther, and not only declares itself to be Virginia, but proceeds
-by its own act to detach itself permanently and forever from the
-Commonwealth, and to erect itself into a new State within the
-jurisdiction of the State of Virginia, the question arises whether this
-proceeding is regular, legal, right, and, in honest good faith,
-conformable to, and within the letter and spirit of the Constitution....
-Congress may admit new States into the Union; but any attempt to
-dismember or divide a State by any forced or unauthorized assumption
-would be an inexpedient exercise of doubtful power to the injury of such
-State. Were there no question of doubtful constitutionality in the
-movement, the time selected for the division of the State is most
-inopportune. It is a period of civil commotion, when unity and concerted
-action on the part of all loyal citizens and authorities should be
-directed to a restoration of the Union, and all tendency towards
-disintegration and demoralization avoided.”[195]
-
-Mr. Blair, likewise in the negative, added little of importance to what
-Secretary Welles had adduced on that side.
-
-The first and rather hastily formed opinion of Attorney-General Bates
-has already been given together with an account of the circumstances
-attending its publication; upon longer reflection he did not greatly
-change the ground of his original convictions and in an elaborate
-discussion still reasoned in the negative.[196]
-
-Between these evenly balanced and conflicting opinions of his advisers
-Mr. Lincoln argued as follows:
-
- The consent of the legislature of Virginia is constitutionally
- necessary to the bill for the admission of West Virginia becoming a
- law. A body claiming to be such legislature has given its consent.
- We cannot well deny that it is such, unless we do so upon the
- outside knowledge that the body was chosen at elections in which a
- majority of the qualified voters of Virginia did not participate.
- But it is a universal practice in the popular elections in all these
- States to give no legal consideration whatever to those who do not
- choose to vote, as against the effect of the votes of those who do
- choose to vote. Hence it is not the qualified voters, but the
- qualified voters who choose to vote that constitute the political
- power of the State. Much less than to non-voters should any
- consideration be given to those who did not vote in this case,
- because it is also matter of outside knowledge that they were not
- merely neglectful of their rights under and duty to this government,
- but were also engaged in open rebellion against it. Doubtless among
- these non-voters were some Union men whose voices were smothered by
- the more numerous secessionists; but we know too little of their
- number to assign them any appreciable value. Can this government
- stand, if it indulges constitutional constructions by which men in
- open rebellion against it are to be accounted, man for man, the
- equals of those who maintain their loyalty to it? Are they to be
- accounted even better citizens, and more worthy of consideration,
- than those who merely neglect to vote? If so, their treason against
- the Constitution enhances their constitutional value. Without
- braving these absurd conclusions, we cannot deny that the body which
- consents to the admission of West Virginia is the legislature of
- Virginia. I do not think the plural form of the words “legislatures”
- and “States” in the phrase of the Constitution “without the consent
- of the legislatures of the States concerned,” etc., has any
- reference to the new State concerned. That plural form sprang from
- the contemplation of two or more old States contributing to form a
- new one. The idea that the new State was in danger of being admitted
- without its own consent was not provided against, because it was not
- thought of, as I conceive. It is said, the devil takes care of his
- own. Much more should a good spirit—the spirit of the Constitution
- and the Union—take care of its own. I think it cannot do less and
- live.
-
- But is the admission into the Union of West Virginia expedient?
- This, in my general view, is more a question for Congress than for
- the Executive. Still I do not evade it. More than on anything else,
- it depends on whether the admission or rejection of the new State
- would, under all the circumstances, tend the more strongly to the
- restoration of the national authority throughout the Union. That
- which helps most in this direction is the most expedient at this
- time. Doubtless those in remaining Virginia would return to the
- Union, so to speak, less reluctantly without the division of the old
- State than with it; but I think we could not save as much in this
- quarter by rejecting the new State, as we should lose by it in West
- Virginia. We can scarcely dispense with the aid of West Virginia in
- this struggle; much less can we afford to have her against us, in
- Congress and in the field. Her brave and good men regard her
- admission into the Union as a matter of life and death. They have
- been true to the Union under very severe trials. We have so acted as
- to justify their hopes, and we cannot fully retain their confidence
- and coöperation if we seem to break faith with them. In fact, they
- could not do so much for us, if they would. Again, the admission of
- the new State turns that much slave soil, to free, and thus is a
- certain and irrevocable encroachment upon the cause of the
- rebellion. The division of a State is dreaded as a precedent. But a
- measure made expedient by a war is no precedent for times of peace.
- It is said that the admission of West Virginia is secession, and
- tolerated only because it is our secession. Well, if we call it by
- that name, there is still difference enough between secession
- against the Constitution and secession in favor of the Constitution.
- I believe the admission of West Virginia into the Union is
- expedient.[197]
-
-The bill passed by the House on the 10th was approved by the President
-on the 31st of December, 1862; after naming the forty-eight counties to
-constitute the new State the act declares, among other things, that
-since the convention framed the constitution for West Virginia its
-people had expressed a wish to change section seven of the eleventh
-article by inserting the following in its place, _viz._: “The children
-of slaves born within the limits of this State after the fourth day of
-July, eighteen hundred and sixty-three, shall be free; and that all
-slaves within the said State who shall, at the time aforesaid, be under
-the age of ten years, shall be free when they arrive at the age of
-twenty-one years; and all slaves over ten and under twenty-one years,
-shall be free when they arrive at the age of twenty-five years; and no
-slave shall be permitted to come into the State for permanent residence
-therein.”[198]
-
-The constitution thus amended was unanimously ratified by the
-convention, which on a summons of the commissioners reassembled February
-18, 1863, and also by the people, to whom it was submitted at an
-election held on May 26 following.[199] President Lincoln on April 20
-issued a proclamation declaring that the prescribed conditions having
-been complied with, the constitution would go into force in sixty days
-from that date; the formation of the new State was complete and it
-became a member of the Union on the 20th of June, 1863.[200]
-
-Daniel Webster, in an address delivered thirteen years before, at the
-laying of the corner-stone of an addition to the Federal Capitol, had
-asked: “And ye men of Western Virginia, ... what benefit do you propose
-to yourself by disunion? If you ‘secede,’ what do you ‘secede’ from, and
-what do you ‘accede’ to? Do you look for the current of the Ohio to
-change, and to bring you and your commerce to the tide-waters of the
-eastern rivers? What man in his senses can suppose that you would remain
-part and parcel of Virginia a month after Virginia should have ceased to
-be part and parcel of the Union?”[201] The remarkable prediction of the
-great orator was fulfilled; his inspired vision had pierced the future.
-The Old Dominion had separated forever along the line of the
-Alleghanies.
-
-Before relating the subsequent history of the restored government, it is
-proper to notice a few important events in the early career of the new
-Commonwealth. On January 31, 1863, an act passed the General Assembly of
-Virginia giving consent to the transfer of Berkeley County to the State
-of West Virginia. The preamble of this act affirms that its people
-desired to be annexed to the proposed State. The question of transfer,
-however, was to be decided by a majority of voters at an election to be
-held on the fourth Thursday of May. If, however, the polls could not be
-safely opened on that day, the Governor was empowered to postpone the
-election by proclamation. The commissioners who superintended the
-polling were to certify the results to the Executive. On February 4
-succeeding another act made it lawful for voters in certain districts
-including twenty-three counties to declare, at a general election to be
-held on the fourth Thursday of May, whether these specified counties
-should be annexed to West Virginia. The consent of the Legislature of
-that State was, of course, made a condition of the transfer, after which
-the jurisdiction of Virginia over such counties was to cease.
-
-West Virginia statutes of August 5 and November 2, 1863, in words, admit
-Berkeley and Jefferson counties, and they have ever since been under her
-jurisdiction. When admitted into the Union it was with a provision in
-her constitution that she might acquire additional territory; therefore
-Congress gave its consent in advance and it was not afterwards
-withdrawn. In brief, West Virginia accepted the transfer and it was
-authorized by the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Virginia.[202]
-
-State officers were elected on May 28, when the following unconditional
-Union candidates, receiving a vote of about 30,000, were chosen without
-opposition: Arthur I. Boreman, Governor; J. E. Boyers, Secretary of
-State; Campbell Tarr, Treasurer; Samuel Crane, Auditor; A. B. Caldwell,
-Attorney-General; also three judges of a court of appeals.
-
-The inauguration of the new State, which was marked by imposing
-ceremonies, took place at Wheeling, the capital, on June 20, 1863. Mr.
-Pierpont, the retiring executive of reorganized Virginia, briefly
-addressed the assembled citizens and urged them not to forsake the flag;
-he then introduced his successor, whom he pronounced “true as steel.”
-Governor Boreman in his short speech said that the only terms of peace
-were that the rebels should lay down their arms and submit to the
-regularly constituted authority of the United States.
-
-The Legislature of West Virginia convened on the same day. Waitman T.
-Willey and P. G. Van Winkle were elected United States Senators.[203] In
-his first message Governor Boreman recommended to the General Assembly
-the immediate passage of laws effectually to extirpate slavery, and also
-the enactment of a law that no man should be permitted to vote or to
-hold office until he had taken the oath of allegiance.
-
-In the Presidential election of 1864, the first held since the adoption
-of the Constitution in which any State deliberately neglected to appoint
-electors, 33,680 votes were polled in West Virginia; of this number the
-Union ticket received 23,223 and the McClellan electors 10,457.[204]
-Elections had also been held in Louisiana and Tennessee by authority of
-the governments established there under Mr. Lincoln’s plan of
-reconstruction; the Republican majority in Congress, however, denied the
-validity of the organizations in the two States last named and refused
-to count the votes which they presented. This question will be fully
-considered when we come to trace the development of the Congressional
-plan. At the regular State election Governor Boreman was chosen without
-opposition, receiving 19,098 votes. With the subsequent history of the
-new Commonwealth the subject of reconstruction is not much concerned.
-
-By the formation of an independent Commonwealth the counties beyond the
-Alleghanies were withdrawn from the jurisdiction of the restored
-government, which after the inaugural ceremonies at Wheeling selected
-for its capital the city of Alexandria, where it continued till May 25,
-1865, to exercise its functions in those parts of the Old Dominion
-within the lines of the Union army. A State government was promptly
-organized by the election of a legislature and of executive officers. In
-this establishment the loyal eastern counties participated. Mr. Pierpont
-was elected Governor for the term of three years beginning January 1,
-1864. A Lieutenant-Governor, a Secretary of State, a Treasurer, an
-Auditor, an Adjutant-General and an Attorney-General were also chosen.
-
-The Governor in his message to the Assembly mentioned slavery as doomed,
-and recommended the calling of a convention so to amend the State
-constitution as to abolish the institution forever. In compliance with
-this suggestion the Legislature, on December 21, 1863, passed an act
-directing a convention to be held at Alexandria on the 13th of February
-succeeding to amend the constitution and prohibit slavery in the
-counties of Accomac, Northampton, Princess Ann, Elizabeth City and York
-(including the cities of Norfolk and Portsmouth). These with Berkeley
-County had been excepted from the operation of the Emancipation
-Proclamation.
-
-None but loyal citizens who had not assisted the insurgents since
-January 1, 1863, were allowed to take part, and those whose right to
-vote might be challenged were required to swear support of the
-Constitution and to declare that they had not in any way given aid or
-comfort to the enemy.
-
-The convention, consisting of sixteen members, assembled in the new
-capital at the appointed time and remained in session till April 11
-following, when a constitution was adopted.[205] Various amendments,
-relating chiefly to the regulation of the elective franchise and to the
-abolition of slavery, were discussed and agreed upon. The work of this
-miniature convention was ordered to be proclaimed without a submission
-to the people. It was not, however, recognized by Congress, though the
-civil government which authorized its formation was permitted to
-continue under it, provisionally only, and in all respects subject to
-the paramount authority of the United States at any time to abolish,
-modify, or supersede.
-
-Though the bill for the admission of West Virginia passed both Houses,
-yet Congress was by no means unanimous in giving its consent to that
-measure. In the debates, of which a synopsis has been given, the
-hostility of Thaddeus Stevens and other influential members is scarcely
-concealed. This opposition to executive policy slowly gathered strength,
-and by 1863 had become formidable enough to defeat the admission of
-Representatives from the Alexandria government. The Senators, however,
-remained, Lemuel J. Bowden till his death, January 2, 1864, when his
-successor was refused admission, and John S. Carlile till the expiration
-of his term in 1865.
-
-On the assembling of the 38th Congress, which commenced its first
-session December 7, 1863, Joseph E. Segar, Lucius H. Chandler and
-Benjamin M. Kitchen appeared as Representatives from Virginia. On May 17
-succeeding Mr. Dawes from the Committee of Elections reported a
-resolution to the effect that Joseph E. Segar, from the First District
-of Virginia, was not entitled to a seat in that Congress. The case of
-Mr. Chandler, regarded as precisely similar, was considered at the same
-time.
-
-The district which Mr. Segar claimed to represent was composed of twenty
-counties; of these, Chairman Dawes asserted, only four participated in
-the election. Polling places were not opened in any other part of the
-district, the Confederate authorities being in possession of the
-remaining counties. As there could be no free exercise of the franchise
-in this situation Mr. Segar, it was contended, was not properly chosen,
-and, therefore, was not entitled to a seat. The vote cast, though not
-accurately ascertained, was estimated at 1,677, of which the claimant
-received 1,300. Because of his loyalty and the sacrifices he had made,
-the Committee regretted the necessity of deciding against him.
-
-Mr. Segar, speaking in his own behalf, reminded the House that in a
-preceding election, when he received 559 out of 1,018 votes polled in
-three counties, he was admitted after a delay of seven or eight weeks;
-but when he was sent by a larger constituency and came as the choice of
-four counties he was informed that he had no right to a seat, and some
-of his colleagues who favored his admission in 1862 voted to exclude
-him. The Committee’s report, he asserted, admitted the existence of such
-a State as Virginia. He asked Chairman Dawes a rather embarrassing
-question when he inquired how a State could have two Senators and no
-Representative in Congress. In conclusion he pronounced restored State
-organization and gradual accretion to be the best method of
-reconstruction.
-
-Concerning the title of Mr. Chandler, from the Second Congressional
-District, Chairman Dawes stated that of the 779 votes polled in the
-election 778 were cast for the claimant. For the same reason as in the
-case of Mr. Segar only a small part of that District was free to
-participate in the election, and nearly all the votes were polled in the
-city of Norfolk. The committee reported against his admission on the
-same ground taken in Mr. Segar’s case.
-
-Chandler, who was permitted to state his case to the House, cited a
-resolution introduced by his former school-mate, Owen Lovejoy, the
-well-known abolitionist, authorizing the names of the three Virginia
-claimants to be enrolled as Representatives. That resolution, however,
-was tabled and their credentials referred to the Committee of Elections.
-
-In 1860 the Union vote in his District was only 6,712; of that number
-2,900, he said, were in Norfolk and Portsmouth; the latter city had cast
-more votes against secession than the remainder of his District. Great
-numbers of loyal men, however, left there at the beginning of the war.
-Electors being under no obligation to vote may allow an election to go
-by default when one citizen could return a member to Congress.
-Territorially restored Virginia was larger than Delaware and possessed
-twice the area of Rhode Island.
-
-The case of Benjamin M. Kitchen, on which the Committee had previously
-made an adverse report, differed from those of the other two claimants
-in that he had received nearly all of his vote in Berkeley County, which
-possessed a sort of wandering character, for it was somewhat uncertain
-whether it was under the jurisdiction of the new or the old State. What
-action was taken on the Committee’s report does not appear, but it may
-be inferred from a facetious remark of one member who observed that,
-like Segar and Chandler, Kitchen had been privileged to retire to
-private life. The two former were refused admission by the decided vote
-of 94 to 23.
-
-Besides endeavoring to win back the wavering, Governor Pierpont was
-occupied in taking measures for the relief of the distressed. In the
-vicinity of Norfolk and Portsmouth there was a large number of destitute
-persons whose natural supporters were still following the declining
-fortunes of the Confederacy or had been killed in its service. While it
-was universally agreed that their necessities should be relieved, the
-military and civil authorities were in conflict as to the mode of
-providing for them. The President in his efforts to establish amicable
-relations between the officers of the army and those of the State
-invoked the assistance of the Governor. As the restored Commonwealth
-could not be consistently recognized while its capital was in a state of
-blockade the President by proclamation, September 24, 1863, declared
-that the interdiction of trade with the port of Alexandria had ceased.
-
-General Butler with headquarters at Fortress Monroe took command of the
-Department of Virginia and North Carolina November 2, 1863. His
-predecessors, he asserted, had endeavored to recruit a regiment of
-Virginians; but after several months of energetic trial their efforts
-were abandoned. As eastern Virginia claimed to be a loyal and fully
-organized State, Butler renewed the attempt, whereupon Governor Pierpont
-protested vigorously. One and a half companies were all the recruits
-that the Commonwealth would furnish, and these, Butler asserts, were
-employed to defend lighthouses and protect Union inhabitants from
-outrages at the hands of their disloyal neighbors.[206] This experience,
-it may be supposed, did not tend to raise the Alexandria government in
-the esteem of the Department Commander. We find accordingly that
-differences soon sprang up between the civil and military authorities.
-An attempt to regulate the liquor traffic in Norfolk and vicinity was
-the occasion of an open rupture. Civil officers continued to collect the
-payments imposed by law on those engaged in the business; the military
-power, to keep the traffic under better control, undertook to give to a
-few firms a monopoly of the importation. In this situation many small
-retailers refused to pay their licenses and were indicted in the local
-courts. To foil this purpose, General Shepley issued, June 22, 1864, an
-order providing that “on the day of the ensuing municipal election in
-the city of Norfolk a poll will be opened at the several places of
-voting, and separate ballot-boxes will be kept open during the hours of
-voting, in which voters may deposit their ballots, ‘yes’ or ‘no,’ upon
-the following question: Those in favor of continuing the present form of
-municipal government during the existence of military occupation will
-vote ‘yes.’ Those opposed to it will vote ‘no.’”
-
-Governor Pierpont resented this action and promptly issued a
-proclamation protesting against it as a revolutionary proceeding in
-violation of the Federal Constitution, adding, “No loyal citizen,
-therefore, is expected to vote on the proposed question.” In a vigorous
-pamphlet discussing the “abuses of military power” he repeated his
-criticism.
-
-Butler at this point took up the cudgels for his subordinate and in a
-general order, dated June 30, 1864, discussed the incident at some
-length. Pierpont was alluded to as “a person who calls himself
-Governor,” and as one “pretending to be the head of the restored
-government of Virginia, which government is unrecognized by the
-Congress, laws, and Constitution of the United States.” The order
-further recited that as the loyal citizens of Norfolk had voted against
-the further trial of the experiment of municipal government “therefore
-it is ordered that all attempts to exercise civil office and power,
-under any supposed city election, within the city of Norfolk and its
-environs, must cease, and the persons pretending to be elected to civil
-offices at the late election, and those heretofore elected to municipal
-offices since the rebellion, must no longer attempt to exercise such
-functions; and upon any pretense or attempt so to do, the military
-commandant at Norfolk will see to it that persons so acting are stayed
-and quieted.”
-
-A memorial to Mr. Lincoln enlisted his sympathy and secured for Pierpont
-the assistance of Attorney-General Bates, who on July 11 wrote the
-President a long official letter setting forth his sense of the serious
-military encroachment by General Butler upon civil law and the authority
-of Mr. Pierpont as Governor of Virginia. The Department Commander
-replied in a communication of forty pages in sharp criticism of the
-Alexandria government, which he characterized as a “useless, expensive,
-and inefficient thing, unrecognized by Congress, unknown to the
-Constitution of the United States, and of such character that there is
-no command in the Decalogue against worshiping it, being the likeness of
-nothing in the heavens above, the earth beneath, or the waters under the
-earth.”
-
-The Attorney-General, who was accused of a design to create a conflict
-between the civil and the military power, also came in for a share of
-rather violent criticism. In this altercation each party accused the
-other of being assisted by only secessionists and traitors.[207]
-
-It was relative to this controversy that Mr. Lincoln, December 21, 1864,
-addressed to General Butler the following communication:
-
- On the 9th of August last, I began to write you a letter, the
- enclosed being a copy of so much as I then wrote. So far as it goes
- it embraces the views I then entertained and still entertain.
-
- A little relaxation of the complaints made to me on the subject,
- occurring about that time, the letter was not finished and sent. I
- now learn, correctly I suppose, that you have ordered an election,
- similar to the one mentioned, to take place on the eastern shore of
- Virginia. Let this be suspended at least until conference with me
- and obtaining my approval.
-
- [Inclosure.]
-
-
- =Executive Mansion, Washington=, _August 9, 1864_.
-
- _Major-General Butler_:
-
- Your paper of the —— about Norfolk matters, is received, as also was
- your other, on the same general subject, dated, I believe, some time
- in February last. This subject has caused considerable trouble,
- forcing me to give a good deal of time and reflection to it. I
- regret that crimination and recrimination are mingled in it. I
- surely need not to assure you that I have no doubt of your loyalty
- and devoted patriotism; and I must tell you that I have no less
- confidence in those of Governor Pierpont and the Attorney-General.
- The former—at first as the loyal governor of all Virginia, including
- that which is now West Virginia, in organizing and furnishing
- troops, and in all other proper matters—was as earnest, honest, and
- efficient to the extent of his means as any other loyal governor.
-
- The inauguration of West Virginia as a new State left to him, as he
- assumed, the remainder of the old State; and the insignificance of
- the parts which are outside of the rebel lines, and consequently
- within his reach, certainly gives a somewhat farcical air to his
- dominion, and I suppose he, as well as I, has considered that it can
- be useful for little else than as a nucleus to add to. The
- Attorney-General needs only to be known to be relieved from all
- question as to loyalty and thorough devotion to the national cause,
- constantly restraining as he does my tendency to clemency for rebels
- and rebel sympathizers. But he is the law-officer of the Government,
- and a believer in the virtue of adhering to law.
-
- Coming to the question itself, the military occupancy of Norfolk is
- a necessity with us. If you, as department commander, find the
- cleansing of the city necessary to prevent pestilence in your army;
- street-lights and a fire department necessary to prevent
- assassinations and incendiarism among your men and stores; wharfage
- necessary to land and ship men and supplies; a large pauperism,
- badly conducted at a needlessly large expense to the government; and
- find that all these things, or any of them, are not reasonably well
- attended to by the civil government, you rightfully may and must
- take them into your own hands. But you should do so on your own
- avowed judgment of a military necessity, and not seem to admit that
- there is no such necessity by taking a vote of the people on the
- question.
-
- Nothing justifies the suspending of the civil by the military
- authority but military necessity; and of the existence of that
- necessity, the military commander, and not a popular vote, is to
- decide. And whatever is not within such necessity should be left
- undisturbed.
-
- In your paper of February you fairly notified me that you
- contemplated taking a popular vote, and, if fault there be, it was
- my fault that I did not object then, which I probably should have
- done had I studied the subject as closely as I have since done. I
- now think you would better place whatever you feel is necessary to
- be done on this distinct ground of military necessity, openly
- discarding all reliance for what you do on any election. I also
- think you should so keep accounts as to show every item of money
- received and how expended.
-
- The course here indicated does not touch the case when the military
- commander, finding no friendly civil government existing, may, under
- sanction or direction of the President, give assistance to the
- people to inaugurate one.[208]
-
-On the same general subject the President one week later wrote General
-Butler this brief note:
-
- I think you will find that the provost-marshal on the eastern shore
- has, as by your authority, issued an order, not for a meeting, but
- for an election. The order, printed in due form, was shown to me,
- but as I did not retain it, I cannot give you a copy. If the people,
- on their own motion, wish to hold a peaceful meeting, I suppose you
- need not hinder them.[209]
-
-It has elsewhere been observed that a Legislature representing what
-remained of the restored government was chosen at the time of Mr.
-Pierpont’s election. This body, however, was but the merest shadow of
-the Assembly of that once proud Commonwealth. Seven Delegates responded
-to the roll call when the House convened in December, 1863. They
-adjourned from day to day and on the 9th of that month organized with
-eight members in the popular branch. Precisely how many Senators
-composed the upper House does not appear in any notice of their
-proceedings accessible to the writer; the aggregate number in both
-chambers, however, is said not to have exceeded 16.[210] This estimate
-is probably correct; for in the election, February 4, 1864, of a
-Secretary of State and a Treasurer the total vote on joint ballot was
-only 14.[211]
-
-It is probable that neither Mr. Lincoln nor Governor Pierpont regarded
-this organization as anything more than a nucleus around which the loyal
-elements might rally. Both Congress and the military authorities,
-however, treated it with scant courtesy. It is not matter of surprise,
-therefore, that memorials were presented to the United States Senate
-petitioning for the substitution of a military for this feeble civil
-government. To offset this movement remonstrances from citizens of
-Alexandria and from citizens of Loudoun County were offered, January 17,
-1865, by Senator Willey, of West Virginia. All the memorials of both
-classes were referred to the Committee on Territories.
-
-By Mr. Willey credentials of Hon. Joseph Segar, Senator-elect from
-Virginia, were presented, February 17, 1865, to supply the vacancy
-caused by the death of Lemuel J. Bowden. Mr. Willey moved that the
-credentials be read and placed on the files, and that the oath of office
-be administered to Mr. Segar. The credentials were read and immediately
-after Mr. Sumner moved that the papers be referred to the Committee on
-the Judiciary. Senator Willey opposed the reference. The credentials, he
-believed, were proper on their face; they came to the Senate in due form
-under the seal of the State of Virginia. Mr. Segar was the accredited
-successor of Mr. Bowden, who died while a member of Congress. If Mr.
-Bowden was entitled to a seat his successor was likewise entitled if his
-credentials were regular and correct.
-
-Mr. Cowan also opposed the reference because he did not think it wise to
-abandon the policy hitherto pursued in dealing with loyal minorities in
-the rebellious States. He would be sorry, he said, if these States were
-repulsed when they were desirous to do all they could to achieve the
-very end for which the present tremendous struggle was taking place.
-When Mr. Bowden came to take his seat no such objection was made. A
-question by Senator Hale developed the fact, however, that Mr. Bowden
-presented himself before the vote was taken on the admission of West
-Virginia.
-
-Trumbull believed that a reference of the credentials, just as in the
-Arkansas case, would bring up the question. Senator Howard, who favored
-a reference, thought that the entire question of the right of Virginia
-to be represented in Congress should be gone into. He would thank the
-committee for a concise account of all the proceedings connected with
-the election of Mr. Segar and his colleague. He asked whether a State
-like Virginia, in armed rebellion, could have Senators on that floor.
-
-Mr. Saulsbury pointed out the change that had come over the judgment of
-the Senate. When Messrs. Willey and Carlile appeared there was, he said,
-but a corporal’s guard who opposed their right to seats, because
-Virginia was in rebellion, and it was then held by the minority that
-Senators should represent the sovereignty of their States. Those who
-were then most zealous for the admission of the gentlemen claiming to
-represent Virginia had become most vehement in their opposition to the
-admission of Mr. Segar.
-
-Senator McDougall believed that to refer the proposition to the
-committee would be to bury it, and no resurrection, he said, had been
-proclaimed for any such thing. He had his impressions and was as well
-prepared to discuss the question then as at any time. Virginia,
-according to his understanding of the philosophy of the Constitution,
-was a State of the Union. He believed the Senator-elect, by reason of
-his credentials, could take the oath, though that was not conclusive of
-his right to a seat in the Senate.
-
-Henry Wilson, of Massachusetts, believed that Congress because of its
-action for three years was bound to recognize the existence of both the
-Governor and Legislature of Virginia. He was disposed, however, to
-support the motion of his colleague, Charles Sumner, as well as the
-amendment thereto which authorized the committee to inquire into the
-election, returns and qualifications in the case of the claimant.
-Certain parts of Virginia, exempted by the President’s proclamation,
-were not in rebellion. Every square mile additional over which Federal
-authority was restored came by the terms of that proclamation into the
-same condition.
-
-Mr. Willey asserted that the Legislature sneeringly referred to as “the
-Common Council of Alexandria” represented 216,000 loyal people. He
-believed that county after county, as fast as they were relieved from
-the power of the rebellion, would come to the support of the loyal
-nucleus at Alexandria. It would place the Senate, he said, in a singular
-position to repulse the claimant while his State was represented by
-another Senator [Carlile].
-
-Senator Sherman stated that Mr. Segar’s credentials purported to show
-that he had been elected a member of the Senate on the 8th of December
-and that they bore date of December 12, 1864. Therefore he had slept for
-sixty or seventy days on his right to a seat which would, at any rate,
-expire on the 4th of March. The succeeding Congress, he said, would have
-ample time to decide the question, for, no doubt, at that time a
-gentleman claiming to be a Senator from Virginia would present himself.
-Then it could be deliberately determined. His motion to lay the
-credentials on the table prevailed by a vote of 29 to 13.[212] When this
-action was taken Carlile was among the eight absentees.
-
-Pursuant to a proclamation of the President the Senate assembled at noon
-of March 4 in executive session. Five days later the question of
-admitting Senators from Virginia came again before the Senate on
-presentation by Mr. Doolittle of the credentials of Hon. John C.
-Underwood as Senator-elect from that State for six years from the 4th of
-March. His credentials were read and after some discussion it was agreed
-to postpone their consideration as well as those of Mr. Segar until the
-following session. Henderson and Doolittle spoke in favor of the early
-recognition by Congress of the local governments in those States which
-had been brought partly under Federal power. The account of Virginian
-affairs will be resumed in the final chapter.
-
------
-
-Footnote 154:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 7.
-
-Footnote 155:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 7n.
-
-Footnote 156:
-
- Eighth Census, pp. 516–522.
-
-Footnote 157:
-
- Density maps in Tenth Census (Population), pp. xii-xiii, xiv-xv,
- xvi-xvii.
-
-Footnote 158:
-
- Blair in Appendix to Globe, pp. 327–331, 2 Sess. 37th Cong.; Eighth
- Census, pp. 516–522; Seventh Census, pp. 242–261.
-
-Footnote 159:
-
- Parker, The Formation of West Virginia, p. 125.
-
-Footnote 160:
-
- Globe, 2 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 3038.
-
-Footnote 161:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1861, pp. 743–744.
-
-Footnote 162:
-
- The Formation of West Virginia, p. 36.
-
-Footnote 163:
-
- The Formation of West Virginia, p. 42.
-
-Footnote 164:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1861, pp. 742–743.
-
-Footnote 165:
-
- The Formation of West Virginia, p. 43.
-
-Footnote 166:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 167:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 743; The Formation of West Virginia, p. 45, gives
- the oath in a form slightly different.
-
-Footnote 168:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 743.
-
-Footnote 169:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1862, p. 801.
-
-Footnote 170:
-
- Mr. A. W. Campbell in The Wheeling Daily Intelligencer, April 14,
- 1897.
-
-Footnote 171:
-
- Globe, 1 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 103–109.
-
-Footnote 172:
-
- The Formation of West Virginia, pp. 47–48.
-
-Footnote 173:
-
- The Formation of West Virginia, pp. 48–50; also Ann. Cycl., 1861, p.
- 745.
-
-Footnote 174:
-
- The Formation of West Virginia, p. 57.
-
-Footnote 175:
-
- The Formation of West Virginia, p. 79.
-
-Footnote 176:
-
- Ibid., p. 93.
-
-Footnote 177:
-
- The Formation of West Virginia, p. 96, says 16,981 for and 441 against
- the constitution. The Annual Cyclopædia for 1862, p. 801, gives the
- vote as 18,862 in favor of, and 514 against, the constitution. Poore’s
- Charters and Constitutions, Vol. II. p. 1977, is the authority for the
- statement in the text.
-
-Footnote 178:
-
- Globe, Part III., 2 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 864; Part IV., pp. 2941–2942,
- 3034–3039, 3134–3135, 3307–3320.
-
-Footnote 179:
-
- Globe, 2 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 2933.
-
-Footnote 180:
-
- Ibid., p. 3397.
-
-Footnote 181:
-
- Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 37–38.
-
-Footnote 182:
-
- Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 38–39, 41–42.
-
-Footnote 183:
-
- Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 43–45.
-
-Footnote 184:
-
- Ibid., p. 46.
-
-Footnote 185:
-
- Ibid., pp. 46–47.
-
-Footnote 186:
-
- Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 48.
-
-Footnote 187:
-
- Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 50–51.
-
-Footnote 188:
-
- Ibid., p. 35.
-
-Footnote 189:
-
- Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 54–55.
-
-Footnote 190:
-
- Ibid., p. 59.
-
-Footnote 191:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 283.
-
-Footnote 192:
-
- Quoted in N. & H., Vol. VI. pp. 300–301.
-
-Footnote 193:
-
- Quoted in N. & H., Vol. VI. pp. 302–303.
-
-Footnote 194:
-
- Ibid., p. 304.
-
-Footnote 195:
-
- Quoted in N. & H., Vol. VI. pp. 304–306.
-
-Footnote 196:
-
- See pp. 105–106 _ante_.
-
-Footnote 197:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 285–287.
-
-Footnote 198:
-
- The Formation of West Virginia, p. 152.
-
-Footnote 199:
-
- Ibid., pp. 192–193.
-
-Footnote 200:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 326.
-
-Footnote 201:
-
- Webster’s Works, Vol. II. pp. 607–608.
-
-Footnote 202:
-
- By a joint resolution, approved March 10, 1866, Congress agreed that
- both counties formed a part of West Virginia. The parent State,
- however, by an act of December 5, 1865, had already repealed both the
- statutes of January 31 and February 4, 1863, as well as section two of
- the act of May 13, 1862; and on December 11, 1866, a bill in equity
- was filed in the Supreme Court of the United States in which it was
- contended that it was not the intention of that State to consent to
- the annexation of Berkeley and Jefferson counties except upon the
- performance of certain conditions; the state of the county on election
- day was such as not to permit the opening of all the polls in Berkeley
- and Jefferson, nor indeed at any considerable part of the usual
- election places. The voters did not have adequate notice. In short, a
- great majority of them were then and now, December, 1866, opposed to
- annexation. Other irregularities are alleged in the complaint of
- Virginia. A decision, however, has been rendered by the Supreme Court
- of the United States in favor of the new Commonwealth. [See Virginia
- vs. West Virginia, 11 Wall., p. 39; also Transcripts of Records,
- Supreme Court U. S., Vol. 152, December Term, 1870.]
-
-Footnote 203:
-
- Notwithstanding the new State had been organized by a law which passed
- both Houses of Congress, and was approved by the President, Mr. Davis,
- of Kentucky, when the members-elect presented themselves before the
- Senate, opposed their admission on the ground that there was legally
- and constitutionally no such State in existence as West Virginia. On
- his motion to administer the customary oath thirty-six Senators voted
- in the affirmative, five in the negative. [Globe, 1 Sess. 38th Cong.,
- pp. 1–3.]
-
-Footnote 204:
-
- A History of Presidential Elections, Stanwood, pp. 246–247. Edition of
- 1884.
-
-Footnote 205:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 809.
-
-Footnote 206:
-
- Butler’s Book, p. 618.
-
-Footnote 207:
-
- N. & H., Abraham Lincoln, A History, Vol. IX. pp. 439–442.
-
-Footnote 208:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 619–621.
-
-Footnote 209:
-
- Ibid., p. 623.
-
-Footnote 210:
-
- Why The Solid South? p. 222.
-
-Footnote 211:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 810.
-
-Footnote 212:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 845–849.
-
-
-
-
- V
- ANTI-SLAVERY LEGISLATION
-
-
-The efforts of Union minorities in Tennessee, in Louisiana and in
-Arkansas to establish governments in harmony with the Constitution and
-laws of the United States, and the agency of President Lincoln in
-effecting that result, have been somewhat particularly described in the
-preceding pages. The principal events which marked the progress of
-secession in those States, the military successes which brought Federal
-authorities to consider the restoration of loyal governments within
-their borders, and the operation of those causes which ultimately
-overthrew rebellion have been more rapidly sketched. To trace the
-successive steps which led to the emancipation of slaves in the seceding
-States a somewhat more ample narrative will be required. This subject is
-not only of intrinsic interest but its culmination in the proclamation
-of September 22, 1862, marks the introduction into the President’s plan
-of restoration of an element hitherto left out of account.
-
-In December, 1859, when John Brown, for his rash though courageous
-attempt to liberate slaves, was hanged by the authorities of Virginia a
-great majority of even Northern people looked on with indifference or
-with approval. The inhabitants of the free States, however, were rather
-law-abiding than pitiless and came in time to revere the memory of that
-stern old Puritan. Ideas in those times matured with amazing rapidity,
-and fourteen months had scarcely elapsed when James B. McKean, a
-Representative from New York, introduced into Congress, three days
-before the Confederate government was organized, the following
-resolution:
-
- Whereas the “Gulf States” have assumed to secede from the Union, and
- it is deemed important to prevent the “border slave States” from
- following their example; and whereas it is believed that those who
- are inflexibly opposed to any measure of compromise or concession
- that involves, or may involve, a sacrifice of principle or the
- extension of slavery, would nevertheless cheerfully concur in any
- lawful measure for the emancipation of slaves: Therefore,
-
- _Resolved_, That the select committee of five be instructed to
- inquire whether, by the consent of the people, or of the State
- governments, or by compensating the slaveholders, it be practicable
- for the General Government to procure the emancipation of the slaves
- in some, or all, of the “border States”; and if so, to report a bill
- for that purpose.[213]
-
-Mr. Burnett, of Kentucky, desiring to discuss the proposition, it was
-laid on the table and received no further consideration. Whether Mr.
-Lincoln had much reflected upon the principle of this resolution or the
-reasoning in its preamble, he had not become on March 4 a convert to its
-essential idea, for in his inaugural address he was content, in
-expressing his sentiments on the institution of slavery, to re-affirm a
-declaration which he had formerly made. “I have no purpose,” said he,
-“directly or indirectly, to interfere with the institution of slavery in
-the States where it exists. I believe I have no lawful right to do so,
-and I have no inclination to do so.”[214] Even if the occasion had not
-demanded the language of conciliation we might easily credit this solemn
-assurance. Indeed, for an entire year after this announcement he
-refrained in his public utterances from taking any attitude hostile to
-the continuance of slavery. The influences which forced him to adopt
-other opinions may be briefly related.
-
-On May 22, 1861, General Butler arrived at Fortress Monroe and at once
-took command of the Department of Virginia; next day he sent a
-reconnoitering party to Hampton, and in the terror and confusion
-occasioned by the presence of Yankee soldiers three slaves of Colonel
-Mallory, a Confederate officer, effected their escape; during the
-afternoon they remained in concealment and at night reached the Union
-pickets. The following morning they were brought before the Federal
-commander, whom they informed of their master’s purpose to employ them
-in military operations in North Carolina. On the next day Major John B.
-Cary, also of the Confederate army, and a former delegate with Butler in
-the Baltimore Convention, came to the fort with a flag of truce, and as
-a representative of Colonel Mallory demanded the surrender of these
-runaways pursuant to the provisions of the Federal Constitution under
-which the Union commander claimed to act. With characteristic readiness
-came the reply that the Fugitive Slave Law could not be invoked in this
-case; Virginia assumed to be a foreign State and she must count it among
-the disadvantages of her position if, so far at least, she was taken at
-her word. These negroes further informed General Butler or his officers
-that if they were not returned others would come next day. On the 26th
-eight slaves were before him awaiting an audience; one squad of
-forty-seven came early on the 27th and another lot of a dozen arrived
-during the same day. Then they came by twenties, thirties and forties
-both to Fortress Monroe and Newport News.[215]
-
-Thus arose an important question on which the Government had yet
-developed no policy. As the acts for the rendition of fugitive slaves
-were not repealed till June, 1864, the views of individual commanders
-temporarily prevailed. Without precedent or instructions General
-McDowell by an order entirely excluded them from his lines. Caprice,
-too, entered into a settlement of the problem, and even a whimsical
-solution was sometimes attempted. A felicitous invention for determining
-these controversies between master and bondman is ascribed to the
-colonel of a Massachusetts regiment. Both the claimant and the claimed
-were put outside his tent for a trial of speed; the negro, proving the
-fleeter, was never heard of again.[216] An institution which had
-practically determined both the foreign and domestic policy of the
-United States for an entire generation was suddenly become the sport of
-a subordinate officer of volunteers! The wise should have heeded these
-signs.
-
-While the Federal commander in Virginia was exchanging arguments with
-Confederate officers, General McClellan at his headquarters in
-Cincinnati was considering a proclamation which on May 26 he issued to
-the Union men of western Virginia. This document, among other things,
-says: “All your rights shall be religiously respected, notwithstanding
-all that has been said by the traitors to induce you to believe our
-advent among you will be signalized by an interference with your slaves.
-Understand one thing clearly: not only will we abstain from all such
-interference, but we will, on the contrary, _with an iron hand crush any
-attempt at insurrection on their part_.”[217]
-
-Scarcely less explicit in its announcement concerning slavery was
-General Patterson’s proclamation of June 3, 1861, to troops of the
-Department of Pennsylvania. “You must bear in mind,” says its concluding
-paragraph, that “you are going for the good of the whole country, and
-that, while it is your duty to punish sedition, you must protect the
-loyal, _and, should the occasion offer, at once suppress servile
-insurrection_.”[218]
-
-Butler’s interview with Major Cary had been promptly communicated to the
-War Department, whose chief, Mr. Cameron, expressed in his reply of May
-30 approval of the General’s action. The Secretary, however, endeavored
-to distinguish between interference with slave property and the
-surrender of negroes that came voluntarily within Federal lines. The
-commander was further directed to “employ such persons in the services
-to which they may be best adapted, keeping an account of the labor by
-them performed, of the value of it, and the expenses of their
-maintenance,”[219] the question of their final disposition to be
-reserved for future determination.
-
-In defence of his attitude toward masters of fugitives who had been
-employed in the batteries or on the fortifications of the enemy,
-international law supplied General Butler with an analogy that he
-skillfully applied to the novel conditions which had arisen. Articles of
-assistance in military operations cannot in time of war be imported by
-neutrals into an enemy’s country, and the attempt to introduce such
-goods renders them liable to seizure as lawful prize. It did not greatly
-embarrass this versatile lawyer that the term _contraband_ applies
-exclusively to relations between a belligerent and a neutral, or that
-the decision of a prize court might be necessary to determine whether a
-particular article had been so designated. No doubt he believed firmly
-in the doctrine that the wants of war are contraband of war. In his
-correspondence with General Scott he had observed that “as a military
-question, it would seem to be a measure of necessity” to deprive
-disloyal masters of the services of their slaves, and this, on the
-pretext that they were contraband of war, he proceeded to do by refusing
-to surrender any negroes coming inside his lines.[220] This method of
-settling the difficulty was what Secretary Cameron had approved. But
-this phase presented the question in its extreme simplicity. A refusal
-to return the slaves of Confederate officers or of Confederate
-sympathizers was one thing; similar treatment of loyal slaveholders
-would not be so readily overlooked by authority. Though such cases were
-more likely to occur in Maryland, Kentucky or Missouri, that fact did
-not prevent the subject from assuming very great importance even in
-Virginia. Whole families escaped from their masters, and General Butler
-soon had on his hands negroes from three months to almost fourscore
-years of age.
-
-Attorney-General Bates, writing July 23, 1861, to United States Marshal
-J. L. McDowell, of Kansas, who had asked whether he should give his
-official service in executing the fugitive slave law, said in response
-to the inquiry:
-
- It is the President’s constitutional duty to “take care that the
- laws be faithfully executed.” That means all the laws. He has no
- right to discriminate, no right to execute the laws he likes, and
- leave unexecuted those he dislikes. And of course you and I, his
- subordinates, can have no wider latitude of discretion than he has.
- Missouri is a State in the Union. The insurrectionary disorders in
- Missouri are but individual crimes, and do not change the legal
- status of the State, nor change its rights and obligations as a
- member of the Union.
-
- A refusal by a ministerial officer to execute any law which properly
- belongs to his office, is an official misdemeanor, of which I have
- no doubt the President would take notice.[221]
-
-The Attorney-General in this instance merely amplified a suggestion
-contained in the inaugural.
-
-Toward the close of July, 1861, the number of “contrabands” had
-increased to nine hundred, and the Union commander again requested
-instructions.[222] Secretary Cameron’s reply on the 8th of August
-following merely authorized, what General Butler had all along been
-doing, employing them at such labor as they were adapted to and keeping
-a complete record, so that when peace was restored the essential facts
-of each case could easily be ascertained.[223] His tact in dealing with
-this question appears from an act of Congress approved August 6 in which
-his extension of meaning to the word _contraband_ is adopted. This
-declared that if persons held to labor or service were employed in
-hostility to the United States, the right to their services should be
-forfeited and such persons be discharged therefrom.[224]
-
-Exclusion of fugitive slaves from the quarters and camps of troops
-serving in the Department of Washington was provided by a general order
-of July 17, 1861, and a few weeks later, August 10, the departure by
-railway of negroes from the District of Columbia was prevented unless
-evidence of freedom could be adduced.[225]
-
-Far more important, however, than these prudent regulations of the
-Adjutant-General was the celebrated proclamation of Fremont, dated St.
-Louis, August 31, 1861, which declared martial law throughout the entire
-State of Missouri and expressed a purpose both to confiscate the
-property and free the negroes of all persons in the State who should
-take up arms against the United States or who were shown to have taken
-an active part with their enemy in the field.[226] The President, in a
-communication of September 2 following, wrote General Fremont expressing
-anxiety concerning the effects of this proclamation: “I think there is
-great danger,” said Mr. Lincoln, “that the closing paragraph, in
-relation to the confiscation of property and the liberating slaves of
-traitorous owners, will alarm our Southern Union friends and turn them
-against us; perhaps ruin our rather fair prospect for Kentucky.[227]
-
-“Allow me therefore to ask that you will, as of your own motion, modify
-that paragraph so as to conform to the first and fourth sections of the
-act of Congress entitled, ‘An act to confiscate property used for
-insurrectionary purposes,’ approved August 6, 1861, and a copy of which
-act I herewith send you.
-
-“This letter is written in a spirit of caution, and not of
-censure.”[228]
-
-Though General Fremont had acted wholly on his own responsibility he
-refused so to modify that portion of his proclamation relative to
-emancipating slaves as to conform to the act of Congress referred to,
-and in a letter requested the President “openly to direct” him “to make
-the correction.” Referring to this part of his communication Mr. Lincoln
-replied on the 11th: “Your answer, just received, expresses the
-preference on your part that I should make an open order for the
-modification, which I very cheerfully do. It is therefore ordered that
-the said clause of said proclamation be so modified, held, and
-construed, as to conform to, and not to transcend, the provisions on the
-same subject contained in the act of Congress” approved August 6,
-1861.[229]
-
-As late as October 14 the War Department was guided by the principles
-developed in its correspondence with Butler, the instructions of that
-date to General T. W. Sherman being based upon this policy.[230] A month
-later inhabitants of the eastern shore of Virginia were informed by
-General Dix that “special directions have been given not to interfere
-with the condition of any person held to domestic service;” to prevent
-any such occurrence slaves were not permitted to come within his
-lines.[231]
-
-Besides those who favored military emancipation, a large class seriously
-expected that the war would not only preserve the integrity of the
-Union, but in some way result in a general liberation of slaves. This
-feeling, manifested in various ways, was rapidly gathering strength, and
-as early as November 8 found enthusiastic expression at a public meeting
-of two thousand citizens held in Cooper Institute, New York city. This
-assembly, which convened at the suggestion of Mr. Lincoln, was presided
-over by Hon. George Bancroft and attended by many distinguished persons
-of both the nation and the State. Besides the remarks of its illustrious
-chairman addresses were made by William Cullen Bryant, General Ambrose
-Burnside, Professor Francis Lieber and others. Shortly before the
-speakers arrived a gentleman arose in the audience, and in a ringing
-voice proposed “Three cheers for John C. Fremont!” These were given,
-says a newspaper account, “with electrical effect and without a murmur
-of dissent.” The meeting was evidently not in entire sympathy with the
-President’s order modifying that General’s proclamation of the preceding
-August.
-
-North Carolina, as is well known, was not so ardent for secession as
-most of her sister States in the South; forced to take sides, however,
-she imitated the example of her neighbors. Even then all her people did
-not share the opinions of their leaders, and when Federal troops landed
-in the vicinity of Hatteras nearly four thousand loyal inhabitants of
-the coast flocked to their lines and readily took the oath of allegiance
-to the United States; for this conduct they incurred the extreme hatred
-of secessionists, who soon reduced them to a condition of distress. To
-relieve their destitution, by supplies of food and clothing, the meeting
-was called in Cooper Institute. Resolutions of sympathy were unanimously
-adopted; a committee of relief was appointed to collect from the city
-and elsewhere such funds as were necessary for the purchase of supplies,
-which were to be forwarded and distributed in the most judicious manner.
-
-“If the President,” said Mr. Bancroft, “has any doubt under the terrible
-conflict into which he has been brought, let him hear the words of one
-of his predecessors. Alien nullification raised itself in South
-Carolina. Andrew Jackson, in the watches of the night, as he sat alone
-finishing that proclamation, sent the last words of it to Livingston,
-his bosom friend and best adviser. He sent it with these words; I have
-had the letter in my own hands, handed to me by the only surviving child
-of Mr. Livingston. I know the letter which I now read is a copy: ‘I
-submit the above as the conclusion of the proclamation for your
-amendment and revision. Let it receive your best flight of eloquence to
-strike to the heart and speak to the feelings of my deluded countrymen
-of South Carolina. The Union must be preserved without blood if this be
-possible; but it must be preserved at all hazards and at any price.’”
-Mr. Bancroft added: “We send the army into the South to maintain the
-Union, to restore the validity of the Constitution. If any one presents
-claims under the Constitution, let him begin by placing the Constitution
-in power, by respecting it and upholding it.”
-
-Francis Lieber referred to slavery as “that great anachronism, out of
-time, out of place in the nineteenth century,” and Rev. Doctor Tyng
-said, “if slavery is in the way of the Union, then tread slavery down
-into the dust.”[232] These sentiments were received with applause.
-
-Mr. Bancroft a week later wrote to the President:
-
- Following out your suggestion, a very numerous meeting of
- New-Yorkers assembled last week to take measures for relieving the
- loyal sufferers of Hatteras. I take the liberty to enclose you some
- remarks which I made on the occasion. You will find in them a copy
- of an unpublished letter of one of your most honored predecessors,
- with which you cannot fail to be pleased.
-
- Your administration has fallen upon times which will be remembered
- as long as human events find a record. I sincerely wish to you the
- glory of perfect success. Civil War is the instrument of Divine
- Providence to root out social slavery. Posterity will not be
- satisfied with the result unless the consequences of the war shall
- effect an increase of free States. This is the universal expectation
- and hope of men of all parties.[233]
-
-On the 18th Mr. Lincoln sent this reply:
-
- I esteem it a high honor to have received a note from Mr. Bancroft
- inclosing the report of proceedings of a New York meeting taking
- measures for the relief of Union people of North Carolina. I thank
- you and all others participating for this benevolent and patriotic
- movement.
-
- The main thought in the closing paragraph of your letter is one
- which does not escape my attention, and with which I must deal in
- all due caution, and with the best judgment I can bring to it.[234]
-
-We have here the key to President Lincoln’s treatment of the slavery
-question down to the hour of his lamented death. As the hostile
-employment of negroes constituted by act of August 6 a full answer to
-any claim for service General McClellan was informed by Secretary
-Seward, December 4, 1861, that the arrest of such persons as fugitives
-from labor “should be immediately followed by the military arrest of the
-parties making the seizure.” These instructions were called forth by
-intelligence that Virginia slaves engaged in hostility to the United
-States frequently escaped from the enemy and took refuge within the
-lines of the Army of the Potomac. Coming afterward into the District of
-Columbia, such persons upon the presumption arising from color, were
-liable to be arrested by the Washington police.[235]
-
-On December 3, 1861, in his first annual message to Congress, Mr.
-Lincoln discussed without especial emphasis the question of aiding those
-slaves who had been freed under the act of August 6; he observed that
-this class was dependent upon the United States; it was believed that,
-for their own benefit, many of the States would enact similar laws; he
-therefore recommended Congress to provide for accepting such persons
-from the States,
-
- according to some mode of valuation, in lieu, _pro tanto_, of direct
- taxes, or upon some other plan to be agreed on with such States
- respectively; that such persons, on such acceptance by the General
- Government, be at once deemed free; and that, in any event, steps be
- taken for colonizing both classes (or the one first mentioned, if
- the other shall not be brought into existence) at some place or
- places in a climate congenial to them. It might be well to consider,
- too, whether the free colored people already in the United States
- could not, so far as individuals may desire, be included in such
- colonization.
-
- To carry out the plan of colonization may involve the acquiring of
- territory, and also the appropriation of money beyond that to be
- expended in the territorial acquisition. Having practiced the
- acquisition of territory for nearly sixty years, the question of
- constitutional power to do so is no longer an open one with us. The
- power was questioned at first by Mr. Jefferson, who, however, in the
- purchase of Louisiana, yielded his scruples on the plea of great
- expediency. If it be said that the only legitimate object of
- acquiring territory is to furnish homes for white men, this measure
- effects that object; for the emigration of colored men leaves
- additional room for white men remaining or coming here. Mr.
- Jefferson, however, placed the importance of procuring Louisiana
- more on political and commercial grounds than on providing room for
- population.
-
- On this whole proposition, including the appropriation of money with
- the acquisition of territory, does not the expediency amount to
- absolute necessity—that without which the Government itself cannot
- be perpetuated?
-
- The war continues. In considering the policy to be adopted for
- suppressing the insurrection, I have been anxious and careful that
- the inevitable conflict for this purpose shall not degenerate into a
- violent and remorseless revolutionary struggle. I have, therefore,
- in every case thought it proper to keep the integrity of the Union
- prominent as the primary object of the contest on our part, leaving
- all questions which are not of vital military importance to the more
- deliberate action of the Legislature.
-
- In the exercise of my best discretion I have adhered to the blockade
- of the ports held by the insurgents, instead of putting in force, by
- proclamation, the law of Congress enacted at the last session for
- closing those ports.
-
- So, also, obeying the dictates of prudence as well as the
- obligations of law, instead of transcending I have adhered to the
- act of Congress to confiscate property used for insurrectionary
- purposes. If a new law upon the same subject shall be proposed, its
- propriety will be duly considered. The Union must be preserved; and
- hence all indispensable means must be employed. We should not be in
- haste to determine that radical and extreme measures, which may
- reach the loyal as well as the disloyal, are indispensable.[236]
-
-The President’s mastery of national affairs is seen in the ability and
-thoroughness with which he treated a great variety of important public
-questions; though his message touches with the utmost delicacy the
-paramount issue of slavery it really marked an advance in his position.
-However, he was not yet abreast of the aggressive anti-slavery party in
-the 37th Congress, which had just commenced its first regular session.
-
-The “increase of free States,” which Mr. Bancroft hoped would result
-from the war, and which President Lincoln’s reply shows had not escaped
-his attention, was not to be effected by military emancipation in the
-field but by the voluntary action of the States themselves. The caution
-and judgment which he brought to bear on this subject are apparent from
-even a casual examination of the message, which refers to the number of
-slaves that had been freed by the incidents of war, and to the extreme
-probability that still others would be liberated in its progress. It
-contained also a recommendation of colonization, a topic which had long
-been familiar to Americans both North and South. To any new law
-emancipating slaves for the participation of their masters in rebellion,
-he promised to give due consideration. This part of the message had the
-additional merit of being easily expanded into a more definite policy.
-It was this characteristic prudence that led the President to suppress
-the following remarks in a report which the Secretary of War had
-prepared for the opening of Congress in December, 1861:
-
- If it shall be found that the men who have been held by the rebels
- as slaves are capable of bearing arms and performing efficient
- military service, it is the right, and may become the duty, of this
- government to arm and equip them, and employ their services against
- the rebels, under proper military regulation, discipline, and
- command.[237]
-
-Any legislation, or even any extended debate, on these recommendations
-was prevented by questions deemed more urgent by Congress. Indeed, the
-President does not appear to have seriously expected favorable action at
-this time upon his suggestions, for he resumed certain efforts which he
-had been carefully considering. He believed that by the pressure of war
-necessities the border States might be induced to take up the idea of
-voluntary emancipation if the General Government would pay their
-citizens the full property value of the slaves they were asked to
-liberate; and this experiment seemed most feasible in the small State of
-Delaware, which retained only the merest fragment of a property interest
-in the institution.
-
-Even before the appearance of his message a plan of compensated
-abolishment had taken definite form in the mind of the President, for
-about November 26 he had prepared a draft of a bill for gradual
-emancipation in Delaware.[238] Through Congressman George P. Fisher the
-proposition was laid before the General Assembly of that State and
-received favorable consideration in the lower House. By the Senate,
-which convened November 25, 1861, it was taken up for discussion on
-February 7 succeeding. Upon the question, 4 voted in favor and 4 against
-concurring in the action of the more popular branch of the Legislature.
-The remaining Senator, McFerran, was absent or silent and is not
-accounted for in the journal of this special session. Therefore the
-measure was returned non-concurred in to the other chamber. The
-following preamble and joint resolution relative to the proposed
-emancipation bill are self-explanatory. The Federal suggestion was
-repelled as an unwarranted interference in the domestic concerns of that
-State:
-
- _Whereas_, There has been circulating among the members of this
- General Assembly a printed draft for a law to be entitled “An act
- for the gradual emancipation of slaves in the State of Delaware with
- just compensation to their owners”; _and whereas_ many of the
- members of this General Assembly have been requested to support it,
- the said draft being in the following words: [Then follows the
- title, together with the twenty-one sections composing the bill. To
- which is added:] _And whereas_ it is uncertain that said proposition
- will be submitted to this General Assembly for its action,
- nevertheless, viewing it to be unworthy of their support, they
- desire to place upon record the grounds of their condemnation;
- therefore
-
- _Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the State of
- Delaware in General Assembly met_, That the members of this
- Legislature were not elected with a view to the passage of any act
- for the emancipation of slaves, but with the understanding, either
- expressed or implied, that legislation upon the distracting subject
- of slavery was hostile to the public peace, and therefore to be
- avoided; that the passage of the act drafted as aforesaid, inasmuch
- as it renders Congressional action necessary, would, upon the
- apparent application of the State of Delaware, introduce the slavery
- question into Congress, would encourage the abolition element
- therein, and fortify it in its purpose to destroy entirely all
- property in slaves, and furthermore, would be injurious to the quiet
- and harmony that prevail in this State.
-
- _Be it further resolved by the authority aforesaid_, That it is the
- opinion of this General Assembly, that Congress has no right to
- appropriate a dollar for the purchase of slaves, and that such a
- proposal, coming from the source to which it is traceable, evinces a
- design on the part of those having control of our national affairs
- to abolish slavery in the States.
-
- _Resolved further_, That this General Assembly having in mind the
- interests of the people of Delaware, are not willing, especially at
- a time of financial embarrassment, to make the State of Delaware a
- guarantor of any debt the payment of which depends upon the mere
- pledge of public faith; that the confidence of the people of this
- State that nothing would ever be done to promote a disunion of our
- National system, but that it would remain, as expressed by Webster
- “one and inseparable, now and forever,” having been impaired by the
- events of the last two years, we are and should be very cautious in
- resting our obligations on the mere faith of others; that by
- accepting the terms to be offered by the United States, we should,
- upon grounds of the plainest equity, be held to have pledged the
- faith of Delaware for the payment of nine hundred thousand dollars
- as mentioned in the draft aforesaid; that, keeping in mind the fact
- that the power of the nation is now put forth to suppress a
- rebellion prevailing throughout a very large portion of its
- territory, and that in consequence of such rebellion and the
- uncertainty of its being speedily quelled, the stocks of the United
- States, which heretofore brought in the market a sum far beyond the
- par value thereof, are now selling at a continually increasing rate
- of discount, we are unwilling to pledge the faith of Delaware (a
- faith which has never been violated) that the proposed mode of
- payment is safe and proper.
-
- _Resolved further_, That when the people of Delaware desire to
- abolish slavery within her borders, they will do so in their own
- way, having due regard to strict equity; that any interference from
- without, and all suggestions of saving expense to the people, or
- others of like character, are improper to be made to an honorable
- people, such as we represent, and are hereby repelled—that though
- the State of Delaware is small, and her people not of the richest,
- they are beyond the reach of any who would promote an end by
- improper interference and solicitations.
-
- _Resolved further_, That a copy of the foregoing resolutions, duly
- attested, be transmitted to each of our Senators, and to our
- Representative in Congress, to be laid before their respective
- houses.[239]
-
-Thus ended, so far as Delaware was concerned, the question of
-compensated emancipation. Precisely why the offer of Federal assistance
-was rejected nowhere clearly appears except in the records of the
-General Assembly. The high ground assumed in the resolutions was, of
-course, the only one in harmony with public opinion in the State. There
-are, however, some facts in the history of that Commonwealth which
-afford a partial explanation of the action of its Legislature. When the
-Federalist party as a political force had disappeared everywhere outside
-of New England its principles and traditions still lingered on in
-Delaware. The same conservative tendency, the same distrust of
-innovation is seen again in the prudent manner in which the authorities
-of the State invested and improved her portion of the surplus revenue
-distributed among the States in 1837. With a half dozen exceptions the
-shares allotted to other members of the Union have disappeared, in some
-instances expended patriotically, in others squandered on projects more
-or less visionary. It has frequently been observed, too, that a
-community whose population is chiefly agricultural is apt to view with
-suspicion any financial proposition of great magnitude. Whatever the
-true explanation of her opposition to the policy of the President, the
-question at once sank to rest in Delaware; it was soon to be revived
-elsewhere, however, as will presently be seen.
-
-Meanwhile army officers continued to determine, on their own authority,
-very important questions relative to the surrender of fugitive slaves.
-Major-General Halleck declared in a proclamation of February 23, 1862,
-that “it does not belong to the military to decide upon the relation of
-master and slave. Such questions must be settled by the civil courts. No
-fugitive slave will therefore be admitted within our lines or camps,
-except when specially ordered by the General commanding.”[240] General
-Halleck’s order No. 3 of November 20 preceding, as it cut off an
-opportunity for the escape of thousands, occasioned much bitter
-discussion both in and out of Congress. By Halleck it was explained in
-these words: “Unauthorized persons, black or white, free or slaves, must
-be kept out of our camps, unless we are willing to publish to the enemy
-everything we do or intend to do.” This statement, however, does not
-altogether harmonize with the spirit of his order.[241]
-
-General Buell up to March 6 appears to have uniformly returned this
-class of persons, and on the 26th of that month General Hooker permitted
-nine citizens of Maryland to search for negroes supposed to have taken
-refuge with some of the regiments in his division. Notwithstanding the
-commander desired that no obstacles be thrown in their way, trouble
-occurred when the claimants showed their authority and demanded the
-surrender of their slaves. They were driven from camp because fears for
-their safety were entertained by some of the officers. The anger of the
-soldiers appears to have been especially aroused by the fact that when
-within a few yards of camp the slaveholders fired two pistol shots at a
-negro who was running past them.[242]
-
-General Doubleday’s opinion, as stated April 6, 1862, by the Assistant
-Adjutant-General, was, “that all negroes coming into the lines of any of
-the camps or forts under his command, are to be treated as persons and
-not as chattels.
-
-“Under no circumstances,” continues this regulation, “has the commander
-of a fort or camp the power of surrendering persons claimed as fugitive
-slaves, as it cannot be done without determining their character.
-
-“The additional article of war recently passed by Congress positively
-prohibits this.”[243]
-
-Notwithstanding the unmistakable tone of the above, General Williams
-announced two months later from his headquarters at Baton Rouge that
-commanders of the camps and garrisons in that part of Louisiana were
-required to turn all fugitives beyond the limits of their guards and
-sentinels because of “the demoralizing and disorganizing tendencies to
-the troops of harboring runaway negroes.”[244]
-
-Enough has been said to show the divergence of sentiment among Federal
-commanders on the rendition of fugitive slaves. The party preferences of
-officers served as a rather reliable index to the treatment of the
-fugitive in any particular case. This confusion, it is scarcely
-necessary to add, arose from the failure of Congress to pass a law on
-the subject, and to a considerable degree from the absence of any
-clearly expressed policy by the Administration. Of the changing opinions
-of the President, however, we catch an occasional glimpse. Though the
-contrabands at Fortress Monroe had, no doubt, brought before him the
-entire question of slavery, the sagacity of General Butler had postponed
-the necessity of any announcement in May, 1861; but the subject could
-not always be avoided, and the imprudence of Fremont forced a
-declaration in September following. The events of another year were
-destined to produce changes which even the wisest could not then
-foresee.
-
-A new phase of this troublesome question resulted from the capture,
-November 7, of Hilton Head, South Carolina, and the Federal occupation
-of the Sea Islands, where the labor of slaves abandoned by their masters
-was organized under authority of the Treasury Department by Mr. E. L.
-Pierce. This was, probably, intended as nothing more than an experiment,
-to be extended if successful. To interest Government officials at
-Washington in the work among these freedmen, Mr. Pierce, at the
-suggestion of Secretary Chase, called, February 15, 1862, upon the
-President, who seemed rather annoyed at the visit, and, after listening
-a few moments, said somewhat impatiently that he did not think he ought
-to be troubled with such details; that “there seemed to be an itching to
-get negroes into our lines.” To this Mr. Pierce replied that the negroes
-were domiciled there when the Union forces took possession. The
-President then handed his visitor a card by which Mr. Chase was
-authorized to give what instructions he thought judicious relative to
-Port Royal contrabands.[245] This impatience Mr. Pierce explains by
-saying that the President was in expectation of a personal bereavement.
-This certainly accounts for the anxiety and apparent annoyance of Mr.
-Lincoln, but his remark that there seemed to be an “itching” to get
-negroes inside Federal lines shows that he had not yet deliberately
-considered the novel case of abandoned slaves; abandoned masters had
-hitherto claimed his attention. Though slowly, as it may have appeared
-to radical members of his own party, the President was surely
-approaching the great question, and on March 6, 1862, sent to Congress a
-message which recommended the adoption, and even proposed the form, of a
-joint resolution declaring:
-
- That the United States ought to coöperate with any State which may
- adopt gradual abolishment of slavery, giving to such State pecuniary
- aid, to be used by such State, in its discretion, to compensate for
- the inconveniences, public and private, produced by such change of
- system.[246]
-
-As one of the most efficient means of self-preservation it was
-recommended by the Executive to the coördinate branch of Government; for
-to deprive the cotton States of the hope of being joined by the border
-States would, he said, “substantially end the rebellion; and the
-initiation of emancipation completely deprives them of it as to all the
-States initiating it. The point is not that all the States tolerating
-slavery would very soon, if at all, initiate emancipation; but that
-while the offer is equally made to all, the more Northern shall, by such
-initiation, make it certain to the more Southern that in no event will
-the former ever join the latter in their proposed confederacy.” Gradual
-emancipation he believed better for all concerned. The current
-expenditures of the war would soon purchase, at a fair valuation, all
-the slaves in any named State. However, it was proposed as a matter of
-perfectly free choice. “In the annual message, last December,” continued
-the President, “I thought fit to say, ‘the Union must be preserved, and
-hence all indispensable means must be employed.’ I said this not
-hastily, but deliberately. War has been made and continues to be an
-indispensable means to this end. A practical re-acknowledgment of the
-national authority would render the war unnecessary, and it would at
-once cease. If, however, resistance continues, the war must also
-continue; and it is impossible to foresee all the incidents which may
-attend and all the ruin which may follow it. Such as may seem
-indispensable, or may obviously promise great efficiency, toward ending
-the struggle, must and will come.”
-
-The message inquired “whether the pecuniary consideration tendered would
-not be of more value to the States and private persons concerned than
-are the institution and property in it, in the present aspect of
-affairs?”[247]
-
-This was really a great step in advance; by many it was regarded as a
-direct and positive interference with the domestic institutions of the
-States; it was certainly a preliminary movement to get rid of slavery.
-The deliberate opinion of the Delaware Legislature has already been
-noticed.
-
-Easily distinguished in principle from the opposition in Delaware were
-the sentiments expressed in Virginia when the equitable and generous
-proposal of the President came up for consideration in the Richmond
-Legislature. Mr. Collier submitted to that body a preamble and
-resolution relative to the proposition. In the former it was said that
-negro slaves having been the property of their masters for two hundred
-and forty years, by use and custom at first, and subsequently by
-recognition of the public law, ought not to be, and could not justly be,
-interfered with in such property relation by the State, by “the people
-in convention assembled to alter an existing constitution, or to form
-one for admission into the confederacy, nor by the representatives of
-the people of the State in the Confederate Legislature, nor by any means
-or mode which the popular majority might adopt; and that the State,
-whilst remaining republican in the structure of its government, can
-lawfully get rid of that species of property, if ever, only by the free
-consent of the individual owners.” For the State to deprive an
-individual of this species of property would contravene the
-indispensable principles of free government. This view, as further
-explained by its author, denied the power of even a majority, in making
-a new State constitution, to disturb a preëxisting and resident
-property.[248]
-
-Three days after sending his recommendation to Congress, the President
-wrote privately to Henry J. Raymond, editor of the _New York Times_:
-
- I am grateful to the New York journals and not less so to the
- “Times” than to others, for their kind notices of the late special
- message to Congress.
-
- Your paper, however, intimates that the proposition, though well
- intentioned, must fail on the score of expense. I do hope you will
- reconsider this. Have you noticed the facts that less than one-half
- day’s cost of this war would pay for all the slaves in Delaware at
- $400 per head—that eighty-seven days’ cost of this war would pay for
- all in Delaware, Maryland, District of Columbia, Kentucky, and
- Missouri at the same price? Were those States to take the step, do
- you doubt that it would shorten the war more than eighty-seven days,
- and thus be an actual saving of expense?
-
- Please look at these things and consider whether there should not be
- another article in the “Times.”[249]
-
-By his request those Congressmen from the border States then in
-Washington called, March 10, on Mr. Lincoln, who explained that his
-recent message was not inimical to the interests they represented. In
-the progress of the war, slaves would come into camps and continual
-irritation be thus maintained. In the border States that condition kept
-alive a feeling of hostility to the Government. He told them further
-“that emancipation was a subject exclusively under the control of the
-States, and must be adopted or rejected by each for itself.”[250]
-
-Relative to this interview a memorandum of the Hon. John W. Crisfield,
-one of the Maryland Representatives present, contains the following
-entry: “He [the President] was constantly annoyed by conflicting and
-antagonistic complaints; on the one side a certain class complained if
-the slave was not protected by the army; persons were frequently found
-who, participating in these views, acted in a way unfriendly to the
-slave-holder; on the other hand, slaveholders complained that their
-rights were interfered with, their slaves induced to abscond and
-protected within the lines; these complaints were numerous, loud and
-deep; were a serious annoyance to him and embarrassing to the progress
-of the war ... [they] strengthened the hopes of the Confederates that at
-some day the border States would unite with them, and thus tend to
-prolong the war; and he was of opinion, if this resolution should be
-adopted by Congress and accepted by our [the border slaveholding]
-States, these causes of irritation and these hopes would be removed, and
-more would be accomplished toward shortening the war than could be hoped
-from the greatest victory achieved by Union armies; ... that he did not
-claim nor had this Government any right to coerce them” to accept the
-proposition.
-
-To Mr. Noell’s remark that the _New York Tribune_ favored the measure
-and understood it to mean that gradual emancipation must be accepted or
-the border States would get something worse, the President replied that
-he must not be expected to quarrel with that journal before the right
-time; he hoped never to have to do it. The message having said that “all
-indispensable means must be employed” to preserve the Union, Mr.
-Crisfield inquired pointedly, what would be the effect of the refusal of
-a State to accept this proposal. Did the President, he asked, look “to
-any policy beyond the acceptance or rejection of this scheme.” Mr.
-Lincoln candidly replied that he had “no designs beyond the action of
-the States on this particular subject,” though he should lament their
-refusal to accept it. Mr. Crisfield said “he did not think the people of
-Maryland looked upon slavery as a permanent institution; and he did not
-know that they would be very reluctant to give it up if provision was
-made to meet the loss and they could be rid of the race; but they did
-not like to be coerced into emancipation, either by the direct action of
-the Government or by indirection, as through the emancipation of slaves
-in this District, or the confiscation of Southern property as now
-threatened; and he thought before they would consent to consider this
-proposition they would require to be informed on these points.” The
-President answered that “unless he was expelled by the act of God or the
-Confederate armies, he should occupy that house for three years; and as
-long as he remained there Maryland had nothing to fear either for her
-institutions or her interests on the points referred to.” Representative
-Crisfield immediately added: “Mr. President, if what you now say could
-be heard by the people of Maryland, they would consider your proposition
-with a much better feeling than I fear without it they will be inclined
-to do.” To this Mr. Lincoln said that a publication of his sentiments
-would not do; it would force him before the proper time into a quarrel
-which was impending with the Greeley faction. This he desired to
-postpone, or, if possible, altogether to avoid.
-
-To an objection of Governor Wickliffe, of Kentucky, he said that the
-resolution proposed would be considered rather as the expression of a
-sentiment than as involving any constitutional question. He did not know
-how the project was received by the members from the free States; some
-of them had spoken to him and received it kindly; but for the most part
-they were as reserved and chary as the border State delegations; he
-could not tell how they would vote.[251]
-
-To James A. McDougall, of California, who was making some opposition in
-the Senate, he sent, March 14, this private communication while the
-resolution was still pending:
-
- As to the expensiveness of gradual emancipation with the plan of
- compensation, proposed in the late message, please allow me one or
- two brief suggestions.
-
- Less than one half day’s cost of this war would pay for all the
- slaves in Delaware at four hundred dollars per head.
-
- Thus, all the slaves in Delaware by the census of 1860, 1,798
- are....
-
- 400
-
- —————————
-
- Cost of slaves $719,200
-
- One day’s cost of the war 2,000,000
-
- =========
-
- Again, less than eighty-seven days’ cost of this war would, at the
- same price, pay for all in Delaware, Maryland, District of Columbia,
- Kentucky, and Missouri.
-
- Thus, slaves in Delaware 1,798
- Maryland 87,188
- District of Columbia 3,181
- Kentucky 225,490
- Missouri 114,965
- ————————————
- 432,622
- 400
- ————————————
- Cost of slaves $173,048,800
- Eighty-seven days’ cost of war 174,000,000
- ============
-
- Do you doubt that taking the initiatory steps on the part of those
- States and this District would shorten the war more than
- eighty-seven days, and thus be an actual saving of expense?
-
- A word as to the time and manner of incurring the expense. Suppose,
- for instance, a State devises and adopts a system by which the
- institution absolutely ceases therein by a named day—say January 1,
- 1882. Then let the sum to be paid to such a State by the United
- States be ascertained by taking from the census of 1860 the number
- of slaves within the State, and multiplying the number by four
- hundred—the United States to pay such sums to the State in twenty
- equal annual installments, in six per cent. bonds of the United
- States.
-
- The sum thus given, as to time and manner, I think, would not be
- half as onerous as would be an equal sum raised now for the
- indefinite prosecution of the war; but of this you can judge as well
- as I. I enclose a census table for your convenience.[252]
-
-On the same day of the conference with the border State delegations,
-March 10, the resolution, in precisely the language suggested by the
-President, was introduced by Roscoe Conkling, and on the following day
-by a vote of 89 to 31 passed the House.[253] The Senate by 32 yeas to 10
-nays took favorable action upon it on the 2d of April succeeding.[254]
-
-It is important to notice that at this time, March, 1862, the Government
-set up no claim of a right by Federal authority to interfere with
-slavery within the limits of a State; also that public opinion in the
-North had advanced to the position occupied by Representative McKean
-more than a year before, when he introduced into Congress his resolution
-for compensated emancipation.[255]
-
-At a session, May 28, 1862, of the Union Convention of Baltimore its
-Business Committee reported a series of resolutions which were adopted
-unanimously, among them one approving the wise and conservative policy
-proposed by the President in his message of March 6; that it was not
-only the duty but the interest of the loyal people of Maryland to accept
-the offer of pecuniary aid tendered by the Government to inaugurate an
-equitable plan of emancipation and colonization.[256] This was the dawn
-of emancipation in Maryland.
-
-The President approved, April 16, six days after the passage of his
-cherished measure, an act prohibiting slavery and liberating slaves in
-the District of Columbia. It included both compensation to owners and
-the principle of colonization.[257]
-
-Shortly before its passage, April 17, a resolution was favorably
-considered by the House to appoint a committee of nine empowered to
-report whether any plan could be proposed and recommended for the
-gradual emancipation of all African slaves and the extinction of slavery
-in Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee and Missouri by the
-people or local authorities thereof, and how far and in what way the
-United States could and ought equitably to aid in facilitating either of
-the above objects. This measure was adopted by a vote of 67 to 52, and
-one week later a committee was appointed by the Speaker.
-
-General Hunter by an order of April 25 had extended martial law over
-South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. Two weeks later he proclaimed
-persons in those States heretofore held as slaves forever free. “Slavery
-and martial law in a free country” he declared “altogether
-incompatible.” The President in his proclamation of May 19, 1862,
-rescinding this order once more reveals his sentiments on the slavery
-question. The act of the Department commander, he said, was wholly
-unauthorized. The document continues: “I further make known that,
-whether it be competent for me, as Commander-in-Chief of the army and
-navy, to declare the slaves of any State or States free, and whether, at
-any time, in any case, it shall have become a necessity indispensable to
-the maintenance of the Government to exercise such supposed power, are
-questions which, under my responsibility, I reserve to myself, and which
-I cannot feel justified in leaving to the decision of commanders in the
-field.”[258]
-
-Mr. Lincoln took this opportunity to point out to those most nearly
-concerned the unmistakable signs of the times, and earnestly appealed to
-them to embrace the offer of compensated abolishment, quoting upon that
-subject the joint resolution of Congress. The order of General Hunter,
-so far as it concerned the President, could have been dismissed by its
-disavowal; but he went farther: he not only took advantage of this
-occasion earnestly to urge upon the border States very serious
-consideration of the principle of compensated emancipation, but he
-raised, without pausing to discuss it, the question of his right as
-Commander-in-Chief of the army and navy to declare the freedom of slaves
-within the limits of a State should such a measure become indispensable
-to the maintenance of the Union.
-
-For refusing to employ his regiment in returning fugitive slaves of
-disloyal masters, Colonel Paine, of the Fourth Wisconsin Volunteers, was
-placed under arrest in the summer of 1862; about the same time
-Lieutenant-Colonel Anthony was similarly disciplined both for refusing
-permission to search his camp and for ordering the arrest of those
-hunting for slaves.[259]
-
-Instructions from the War Department, dated July 22, and applying to all
-the States in rebellion except South Carolina and Tennessee, authorized
-the employment as laborers of so many persons of African descent as the
-military and naval commanders could use to advantage, and the payment of
-reasonable wages for their labor.[260]
-
-On May 12, 1862, Representative Lovejoy proposed a bill, a substitute
-for one previously reported by him and introduced by Mr. Isaac N.
-Arnold:
-
- To the end that freedom may be and remain forever the fundamental
- law of the land in all places whatsoever, so far as it lies within
- the powers or depends upon the action of the Government of the
- United States to make it so: Therefore,
-
- _Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
- United States of America in Congress assembled_, That slavery or
- involuntary servitude, in all cases whatsoever (other than in the
- punishment of crime, whereof the party shall have been duly
- convicted) shall henceforth cease, and be prohibited forever in all
- the Territories of the United States, now existing, or hereafter to
- be formed or acquired in any way.[261]
-
-This measure passed by 85 yeas to 50 nays. In the Senate, June 9, it was
-reported amended by inserting this substitute: “That from and after the
-passage of this act there shall be neither slavery nor involuntary
-servitude in any of the Territories of the United States now existing,
-or which may at any time hereafter be formed or acquired by the United
-States, otherwise than in punishment of crimes whereof the party shall
-have been duly convicted.” In this form it passed by a vote of 28 to 10
-and the House concurred by 72 yeas to 38 nays.[262]
-
-Charles Sumner, writing June 5, 1862, to a correspondent who was
-impatient at what seemed the short-comings of the President, says:
-
- Your criticism of the President is hasty. I am confident that, if
- you knew him as I do, you would not make it.
-
- Of course, the President cannot be held responsible for all the
- misfeasances of subordinates, unless adopted or at least tolerated
- by him. And I am sure that nothing unjust or ungenerous will be
- tolerated, much less adopted, by him.
-
- I am happy to let you know that he has no sympathy with Stanly in
- his absurd wickedness, closing the schools, nor again in his other
- act of turning our camp into a hunting ground for slaves. He
- repudiates both—positively. The latter point has occupied much of
- his thought; and the newspapers have not gone too far in recording
- his repeated declarations, which I have often heard from his own
- lips, that slaves finding their way into the national lines are
- never to be re-enslaved. This is his conviction, expressed without
- reserve.
-
- Could you have seen the President—as it was my privilege often—while
- he was considering the great questions on which he has already
- acted—the invitation to emancipation in the States, emancipation in
- the District of Columbia, and the acknowledgment of the independence
- of Hayti and Liberia—even your zeal would have been satisfied, for
- you would have felt the sincerity of his purpose to do what he could
- to carry forward the principles of the Declaration of Independence.
- His whole soul was occupied, especially by the first proposition,
- which was peculiarly his own. In familiar intercourse with him, I
- remember nothing more touching than the earnestness and completeness
- with which he embraced this idea. To his mind, it was just and
- beneficent while it promised the sure end of slavery. Of course, to
- me who had already proposed a bridge of gold for the retreating
- fiend, it was most welcome. Proceeding from the President, it must
- take its place among the great events of history.
-
- * * * * *
-
- I wish that you really knew the President, and had heard the artless
- expression of his convictions on these questions which concern you
- so deeply. You might, perhaps, wish that he were less cautious, but
- you would be grateful that he is so true to all that you have at
- heart. Believe me, therefore, you are wrong, and I regret it the
- more because of my desire to see all our friends stand firmly
- together.[263]
-
-The President requested and obtained, July 12, 1862, an interview with
-the border State delegations. The near adjournment of Congress would
-deprive him of an opportunity of seeing them for several months. He
-believed they held more power for good than any other equal number of
-members, and felt that the duty of making an appeal to them could not be
-waived. This he did by reading a carefully prepared paper.
-
-The Confederate States, he said, would cling to the hope of an ultimate
-union with the border States as long as they perpetuated the institution
-of slavery. If the members had supported his plan of gradual
-emancipation in the preceding March the rebellion would now, 1862, be
-substantially ended.
-
-Looking to the stern facts in the case he inquired whether they could do
-better for their States than to follow the course which he urged. If the
-war continued long, the institution “will be extinguished by mere
-friction and abrasion,”—by the incidents of war much of its value was
-already gone. He did not speak of immediate emancipation, “but of a
-decision at once to emancipate gradually.” Room for colonization could
-be procured in South America ample and cheap enough. When their numbers
-increased sufficiently to be company for one another the freed people
-would not be so reluctant to go. His repudiation of General Hunter’s
-proclamation had given offence to some whose support the Government
-could not afford to lose. The pressure from such persons was still upon
-him and the Congressmen from the border slave States could relieve him
-and the country. He begged them to reexamine his message of March 6, and
-commend it to the consideration of their constituents. The peril of
-their common country demanded the loftiest views and the boldest action
-if they desired to perpetuate popular government.[264]
-
-It was represented to him, in a conversation which followed this appeal,
-that the resolution of Congress, being no more than an expression of
-sentiment, could not be regarded by them as a basis for substantial
-action. Mr. Lincoln admitted that, as a condition of taking into
-consideration a proposition so nearly affecting their social system, the
-border slave States were entitled to expect a substantial pledge of
-pecuniary aid.
-
-It was further represented at this conference that the people of the
-border States were interested in knowing the great importance which Mr.
-Lincoln attached to the policy in question, while it was equally due to
-the country, to the President and to themselves that they should
-publicly announce the motives under which they were called to act, and
-the considerations of public policy urged upon them and their
-constituents. With a view to such a statement of their position the
-members met in council to deliberate on the reply they should make, and
-two days later the majority sent the following paper to the President:
-
-“The undersigned ... have listened to your address with the profound
-sensibility naturally inspired by the high source from which it
-emanates, the earnestness which marked its delivery, and the
-overwhelming importance of the subject of which it treats. We have given
-it our most respectful consideration, and now lay before you our
-response....
-
-“... Repudiating the dangerous heresies of the secessionists, we
-believed, with you, that the war on their part is aggressive and wicked,
-and the objects for which it was to be prosecuted on ours, defined by
-your message at the opening of the present Congress, to be such as all
-good men should approve. We have not hesitated to vote all supplies
-necessary to carry it on vigorously....”
-
-This support, continues the response, was yielded “in the face of
-measures most distasteful to us and injurious to the interests we
-represent, and in the hearing of doctrines, avowed by those who claim to
-be your friends, [which] must be abhorrent to us and our constituents.”
-
-The greater number of them did not, however, vote for the measure
-recommended in his message of March 6, and they proceeded to state the
-principal reasons which influenced their action. First, it proposed a
-radical change in their social system; it was hurried through both
-Houses with undue haste; and was passed without any opportunity whatever
-for consultation with their constituents, whose interests it deeply
-involved. “It seemed,” said the majority, “like an interference by this
-Government with a question which peculiarly and exclusively belonged to
-our respective States, on which they had not sought advice or solicited
-aid. Many of us doubted the constitutional power of this Government to
-make appropriations of money for the object designated, and all of us
-thought our finances were in no condition to bear the immense outlay
-which its adoption and faithful execution would impose upon the national
-Treasury. If we pause but a moment to think of the debt its acceptance
-would have entailed, we are appalled by its magnitude. The proposition
-was addressed to all the States and embraced the whole number of
-slaves.”
-
-The census of 1860 showed a slave population of nearly 4,000,000; from
-natural increase the number in 1862 exceeded that. “At even the low
-average of $300, the price fixed by the emancipation act for the slaves
-of this District, and greatly below their real worth, their value runs
-up to the enormous sum of $1,200,000,000; and if to that we add the cost
-of deportation and colonization, at $100 each, which is but a fraction
-more than is actually paid by the Maryland Colonization Society, we have
-$400,000,000 more. They were not willing nor could the country bear a
-tax sufficient to pay the interest on that sum in addition to the vast
-and daily increasing debt already fixed upon them by the exigencies of
-the war. The proposition is nothing less than the deportation from the
-country of $1,600,000,000 worth of producing labor and the substitution
-of an interest-bearing debt of the same amount. Even if it were expected
-that only the border States would accept the proposition, that involved
-a sum too great for the financial ability of the Government at this
-time. The total number of slaves in those States according to the late
-census was 1,196,112. The same rate of valuation with expenses of
-deportation and colonization gives the enormous sum of $478,038,133.
-
-“We did not feel that we should be justified in voting for a measure
-which, if carried out, would add this vast amount to our public debt at
-a moment when the Treasury was reeling under the enormous expenditure of
-the war.”
-
-To them the resolution seemed no more than the enunciation of a
-sentiment. “No movement was then made to provide and appropriate the
-funds required to carry it into effect; and we were not encouraged to
-believe that funds would be provided. And our belief has been fully
-justified by subsequent events. Not to mention other circumstances, it
-is quite sufficient for our purpose to bring to your notice the fact
-that, while this resolution was under consideration in the Senate our
-colleague, the Senator from Kentucky, moved an amendment appropriating
-$500,000 to the object therein designated, and it was voted down with
-great unanimity. What confidence, then, could we reasonably feel that if
-we committed ourselves to the policy it proposed, our constituents would
-reap the fruits of the promise held out; and on what ground could we, as
-fair men, approach them and challenge their support?”
-
-They denied that if, as the President alleged, they had supported the
-resolution of March 6, the war would be substantially ended, and they
-added, “The resolution has passed and if there be virtue in it, it will
-be quite as efficacious as if we had voted for it.”
-
-The war, they asserted, was prolonged not by reason of their conduct,
-but because of the union of all classes in the South. Those who wished
-to break down national independence and set up State domination, the
-State-rights party, could not be reconciled; but the large class who
-believed their domestic interests had been assailed by the Government
-might be if only they were convinced “that no harm is intended to them
-and their institutions,” but that the Government was simply defending
-its legitimate authority.
-
-“Twelve months ago,” adds this response, “both Houses of Congress,
-adopting the spirit of your message, then but recently sent in, declared
-with singular unanimity the objects of the war, and the country
-instantly bounded to your side to assist you in carrying it on. If the
-spirit of that resolution had been adhered to, we are confident that we
-should before now have seen the end of this deplorable conflict. But
-what have we seen?
-
-“In both Houses of Congress we have heard doctrines subversive of the
-principles of the Constitution, and seen measure after measure founded
-in substance on those doctrines proposed and carried through which can
-have no other effect than to distract and divide loyal men, and
-exasperate and drive still further from us and their duty the people of
-the rebellious States. Military officers, following these bad examples,
-have stepped beyond the just limits of their authority in the same
-direction, until in several instances you have felt the necessity of
-interfering to arrest them.... The effect of these measures was
-foretold, and may now be seen in the indurated state of Southern
-feeling.”
-
-To these causes, and not to the failure of the border delegations to
-support the measure, they attributed the terrible earnestness of those
-in arms against the Government. Nor was the institution of slavery the
-source of insurgent strength, but rather the apprehension that the
-powers of a common Government would be wielded against the institutions
-of the Southern States.
-
-The reply concludes: “If Congress, by proper and necessary legislation,
-shall provide sufficient funds and place them at your disposal, to be
-applied by you to the payment of any of our States or the citizens
-thereof who shall adopt the abolishment of slavery, either gradual or
-immediate, as they may determine, and the expense of deportation and
-colonization of the liberated slaves, then will our State[s] and people
-take this proposition into careful consideration, for such decision as
-in their judgment is demanded by their interest, their honor, and their
-duty to the whole country.”[265]
-
-The minority, seven in number, in their reply of the 15th declared
-themselves ready to make any sacrifice to save the Government and the
-institutions of their fathers, and promised to ask the people of their
-States calmly, deliberately and fairly to consider the recommendations
-of the President; they were encouraged to assume this position because
-the leaders of the rebellion had offered to abolish slavery among them
-as a condition of foreign intervention in favor of their independence as
-a nation.[266]
-
-Horace Maynard, though not representing a border State proper, expressed
-his approval of the President’s policy and stated the physical
-impossibility of submitting to the consideration of his people that or
-any other proposition until Tennessee had first been freed from hostile
-arms.[267]
-
-A fourth paper submitted to the President was that of Senator J. B.
-Henderson, of Missouri, who had cheerfully supported the measure at the
-time of its introduction; he believed the proposition would have
-received the approbation of a large majority of the border State
-delegations if they could have foreseen that the war would have been
-protracted a twelvemonth and had felt assured that the dominant party in
-Congress would, like the President, be as prompt in practical action as
-they had been in the expression of a sentiment. “In this period of the
-nation’s distress,” says Senator Henderson, “I know of no human
-institution too sacred for discussion; no material interest belonging to
-the citizen that he should not willingly place upon the altar of his
-country, if demanded by the public good.”[268]
-
-Mr. Henderson did not agree with the opinion of the President that “the
-war would now be substantially ended” had the members from the border
-States supported the measure in the preceding March. Personally he was
-favorable to the proposition, but remembered that he was the servant not
-the master of the people of Missouri.
-
-To the sudden and unexpected collapse of McClellan’s Richmond campaign
-has been ascribed the determination of President Lincoln to adopt
-general military emancipation so much sooner than he otherwise would
-have done. The great and decisive element of military strength in the
-slave population which he saw so clearly a little later could not even
-then, June and July, 1862, have been altogether concealed from his keen
-insight into affairs. His personal appeal to the border Congressmen was
-made July 12; the result of that conference he easily anticipated. Nor
-was the receipt of their written replies necessary to inform him that
-his offer would be rejected. So much he could readily collect from their
-oral objections and verbal criticisms. The decision to give notice of
-his intention to issue a proclamation concerning slavery was probably
-made within a few hours after he had assured Mr. Crisfield that the
-emancipation policy extended no farther than to a refusal of the border
-States to accept his tender of pecuniary aid to any commonwealth
-voluntarily adopting the plan of gradual abolishment. However this may
-be, he confided on the following day, July 13, 1862, to Secretaries
-Seward and Welles his intention to emancipate slaves by proclamation if
-their masters did not cease to make war on the Government. From the
-diary of the latter, we learn under what circumstances this important
-communication was made.
-
- President Lincoln [writes Mr. Welles] invited me to accompany him in
- his carriage to the funeral of an infant child of Mr. Stanton.
- Secretary Seward and Mrs. Frederick Seward were also in the
- carriage. Mr. Stanton occupied at that time, for a summer residence,
- the house of a naval officer, some two or three miles west or
- northwesterly of Georgetown. It was on this occasion and on this
- ride that he first mentioned to Mr. Seward and myself the subject of
- emancipating the slaves by proclamation in case the rebels did not
- cease to persist in their war on the Government and the Union, of
- which he saw no evidence. He dwelt earnestly on the gravity,
- importance, and delicacy of the movement; said he had given it much
- thought, and had about come to the conclusion that it was a military
- necessity, absolutely essential for the salvation of the nation,
- that we must free the slaves or be ourselves subdued, etc., etc.
- This was, he said, the first occasion where he had mentioned the
- subject to any one, and wished us to frankly state how the
- proposition struck us. Mr. Seward said the subject involved
- consequences so vast and momentous that he should wish to bestow on
- it mature reflection before giving a decisive answer; but his
- present opinion inclined to the measure as justifiable, and perhaps
- he might say expedient and necessary. These were also my views. Two
- or three times on that ride the subject, which was of course an
- absorbing one for each and all, was adverted to, and before
- separating, the President desired us to give the subject special and
- deliberate attention, for he was earnest in the conviction that
- something must be done. It was a new departure for the President,
- for until this time, in all our previous interviews, whenever the
- question of emancipation or the mitigation of slavery had been in
- any way alluded to, he had been prompt and emphatic in denouncing
- any interference by the General Government with the subject. This
- was, I think, the sentiment of every member of the Cabinet, all of
- whom, including the President, considered it a local domestic
- question appertaining to the States respectively, who had never
- parted with their authority over it. But the reverses before
- Richmond, and the formidable power and dimensions of the
- insurrection, which extended through all the slave States and had
- combined most of them in a confederacy to destroy the Union,
- impelled the Administration to adopt extraordinary measures to
- preserve the national existence. The slaves, if not armed and
- disciplined, were in the service of those who were, not only as
- field laborers and producers, but thousands of them were in
- attendance upon the armies in the field, employed as waiters and
- teamsters, and the fortifications and intrenchments were constructed
- by them.[269]
-
-The session of Congress was drawing to a close, but before adjournment
-the Confiscation Act, passed July 17, 1862, was approved by the
-President. This with kindred laws increased the number of forfeitures of
-title to slaves for the crimes of treason and rebellion. These penalties
-were by him considered just and their imposition constitutional.
-
-Within five days after the adjournment of Congress the President, July
-21, 1862, reached his final conclusions on the subject of emancipation.
-The diary of Secretary Chase contains the following record:
-
- [Having received notice of a Cabinet meeting, Mr. Chase says:] I
- went to the President’s at the appointed hour and found that he was
- profoundly concerned at the present aspect of affairs, and had
- determined to take some definite steps in respect to military action
- and slavery. He had prepared several orders, the first of which
- contemplated authority to commanders to subsist their troops in the
- hostile territory; the second, authority to employ negroes as
- laborers; the third, requiring that both in case of property taken
- and negroes employed, accounts should be kept with such degree of
- certainty as would enable compensation to be made in proper cases.
- Another provided for the colonization of negroes in some tropical
- country.
-
- A good deal of discussion took place upon these points. The first
- order was unanimously approved. The second was also unanimously
- approved; and the third by all except myself. I doubted the
- expediency of attempting to keep accounts for the benefit of
- inhabitants of rebel States. The colonization project was not much
- discussed.
-
- The Secretary of War presented some letters from General Hunter, in
- which General Hunter advised the Department that the withdrawal of a
- large proportion of his troops to reënforce General McClellan
- rendered it highly important that he should be immediately
- authorized to enlist all loyal persons without reference to
- complexion. Mr. Stanton, Mr. Seward, and myself expressed ourselves
- in favor of this plan, and no one expressed himself against it. Mr.
- Blair was not present. The President was not prepared to decide the
- question, but expressed himself as averse to arming negroes.[270]
-
-This Cabinet meeting came to no final conclusion, and, as we learn from
-the same source, the discussion was resumed on the following day, July
-22, when the question of arming the slaves was brought up.
-
- I advocated it warmly [writes Secretary Chase].[271] The President
- was unwilling to adopt this measure, but proposed to issue a
- proclamation on the basis of the Confiscation Bill, calling upon the
- States to return to their allegiance—warning rebels that the
- provisions of the act would have full force at the expiration of
- sixty days—adding, on his own part, a declaration of his intention
- to renew, at the next session of Congress, his recommendation of
- compensation to States adopting gradual abolishment of slavery—and
- proclaiming the emancipation of all slaves within States remaining
- in insurrection on the first day of January, 1863.[272]
-
-Mr. Chase promised the measure his cordial support, but preferred that
-no new expression on the subject of compensation be made at that time.
-Secretary Chase, in the diary mentioned, says: “The impression left upon
-my mind by the whole discussion was, that, while the President thought
-that the organization, equipment, and arming of negroes, like other
-soldiers, would be productive of more evil than good, he was not
-unwilling that commanders should, at their discretion, arm for purely
-defensive purposes, slaves coming within their lines.”[273] On the
-kindred policy of emancipation, however, the President had reached a
-definite conclusion which was in advance of the opinions entertained by
-even the most radical members of his Cabinet. When, therefore, he read
-to them, on July 22, his draft of an emancipation proclamation they were
-for the most part taken completely by surprise. This momentous document
-deserves to be reproduced entire.
-
- In pursuance of the sixth section of the act of Congress entitled
- “An act to suppress insurrection and to punish treason and
- rebellion, to seize and confiscate property of rebels, and for other
- purposes,” approved July 17, 1862, and which act and the joint
- resolution explanatory thereof are herewith published, I, Abraham
- Lincoln, President of the United States, do hereby proclaim to and
- warn all persons within the contemplation of said sixth section to
- cease participating in, aiding, countenancing, or abetting the
- existing rebellion, or any rebellion, against the Government of the
- United States, and to return to their proper allegiance to the
- United States, on pain of the forfeitures and seizures as within and
- by said sixth section provided.
-
- And I hereby make known that it is my purpose, upon the next meeting
- of Congress, to again recommend the adoption of a practical measure
- for tendering pecuniary aid to the free choice or rejection of any
- and all States which may then be recognizing and practically
- sustaining the authority of the United States, and which may then
- have voluntarily adopted, or thereafter may voluntarily adopt,
- gradual abolishment of slavery within such State or States; that the
- object is to practically restore, thenceforward to be maintained,
- the constitutional relation between the General Government and each
- and all the States wherein that relation is now suspended or
- disturbed; and that for this object the war, as it has been, will be
- prosecuted. And as a fit and necessary military measure for
- effecting this object, I as Commander-in-Chief of the army and navy
- of the United States, do order and declare that on the first day of
- January, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and
- sixty-three, all persons held as slaves within any State or States
- wherein the constitutional authority of the United States shall not
- then be practically recognized, submitted to, and maintained, shall
- then, thenceforward, and forever be free.[274]
-
-The diary of Secretary Chase, as well as the President’s endorsement on
-his draft, shows the emancipation proclamation to have been read to the
-Cabinet July 22, 1862. Various suggestions were offered; but except an
-objection of Secretary Seward they had all been fully anticipated by Mr.
-Lincoln and settled in his own mind. Secretary Seward said: “Mr.
-President, I approve of the proclamation, but I question the expediency
-of its issue at this juncture. The depression of the public mind,
-consequent upon our repeated reverses, is so great that I fear the
-effect of so important a step. It may be viewed as the last measure of
-an exhausted Government, a cry for help; the Government stretching forth
-its hands to Ethiopia, instead of Ethiopia stretching forth her hands to
-the Government.”
-
-Speaking afterwards of this incident, Mr. Lincoln said: “Seward’s idea
-was ‘that it would be considered our last _shriek_ on the retreat. Now,’
-added Mr. Seward, ‘while I approve the measure, I suggest, sir, that you
-postpone its issue, until you can give it to the country supported by
-military success, instead of issuing it, as would be the case now, upon
-the greatest disasters of the war!’ The wisdom of this view,” said Mr.
-Lincoln in recalling the occasion, “struck me with very great force. It
-was an aspect of the case that, in all my thought upon the subject, I
-had entirely overlooked. The result was that I put the draft of the
-proclamation aside, as you do your sketch for a picture, waiting for a
-victory.”[275]
-
-Instead of the proclamation so carefully discussed, a short one was
-published three days later, of which the most important part is as
-follows:
-
- In pursuance of the sixth section of the act of Congress entitled
- “An act to suppress insurrection and to punish treason and
- rebellion, to seize and confiscate the property of rebels, and for
- other purposes,” approved July 17, 1862, and which act, and the
- joint resolution explanatory thereof, are herewith published, I,
- Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, do hereby proclaim
- to and warn all persons within the contemplation of said sixth
- section to cease participating in, aiding, countenancing, or
- abetting the existing rebellion, or any rebellion, against the
- Government of the United States, and to return to their proper
- allegiance to the United States, on pain of the forfeitures and
- seizures as within and by said sixth section provided.[276]
-
-This warning was required by the sixth section of the act mentioned.
-
-During the following month President Lincoln waited patiently for
-tidings of some unquestioned success that would justify the publication
-of his proclamation, but when instead he received in the closing days of
-August intelligence of the second disaster at Manassas his anxiety must
-have become intense. This victory, together with the succession of
-others recently attending Confederate arms, encouraged General Lee’s
-invasion of Maryland. An army, notwithstanding its late reverses, still
-formidable in numbers and once more thoroughly reorganized marched
-leisurely from the vicinity of Washington to locate and destroy him.
-When, where or how the battle-cloud would break was uncertain. All eyes
-were turned on McClellan, again in command of the Union forces and
-strengthened by every soldier that could be spared from the defences of
-the Federal capital. It was in this state of suspense, and on the very
-day, September 13, that Lee’s victorious legions entered Frederick City
-that the President gave audience to a deputation from the religious
-denominations of Chicago, presenting a memorial for the immediate issue
-of an emancipation proclamation, which was enforced by some remarks from
-the chairman. The President replied that he had for weeks past, even for
-months, thought much upon the subject of their memorial.
-
-“I am approached,” said he, “with the most opposite opinions and advice,
-and that by religious men, who are equally certain that they represent
-the Divine will. I am sure that either the one or the other class is
-mistaken in that belief, and perhaps, in some respect, both. I hope it
-will not be irreverent for me to say that if it is probable that God
-would reveal His will to others, on a point so connected with my duty,
-it might be supposed He would reveal it directly to me; for, unless I am
-more deceived in myself than I often am, it is my earnest desire to know
-the will of Providence in this matter. And if I can learn what it is I
-will do it! These are not, however, the days of miracles, and I suppose
-it will be granted that I am not to expect a direct revelation. I must
-study the plain physical facts of the case, ascertain what is possible,
-and learn what appears to be wise and right.”
-
-The difficulties of the subject and the impossibility of even
-anti-slavery men, in or out of Congress, agreeing upon any measure of
-emancipation were then referred to. However, he would discuss the merits
-of the case and asked pointedly:
-
-“What good would a proclamation of emancipation from me do, especially
-as we are now situated? I do not want to issue a document that the whole
-world will see must necessarily be inoperative.... Would my word free
-the slaves, when I cannot even enforce the Constitution in the rebel
-States? Is there a single court, or magistrate, or individual that would
-be influenced by it there?”
-
-He admitted to his visitors, however, that he raised no objections to
-such a proclamation as they desired on legal or on constitutional
-grounds; for, continued he, “as Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy,
-in time of war I suppose I have a right to take any measure which may
-best subdue the enemy, nor do I urge objections of a moral nature, in
-view of possible consequences of insurrection and massacre at the South.
-I view this matter as a practical war measure, to be decided on
-according to the advantages or disadvantages it may offer to the
-suppression of the rebellion.”
-
-The committee replied, and the President added, “I admit that slavery is
-at the root of the rebellion.... I will also concede that emancipation
-would help us in Europe, and convince them that we are incited by
-something more than ambition. I grant, further, that it would help
-somewhat at the North, though not so much, I fear, as you and those you
-represent imagine.... Unquestionably, it would weaken the rebels by
-drawing off their laborers, which is of great importance; but I am not
-so sure we could do much with the blacks.”[277] The President, too,
-called attention to the fact that the border slave States had 50,000
-bayonets in the Union army. It would be a serious matter if in
-consequence of such a proclamation they should go over to the South. In
-conclusion he said that he had not decided against a proclamation of
-liberty to the slaves, but held the matter under advisement and assured
-them that the subject was on his mind by day and by night more than any
-other.
-
-It was currently reported among anti-slavery men in Illinois that the
-emancipation proclamation was extorted from the President by the
-pressure of such delegations as this from the Christian Convention.[278]
-To determine how little foundation there is for this opinion it is only
-necessary to recall what had occurred in the Cabinet on July 22
-preceding.
-
-The repulse of Lee’s veterans at Antietam, September 17, 1862, raised
-somewhat the hopes of the President. On the 19th General McClellan
-telegraphed an account of his victory, and Mr. Lincoln three days later
-announced his intention to issue the postponed proclamation.
-
-All the Cabinet members, having been summoned by messenger from the
-State Department, were in attendance at the White House on September 22,
-1862. After some talk of a general nature, and the reading by Mr.
-Lincoln of a humorous chapter from a book by Artemus Ward, the
-conversation assumed a more serious tone. What subsequently transpired
-on that eventful occasion we learn from the following record in the
-diary of Secretary Chase:
-
- “Gentlemen, [said the President] I have, as you are aware, thought a
- great deal about the relation of this war to slavery, and you all
- remember that, several weeks ago, I read to you an order I had
- prepared upon the subject, which, on account of objections made by
- some of you, was not issued. Ever since then my mind has been much
- occupied with this subject, and I have thought all along that the
- time for acting on it might probably come. I think the time has come
- now. I wish it was a better time. I wish that we were in a better
- condition. The action of the army against the rebels has not been
- quite what I should have best liked. But they have been driven out
- of Maryland, and Pennsylvania is no longer in danger of invasion.
- When the rebel army was at Frederick I determined, as soon as it
- should be driven out of Maryland, to issue a proclamation of
- emancipation, such as I thought most likely to be useful. I said
- nothing to any one, but I made a promise to myself and [hesitating a
- little] to my Maker. The rebel army is now driven out, and I am
- going to fulfill that promise. I have got you together to hear what
- I have written down. I do not wish your advice about the main
- matter, for that I have determined for myself. This I say without
- intending anything but respect for any one of you. But I already
- know the views of each on this question. They have been heretofore
- expressed, and I have considered them as thoroughly and as carefully
- as I can. What I have written is that which my reflections have
- determined me to say. If there is anything in the expressions I use
- or in any minor matter which any one of you thinks had best be
- changed, I shall be glad to receive your suggestions. One other
- observation I will make. I know very well that many others might, in
- this matter as in others, do better than I can; and if I was
- satisfied that the public confidence was more fully possessed by any
- one of them than by me, and knew of any constitutional way in which
- he could be put in my place, he should have it. I would gladly yield
- it to him. But though I believe that I have not so much of the
- confidence of the people as I had some time since, I do not know
- that, all things considered, any other person has more; and, however
- this may be, there is no way in which I can have any other man put
- where I am. I am here. I must do the best I can, and bear the
- responsibility of taking the course which I feel I ought to take.”
-
- The President then proceeded to read his Emancipation Proclamation,
- making remarks on the several parts as he went on, and showing that
- he had fully considered the subject in all the lights under which it
- had been presented to him.
-
- After he had closed, Governor Seward said: “The general question
- having been decided, nothing can be said further about that. Would
- it not, however, make the proclamation more clear and decided to
- leave out all reference to the act being sustained during the
- incumbency of the present President; and not merely say that the
- Government _recognises_, but that it will maintain the freedom it
- proclaims?”
-
- I followed, saying: “What you have said, Mr. President, fully
- satisfies me that you have given to every proposition which has been
- made a kind and candid consideration. And you have now expressed the
- conclusion to which you have arrived clearly and distinctly. This it
- was your right, and, under your oath of office, your duty to do. The
- proclamation does not, indeed, mark out the course I would myself
- prefer; but I am ready to take it just as it is written and to stand
- by it with all my heart. I think, however, the suggestions of
- Governor Seward very judicious, and shall be glad to have them
- adopted.”
-
- The President then asked us severally our opinions as to the
- modifications proposed, saying that he did not care much about the
- phrases he had used. Every one favored the modification, and it was
- adopted. Governor Seward then proposed that in the passage relating
- to colonization some language should be introduced to show that the
- colonization proposed was to be only with the consent of the
- colonists, and the consent of the states in which the colonies might
- be attempted. This, too, was agreed to, and no other modification
- was proposed. Mr. Blair then said that the question having been
- decided, he would make no objection to issuing the proclamation; but
- he would ask to have his paper, presented some days since, against
- the policy, filed with the proclamation. The President consented to
- this readily. And then Mr. Blair went on to say that he was afraid
- of the influence of the proclamation on the border States and on the
- army, and stated, at some length, the grounds of his apprehensions.
- He disclaimed most expressly, however, all objections to
- emancipation _per se_, saying he had always been personally in favor
- of it—always ready for immediate emancipation in the midst of slave
- States, rather than submit to the perpetuation of the system.[279]
-
-The foregoing account from the diary of Secretary Chase is fully
-corroborated by a narrative of Mr. Welles describing the same
-event.[280] Mr. Blair, as already observed, believed the time
-inopportune for issuing the proclamation and feared as a result that the
-border States would go over to secession. The President, however,
-thought the difficulty not to act as great as to act. There were two
-sides, he said, to that question. For months he had labored to get those
-States to move in this matter, convinced in his own mind that it was
-their true interest to do so, but his labors were vain. “We must take
-the forward movement,” he declared. “They would acquiesce, if not
-immediately, soon; for they must be satisfied that slavery had received
-its death-blow from slave-owners—it could not survive the
-rebellion.”[281]
-
-When the Cabinet had concluded its deliberations the document was duly
-attested, the seal affixed and the President’s signature added. On the
-following morning, September 23, 1862, the proclamation was published in
-full by all the leading newspapers of the loyal States, where it excited
-the most profound surprise. Indicating, as it does, the progress of
-opinion, it was the first great landmark of the war; behind it lay the
-old, before it the new order of things. The successive steps by which
-Mr. Lincoln reached this position have been sketched in the present
-chapter with fullness and, it is believed, with accuracy. It has been
-shown how fugitive slaves escaping to the Federal lines were at first
-surrendered to their masters; how soon afterward, as in the case of
-General Butler’s command, they were protected by the army and employed
-as laborers; how in a later stage, certain Union commanders who proposed
-to confiscate slave property or to arm negroes as soldiers were gently
-rebuked and their acts disavowed by the President. This forbearance,
-however, was without effect on the Southern people, whose hatred was
-quite as likely to ascribe it to Yankee cowardice as to Yankee
-magnanimity.
-
-With this account of the introduction into the problem of reconstruction
-of a novel and very perplexing element we are prepared to examine the
-various theories of State status held by those whose position and
-ability made them leaders of public opinion. That subject will be more
-properly discussed in a separate chapter.
-
------
-
-Footnote 213:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 209.
-
-Footnote 214:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 1.
-
-Footnote 215:
-
- Addresses and Papers of Edward L. Pierce, pp. 20–25.
-
-Footnote 216:
-
- Addresses and Papers of E. L. Pierce, p. 26.
-
-Footnote 217:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist. p. 244.
-
-Footnote 218:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 219:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 244.
-
-Footnote 220:
-
- Ibid., p. 245.
-
-Footnote 221:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 235n.
-
-Footnote 222:
-
- Addresses and Papers of E. L. Pierce, p. 29.
-
-Footnote 223:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 245.
-
-Footnote 224:
-
- Appendix, Globe, 1 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 42.
-
-Footnote 225:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 245.
-
-Footnote 226:
-
- Ibid., pp. 245–246.
-
-Footnote 227:
-
- General Anderson had telegraphed President Lincoln that an entire
- company of Kentucky soldiers had laid down their arms upon hearing of
- Fremont’s action.
-
-Footnote 228:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 77.
-
-Footnote 229:
-
- Ibid., pp. 78–79.
-
-Footnote 230:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 247–248.
-
-Footnote 231:
-
- Ibid., p. 248.
-
-Footnote 232:
-
- N. Y. Tribune, November 8, 1861.
-
-Footnote 233:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 90.
-
-Footnote 234:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 235:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 646.
-
-Footnote 236:
-
- First Annual Message, December 3, 1861. McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p.
- 134; Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 102–103.
-
-Footnote 237:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 249.
-
-Footnote 238:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 91.
-
-Footnote 239:
-
- See “Journal of the Senate of the State of Delaware, At a Special
- Session of the General Assembly, Commenced and held at Dover, on
- Monday, the 25th day of November, 1861.”
-
-Footnote 240:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 250.
-
-Footnote 241:
-
- Ibid., p. 248.
-
-Footnote 242:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 250.
-
-Footnote 243:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 244:
-
- Ibid., p. 251.
-
-Footnote 245:
-
- Addresses and Papers of E. L. Pierce, p. 87; also Letters and State
- Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 126.
-
-Footnote 246:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 129.
-
-Footnote 247:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 129–130.
-
-Footnote 248:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1862, pp. 799–800.
-
-Footnote 249:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 132.
-
-Footnote 250:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 210.
-
-Footnote 251:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 133–135; also
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 210–211.
-
-Footnote 252:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 137–138.
-
-Footnote 253:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1862, pp. 346–347.
-
-Footnote 254:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 1496.
-
-Footnote 255:
-
- See p. 143, _ante_.
-
-Footnote 256:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 226–227.
-
-Footnote 257:
-
- The question of colonizing free blacks out of the United States
- engaged the attention of Thomas Jefferson and James Monroe, who had
- some correspondence on the subject at the beginning of the nineteenth
- century. Late in the year 1816 there was organized in the city of
- Washington the “National Colonization Society,” of which the expressed
- purpose was to encourage emancipation by procuring a place outside the
- United States, preferably in Africa, to which free negroes could be
- aided in emigrating. This, it was believed, would rid the South of its
- free colored population which had already become a nuisance. Until
- 1830 it was warmly supported everywhere, and branches of the society
- were established in nearly every State. In the South its purposes were
- furthered by James Madison, by Charles Carroll and by Henry Clay.
- Bushrod Washington became president of the association. Rufus King and
- President Harrison were among its friends in the North.
-
- Though Texas and Mexico were looked upon as favorable places for
- locating a colony of free blacks, they were sent to the British
- possession of Sierra Leone. In 1821 a permanent location was purchased
- in Liberia. This settlement, with Monrovia as its capital, became
- independent in 1847. The American Colonization Society attracted
- little notice after the rise, about 1829–30, of those known as
- immediate abolitionists.
-
-Footnote 258:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 155.
-
-Footnote 259:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 251.
-
-Footnote 260:
-
- Ibid., p. 252.
-
-Footnote 261:
-
- Globe, Part III., 2 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 2068.
-
-Footnote 262:
-
- Ibid., p. 2618. Ibid., p. 2769.
-
-Footnote 263:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 233.
-
-Footnote 264:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 204–205.
-
-Footnote 265:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 214–217.
-
-Footnote 266:
-
- Ibid., pp. 217–218.
-
-Footnote 267:
-
- Ibid., p. 218.
-
-Footnote 268:
-
- Ibid., pp. 218–220.
-
-Footnote 269:
-
- Quoted in Nicolay and Hay’s Abraham Lincoln, A History. Vol. VI. p.
- 121 _et seq._
-
-Footnote 270:
-
- Schuckers’ Life of Salmon Portland Chase, pp. 439–440.
-
-Footnote 271:
-
- Ibid., p. 440.
-
-Footnote 272:
-
- Shuckers’ Life of Chase, pp. 440–441.
-
-Footnote 273:
-
- Ibid., p. 441.
-
-Footnote 274:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 213.
-
-Footnote 275:
-
- Carpenter’s Six Months at the White House, pp. 21–22.
-
-Footnote 276:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 214.
-
-Footnote 277:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 231–232.
-
-Footnote 278:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 233.
-
-Footnote 279:
-
- Quoted in Schuckers’ Life of Chase, pp. 453–455.
-
-Footnote 280:
-
- The Galaxy, December, 1872, pp. 846–847.
-
-Footnote 281:
-
- Ibid., p. 847.
-
-
-
-
- VI
- THEORIES AND PLANS OF RECONSTRUCTION
-
-
-In considering the different plans of reconstruction it is not deemed
-necessary to discuss further than has been done in the preceding pages
-the President’s theory of State status. There, in his effort to
-establish loyal governments in three of the rebellious States, as well
-as in the protection and encouragement extended to reorganized Virginia,
-we have seen practical applications of that theory. In his first
-inaugural Mr. Lincoln said: “It is safe to assert that no government
-proper ever had a provision in its organic law for its own termination,”
-and on the same occasion he added, “No State, upon its own mere motion,
-can lawfully get out of the Union; that _resolves_ and _ordinances_ to
-that effect are legally void.”[282] From the principles of March 4,
-1861, was logically deduced the central idea of the plan announced in
-December, 1863, and maintained by the President till the last hour of
-his life. In his first message to Congress, submitted at the special
-session beginning July 4, 1861, he again attempted to remove the fears
-of those whose prejudice ascribed to the dominant political party a
-purpose to interfere in the domestic concerns of the slaveholding
-States. As will be seen by the following quotation he little more than
-reiterated on that occasion what he had solemnly declared four months
-earlier:
-
- Lest there be some uneasiness in the minds of candid men as to what
- is to be the course of the Government towards the Southern States
- _after_ the rebellion shall have been suppressed, the Executive
- deems it proper to say, it will be his purpose then, as ever, to be
- guided by the Constitution and the laws; and that he probably will
- have no different understanding of the powers and duties of the
- Federal Government relatively to the rights of the States and the
- people, under the Constitution, than that expressed in the inaugural
- address.
-
- He desires to preserve the Government, that it may be administered
- for all, as it was administered by the men who made it. Loyal
- citizens everywhere have the right to claim this of their
- Government, and the Government has no right to withhold or neglect
- it. It is not perceived that, in giving it, there is any coercion,
- any conquest, or any subjugation, in any just sense of those
- terms.[283]
-
-The first paragraph quoted expresses his perfect confidence in a
-successful conclusion of the war, and in this respect suggests the faith
-of Charles Sumner, in whose private correspondence the same thought
-constantly occurs. In his message the President observed also that
-Virginia had allowed “this giant insurrection to make its nest within
-her borders; and this Government has no choice left but to deal with it
-_where_ it finds it. And it has the less regret, as the loyal citizens
-have, in due form, claimed its protection. Those loyal citizens this
-Government is bound to recognize, and protect, as being Virginia.”[284]
-
-As early as June, 1861, Mr. Lincoln, on application of Governor
-Pierpont, recognized the restored State of Virginia by promising
-assistance to repel invasion and to suppress domestic violence; his
-example was followed by both Houses of Congress: first, in the prompt
-admission of Senators and Representatives from that Commonwealth, and
-long afterward, when there was ample time for reflection, by consenting
-to admit the new State of West Virginia, to whose separate and
-independent existence the reorganized Legislature had formally assented.
-The recognition of Pierpont’s government, however, involved on the
-constitutional question little difference of opinion between the
-President and Congress. Thus far the political departments, if not in
-complete harmony, were at any rate not in conflict. This act, though it
-marked no distinct Executive policy, was the occasion of some discordant
-notes which will be referred to in their proper relation.
-
-It may not be unnecessary to observe that underlying the early policy of
-the President was a conviction that the rebellion was effected by a
-small but treasonable faction; indeed, in the message of July 4 he
-expressed his belief that, with the probable exception of South
-Carolina, the disloyal were in a minority in all the seceding States.
-The great mass of Southern people, it was assumed, opposed disunion, and
-with Federal assistance would soon right themselves. Peaceful citizens
-of that section, being regarded as still under protection of the
-Constitution, were, therefore, not to be molested. The conflict waged by
-the General Government was a personal war against insurgents. Leaders
-who encouraged sedition and committed acts of hostility against the
-United States could be tried precisely as in a consolidated state like
-Great Britain, and upon conviction punished for their treason. This
-attitude was not only wise, but had the additional merit of greatly
-simplifying the method of restoration. It asserted further that the
-rebellious States were still in the Union, and under the existing
-compact could not lawfully withdraw from it; being in the Union, they
-were entitled to all the rights accorded to other members of the
-confederation. In brief, its essential idea was the indestructibility of
-a State, and it denied that the integrity of the national domain had
-been impaired or the number of States diminished by the ordinances of
-secession. The General Government could properly aid the people of a
-State to express their will, but, beyond what was demanded by the
-exigencies of the war, could not legally exercise those powers
-constitutionally reserved to the States. By the treasonable act of
-levying war against the Republic the rights and franchises incident to
-United States citizenship were forfeited. The power of Congress extended
-no further than to a guaranty of preëxisting republican forms of
-government.
-
-To the correctness of these principles Democrats and Republicans alike
-gave almost universal assent. But the war was increasing in magnitude,
-and the measures adequate to the suppression of a gigantic rebellion
-proved to be very different from those adapted to a local insurrection.
-The President’s original intention was to overcome armed resistance to
-Federal power and as speedily as possible restore the States to their
-former relations. This task, however, was more easily conceived than
-accomplished, and in the terrible conflict that ensued political parties
-as well as individual statesmen were swept onward from point to point to
-very different resting-places. From this condition resulted the great
-number of theories of reconstruction presented before the end of the
-rebellion.
-
-The President early in the war adopted principles that found little
-favor with conservative Democrats. His readiness to recognize the
-restored State of Virginia was equivalent to a declaration that if a
-majority of the people in one of the seceded States voluntarily
-transferred their obedience and support to a hostile power the loyal
-minority constituted the State and should govern it. In this connection
-will be remembered the objections of Bayard and Saulsbury to receiving
-Senators Willey and Carlile from the reorganized government of Virginia.
-A further advance is indicated by Mr. Lincoln’s appointment, early in
-1862, of military governors for those States that had been brought
-partly within Federal military lines. After the proclamation of
-September 22, 1862, and that of January 1 succeeding, the question of
-restoration was left permanently out of view. If the erring States were
-ever to resume their places they must first recognize the anti-slavery
-legislation summarized in the preceding chapter. Hitherto the paramount
-consideration with the President was a speedy restoration of former
-relations; thenceforth “the Union as it was” became impossible, because
-slaves liberated in the progress of the war could never be returned to a
-condition of servitude. The introduction of this element greatly
-increased the difficulties of a problem already sufficiently intricate.
-But neither this nor any other consequence of his proclamation appears
-to have been overlooked by the Executive.
-
-The message of December 8, 1863, together with the accompanying
-proclamation sketched in outline the only plan which Mr. Lincoln ever
-published on the subject of reconstruction, and even to this mode of
-reinstatement he did not require exact conformity, recognizing that its
-modification might be demanded by inherent differences in situation
-among the returning States. By its terms all persons participated in the
-rebellion, except certain described classes, were promised amnesty with
-restoration of property (excluding slaves and those cases of property in
-which rights of third parties intervened) upon taking an oath which
-pledged support of the Constitution and the Union; of the slavery
-legislation enacted during the war (unless such acts were repealed by
-Congress, or were modified or annulled by the Supreme Court), and
-adherence to all Executive proclamations on that subject so long and so
-far as not modified or declared void by the Judiciary. Whenever in any
-of the rebellious States a number of persons equal to one tenth of the
-voters participating in the Presidential election of 1860, who were
-qualified electors under the laws existing immediately before the
-ordinance of secession, should reëstablish a State government republican
-in form, and not contravening this oath, it would be recognized as the
-true government of that State and should receive the benefits of the
-constitutional guaranty. To the emancipated race renewed assurance of
-permanent freedom was given. It was also suggested that in
-reorganization the political framework of the States be maintained. The
-admission of members elected to Congress was a matter for the
-determination of its respective Houses.
-
-It is proper to notice in this method of reorganization, known afterward
-as “the Louisiana Plan,” the absence of any provision for conferring on
-the freedmen the elective franchise. In a private letter to Governor
-Hahn the President had, it is true, expressed his personal preference
-for including among the electors such of the colored race as had fought
-gallantly in the Union ranks and also the very intelligent among
-them[285]. This, however, was only an unofficial suggestion. Nor were
-securities of any sort required for the future as a condition of
-reinstatement.
-
-Under this plan, which was presented as only a rallying point, Union
-governments had been inaugurated in Tennessee, Louisiana and Arkansas;
-the first two participated in the Presidential election of 1864, and
-before the close of the war they had all elected members to Congress.
-The legality of these governments Mr. Lincoln always maintained. How
-Congress regarded them will be related in succeeding chapters.
-
-Long before the announcement of any mode of reorganization by the
-Executive, members of the Legislative branch of Government had made some
-efforts in this field; these, however, were for the most part tentative
-and hesitant. The question had not yet been brought fairly before
-Congress; indeed, it was in discussing the results and tendencies of
-Presidential reconstruction that the Congressional plan, destined
-ultimately to prevail, slowly assumed definitive form.
-
-As early as December, 1861, Mr. Harlan, of Iowa, introduced into the
-Senate a bill for the establishment of provisional governments for the
-territory embraced by the States of Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi,
-Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas and Tennessee. It was referred to the
-Committee on Territories, but was never reported.
-
-More important, however, than this proposed enactment, both because of
-the acknowledged position of their author and the influence which they
-exerted upon the mode of reconstruction finally adopted, were the nine
-resolutions offered, February 11, 1862, by Charles Sumner. These were
-“declaratory of the relations between the United States and the
-territory once occupied by certain States, and now usurped by pretended
-governments, without constitutional or legal right.” A preamble in the
-characteristic style of this celebrated statesman introduced his famous
-propositions, which were as follows:
-
- Whereas certain States, rightfully belonging to the Union of the
- United States, have through their respective governments wickedly
- undertaken to abjure all those duties by which their connection with
- the Union was maintained; to renounce all allegiance to the
- Constitution; to levy war upon the national Government; and, for the
- consummation of this treason, have unconstitutionally and unlawfully
- confederated together, with the declared purpose of putting an end
- by force to the supremacy of the Constitution within their
- respective limits; and whereas this condition of insurrection,
- organized by pretended governments, openly exists in South Carolina,
- Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas,
- Tennessee, and Virginia, except in Eastern Tennessee and Western
- Virginia, and has been declared by the President of the United
- States, in a proclamation duly made in conformity with an act of
- Congress, to exist throughout this territory, with the exceptions
- already named; and whereas the extensive territory thus usurped by
- these pretended governments and organized into a hostile
- confederation, belongs to the United States, as an inseparable part
- thereof, under the sanctions of the Constitution, to be held in
- trust for the inhabitants in the present and future generations, and
- is so completely interlinked with the Union that it is forever
- dependent thereupon; and whereas the Constitution, which is the
- supreme law of the land, cannot be displaced in its rightful
- operation within this territory, but must ever continue the supreme
- law thereof, notwithstanding the doings of any pretended governments
- acting singly or in confederation, in order to put an end to its
- supremacy: Therefore:
-
- 1. _Resolved_, That any vote of secession or other act by which any
- State may undertake to put an end to the supremacy of the
- Constitution within its territory is inoperative and void against
- the Constitution, and when sustained by force it becomes a practical
- _abdication_ by the State of all rights under the Constitution,
- while the treason which it involves still further works an instant
- _forfeiture_ of all those functions and powers essential to the
- continued existence of the State as a body politic, so that from
- that time forward the territory falls under the exclusive
- jurisdiction of Congress as other territory, and the State being,
- according to the language of the law, _felo-de-se_, ceases to exist.
-
- 2. That any combination of men assuming to act in the place of such
- State, attempting to insnare or coerce the inhabitants thereof into
- a confederation hostile to the Union, is rebellious, treasonable,
- and destitute of all moral authority; and that such combination is a
- usurpation incapable of any constitutional existence and utterly
- lawless, so that everything dependent upon it is without
- constitutional or legal support.
-
- 3. That the termination of a State under the Constitution
- necessarily causes the termination of those peculiar local
- institutions which, having no origin in the Constitution or in those
- natural rights which exist independent of the Constitution, are
- upheld by the sole and exclusive authority of the State.
-
- 4. That slavery, being a peculiar local institution, derived from
- local laws, without any origin in the Constitution or in natural
- rights, is upheld by the sole and exclusive authority of the State,
- and must therefore cease to exist legally or constitutionally when
- the State on which it depends no longer exists; for the incident
- cannot survive the principal.
-
- 5. That in the exercise of its exclusive jurisdiction over the
- territory once occupied by the States, it is the duty of Congress to
- see that the supremacy of the Constitution is maintained in its
- essential principles, so that everywhere in this extensive territory
- slavery shall cease to exist practically, as it has already ceased
- to exist constitutionally or legally.
-
- 6. That any recognition of slavery in such territory, or any
- surrender of slaves under the pretended laws of the extinct States
- by any officer of the United States, civil or military, is a
- recognition of the pretended governments, to the exclusion of the
- jurisdiction of Congress under the Constitution, and is in the
- nature of aid and comfort to the rebellion that has been organized.
-
- 7. That any such recognition of slavery or surrender of pretended
- slaves, besides being a recognition of the pretended governments,
- giving them aid and comfort, is a denial of the rights of persons
- who, by the extinction of the States, have become free, so that,
- under the Constitution, they cannot again be enslaved.
-
- 8. That allegiance from the inhabitant and protection from the
- Government are corresponding obligations, dependent upon each other,
- so that while the allegiance of every inhabitant of this territory,
- without distinction of color or class, is due to the United States,
- and cannot in any way be defeated by the action of any pretended
- Government, or by any pretence of property or claim to service, the
- corresponding obligation of protection is at the same time due by
- the United States to every such inhabitant, without distinction of
- color or class; and it follows that inhabitants held as slaves,
- whose paramount allegiance is due to the United States, may justly
- look to the national Government for protection.
-
- 9. That the duty directly cast upon Congress by the extinction of
- the States is reinforced by the positive prohibition of the
- Constitution that “no State shall enter into any Confederation,” or
- “without the consent of Congress keep troops or ships-of-war in time
- of peace, or enter into any agreement or compact with another
- State,” or “grant letters of marque and reprisal,” or “coin money,”
- or “emit bills of credit,” or “without the consent of Congress lay
- any duties on imports or exports,” all of which have been done by
- these pretended Governments, and also by the positive injunction of
- the Constitution, addressed to the nation, that “the United States
- shall guaranty to every State in this Union a republican form of
- government,” and that in pursuance of this duty cast upon Congress,
- and further enjoined by the Constitution, Congress will assume
- complete jurisdiction of such vacated territory where such
- unconstitutional and illegal things have been attempted, and will
- proceed to establish therein republican forms of government under
- the Constitution; and in the execution of this trust will provide
- carefully for the protection of all the inhabitants thereof; for the
- security of families, the organization of labor, the encouragement
- of industry, and the welfare of society, and will in every way
- discharge the duties of a just, merciful and paternal
- Government.[286]
-
-Sumner, as already noticed, having confidence in the ultimate triumph of
-the national cause, began early in the war to reflect on the subject of
-reorganization. As might have been expected from his previous career,
-his opinion of the changes that would result from rebellion inclined him
-at the outset to adopt the views of the less extreme anti-slavery men.
-Notwithstanding this fact, however, his scheme of reconstruction,
-because of its radical and comprehensive character, caused something of
-a sensation when introduced in the Senate, and disturbed the repose of
-many conservative patriots outside. By leading Republicans it was
-promptly disavowed as the policy of their party. These resolutions,
-though never adopted or even formally discussed by Congress, colored
-somewhat the final work of reconstruction. An account of the extent and
-the manner in which they influenced the legislative plan belongs
-properly to a consideration of the acts of March, 1867. What appeared to
-be a public necessity had by that time brought many members of his party
-fully abreast of Mr. Sumner.
-
-The interval had been employed in various ways to keep his peculiar
-theory before the public. A private letter to Francis Lieber, dated
-March 29, 1862, shows that Sumner’s view of the measures essential to
-restoration had not been modified by the discussions of a month.
-“Assuming,” he says, “that our military success is complete, and that
-the rebel armies are scattered, what next? Unless I am mistaken, the
-most difficult thing of all,—namely, the reorganization. How shall it be
-done,—by what process? What power shall set a-going the old governments?
-Will the people coöperate enough to constitute self-government? I have
-positive opinions here. If successful in war, we shall have then before
-us the alternative: (1) Separation; or (2) subjugation of these States
-with emancipation. I do not see any escape. Diplomatists here and abroad
-think it will be separation. I think the latter, under my resolutions or
-something like.”[287]
-
-By a distinguished Confederate officer Sumner has been described as a
-statesman who seemed over-educated, and who had retained without having
-digested his learning;[288] by an admirer of his own party as wanting in
-tact and practical wisdom as a legislator.[289] Though it must be
-admitted that a grain of truth forms the basis of these criticisms, yet
-the letter to his friend Dr. Lieber shows no lack of insight into the
-events and tendencies of the times. Without anticipating a subsequent
-portion of this narrative it may be observed here that if his vision did
-not pierce the remote future, his knowledge and experience enabled him
-to see as much of coming events as the most gifted of his
-contemporaries. Writing a year later, July 21, 1863, to Hon. John
-Bright, one of our few friends in England, he remarked that “so great a
-revolution cannot come to a close at once.”[290] The defeat of General
-Lee at Gettysburg a few weeks earlier suggested the thought that the
-destruction of the Army of Northern Virginia would have precipitated on
-Congress the entire question of reconstruction, and time was an
-essential element in the development of Sumner’s most cherished plans.
-
-Not only in his private correspondence and in the discussion of every
-conceivable measure before Congress did he endeavor to enforce his
-theory of State status, but he also published in a leading periodical an
-elaboration and defence of his opinions. For many reasons the
-undelivered speech forming the basis of his article in the _Atlantic
-Monthly_ for October, 1863, is of remarkable interest. It reveals the
-mental habits of one of the most useful and influential characters then
-in public life; the statesman is really thinking aloud. He appears, for
-instance, to have been much impressed by the fact that, under the
-Commonwealth, Cromwell partitioned his country into military districts
-of which Sumner remarked that there were precisely _eleven_, just the
-number of States in rebellion. One view is enforced by an appropriate
-passage from Cicero, while of Edmund Burke it is asserted that had he
-lived during the Civil War his eloquence would have blasted Southern
-leaders for their folly and madness in entering upon a career of
-rebellion. All who are familiar with the debates of that period must
-have observed that Sumner was considerably influenced by the authority
-of great names, and in consequence sometimes exposed himself to rebuke
-from men who, though in many respects inferior, had studied the
-questions of the day in the light of their own times.
-
-It is not intended, however, to trace the origin of the doctrine of
-State suicide or even to suggest all the arguments upon which he relied
-for its support, the purpose of these remarks being rather to show on
-what principles its essential propositions were based. This, it is
-believed, cannot be better done than by explaining the resolutions in
-his own language.
-
-In the _Atlantic Monthly_ he wrote: “It is sometimes said that the
-States themselves committed _suicide_, so that as States they ceased to
-exist, leaving their whole jurisdiction open to the occupation of the
-United States under the Constitution. This assumption is founded on the
-fact that, whatever may be the existing governments in these States,
-they are in no respect constitutional, and since the State itself is
-known by the government, with which its life is intertwined, it must
-cease to exist constitutionally when its government no longer exists
-constitutionally.”
-
-He acknowledges the difficulty of defining the entity which we call a
-State. “Among us,” says Mr. Sumner, “the term is most known as the
-technical name for one of the political societies which compose our
-Union.... Nobody has suggested, I presume, that any ‘State’ of our Union
-has, through rebellion, ceased to exist as a _civil society_, or even as
-a _political community_. It is only as a _State of the Union_, armed
-with State rights, or at least as a _local government_, which annually
-renews itself, as the snake its skin, that it can be called in question.
-But it is vain to challenge for the technical ‘State,’ or for the annual
-government, that immortality which belongs to civil society. The one is
-an artificial body, the other is a natural body; and while the first,
-overwhelmed by insurrection or war, may change or die, the latter can
-change or die only with the extinction of the community itself, whatever
-may be its name or its form.”
-
-Phillimore is quoted in support of the proposition that a “State,” even
-in a broader signification, may lose its life. That author says: “A
-state, like an individual, may die,” and, among the various ways in
-which this may occur, adds, “by its submission and the donation of
-itself to another country.” “But in the case of our Rebel States,”
-resumes Mr. Sumner, “there has been a plain submission and donation of
-themselves,—_effective, at least, to break the continuity of
-government_, if not to destroy that immortality which has been claimed.
-Nor can it make any difference, in breaking this continuity, that the
-submission and donation, constituting a species of attornment, were to
-enemies at home rather than to enemies abroad,—to Jefferson Davis rather
-than to Louis Napoleon. The thread is snapped in one case as much as in
-the other.
-
-“But a _change of form_ in the actual government may be equally
-effective. Cicero speaks of a change so complete as ‘to leave no image
-of a state behind.’ But this is precisely what has been done throughout
-the whole Rebel region: there is no image of a _constitutional_ State
-left behind.”
-
-The first resolution of the series quoted declares “That any vote of
-secession or other act by which any State may undertake to put an end to
-the supremacy of the Constitution within its territory is inoperative
-and void against the Constitution, and when sustained by force it
-becomes a practical _abdication_ by the State of all its rights under
-the Constitution.” Perhaps Mr. Sumner in the essay failed to strengthen
-his original statement of this proposition, which he believed was
-“upheld by the historic example of England, at the Revolution of 1688,
-when, on the flight of James II. and the abandonment of his kingly
-duties, the two Houses of Parliament voted that the monarch, ‘having
-violated the fundamental laws, and having withdrawn himself out of the
-kingdom, _had abdicated the government_, and that the throne had thereby
-become vacant.’” This precedent, which Senator Sumner thought
-applicable, was by no means so formidable an argument against the
-rebellious States as he chose to regard it. If the term _abdicate_ is
-equivalent to a species of informal resignation it did not apply
-strictly to the case of James II., for that unfortunate ruler presented
-to Englishmen the unusual spectacle of withdrawing from his kingdom
-under an escort of Dutch troops. Doubtless he remembered the saying of
-his father, who proved the truth of the adage in his own person, that
-the distance is short between the prison and the grave of a king. The
-expectation of recovering his throne was a motive with James scarcely
-less powerful than that of taking precaution for his personal safety.
-This intention appears from the unsuccessful campaign in Ireland, which
-he had selected as a rallying point. That monarch’s real offence was his
-violation of the laws of England. Many of his predecessors, as well as
-some of his successors, were as unreasonable and as obstinate as he. The
-charge of abdication was scarcely a decent pretext for declaring the
-throne vacant, and Mr. Sumner appears to have forgotten for the moment
-that the Federal Government is one of limited while Parliament is
-clothed with absolute powers. In reality James was coerced by the Prince
-of Orange into “withdrawing” from the Kingdom. It is not intended here
-to call in question the accepted vindication of the Revolution of 1688,
-but merely to show that the Massachusetts statesman was at times not
-above supporting an argument by a legal or an historical fiction.
-
-The same resolution continues: “The treason which it [the attempt by
-force to terminate the supremacy of the Constitution] involves still
-further works an instant _forfeiture_ of all those functions and powers
-essential to the continued existence of the State as a body politic.”
-
-On the idea of State forfeiture his reasoning is entitled to more
-respect. He argues: “But again it is sometimes said that the States, by
-their flagrant treason, have _forfeited_ their rights as States, so as
-to be civilly dead. It is a patent and indisputable fact, that this
-gigantic treason was inaugurated with all the forms of law known to the
-State; that it was carried forward not only by individuals, but also by
-States, so far as States can perpetrate treason; that the States
-pretended to withdraw bodily in their corporate capacities;—that the
-Rebellion, as it showed itself, was _by_ States as well as _in_ States;
-that it was by the governments of States as well as by the people of
-States; and that, to the common observer, the crime was consummated by
-the several corporations as well as by the individuals of whom they were
-composed. From this fact, obvious to all, it is argued that, since,
-according to Blackstone, ‘a traitor hath abandoned his connection with
-society, and hath no longer any right to the advantages which before
-belonged to him purely as a member of the community,’ by the same
-principle the traitor State is no longer to be regarded as a member of
-the Union. But it is not necessary, on the present occasion, to insist
-on the application of any such principle to States.”
-
-Discarding as not essential to his defence the theories of State
-forfeiture, State abdication, or even State suicide, the article adds:
-“It is enough, that, for the time being, and _in the absence of a loyal
-government_, they can take no part and perform no function in the Union,
-_so that they cannot be recognized by the National Government_. The
-reason is plain. There are in these States no local functionaries bound
-by constitutional oaths, so that, in fact, there are no constitutional
-functionaries; and since the State government is necessarily composed of
-such functionaries, there can be no State government. Thus, for
-instance, in South Carolina, Pickens and his associates may call
-themselves the governor and legislature; and in Virginia, Letcher and
-his associates may call themselves governor and legislature; but we
-cannot recognize them as such. Therefore to all pretensions in behalf of
-State governments in the Rebel States I oppose the simple FACT, that for
-the time being no such governments exist. The broad spaces once occupied
-by those governments are now abandoned and vacated.”
-
-Discussing the question of transition to rightful government he says:
-“And here the question occurs, How shall this rightful jurisdiction be
-established in the vacated States? Some there are, so impassioned for
-State rights, and so anxious for forms even at the expense of substance,
-that they insist upon the instant restoration of the old State
-governments in all their parts, through the agency of loyal citizens,
-who meanwhile must be protected in this work of restoration. But
-assuming that all this is practicable, as it clearly is not, it
-attributes to the loyal citizens of a Rebel State, however few in
-numbers,—it may be an insignificant minority,—a power clearly
-inconsistent with the received principle of popular government, that the
-majority must rule, ... but the argument for State Rights assumes that
-all these rights may be lodged in voters as few in number as ever
-controlled a rotten borough of England.
-
-“Pray admitting that a minority may organize the new government, how
-shall it be done? and by whom shall it be set in motion?... It is not
-easy to see how the new government can be set in motion without a resort
-to some revolutionary proceeding, instituted either by the citizens or
-by the military power,—unless Congress, in the exercise of its plenary
-powers, should undertake to organize the new jurisdiction.
-
-“But every revolutionary proceeding is to be avoided. It will be within
-the recollection of all familiar with our history, that our fathers,
-while regulating the separation of the Colonies from the parent country,
-were careful that all should be done according to the forms of law, so
-that the thread of _legality_ should continue unbroken. To this end the
-Continental Congress interfered by a supervising direction. But the Tory
-argument in that day denied the power of Congress as earnestly as it
-denies this power now.”...
-
-“But, happily,” he says, “we are not constrained to any such
-revolutionary proceeding. The new governments can all be organized by
-Congress, which is the natural guardian of people without any immediate
-government, and within the jurisdiction of the Constitution of the
-United States. Indeed, with the State governments already _vacated_ by
-rebellion, the Constitution becomes, for the time, the supreme and only
-law, binding alike on President and Congress, so that neither can
-establish any law or institution incompatible with it. And the whole
-Rebel region, deprived of all local government, lapses under the
-exclusive jurisdiction of Congress, precisely as any other territory;
-or, in other words, the lifting of the local governments leaves the
-whole vast region without any other government than Congress, unless the
-President should undertake to govern it by military power.”...
-
-This part of the essay concludes with a declaration that its author had
-no pride of opinion, but would cheerfully abandon his views when
-convinced of their error. He next proceeds to an examination of the
-sources of Congressional power. These, he asserts, are derived from the
-necessity of the case, for Congress must have jurisdiction over every
-portion of the United States _where there is no other government_; and
-from the _Rights of War_, which he deemed not less abundant for Congress
-than for the President. “It is Congress,” he contended, “that conquers;
-and the same authority that conquers must govern.” A third source of
-authority, common alike to Congress and the President, was the
-constitutional provision imposing on the United States the duty of
-guarantying republican forms of government. These ample powers were
-confirmed by an additional grant in the clause concerning the admission
-of new States “into this Union.” The latter left it with Congress to
-prescribe the time and manner of the return of the rebel States,
-assuming that they were no longer _de facto_ States of the Union.
-
-Among the “unanswerable reasons for Congressional governments” the
-article says: “Slavery is so odious that it can exist only by virtue of
-positive law, plain and unequivocal; but no such words can be found in
-the Constitution. Therefore Slavery is impossible within the exclusive
-jurisdiction of the National Government.... I am glad to believe that it
-is implied, if not expressed, in the Chicago Platform; ... but if the
-rebel territory falls under the exclusive jurisdiction of the National
-Government, then Slavery will be impossible there.... The moment that
-the States fell, Slavery fell also; so that, even without any
-Proclamation of the President, Slavery had ceased to have a legal and
-constitutional existence in every rebel State.”[291]
-
-“Let it be established in advance,” declared Mr. Sumner, “as an
-inseparable incident to every Act of Secession, that it is not only
-impotent against the Constitution of the United States, but that, on its
-occurrence, both soil and inhabitants will lapse beneath the
-jurisdiction of Congress, and no State will ever again pretend to
-secede.”
-
-The argument of which an epitome has been given was regarded by the
-Postmaster-General, Montgomery Blair, as formidable enough to merit
-attention, and he accordingly replied in a speech at Rockville,
-Maryland, in which Sumner, for arraying himself directly against the
-President on a question of fundamental policy in the conduct of the war,
-was mentioned with sharp censure. This brought upon the Cabinet member,
-and upon Mr. Lincoln over his shoulders, much vehement criticism. It was
-in relation to this address that the President said:
-
- The controversy between the two sets of men represented by Blair and
- by Sumner is one of mere form and little else. I do not think Mr.
- Blair would agree that the States in rebellion are to be permitted
- to come at once into the political family and renew their
- performances, which have already so bedeviled us, and I do not think
- Mr. Sumner would insist that when the loyal people of a State obtain
- supremacy in their councils and are ready to assume the direction of
- their own affairs they should be excluded. I do not understand Mr.
- Blair to admit that Jefferson Davis may take his seat in Congress
- again as a representative of his people. I do not understand Mr.
- Sumner to assert that John Minor Botts may not. So far as I
- understand Mr. Sumner, he seems in favor of Congress taking from the
- Executive the power it at present exercises over insurrectionary
- districts and assuming it to itself; but when the vital question
- arises as to the right and privilege of the people of these States
- to govern themselves, I apprehend there will be little difference
- among loyal men. The question at once is presented, In whom is this
- power vested? and the practical matter for discussion is how to keep
- the rebellious population from overwhelming and outvoting the loyal
- minority.[292]
-
-Concisely expressed, the theory of State suicide based reconstruction
-upon the right of Congress to legislate for Federal territories and to
-admit new States into this Union. In one view it rested on a provision
-in the Constitution which makes it obligatory on the States to have
-republican governments. This side of the doctrine shaded into the
-conservative view, according to which it is the duty of the States to be
-represented in Congress; but Sumner, as will subsequently appear,
-maintained that the Confederate States should not be counted when
-numbers were to be estimated in the adoption of constitutional
-amendments; also that Congress had power to prescribe the qualifications
-of voters for conventions in those States. This view regarded the war as
-a conflict of ideas; it assumed to find authority in the individual
-conscience discerning the will of God, was inclined to disallow
-objective standards, and to consider all law as matter of subjective
-determination. From a careful perusal of his speeches Mr. Sumner appears
-to have insisted that a republican form of government could be such a
-one only as conformed to his subjective ideas. Except his own State,
-whose constitution of 1780 was held to have abolished slavery in that
-Commonwealth, no one of the States in 1789 possessed, according to his
-notions, a republican form of government. His touchstone of
-republicanism was the Declaration of Independence. In short, the
-requirements of the Constitution appear to have been found, not in the
-written instrument, but in his individual conceptions of political
-justice, equality and liberty whereby he constituted himself a new
-source of law. In the matter of a subjective standard of natural justice
-and the like, the “radicals” generally agreed with Sumner.[293]
-
-The position that the object of the war from the beginning, on the part
-of the Federal authorities, was to fulfill the guaranty of a republican
-form of government is untenable. It may well be doubted whether the
-community so guaranteed can be restricted to any particular government;
-indeed, it is difficult to see how a government not voluntarily
-instituted by the people of a State can be called republican. By having
-a government imposed by Congress they would resemble the people of a
-Territory, and the result would be an inequality among the States
-composing the Union.
-
-Though it has been commended as well written, there is some crude
-thinking and even cruder phraseology in the preamble as well as in the
-resolutions themselves. Mr. Sumner appears to have been much influenced
-by feudal and other historical analogies. It will be seen later how he
-recoiled somewhat from accepting fully the consequences of his own
-principles.[294] The famous theory of State suicide, as tersely stated
-by an able advocate of the doctrine, was in effect that “a Territory by
-coming into the Union becomes a State; a State by going out of the Union
-becomes a Territory.”[295]
-
-To offset the resolutions of Sumner, Hon. Garrett Davis, of Kentucky,
-introduced two days later a series of eight propositions. Of these the
-first asserts that the rights, privileges and liberties which the
-Constitution assures to the people of the United States “are fixed,
-permanent, and immutable through all the phases of peace and war, until
-changed by the power and in the mode prescribed by the Constitution
-itself.”
-
-In the light of subsequent events, however, the last is the most
-interesting of the series. This declares “That the United States
-Government should march their armies into all the insurgent States, and
-promptly put down the military power which they have arrayed against it,
-and give protection and security to the loyal men thereof, to enable
-them to reconstruct their legitimate State governments, and bring them
-and the people back to the Union and to obedience and duty under the
-Constitution and the laws of the United States, bearing the sword in one
-hand and the olive branch in the other, and whilst inflicting on the
-guilty leaders condign and exemplary punishment, granting amnesty and
-oblivion to the comparatively innocent masses; and if the people of any
-State cannot, or will not reconstruct their State government and return
-to loyalty and duty, Congress should provide a government for such State
-as a Territory of the United States, securing to the people thereof
-their appropriate constitutional rights.”[296]
-
-These propositions, like the resolutions of Sumner, were never taken up
-for discussion, and they are referred to as containing a clear
-expression, by a Southern Democrat,[297] of extra-constitutional powers
-in treating incorrigible States as Territories.
-
-Sumner was not alone in maintaining novel opinions concerning the
-relation of the seceded States to the Federal Government. A theory
-destined to exert even greater influence in shaping the plan of
-reconstruction finally adopted was announced at the very commencement of
-hostilities by Thaddeus Stevens, of Pennsylvania, then one of the
-foremost members of the Republican party and a few years later its
-acknowledged leader in the House. Unlike the Massachusetts Senator, Mr.
-Stevens never formulated his views of State status; but as he urged them
-on almost every conceivable occasion the essential principles of his
-system may be easily collected from his numerous speeches in Congress.
-Subjects of legislation only remotely related to his favorite topic
-appear to have been regarded by him as important chiefly because of the
-opportunity afforded to express his sentiments on the measures necessary
-to reorganization. These opinions, he declared, had been deliberately
-formed; we know that to the end they were persistently urged and ably
-defended. Because of their radical nature and the frequency with which
-they were reiterated Stevens was by many regarded as a sort of fanatic;
-this estimate was confirmed, no doubt, by his bodily deformity as well
-as by an apparent want of amiability and a certain bluntness of
-expression. Even by keen observers he was at first considered a man of
-mediocre ability. But, though not to be compared with the giant race of
-an earlier generation, he was a statesman far above the common-place.
-Among the multitude of plans and theories offered in Congress his system
-was distinguished for the harmony of its parts; and enemies who hated,
-no less than followers who feared, him were forced to admit the
-consistency of his principles.
-
-The limitations of Stevens in the field of constructive statesmanship
-cannot now be discussed; for their consideration belongs properly to an
-examination of the first reconstruction act, which was no more than a
-modification of his theory. Long before Sumner’s plan had agitated timid
-conservatives the Pennsylvanian leader by his extreme opinions had
-astonished Congress. When the question of discharging from labor or
-service those slaves employed in hostility to the United States came
-before the House at the special session beginning July 4, 1861, Stevens
-said:
-
- Mr. Speaker, I thought the time had come when the laws of war were
- to govern our action; when constitutions, if they stood in the way
- of the laws of war in dealing with the enemy, had no right to
- intervene. Who pleads the Constitution against our proposed action?
- Who says the Constitution must come in, in bar of our action? It is
- the advocates of rebels, of rebels who have sought to overthrow the
- Constitution and trample it in the dust—who repudiate the
- Constitution. Sir, these rebels, who have disregarded and set at
- defiance that instrument, are, by every rule of municipal and
- international law, estopped from pleading it against our action.
- Who, then, is it that comes to us and says, “You cannot do this
- thing, because your Constitution does not permit it?” The
- Constitution! Our Constitution, which you repudiate and trample
- under foot, forbids it! Sir, it is an absurdity. There must be a
- party in court to plead it, and that party, to be entitled to plead
- it in court, must first acknowledge its supremacy, or he has no
- business to be in court at all. I repeat, then, that those who bring
- in this plea here, in bar of our action, are the advocates of
- rebels. They are nothing else, whatever they intend. I mean it, of
- course, in a legal sense. I mean they are acting in the capacity of
- counsellors-at-law for the rebels; they are speaking for them, and
- not for us—who are the plaintiffs in this transaction. I deny that
- they have any right to plead at all. I deny that they have any
- standing in court. I deny that they have any right to invoke this
- Constitution, which they deny has authority over them, which they
- set at defiance and trample under foot. I deny that they can be
- permitted to come here and tell us we must be loyal to the
- Constitution.[298]
-
-The expectation almost universally cherished at this time was that when
-the insurrection should have been suppressed, as it was confidently
-believed it speedily would be, the erring States, without the
-interposition of Federal authority, would resume their normal relations
-to the General Government. With this state of public opinion in mind it
-will readily be perceived how great an interval separated Mr. Stevens
-from both parties in Congress. The opening sentence of the remarks
-quoted contains the essential idea of his theory of the change resulting
-from rebellion. Armed secession had unlocked the war powers, and the
-Constitution, where it conflicted with these powers, had ceased to be a
-restraint upon government. The military had risen superior to the civil
-authority. The principle was boldly and emphatically announced that
-those who repudiated and defied the supreme law could not at the same
-time plead its provisions.
-
-On January 8, 1863, the appropriation bill being under consideration, an
-amendment was offered to add to the clause “for compensation of
-thirty-three commissioners, at $3,000 each, and eleven clerks, at $1,200
-each, $112,200,” the following:
-
- _Provided_, A sufficient sum shall be collected in the
- insurrectionary States to pay said salaries: _And provided further_,
- That no greater sum shall at any time be paid to said commissioners,
- or to any of them, than shall have been collected from the taxes in
- the insurrectionary States, and paid into the Treasury of the United
- States.[299]
-
-The discussion which ensued brought out an expression of views relative
-to the position of the seceded States under the Federal Government.
-Stevens in the course of his remarks said: “I did say, sir, that I find
-no warrant in the Constitution for the admission, under the
-Constitution, of West Virginia. I do not know whether the gentleman from
-Kentucky voted for that bill or not.” Mr. Dunlap, the member referred
-to, stated that he had voted against the bill, because he deemed it
-unconstitutional. After this explanation the Pennsylvania leader
-proceeded as follows:
-
- Then the gentleman voted against it upon the same opinion I
- expressed, that it was unconstitutional. But I went further and
- voted for it because I did not believe that the Constitution
- embraced a State now in arms against the Government of this Union
- and I hold that doctrine now. It was not said upon the spur of the
- occasion. It is a deliberate opinion, formed upon a careful
- examination of the law of the United States and the laws of nations.
-
- Though it may be out of place just now, I will give one or two
- reasons for my opinion. The establishment of our blockade admitted
- the Southern States, the Confederates, to be a belligerent power.
- Foreign nations have all admitted them as a belligerent power.
- Whenever that came to be admitted by us and by foreign nations, it
- placed the rebellious States precisely in the condition of an alien
- enemy with regard to duties and obligations. Now, I think there is
- nothing more plainly written in the law of nations than that
- whenever a war, which is admitted to be a national war, springs up
- between nation and nation, ally and ally, confederate and
- confederate, every obligation which previously existed between them,
- whether treaty, compact, contract, or anything else, is wholly
- abrogated, and from that moment the belligerents act toward each
- other, not according to any municipal obligations, not according to
- any compacts or treaties, but simply according to the laws of war.
- And I hold and maintain that with regard to all the Southern States
- in rebellion. I do not speak of Kentucky, but of those States which
- have gone out under an act of legislation or convention—the
- Constitution has no binding influence and no application.
-
-In answer to a question by Representative Dunlap he stated further that
-the seceded States, in his opinion, were not members of the Union. “The
-ordinances of secession,” he added, “backed by the armed power which
-made them a belligerent nation, did take them, so far as present
-operations are concerned, from under the laws of the nation.” When asked
-how, as Chairman of the Committee of Ways and Means, he proposed to pass
-an appropriation to pay officers to collect revenue in States which did
-not belong to the Union, he said:
-
- I propose to levy that tax, and collect it as a war measure. I would
- levy a tax wherever I can upon these conquered provinces, just as
- all nations levy them upon provinces and nations they conquer. If my
- views and principles are right, I would not only collect that tax,
- but I would, as a necessary war measure, take every particle of
- property, real and personal, life estate and reversion, of every
- disloyal man, and sell it for the benefit of the nation in carrying
- on this war. We have such power and we are to treat them simply as
- provinces to be conquered, and as a nation fighting in hostility to
- us until we do conquer them. To me it is a great absurdity to say
- that men, by millions, in arms, shall claim the protection of the
- provisions of the Constitution and laws made for loyal men, while
- they do not obey one of those laws, but repudiate their binding
- effect. There never was a principle more clear than that every
- obligation, whether in a national or civil point of view, in order
- to be binding, must be reciprocal; and that the moment the duty
- ceases upon the one part, the obligation ceases upon the other; and
- that, in my judgment, is precisely the condition of the rebel States
- now.
-
-The secession ordinance of South Carolina he characterized in response
-to an inquiry as an act of treason and rebellion, and when asked whether
-the backing up of these ordinances by armed force imparted to them any
-validity, he replied: “I hold that so long as they remain in force
-against us as a belligerent power, and until they are conquered, it is
-in fact an existing operation. I will not say anything about its
-legality. [Laughter.] I hold that it is an existing _fact_, and that so
-far from enforcing any laws, you have not the power.”
-
-To Mr. Yeaman, who asked whether those people were then citizens of the
-United States, or whether they formed an independent nation, and if the
-latter whence was derived the right or the authority to wage war against
-them, and to tax them for the support of that war, Stevens answered: “I
-hold that the Constitution, in the first place, so far operated that
-when they went into secession and armed rebellion they committed
-treason; and that when they so combined themselves as to make themselves
-admitted as belligerents—not merely as men in insurrection, but as
-belligerents—they did acquire the right to be treated as prisoners of
-war, and all the other rights which pertain to belligerents under the
-laws of nations.”
-
-Some members held in utter abhorrence the principles of the Pennsylvania
-leader; others were astonished at their boldness. It was in the course
-of this discussion, participated in by many Representatives, that
-Stevens defined his existing as well as his past relations to his party,
-and referred, not without a touch of pride, to the fact that hitherto he
-had pointed out the way for the Republican majority—in short, that he
-had been the political prophet of his party. He declared:
-
- I know perfectly well, as I said before, I do not speak the
- sentiments of this side of the House as a party. I know more than
- that: that for the last fifteen years I have always been a step
- ahead of the party I have acted with in these matters; but I have
- never been so far ahead with the exception of the principles I now
- enunciate, but that the members of the party have overtaken me and
- gone ahead; and they, together with the gentleman from New York,
- [Mr. Olin] will again overtake me and go with me, before this
- infamous and bloody rebellion is ended. They will find that they
- cannot execute the Constitution in the seceding States; that it is a
- total nullity there; and that this war must be carried on upon
- principles wholly independent of it. They will come to the
- conclusion that the adoption of the measures I advocated at the
- outset of the war, the arming of the negroes, the slaves of the
- rebels, is the only way left on earth in which these rebels can be
- exterminated. They will find that they must treat those States now
- outside of the Union as conquered provinces and settle them with new
- men, and drive the present rebels as exiles from this country; for I
- tell you they have the pluck and endurance for which I gave them
- credit a year and a half ago in a speech which I made, but which was
- not relished on this side of the House, nor by the people in the
- free States. They have such determination, energy, and endurance,
- that nothing but actual extermination or exile or starvation will
- ever induce them to surrender to this Government. I do not ask
- gentlemen to indorse my views, nor do I speak for anybody but
- myself; but in order that I may have some credit for sagacity, I ask
- that gentlemen will write this down in their memories. It will not
- be two years before they will call it up, or before they will adopt
- my views, or adopt the other alternative of a disgraceful submission
- by this side of the country.[300]
-
-For himself, for the Administration and for the Republican party even so
-radical an anti-slavery man as Owen Lovejoy made haste to repudiate
-these extreme opinions.
-
-In debate, January 22, 1864, Stevens enunciated still more clearly the
-fundamental principles of his system. “I mean to say,” he declared on
-that occasion, “that if a State, as a State, makes war upon the
-Government and becomes a belligerent power, we treat it as a foreign
-nation, and when we conquer it we treat it just as we do any other
-foreign nation.” “There can be no neutrals,” he added, “in a hostile
-State.” If loyal people domiciled in the South desired to avoid
-punishment or the hardships of public enemies, they should change their
-place of residence.
-
-Relative to discerning the State in the Union minority he observed: “If
-ten men fit to save Sodom can elect a Governor and other State officers
-for and against the eleven hundred thousand Sodomites in Virginia, then
-the democratic doctrine that the majority shall rule is discarded and
-dangerously ignored. When the doctrine that the _quality_ and not the
-_number_ of voters is to decide the right to govern, then we are no
-longer a republic, but the worst form of despotism.” It was a mere
-mockery, he affirmed, to say that a tithe of the residents, because they
-were holier or more loyal than others, could change the form and
-administer the government of an organized State. The people who took a
-State out of the Union were subject to the laws of the commonwealth,
-and, so far as the General Government is concerned, subject to the laws
-of war and of nations, both while the war continued and when it
-ended.[301]
-
-Northern Democrats, from the beginning to the end of reconstruction,
-were consistent advocates of a doctrine which involved no contradictions
-like the system of Sumner and no element of vindictiveness like the
-“conquered province” theory of Stevens. Ordinances of secession they
-held to be null and void; these measures in no way impaired the vitality
-or contracted the scope of the Constitution because the power by which
-they were temporarily maintained, however near to attaining its object,
-had not been crowned with success. The result of the conflict could
-alone determine whether the bond of union between the seceding and the
-loyal States had been severed. Armed resistance to the supreme law was
-treason in those so engaged, even though such resistance was decreed by
-States. _Ante bellum_ relations would continue unimpaired if the General
-Government succeeded in suppressing the rebellion. This doctrine, once a
-State in the Union always a State, was, so far, in harmony with the
-policy adopted by the Administration at the commencement of hostilities.
-
-With all the following propositions, however, the policy of the
-Government was not in entire accord, nor, indeed, was it in exact
-conformity with the principles above ascribed to the President. The
-people of a State, the Democratic leaders asserted, are the State, in
-the widest sense of that term, and they make its fundamental law; to be
-their constitution it must be their unrestrained and voluntary act, not
-a result of coercion or intimidation. When they have freely acted, then
-the only essential conditions of a State constitution, in its Federal
-relations, are that it should be republican in form and not conflict
-with the Constitution of the United States. South Carolina, for example,
-was made a member of the Union by the Constitution and the consent of
-her people; except successful revolution no other power could unmake
-her. That revolution being unsuccessful she was still in the Union. The
-idea that a State was partly out of and partly in the Union, Democratic
-doctrine regarded as an absurdity. State officers, indeed, could commit
-suicide; a majority of its people could commit suicide; but the State
-did not, therefore, cease to exist, for the idea of a State involved the
-fourfold notion of a defined territory, people occupying it, functions
-constituting a system of government and officers to administer it.
-
-Representative Joseph K. Edgerton, of Indiana, in an able speech
-delivered February 20, 1865, said that he accepted the principle of
-President Lincoln’s inaugural and only regretted that after so clear and
-sound a statement of constitutional law and good intentions the
-President had subsequently come to the same conclusion as Mr. Stevens.
-The theory then announced was the only one consistent with the true
-constitutional idea that the Federal Union is a perpetual union of
-States, and that each State, as an individual member of the Union, has
-in itself the same element of perpetuity that belongs to the aggregate
-Republic formed by the Federal union of States. The Union can be held to
-be perpetual only on the principle that the States composing it are
-perpetual corporations or bodies politic, and indestructible by any act
-of the aggregate body or by their own act. The States united cannot
-destroy a single commonwealth; power to do that is power to consolidate
-the States into one. A single member cannot destroy the Union; power to
-do that is power to secede, and neither consolidation nor secession is a
-principle of the Union. Here we have in amplified form the celebrated
-declaration of Chief Justice Chase, that the Constitution in all its
-provisions contemplates “an indestructible union of indestructible
-States.”[302] For a different though a very able presentation of
-Democratic theory the reader is referred to the address of Mr. Pendleton
-on the bill to guarantee republican forms of government to the
-rebellious States.[303]
-
-Though this theory of a perpetual Union was the one almost universally
-held at the beginning of the war, it came during the progress of the
-conflict to be little regarded by the dominant party in Congress; by
-Republican leaders it was soon cast aside with indignation or contempt;
-it remained unaltered when their views of State status were adapted to
-changed conditions, and the Democratic organization, so far at least as
-reconstruction was concerned, settled down into little more than a party
-of protest.
-
-The silence in which Sumner’s propositions were received may be regarded
-as a negative testimony to the conservative sentiments of Senators even
-after war had existed for nearly a year; the House, however, just twelve
-months before the Massachusetts Senator offered his plan, February 11,
-1861, made a positive declaration of its opinion relative to the
-limitations of Federal authority by passing unanimously the following
-resolution: “That neither Congress, nor the people or the governments of
-the non-slaveholding States, have the right to legislate upon or
-interfere with slavery in any of the slaveholding States in the
-Union.”[304] This deliberate expression establishes beyond question the
-fact that the Constitution, as then understood, gave no authority to the
-Federal Government to interfere with, control or regulate relations
-between master and slave in any State which recognized the right of
-property in man. On this subject the people were practically unanimous,
-their Representatives entirely so. Even three months of war, with all
-the antagonisms and all the bitterness excited, failed to shake this
-conviction.
-
-On July 22, 1861, the day after the disaster at Bull Run, Representative
-Crittenden, of Kentucky, introduced the following resolution:
-
- That the present deplorable civil war has been forced upon the
- country by the disunionists of the Southern States, now in arms
- against the constitutional Government, and in arms around the
- capital; that in this national emergency, Congress, banishing all
- feelings of mere passion or resentment, will recollect only its duty
- to the whole country; that this war is not waged on their part in
- any spirit of oppression, or for any purpose of conquest or
- subjugation, or purpose of overthrowing or interfering with the
- rights or established institutions of those States, but to defend
- and maintain the _supremacy_ of the Constitution, and to preserve
- the Union with all the dignity, equality, and rights of the several
- States unimpaired; and that as soon as these objects are
- accomplished the war ought to cease.
-
-Only two votes were recorded against it.[305] Four days later Andrew
-Johnson offered in the upper House a resolution in nearly the same
-language, and it was opposed by only five Senators. There is little
-doubt that this practical unanimity in Congress reflected the sentiment
-of almost the entire North. This conspicuous landmark, so frequently
-referred to before the reunion was completed, will be useful to show how
-far the warring factions drifted during the progress of the conflict.
-
-Senator Trumbull, of Illinois, who disliked certain expressions in the
-form in which it was proposed, said, relative to the object of the war
-as declared by the resolution:
-
- I trust this war is prosecuted for the purpose of subjugating all
- rebels and traitors who are in arms against the Government. What do
- you mean by “subjugation”? I know that persons in the Southern
- States have sought to make this a controversy between States and the
- Federal Government, and have talked about coercing States and
- subjugating States; but, sir, it has never been proposed, so far as
- I know, on the part of the Union people of the United States, to
- subjugate States or coerce States. It is proposed, however, to
- subjugate citizens who are standing out in defiance of the laws of
- the Union, and to coerce them into obedience to the laws of the
- Union. I dislike that word in this connection. In its broadest sense
- I am opposed to it. If it means the war is not for the purpose of
- the subjugation of traitors and rebels into obedience to the laws,
- then I am opposed to it. I trust the war is prosecuted for that very
- purpose. I move to strike out the words “and in arms around the
- capital,” and also the words “or subjugation.”[306]
-
-Mr. Harris, of New York, said: “If slavery shall be abolished, shall be
-overthrown as a consequence of this war, I shall not shed a tear over
-that result; but, sir, it is not the purpose of the Government to
-prosecute this war for the purpose of overthrowing slavery. If it comes
-as a consequence, let it come; but it is not an end of the war.”[307]
-
-In the succeeding chapter will be traced with some degree of fullness
-the sentiments on reconstruction, in July, 1864, not only of the
-majority but of every important element composing Congress. The position
-then attained by the average Republican member, it must be repeated, was
-not reached at a single bound. Its progress has been described in the
-preceding pages. The vote on the Crittenden resolution marks the
-starting point. There was then, though war had existed for three months,
-no diversity of opinion worthy of notice. The successive advances from
-the declaration, February 11, 1861, that neither Congress nor the
-governments of the free States had a constitutional right to interfere
-with slavery in any slaveholding State of the Union to the passage by
-both Houses, July 2, 1864, of the Wade-Davis bill, which proposed by
-Federal law to regulate the franchise in the rebellious States, to
-appoint provisional governors (empowered to dissolve State conventions),
-and to prescribe provisions for their local constitutions, form one of
-the most instructive commentaries on the importance of necessity as a
-principle of constitutional interpretation.
-
-A resolution introduced December 4, 1861, by Mr. Holman, of Indiana, for
-the purpose of getting the House to re-affirm the Crittenden
-propositions of July 22 preceding, was tabled by a vote of 71 to
-65.[308]
-
-A discussion of the various theories of reconstruction might seem to
-require in this place, by way of anticipation, at least a summary of the
-Congressional plan; but as this was the mode of reorganization which was
-finally imposed on the South it is preferred to present its development
-chronologically and to consider it apart. Several of the remaining
-chapters will be devoted to an account of its successive modifications
-until the subject was taken, in December, 1865, altogether out of
-Executive hands.
-
------
-
-Footnote 282:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 106.
-
-Footnote 283:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 129.
-
-Footnote 284:
-
- Ibid., p. 125.
-
-Footnote 285:
-
- See p. 73, _ante_.
-
-Footnote 286:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 322–323.
-
-Footnote 287:
-
- Memoir of Charles Sumner by E. L. Pierce, Vol. IV. pp. 74–75.
-
-Footnote 288:
-
- General Richard Taylor in Destruction and Reconstruction, p. 245.
-
-Footnote 289:
-
- Blaine, Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. II. p. 114.
-
-Footnote 290:
-
- Memoir of Sumner by E. L. Pierce, Vol. IV. p. 143.
-
-Footnote 291:
-
- Mr. Sumner, notwithstanding this view, proposed to enact the
- Emancipation Proclamation into a law. See pp. 272–273 _infra_.
-
-Footnote 292:
-
- N. and H., Vol. IX. pp. 335–336.
-
-Footnote 293:
-
- In his Theory of our National Existence (_passim_) and in the American
- Law Review for January, 1865, Mr. John C. Hurd has much keen criticism
- of the reconstruction theories of Sumner and others.
-
-Footnote 294:
-
- Colloquy with Senator Doolittle, December 19, 1866, Cong. Globe, p.
- 192.
-
-Footnote 295:
-
- Brownson’s American Republic, p. 308.
-
-Footnote 296:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 323.
-
-Footnote 297:
-
- Mr. Davis is sometimes classed as a Unionist.
-
-Footnote 298:
-
- Globe, 1 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 414.
-
-Footnote 299:
-
- Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 238.
-
-Footnote 300:
-
- Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 239–243.
-
-Footnote 301:
-
- Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 317.
-
-Footnote 302:
-
- Texas vs. White, 7 Wall., p. 725.
-
-Footnote 303:
-
- See Chapter VII., pp. 257–261, _infra_.
-
-Footnote 304:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 36th Cong., p. 857.
-
-Footnote 305:
-
- Globe, 1 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 222–223.
-
-Footnote 306:
-
- Ibid., p. 258.
-
-Footnote 307:
-
- Globe, 1 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 259.
-
-Footnote 308:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1862, p. 277.
-
-
-
-
- VII
- RISE OF THE CONGRESSIONAL PLAN
-
-
-A previous chapter, in relating the military events which succeeded the
-disaster at Chickamauga, noticed a suggestion of the defeated Federal
-commander as well as Mr. Lincoln’s reply relative to the publication at
-that time of a declaration of amnesty to those in arms against the
-Government.[309] The double victory of Mission Ridge and Lookout
-Mountain, following the removal of Rosecrans, confirmed the President in
-his purpose of offering a general pardon to those who would lay down
-their arms and return to their obedience to the laws. The Proclamation
-of December 8, 1863, followed promptly and brought the subject of
-reconstruction before the Thirty-eighth Congress at its first session.
-The preceding pages have alluded to the universal favor with which that
-announcement was received. Though opposition to Executive measures was
-hushed for the time, it appears only to have gathered strength in this
-brief interval of silence. One short week introduced into the House of
-Representatives a resolution the subsequent progress of which brought
-the dominant party in Congress to the support of a measure hostile to
-that submitted by the President. Its interesting history may be
-collected from the pages of the _Congressional Globe_.
-
-On December 15, from the Committee of Ways and Means, Thaddeus Stevens
-reported among other resolutions one to refer so much of the President’s
-message as was contained in the Proclamation, and as related to the
-condition and treatment of rebellious States, to a special committee of
-nine to be appointed by the Speaker. Henry Winter Davis inquired whether
-Mr. Stevens would accept for that resolution an amendment pointing more
-directly to the purpose in view. This substitute read as follows:
-
- That so much of the President’s message as relates to the duty of
- the United States to guarantee a republican form of government to
- the States in which the governments recognized by the United States
- have been abrogated or overthrown, be referred to a select committee
- of nine, to be named by the Speaker, which shall report the bills
- necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing
- guaranty.[310]
-
-Stevens offering no objection, Representative Davis remarked that the
-language of the resolution was general, and, he believed, would cover
-the whole war; the committee, he supposed, intended to point to what, in
-the very inaccurate phraseology of the day, was known as the question of
-reconstruction; but believing there had been no destruction, he
-carefully avoided the use of that term.
-
-The Government of the United States, continued Mr. Davis, was engaged in
-two operations: the suppression of armed resistance to the supreme
-authority of the nation and a very delicate, and perhaps as high a
-duty—to see, when armed resistance should be overcome, that governments
-republican in form should be restored in all those States. His
-substitute directed the investigations of the committee to that one
-point. It was not intended as a peremptory instruction to the committee
-to report any particular measure, but to take such action as their
-wisdom should recommend.
-
-Democratic feeling on this subject appears in an inquiry by
-Representative Brooks, of New York, as to whether republican governments
-had not been abrogated and overturned north as well as south of the
-Potomac since the revolution began.[311]
-
-The amendment of Mr. Davis prevailed, and of the special committee
-appointed he was made chairman. On January 18, 1864, he asked unanimous
-consent to report a bill to guarantee certain States a republican form
-of government. Objection having been made, he moved a suspension of the
-rules; but failing to receive the necessary two thirds vote his motion
-was lost. On February 15 succeeding, when he brought the measure before
-the House again and requested a postponement of its consideration for
-two weeks, it encountered Democratic opposition. The bill was then read
-a first and second time, ordered to be printed, and returned to the
-committee.
-
-On March 22 the bill came before the House on the question of ordering
-it to be engrossed and read a third time. In its support Mr. Davis made
-an able address in which he analyzed the plan proposed by the Executive
-and emphasized its deficiencies. He said:
-
- The bill which I am directed by the Committee on the Rebellious
- States to report is one which provides for the restoration of civil
- government in States whose governments have been overthrown. It
- prescribes such conditions as will secure not merely civil
- government to the people of the rebellious States, but will also
- secure to the people of the United States permanent peace after the
- suppression of the rebellion.
-
- The bill challenges the support of all who consider slavery the
- cause of the rebellion, and that in it the embers of rebellion will
- always smoulder; of those who think that freedom and permanent peace
- are inseparable, and who are determined, so far as their
- constitutional authority will allow them, to secure these fruits by
- adequate legislation.
-
- ... It is entitled to the support of all gentlemen upon this side of
- the House, whatever their views may be of the nature of the
- rebellion; and the relation in which it has placed the people and
- States in rebellion toward the United States, not less of those who
- think that the rebellion has placed the citizens of the rebel States
- beyond the protection of the Constitution, and that Congress,
- therefore, has supreme power over them as conquered enemies, than of
- that other class who think that they have not ceased to be citizens
- and States of the United States, though incapable of exercising
- political privileges under the Constitution, but that Congress is
- charged with a high political power by the Constitution to guarantee
- republican governments in the States, and that this is the proper
- time and the proper mode of exercising it. It is also entitled to
- the favorable consideration of gentlemen upon the other side of the
- House, who honestly and deliberately express their judgment that
- slavery is dead. To them it puts the question whether it is not
- advisable to bury it out of our sight, that its ghost may no longer
- stalk abroad to frighten us from our propriety.
-
- It does not address itself to that class of gentlemen upon the other
- side of the House, if there be any, nor to that class of the people
- of the country who look for political alliance to the men who head
- the rebellion in the South....
-
- It purports, sir, not to exercise a revolutionary authority, but to
- be an execution of the Constitution of the United States, of the
- fourth section of the fourth article of that Constitution, which not
- merely confers the power upon Congress, but imposes upon Congress
- the duty of guaranteeing to every State in this Union a republican
- form of government. That clause vests in the Congress of the United
- States a plenary, supreme, unlimited political jurisdiction,
- paramount over courts, subject only to the judgment of the people of
- the United States, embracing within its scope every legislative
- measure necessary and proper to make it effectual; and what is
- necessary and proper the Constitution refers, in the first place, to
- our judgment, subject to no revision but that of the people. It
- recognizes no other tribunal. It recognizes the judgment of no
- court. It refers to no authority except the judgment and will of the
- majority of Congress, and of the people on that judgment, if any
- appeal from it.
-
- [Secession he described as] the act of the people of the States,
- carrying with it all the consequences of such an act. And therefore
- it must be either a legal revolution which makes them independent,
- and makes of the United States a foreign country, or it is a
- usurpation against the authority of the United States, the erection
- of governments which do not recognize the Constitution of the United
- States, which the Constitution does not recognize, and, therefore,
- not republican governments of the States in rebellion. The latter is
- the view which all parties take of it. I do not understand that any
- gentleman on the other side of the House says that any rebel
- government which does not recognize the Constitution of the United
- States, and which is not recognized by Congress, is a State
- government within the meaning of the Constitution. Still less can it
- be said that there is a State government, republican or
- un-republican, in the State of Tennessee, where there is no
- government of any kind, no civil authority, no organized form of
- administration except that represented by the flag of the United
- States, obeying the will, and under the orders of the military
- officer in command. It is the language of the President of the
- United States in every proclamation, of Congress in every law on the
- statute-book, of both Houses in their forms of proceeding, and of
- the Courts of the United States in their administration of the law.
- It is the result of every principle of law, of every suggestion of
- political philosophy, that there can be no republican government
- within the limits of the United States that does not recognize, but
- does repudiate, the Constitution, and which the President and the
- Congress of the United States do not, on their part, recognize.
- Those that are here represented are the only governments existing
- within the limits of the United States. Those that are not here
- represented are not governments of the States, republican under the
- Constitution. And if they be not, then they are military
- usurpations, inaugurated as the permanent governments of the States,
- contrary to the supreme law of the land, arrayed in arms against the
- Government of the United States; and it is the duty, the first and
- highest duty, of the Government to suppress and expel them. Congress
- must either expel, or recognize and support them. If it do not
- guarantee them, it is bound to expel them; and they who are not
- ready to suppress them are bound to recognize them.
-
-“In the famous Rhode Island cases,” he continued, the Supreme Court of
-the United States by the mouth of Chief Justice Taney, declared “that a
-military government, established as the permanent government of a State,
-is not a republican government in the meaning of the Constitution, and
-that it is the duty of Congress to suppress it. That duty Congress is
-now executing by its armies. He [Justice Taney] further said in that
-case that it is the exclusive prerogative of Congress—of Congress, and
-not of the President—to determine what is and what is not the
-established government of the State; and, to come to that conclusion, it
-must judge of what is and what is not a republican government, and its
-judgment is conclusive on the Supreme Court, which cannot judge of the
-fact for itself, but accepts the fact declared by the political
-department of the Government.”
-
-Mr. Davis resumed:
-
- We are now engaged in suppressing a military usurpation of the
- authority of the State government. When that shall have been
- accomplished, there will be no form of State authority in existence
- which Congress can recognize. Our success will be the overthrow of
- all semblance of government in the rebel States. The Government of
- the United States is then, in fact, the _only_ Government existing
- in those States, and it is there charged to guarantee them
- republican governments.
-
- ... The duty of guaranteeing carries with it the right to pass all
- laws necessary and proper to guaranty.... It places in the hands of
- Congress the right to say what is and what is not, with all the
- light of experience and all the lessons of the past, inconsistent,
- in its judgment, with the permanent continuance of republican
- government; and if, in its judgment, any form of policy is radically
- and inherently inconsistent with the permanent and enduring peace of
- the country, with the permanent supremacy of republican government,
- and it have the manliness to say so, there is no power, judicial or
- executive, in the United States, that can even question this
- judgment but the =People=; and they can do it only by sending other
- representatives here to undo our work. The very language of the
- Constitution and the necessary logic of the case involve that
- consequence. The denial of the right of secession means that all the
- territory of the United States shall remain under the jurisdiction
- of the Constitution. If there can be no State government which does
- not recognize the Constitution, and which the authorities of the
- United States do not recognize, then there are these alternatives,
- and these only: the rebel States must be governed by Congress till
- they submit and form a State government under the Constitution; or
- Congress must recognize State governments which do not recognize
- either Congress or the Constitution of the United States; or there
- must be an entire absence of _all_ government in the rebel States;
- and that is anarchy. To recognize a government which does not
- recognize the Constitution is absurd, for a government is not a
- constitution; and the recognition of a State government means the
- acknowledgment of men as governors, and legislators, and judges,
- actually invested with power to make laws, to judge of crimes, to
- convict the citizens of other States, to demand the surrender of
- fugitives from justice, to arm and command the militia, to require
- the United States to repress all opposition to its authority, and to
- protect it from invasion—against our own armies; whose Senators and
- Representatives are _entitled_ to seats in Congress, and whose
- electoral votes must be counted in the election of the President of
- a Government which they disown and defy!! To accept the alternative
- of anarchy as the constitutional condition of a State is to assert
- the failure of the Constitution and the end of republican
- government. Until, therefore, Congress recognize a State government,
- organized under its auspices, there is no government in the rebel
- States except the authority of Congress. In the absence of all State
- government, the duty is imposed on Congress ... to administer civil
- government until the people shall, under its guidance, submit to the
- Constitution of the United States, and, under the laws which it
- shall impose, and on the conditions Congress may require, reorganize
- a republican government for themselves, and Congress shall recognize
- that government.
-
- ... Is it yet time to reorganize the State governments? or is there
- not an intermediate period in which sound legislative wisdom
- requires that the authority of Congress shall take possession of and
- temporarily control the States now in rebellion until peace shall be
- restored and republican government can be established deliberately,
- undisturbed by the sound or fear of arms, and under the guidance of
- law?
-
-After referring to the condition of the rebellion, Mr. Davis declared:
-“We have occupied a vast area wrested from its power, but to this day we
-have not expelled the rebels from _any State_ they ever held.” In no
-portion of those States could military power “be withdrawn for a moment
-without instant insurrection”; and he added, “There is no rebel State
-held now by the United States enough of whose population adheres to the
-Union to be intrusted with the government of the State. One tenth cannot
-control nine tenths. Five tenths are nowhere willing to undertake the
-control of the other five tenths.” In West Virginia, he said, such a
-condition existed and had been recognized. “In no other State—the only
-one in respect to which a doubt can exist is Tennessee—in no other State
-is there such a portion of territory held, or any such portion of
-population under our control, or any such portion of it which is in our
-control inspired by such sentiments toward the Government of the United
-States, so free from fear of the returning wave of rebel invasion, so
-assured of the continued supremacy of the United States, that we ought
-to be willing to trust them with this power. You can get a handful of
-men in the several States who would be glad to take the offices if
-protected by the troops of the United States, but you have nowhere a
-body of independent, loyal partisans of the United States, ready to meet
-the rebels in arms, ready to die for the Republic, who claim the
-Constitution as their birthright, count all other privileges light in
-comparison, and resolve at every hazard to maintain it.”
-
-Concerning the loyal masses of the South, of whom so much was heard at
-the beginning of the war, he remarked:
-
- It is the most astounding spectacle in history that in the Southern
- States, with more than half of the population opposed to it, a great
- revolution was effected against their wishes and against their
- votes, without a battle, a riot, or a protest in behalf of the
- beneficent Government of their fathers—a revolution whose opponents
- hastened to lead it, without a martyr to the cause they deserted
- except the nameless heroes of the mountains of Tennessee, or a
- confessor of the faith they had avowed save the illustrious Petigru
- of South Carolina!
-
- ... There is no fact that any one has stated on authority at all
- reliable that any respectable proportion of the people of the
- Southern States now in rebellion are willing to accept any terms
- that even our opponents on the other side of the House are willing
- to offer them.
-
- * * * * *
-
- What, then, are we to do with the population in these States? To
- make “confusion worse confounded” by erecting by the side of the
- hostile State government a new State government on the shifting
- sands of that whirlpool, to be supported by us while we are there
- and to turn its power against us when we are driven out? That would
- be to erect a new throne where
-
- “Chaos umpire sits,
- And by decision more embroils the fray
- By which he reigns.”
-
- In my judgment, it is not safe to confide the vast authority of
- State governments to the doubtful loyalty of the rebel States until
- armed rebellion shall have been trampled into the dust, until every
- armed rebel shall have vanished from the State, until there shall be
- in the South no hope of independence and no fear of subjection,
- until the United States is bearded by no military power and the laws
- can be executed by courts and sheriffs without the ever-present
- menace of military authority. Until we have reached that point, this
- bill proposes that the President shall appoint a civil governor to
- administer the government under the laws of the United States in
- force in the States respectively at the outbreak of the rebellion,
- subject, of course, to the necessities of military occupation.
-
-When military opposition shall have been suppressed, continued Mr.
-Davis, then call upon the people to reorganize their governments in
-their own way, “subject to the conditions that we think essential to our
-permanent peace, and to prevent the revival hereafter of the
-rebellion....”
-
-To establish republican forms of government that the people of the
-United States would agree to, three modes were indicated: “One is to
-remove the cause of the war by an alteration of the Constitution of the
-United States prohibiting slavery everywhere within its limits. That,
-sir, goes to the root of the matter, and should consecrate the nation’s
-triumph. But there are thirty-four States—three fourths of them would be
-twenty-six. I believe there are twenty-five States represented in this
-Congress, so that we, on that basis, cannot change the Constitution. It
-is, therefore, a condition precedent in that view of the case, that more
-States shall have governments organized within them.”
-
-He next noticed the calculation based on three fourths of the States
-then represented in Congress, a construction held by Thaddeus Stevens,
-but even that view was not without its difficulties. The States of New
-Jersey, Kentucky, Maryland and Delaware were named as doubtful. If such
-an amendment were adopted it still left “the whole field of the civil
-administration of the States prior to the recognition of State
-governments, all laws necessary to the ascertainment of the will of the
-people, and all restrictions on the return to power of the leaders of
-the rebellion, wholly unprovided for.” The constitutional amendment met
-his hearty approval, but it was not a complete remedy.
-
-Relative to the Administration policy, he observed:
-
- The next plan is that inaugurated by the President of the United
- States in the proclamation of the 8th of December, called the
- amnesty proclamation. That proposes no guardianship of the United
- States over the reorganization of the governments, no law to
- prescribe who shall vote, no civil functionaries to see that the law
- is faithfully executed, no supervising authority to control and
- judge of the election. But if, in any manner, by the toleration of
- martial law, lately proclaimed the fundamental law, under the
- dictation of any military authority, or under the prescriptions of a
- provost marshal, something in the form of a government shall be
- presented, represented to rest on the votes of one tenth of the
- population, the President will recognize that, provided it does not
- _contravene_ the proclamation of freedom and the laws of Congress;
- and, to secure that, an oath is exacted.
-
- Now you will observe that there is no guarantee of law to watch over
- the organization of that government. It may combine all the
- population of a State; it may combine one tenth only; or ten
- governments may come competing for recognition at the door of the
- Executive mansion. The executive authority is pledged; Congress is
- not pledged. It may be recognized by the military power and may not
- be recognized by the civil power, so that it would have a doubtful
- existence, half civil and half military, neither a temporary
- government by law of Congress nor a State government, something as
- unknown to the Constitution as the rebel government that refuses to
- recognize it.
-
-In examining the operation of the Executive proclamation on the
-existence of slavery, Mr. Davis asked, how does it accomplish the
-reorganization of the government on the basis of universal freedom? and
-added:
-
- The only prescription is that the government shall not _contravene_
- the provisions of that proclamation. Sir, if that proclamation be
- valid, then we are relieved from all trouble on that score; but if
- that proclamation be not valid, then the oath to support it is
- without legal sanction, for the President can ask no man to bind
- himself by an oath to support an unfounded proclamation or an
- unconstitutional law even for a moment, still less till it shall
- have been declared void by the Supreme Court of the United
- States.... If, therefore, he shall have taken the oath, he can, in
- good conscience as well as in good law, disregard it the next
- moment; so that, in point of fact, the law leaves us where the
- proclamation does; it adds nothing to its legality, nothing to its
- force.
-
- But what is the proclamation which the new governments must not
- contravene? That certain negroes shall be free, and that certain
- other negroes shall remain slaves. The proclamation therefore
- recognizes the existence of slavery. It does just exactly what all
- the constitutions of the rebel States prior to the rebellion did;
- ... and, therefore, the old constitutions might be restored
- to-morrow without _contravening_ the proclamation of freedom. Those
- constitutions do not say that the President shall not have the
- right, in the exercise of his military authority, to emancipate
- slaves within the States.... They do not even establish slavery....
- They merely recognize it just as the proclamation recognizes its
- existence in parts of Virginia and in parts of Louisiana. So that
- the one tenth of the population at whose hands the President
- proposes to accept and guarantee a State government, can elect
- officers under the old constitution of their State in exactly the
- same terms and with exactly the same powers existing at the time of
- the rebellion, and may, under his proclamation, demand a
- recognition.... So soon as the State government is recognized, the
- operation of the proclamation becomes merely a judicial question.
- The right of a negro to his freedom is a legal right divesting a
- right of property, and is to be enforced in the courts; and then the
- question is what the courts will say about the proclamation. Is it
- valid or invalid? Does it of itself confer a legal right to freedom
- on negroes who were slaves? Is it within the authority of the
- Executive?... How local State courts, created by the Southern
- people, will decide such a question _no one_ can doubt.... It is,
- therefore, under the scheme of the President, merely a judicial
- question, to be adjudged by judicial rules, and to be determined by
- the courts.... I do not desire to argue the legality of the
- proclamation of freedom. I think it safer to _make it law_.... Under
- the act of 1862 the President is authorized to use the negro
- population for the suppression of the rebellion; while the rebellion
- lasts, his proclamation in law exempts the slave from the duty of
- obeying his master, but after the rebellion is extinguished, the
- master’s rights are in his own hands, subject only to the opinion of
- the courts on the legal effect of the proclamation, without a single
- precedent to sanction it, and opposed by the solemn assertions of
- our Government against the principle worked to authorize it.
- Gentlemen are less prudent or less in earnest than I am if they will
- risk the great issues involved in this question on such authorities
- before the courts of justice.
-
- By the bill we propose to preclude the judicial question by the
- solution of a political question. How so? By the paramount power of
- Congress to reorganize governments in those States, to impose such
- conditions as it thinks necessary to secure the permanence of
- republican government, to refuse to recognize any governments there
- which do not prohibit slavery forever. Ay, gentlemen take the
- responsibility to say, in the face of those who clamor for speedy
- recognition of governments tolerating slavery, that the safety of
- the people of the United States is the supreme law; that their will
- is the supreme rule of law, and that we are authorized to pronounce
- their will on this subject—take the responsibility to say that we
- will revise the judgments of our ancestors; that we have experience
- written in blood which they had not; that we find now, what they
- darkly doubted, that slavery is really, radically inconsistent with
- the permanence of republican governments; and that, being charged by
- the supreme law of the land, on our conscience and judgment, to
- guarantee, that is, to continue, maintain, and enforce, if it exist,
- to institute and restore when overthrown, republican governments
- throughout the broad limits of the republic, we will weed out every
- element of their policy which we think incompatible with its
- permanence and endurance.... It [the bill] adds to the authority of
- the proclamation the sanction of Congress....
-
- Gentlemen must deny the jurisdiction of Congress over the States
- where there are no recognized governments, or place a bound or limit
- to the discretion of Congress....
-
- And if the sentiments of State pride and State rights be touched by
- the assertion of this wide discretion, which men may deny but cannot
- expunge, I would admonish those who dislike it that it is a
- jurisdiction which nothing but the dereliction of the States can
- wake into activity, and they who wish to exclude it from their
- limits have only not to give occasion for its exercise by renouncing
- obedience to the Constitution and pulling down their own State
- governments. But now the jurisdiction has attached in all the rebel
- States. Until Congress has assented, there is no State government in
- any rebel State, and none will be recognized except such as
- recognize the power of the United States; so that we come down to
- this: whether we—and when I say we, I mean we upon this side of the
- House, who are firmly, thoroughly, and honestly convinced that the
- time has come not merely to strike the arms from the hands of the
- rebels, but to strike the fetters from the arms of the slaves, and
- remove that domineering and cohesive power without which we could
- have had no rebellion, and which now is its animating spirit, and
- which will die when it dies—....
-
- And if it be time [for Congress to assert its authority] then all I
- ask in conclusion is, that gentlemen will go and read that great
- argument of Daniel Webster in the Rhode Island case ... where he met
- this semi-revolutionary attempt to count heads and call that the
- people, and maintained—and so the Supreme Court judged when it
- refused to take jurisdiction of the question—that the great
- political law of America is that every change of government shall be
- conducted under the supervising authority of some existing
- legislative body throwing the protection of law around the polls,
- defining the rights of voters, protecting them in the exercise of
- the elective franchise, guarding against fraud, repelling violence,
- and appointing arbiters to pronounce the result and declare the
- persons chosen by the people.... He [Webster] maintained it to be
- the great fundamental principle of the American government that
- legislation shall guide every political change, and that it assumes
- that somewhere within the United States there is always a permanent,
- organized legal authority which shall guide the tottering footsteps
- of those who seek to restore governments which are disorganized and
- broken down.
-
-The bill, he asserted in conclusion, was an effort to apply this great
-principle of American law.[312]
-
-Representative Scofield, of Pennsylvania, said, April 29, 1864, when the
-subject was again before the House, that the continuity of
-constitutional government in the seceded States had been broken, the
-regular transmission of political power interrupted. How, he inquired,
-should the severed thread be joined? By the unconstrained action of the
-people themselves, say the gentlemen in opposition. He indorsed that
-sentiment, and added that when the people of those States should ground
-the arms of their rebellion, and uncoerced take upon themselves the easy
-yoke and light burden of the ever gentle Federal Government it would
-mark a glad day in those uncheerful years of our history.
-
-For those States from which hostile armies had been excluded Congress
-should legislate or leave the people in the rough hand of military law.
-The bill designed to discharge that duty was generally acceptable to any
-one who conceded the propriety of Congressional action, its three
-prohibitions being probably the only debatable points,—that is the
-assumption of Confederate debts, the prevention of Confederate officers
-from voting and the prohibition of involuntary servitude.
-
-To assume the rebel debt, he asserted, would be to offer a high bounty
-for future rebellions; if rebel officers were permitted to vote, upon
-what principle of comparative justice could the privilege be denied to
-ordinary criminals? These officers were guilty of the highest crime
-against government. As to the third prohibition he had more to say.
-
-“If God shall give us victory,” continued Mr. Scofield, “and enable us
-to subdue or scatter the army of the enemy, is a voluntary reunion of
-the States possible? I say _voluntary_ because I suppose nobody desires
-a Union always to be maintained by force; and I use the word _reunion_
-because nobody proposes a form of government different from our present
-system of State brotherhood. I am not now speaking of the several plans
-of reconstruction, for they are designed only as temporary devices,
-looking to a reunion.... My question looks beyond the battle and beyond
-reconstruction. When the victory is won, if won it shall be, and the
-transition over, will the insurgent States _willingly stay_ where they
-have been _forcibly put_ in their old places in the old Union?... Our
-own liberties could not survive their permanent subjugation. When the
-Federal Government becomes strong enough to hold eleven States as
-colonies, it will be too strong, I fear, for the people’s liberties.”
-All motives for those States ever to depart should be removed.
-
-Similarity of ideas he characterized as the bond of nationality, and
-named Ireland, Hungary and Poland to show the opposite. In the United
-States slavery was the one subject of estrangement. Could North and
-South be brought to think alike on that subject? The theory that each
-side could hold its own opinions on slavery and no evil consequences
-follow was somewhat to blame. That theory failed in practice and for
-that failure each side blamed the other.
-
-The fathers, he said, lived under that theory, that slavery and freedom
-could coexist, but they expected that the institution would soon become
-extinct. Hence they only tolerated it. Slavery was to recede slowly and
-freedom to follow steadily. Upon _that_ basis they got along very well
-and so could their descendants. Instead of consenting to go, slavery
-demanded expansion and perpetuity. This was reversing the compromise of
-the fathers; this change had to be discussed, the slave power took
-umbrage and secession followed. If one sentiment must prevail, then
-slavery, which could not stand discussion, must yield if there was to be
-a reunion. To live in peace together the North must embrace slavery or
-the South must abandon it.
-
-To adopt slavery would mean the adoption by 20,000,000 people of
-sentiments favorable thereto, whereas the institution never had any
-friends in the North. Those in that section so considered were only its
-apologists. If, three years ago, slavery had no real friends in the
-North, who would advocate it when it had attempted to destroy the most
-beneficent of governments? To reconcile the free States would
-necessitate a change of opinion—to adopt freedom as the dominant idea
-would require simply a change of _investment_ in the sections. For the
-present extinguish the conflagration, for the future remove the
-inflammable material from which it was kindled. For the present seize
-the mad revolutionists of the South, for the future destroy the virus
-that poisoned their blood.
-
-All who favored emancipation he favored as co-workers for a voluntary
-and peaceful reunion of the States; slavery was presented merely as an
-element of discord and disunion and as such he asked for its
-removal.[313]
-
-Mr. Williams said that the war was inaugurated on the theory that the
-States were _in_, whereas the great fact of war was a proclamation that
-they were _out_. Northern Democrats were willing to accept the fact that
-they were _out, without war_—to adopt the principle of the _laissez nous
-faire_ of the rebel authorities and to treat with them upon the idea of
-a _reconstruction_; peaceful secession with _reconstruction by treaty_.
-The severance of the States was complete, though the hope of recovery
-remained. By releasing the crews of their privateers, by blockading
-their ports the Federal authorities had recognized them as a _de facto_
-government; Federal legislation had put them under the ban as alien
-enemies. In the minds of the framers of the Constitution the theory of
-an indissoluble Union referred to _the right_, to its organic law. They
-did not mean that it could not be ruptured by violence. If the
-governments of the States were dissolved “they must, of course, be
-reconstructed under the auspices of the conquering power, and that not
-by the Executive, but by the Legislature of the Union, whose sword he
-bears, and which only, consistently with the genius of our institutions,
-the past practice of the Government, and the letter as well as spirit of
-the Constitution, can venture to determine what use shall be made of the
-territories conquered by it, and when and upon what terms they shall be
-readmitted into full communion as members of this Government.... To
-permit any executive officer to declare its law, and set it in motion,
-and place it under the control of a minority—a mere tithe of its
-citizens—with power to send delegates to Congress with representation
-unimpaired and unaffected—even though he should reenact a part of its
-abrogated Constitution—would be, as I think, a monstrous anomaly, a
-violation of fundamental principles, and a precedent fraught with great
-danger to republican liberty.... To come back into the Union, it must
-either be born anew or come back with all its rights unimpaired, except
-those material ones which have been destroyed in the progress of the
-war. There is, I think, no middle ground, as there is no power either
-here or elsewhere to prescribe terms which shall abridge the rights or
-privileges of a State that has _not_ been out of the Union, or returns
-to it in virtue of its original title.” The rebellious States, he
-declared, “are in the Union for correction, not for _heirship_.” In
-point of fact they were out.
-
-Replying to an observation of Fernando Wood, Mr. Williams said: “We are
-in favor, at all events, of preserving all that is left of it [the
-Union], and intend, with the blessing of God, to win back the residue,
-and pass it through the fire until it shall come out purged of the
-malignant element that has unfitted it for freedom.
-
-“... Say that they [the rebellious States] are in the Union as before,
-and all your sacrifices have been idle, and all the blood spilled by you
-has sunk into the earth in vain.”
-
-The confiscation and distribution of the great baronial possessions of
-rebel leaders were in his judgment an essential element in any feasible
-plan of reconstruction. He deduced from passages in Bynkershoek and
-Barbeyrac that “everything belonging to the offending party is
-confiscated.... _Indemnity_, _security_, and _punishment_ are all,
-therefore, means of self-defense which may be legitimately used.”
-
-Is the forfeiture, he asked, of the estates and property of traitors,
-whether they consist of lands or slaves, required for these purposes?
-“_Vae Victis_” is not the maxim of a humane conqueror. Though he would
-not exclude the idea of mercy, he was not clear as to “the wisdom of a
-proclamation of amnesty in advance as a measure of pacification, without
-limits as to time, and where submission after conquest, and when it is
-no longer a virtue but a necessity, is to be rewarded with the same
-impunity as a voluntary return to duty before that time.”
-
-Speaking of the nature, cause and fury of the war, he continued: “Its
-suppression has become impossible without removing the cause of the
-strife, and disabling our enemy by liberating his slaves, and arming
-them against him.”
-
-No reparation was adequate for the injury inflicted; for, said he,
-“there can be no punishment, except in the divestiture of the rights and
-the seizure of the estates of the guilty leaders. There is no security
-except in the distribution of the latter.” From these he would carve out
-inheritances for the widow and the helpless offspring of the Northern
-soldier.
-
-For eighteen months, he observed in conclusion, the war was conducted
-upon the principle of inflicting as little injury as possible upon the
-enemy.[314]
-
-The speech of Mr. Williams was marked by considerable fluency as well as
-great elegance of diction; it was the effort of a scholar, though not
-confined strictly to the question before the House. He introduced with
-directness and vigor the ideas of indemnity, security and punishment;
-these, it may be remarked, became important elements in determining the
-mode of reinstatement that finally emerged from the chaos of resolutions
-and plans submitted to Congress.
-
-Representative Baldwin, of Michigan, believed the bill “to be an utter
-subversion of the Constitution”; even a latitudinarian construction of
-that instrument would not justify it. It embraced a plan that could be
-enforced by only the military arm. It was the precursor of the
-establishment of a despotism. That measure, as well as the President’s
-plan, was fraught with danger.
-
-He lamented interference with the elective franchise and the denial of
-the privileges of the writ of _habeas corpus_. For eighteen months the
-war had been waged for the destruction of the South, not for the
-restoration of the Union. Did not wisdom, he asked, suggest that all
-plans of reconstruction which tended only to intensify hate and postpone
-the day of peace be abandoned? Speaking of the effect of Mr. Lincoln’s
-policy he observed: “That it was intended that the amnesty proclamation
-of last December would hasten the end of this strife, I do not believe.
-We are told that nearly every Southern paper published it, and it only
-nerved them to the performance of more earnest deeds.” The President’s
-plan as well as that of Congress, he believed, were designed to
-perpetuate the present dominant party by the vote of reconstructed
-States. A considerable portion of his remarks was devoted to criticism
-of the Administration.[315]
-
-Mr. Thayer, of Pennsylvania, believed that the powers delegated by the
-people of the United States to the national Government were sufficient
-for the great work of reconstruction, and added: “That the time has come
-in which Congress, in the exercise of the great powers conferred upon
-it, should settle and authoritatively declare the terms and conditions
-upon which the people of the rebellious districts should be restored to
-their State privileges and resume their just relations to the national
-Government, does not admit of doubt.” People occupying territory wrested
-from the rebellion should be restored with the least possible delay to
-the privileges of representative government. “Congress alone can enact
-the laws which are to reconstruct the political societies in which the
-fundamental principle of loyalty to the national Government and
-obedience to its laws and respect for its authority have been
-obliterated by the violence of rebellion. The President of the United
-States cannot enact these laws, and it is in my opinion a reproach to
-Congress that by its inaction up to the present time it has rendered it
-necessary that the national Executive should be obliged by a sense of
-obligation to the public welfare to resort to temporary expedients for
-the preservation of public order and the assertion of national supremacy
-in those districts and States which the valor of our soldiers has
-redeemed from the insulting domination of the rebel army.”
-
-Executive action, he asserted, was suggested by necessity. “What has
-been done in that respect by the President I believe to have been well
-done, wisely done, and patriotically done, and to have been demanded
-alike by the necessity of the case and for the welfare of the Republic.”
-The exclusive right over the subject, however, belonged to Congress,
-which should relieve the President of all responsibility therein.
-
-Safeguards against the recurrence of similar outbreaks in the future
-should be required. He would support the measure before the House
-because of these safeguards or pledges. Unconditional and perpetual
-loyalty in the new governments in the rebellious States to that of the
-United States, extirpation and perpetual prohibition of slavery and
-compulsory repudiation of the rebel debt were the chief among these.
-
-“The safety of the country,” said he, “its future repose, the
-continuance of the Union, and the firm establishment of our political
-system imperatively demand that in the reorganization of local
-governments in the rebel States the foundations of such governments must
-rest upon the principle of submission to the Constitution and laws of
-the United States.
-
-“... It is also necessary to guard the elective franchise and the
-privilege of holding office in those States against the intrusion and
-treachery of all who have in any sense been leaders in the present
-rebellion. For this purpose prudence requires that all who have held
-office under the pretended rebel government should be excluded from
-these privileges.”
-
-The seventh section of the bill he would like to see so modified as to
-declare that no debt of the pretended Confederate States, and no debt
-contracted by the State for the purpose of prosecuting the war against
-the United States or of giving aid to its enemies, should be recognized
-or paid by the State.
-
-It was a singular doctrine, he remarked in conclusion, that those who
-had thrown off all restraints of the Constitution and who for years had
-waged war for the purpose of overthrowing it should be entitled to
-demand its protection while engaged in armed hostility to it.[316]
-
-Mr. Yeaman did not believe Congress had a right to legislate away the
-laws and institutions of these States. The American people, he said,
-would come out of the contest with a better political education, an
-education having for its basis the idea that _they are a nation_, and he
-added, “a war to enforce the theory of secession will end in an
-increased consolidated nationality.” The theory expressed in the
-Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions was the fatal blow in our political
-history. His address was in the nature of an essay in political science
-and not altogether germane to the measure under consideration.[317]
-
-“Pass a judicious enabling act,” urged Mr. Longyear, “with proper
-safeguards, of which the people may avail themselves to organize civil
-governments at the very earliest opportunity, and it will afford a
-rallying point for the Union sentiment remaining there, and tend to
-foster it and nourish it into a healthful and vigorous existence. It
-will prevent perplexing and complicated irregularities and diversities
-of action, and tend largely to harmony and strength in our future
-deliberations. No stronger illustration of the necessity and propriety
-of immediate action need be given than the case of Tennessee, Louisiana,
-and Arkansas.
-
-“The President’s proclamation does not solve the difficulty. As a
-proclamation of amnesty, as a general outline or plan for organizing new
-State governments, as a prescription of safeguards and conditions
-precedent to such organization, it will ever stand as a bright and
-glorious page in the history of the present Administration. But it is
-incomplete for lack of constitutional power. That can be conferred by
-Congress alone, under the power to admit new States.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“If we succeed [in the war] we make no conquest of territory, because
-that is already ours. We simply succeed, in that respect, in bringing
-that which is our own again under our control.” Because of rebellion the
-constitutions and laws of those States had ceased to exist, and as
-slavery was established solely in State laws that also ceased to exist.
-The only object of a constitutional amendment was to prohibit its
-establishment forever. Freedom, he added, was being substituted for
-slavery. In respect to slavery and the slave power we were in the midst
-of a revolution. They proved themselves inimical to civil liberty, to
-the Constitution and to republican institutions.[318]
-
-To the remark of Fernando Wood, of New York, that the South could not be
-subdued, Ignatius Donnelly replied, “We are doing it!” and he added, if
-the system of the President is deficient in the machinery that will
-ensure safety “it is our duty to supply that defect. The plan of the
-President, unsupported by any action on our part, hangs upon too many
-contingencies. It may be repealed by his successor; it may be resisted
-by Congress; it may be annulled by the Supreme Court. It rests the
-welfare of the nation upon the mind of one man; it rests the whole
-structure of social order upon the unstable foundation of individual
-oaths.” Upon this subject Mr. Donnelly observed that General Jefferson
-Thompson, C. S. A., noted in passing through those regions that men
-consulted their memorandum books to see what oath they had taken last.
-Thousands of rebel dead had been found on the battle field with oaths of
-allegiance, sworn to and subscribed, in their pockets. Mr. Donnelly
-favored the bill, and if any measure of greater security could be found
-he would support that. He desired, as soon as it could be attained, an
-amendment of the Constitution that would prohibit slavery.
-
-“I am aware, Mr. Speaker,” he continued, “of the great claims which Mr.
-Lincoln has upon the people of the United States. I recognize that
-popularity which accompanies him, and which, considering the ordeal
-through which he has passed, is little less than miraculous. I recognize
-that unquestioning faith in his honesty and ability which pervades all
-classes, and the sincere affection with which almost the entire
-population regard him. We must not underrate him even in our praises. He
-is a great man. Great not after the old models of the world, but with a
-homely and original greatness. He will stand out to future ages in the
-history of these crowded and confused times with wonderful distinctness.
-He has carried a vast and discordant population safely and peacefully
-through the greatest of political revolutions with such consummate
-sagacity and skill that while he led he appeared to follow; while he
-innovated beyond all precedent he has been denounced as tardy; while he
-struck the shackles from the limbs of three million slaves he has been
-hailed as a conservative! If to adapt, persistently and continuously,
-just and righteous principles to all the perplexed windings and changes
-of human events, and to secure in the end the complete triumph of those
-principles, be statesmanship, then Abraham Lincoln is the first of
-statesmen.
-
-“If the end of the war is to be a restoration _of the appearance_ of the
-old Government; a patching together of the broken shreds and fragments;
-a propping up of the fabric in such style that the next Administration
-may possibly get out from under it before it falls, then that
-proclamation may be found all-sufficient. But for all other purposes it
-will be utterly unavailing. It does not reach the heart of the
-distemper....
-
-“We owe more than this to ourselves; we owe more than this to the South.
-We must regenerate the South.”[319]
-
-This discriminating tribute to the character and genius of Mr. Lincoln
-was paid by no servile flatterer; it was not the eulogy of even a
-supporter of the Presidential plan of reconstruction; nor was it
-designed as a discharge of, or uttered in expectation of compelling,
-Executive favors, but appears rather to have been the spontaneous
-testimony of a keen interpreter of men and measures not less creditable
-to the insight of the speaker than to the subject of his remarks.
-Others, it is true, refrained from misrepresenting the President’s
-attitude and cheerfully ascribed to him patriotic and enlightened
-motives in his public conduct. Mr. Donnelly alone condensed into a
-paragraph a panegyric with which the judgment of posterity is in
-complete accord. This portion of his speech is quoted both to show that
-there were men in Congress who fully appreciated the greatness of the
-President, and that criticism of his measures was not in many instances
-suggested by feelings of personal hostility.
-
-Very different were the remarks of Mr. Dennison, who declared that “The
-passage of this law will be the final gathering up of the reserved
-rights of States, and the last vestige of protection of the citizen
-under State constitutions will be taken away, and all power centralized
-in the General Government.” He opposed the bill for the additional
-reason that it was intended to legalize and perpetuate the
-unconstitutional acts of the President. “There does not exist on the
-earth a more despotic government than that of Abraham Lincoln. He is a
-despot in fact if not in name.”[320] These excerpts sufficiently
-indicate the character of his invective.
-
-“I have offered a substitute to the bill of the committee,” said
-Thaddeus Stevens, “because that does not, in my judgment, meet the evil.
-It partially acknowledges the rebel States to have rights under the
-Constitution, which I deny, as war has abrogated them all. I do not
-inquire what rights we have under it, but they have none. The bill takes
-for granted that the President may partially interfere in their civil
-administration, not as conqueror but as President of the United States.
-It adopts in some measure the idea that less than a majority may
-regulate to some extent the affairs of a republic.”[321] The chief
-objection of Mr. Stevens, however, was that it removed the opportunity
-of confiscating the property of the disloyal.
-
-Representative Wadsworth, of Kentucky, he said, agreed with him that the
-people of the South could plead none of the constitutional provisions in
-their defence. Whatever rights they possessed were those of belligerents
-engaged in war. “When we come to enforce the rights of conquest,”
-continued the Pennsylvania member, “we should be justified in insisting
-upon the _extreme rights_ of war, without yielding to the mitigations
-dictated by modern usage with regard to belligerents originally composed
-of foreign nations engaged in war which they deemed just.” Explaining
-former recommendations which in many quarters had called forth severe
-criticism, he said: “I thought that the women and children, the
-non-combatants, and those who were forced by the laws of their State
-into the armies, should be spared; and the property of the guilty,
-morally as well as politically guilty, only should be taken. And yet we
-hear a howl of horror from conservative gentlemen at the inhumanity of
-the proposition.” He still further explained his sentiments on this
-occasion. After stating that the people of the Confederate States were
-sovereign and acted through their representatives, he asserted that they
-had commenced and were continuing to wage an unjust war and therefore
-their private property was liable to confiscation. The right to take
-their property existed, but no one, he said, “advises the execution of
-the extreme right. But the right exists and ought to be enforced against
-the most guilty. To allow them to return with their estates untouched,
-on the theory that they have never gone out of the Union, seems to me
-rank injustice to loyal men.” Of those who denied that the Confederate
-States had gone out of the Union he inquired, “What are we making war
-upon them for? For seceding; for going out of the Union against law. The
-law forbids a man to rob or murder, and yet robbery and murder exist _de
-facto_ but not _de jure_.” Hence the Constitution does not allow the
-States to go out of the Union. He referred also in his speech to a
-resolution introduced by Mr. Schenck, of Ohio, which passed the House
-without a division and declared the Confederate States a public enemy,
-engaged in a public war.[322]
-
-On the same day, May 2, Representative Strouse remarked that immediately
-after the disaster of Bull Run the House almost unanimously passed the
-Crittenden Resolutions, which declared that “This war is not waged in
-any spirit of oppression, or for any purpose of conquest or subjugation,
-or purpose of overthrowing or interfering with the rights or established
-institutions of these States.” This announcement, he asserted, brought
-volunteers, whereas now, 1864, county, State and Federal bounties
-combined could not induce men to enlist, and the cause of the apathy was
-that the war had been perverted from the purpose announced in the
-resolutions referred to. The entire speech had little reference to the
-bill of Mr. Davis, but seemed rather designed, by an attack on the
-Administration, to please his Democratic constituents.[323]
-
-Mr. Cravens said that the dominant party did not distinguish between
-loyalty to the Administration and loyalty to the Government. The time
-for compromise had passed when the Republican party refused to accept
-the Crittenden Resolutions. That organization was in all essentials an
-abolition party. If there ever was a distinction it no longer existed.
-He cited a rather complete list of all the measures acted upon by
-Congress showing their concern for the negro; he charged neglect of the
-white soldier, his widow and orphans; quoted from the speech of Thaddeus
-Stevens on the admission of West Virginia, and named Representative
-Julian as uttering sentiments little behind the Pennsylvania member in
-boldness and exhibiting no more reverence for the Constitution. The
-incapacity and dire wickedness of the President and his “courtiers” came
-in for a share of criticism.
-
-Mr. Gooch on the following day, May 3, remarked that the rebellion was
-but the military phase of the conflict of ideas which began with the
-adoption of the Constitution. “When we shall have crushed the rebellion
-and restored peace to all parts of the country we shall hold this
-territory, not by a new title, but by the old, not as territory acquired
-by conquest, but territory defended and maintained against revolt.... I
-can see no reason why the President, as Commander-in-Chief, should not,
-in the meantime, so use the military power as to aid and assist the
-loyal people of any one of these States in the organization of a loyal
-State government.... All these acts by the President, or the military
-power under him, in thus aiding and assisting the loyal people in these
-States, impose no obligation upon Congress to recognize them until such
-time as it shall deem proper to do so, and any recognition the military
-power may see fit to give to these governments can never fix their
-status in the Union. Congress alone has the power to determine what
-government is the legitimate one in a State, and its decision is binding
-on the other departments of the Government.”[324]
-
-Mr. Perry, of New Jersey, spoke of the duration of the war, predicted
-the general bankruptcy which its great expense would bring about, and
-calculated that in eleven years the cost of the war would equal the
-assessed value of property.
-
-Speaking of the Executive plan he said: “And here the President’s design
-is perfectly evident, to secure a majority of the delegates to the
-nominating convention of his party, and to provide for his own election
-by the House of Representatives in the event of there not being an
-election by the people. By this plan the narrow foothold maintained by
-our armies in North Carolina, Louisiana, Texas, Alabama, Florida,
-Arkansas, and elsewhere may send the pretended full delegations of those
-States to this House. Mr. Speaker, I denominate the whole plan a
-political trick worthy of the most adroit and unscrupulous wire-puller
-of our ward primary meetings.” The State governments had not been
-destroyed, he added, “nor can they be destroyed unless the rebels are
-finally victorious, and establish their independence.”[325]
-
-Fernando Wood said that Mexico had a republican form of government, and
-that Texas came into the Union without changing the character of her
-government except to substitute a governor for President and to change
-the titles of some officials. Every Southern State possessed the same
-form of government which it did before secession. If, he asserted, they
-were then republican in form, “they are so now.” The Confederate
-constitution had all the elements of republicanism. The bill provided
-that hereafter none of the States in rebellion should hold slaves. It
-did not leave to the people the right to regulate their domestic
-institutions. Is it republicanism to take from the people this
-privilege? “To impose upon them a form of government of your own making,
-under the pretext of this bill, would be the worst kind of tyranny,
-whatever the provisions of your constitution might be.”[326]
-
-He defended himself against serious charges of General Schenck, whom he
-criticised severely. These accusations, however, were reiterated by Hon.
-William D. Kelley, of Pennsylvania, who at this point rose to speak on
-the merits of the bill.
-
-The proposed measure did not meet his unqualified approval. It lacked
-some of the amendments suggested by Mr. Stevens. “I should like to see
-his distinct declaration,” said Congressman Kelley, “that ‘The
-Confederate States are a public enemy, waging an unjust war, whose
-injustice is so glaring that they have no right to claim the mitigation
-of the extreme rights of war which are accorded by modern usage to an
-enemy who has the right to consider the war a just one.’” He would like
-to see the bill of Mr. Davis provide also for the exclusion from
-Congress of all those States that seceded, and every part of them.
-
-As more immediately important, however, he would prefer to see included
-in the measure the proposition of Mr. Stevens respecting amendments of
-the Constitution; he denied the immortality of a State. It has its
-beginning, its transitions and may have its end. “A State may be killed,
-a State may commit suicide. An act of God, by destroying its
-inhabitants, might extinguish a State. A State could be conquered and
-held by some strong and hostile power. The political people of each of
-those States have overthrown the State. Through its corporate power each
-State destroyed its corporate life, and no one of them exists.” He also
-denied that a State could transfer to any foreign power territory within
-the jurisdiction of the United States. The Supreme Court had decided
-that the Southern States were alien enemies and entitled to only the
-rights of such.[327]
-
-The message of the President, Representative S. S. Cox believed, “should
-be welcomed, not so much for what it is as for what it pretends to be.
-It is his first adventure beyond the line of force into the field of
-conciliation....
-
-“To test the genuineness of this amnesty: five months have gone, but we
-see no signs of thousands of Southern citizens rushing to embrace this
-amnesty. Indeed, it is conceded that the rebellion is now more
-formidable than ever.” There was no genuine movement toward the
-restoration of the seceded States. He would not take the oath of
-allegiance and swear support of the negro policies. How could Southern
-men be expected to take the oath? Its terms provoked or irritated them
-still more. The structure, he declared, was built on the Emancipation
-Proclamation.
-
-The bill of Mr. Davis had the same defects. That, too, was based upon
-the one tenth system and the policy of forced emancipation. “In some of
-its features,” he said, “it is an improvement upon the rickety
-establishment proposed by the President.
-
-“... The emancipation act of the gentleman [Lincoln] can never be
-reconciled with the normal control of the States over their domestic
-institutions, so all oaths to sustain the same are oaths to subvert the
-old governments, Federal and State.... The President’s plan, therefore,
-whether intended or not, is an oath to encourage treason, and the plan
-of the gentleman from Maryland is a plan to consummate revolution.
-
-“... If his [the President’s] plan of making one tenth rule in the
-States should succeed, then he will have ready at hand the electoral
-votes of Florida, Arkansas, Louisiana, Tennessee, North Carolina, and
-other States. He began this business in Florida the other day, and the
-blood which flowed at Olustee is the result of this scheme of personal
-ambition!
-
- * * * * *
-
-“There is a sort of _odium historicum_,” proceeded Mr. Cox, “attached to
-all political test oaths.... They have been the bane and foil of good
-government ever since bigotry began and revenge ruled. You cannot make
-eight million people, nearly all in revolt at what they regard as the
-detestable usurpations of abolition, forswear their hatred to abolition.
-You force by this oath the freed negro into the very nostrils of the
-Southern man, whose submission to law you seek.
-
-“The conditions of pardon only inflame but do not quench rebellion....
-
-“We may yet change the war from the diabolical purposes of those in
-power, by changing that power to other hands, and we are not ready to
-sever our Union while that hope remains.”
-
-Precedents and analogies from both ancient and contemporary history were
-cited to demonstrate the folly of attempting to hold the South in her
-place by force. These together with censure of the Administration and
-criticism of the dominant party in Congress made up a great part of Mr.
-Cox’s very long speech.[328]
-
-Representative Boutwell, of Massachusetts, referring, May 4, to the
-remarks of his colleague, Mr. Ashley, of the committee which reported
-the bill, observed that “since this rebellion opened the Thirty-seventh
-Congress commenced its existence and ceased to exist; that this Congress
-is now closing the fifth month of its First Session, and that up to this
-time no efficient, indeed no legislative steps whatever have been taken
-by which the Executive is to be guided in the affairs of the people
-occupying the territory that has been reclaimed from rebel domination.
-Under these circumstances I think it due to the country that this House,
-at least, should do nothing which conveys any reflection upon his policy
-unless that policy be clearly and manifestly in contravention of the
-Constitution or of the well-ascertained and admitted principles of the
-Government.”
-
-When the populous parts of Louisiana were torn from rebel domination,
-and the State of Arkansas indicated in various ways the growth of a
-sentiment of loyalty and returning allegiance to the General Government,
-the Executive had but one of three courses before him: either to be
-silent, to govern by military authority alone, or else to establish a
-civil government or at least to take initiatory steps toward such
-establishment. “It was unquestionably his right and duty, in the absence
-of all legislative action, to govern these territories as fast and as
-far as they were reclaimed by military power.”
-
-He defended both the President and General Banks, who had for years been
-consistent advocates of liberty. He then announced himself in favor of
-the bill of Mr. Davis.
-
-“The gentleman from Pennsylvania [Mr. Stevens],” continued Mr. Boutwell,
-“maintains, as I understand, that these States are out of the Union;
-that their territory is alien territory, and that we are making war
-against alien enemies. I do not admit either of these positions to be
-true. I feel quite sure that these eleven once-existing States are no
-longer States of the Union. The evidence on which I rely in support of
-this position is found first in the declaration made by the authorities
-of those States that they no longer exist as States of the American
-Union. Next, we find that for three years and more they have been
-resisting the authority of the Government and have been carrying on a
-war against it. It is absurd to say that States or people are a part of
-the Government under the Constitution, and entitled to constitutional
-rights and privileges, when they have been carrying on war against the
-Government.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Nor do I admit that the people in the rebellious States are aliens.
-They are not of any other country, they are not of any other legal
-jurisdiction, they are within the jurisdiction of the Union. Three years
-ago they were a portion of this Union, and although they have been
-carrying on a war, that war has not thus far been successful, their
-independence has not been acknowledged by us, nor has it been recognized
-by any other nation. They, therefore, are not aliens. They are, to be
-sure, public enemies, but they are not alien enemies.
-
-“... These States as political organizations have by their own will
-ceased to exist.... The existence of a State is a fact within the
-control of the people themselves, and cannot be influenced by any
-extraneous power whatever, and therefore these States have by the will
-of the people thereof as political organizations ceased to exist.”
-
-Admitting that the Government of the United States had legal
-jurisdiction over this territory and over the people who occupied it, it
-was an absurdity, he declared, “to say that these States still exist and
-that the people there may without our consent elect officers and send
-Representatives to this body and Senators to the other branch of
-Congress.”
-
-To the taunt of the Democrats that the war had been changed from a war
-to restore the Union to one for the purpose of emancipating the slave,
-Mr. Boutwell replied by a denial of the fact, but added that even if it
-were so, it was not the first instance of the sort in human history. Up
-to 1774 every American expected to preserve the old relations with
-England, yet within two years Independence was declared. The pending
-measure, he asserted, had not elicited marked attention in Congress nor
-any great interest throughout the country, yet in it lay the germ of a
-new civilization for half a continent.
-
-The limitation of the elective franchise to white males did not meet his
-approval; for though the suffrage is not a natural, it is the highest
-political, right. Where the suffrage is denied to any large number of
-men, that community is never free from the danger of intestine
-commotion.
-
-As South Carolina and Georgia were responsible for breathing into
-slavery the breath of life after it had everywhere been condemned, he
-would not have them again reappear in the Union. Florida did not deserve
-a place in the Union and, by giving the colored men local suffrage in
-that district, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida, he would invite the
-blacks thither as fast as they could be spared from the industries in
-which they were elsewhere engaged. He would not ask to extend this
-principle to loyal Northern or to border States with a negro
-population.[329]
-
-Mr. Pendleton, of Ohio, made by far the ablest Democratic argument
-against the proposed enactment. Its details as well as its general
-policy, he said, required examination. After stating quite fully the
-provisions of the bill, he continued:
-
- The gentleman from Maryland [Mr. Davis] facetiously entitles it “a
- bill to guaranty to certain States whose governments have been
- usurped or overthrown a republican form of government.”
-
- At last the mask has been thrown off. At last the pretenses have all
- been laid aside. Three years of war have done their work, and the
- purposes and objects of the Republican party have been at last
- acknowledged. This bill is the consummation of its statesmanship the
- fruit of its experience, the demonstration of its purposes. The
- gentleman from Maryland introduced it; it is understood to be
- distasteful to some of his party friends; but it is a party measure;
- it will be voted for by every member of the Republican organization;
- it marks their policy of restoration; it defines their ideas of
- Union; it interprets their construction of the Constitution. As such
- I accept it. We have had double-dealing, hypocrisy and fraud for the
- last three years. We have had false professions, false names, and
- double-faced measures. We have had armies raised, taxes collected,
- battles fought, under the pretense that the war was for the Union,
- the old Union, the Union of the Constitution. These were the
- catchwords for the patriotic people. In the secret council-chambers
- of the party they were sneered at as devices with which to ensnare
- the innocent, to deceive the ignorant, to coax the obstinate. They
- were to be discarded as soon as, in the heat of war, in the
- exasperation of passion, in the exultation of victory, or in the
- bitterness of defeat and disaster and oppression, it would be safe
- to divulge the great conspiracy against the Union, the
- constitutional confederation, the principles of free government.
-
- That time has come. The veil is drawn aside. We see clearly. The
- party in possession of the powers of the Government is
- revolutionary. It seeks to use those powers to destroy the
- Government, to change its form, to change its spirit. It seeks under
- the forms of law to make a new Government, a new Union, to ingraft
- upon it new principles, new theories, and to use the powers of the
- law against all who will not be persuaded. It is in rebellion
- against the Constitution; it is in treasonable conspiracy against
- the Government. It differs in nothing from the armed enemies except
- in the weapons of its warfare. They fight to overthrow its authority
- over them, while it seeks to destroy that authority at home. They
- would curtail the limits of the jurisdiction of the Federal
- Government; it would extend those limits, but change the basis and
- principles upon which it rests. If revolt against constituted
- authority be a crime, if patriotism consist in upholding in form and
- spirit the Government our fathers made, those in power here to-day
- are as guilty as those who in the seceded States marshal armed men
- for the contest.
-
- “Revolutions move onward.” That is true. But call things by their
- true names. Admit you are in revolution; admit you are
- revolutionists; admit that you do not desire to restore the old
- order; admit that you do not fight to restore the Union. Take the
- responsibility of that position. Avow that you exercise the powers
- of the Government because you control them; that you are not bound
- by the Constitution, but by your own sense of right. Avow that
- resistance to your schemes is not treason, but war. Dissolve the
- spell which you have woven around the hearts of our people by the
- cunning use of the words conservatism, patriotism, Union. And we
- will cease all criminations, we will hush all reproaches for oaths
- violated, pledges falsified, faith betrayed. We will meet you on
- your own ground, we will fight you with your weapons, and by the
- issue of that contest, whether of argument or of arms, we will
- abide.
-
- Am I to be told that I misrepresent the Republican party? The
- gentleman who has just taken his seat [Mr. Boutwell], an able and
- honored member of that party, has said in your hearing, “If I could
- direct the force of public sentiment and the policy of this
- Government, South Carolina as a State and with a name should never
- reappear in this Union. Georgia deserves a like fate. Florida does
- not deserve a name in this Union.”
-
- The gentleman from Maryland felt that this charge could be
- truthfully made. He sought to answer it in advance. He denied that
- the provisions of the bill contravened any clause of the
- Constitution. Where is the authority for it? Where is the authority
- to declare State governments overthrown? Where is the authority to
- reconstruct them? Where is the authority to appoint a governor; to
- call a convention to remodel their constitutions; to fix the
- qualifications of its members; to prescribe the conditions of their
- organic law; and until a _new_ constitution shall be made, to
- administer by Federal officers such parts of the old constitution
- and laws as the governor, or the President, or Congress may
- select?...
-
-At this point he quoted Madison on the guaranty clause, a subject
-elaborated in the Senate by Carlile, of Virginia. Mr. Pendleton observed
-that if slavery, which, with one possible exception, existed in all the
-States at the time of the adoption of the Constitution, was not
-inconsistent with a republican form of government then it was not
-inconsistent with it in 1864.
-
- And yet the advocates of this bill [continued Mr. Pendleton] propose
- to deprive the States of power over the question of slavery, power
- over their own indebtedness, power to regulate the elective
- franchise, and the right to hold office, under the pretense that
- they thereby execute the provision that the United States must
- guaranty a republican form of government to the States.
-
- The gentleman from Massachusetts [Mr. Boutwell] has shown how he
- would execute it. South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida should never
- again appear as State[s] or in name in this Confederation. Is their
- exclusion a guarantee to them of a republican government?
-
- ... If Congress may insist upon the three fundamental conditions
- prescribed in this bill, ... by a parity of reasoning it ought to
- insist upon their incorporation into the constitution of the States
- remaining steadfast by the Union. If they are essential to
- republicanism in the one class of States they are equally so in all.
-
- * * * * *
-
- ... Gentlemen must not palter in a double sense. These acts of
- secession are either valid or they are invalid. If they are valid,
- they separated the State from the Union. If they are invalid, they
- are void; they have no effect; the State officers who act upon them
- are rebels to the Federal Government; the States are not destroyed;
- their constitutions are not abrogated; their officers are committing
- illegal acts, for which they are liable to punishment; the States
- have never left the Union, but so soon as their officers shall
- perform their duties or other officers shall assume their places,
- will again perform the duties imposed and enjoy the privileges
- conferred by the Federal compact, and this not by virtue of a new
- ratification of the Constitution, nor a new admission by the Federal
- Government, but by virtue of the original ratification, and the
- constant, uninterrupted maintenance of position in the Federal Union
- since that date.
-
- Acts of secession are not invalid to destroy the Union, and valid to
- destroy the State governments and the political privileges of their
- citizens. We have heard much of the two-fold relation which citizens
- of the seceded States may hold to the Federal Government—that they
- may be at once belligerents and rebellious citizens. I believe there
- are some judicial decisions to that effect. Sir, it is impossible.
- The Federal Government may possibly have the right to elect in which
- relation it will deal with them; it cannot deal with them at one and
- the same time in inconsistent relations. Belligerents being captured
- are entitled to be treated as prisoners of war; rebellious citizens
- are liable to be hanged. The private property of belligerents,
- according to the rules of modern war, shall not be taken without
- compensation; the property of rebellious citizens is liable to
- confiscation. Belligerents are not amenable to the local criminal
- law, nor to the jurisdiction of courts which administer it;
- rebellious citizens are, and the officers are bound to enforce the
- law, and to exact the penalty of its infraction. The seceded States
- are either in the Union or out of it. If in the Union, their
- constitutions are untouched, their State governments are maintained;
- their citizens are entitled to all political rights, except so far
- as they may be deprived of them by the criminal law which they may
- have infracted. This seems incomprehensible to the gentleman from
- Maryland. In his view the whole State government centers in the men
- who administer it; so that when they administer it unwisely, or put
- it in antagonism to the Federal Government, the State government is
- dissolved, the State constitution is abrogated, and the State is
- left, in fact and in form, _de jure_ and _de facto_, in anarchy,
- except so far as the Federal Government may rightfully intervene.
- This seems to be substantially the view of the gentleman from
- Massachusetts [Mr. Boutwell]. He enforces the same position, but he
- does not use the same language.
-
- ... If by a plague or other visitation of God every officer of a
- State government should at the same moment die, so that not a single
- person clothed with official power should remain, would the State
- government be destroyed? Not at all. For the moment it would not be
- administered, but as soon as officers were elected and assumed their
- respective duties it would be instantly in full force and vigor.
-
- If these States are out of the Union their State governments are
- still in force unless otherwise changed. And their citizens are to
- the Federal Government as foreigners, and it has in relation to them
- the same rights, and none other, as it had in relation to British
- subjects in the war of 1812, or to the Mexicans in 1846. Whatever
- may be the true relation of the seceded States, the Federal
- Government derives no power in relation to them or their citizens
- from the provision of the Constitution now under consideration, but
- in the one case derives all its power from the duty of enforcing the
- “Supreme law of the land;” and in the other from the power “to
- declare war.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- The gentleman [Mr. Davis] states his case too strongly. The duty
- imposed on Congress is doubtless important, but Congress has no
- right to use a means of performing it forbidden by the Constitution,
- no matter how necessary or proper it might be thought to be. But,
- sir, this doctrine is monstrous. It has no foundation in the
- Constitution. It subjects all the States to the will of Congress; it
- places their institutions at the feet of Congress. It creates in
- Congress an absolute unqualified despotism. It asserts the power of
- Congress in changing the State governments to be “plenary, supreme
- and unlimited”—“subject only to revision by the people of the whole
- United States.” The rights of the people of the State are nothing,
- their will is nothing. Congress first decides, the people of the
- whole Union revise. My own State of Ohio is liable at any moment to
- be called in question for her constitution. She does not permit
- negroes to vote.... From that decision of the Congress there is no
- appeal to the people of Ohio, but only to the people of
- Massachusetts, and New York, and Wisconsin, at the election of
- Representatives; and if a majority cannot be elected to reverse the
- decision, the people of Ohio must submit. Woe be to the day when
- that doctrine shall be established, for from its centralized
- despotism we will appeal to the sword!
-
-The rights of the States, he said in conclusion, had reconciled liberty
-with empire, the freedom of the individual with increase of the public
-domain; by the proposed measure these were all swept instantly away. It
-substituted “despotism for self-government; despotism the more severe
-because vested in a numerous Congress elected by a people who may not
-feel the exercise of its power.... It maintains integrity of territory
-but destroys the rights of the citizen.” Finally he declared that he
-preferred separation to the unity which the bill would create.[330]
-
-Debate was concluded by Henry Winter Davis, who rose for the purpose of
-perfecting the pending measure by moving as a substitute a bill
-essentially the same as that under consideration in the House; from that
-plan, however, it differed in two not unimportant particulars. First, it
-excluded what his friend Mr. Cox had objected to, the rule of one tenth,
-and required a majority to concur in forming a government. The other
-softened the operation of the clause excluding officers of the State and
-Confederate government, by saving merely ministerial officers and the
-inferior military officers; so that the exclusion merely affected
-persons of dangerous political influence. By an arrangement with
-Thaddeus Stevens, instead of having a direct vote on his substitute, a
-portion of it was proposed as a preamble to this bill, which, of course,
-would be voted on separately and take whatever fate the House might
-assign to it. With these observations Mr. Davis said, “I offer this as a
-substitute, and move the previous question upon it.” The substitute was
-agreed to, and the amendment to the preamble adopted, the preamble
-itself being rejected. By 73 yeas to 59 nays, the bill passed the House,
-May 4, 1864.[331]
-
-This important measure authorized the President, by and with the advice
-and consent of the Senate, to appoint for each of the States declared in
-rebellion a provisional governor, with pay and emoluments not to exceed
-that of a brigadier-general of volunteers, and who was to be charged
-with the civil administration of such State until a government was
-recognized as existing therein. As soon as military resistance to
-Federal authority had been suppressed, and the people had sufficiently
-returned to their obedience to the Constitution and the laws, it was
-made the duty of the governor to direct the United States marshal to
-enroll all white male citizens of the United States, resident in the
-State, in their respective counties; and wherever a majority of them
-took the oath of allegiance, the loyal people of the States were, by
-proclamation, to be invited by the governor to elect delegates to a
-convention to act upon the reëstablishment of a State government, the
-proclamation to prescribe the details of the election. Qualified
-electors in the army could vote at the headquarters of their respective
-commands. No person who had held or exercised any civil, military, State
-or Confederate office under the rebel occupation, and who had
-voluntarily borne arms against the United States, could either vote or
-be eligible as a delegate. The convention was required to insert in the
-constitution the following provisions:
-
- First. No person who has held or exercised any office, civil or
- military, except offices merely ministerial and military offices
- below colonel, State or Confederate, under the usurping power, shall
- vote for or be a member of the Legislature, or Governor.
-
- Second. Involuntary servitude is forever prohibited, and the freedom
- of all persons is guaranteed in said State.
-
- Third. No debt, State or Confederate, created by or under the
- sanction of the usurping power, shall be recognized or paid by the
- State.
-
-Upon the adoption of such a constitution by the convention and its
-ratification by the voters of the State the provisional governor should
-so certify to the President, who, after obtaining the assent of
-Congress, was empowered by proclamation to recognize the government so
-established, and none other, as the constitutional government of the
-State; from the date of such recognition, and not before, Senators and
-Representatives as well as electors for President and Vice-President
-could be legally chosen in such State. Until reorganization the
-provisional governor was to enforce the laws of the Union, and of the
-State before rebellion.
-
-The remaining provisions were as follows:
-
-Section 12 declared that “all persons held to involuntary servitude or
-labor in the States referred to, are emancipated and discharged
-therefrom, and they and their posterity are declared to be forever free.
-And if any such persons or their posterity shall be restrained of
-liberty, under pretense of any claim to such service or labor, the
-courts of the United States shall, on _habeas corpus_, discharge them.”
-
-Section 13 provided that “if any person declared free by this or any law
-of the United States, or any proclamation of the President, be
-restrained of liberty; with intent to be held in or reduced to
-involuntary servitude or labor, the person convicted before a court of
-competent jurisdiction of such act shall be punished by a fine of not
-less than $1,500, and be imprisoned not less than five nor more than
-twenty years.”
-
-By section 14 it was declared that “every person who shall hereafter
-hold or exercise any office, civil or military, except offices merely
-ministerial, and military offices below the grade of colonel, in the
-rebel service, State or Confederate, is declared not to be a citizen of
-the United States.”[332]
-
-On the following day the proposed measure came up in the Senate, was
-read twice by its title and referred to the Committee on Territories. On
-May 27 Mr. Wade reported the bill with amendments, and on June 30
-succeeding moved to postpone all prior orders and proceed to its
-consideration. His motion, however, was not agreed to, and it was not
-till July 1, when the session was drawing rapidly to a close, that its
-discussion began. To save time the amendments proposed by the committee
-were voted down. Senator Brown, of Missouri, believed that the subject
-of reconstruction could and should be postponed to a later day, and
-offered for the bill, by way of amendment, a substitute which declared
-incapable of voting “for electors of President or Vice-President of the
-United States, or of electing Senators or Representatives in Congress,”
-until the rebellion was abandoned, the inhabitants of all those States
-hitherto proclaimed in a state of insurrection. That question he
-regarded as the necessity of the hour.[333]
-
-Mr. Wade hoped this amendment would not prevail; there was nothing, he
-asserted, in the argument that sufficient time did not remain for its
-careful consideration, because it was early and thoroughly debated in
-the House and had been fully discussed by the Senate Committee. It was
-five months on their desks and the attention of Senators had often been
-called to it. On Republicans at least its consideration had frequently
-been urged by himself. More than ordinary care had been taken in this
-matter, and if the bill was not then understood it never would be.
-
-The question would arise in the ensuing campaign. Senators, he said, had
-been refused admission to Congress, and the principles on which they
-would be received should be declared. They were announced in the bill
-which had passed the House. It protected the Government against
-Confederate sympathizers and guarded the interests of loyal Southerners
-during the period of transition.
-
-The status of the seceded States was a question upon which men differed
-widely. It was a question to be ascertained and declared by Congress,
-“for the Executive ought not to be permitted to handle this great
-question to his own liking. It does not belong, under the Constitution,
-to the President to prescribe the rule, and it is a base abandonment of
-our own powers and our own duties to cast this great principle upon the
-decision of the executive branch of the Government.... I know very well
-that the President from the best motives undertook to fix a rule upon
-which he would admit these States back into the Union. It was not upon
-any principle of republicanism; it would not have guarantied to the
-States a republican form of government, because he prescribed the rule
-to be that when one tenth of the population would take a certain oath
-and agree to come back into the Union they might come in as States. When
-we consider that in the light of American principle, to say the least of
-it, it was absurd. The idea that a State shall take upon itself the
-great privilege of self-government when there are only one tenth of the
-people that can stand by the principle is most anti-republican,
-anomalous, and entirely subversive of the great principles that underlie
-all our State governments and the General Government. Majorities must
-rule, and until majorities be found loyal and trustworthy for State
-government, they must be governed by a stronger hand....
-
-“... I hold that once a State of this Union, always a State; that you
-cannot by wrong and violence displace the rights of anybody or
-disorganize the State.” It was marvellous to him how gentlemen could
-fancy that States forfeited their rights because more or less of the
-people had gone off into rebellion, and he added, “This bill proceeds
-upon that idea and discards absolutely the notion that States may lose
-their rights and that they may be abrogated and may be reduced to the
-condition of Territories. It denies any such thing as that. No sound
-principle can be adopted that warrants any such thing.”
-
-Noticing the imposition of conditions on the admission or on the
-readmission of a State, he remarked that this feature of the bill would
-probably receive more criticism than any other, and declared, “that the
-great Union party of the country are altogether convinced that slavery
-mixed up in a Government is so unsafe, so liable to overthrow that it
-cannot be admitted as an element in a State government.... Therefore
-this bill has taken special pains to say that the new government shall,
-in its constitution, proclaim emancipation as a condition upon which it
-shall be permitted to come into the Union.” There was a time, he
-admitted, when it would have been deemed unconstitutional in Congress to
-prescribe any particular principle for a constitution when a State was
-seeking to come into the Union. “We have done so, however,” he asserted,
-“in every State that we have ever admitted,” and yet perhaps the
-question was never entirely settled. “Would it be wise for us,” he
-asked, “in admitting States back into this Union to permit them to come
-with the very element that carried them out, with the very seeds of
-destruction which had destroyed them already? The framers of this bill,”
-he continued, “have sedulously shut it out, and made it a condition on
-which the seceded States shall come back that it shall be a fundamental
-principle of their constitution that slavery is excluded.”
-
-The amendment of Senator Brown he characterized as a bare negative; it
-did not inform the people of the seceded States upon what principle they
-were to be again admitted into the Union.[334]
-
-Mr. Carlile, of Virginia, observed on entering into the discussion that
-everything the bill proposed to do in the way of remedying existing
-evils would be accomplished by adopting the amendment offered by the
-Senator from Missouri. The provisions of the bill were not to be
-enforced and were not to have any life until after the suppression of
-the rebellion, and, therefore, there could be no pressing necessity for
-action at that time, when a large majority of Senators expected in three
-or four days to leave Washington for their homes. Senator Wade
-interrupted him to point out that there was provided a military governor
-whose duties could be performed in any stage of the rebellion, from the
-time Federal forces obtained a foothold in any State until it was in the
-Union again. The Virginia Senator agreed with Mr. Wade as to the extent
-of the President’s power in the matter, and in the belief that once a
-State in the Union always a State; but the bill, he said, not only
-maintained that State governments were overthrown, but so far as it
-could do so, recognized and assumed the right to overthrow the State
-governments if that work was not already accomplished. If the President
-had not the right to prescribe rules for the return of rebellious
-States, where was the constitutional provision which authorized Congress
-to do so? The title of the bill was an insult, he declared, to the
-understanding of every enlightened man in the nation and the bill itself
-one of the most revolutionary that ever was proposed in a deliberative
-body claiming to be the representatives of a free people.
-
-The question mooted in Congress forty years before, he continued, was
-insignificant compared to the present. That was a proposition to impose
-upon the inhabitants of a Territory seeking admission into the Union a
-restriction upon their right of self-government when they became a
-State. After one of the most exhaustive and learned debates that ever
-graced the Capitol of the nation that assumption for Congress was
-abandoned. It was permitted to rest as the settled law of the land that
-Congress had no power to impose limitations affecting the right of the
-people of a State to regulate their own domestic affairs, even when
-sought to be applied to the inhabitants of a Territory seeking admission
-to the Union. This continued the settled action of Congress until
-reversed at the preceding session by assuming to create an independent
-State out of a portion of the Commonwealth which he represented.
-
-“No State can have a Republican form of government,” he declared, “no
-State has a republican government, when that government, no matter what
-are its provisions, is prescribed to them by another outside of their
-limits. A republican form of government must emanate and emanate alone
-from the people that are to be governed. It belongs not to the Congress
-of the United States; it belongs not to the thirty-three States of this
-Union to prescribe for the smallest State within its folds a
-constitution or form of government. If you have a right to impose a
-limitation upon this power as to one subject of domestic legislation you
-have a right to impose it upon every subject. If you have a right to
-make one provision of a constitution for a people you have the right to
-make the entire instrument itself.”
-
-An interruption of his argument by Mr. Wade drew from the Virginia
-Senator a query rather embarrassing to the Ohio statesman. “Where,”
-asked Carlile, “does the Senator derive the power to appoint a governor
-for a State, a State which he acknowledges to be in existence, a State
-government that he acknowledges to be in existence, a State government
-that he acknowledges it to be his duty to protect and maintain? By what
-provision of the Constitution does the Senator derive the authority to
-appoint for such a State an executive head?” Mr. Wade replied that when
-the Constitution imposed the duty of guaranteeing a republican form of
-government it conferred the power to do so, and he in turn inquired, “Is
-not that good law?” “No, sir,” answered Carlile, who proceeded: “Now,
-Mr. President, I will satisfy the Senator himself, I think; and really
-it is not necessary for me to attempt to satisfy him, for he is too good
-a lawyer not to know the meaning of the word ‘guaranty.’ What is it?
-Does the authority to ‘guaranty to each State in this Union a republican
-form of government’ authorize this Union to set up a government, to
-create a government, or to make a government? Is the maker of a note the
-man who guaranties its payment? There is no man in the Senate who knows
-better the definition and legal significance of the word ‘guaranty’ than
-the Senator from Ohio, and none, I am sure, is more familiar, too, with
-the power that was intended to be conferred by this provision of the
-Constitution.” After admitting that he would bring the power of the
-Government to bear on a faction who undertook to establish a monarchical
-form of government, Mr. Wade put this hypothetical case: “Suppose now
-that we have conquered them and the people are still bent on their
-monarchy, shall we not guaranty a republican government to them by
-putting one over them?” “If the Senator be right,” answered Carlile,
-“Mr. Madison, the author of the Constitution, was wrong.” He then quoted
-from the forty-third number of the Federalist:
-
- “To guaranty to every State in the Union a republican form of
- government; to protect each of them against invasion; and on
- application of the Legislature, or of the Executive (when the
- Legislature cannot be convened), against domestic violence.”
-
- In a confederacy founded on republican principles and composed of
- republican members, the superintending government ought clearly to
- possess authority to defend the system against aristocratic or
- monarchical innovations.
-
-“The very case put by Senator Wade,” observed Carlile; “and how it is to
-be done is stated:”
-
- The more intimate the nature of such a Union may be, the greater
- interest have the members in the political institutions of each
- other; and the greater right to insist that the forms of government
- under which the compact was entered into should be _substantially_
- maintained.... It may possibly be asked, what need there could be of
- such a precaution, and whether it may not become a pretext for
- alterations in the State governments, without the concurrence of the
- States themselves. These questions admit of ready answers. If the
- interposition of the General Government should not be needed, the
- provision for such an event will be a harmless superfluity only in
- the Constitution. But who can say what experiments can be produced
- by the caprice of particular States, by the ambition of enterprising
- leaders, or by the intrigues and influence of foreign powers? To the
- second question it may be answered that if the General Government
- should interpose by virtue of this constitutional authority, it will
- be, of course, bound to pursue the authority. But the authority
- extends no further than to a _guaranty_ of a republican form of
- government, which supposes a _preëxisting government_ of the form
- which is to be guarantied.
-
-Sustained in his position by Madison’s commentary Carlile resumed: “Now,
-sir, is the Senator answered?... It is not claimed or pretended, I
-suppose, by the Senator from Ohio, or by any advocate of this bill, that
-under any other provision of the Constitution can a pretext be afforded
-for the assertion of such a power as this bill proposes to assert.” To
-Senator Wilkinson’s inquiry, what would the Government of the United
-States do if the people of South Carolina determined that they would not
-have a republican form of government in that State, the Virginia Senator
-answered:
-
-“I would have the Government of the United States do nothing that it has
-not the power under the Constitution to do, because I believe that the
-Government of the United States is a Government of limited powers. I
-believe it to be its duty under the grant of power in the Constitution
-to guaranty the existence of a preëxisting republican government. That
-government existed in South Carolina; the people have not determined, at
-least before this war they had not determined, to have any other than a
-republican form of government. We had recognized that government as a
-republican form of government by the recognition of the State in all its
-departments and the admission of all its national representatives. It is
-made the duty of the Government of the United States, not of Congress;
-and I desire to call the attention of the Senator to that, because it
-bears upon his assumption for Congress of power which does not belong to
-the Executive. It is not alone the duty of Congress to guaranty a
-republican form of government to the people of the several States; the
-extent of that guarantee is not limited alone to the means which
-Congress may employ; but the words of the Constitution are ‘the United
-States shall guaranty.’ Hence every department of the Government is
-equally bound; and Congress being the legislative branch of course
-participates to a greater extent in the discharge of that duty.”
-
-After a discussion with Mr. Clark, Carlile proceeded in his argument:
-“But, sir, the Senator from Ohio says the Union is to be preserved. So
-say I. Upon what principle are these States to come back into the Union?
-The people, says the Senator from Ohio, will meet you with that inquiry.
-Sir, when was ever such an inquiry suggested to the brain of any loyal
-man in this Union? When was such an inquiry ever put? Never until after
-a policy different from that which characterized the commencement of
-this struggle was entered upon by the party in power. All said the Union
-was to be restored; all accepted the struggle as the use of the military
-power of the Government in the restoration of the Union. What Union? The
-Union of the Constitution. The Union into which new States are to be
-admitted. It is not into ‘a Union’ but into ‘this Union’ that the States
-are admitted. What Union? The Union of the Constitution, none other; and
-he who seeks to preserve the Union can only do it by an observance of
-the Constitution and of the constitutional means to restore it, not
-reconstruct it.
-
-“... In this Union, created by this Constitution, of limited and
-delegated powers, all prescribed and written in the instrument, you
-propose to exercise your legislative power by usurping the rights and
-liberties of the people, a power which all the people you represent
-could not use or could not exert without the destruction of the Union
-which the Constitution formed. There is no power in this Government,
-there is no power in the parties to this Government, there is no power
-in all the States of this Union to prescribe a constitution for the
-little State of Rhode Island. If every other State in the Union, the
-adhering as well as the rebellious States, if every man, woman, and
-child in them were to meet and prescribe a constitution for the people
-of Rhode Island, they would have no power or authority to do so under
-the Union; and tell me where the people’s representatives derive the
-power to do that which all the people in their collective capacity, save
-the small minority which constitutes that State, cannot do?”[335]
-
-Mr. Carlile emphasized the fact that the bill under consideration was
-not a war measure. In a running argument with several Senators he showed
-both a ready and comprehensive knowledge of the Constitution and made
-some telling points against the bill as well as against the radical
-tendencies in Congress. His speech was, perhaps, the very ablest
-delivered by any Senator in opposition to the proposed measure. At its
-conclusion Mr. Brown’s amendment was agreed to.
-
-An amendment offered by Charles Sumner to enact the Emancipation
-Proclamation into a law was rejected by a vote of 21 to 11. The
-Massachusetts statesman did not wish, he said, to see the edict of
-freedom “left to float on a Presidential proclamation.”[336]
-
-The bill concerning States in insurrection against the United States
-then passed the Senate by 26 yeas to 3 nays.[337] When the vote was
-taken 20 Senators were absent. On the succeeding day, July 2, 1864, a
-message announced the disagreement of the House to the Senate amendment
-and requested a committee of conference. A subsequent motion of Mr. Wade
-that the Senate recede from its amendment and agree to the bill of the
-House was carried after some discussion by a vote of 18 to 14, thus
-passing the bill on the same day.[338] The names of Doolittle,
-Henderson, Ten Eyck and Trumbull voting with the Democrats in opposition
-foreshadowed that division in the Republican ranks which afterwards
-occurred.
-
-The history of this famous bill from the moment of its passage by
-Congress until the publication a week later of the President’s
-proclamation concerning it is best related in the Life of Mr. Lincoln by
-his private secretaries, Messrs. Nicolay and Hay. These writers
-possessed an unusual opportunity for ascertaining the sentiments of the
-President upon nearly every question of public interest.
-
-“Congress,” says the diary of Mr. Hay, “was to adjourn at noon on the
-Fourth of July; the President was in his room at the Capitol signing
-bills, which were laid before him as they were brought from the two
-Houses. When this important bill was placed before him he laid it aside
-and went on with the other work of the moment. Several prominent members
-entered in a state of intense anxiety over the fate of the bill. Mr.
-Sumner and Mr. Boutwell, while their nervousness was evident, refrained
-from any comment. Zachariah Chandler, who was unabashed in any mortal
-presence, roundly asked the President if he intended to sign the bill.
-The President replied: ‘This bill has been placed before me a few
-moments before Congress adjourns. It is a matter of too much importance
-to be swallowed in that way.’ ‘If it is vetoed,’ cried Mr. Chandler, ‘it
-will damage us fearfully in the Northwest. The important point is that
-one prohibiting slavery in the reconstructed States.’ Mr. Lincoln said:
-‘That is the point on which I doubt the authority of Congress to act.’
-‘It is no more than you have done yourself,’ said the Senator. The
-President answered: ‘I conceive that I may in an emergency do things on
-military grounds which cannot be done constitutionally by Congress.’ Mr.
-Chandler, expressing his deep chagrin, went out, and the President,
-addressing the members of the Cabinet who were seated with him, said: ‘I
-do not see how any of us now can deny and contradict what we have always
-said, that Congress has no constitutional power over slavery in the
-States.’ Mr. Fessenden expressed his entire agreement with this view. ‘I
-have even had my doubts,’ he said, ‘as to the constitutional efficacy of
-your own decree of emancipation, in those cases where it has not been
-carried into effect by the actual advance of the army.’
-
-“The President said: ‘This bill and the position of these gentlemen seem
-to me, in asserting that the insurrectionary States are no longer in the
-Union, to make the fatal admission that States, whenever they please,
-may of their own motion dissolve their connection with the Union. Now we
-cannot survive that admission, I am convinced. If that be true, I am not
-President; these gentlemen are not Congress. I have laboriously
-endeavored to avoid that question ever since it first began to be
-mooted, and thus to avoid confusion and disturbance in our own councils.
-It was to obviate this question that I earnestly favored the movement
-for an amendment to the Constitution abolishing slavery, which passed
-the Senate and failed in the House. I thought it much better, if it were
-possible, to restore the Union without the necessity of a violent
-quarrel among its friends as to whether certain States have been in or
-out of the Union during the war—a merely metaphysical question, and one
-unnecessary to be forced into discussion.’
-
-“Although every member of the Cabinet agreed with the President, when, a
-few minutes later, he entered his carriage to go home, he foresaw the
-importance of the step he had resolved to take and its possibly
-disastrous consequences to himself. When some one said to him that the
-threats made by the extreme radicals had no foundation, and that people
-would not bolt their ticket on a question of metaphysics, he answered:
-‘If they choose to make a point upon this, I do not doubt that they can
-do harm. They have never been friendly to me. At all events, I must keep
-some consciousness of being somewhere near right. I must keep some
-standard or principle fixed within myself.’”[339]
-
-A perusal of the preceding abridgment of debates shows clearly that the
-bill was designed by Congress as a measure of reconstruction and
-intended by many of its leading advocates as a rebuke of the President.
-He was not, however, a statesman whom even the deliberate censure of a
-coördinate branch of Government could hurry into an act of rashness; he
-had never been precipitate; indeed, the burden of radical criticism was
-that Mr. Lincoln was provokingly slow. This was the opinion which
-Charles Sumner expressed in confidential correspondence with his English
-friends[340] and which Secretary Chase entered in the pages of his
-diary.[341] The President was, it is true, the most cautious of men, and
-the fact goes far to explain the absence during his eventful
-administration of even a single serious blunder; the discovery of a
-gross error of judgment seldom or never rewarded the researches of his
-ablest critics. Though his modesty was scarcely less than his prudence,
-he entertained a just conception of the dignity of his office; long
-reflection upon constitutional questions, which made him familiar with
-the extent of executive power, taught him likewise to recognize those
-limitations which the fundamental law had imposed upon legislative
-action. Another characteristic which made him a formidable adversary in
-every controversy was a constant purpose to be always, as he expressed
-it himself, “somewhere near right.”
-
-The measure had been so long under consideration that none of its
-provisions could have taken him by surprise, and we are justified in
-concluding that when the bill was presented for his approval he had
-already determined on his course of action. Indeed there is evidence
-that some of his supporters in Congress had written to their friends in
-Louisiana predicting the very fate that afterward befell the bill. Their
-outline of the President’s course admits of no other explanation than
-that he had communicated to them his intentions respecting it. The
-progress of the measure in the Senate was to be so retarded that the
-adjournment of Congress would relieve him of the necessity of exercising
-the veto, and that is precisely what happened. In the very last hour of
-the session it was submitted for his approval; his disposal of the bill
-on that occasion has already been noticed; his approval was withheld and
-Congress rose before the expiration of the ten days which would enact
-the bill into a law without his signature. Though an interested view had
-not been overlooked, he disregarded in discharge of his duty every
-personal consequence of the important step which he purposed to take.
-His hostility to the measure had long been suspected, but when knowledge
-of his failure to approve it had become a certainty the anger of the
-more radical members of his party became extreme. They had clearly been
-outwitted by the President and many of them, eager for retaliation,
-returned to their homes meditating schemes of revenge.
-
-For the present, at least, anything like adequate discipline of Mr.
-Lincoln was not within their power, for the Baltimore convention, which
-renominated him for the Presidency, had adjourned nearly a month before.
-This at least was secure. His election, though not entirely a foregone
-conclusion, was reasonably assured; few of the discomfited members even
-imagined the thought of injuring their party to embarrass the President.
-It is easy to believe, however, that they intended such criticism of his
-policy as would be consistent with party success. But even here he
-resolved to dispute with them a field of operations which they believed
-entirely their own. The President, it is true, could not, even if so
-inclined, justify his conduct in person before the voters of every State
-in the Union; he could, however, and did forestall expected criticism
-from Congressmen by publishing a proclamation vindicating his “pocket”
-veto, thus destroying whatever hope remained to radical Republicans of
-diminishing his popularity by ascribing to him base or selfish motives
-for opposing the sense of the Legislative department of Government. As
-on other critical occasions so on this he found no precedent to guide
-him, but with characteristic firmness proceeded deliberately to
-establish one. When some of the Congressmen reached their States they
-found their constituents already pondering the proclamation of July 8,
-1864. Its importance requires that it be quoted in full:
-
- Whereas, at the late session, Congress passed a bill to “guarantee
- to certain States, whose governments have been usurped or
- overthrown, a republican form of government,” a copy of which is
- hereunto annexed;
-
- And whereas the said bill was presented to the President of the
- United States for his approval less than one hour before the _sine
- die_ adjournment of said session, and was not signed by him;
-
- And whereas the said bill contains, among other things, a plan for
- restoring the States in rebellion to their proper practical relation
- in the Union, which plan expresses the sense of Congress upon that
- subject, and which plan it is now thought fit to lay before the
- people for their consideration:
-
- Now, therefore, I, Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States,
- do proclaim, declare, and make known, that, while I am (as I was in
- December last, when by proclamation I propounded a plan for
- restoration) unprepared, by a formal approval of this bill, to be
- inflexibly committed to any single plan of restoration; and, while I
- am also unprepared to declare that the free-State constitutions and
- governments already adopted and installed in Arkansas and Louisiana
- shall be set aside and held for naught, thereby repelling and
- discouraging the loyal citizens who have set up the same as to
- further effort, or to declare a constitutional competency in
- Congress to abolish slavery in States, but am at the same time
- sincerely hoping and expecting that a constitutional amendment
- abolishing slavery throughout the nation may be adopted,
- nevertheless I am fully satisfied with the system for restoration
- contained in the bill as one very proper plan for the loyal people
- of any State choosing to adopt it, and that I am, and at all times
- shall be, prepared to give the Executive aid and assistance to such
- people, so soon as the military resistance to the United States
- shall have been suppressed in any such State, and the people thereof
- shall have sufficiently returned to their obedience to the
- Constitution and laws of the United States, in which cases Military
- Governors will be appointed, with directions to proceed according to
- the bill.[342]
-
-This unexpected publication was very differently received by the various
-elements composing the Republican party; a large majority of those
-acting with that organization still confided in Mr. Lincoln; by the
-radical wing, however, he was sharply censured. Notwithstanding the
-necessity for harmony in the approaching campaign two of the boldest
-leaders, disregarding every consideration of prudence, arraigned the
-President in language which for severity was never surpassed by the
-invectives of his ablest political opponents. In the entire experience
-of the Republic no Executive had ever assumed to reject those provisions
-in a legislative measure which he disliked and adopt those that were
-acceptable. This is precisely what Mr. Lincoln did, and the reasons for
-his action he declared to the people with a confidence which forcibly
-recalls the direction of Andrew Jackson to the editor of his official
-organ: “Speak out to the people, sir, and tell them that instead of
-supporting me and my policy Congress is engaged in President-making.”
-There was, however, this difference: Abraham Lincoln addressed the
-people directly and ventured no criticism of their representatives. Like
-his more impulsive though not less popular predecessor he was not
-deceived in the reliance which he placed in the patriotic instincts of
-the multitude, which cared little for nice metaphysical distinctions; by
-the masses of the people he was trusted to the end.
-
-By Henry Winter Davis and Benjamin F. Wade, chief authors of the bill,
-its progress had been watched with feverish anxiety; when convinced that
-their labor was lost they became greatly agitated and made no effort to
-conceal their indignation at the conduct of the President. Their joint
-protest, printed in the _New York Tribune_ of August 5, was, perhaps,
-the most bitter attack made upon Mr. Lincoln during his Presidential
-career. Their fierce manifesto, addressed “To the supporters of the
-Government,” declares that the writers had “read without surprise, but
-not without indignation, the proclamation of the President of the 8th of
-July, 1864.
-
-“The supporters of the Administration are responsible to the country for
-its conduct; and it is their right and duty to check the encroachments
-of the Executive on the authority of Congress, and to require it to
-confine itself to its proper sphere.”
-
-The paper then related the history of the bill. Its treatment by the
-President, they declared, indicated a persistent though unavowed purpose
-to defeat the will of the people by the Executive perversion of the
-Constitution. They insinuated that only the lowest personal motives
-could have dictated this action. “The President,” they said, “by
-preventing this bill from becoming a law, holds the electoral votes of
-the rebel States at the dictation of his personal ambition.
-
-“If those votes turn the balance in his favor, is it to be supposed that
-his competitor, defeated by such means, will acquiesce?
-
-“If the rebel majority assert their supremacy in those States, and send
-votes which elect an enemy of the Government, will we not repel his
-claims?
-
-“And is not that civil war for the Presidency inaugurated by the votes
-of the rebel States?
-
-“Seriously impressed with these dangers, Congress, ‘_the proper
-constitutional authority_,’ formally declared that there are no State
-governments in the rebel States, and provided for their erection at a
-proper time; and both the Senate and the House of Representatives
-rejected the Senators and Representatives chosen under the authority of
-what the President calls the free constitution and government of
-Arkansas.
-
-“The President’s proclamation ‘holds for naught’ this judgment, and
-discards the authority of the Supreme Court, and strides headlong toward
-the anarchy his proclamation of the 8th of December inaugurated.
-
-“If electors for President be allowed to be chosen in either of those
-States, a sinister light will be cast on the motives which induced the
-President to ‘hold for naught’ the will of Congress rather than his
-government in Louisiana and Arkansas.
-
-“The judgment of Congress which the President defies was the exercise of
-an authority exclusively vested in Congress by the Constitution, to
-determine what is the established government in a State, and in its own
-nature and by the highest judicial authority binding on all other
-departments of the Government.”
-
-They ridiculed the President’s expressed hope that the constitutional
-amendment abolishing slavery might be adopted. “We curiously inquire,”
-continue Messrs. Wade and Davis, “on what his expectation rests, after
-the vote of the House of Representatives at the recent session, and in
-the face of the political complexion of more than enough of the States
-to prevent the possibility of its adoption within any reasonable time;
-and why he did not indulge his sincere hopes with so large an
-installment of the blessing as his approval of the bill would have
-secured?
-
- * * * * *
-
-“A more studied outrage on the legislative authority of the people has
-never been perpetrated.
-
-“Congress passed a bill; the President refused to approve it, and then
-by proclamation puts as much of it in force as he sees fit, and proposes
-to execute those parts by officers unknown to the laws of the United
-States, and not subject to the confirmation of the Senate.
-
-“The bill directed the appointment of provisional governors by and with
-the advice and consent of the Senate.
-
-“The President, after defeating the law, proposes to appoint, without
-law and without the advice and consent of the Senate, military governors
-for the rebel States!
-
-“He has already exercised this dictatorial usurpation in Louisiana, and
-defeated the bill to prevent its limitation.”
-
-Scarcely an expression of the proclamation, which was examined in
-detail, escaped its share of censure or of ridicule. To suppose that the
-President was ignorant of the contents of the bill was out of the
-question, for it had been discussed, they asserted, during more than a
-month in the House of Representatives, by which it was passed as early
-as the 4th of May. It passed the Senate in absolutely the form in which
-it came from the House. Indeed, at the President’s request, a draft of a
-bill substantially the same in material points, and almost identical in
-those features objected to by the proclamation, was submitted for his
-consideration during the winter of 1862–1863.
-
-The “Protest” included also a sharp contrast between the Executive plan
-of December 8, 1863, and that embodied in the bill which had passed
-Congress. That measure, said Messrs. Wade and Davis, required a majority
-of the voters to establish a State government, the proclamation was
-satisfied with one tenth; “the bill requires one oath, the proclamation
-another; the bill ascertains voters by registering, the proclamation by
-guess; the bill exacts adherence to existing territorial limits, the
-proclamation admits of others; the bill governs the rebel States _by
-law_, equalizing all before it, the proclamation commits them to the
-lawless discretion of military governors and provost marshals; the bill
-forbids electors for President (in the rebel States), the proclamation
-and defeat of the bill threaten us with civil war for the admission or
-exclusion of such votes....”
-
-This arraignment of the President’s course concluded with the language
-of admonition, if not indeed of absolute menace: “The President has
-greatly presumed on the forbearance which the supporters of his
-Administration have so long practised, in view of the arduous conflict
-in which we are engaged, and the reckless ferocity of our political
-opponents.
-
-“But he must understand that our support is of a cause, and not of a
-man; that the authority of Congress is paramount and must be respected;
-that the whole body of the Union men of Congress will not submit to be
-impeached by him of rash and unconstitutional legislation; and if he
-wishes our support, he must confine himself to his Executive duties,—to
-obey and execute, not make the laws,—to suppress by arms armed
-rebellion, and leave political reorganization to Congress.
-
-“If the supporters of the Government fail to insist on this, they become
-responsible for the usurpations which they fail to rebuke, and are
-justly liable to the indignation of the people whose rights and
-security, committed to their keeping, they sacrifice.
-
-“Let them consider the remedy for these usurpations, and, having found
-it, fearlessly execute it.”[343]
-
-The authors of this remarkable paper were eminent in the councils of
-their party and stood high in the estimation of Union men everywhere.
-Senator Wade was distinguished no less for his physical than for his
-moral courage—qualities impaired somewhat, it is true, by a temper
-fierce and vindictive. Henry Winter Davis, whose zeal for civil liberty
-will constitute his best claim to the gratitude of posterity, possessed
-literary gifts scarcely surpassed by any statesman then in public life.
-Though treated with extreme fairness, not to say generosity, by the
-President, he pursued toward the Administration a course of consistent
-hostility. This opposition, which even Mr. Lincoln’s tact could never
-disarm, has been ascribed to disappointment at his failure to obtain a
-place in the Cabinet. While the selection of Montgomery Blair from his
-own State of Maryland may have been a cause of estrangement, a sense of
-what Mr. Davis regarded as public duty contributed, doubtless, to
-intensify this feeling, which led him ultimately to think the President
-scarcely entitled to courteous treatment. With the Ohio Senator the
-pitiless maxim, _vae victis_, had an undoubted influence. Both were
-gentlemen of wide experience and acknowledged ability, and yet their
-vigorous and fearless arraignment of the President revealed an
-astonishing lack of political sagacity. They inquired, for example, on
-what foundation he rested his expectation of an adoption of the
-constitutional amendment abolishing slavery. The incorporation, soon
-after, of such a provision in the fundamental law shows their want of
-insight into the tendencies of the times. The fire of the prophet,
-indeed, was present in the protest; his inspiration was altogether
-wanting. Their absurd assertion that the electoral votes of Louisiana,
-Arkansas and Tennessee were the prime consideration with the President
-must be attributed to the passion rather than to the reason of his
-critics, for few men of that generation were more familiar with the
-Constitution in all its relations. Better than most of their readers
-they knew that the duty of counting such votes was entrusted not to a
-possibly interested Executive, but to a joint convention of both Houses.
-If the Maryland member believed the President had committed the
-misdemeanors charged and insinuated it was his duty to bring before the
-House the question of impeachment. Far less than was expressed in the
-protest would have been ground for investigation. If tenderness to
-Lincoln, a weakness of which Mr. Davis at least was never suspected, or
-a concern for party welfare prevented such a step, then he was himself
-guilty of a gross neglect of duty. Doubtless this consideration,
-together with the want of moderation shown in the manifesto, subjected
-its authors to a suspicion of insincerity. Indeed, one does not read a
-dozen lines of their arraignment without discovering the chief if not
-the sole cause of its publication. “The President,” they say, “did not
-sign the bill ‘to guarantee to certain States whose governments have
-been usurped, a republican form of government’—passed by the supporters
-of his Administration in both Houses of Congress after mature
-deliberation.” In brief, the political departments of Government had
-entered upon a struggle for power; Congress had been defeated, and its
-discomfited leaders sought to relieve their feelings by railing at the
-President.
-
-Except that it probably defeated the renomination of Mr. Davis for
-Congress, their protest was followed by no political result of
-moment.[344] In it the mass of Republicans perceived only the seeds of
-dissension within their ranks. In this view it was a source of delight
-to Democrats, though they felt little sympathy with either the defeated
-bill or the purposes of its chief authors.
-
------
-
-Footnote 309:
-
- See p. 23, _ante_.
-
-Footnote 310:
-
- Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 33.
-
-Footnote 311:
-
- Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 34.
-
-Footnote 312:
-
- Appendix, Part IV., Globe, 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 82–85; also
- Speeches and Addresses of Henry Winter Davis. New York: Harper &
- Brothers, 1867, pp. 368–383.
-
-Footnote 313:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1970–1972.
-
-Footnote 314:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1974–1981.
-
-Footnote 315:
-
- Ibid., pp. 1981–1983.
-
-Footnote 316:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 2002–2006.
-
-Footnote 317:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 2008.
-
-Footnote 318:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 2011–2014.
-
-Footnote 319:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 2038.
-
-Footnote 320:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 2039–2041.
-
-Footnote 321:
-
- Ibid., p. 2041.
-
-Footnote 322:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 2041–2042.
-
-Footnote 323:
-
- Ibid., p. 2043.
-
-Footnote 324:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 2071.
-
-Footnote 325:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 2073.
-
-Footnote 326:
-
- Ibid., p. 2074.
-
-Footnote 327:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess 38th Cong., p. 2078.
-
-Footnote 328:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 2095–2102.
-
-Footnote 329:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 2102–2105.
-
-Footnote 330:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 2105–2107.
-
-Footnote 331:
-
- Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 2108.
-
-Footnote 332:
-
- Globe, Part IV., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 3448–3449.
-
-Footnote 333:
-
- Ibid., p. 3449.
-
-Footnote 334:
-
- Globe, Part IV., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp 3448–3450.
-
-Footnote 335:
-
- Globe, Part IV., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 3451–3453.
-
-Footnote 336:
-
- Ibid., p. 3460.
-
-Footnote 337:
-
- Globe, Part IV., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 3461.
-
-Footnote 338:
-
- Ibid., p. 3491.
-
-Footnote 339:
-
- Diary of John Hay, quoted in Abraham Lincoln, A History, Vol. IX. pp.
- 120–122.
-
-Footnote 340:
-
- Pierce’s Memoir of Sumner, Vol. IV. pp. 57, 60, 83, 84, 106, 108, 130,
- etc.
-
-Footnote 341:
-
- Shuckers’ Life of Chase, pp. 440n, 442, 453, 495.
-
-Footnote 342:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 545;
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 318–319.
-
-Footnote 343:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1864, pp. 307–310n.
-
-Footnote 344:
-
- Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. II. p. 44.
-
-
-
-
- VIII
- AN ATTEMPT TO COMPROMISE
-
-
-When Congress met in December, 1864, Mr. Lincoln, who received the
-electoral votes of twenty-two of the twenty-five States participating in
-the contest, had again been chosen President. In the struggle for power
-he had refrained with his usual prudence from improving his advantage
-over the Legislative department. The annual message omitted all
-reference to the controversy occasioned by his failure to sign, and his
-proclamation concerning, the bill of Messrs. Wade and Davis; the
-question of reconstruction was noticed in only the most casual manner. A
-statement of the satisfactory condition of foreign relations introduced
-the Executive communication; the subject of finance received the
-consideration that its importance required. The vast proportions and the
-efficient state of the navy were mentioned as matter of congratulation.
-General Sherman’s projected march of three hundred miles through hostile
-regions was characterized as the most remarkable feature in the military
-operations of the year. This with other evidences of approaching
-disruption in the Confederacy led logically to a summary of what had
-been accomplished toward reorganization in those States already wrested
-from insurgent armies. On this subject the message observed: “Important
-movements have also occurred during the year to the effect of molding
-society for durability in the Union. Although short of complete success,
-it is much in the right direction that twelve thousand citizens in each
-of the States of Arkansas and Louisiana have organized loyal State
-governments, with free constitutions, and are earnestly struggling to
-maintain and administer them.”[345] Movements in the same direction, he
-said, more extensive though less definite, were in progress elsewhere
-and should not be overlooked. No plan of reconstruction was proposed, or
-even alluded to in the message.
-
-Among questions beyond Executive authority to adjust was specified the
-admission of members to Congress. In disclaiming power over this subject
-he anticipated the criticism of those Senators and Representatives who
-later in the session ascribed to him a design to usurp important
-functions of the Legislative branch of Government.
-
-From its concluding paragraphs we are enabled to collect the sentiments
-of the President relative to his offer, a year before, of a general
-pardon to designated classes upon specified terms. In this connection he
-said: “But the time may come—probably will come—when public duty shall
-demand that it [the door open to repentant rebels] be closed; and that,
-in lieu, more rigorous measures than heretofore shall be adopted.” This
-seems to establish beyond question the fact that Mr. Lincoln feared some
-measures more stringent than he had been hitherto pursuing might be
-rendered necessary by the failure of a policy of clemency to recall any
-large number of insurgents to their obedience to the Constitution and
-the laws.
-
-He ventured to recommend a reconsideration of the proposed
-constitutional amendment abolishing slavery throughout the United
-States, which at the preceding session had passed the Senate, but failed
-to receive in the House the requisite two thirds vote. Though the
-present, he reminded them, was the same Congress and composed of nearly
-the same members, their judgments were, no doubt, influenced by an
-intervening election, which, though it imposed on them no obligation to
-change their views, made it reasonably certain that if they did not
-submit the amendment to the States the succeeding Congress would. He
-inquired, since its passage was merely a question of time, whether they
-would not agree that the sooner the better? The voice of the people, he
-added, had for the first time been heard on that question.[346]
-
-As the President believed, the House had been so far converted to his
-views that a joint resolution adopting the amendment was passed early in
-the session by a vote of 119 to 56.[347]
-
-When Congress assembled the public was occupied chiefly in watching the
-progress of naval and military operations. The sinking of the _Alabama_
-and the capture of the _Florida_ practically ended Confederate
-privateering, for any expectations based upon the escape of the
-_Albemarle_ were frustrated by the enterprise and daring of Lieutenant
-Cushing. One army had been destroyed by Sheridan, another crippled by
-Thomas. Tidings of telling blows inflicted by General Sherman gave
-something like assurance of his safety. Though not without heavy loss,
-Grant had forced Lee within the defences of Richmond and Petersburg.
-Some of the lesser Union advantages had, it is true, been offset by
-Southern victories; signs of disintegration within the Confederacy,
-however, were multiplying, and this condition forced upon Congress the
-inevitable question of reconstruction.
-
-By unanimous consent of the House Thaddeus Stevens, on December 8,
-offered resolutions distributing the President’s message. To the
-Committee on the Rebellious States was referred so much of it as was
-alleged to relate “to the duty of the United States to guaranty a
-republican form of government to the States in which the governments
-recognized by the United States have been abrogated or overthrown.”[348]
-
-Nothing whatever in the message or the accompanying documents related to
-any such duty on the part of the United States, and the resolution
-assumed such a recommendation, no doubt, for the purpose of bringing the
-subject before Congress. One week later, Mr. Ashley, of Ohio, reported a
-bill, on the subject of Stevens’s resolution, which was read twice,
-ordered to be printed and returned to the Committee. On January 12
-succeeding Representative Eliot, of Massachusetts, gave notice of his
-intention to offer at the proper time an amendment to the bill in charge
-of Mr. Ashley. No objection having been made, it was ordered to be
-printed. This was, in fact, a substitute for the bill reported by the
-Ohio member, and provided “that no State engaged in rebellion against
-the Government of the United States shall be allowed to resume its
-political relations with the Government of the United States until by
-the action of the loyal citizens within the limits of the same a State
-constitution shall be ordained and established, republican in form,
-forever prohibiting involuntary servitude within the State, and
-guarantying to all persons freedom and equality of rights before the
-law.” Its second section provided “that the State of Louisiana shall be
-permitted to renew its political relations with the Government of the
-United States under the constitution adopted by the convention assembled
-at New Orleans on the 6th of April, 1864.”[349]
-
-That some of the more influential among the radical members desired to
-avoid, if possible, a controversy with the President may be fairly
-inferred from a letter of Charles Sumner, written December 27, 1864, to
-Doctor Lieber. Among other things the Senator says: “I have presented to
-the President the duty of harmony between Congress and the Executive. He
-is agreed. It is proposed to admit Louisiana (which ought not to be
-done), and at the same time pass the reconstruction bill for all the
-other States, giving the electoral franchise to ‘all citizens’ without
-distinction of color. If this arrangement is carried out, it will be an
-immense political act.”[350] A communication to John Bright, written a
-few days after the above, January 1, 1865, confirms this view. On that
-occasion Mr. Sumner said: “The President is exerting every force to
-bring Congress to receive Louisiana under the Banks government. I do not
-believe Louisiana is strong enough in loyalty and freedom for an
-independent State. The evidence on this point seems overwhelming. I have
-discussed it with the President, and have tried to impress on him the
-necessity of having no break between him and Congress on such questions.
-Much as I am against the premature recognition of Louisiana, I will hold
-my peace if I can secure a rule for other States, so that we may be
-saved from daily anxiety with regard to their condition.”[351] These
-passages explain the amendment to the revived bill. Sumner was willing
-to remain a neutral spectator of the debates on the recognition of
-Louisiana provided the reorganization of the remaining States should be
-made on the lines indicated by Congress.
-
-On January 16, Ashley’s bill was reached in the regular order of
-business; by direction of the Committee on the Rebellious States, it was
-offered as a substitute for the original measure, from which it differed
-in one very important particular. It expressly recognized the loyal
-governments of both Louisiana and Arkansas. By unanimous consent the
-proposed enactment, considered as an original bill, was offered for the
-plan submitted by Henry Winter Davis at the preceding session.
-
-Representative William D. Kelley, of Pennsylvania, would amend the
-clause providing for the enrollment of “all the white male citizens of
-the United States” by inserting the words “and all other male citizens
-of the United States who may be able to read the Constitution thereof.”
-Mr. Eliot then introduced the amendment of which he had previously given
-notice. By Representative Arnold another amendment was offered to that
-of Eliot.
-
-Judge Kelley opened the debate by declaring that indemnity for the past
-the victors in the war could not hope to obtain; they could, however,
-demand security for the future. In a very long speech he discussed the
-status of the negro in the early days of the Republic; this portion of
-his address was concluded with the remark that his amendment did not
-contemplate that the entire mass of people of African descent, degraded
-and brutalized by laws and customs, be immediately clothed with all the
-rights of citizenship, but only those so far fitted by education for its
-judicious exercise as were able to read the Constitution and the laws of
-the United States. This, indeed, he admitted, was only an entering wedge
-and was to be regarded as an aid to their improvement; when sufficiently
-advanced they were to be endowed with every right necessary to their
-protection. A strong plea was made to confer the suffrage on the colored
-man; otherwise, asked the Pennsylvania member, how will it be possible
-to prevent his subjugation? He would not rely on men’s abstract sense of
-justice, for that had not prevented outrages in the past. Justice should
-be embodied in laws and constitutions while it was in the power of
-Congress to do so. That body was to determine who should select
-delegates to the conventions that were to frame governments for the
-insurgent States. The Union minorities in the South required the
-political support of every loyal man in their communities. It was the
-power, he reminded Representatives, not the spirit of the rebellion that
-Federal armies were overthrowing. In conclusion he declared himself in
-favor of conferring the suffrage on “every man who fights or pays,” a
-doctrine which he ascribed to Jefferson, in whose party he said he had
-been trained.[352]
-
-Mr. Eliot, who spoke on January 17, regretted that he had not been able
-to support the amended bill reported from the select committee. Partly
-because of the interest, he said, which his friend Henry Winter Davis
-took in the subject he came to its consideration prepossessed in its
-favor. The provisions of the measure passed at the preceding session,
-however, were not then discussed. There were strong reasons for action
-at that time which no longer existed to the same extent. There was time
-enough on the present occasion, January, 1865, to make it more perfect
-and more practicable than the plan offered by the committee.
-
-Entering upon an examination of the bill he declared that its terms were
-peremptory; eleven States were in rebellion, and by the first section
-the President was called upon to appoint for each of them a provisional
-governor. Such appointments were to be made when the measure became a
-law. Except in Louisiana, Arkansas and Tennessee these appointments
-would be not only useless but a needless source of expense, and though
-section _fifteen_ recognized the governments established in the two
-former, the machinery of the bill would be applied to all the States in
-rebellion.
-
-It imposed upon the several governors proposed to be appointed executive
-duties which they could not assume until the power of the United States
-had vindicated itself within those States; there were other duties which
-they should not be required to perform. They were to see that the laws
-which were in force in that section in 1860 should be faithfully
-executed, with no knowledge on the part of the House of the import of
-those laws. Why should Congress assume responsibility for enforcing the
-black code? Why demand the enforcement, he asked, of minute police
-regulations in States where complexion appointed or reduced punishment?
-Other laws were specified, such as those punishing the circulation of
-books or writings advocating human rights, laws requiring the removal
-from those States of free persons of color, prohibiting them from
-engaging in business, and punishing by the lash upon suspicion of false
-testimony and before conviction. There was a law, he said, in one of
-those States requiring the imprisonment of free colored sailors in her
-ports.[353] These provisions and many others of the same tenor were
-contained in the statute books of those States in 1860 and had been
-enforced. The penalty differed according to color; offences when
-committed by a white man were punished in one way, and when committed by
-colored men in another way. The provisional governor was charged with
-the faithful execution of such laws.
-
-The provision for the assessment and collection of taxes he
-characterized as a remarkable proposition; they were to be imposed
-without representation, without any persons at the national capital to
-enlighten Congress on the subject; they were to be laid without the
-knowledge of the parties concerned or the parties to be affected.
-
-The sixth section, he continued, provided that every person who should
-thereafter hold certain offices in the Confederacy was “declared not to
-be a citizen of the United States.” That, Mr. Eliot contended, was
-applying the punishment before the offence had been committed. If
-Congress declared that a man should for a certain offence be deprived of
-citizenship, could he, then, be indicted for treason subsequently
-committed?
-
-The question of electing delegates to constitutional conventions
-presented a practical difficulty. Colored soldiers and sailors in the
-service were made voters by the bill; but they were not enrolled, they
-were not registered or credited to any county or parish; they were
-aggregated. They had no legal local habitation. They may have belonged
-to men owning plantations in several districts. The bill did not
-designate. With the white soldier the case was different, for he was
-known to belong to a certain district. If colored men entitled, because
-of military or naval service, to participate in the choice of delegates
-should be out of the service before the election occurred, and others
-should have taken their places, which class could vote, those in the
-service of the Government when the election for delegates took place, or
-those serving when the bill passed Congress?
-
-Whether the difficulties pointed out were inseparable from any bill on
-the subject, he would not undertake to say. But in his judgment it would
-be unsafe for Congress to permit a measure containing such provisions to
-become a law. “Why,” he asked, “is it not more wise to take the States
-as they shall present themselves for admission?” Arkansas had acted in
-one way, Louisiana in another, and Tennessee was proceeding in still a
-different manner.
-
-Notwithstanding his objections to some features of the Louisiana
-constitution, he favored her recognition. From information derived from
-the highest sources, he had no doubt that her Legislature would supply
-such deficiencies. There were influences bearing on that body which he
-believed could not be resisted.
-
-Thaddeus Stevens inquired, “If Louisiana and those other States are in
-the Union, by what authority do we legislate for their internal police?”
-This provoked laughter on the Democratic side of the House. “If they are
-in the Union,” answered Mr. Eliot, “just as Pennsylvania is, we ought
-not to; but the difficulty is that they are not in the Union in that
-sense, to that extent, thus fully. They are not out of the Union
-territorially, and yet rebellion has overthrown their governments for a
-time, and it is needful that the Congress of the United States should
-intervene and should legislate.” To this the Pennsylvania leader further
-observed, “I understand the gentleman to say that they are partly in the
-Union, and partly out. About how much are they in the Union and about
-how much out?” This keen thrust was greeted by more laughter from the
-Democratic members.[354]
-
-On his motion to postpone further consideration for two weeks Mr. Wilson
-demanded the previous question. Henry Winter Davis appealed to him to
-withdraw the motion. This Mr. Wilson declined to do, upon which the
-Maryland member observed, “a vote to postpone is equivalent to a vote to
-kill the bill.” By 103 yeas to 34 nays, however, further debate was
-postponed till the 1st of February succeeding.[355]
-
-Though Representative Washburne, of Illinois, moved on February 7 a
-further postponement of two weeks, the subject was before the House
-again on the following day, when it went over informally. Debate was not
-resumed till the 20th, when Mr. Dawes, of Massachusetts, took the floor.
-
-The Thirty-eighth Congress, he said, was in the last days of its last
-session; a bill containing the main features of the measure under
-consideration, though it passed both Houses, failed at the preceding
-session to become a law; this circumstance led him to make a careful
-examination of the subject. The proposed enactment was not designed to
-invigorate the army, the navy or the Executive; it was intended rather
-to follow the army. It was intended to be applied to the condition in
-which the army left the State. “it is an attempt,” he said, “to gather
-up the ‘_disjecta membra_’ of those States, the broken and torn
-fragments of those communities, and out of the chaos, as well as the
-ruins and _debris_ that are left in the march of those armies, to create
-a State capable of discharging the functions, exercising the authority,
-and invoking the recognition of this Government, and of the people under
-which it lives....
-
-“... The bill proceeds upon the supposition not only that there are
-States still existing, but that their old constitutions and laws are
-still in full force and operation”; for it imposed upon the provisional
-governor the faithful execution of those laws in force when rebellion
-overthrew their State governments, with the single exception of the
-provision touching the enforcement of laws against slavery and the mode
-of trial and punishment of colored people. Two remarkable features of
-the bill, he asserted, were those empowering the Executive in
-Washington, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, to appoint
-governors in every one of those States; then, no matter what provisions
-for their election existed in the State law, the President was
-authorized to appoint just as many and just as few officers as he
-pleased. It might be a judge of the highest court of judicature in the
-State; or it might be the humblest road-master; it might be any one or
-all of the countless corps between them. There was no provision in the
-bill that they should be even residents of the State. “An army of
-officers,” he continued, “in one paragraph of four lines, is here
-created, subject to the sole authority and control of the President of
-the United States.” In a Confederate report Mr. Dawes noticed that there
-were 13,000 of them in a single State.
-
-“What,” he asked, “is the effect to be on the people over whom, from
-every quarter of this Union, broken-down politicians, men without place,
-foot-loose, are to be placed? Sir, it is a reproach to our Government at
-this hour that there are, about this capital and in the Northern States,
-men who have been appointed to the judgeships of district and other
-courts of the rebel States and Territories, drawing quarterly the
-salaries of those offices, although they have never been able, from the
-hour they received their commissions to the present moment to set foot
-in the States over whose courts they have been appointed. They could not
-go one rod into the State, positions in whose highest courts they have
-held for more than a year, without being hung on the first tree.... But
-my friend [Mr. Ashley] has reported a bill here which authorizes an army
-of thousands of these officeholders to go into those States, with
-commissions from this capital in their pockets, to lord it over the
-poor, miserable inhabitants left behind the army there. These rebel
-States may be thus converted into asylums for broken-down politicians.”
-
-In the language of indignation he entered into a criticism of that
-policy which proposed to levy on the houseless and homeless wanderers in
-the South, even then only saved from starvation by the charity of the
-North, precisely the same amount of taxes raised in 1860 when, by
-comparison, the people were in a princely state. “Sir,” he declared,
-“there is not an army, great as our army is, that has power enough to
-accomplish that one single feat provided for in this bill, for the very
-plain reason that there is not money enough left in any one of these
-States outside the Government with which to pay that round sum for one
-single year.... This wise, efficacious policy is resorted to in this
-bill to hasten on, I suppose, that other day mentioned in it, when a
-majority of these people, molded by this process, won by its benignity
-‘shall voluntarily take the oath of allegiance.’”
-
-He asserted, as Eliot had done, that the committee were calling upon
-Congress to sanction all the black codes of those States, save only that
-part which held men in bondage, and that was allowed to enforce itself.
-
-The omissions, he asserted, were not less remarkable than the provisions
-of the bill. The state of things established by it was of indefinite
-duration. There was no provision for the peculiar conditions existing
-there. “There is no attempt at any adaptation of these laws to the new
-state of things consequent upon the rebellion, and consequent upon our
-constitutional action here. Not only is there no provision for the new
-wants and necessities of this wasted and wretched people who have been
-involved in the rebellion, but for that other people who have now passed
-into freedom by our legislation, and by the military consequences of
-this rebellion, who are now without food, without subsistence, without
-knowledge, and without opportunity to support and maintain themselves;
-yes, sir, without homes, literally without where to lay their heads.”
-There were 3,000,000 of these people, he added, whose very existence was
-ignored by the bill; there was no provision for schools; no provision
-for even a poorhouse; no provision to teach them the arts of
-civilization, no provision for kindling in them hope, for holding up
-before them incentives to industry or securing to them its reward. Under
-the operations of the bill they were the objects of free plunder; they
-were to go forth to be hunted, despoiled and persecuted: outcasts in the
-land.
-
-By the bill it was left in the discretion of the provisional governor,
-he asserted, to terminate the system set over them. He, as well as the
-army of officeholders under him, would be interested in prolonging the
-period until the people had _sufficiently_ returned to their obedience.
-Before the initiatory steps could be taken, even if the provisional
-governor were willing, a majority of the people in each State must of
-their own choice signify their loyalty by taking the oath of allegiance.
-This made the matter dependent not upon the wish of the loyal, but of
-the disloyal persons who constituted the majority in those States.
-
-The plan, he further stated, ignored the principle that the American
-people have the right to shape and alter for themselves the rules by
-which they are to be governed. If the matter was left in the hands of
-the disloyal, the time would be far distant when Union governments would
-be instituted in those States. The only wise policy was to establish a
-government among the loyal; even though it might be weak and inefficient
-at first, it would finally win back those who desired to be reconciled.
-The other numerous class, those who deserved to be hanged, were not
-provided for in the bill. He was opposed to the provision which would
-turn over to insurgents the loyal minorities in those States, and was
-not less opposed to prescribing a fixed iron rule by conformity to which
-alone out of chaos and anarchy might be made a loyal government.
-
-Further, the bill proceeded upon the assumption that there was no power
-in these people, except what was conferred on them by Federal
-legislation, to establish State governments. This he denied, and the
-authors of the proposed measure, by offering to recognize the
-establishments otherwise organized in Arkansas and Louisiana had
-conceded as much. In the people, he said, and in them alone, existed the
-authority to form an organic law subject to the constitutional provision
-that the government should be republican in form. He favored a
-recognition of the Louisiana government not because it was formed under
-the guidance of General Banks, but because it was made by the loyal
-people of that State, was acquiesced in by them, and because under it
-they were building up a loyal government.
-
-Governors Hahn and Murphy and the officials chosen in Louisiana and
-Arkansas who had been exercising their functions for a year would be
-dispossessed by foreigners sent amongst them by the President, who was
-empowered to do so by the bill; bickerings, heartburnings and discontent
-would follow any attempt to enforce this policy. Sooner or later the
-people of those States must be allowed to form governments for
-themselves, protected by the parental care of the central
-authority.[356]
-
-Fernando Wood declared that he had listened with interest and pleasure
-to words of conciliation for the South; little but subjugation,
-devastation and annihilation had thus far been heard from the party, the
-Administration and the people represented by Mr. Dawes.
-
-The seceding States, Mr. Wood contended, had republican forms of
-government which the treason of individuals did not affect. Nor did
-individual crimes destroy the rights of the people to regulate their
-domestic institutions. The forms of government were the same as those
-that existed in the rebellious States six years before. Even admitting
-that they had not such governments in existence among them, the bill did
-not provide a _republican_ form of government for those States.[357]
-
-He was followed in opposition to the proposed enactment by Mr. LeBlond,
-of Ohio, who discussed both the status of the rebellious States and
-their form of government. His speech on the former question added
-nothing of value to what Representative Pendleton had said at the
-preceding session, nor did he enter upon so able an examination of the
-clause guaranteeing a republican form of government as did Senator
-Carlile on that occasion.
-
-Henry T. Blow, of Missouri, made an appeal for the admission of Arkansas
-and Louisiana to prevent destructive military raids into those States as
-well as his own. He would support any measure that would restore them
-and strengthen their loyal population. However, he did not favor negro
-suffrage. His remarks scarcely touched the measure before the
-House.[358]
-
-Joseph K. Edgerton, of Indiana, who followed in a lengthy speech in
-opposition, said:
-
- The forerunner of this measure of legislation, so far as this House
- is concerned, may be found in the territorial bill reported by the
- gentleman from Ohio [Mr. Ashley] from the Committee on Territories
- in the Thirty-seventh Congress, in March, 1862. It was aptly termed
- at the time by the gentleman’s colleague from the Cincinnati
- district of Ohio [Mr. Pendleton] “A bill to dissolve the Union and
- abolish the Constitution of the United States.” The bill was
- summarily, if not indignantly, rejected by the House without a
- second reading. But, sir, men and events have since changed, if the
- Constitution of the United States has not changed, and the stone of
- revolutionary reconstruction then rejected by the master-builders in
- this House bids fair to become the head of the corner. Then the
- Constitution was not altogether repudiated as the foundation of our
- legislation; now revolutionary opinions and plans override it as a
- thing of the past. Not many are there in this Congress, and fewer
- there will be in the next, I fear, to do reverence to the
- Constitution and obey its commands.
-
-The President’s proclamation of December 8, 1863, was then noticed, and
-his usurpation of authority denounced; the subject of the Louisiana
-government was also entered upon and fully discussed. He next referred
-to the introduction early in the preceding session of a resolution by
-Henry Winter Davis providing for the appointment of a special committee
-authorized to report a bill guaranteeing a republican form of government
-to the rebellious States. The fate of that bill, President Lincoln’s
-proclamation concerning it, and the protest of Wade and Davis were
-successively dwelt upon.
-
-The question between the President and his two Congressional friends,
-Wade and Davis, was to Mr. Edgerton’s mind “one between two usurping
-powers, the Executive and the Legislative”; but, he continued, “I am
-free to say my sympathies were with the legislators and not with the
-President. Executive edicts have done more than acts of Congress during
-the last four years to sap the foundations and remove the landmarks of
-the Constitution.” The majority in Congress, he asserted, by consenting
-to recognize the governments of Louisiana and Arkansas, kissed the hand
-that smote them.
-
-He opposed a recognition of the Louisiana government because of its
-unconstitutional origin; Arkansas, he said, differed from it in no
-material respect. After stating the provisions of the bill he gave the
-following summary of its effects:
-
- 1. To take from the people of the State all power to initiate
- proceedings to reorganize their own State government in harmony with
- the Constitution of the United States, or even to prescribe the
- qualifications of suffrage. The bill ignores the idea that there is
- any vital power in the people to restore their State government—not
- only taken from them by rebellion but kept from them by Federal
- power—....
-
- 2. The effect is to exclude from the reorganization the entire white
- population of the State who shall have held office or voluntarily
- borne arms against the United States, or who shall not take the oath
- of July 2, 1862.
-
- 3. To confine the right of suffrage and power of reorganization to
- enrolled men and Federal soldiers taking the oath; and the law
- affords no guaranty that even the enrollment shall embrace a
- majority of males over twenty-one years of age. The majority
- required as a basis of action is so many of enrolled persons taking
- the oath as, with the soldiers, shall constitute a majority of the
- persons enrolled; that majority, through defect or fraud in
- enrollment, may be not even one tenth of the males of the State over
- twenty-one years of age.
-
- 4. The effect is the absolute disfranchisement of eleven States and
- their continuance in a state of war until they accept “the
- abandonment of slavery,” as dictated to them by the United States,
- and until by organic law they declare that all persons shall have
- “equality of civil rights before the law” of the State; a
- well-seeming phrase of broad import; the precise meaning of which I
- do not understand. A woman is a person, a negro is a person, an
- alien is a person, and the right of suffrage is a civil right. Does
- this high-sounding phrase of the bill mean that women, negroes, and
- aliens shall have equal right to vote in a regenerated State with
- white male citizens? What does “equality of civil rights before the
- law for all persons” mean?
-
- * * * * *
-
- In fact and in purpose, then, the bill before the House is one to
- abolish slavery in the United States, and to enfranchise and elevate
- negroes, and to disfranchise and degrade white men; a bill to change
- the social and industrial systems and internal policy of eleven
- States; a bill to take from those States their inherent reserved
- constitutional right to regulate in their own way their internal
- policy, not inconsistent with the Constitution of the United States.
- It is a bill to punish treason without trial or conviction; a bill
- to confiscate private property without adequate compensation; in
- short, a bill to reconstruct States and make State constitutions,
- when in truth no States or their constitutions have been destroyed,
- or need reconstruction, unless by the voluntary action of their own
- people.
-
- * * * * *
-
- If this is a revolutionary Congress, you have a revolutionary power
- to pass this bill; but if it be, as I am bound by my oath of office
- to believe and assert, a Congress sitting under the Constitution of
- the United States, and having no powers outside of or unknown to it,
- then you cannot constitutionally pass this bill.
-
-He stated further that the bill “embodies a spirit and purpose toward
-the Southern people which, if impolitic and vindictive one year ago,
-when the bill first came before the House, and when our enemy was far
-stronger and more defiant than now, is still more impolitic and
-vindictive at this time, when the minds of all good men are searching
-diligently for ways of reconciliation and peace.”
-
-In conclusion he declared: “The Congress of the United States, the
-legislative power of the Union, and the Constitution, is asked by this
-bill to be the minister and executioner of the great revenge of section
-upon section, States North upon States South. For one, sir, I wash my
-hands of the deed.”[359]
-
-The passages quoted convey no adequate idea of the able and
-comprehensive character of Mr. Edgerton’s speech. It was concerned not
-only with the subject under discussion, but extended to a rather
-searching examination of Republican professions in 1861 and the
-revolutionary practices of a later time. It was marked throughout by
-perfect temper, but was not on that account less effective. Any
-extension of time, however, even twenty minutes, was denied him by the
-majority.
-
-At this point, February 21, Ashley withdrew a motion he had previously
-made to recommit the bill, and by authority of his committee withdrew
-the measure which was the original text and, in lieu thereof, introduced
-another. With this substitution the pending amendments fell.
-Representative Wilson desired his substitute to hold its original place.
-Messrs. Wilson, Kelley and Eliot then modified their amendments to the
-measure hitherto under discussion, and Ashley explained his action in a
-brief address.
-
-He referred to the bill which at the preceding session failed to receive
-the President’s approval. Since then he had labored earnestly to
-conciliate members on his side of the House who had scruples about the
-measure as it originally passed, and, if possible, obtain a united vote
-in its favor. For that purpose he consented to a compromise in providing
-for the recognition of Louisiana, Arkansas and Tennessee. The conditions
-were not such as he would prescribe if those States stood alone. But in
-order to secure what he thought of paramount importance—universal
-suffrage to the liberated black men of the South—he consented to insert
-in the bill which he had proposed a few days previously, a conditional
-recognition of existing governments in the States of Louisiana and
-Arkansas, and the government then being organized in Tennessee.
-
-Disappointed in his efforts to win the coöperation of Representatives
-who entertained practically the same opinions which he did in favor of
-universal suffrage for the colored man, and in favor of the early
-recognition of every Confederate State with a population sufficient to
-maintain a government, he now declined to offer his substitute. At the
-request and with the concurrence of his committee the bill of the
-preceding session was offered with some modifications. These alterations
-were to strike out all that the bill contained to which gentlemen had
-raised objection, in that it seemingly authorized the execution of State
-laws as they existed at the commencement of the rebellion. To make it
-perfectly clear what the committee intended, they had inserted a
-provision that the governor should execute only such laws as related to
-the protection of persons and property; that all laws inconsistent with
-the proposed enactment, and all laws recognizing the relation of master
-and slave, should not be enforced. The section which authorized the
-collection of taxes had been omitted. He preferred not to commit himself
-to a recognition of the Louisiana and Arkansas governments, unless he
-could secure what he thought of paramount importance in reorganizing the
-other States.
-
-“It is very clear to my mind,” he asserted, “that no bill providing for
-the reorganization of loyal State governments in the rebel States can
-pass this Congress. I am pretty sure that this bill and all the
-amendments and substitutes offered will fail to command a majority of
-this House.”
-
-The course of debate had shown on the Republican side, he said, so
-strong an individuality that no compromise could bring them together on
-the great question of reconstruction. Many on his side were capital
-leaders in the minority; they were good at pulling down, but not so good
-at leading majorities and building up. He admitted their utter inability
-to agree on the subject, and had consented to a conditional recognition
-of certain State governments because he knew they could be upheld by
-military power until the rebellion should be crushed. Republicans were
-so nearly unanimous at the preceding session, he said, that he felt the
-concessions embodied in his substitute would enable them to agree
-without much discussion or without consuming the valuable time of the
-House so late in the session. His remarks not only showed disappointment
-at the attitude of his party, but clearly revealed the existence of a
-schism in its ranks.[360]
-
-Henry Winter Davis then rose to state the case for the House. The bill,
-he said, to which amendments were pending was the same as that which at
-the preceding session received the assent of both Houses of Congress,
-with some modifications to suit the tender susceptibilities of gentlemen
-from Massachusetts: “first, the sixth section, declaring rebel officers
-not citizens of the United States, has been stricken out; second, the
-taxation clause has been stricken out; third, the word ‘government’ has
-been inserted before ‘trial and punishment,’ to meet the refined
-criticisms of the two gentlemen from Massachusetts who suppose that
-penal laws would be in force and operative when the penalties were
-forbidden to be enforced; that discriminating laws could survive the
-declaration that there should be no discrimination between different
-persons in trial or punishment. There has been one section added to meet
-the present aspect of public affairs; that section authorizes the
-President, instead of pursuing the method prescribed in the bill in
-reference to the States where military resistance shall have been
-suppressed, in the event of the legislative authority under the
-rebellion in any rebel State taking the oath to support the Constitution
-of the United States, annulling their confiscation laws and ratifying
-the amendment proposed by this Congress to the Constitution of the
-United States, before military resistance shall be suppressed in such
-State, to recognize them as constituting the legal authority of the
-State, and directing him to report those facts to Congress for its
-assent and ratification. With these modifications, the bill which is now
-the test for amendment is the bill which was adopted by this House at
-the last session.”
-
-He need not be at the trouble, he said, to answer the arguments of
-gentlemen who at the preceding session voted for the bill, and who, in
-the repose of the intervening period, had criticised in detail the
-language and, not stopping there, had found in its substance that it
-violated the principles of republican government and sanctioned the
-enormities of those laws with which slavery had covered and defiled the
-statutes of every Southern State.
-
-With increasing severity Mr. Davis proceeded:
-
- That these discoveries should have been made since the vote of last
- session is quite as remarkable as that they should have been
- overlooked before that vote. But they were neither overlooked before
- nor discovered since. The vote was before a pending election. It is
- the will of the President which has been discovered since.
-
- It is not at all surprising, Mr. Speaker, that the President, having
- failed to sign the bill passed by the whole body of his supporters
- by both Houses at the last session of Congress, and having assigned,
- under pressure of events, but without the authority of law, reasons,
- good or bad, first for refusing to allow the bill to become a law,
- and therefore usurping power to execute parts of it as law, while he
- discarded other parts which interfered with possible electoral
- votes, those arguments should be found satisfactory to some minds
- prone to act upon the winking of authority.
-
- The weight of that species of argument I am not able to estimate. It
- bids defiance to every species of reply. It is that subtle,
- pervading epidemic of the time that penetrates the closest argument
- as spirit penetrates matter that diffuses itself with the atmosphere
- of authority, relaxing the energy of the strong, bending down the
- upright, diverting just men from the path of rectitude, and
- substituting the will and favor of power for the will and interest
- of the people as the rule of legislative action.
-
- * * * * *
-
- All I desire now to do is to state the case and predict results from
- one course or the other. The course of military events seems to
- indicate that possibly by the 4th of next July, probably by next
- December, organized, armed rebellion will cease to lift its brazen
- front in the land. Disasters may intervene; errors or weaknesses may
- prolong the conflict; the proverbial chances of war may interpose
- their caprices to defer the national triumph; but events now point
- to the near approach of the end. But whether sooner or later,
- whenever it comes, there is one thing that will assuredly accompany
- it. If this bill do not become a law, when Congress again meets, at
- our doors, clamorous and dictatorial, will be sixty-five
- Representatives from the States now in rebellion, and twenty-two
- Senators, _claiming_ admission, and, upon the theory of the
- honorable gentleman, _entitled_ to admission beyond the power of
- argument to resist it; for peace will have been restored, there will
- be no armed power but that of the United States; there will be
- quiet, and votes will be polled under the existing laws of the
- State, in the gentleman’s view. Are you ready to accept that
- consequence? For if they come to the door of the House they will
- cross the threshold of the House, and any gentleman who does not
- know that, or who is so weak or so wild as to suppose that any
- declaratory resolution adopted by both Houses as a condition
- precedent can stop that flood, had better put his puny hands across
- the flood of the flowing Mississippi and say that it shall not enter
- the Gulf of Mexico.
-
- There are things, gentlemen, that are possible at one time and not
- possible at another. You can now prevent the rise of the flood, but
- when it is up you can not stop it. If gentlemen are in favor of
- meeting that state of things, then do as has been already so
- distinctly intimated in the course of this debate, vote against this
- bill in all its aspects; leave the door wide open; let “our brethren
- of the South,” whose bayonets are now pointed at our brothers’
- hearts, drop their arms, put on the seemly garb of peace, go through
- the forms of an election, and assert the triumph of their beaten
- faction under the forms of political authority after the sword has
- decided against them. I am no prophet, but that is the history of
- next December if this bill be defeated; and I expect it not to
- become a law.
-
- But suppose the other course to be pursued; suppose the President
- sees fit to do what there is not the least reason to suppose that he
- desires to do; suppose that after he has destroyed the armies in the
- field he should go further, and do, as I think he ought to do, what
- the judgment of this country dictates, treat those who hold power in
- the South as rebels and not as governors or legislators; disperse
- them from the halls of legislation; expel them from executive
- mansions, strip them of the emblems of authority, and set to work to
- hunt out the pliant and supple “Union men,” so-called, who have
- cringed before the storm, but who will be willing to govern their
- fellow-citizens under the protection of United States bayonets;
- suppose that the fruitful example of Louisiana shall spread like a
- mist over all the rest of the southern country, and that
- Representatives like what Louisiana has sent here, with such a
- backing of votes as she has given, shall appear here at the doors of
- this Hall; whose representatives are they? I do not mean to speak of
- the gentlemen now here from Louisiana in their individual character,
- but in their political relations to their constituency. Whose
- representatives are they? In Louisiana they are the representatives
- of the bayonets of General Banks and the will of the President, as
- expressed in his secret letter to General Banks. If you admit such
- representatives, you must admit, on the same basis and under the
- same influences, Representatives from every State from Texas to
- Virginia; the common council at Alexandria—which has just sent two
- Senators to the other House and has ratified the amendment to the
- Constitution abolishing slavery in all the rest of Virginia, where
- none of them dare put his portly person—would be entitled to send
- ten Representatives here and two Senators to speak for the
- indomitable “Old Dominion.” If the rebel Representatives are not
- here in December next you will have here servile tools of the
- Executive who will embarrass your legislation, humble your Congress,
- degrade the name of republican government for two years, and then
- the natural majority of the South, rising indignantly against that
- humiliating insult, will swamp you here with rebel Representatives
- and be your masters. These are their alternatives and there is no
- middle ground.
-
-To Mr. Eliot’s objection the Maryland member replied that provisional
-governors “are appointed _now without law_, and all we propose is that
-they shall be _under the responsibility of law and subject to the
-control and confirmation of the Senate_.” Having in mind this condition
-and the Executive appointments to judicial places in Louisiana, Mr.
-Davis added:
-
- Sir, when I came into Congress ten years ago, this was a Government
- of law. I have lived to see it a Government of personal will.
- Congress has dwindled from a power to dictate law and the policy of
- the Government to a commission to audit accounts and to appropriate
- moneys to enable the Executive to execute his will and not ours. I
- would stop at the boundaries of law. When I look around for them I
- seem to be in a waste; they are as clean gone as the division fences
- of Virginia estates from here to the Rapidan.
-
-After explaining the efforts of Mr. Ashley and himself to remove the
-objectionable features of the bill as pointed out by the two members
-from Massachusetts [Messrs. Dawes and Eliot] he again criticised both
-with some severity, and continued:
-
- Sir, my successor may vote as he pleases. But when I leave this Hall
- there shall be no vote from the third congressional district of
- Maryland that recognizes anything but the body and mass of the
- people of any State as entitled to govern them, and to govern the
- people that I represent. And they who may wish to substitute one
- tenth, or any other fractional minority, for that great power of the
- people to govern, may take, and shall take, the odium. Ay! I shall
- brand it upon them that in the middle of the nineteenth century, in
- the only free Republic that the world knows, where alone the
- principles of popular government are the rules of authority, they
- have gone to the dark ages for their models, reviving the wretched
- examples of the most odious governments that the world has ever
- seen, and propose to stain the national triumph by creating a
- wretched, low, vulgar, corrupt, and cowardly oligarchy to govern the
- freemen of the United States—the national arms to guaranty and
- enforce their oppressions. Not by my vote, sir; not by my vote!
-
- If the majority of the people will not recognize the authority of
- the Constitution of the United States, what does the gentleman say
- who proposes these declaratory resolutions? That they shall come
- here without it? No, sir; but I would govern them for a thousand
- years first by the supreme authority of the Constitution which they
- have defied and will not acknowledge. And govern them how? Not by
- the uncontrolled will of this or any other President that ever
- lived, George Washington included. I would govern them by the laws
- that in the hours of their sanity they enacted, unaltered excepting
- so far as the progress of events require that they should be
- altered; to the extent that we have proposed to alter them in our
- bill, and no further. I leave their own rules for their government,
- make the President appoint, under his official and public
- responsibility, the officers who are to execute them; and if they do
- not like to be governed in that way, let us trust that the prodigal
- will come one day to his senses, and humbly kneeling before the
- Constitution that he has vainly defied, swear before Almighty God
- that he will again be true to it.
-
-That is my remedy for the grievance. That is what we propose....[361]
-
-Though not his last word on the subject of reconstruction, this was the
-last great speech of Mr. Davis in Congress on the question of restoring
-political power to the rebellious States. His alliance with Stevens, a
-somewhat unnatural union, had brought him only disaster. As noticed in
-the preceding chapter, he had been defeated for renomination in his
-district. It is thought that disappointment hastened somewhat his early
-death, which occurred toward the close of the year, December 30, 1865.
-Though a touch of pathos may be discerned in his concluding remarks, his
-was not the craven spirit that was ready, in the words of Edgerton, to
-kiss the hand that smote him.
-
-Representative Mallory, of Kentucky, on his motion to lay the bill and
-amendments on the table, called for the yeas and nays. The question
-being taken was decided in the affirmative; 91 voting to lay the bill
-and amendments on the table; 64 were opposed, and 27 did not vote.[362]
-The Democratic members were a unit against the measure, and in a body
-voted to lay it on the table.
-
-The defeat of Davis now appeared complete, but the struggle was not to
-be abandoned without another effort. On the following day, February 22,
-1865, Mr. Wilson from the Committee on the Judiciary reported House Bill
-No. 740, to establish the supremacy of the Constitution in the
-insurrectionary States, with a substitute which provided that neither
-the people nor the legislature of any rebellious State should elect
-Representatives or Senators to Congress until the President had
-proclaimed that armed hostility to the United States within such State
-had ceased; nor until the people of such State had adopted a
-constitution not repugnant to the Constitution and laws of the United
-States; nor until by law of Congress such State had been declared
-entitled to representation in the Congress of the United States.
-
-The authority for this bill he professed to find in the fourth section
-of Article I. of the Constitution, which reads as follows:
-
- The Times, Places and Manner of holding elections for Senators and
- Representatives shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature
- thereof; but the Congress may, at any time, by law, make or alter
- such regulations, except as to the Places of choosing Senators.
-
-Mr. Wilson was somewhat embarrassed in defending his bill. Dawes and
-Mallory exposed its weakness, and Representative Kernan, of New York,
-believed it would put it in the power of the Executive to say whether
-States should be represented in Congress. Fernando Wood observed that
-neither by that bill nor any other could either House of Congress be
-deprived of the right to pass upon the election, returns and
-qualifications of members.[363]
-
-Mr. Ashley at this point moved to amend the substitute offered by the
-Committee on the Judiciary by striking out all after the enacting clause
-and inserting the reconstruction bill that was tabled the day before.
-When a point of order was raised against its introduction the Speaker
-said that there was an important amendment; the word “white” having been
-inserted before the expression “male citizen,” thus restricting the
-class to be enrolled by the United States marshal. Mr. Kelley would
-amend it by striking out the word “white.” To this the Ohio member had
-no personal objection; indeed, he was abreast of Mr. Kelley in the
-matter of the suffrage: the only restriction he would impose being that
-of intelligence. Ashley appears, however, to have regarded himself as
-but the mouthpiece of his committee by whose authority he had only a few
-months before inserted a provision in his reconstruction bill to
-recognize the Louisiana and Arkansas governments, though he expressly
-declared on a subsequent occasion that he was opposed to such
-recognition.
-
-By a vote of 80 to 65 the bill and its amendments was again laid on the
-table. Thirty-seven members abstained from voting; fourteen Republicans
-voted with the Democrats.[364] This action was taken on the 22d of
-February, 1865; the session closed on the 4th of March following without
-any further attempt to pass the bill. Before the vote was taken Ashley
-stated his sentiments candidly. He wanted a record made on the question.
-“I do not expect,” said he, “to pass this bill now. At the next session,
-when a new Congress fresh from the people shall have assembled, with the
-nation and its Representatives far in advance of the present Congress, I
-hope to pass even a better bill. Sir, I know that our loyal people will
-never be guilty of the infamy of inviting the blacks to unite with them
-in fighting our battles, and after our triumph—a triumph which we never
-could have achieved but for their generous coöperation and aid—deny
-those loyal blacks political rights while consenting that pardoned but
-unrepentant white rebels shall again be clothed with the entire
-political power of these States.”[365] The desire to obtain negro
-suffrage explains the inconsistent course of Representative Ashley
-throughout these debates.
-
-By a singular method of abridging history Mr. Blaine in his _Twenty
-Years of Congress_ passes without observation the attempt to revive the
-“pocketed” bill, though it was during its discussion that there was for
-the first time unmistakably revealed the existence of a schism in the
-Republican party.
-
------
-
-Footnote 345:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 557.
-
-Footnote 346:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 555–558.
-
-Footnote 347:
-
- Rise and Fall of the Slave Power in America, Vol. III. p. 452.
-
-Footnote 348:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 12–13.
-
-Footnote 349:
-
- Ibid., p. 234.
-
-Footnote 350:
-
- Pierce, Memoir of Charles Sumner, Vol. IV. p. 205.
-
-Footnote 351:
-
- Ibid., p. 221.
-
-Footnote 352:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 281–291.
-
-Footnote 353:
-
- An interesting account of the imprisonment of colored seamen in the
- ports of South Carolina is given in The Rise and Fall of the Slave
- Power in America, Vol. I. pp. 576–586.
-
-Footnote 354:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 298–301.
-
-Footnote 355:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 356:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 934–937.
-
-Footnote 357:
-
- Ibid., pp. 937–939.
-
-Footnote 358:
-
- Appendix to Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 73–75.
-
-Footnote 359:
-
- Appendix to Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 75–83.
-
-Footnote 360:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 968–969.
-
-Footnote 361:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 969–970.
-
-Footnote 362:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 970–971.
-
-Footnote 363:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 997–1001.
-
-Footnote 364:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1002.
-
-Footnote 365:
-
- Ibid.
-
-
-
-
- IX
- THE ELECTORAL VOTE OF LOUISIANA
-
-
-A preceding chapter has noticed the result of the Presidential election
-of 1864. It was thought proper, however, to reserve for separate
-treatment the various questions presented by the participation in that
-contest of Louisiana and Tennessee, two States reorganized under
-Executive auspices. On the introduction by Mr. Wilson of a joint
-resolution declaring certain named States not entitled to representation
-in the Electoral College, the entire subject came before the House soon
-after the meeting of Congress in December.
-
-The proposed resolution was read twice and referred to the Committee on
-the Judiciary. On the following day, December 20, 1864, it was reported,
-ordered to be printed and recommitted. Under the operation of the
-previous question it passed the House on January 30 succeeding. Its
-preamble, which was favorably considered at the same time, declared that
-“the inhabitants and local authorities of the States of Virginia, North
-Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi,
-Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, and Tennessee rebelled against the
-Government of the United States, and have continued in a state of armed
-rebellion for more than three years, and were in a state of armed
-rebellion on the 8th of November, 1864.”
-
-The joint resolution provided that these States were not entitled to
-representation in the Electoral College for the choice of President and
-Vice-President for the term of office beginning March 4, 1865, and that
-no electoral votes from them, relative to the choice of said officers
-for that term, should be received or counted.[366]
-
-In a modified form the measure subsequently passed the Senate, which
-proposed that there be stricken from the preamble the words “and were in
-such condition of armed rebellion for more than three years,” and that
-there be inserted in lieu thereof, “and were in such condition on the
-8th day of November, 1864, that no valid election for electors of
-President and Vice-President, according to the Constitution and laws
-thereof, was held therein on said day.” In this amendment the House
-promptly concurred, February 6, 1865.
-
-In the Senate, February 1, Mr. Trumbull asked consideration of the
-measure inasmuch as the electoral votes were to be counted a week later.
-When the amendment was under discussion, Senator Ten Eyck, of New
-Jersey, moved to strike out the word “Louisiana” in the preamble, and
-added that it was a matter of history that the State had reorganized, or
-at least attempted to do so, and in the opinion of many, and perhaps
-most, of her loyal citizens had reorganized as a State. It was matter of
-history that they had elected State officers and a State Legislature;
-that they had elected members to a constitutional convention and framed
-a new constitution for that State; that the Legislature passed a law
-authorizing the choice of electors for President and Vice-President of
-the United States in the last Presidential election, and that such
-electors had met and cast their votes. “Under these circumstances,” said
-Mr. Ten Eyck, “I think there is a striking distinction between the State
-of Virginia and the State of Louisiana.” The object of his amendment, he
-stated, was to afford opportunity to a loyal people who had suffered all
-the horrors of the rebellion, who had got the better of it, and put it
-under foot, of coming back and resuming their place in the councils of
-the nation. He did not then desire to make any further remarks.[367]
-
-Senator Trumbull then took up the discussion of Ten Eyck’s amendment to
-the amendment. The electoral votes, he said, were to be opened and
-canvassed a week later, and it was known to all that no rules for action
-had ever been adopted in that joint convention. He recalled the fact
-that in 1856 there arose a question over the counting of the electoral
-vote of Wisconsin. A severe snow storm had prevented the electors from
-meeting at their State capital on the day fixed by law, and it was not
-until the day following that they were able to cast their votes for
-President and Vice-President. The question was not then decided, for
-Buchanan and Breckenridge were the successful candidates in either
-event, and were so declared.
-
-He believed a similar question was likely to arise when the electoral
-votes would be counted on February 8. It was a matter of public
-notoriety, he continued, that several of the States included in the
-President’s proclamation of 1861, Arkansas, Tennessee and Louisiana, had
-cast electoral votes. There was a question as to their authority to do
-so in consequence of the insurrection which prevailed there on the 8th
-of November, when the election took place, and the House of
-Representatives had passed the joint resolution declaring that the votes
-of certain named States should not be counted. The motion of the Senator
-from New Jersey would have the effect of counting the vote of Louisiana.
-“If we decide to receive the vote from Louisiana,” declared Mr.
-Trumbull, “it will be a decision by the Congress of the United States
-that the State of Louisiana was in such a condition as to vote for
-President and Vice-President on the 8th of November last.”
-
-The alteration proposed by the Committee on the Judiciary, said he, was
-for the purpose of avoiding any such committal on the subject as the
-motion of the Senator from New Jersey brought up. If the preamble “is
-adopted and the resolution passed, Congress will not have decided
-whether Louisiana is in the Union or out of the Union, whether she is a
-State or not a State.” It would be time enough, he believed, to decide
-that question when it was presented to the Senate. No statement of
-facts, he asserted in reply to Senator Howe, accompanied the joint
-resolution from the Committee on the Judiciary; it was a House
-resolution, and no report accompanied it from the House Committee.
-
-A large part of Louisiana, he added, was on the 8th of November
-preceding in the possession of a hostile force. In a very considerable
-portion of the State there was no opportunity to vote for President or
-Vice-President, and it might be a very serious question whether, when
-half a State or the third of a State was overrun by an enemy, an
-election held under such circumstances and under the auspices of Federal
-guns would be an election which would authorize the Congress of the
-United States, when in joint convention it came to canvass the votes for
-President and Vice-President, to count ballots cast under such
-circumstances.
-
-In acting upon the resolution he did not mean to commit the Senate one
-way or another relative to the organization which had been formed in
-Louisiana. A decision to strike out Louisiana would be to decide that
-her electoral vote would be received and that on November 8th there was
-a State government there. That he did not believe. No evidence, he
-asserted, had been submitted to show how many votes were cast.
-
-Pursuant to an act of Congress the President had declared the
-inhabitants of Louisiana in insurrection against the United States. That
-proclamation had not been recalled. “Sir,” concluded Mr. Trumbull,
-“until there shall be some action by Congress recognizing the
-organization which has been set up in Louisiana, we ought not in my
-judgment to count electoral votes from the State.” Whether Congress
-would recognize it, he could not say; that had not yet been done, and,
-until it had been, the electoral vote ought not to be counted. He hoped,
-therefore, that Ten Eyck’s amendment would not prevail.[368]
-
-Mr. Ten Eyck said it was with great diffidence that he undertook to
-propose an amendment to the resolution; but he held the doctrine that
-these commonwealths having taken up their lot and part with their sister
-States when admitted into the Union were not legally out of it; their
-governments had been in abeyance; they had been overrun by the feet of
-hostile armies, and many of their citizens, by usurpation and in
-violation of their duty to their fellow-men and to their God, had
-attempted to carry these States out of the Union.
-
-That being his opinion, whenever these States, by the aid of the General
-Government, or by the efforts of their own people, or by the act of both
-combined, reëstablished themselves, or set their State governments in
-action anew, and had commenced again to revolve in their old orbits, he
-should feel it his duty, so far as he was concerned, to extend to them
-all the privileges and all the rights to which the loyal people of a
-loyal State were entitled at the hands of their sister States, whether
-upon the floor of the Senate or anywhere else. It was to exclude
-Louisiana from the operation of the resolution that he made his motion.
-As to those States manifestly in the condition described in the preamble
-there was propriety in passing the resolution.
-
-In reply to an observation of the chairman of the Judiciary Committee,
-that the majority desired to avoid a committal on this subject, Mr. Ten
-Eyck suggested that it would not, perhaps, be amiss to insist that a
-committal should not be had against the interest of the State any more
-than in its favor, and if his amendment involved the question whether
-Louisiana was in a condition to perform all the functions of a State
-government and to appoint State officers and Senators and members of the
-national House of Representatives, the same question was involved in the
-resolution and it would be determined against her if the joint
-resolution passed as it stood; for that would decide that Louisiana was
-in a state of rebellion such as to deprive her of all the powers, rights
-and privileges of a member of the Union. He was not prepared to go to
-that extent.
-
-From various memorials, papers and documents that had come into
-possession of the Senate, he continued, and were published by its order,
-as well as from information derived from other sources, it appeared that
-nearly, if not quite, a year before an election for State officers was
-held in Louisiana and a very large number of votes cast, about two
-thirds or approximating two thirds of the largest number that had been
-cast at any former election for State officers. Trumbull interrupted to
-remark that no such statements had been received by the committee. In
-those localities which voted, perhaps two thirds of the former vote had
-been cast, but not two thirds of that cast in the entire State. Ten Eyck
-replied that the vote was 11,414; it was alleged that a large number of
-former voters had entered the rebel army and a great many had been
-killed. He might be in error concerning the whole vote of the State. All
-these elections were free and uninterrupted and without the interference
-of any military power whatever. A person on the ground had declared that
-“no effort whatever was made on the part of the military authorities to
-influence the citizens of the State, either in the selection of
-candidates or in the election of officers, and that the direct influence
-of the Government of the United States was less in Louisiana than in the
-elections probably of any State of the Union; that the officers
-representing the Government, both civil and military, were divided, so
-far as they entertained or expressed opinions, on the question of
-candidates and upon the policy pursued in the organization of the
-government.” If any military interference was exerted it was in aid of
-the loyal people, and the civil authority was not at all in
-subordination to the military.
-
-In view of the invitation that had been held out by the Government to
-all the loyal people of those States to come back and to endeavor to
-organize themselves anew and, when they had gained sufficient strength,
-to present themselves civilly and quietly at the ballot-box to choose
-their own State officers and to choose delegates to form a new State
-constitution, and when they claim the rights of other States, are they
-to be met by the plea that upon certain out-bounds of the State there
-may still be heard the tread of rebel feet? It appeared by all the
-testimony that the population, the business and the property of
-Louisiana were confined to the cities and regions of country immediately
-bordering upon the river, and that the residue of the State was very
-sparsely settled indeed. That portion not submerged was used for
-planting purposes. The wealth and population of the State were confined
-within a small space and this contracted area was chiefly under control
-of the United States. The Presidential electors were chosen by the State
-Legislature, and he did not think that method legal. That is why the
-vote cast in the election did not appear in the testimony submitted to
-the Committee on the Judiciary.
-
-As to the withdrawal by the President of his proclamation declaring the
-inhabitants of Louisiana in a state of insurrection, if that were the
-test either the present incumbent or his successor could keep the loyal
-people of those States from returning to the Union during the remainder
-of his administration, and, if reëlected, for the following term. This
-even if every soul within the State were loyal and anxious to
-return.[369]
-
-Mr. Howe announced his intention of voting for the amendment of Ten
-Eyck, though for reasons very different from those which influenced the
-New Jersey Senator. His support would not be controlled by the number of
-citizens who participated in the choice of electors. “I am governed,”
-said he, “by the single fact that a statute of your own, existing at the
-time of that election, declared that the people of that State had the
-right to choose electors, and that certain of them did participate in
-making that choice. The Senator from Illinois [Trumbull] says but a
-small portion of the people of the State participated in that choice.
-Your statute said that all might. Does the refusal of a large portion or
-a small portion of the people of a State to participate in an election
-deprive the minority, if you please, no matter how small, of their right
-under your statute?” Besides Louisiana he understood that two other
-States had made choice of electors. He would vote for an amendment to
-strike them out of the resolution also.[370]
-
-Trumbull argued that a mere refusal to count the electoral vote of
-Louisiana did not settle the question against the existing organization.
-Wisconsin had a right to vote in 1856, and nobody supposed otherwise;
-but many opposed the counting of that vote. The State organization may
-be perfect and yet its electoral vote rejected. If the Senate had
-refused to count Wisconsin’s vote, it would not therefore have decided
-that there was no such State. Ten Eyck promptly indicated the weakness
-of this reasoning by pointing out that the preamble of the pending
-resolution declared Louisiana in such a condition of rebellion that no
-election could be had. Senator Trumbull then put the case of a foreign
-enemy having such possession of Louisiana that no election could be held
-throughout the State, and asked whether the Senator from New Jersey
-would count the electoral vote of Louisiana when not twenty men could
-have assembled in the State and voted for President and Vice-President.
-If the Senate refused to count her vote under such circumstances, would
-it decide that the organization of the State of Louisiana was not to be
-recognized, and was repudiated? Whether the organization established in
-Louisiana was a valid one was a question which would come before the
-Senate when they inquired into the right to seats of those gentlemen who
-had presented themselves as Senators.
-
-Replying to an assertion of Senator Howe, who was not in his seat, Mr.
-Trumbull said he would like to see the statute which gave Louisiana a
-right to vote in the Presidential election of 1864. If any such existed
-it would be repealed by the act of Congress which empowered the
-President to declare the people of certain commonwealths in a state of
-insurrection.
-
-In referring to the objection of Mr. Ten Eyck that the President, if he
-desired, could keep a State out during his entire administration,
-Senator Trumbull observed that it was only necessary for Congress to
-repeal the act upon which the proclamation was based and then the
-proclamation itself would fall.
-
-The refusal of a State to vote when she had an opportunity to do so,
-said Mr. Trumbull, would be no reason for excluding her electoral vote;
-but the people of Louisiana did not have an opportunity unawed by
-hostile armies and unrestrained by military authority to vote for
-President and Vice-President. This, he said, was not the real point at
-issue; the question for the Senate to consider and determine was whether
-the Legislature of Louisiana was a lawful assembly, for it was by that
-body that electors of President and Vice-President were chosen in the
-election of 1864.
-
-Mr. Trumbull believed that on November 8 about three fourths of the area
-of Louisiana was in possession of the Confederates. No person could have
-voted within that jurisdiction. Eleven or twelve thousand was the
-largest vote ever cast under these organizations; while the vote of the
-State, when all her legal voters had the privilege of going to the
-polls, was more than 60,000.
-
-Mr. Ten Eyck stated that 51,000 was the highest vote ever cast, and that
-the average was but 34,000. Trumbull believed the Senate should concur
-in the House resolution and that it need not commit itself one way or
-the other on the Louisiana organization. The counting of the electoral
-vote, which pressed for settlement, should soon be determined.[371]
-
-Mr. Harris thought the question of counting the votes could be disposed
-of without committing the Senate or deciding the matter of admitting
-Senators, as was done in the case of Wisconsin in 1856. “If we count the
-votes of these States,” said he, “the number of votes for Mr. Lincoln
-and Mr. Johnson will be so many; if we reject these votes the number of
-votes will be so many; and in either case these candidates are elected.”
-By this or a similar declaration, the phraseology of which was suggested
-by the precedent of 1856, the question could be passed over. He asked
-the chairman of the Committee on the Judiciary why Congress had not the
-power to declare that New York should not vote. He opposed the preamble
-because he did not believe it true, and he denied that the local
-authorities in Louisiana, Arkansas and Tennessee were in rebellion on
-the 8th of November preceding.
-
-When, on February 2, Senator Harris resumed his remarks he observed that
-the question as to the power of Congress to legislate in relation to the
-counting of votes for President and Vice-President was not considered by
-the committee. Reflection had led him to doubt the competence of
-Congress to legislate on the subject. That body could fix the time for
-choosing electors and specify the time when they should perform the
-functions of their office. That, he contended, was the extent of the
-power of Congress over the subject. He could find no authority in the
-Constitution, however, which empowered Congress to pass a law, for the
-resolution amounted to that, excluding any votes returned to the
-Vice-President. Even if Congress had the authority it was inexpedient to
-exercise it. Why should such extreme power be exercised when the
-necessity did not exist? The result, it was conceded, would be the same
-whether Congress counted the votes of Louisiana, Tennessee and Arkansas
-or not. The power was not contained in the Constitution. Those States
-specified in the preamble did certainly rebel, but that Louisiana,
-Arkansas and Tennessee were in that condition on November 8 was at least
-open to question.[372]
-
-Senator Doolittle believed that Congress by legislation could provide in
-advance for the manner of counting electoral votes; but that, he
-insisted, was very different from passing a law which declared certain
-votes null and void after they had been cast. That would be retroactive
-legislation. He doubted the power of Congress over the subject of
-counting the electoral votes, beyond that contained in the Constitution.
-
-“The Congress,” he continued, quoting the fourth clause of section one
-of the second article, “may determine the time of choosing the electors,
-and the day on which they shall give their votes; which day shall be the
-same throughout the United States.” Pursuant to this provision Congress
-passed the act of January 23, 1845. It was not for the president of the
-Senate to open such as Congress told him to open, but he should “open
-all the certificates” which were sent to him, “and the votes shall then
-be counted.” Here, said the Senator, arose the grave question whether
-the president of the joint convention was made the sole judge as to what
-votes should be counted. The question practically came up in 1856, but
-it was not then necessary to decide it, and it was waived as not being
-essential to the result. On the present occasion, 1865, it was the same,
-the result of the election would not be affected by the matter of
-counting or not counting the votes of Tennessee and Louisiana; but it
-was not necessary for Congress to assert a doctrine which in some future
-time might be the very destruction of the Government, namely, “That a
-political party in Congress can decide that certain votes of certain
-States shall be canceled and others shall be received. It will never do
-to set that precedent.” It would be time enough, he said in conclusion,
-to meet the question when it came up in the joint convention.[373]
-
-Mr. Hale said that he had foreseen the difficulty and at the preceding
-session had introduced a joint resolution directing in advance what
-should be done; but the pressure of other business, certainly not more
-important, prevented action thereon. If the result of the Presidential
-election had depended upon the votes of Louisiana, Tennessee and
-Arkansas would the party have submitted against which their votes had
-been cast? The rebellion then existing was caused, he believed, by
-nothing at all in comparison with such a question.
-
-He denied the assertion of Senator Doolittle that Congress had no power
-over the counting of the electoral votes. Suppose, he argued, that,
-contrary to the constitutional provision, a member of Congress or any
-officer of the Federal Government holding an office of profit or trust
-happened to be an elector, would not Congress have power to say that
-such vote of Federal officer should not be counted?
-
-The framers of the Constitution, he declared, made the most ample
-provision for just such a case. That instrument confers on Congress the
-power “to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying
-into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this
-Constitution in the Government of the United States.” Was not the power
-to choose a President one vested in the Government of the United States?
-
-Mr. Hale contended that then, when action by Congress would not affect
-the result of the election, was the time to settle the principle, and
-the precedent could be pointed to showing the action and sentiment of
-Congress at a time when there was no inducement to anything but an
-honest and straightforward decision of the case.
-
-Suppose, he went on, that Nevada while in the territorial condition had
-grown restless under her provincial state and had sent certificates
-signed by her electors, would Congress have no authority to say whether
-they should be counted? In Washington’s first election the vote of New
-York State was not counted. Now her Senator, Mr. Harris, doubted the
-competence of Congress either to exclude, or refuse to count, the votes
-of a State.[374]
-
-Mr. Doolittle objected to being quoted quite so strongly as to say that
-Congress had no power over this subject. Congress had power over the
-subject, but that power was limited. When the Constitution says that the
-States shall do certain things, such as directing the appointment of
-electors, that is a limitation on the power of Congress over the matter.
-What he maintained was that after the ballots had been cast there was no
-power in Congress as a legislative body to declare certain votes valid
-or invalid. The tribunal to which the question was referred was the
-president of the Senate presiding over the joint convention of both
-Houses. The power in the first instance was with that officer to count
-or not to count the votes. He was to decide whether they were from
-States or from Territories.[375]
-
-Senator Trumbull maintained that so far from being empowered to decide
-disputes, the president of the joint convention was not authorized to
-even count the votes. In the practice of the Government the
-Vice-President had never since the days of Washington counted the votes.
-The Constitution says that he shall “open all the certificates and the
-votes shall then be counted.” It does not state by whom, but it does
-state that Congress has power to pass all laws necessary to carry the
-instrument into effect. Congress, he said, had exercised such power from
-the beginning.
-
-There was no legal difference, he asserted, between South Carolina and
-Louisiana. An individual trading in the latter State, except under a
-particular license, could be taken up and tried as a felon, and yet “we
-are told that we cannot determine by act of Congress that they cannot
-elect a President for us!”
-
-Mr. Trumbull contended that if a question arose upon the counting of the
-vote of any State, the joint convention could not decide upon it. The
-bodies would have to separate and, by passing a concurrent resolution,
-each act independently. There was no popular election, he said, in the
-State of Louisiana, but a body assuming to be its Legislature had
-appointed electors of President and Vice-President. He did not know
-whether the new constitution of Louisiana authorized that method.
-
-The purpose of the Senate, he continued, in amending the joint
-resolution of the House was to avoid declaring that the people of
-Louisiana were on the 8th of November in a state of armed insurrection.
-The preamble, even as it was amended, did not wholly satisfy him; he
-believed that he would be better pleased if it was altogether omitted.
-He was informed that Tennessee had sent a vote as well as Louisiana. The
-object of the committee was to settle the question before the meeting of
-the joint convention.[376]
-
-Senator Collamer thought that any law honestly intended to carry into
-effect the provisions of the Constitution could not be objected to. It
-could if it opposed or was inconsistent with that instrument. There had
-been legislation on the subject and additional action by Congress might
-be necessary. For the resolution he offered the following substitute:
-
- That the people of no State, the inhabitants whereof have been
- declared in a state of insurrection by virtue of the fifth section
- of the act entitled “An act further to provide for the collection of
- duties on imports, and for other purposes,” approved July 13, 1861,
- shall be regarded as empowered to elect electors of President and
- Vice-President of the United States until said condition of
- insurrection shall cease and be so declared by virtue of a law of
- the United States.[377]
-
-By Mr. Howard the question was regarded as of very great importance not
-only as a precedent for the future, but “as indicating the opinion of
-Congress on the subject, to use a familiar term, of ‘reconstruction,’ or
-rather the rights of the States in rebellion.” He believed it clear that
-the Vice-President was to open the certificates and that the duty of
-counting devolved upon the two Houses thus assembled. The act of 1792
-seemed so to construe the Constitution.
-
-“The power of counting the votes,” he asserted, “and of rejecting votes
-which are void for fraud or illegality, is, under the Constitution, in
-the joint convention thus assembled.” There was no doubt about it, he
-declared, because the Houses convened for a great and protective
-purpose; they were exercising the tutelary authority of the people, in
-protecting the nation from the imposition of false and fraudulent
-ballots and certificates. The inhabitants of the States mentioned in the
-proclamation of the President were public enemies; therefore they had no
-political rights under the United States.
-
-“I look upon this measure as necessary,” continued Mr. Howard, “as one
-form in which the sense of Congress ought to be expressed against any
-hasty attempt to readmit these rebellious States into the Union.” For
-one, he would require the loyalty and friendliness of a majority of the
-people of the rebellious States to be proved before readmitting any of
-them. “The theory of our Government,” he went on, “is different from
-that of almost every other government on earth. It is that the will of
-the majority shall govern; in common phrase, the majority of the people,
-but practically the majority of the voting population.”
-
-In conclusion he declared that it was “the bounden duty of Congress, in
-every case, to keep out of the Union every one of these eleven seceded
-States until, in pursuance of our laws, passed or to be passed, it has
-become perfectly evident to us that there is in such a State a clear,
-absolute majority of its voting population friendly to the Government of
-the United States, and willing to proceed in the discharge of their
-functions as a State; and, until that is done, you may be perfectly
-sure, so long as I hold a seat in this body, my vote will be given
-against any such proposal. I never will consent to admit into this Union
-a State a majority of whose people are hostile and unfriendly to the
-Government of my country. I prefer to hold them in tutelage (for that is
-really the word) one year, five years, ten years, even twenty years,
-rather than run the risk of a repetition of this rebellion, which has
-cost us so much blood and treasure.”[378]
-
-Ten Eyck, considering Louisiana as the strongest case, mentioned it in
-preference to Arkansas or Tennessee, and, from a paper furnished by a
-gentleman who was familiar with the situation there, was able to state
-that “eleven thousand four hundred and fourteen votes were polled at
-this election. The average vote for ten years prior to the rebellion in
-these parishes was fifteen to sixteen thousand.” The same parishes cast
-their highest vote, 21,000, in 1860. He expressed a wish to save
-Tennessee also from the effect of the resolution, and declared that he
-did not see how the Vice-President-elect, an alien, could preside over
-the Senate. Further, a vote in favor of the resolution prejudged the
-case of the Senators and the legality of the Legislature which sent
-them.[379]
-
-Senator Pomeroy did not suppose that States unrepresented in either
-House could be represented in the Electoral College. He criticised the
-correctness of the preamble so far as it related to Arkansas. The rebel
-governor as well as the rebel legislature, he said, was driven out long
-ago.
-
-“Arkansas,” he continued, “has not voted at all in the Presidential
-election.... Under the instructions and impressions that the members
-from Arkansas received here last session, they distinctly understood
-that States not represented in either branch of Congress would have no
-right to vote at the Presidential election. They returned to Arkansas
-and so reported, and they never had any election; there are no votes
-here from that State. They have been in suspense awaiting the action of
-Congress.” The resolution itself did not, of course, affect Arkansas,
-for there were no votes from that State to be counted.[380]
-
-Mr. Cowan, probably adopting a hint dropped by Senator Ten Eyck, noticed
-the fact that the proclamation of January 1, 1863, exempted from its
-operations thirteen named parishes of Louisiana because no rebellion
-existed in them. The validity of that decree had been recognized, while
-the proclamation of December 8 following invited the people of Louisiana
-and other States to resume their rights. The question was whether the
-arrangements of the President were to be executed in good faith.
-
-It was the duty of the Executive, he continued, “to put down this
-rebellion, to relieve the people from its oppression, and to restore
-them precisely to where they were when the rebellion found them. If that
-is done, in ten days after his proclamation, _eo instanti_, the people
-resume their rights and functions; and in this case I understand they
-are not only in possession of the right, but are actually in the
-enjoyment of it, having a regularly organized government with all the
-machinery necessary and proper to a government.” He believed that men
-and money were furnished the President to sustain State governments and
-make them supreme within their own limits.
-
-Concluding this portion of his remarks he said: “Mr. President, this
-involves a direct conflict between the Legislative and Executive bodies
-of this Government, and at this time I am of opinion that we cannot
-afford to enter into that conflict.”[381]
-
-Senator Powell, of Kentucky, said that when it was asserted that General
-Banks did not interfere in the Louisiana election the statement was not
-true, for there could be no greater interference in the elections of a
-State than to alter the qualifications of voters. He declared himself
-“opposed to admitting on this floor persons who are elected under the
-bayonet influence in any way whatever. I very well know that there was
-no free expression of the people of Louisiana in these elections. I know
-that they but obeyed the behests of the military, whatever commanders
-may say about it.... But for its tragical results upon republican
-liberty it [the election] would be the greatest of farces.”
-
-The Kentucky member believed that the rebellious States were still in
-the Union, and when a majority of the people in any of them returned to
-loyalty, when their governments were organized, their Senators and
-Representatives should be received.[382]
-
-Cowan, entering again into the discussion, said: “We are bound by the
-Constitution to preserve the Union and to preserve the rights of the
-people under the Union; not merely the rights of a majority, but the
-rights of the people, of all the people, and of any number of the people
-however small. What are we to do? A minority of the people come forward
-and say, ‘If you aid us for a while we can preserve this State and keep
-her in the Union.’ ‘But no,’ according to the doctrine advanced here,
-‘there must be a majority of you before we can recognize you as in the
-Union.’... That will be very poor encouragement for the loyal men of the
-rebel States to try and bring back their people to reason.” The
-Pennsylvania Senator was one of the few who adhered to the opinion that
-the masses of men at the South were not disloyal; that it was a leaders’
-rebellion.[383]
-
-Sherman, of Ohio, described the scene in the joint convention of 1856
-when Humphrey Marshall wanted to speak and Mr. Mason, president of the
-Senate, refused to recognize him. Speaker Banks, however, did recognize
-him; upon this, Mason and others left the convention, and confusion
-ensued; that, Mr. Sherman believed, was a reason why the resolution
-should be disposed of.[384]
-
-Mr. Wade said: “About a year ago Congress, anticipating that such
-questions as this might arise, in my judgment very wisely framed a law
-and passed it through both branches with the hope of settling this
-matter in advance. That law was made upon great deliberation in both
-bodies of Congress: it received a very large vote in each House. It was
-very proper in my judgment that Congress should fix the matter then,
-because everybody could anticipate that a question of the most serious
-danger to the Republic might arise in the then approaching Presidential
-election, which might endanger the stability of our Union, and which
-might under certain circumstances precipitate these Northern States into
-a civil war. Apprehending that such a question might arise, Congress
-wisely, in my judgment, provided against it; but the President did not
-agree with them, and he vetoed their bill, leaving the question open
-with all its dangers, which, thank God, have not arisen.”
-
-The President, added Mr. Wade, chose to pocket the bill, “and, as I
-suppose, he did it in defence of the proclamation which he had put
-forth, declaring that whenever a tenth part of the people of a State
-would come back, he would recognize them as the State and as part and
-parcel of this Government—a proposition which, with all my respect for
-the Chief Magistrate, I am bound to say is the most absurd and
-impracticable that ever haunted the imagination of a statesman.... And I
-must say of that proclamation of the President that it was the most
-contentious, the most anarchical, the most dangerous proposition that
-was ever put forth for the government of a free people.
-
-“... I had a conversation with the now Vice-President-elect of the
-United States on that subject, and with other gentlemen on the Union
-side in the Southern States, and I do not know of one of them who was
-not filled with the deepest apprehension that if this principle should
-prevail they would be annihilated by the nine tenths.”[385]
-
-As to permitting citizens of Louisiana who were serving in the army and
-navy to vote in the election of February 22, 1864, Mr. Doolittle
-observed: “We have done the same thing in Wisconsin, in Ohio, in
-Pennsylvania, in New York, all growing out of exigencies which have
-occurred since this rebellion began, passing laws, authorizing men,
-although in the Army of the United States, still to take part in the
-elections, providing that they should not be deprived of their rights of
-citizenship because they had enlisted in the Army to bear all the
-sacrifices which are necessary to defend their country in this struggle.
-And, sir, I maintain that there was nothing wrong in this.”[386] Even if
-it were wrong, only 808 soldiers, he asserted, participated in the
-election. A separate registry of this vote had been kept by General
-Banks. So far, therefore, from being a military usurpation it was an
-attempt of the President to lay down the military power. This he was
-endeavoring in good faith to do.
-
-After a somewhat excited defence of the Administration by Senator
-Doolittle, and severe attacks on both President Lincoln and General
-Banks by Mr. Powell and others, Ten Eyck’s motion to strike out
-Louisiana from the joint resolution was defeated, February 3, 1865, by a
-vote of 22 to 16.[387] Lane’s motion immediately after to strike out the
-preamble, which would leave only an unmeaning resolution, was lost by a
-vote of 30 nays to 12 yeas.[388]
-
-Senator Harris proposed to amend Mr. Collamer’s substitute by resolving,
-“That it is inexpedient to determine the question as to the validity of
-the election of electors in the said States of Tennessee and Louisiana,
-and that in counting the votes for President and Vice-President the
-result be declared as it would stand if the votes of the said States
-were counted, and also as it would stand if the votes of the said States
-were excluded, such result being the same in either case.” By nearly the
-same majority this proposition also was voted down without much
-discussion.[389]
-
-Reverdy Johnson, who favored the House resolution as amended by the
-Committee on the Judiciary, did not think the rebellious States were out
-of the Union, and asserted that there was no power in any branch of
-Government to declare war against a State. Referring to the Whiskey
-Insurrection in Washington’s administration, he said that Congress
-passed no act declaring it at an end. The President declared it. It
-ended itself. The insurrectionists laid down their arms, and expressed
-willingness to yield obedience to the United States; that ended the
-insurrection and disbanded the Federal forces, “and that happening, the
-State of Pennsylvania, every part of it, stood exactly in the relation,
-for all purposes, in which the State and every part of it stood before
-the insurrection was commenced.”[390]
-
-Mr. Collamer said that the real point in Senator Johnson’s argument was
-whether Congress had anything to do in the reorganization or
-reëstablishment of those States. Mr. Johnson, continued the Senator from
-Vermont, seemed to think not. On resuming his speech, February 4, 1865,
-he inquired: “When will, and when ought, Congress to admit these States
-as being in their normal condition? When they see that they furnish
-evidence of it. It is not enough that they stop their hostility and are
-repentant. They should present fruits meet for repentance. They should
-furnish to us by their actions some evidence that the condition of
-loyalty and obedience is their true condition again, and Congress must
-pass upon it; otherwise we have no securities. It is not enough that
-they lay down their arms. Our courts should be established, our taxes
-should be gathered, our duties should be collected in those States; and
-before they come here to perform their duties or privileges again as
-members of this Union, they should place themselves in an attitude
-showing to us that they have truly taken that position, and we should
-pass upon it; and I insist that the President, making peace with them,
-if you please, by surceasing military operations, does not alter their
-status until Congress passes upon it.... I believe that when
-reëstablishing the condition of peace with that people, Congress,
-representing the United States, has power, in ending this war as any
-other war, to get some security for the future.”
-
-The guaranty clause, Mr. Collamer asserted, implied that States were to
-be kept in the Union; it was inserted for the security of the minority
-in a State, though there might be but one man there to redeem Sodom. No
-one State could discharge the United States from a performance of that
-obligation. To keep it Congress, if it was essential to maintaining a
-republican form of government, could abolish slavery if that institution
-stood in the way of performing the guaranty. Before restoring the
-States, he added in conclusion, the President would need the assistance
-of Congress, else how could he get rid of the confiscation act.[391]
-
-Collamer’s substitute, which shared the fate of the amendment offered by
-Ten Eyck, could be construed only by an examination of the President’s
-proclamation to ascertain what States were in insurrection.
-
-To the preamble, which stated that four years earlier certain designated
-States had rebelled, and on the 8th of November preceding were in such
-condition of rebellion that no valid election for the choice of electors
-of President and Vice-President could be held there, Senator Pomeroy
-objected that the rebel governor of Arkansas had been killed, and the
-entire disloyal government destroyed. When the election was held the
-real local authorities in that State were Union men. It would not be
-true, as the preamble declared, that these authorities were in rebellion
-on November 8. The terms of the disloyal officials in Arkansas had
-expired by limitation; the chief men in that government were not alive
-to exert any influence if they were disposed to do so. It was not true
-to say that they made war on the United States on the 8th of November,
-1864, or that they were then in condition to do so. Since the rebellion
-began they never had but one election.
-
-Pomeroy’s amendment to substitute for “state of rebellion” the word
-“condition” was carried by a vote of 26 to 13. The preamble, as thus
-perfected, declared that certain States had rebelled four years before,
-and on November 8 were in such “condition” that no valid election was
-held.[392]
-
-Mr. Lane believed that for the protection of Union men in those States a
-loyal government was indispensable, and that it did more to demoralize
-the insurgents and to close out the rebellion than any other act that
-could be accomplished. It would be worth more than all the victories
-that could be gained in the field.[393]
-
-Senator Howe in closing the debate observed that four days had been
-spent in discussing not the passage of the joint resolution, but the
-reason to be assigned in its preamble for excluding the vote of certain
-States. It belonged to the legislatures of those commonwealths, he
-maintained, to declare whether valid elections had been held there. He
-distrusted that sort of legislation, and in conclusion said: “If you
-will take hold of the question of the political relations of these
-communities, and if you will tell what is the truth, and has been the
-truth since 1861, that there are no State organizations there, no State
-governments, I am with you. When you establish that, you know what they
-may and what they may not do.”[394]
-
-By a vote of 29 to 10 the joint resolution was passed on February 4. In
-the record the names of Cowan, Doolittle, Harris, Howe, Lane of Kansas,
-Nesmith, Saulsbury, Ten Eyck, Van Winkle and Willey appear in
-opposition.[395]
-
-For the purpose of canvassing the electoral votes, both Houses assembled
-in joint convention four days later, February 8, 1865. The
-Vice-President in discharge of his duty proceeded to open and hand to
-the tellers the votes of the several States, beginning with Maine. No
-one dissenting it was agreed on a suggestion by Senator Wade to dispense
-with the reading of everything in the certificate except the result of
-the vote.
-
-When all the votes had been recorded, Cowan said: “Mr. President, I
-inquire whether there are any further returns to be counted.” The
-Vice-President replied in the negative. To his former question Mr. Cowan
-then added, “And if there be, I would inquire why they are not submitted
-to this body in joint convention, which is alone capable of determining
-whether they should be counted or not.” The Vice-President acknowledged
-that he had in his possession returns from the States of Louisiana and
-Tennessee, but in obedience to the law of the land “the Chair holds it
-to be his duty not to present them to the convention.” The Pennsylvania
-Senator thereupon inquired whether the joint resolution had been signed
-by the President, and was informed that while the official communication
-of its approval had not been received by either House, the Chair had
-been apprised that the resolution had received the Executive approval.
-
-Cowan then suggested that, as a motion was not in order, the votes of
-Louisiana and Tennessee be counted, and that the convention determine
-the fact. Representative Cox immediately recommended the reading of the
-joint rule under which both Houses were then acting. On being directed
-by the Vice-President the secretary complied with this suggestion.
-
-Thaddeus Stevens did not think any question had arisen which required
-the two Houses to separate, for that, according to the language of the
-joint resolution, could only occur upon the reading of those returns
-which had been opened by the president of the convention.
-
-Mr. Cowan did what he could to bring the question before the two Houses,
-and failing, withdrew it. The result, after some further effort to call
-up the returns from Louisiana and Tennessee, was then announced. The
-tellers reported that for President of the United States Abraham Lincoln
-had received 212, and George B. McClellan 21 votes; that for
-Vice-President Andrew Johnson had received 212, and George H. Pendleton
-21 votes.[396]
-
-On February 10 the president _pro tempore_ laid before the Senate the
-following communication from Mr. Lincoln:
-
- _To the honorable the Senate and House of Representatives_:
-
- The joint resolution entitled “Joint resolution declaring certain
- States not entitled to representation in the Electoral College” has
- been signed by the Executive, in deference to the view of Congress
- implied in its passage and presentation to him. In his own view,
- however, the two Houses of Congress, convened under the twelfth
- article of the Constitution, have complete power to exclude from
- counting all electoral votes deemed by them to be illegal; and it is
- not competent for the Executive to defeat or obstruct that power by
- a veto, as would be the case if his action were at all essential in
- the matter. He disclaims all right of the Executive to interfere in
- any way in the matter of canvassing or counting electoral votes, and
- he also disclaims that, by signing said resolution, he has expressed
- any opinion on the recitals of the preamble, or any judgment of his
- own upon the subject of the resolution.[397]
-
-Except for a brief speech by Reverdy Johnson this message was received
-in silence by the Senate. Mr. Johnson commented upon the extraordinary
-course of the President, whose duty, he said, was clearly to approve or
-to disapprove, not virtually to read a lecture to the Senate as he had
-done. The Maryland member did not doubt that the motives of the
-President were perfectly correct and patriotic, but it was not the first
-time, he asserted, that that had been done. The bill for the
-reconstruction of the seceded States passed both Houses by an
-overwhelming majority; but it was defeated by the President’s failure to
-approve, and the adjournment of Congress before ten days elapsed. In his
-manifesto or proclamation he approved portions and disapproved
-others.[398]
-
-Short as this paper was, however, it was entirely characteristic of the
-President. This little lesson in constitutional law is only another
-proof that Mr. Lincoln possessed in an eminent degree the faculty of
-seeing clearly through the most intricate question. His disposal of this
-difficulty as well as his reflections on Congress remind one of the
-facility with which he straightened out for General Butler the liquor
-problem at Norfolk. The succeeding chapter will describe another phase
-of the controversy between the political departments of the Government.
-
------
-
-Footnote 366:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 505.
-
-Footnote 367:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 533.
-
-Footnote 368:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 534–535.
-
-Footnote 369:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 535–536.
-
-Footnote 370:
-
- Ibid., p. 536.
-
-Footnote 371:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 535–537.
-
-Footnote 372:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 537, 548.
-
-Footnote 373:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 548–549.
-
-Footnote 374:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 549–550.
-
-Footnote 375:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 550.
-
-Footnote 376:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 550–551.
-
-Footnote 377:
-
- Ibid., pp. 551–552.
-
-Footnote 378:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 553–554.
-
-Footnote 379:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 554–555.
-
-Footnote 380:
-
- Ibid., pp. 555–556.
-
-Footnote 381:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 556.
-
-Footnote 382:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 557–558.
-
-Footnote 383:
-
- Ibid., p. 558.
-
-Footnote 384:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 385:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 576–582.
-
-Footnote 386:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 575.
-
-Footnote 387:
-
- Ibid., pp. 576–582.
-
-Footnote 388:
-
- Ibid., p. 582.
-
-Footnote 389:
-
- Ibid., p. 583.
-
-Footnote 390:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 585.
-
-Footnote 391:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 591.
-
-Footnote 392:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 593.
-
-Footnote 393:
-
- Ibid., p. 594.
-
-Footnote 394:
-
- Ibid., pp. 594–595.
-
-Footnote 395:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 595.
-
-Footnote 396:
-
- The subject of the counting of the electoral votes will be found in
- the Congressional Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 668–669.
-
-Footnote 397:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 711.
-
-Footnote 398:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 711.
-
-
-
-
- X
- SENATE DEBATE ON LOUISIANA
-
-
-At the opening of its second session, December 5, 1864, the Speaker of
-the Thirty-eighth Congress laid before the House the credentials of W.
-D. Mann, T. M. Wells, Robert W. Taliaferro, A. P. Field and M. F.
-Bonzano, who claimed seats as Representatives from the State of
-Louisiana. A petition, signed by numerous citizens of that commonwealth,
-protesting against the admission of these claimants, was referred at the
-same time on motion of Henry Winter Davis to the Committee of Elections
-in connection with their credentials, which had already received the
-same direction. On the 13th this remonstrance was ordered to be printed.
-
-Mr. Dawes on February 11 following reported that “M. F. Bonzano is
-entitled to a seat in this House as a Representative from the First
-Congressional District of Louisiana.” Six days later he presented a
-report and resolutions from his committee to the effect that Messrs.
-Field and Mann from the Second and Third Districts, respectively, were
-also entitled to seats. These reports with the accompanying resolutions
-were laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
-
-No further action was taken on the question of their admission, but on
-March 3, 1865, Chairman Dawes by unanimous consent reported from the
-Committee of Elections a resolution that there be paid to each of the
-Louisiana claimants for compensation, expenses and mileage the sum of
-$2,000 and a like amount to T. M. Jacks, J. M. Johnson and A. A. C.
-Rogers, claimants from Arkansas.
-
-The House, however, was not nearly so unanimous as its committee. Mr.
-Washburne remarked that Congress, by allowing at the last session the
-sum of $1,500 to one gentleman who claimed a seat, had fixed a sort of
-rule in such cases. That amount he would, probably, not object to paying
-to the present applicants; but if large payments, such as the
-compensation proposed by the resolution, were made to men coming to the
-Capitol it was feared they might not soon stop.
-
-Representative Johnson, of Pennsylvania, believed that regardless of
-their right to seats they should be compensated because they had been
-encouraged to come; they appeared at the Capitol, he asserted, with an
-honest expectation of getting seats, and in an honest effort to restore
-popular government to their States.
-
-Mr. Dawes declared that they came not as adventurers but under what they
-supposed was the policy of the General Government; hence the favorable
-recommendation of the committee. When he demanded the previous question,
-Representative Brandegee moved to lay the resolution on the table.
-Thaddeus Stevens asked to strike out the words “claimants for seats.” To
-this the Massachusetts member offered no objection. “I do not want to
-recognize the idea,” added Stevens, “that anybody on earth thinks that
-these men are entitled to seats.”[399] This request, however, was
-denied, and the resolution was then adopted.
-
-It was during their three months’ sojourn in Washington that one of the
-claimants, A. P. Field, committed an assault upon Representative William
-D. Kelley, of Pennsylvania, whom he regarded as the chief obstacle to
-their admission. This occurrence, which took place on February 20 at the
-Willard Hotel, was due, no doubt, to the artificial excitement of the
-Louisiana claimant, but was without influence upon the action of the
-House.[400]
-
-The General Assembly of Louisiana, as previously related, had chosen
-Charles Smith and R. King Cutler as United States Senators. With the
-Representatives-elect these gentlemen also appeared in Washington as
-claimants for seats. On December 7, two days after Congress assembled,
-the president _pro tempore_ presented certain proceedings of the
-Louisiana Legislature declaratory of the election of Smith and Cutler.
-The papers, it was announced, would lie on the table unless otherwise
-ordered. Just as Henry Winter Davis had done in the House, Senator Wade
-offered a memorial from Louisiana citizens remonstrating against their
-admission, and also against the reception of any electoral vote from
-that State. On his motion it was agreed that all documents pertaining to
-the subject be printed. On the following day, December 8, the
-credentials as well as the remonstrance were referred to the Committee
-on the Judiciary.
-
-Senator Trumbull on February 17 succeeding made a report from his
-committee, and offered a joint resolution relative to the credentials of
-Smith and Cutler. At the request of Charles Sumner the resolution was
-read at length and was as follows:
-
- That the United States do hereby recognize the government of the
- State of Louisiana, inaugurated under and by the convention which
- assembled on the 6th day of April, A. D., 1864, at the city of New
- Orleans, as the legitimate government of the said State, and
- entitled to the guarantees and all other rights of a State
- government under the Constitution of the United States.[401]
-
-This resolution was limited to Louisiana because the facts, while in
-many respects similar, were not identical with those in the case of
-Arkansas. Besides, when the subject first came up in committee the
-Arkansas case had not been presented, though it arose before Louisiana
-had been disposed of. Trumbull believed it the intention of the
-committee to act immediately upon Arkansas when the case of Louisiana
-had been considered.[402]
-
-Sumner moved, February 23, to strike out all of the joint resolution
-except the enacting clause, and to substitute the following:
-
- That neither the people nor the Legislature of any State, the people
- of which were declared to be in insurrection against the United
- States by the proclamation of the President, dated August 16, 1861,
- shall hereafter elect Representatives or Senators to the Congress of
- the United States until the President, by proclamation, shall have
- declared that armed hostility to the Government of the United States
- within such State has ceased; nor until the people of such State
- shall have adopted a constitution of government not repugnant to the
- Constitution and laws of the United States; nor until, by a law of
- Congress, such State shall have been declared to be entitled to
- representation in the Congress of the United States of America.[403]
-
-To this amendment Senator Trumbull objected that it would put it in the
-power of the President, by refusing to issue his proclamation, to keep a
-State out forever. Sumner’s substitute was promptly defeated by a vote
-of 29 to 8.[404]
-
-Of the members of the committee Powell alone opposed the resolution
-offered by Mr. Trumbull. The chief object in recognizing the government
-of Louisiana at that time, said the Kentucky Senator, was to allow that
-State to vote for the proposed amendment of the Constitution; to do that
-effectually those favorable to the resolution desired first to admit her
-Senators and Representatives; their admission would be the immediate
-effect of its passage.
-
-A just conclusion on that subject could be reached only by information
-concerning the action of the President, of the military, and of the
-people of Louisiana in connection with the election. He opposed the
-loyal government because it was not formed by the people of that State;
-however, he did not want to be classed with those who thought Louisiana
-out of the Union. He believed that something approximating a majority of
-her people should indicate a willingness to return to the Union, and
-should participate in the movement for reorganization. The formation of
-the existing government, he asserted, was controlled and influenced by
-persons who were not citizens of Louisiana, and, he added, “It is a
-government formed really and virtually by the military power of the
-United States, using as instruments delegates who were elected under and
-by force of the bayonet.”
-
-Before Senators could vote for the resolution, he continued, they must
-maintain the doctrine announced in the President’s proclamation of
-December 8, 1863, when he proposed that one tenth of the loyal voters in
-a State who would comply with the conditions therein prescribed, could
-form a State government; they must further maintain that the President,
-of his own volition, had power by decretal order to alter the
-constitution of a State; that the President had power to prescribe the
-qualifications both of voters and candidates for office in the States;
-finally they must believe that not only did the President possess these
-powers, but that Major-General Banks, in virtue of his office, possessed
-them in Louisiana.
-
-Mr. Powell proposed to show that not only did Louisiana people not act
-of their own volition, but that “they were coerced to do what they did.”
-The constitution of that State, he asserted, was not made by the free
-suffrage of the people.
-
-The creation of a State government is a purely civil act; the people
-must act without restraint. He had never heard any Senator say that the
-President could legitimately exercise the power assumed in his
-proclamation of December 8, 1863. Mr. Powell objected to the oath which
-was to be taken as a condition precedent to becoming a qualified elector
-in one of the revolted States, especially to that portion which promised
-support of all future proclamations of the President on the question of
-slavery. “Why, sir,” he exclaimed, “the President may proclaim that the
-negro shall be the master and the white man the slave; that the negro
-shall be the voter and the white man deprived of the right of suffrage;
-and yet this oath requires the man taking it to swear in advance that he
-would support even such a measure as that....
-
-“At the very threshold, then,” he continued, “you repudiate the great
-principle of republican government that majorities shall rule. Here you
-propose to say not that majorities, but that less than one tenth shall
-rule.” It was intimated by the President that when they made a
-constitution it must not recognize African slavery. General Banks,
-carrying out the suggestion of the President, as well as what had been
-distinctly stated to General Steele in relation to Arkansas, took it
-upon himself to alter the constitution of Louisiana in that respect.
-
-Whence does the President, it was asked, derive the power to prescribe
-qualifications for either electors or candidates? The proclamation, the
-Kentucky Senator asserted, was the basis of the whole proceeding, and
-those who voted for the resolution endorsed the proclamation.
-
-Mr. Powell then reviewed the acts and read the proclamation of General
-Banks, whose conduct he denounced for presuming to declare certain parts
-of the Louisiana constitution no longer applicable to any class of
-persons in that State, and, therefore, inoperative and void.
-
-He further objected that Banks had no authority to call the convention,
-for the constitution of Louisiana could be lawfully amended in only the
-mode pointed out by itself. The President’s proclamation, he added,
-would allow only those to vote who were qualified electors under the
-fundamental law of the State; those in the army and navy were not, but
-General Banks in his ukase of February 13, 1864, allowed them to
-participate in the election.
-
-He also invited attention to the action of the Department Commander in
-designating provost marshals to take care that the polls were properly
-opened, in the absence of the sheriffs, and that suitable persons were
-appointed judges of election and so forth. Of the 11,414 votes he
-asserted that 808 were cast by soldiers who under the President’s
-proclamation were not legal voters. The fact, added Mr. Powell, that
-General Banks after the inauguration of Hahn as governor continued to
-issue proclamations shows that the civil was controlled by the military
-authority.
-
-Passing on to a discussion of the statement of Banks before the
-Committee on the Judiciary that the military did not interfere in the
-election of February 22, Senator Powell quoted the following passages
-from a proclamation of the Department Commander:
-
- Those who have exercised or are entitled to the rights of citizens
- of the United States will be required to participate in the measures
- necessary for the reëstablishment of civil government.... It is
- therefore a solemn duty resting upon all persons to assist in the
- earliest possible restoration of civil government. Let them
- participate in the measures suggested for this purpose. Opinion is
- free and candidates are numerous. Open hostility cannot be
- permitted. Indifference will be treated as a crime, and faction as
- treason.
-
-“Talk to me,” exclaimed Mr. Powell, “of freedom of election under such
-military orders! Why, sir, there was but one free man, in my opinion, in
-all Louisiana at that time, and that was Major-General Banks; and I do
-not know that he was free, for he was serving his master at the White
-House.” The fundamental law there was martial law, which is but the will
-of the commander-in-chief, and under that law he could have beheaded
-them if they did not vote.
-
-From beginning to end, he continued, the coercive finger of the military
-was engaged in the establishment of that government. Under the various
-proclamations even Unionists, men who had always been loyal, could not
-vote unless they took the oath required in the President’s proclamation.
-There was a large class of loyal men in Louisiana, he said, who refused
-to take that oath, for there had been presented to the Judiciary
-Committee an earnest protest signed by Thomas J. Durant and thirty-one
-others, influential Union men of that State, against the admission of
-Senators and Representatives and against counting its electoral vote.
-Those Senators, he added toward the conclusion of his remarks, who only
-a few days before opposed the counting of Louisiana’s electoral vote
-should now vote against the resolution acknowledging the government
-which appointed the Senators that are claiming seats.[405]
-
-Sumner and Davis referred to the resolution as a shadow. To this Mr.
-Doolittle replied that the vote of Louisiana might be necessary to
-secure the constitutional amendment, and that the new constitution of
-that State had struck the shackles from 90,000 slaves not reached by the
-Emancipation Proclamation.
-
-Mr. Henderson, who favored the resolution, secured the floor, and
-observed, among other things, that Louisiana and Arkansas did not claim
-that they were yet strong enough to maintain their governments without
-the military aid of the nation; but neither was Maryland, West Virginia,
-Kentucky or Missouri; even Ohio, Indiana or Illinois, he said, could not
-without national assistance maintain their State organizations for sixty
-days against the Confederate armies.
-
-“If we would have State governments,” said Mr. Henderson, “we must begin
-somewhere and at some time.” It was nonsensical, he argued to talk of
-restoring the Union, while keeping the loyal people in those States for
-all time to come under military domination. “We must declare the right
-in Congress,” he added, “to make and establish these governments for the
-States, or permit the President, under military law, to set them up, or
-we must recognize such as the loyal people may set up for themselves.”
-If, as Madison thought, Congress cannot make them, but can only
-guarantee such as already exist and are found to be republican in form,
-it must be left with the President, under his power as the head of the
-army, or to the people of the respective States. If left entirely with
-the President he might by military force impose upon the State a
-constitution against the wishes of both the loyal and disloyal. The
-Senator frankly admitted that neither House would be under any
-obligation to receive members sent from a State so constituted.
-
-“But,” he went on to say, “if the people—the loyal masses, whether a
-majority or a minority of the whole voting population as formerly
-known—participated in its creation and acquiesce in the revival of the
-State government, the case though inaugurated by the President in my
-judgment would be very different. According to the theory of our
-Government, and its practice in all its past time in analogous cases, it
-would seem that whether Congress or the President inaugurated the
-proceeding, the constitution can only receive its validity and authority
-from the approval or acquiescence of the people to be affected; and that
-brings me to consider how the people in the seceded States shall revive
-their governments, and who are the legally qualified voters for that
-purpose in these States.
-
-“At the threshold of the inquiry we are met with the objection that the
-States are now without officers of any kind legally elected, and that of
-themselves they are powerless to inaugurate any movement to set up a
-loyal government. It is said they have no officials to superintend the
-election, to count the votes, and grant certificates of election.
-However desirable these formalities may be, it has not been the uniform
-practice of Congress to require them.”
-
-In the case of California, continued Mr. Henderson, the first election
-was called by the military order of a subordinate officer of the army, a
-delegate convention was chosen, a constitution was framed by that
-assembly and submitted to Congress. It was accepted as republican in
-form, and under it a State government was inaugurated that for fifteen
-years had been administered with the greatest success. The territory, he
-said, was wholly without civil authorities recognized by the United
-States. Congress had passed no enabling act, had prescribed no forms of
-proceeding, had failed to fix the qualifications of voters, had
-appointed no judges of election or other officers to count and certify
-the votes; yet the act, however informal, was ratified because the
-constitution on its face was unobjectionable in form, and it was
-believed that the people interested acquiesced in the government it
-established.
-
-If the people of Rhode Island, added Mr. Henderson, had acquiesced in
-the government set up under Dorr, Congress and the Executive would have
-recognized it as legitimate. The Senator from Kentucky contended that
-although a majority of the legal and qualified voters of Louisiana
-should acquiesce in the new constitution Congress could not admit the
-State. In support of his view Mr. Henderson pointed to the State
-government of Missouri, which was the offspring of a movement purely
-revolutionary.
-
-In the States whose representatives were seeking admission to Congress
-but one government asked recognition, and what if these organizations
-were of revolutionary origin?—the revolution was on the side of loyalty.
-Revolutionary governments had been accepted in time of peace—governments
-springing up in the midst of anarchy, without the sanctions of
-regularity; why, he asked, should they be rejected now when they were
-needed to protect the loyal inhabitants of the respective States and to
-aid the nation in vindicating its lost authority?
-
-The assertion that on the face of these constitutions they were
-republican in form Senator Sumner denied. They did not follow out the
-principles of the Federal Constitution. This general answer was
-unsatisfactory, and Mr. Henderson said that the only question with him
-was how could he best get these States performing their legitimate
-functions in the Union again. If, as the Massachusetts Senator
-maintained, the act of secession took the States out, why could not the
-act of loyal men bring them back? If secession, he argued, was potent
-enough to take a State out, and that was mere revolution, why could not
-the loyal men perfect a revolution on the side of Government as well as
-rebels perfect a revolution on the side of secession, outrage and wrong?
-
-The doctrine that secession took the States out of the Union, Sumner
-objected to have imputed to him. A subsequent remark indicated one
-ground of his opposition to the government of Louisiana. “If the loyal
-men, white and black, recognize it, then,” he declared, “it will be
-republican in form. Unless that is done, it will not be.”
-
-When asked whether Congress could interfere with the right of suffrage
-in one of the States, Sumner evaded a candid reply, and concealed his
-meaning under these words: “It is the bounden duty of the United States
-by act of Congress to guarantee complete freedom to every citizen, and
-immunity from all oppression, and absolute equality before the law.” No
-government that does not guarantee these things, he added, can be
-recognized as republican in form according to the theory of the Federal
-Constitution, if the United States are called upon to enforce the
-constitutional guaranty.
-
-Senator Henderson, interpreting this answer in the affirmative, observed
-that if under the guaranty clause the national Legislature could
-regulate the suffrage in the States, there was no limitation except the
-mere discretion of Congress. In support of this position he cited
-Madison in No. 43 of _The Federalist_, and of course had this part of
-the argument his own way, for the test of a republican form satisfactory
-to the Massachusetts Senator would leave few representatives in
-Congress.
-
-Mr. Henderson denied that the admission of Senators and Representatives
-from these commonwealths would be a precedent for other States to demand
-recognition, even with the institution of slavery, thus bringing back
-the germs of a new rebellion against the Government; because in the
-constitutions presented involuntary servitude was abolished. With
-slavery remaining any restoration would be utterly useless. It was
-against union with the free States that the Southern people had taken up
-arms, and against restoration that they continued to use them. In that
-struggle they would employ every moral and material force, including the
-slave himself, stimulated by the boon of freedom, to resist the return
-of their States. Whatever the future might bring, it would fail to bring
-to the doors of Congress seeking admission a State constitution without
-a positive interdict of slavery.
-
-To the objection that a majority of the people of these States were in
-rebellion and that to recognize the loyal minority would be to subvert
-the whole republican system Senator Henderson replied that if it were
-strictly true that a majority in a particular community “not only shall
-but must govern,” then a majority of legal voters in a State desiring to
-secede would have the undoubted right to do so. As no principle of the
-General Government authorized such action, it was not true, he said,
-that a majority of citizens in a State can govern themselves except in
-strict obedience to the Constitution of the United States. If a majority
-proved derelict and undertook to destroy the very Government of which
-the State is a part, it is right that the minority, who sustain the
-Government in its entirety, State and national, should institute
-government for their protection. He admitted that General Banks did a
-great many things for which there was no legal authority; but the
-question was whether this constitution was the will of the loyal men of
-Louisiana. If it was, their representatives had a right to seats on the
-floor of Congress.
-
-In reply to Sumner, Senator Henderson said he favored the idea that the
-loyal men should govern a State, and he added, if that be the government
-of the few it results from the voluntary disloyalty of the many. They,
-of their own will, had relinquished the right to govern themselves under
-the Constitution, and as they had no right to govern themselves
-otherwise they could not govern at all. As to the oligarchy of skin, to
-which Sumner had referred, Henderson believed that the regulation of the
-suffrage was a question for the consideration of the States; if they
-conferred the franchise on the negro, he did not object.
-
-As to the Louisiana constitution the question was whether it embodied
-the will of those legally entitled to exercise the functions of the
-State government. If the casting of illegal votes vitiated elections,
-but few elections, he asserted, would be valid.
-
-If those States were admitted, they could immediately settle all
-questions of suffrage, and Congress would be relieved of the difficulty
-in future. He put clearly the difference of opinion prevailing among
-Senators on this subject when he stated that Mr. Powell objected to the
-new constitution of Louisiana because negro soldiers were permitted to
-vote, while Mr. Sumner opposed it because negroes at home did not vote.
-Concluding this part of his speech, he declared that the Federal
-Government by recognizing the old organization in Rhode Island against
-Dorr expressed its preference for a constitution of restricted suffrage.
-
-Without naming his authority Henderson then read from a private letter
-the opinion of a gentleman whom he regarded as one of the ablest jurists
-in the United States.[406] The correspondent said in part:
-
- It must be observed that the civil society, and the political
- society so to speak, of a State need not necessarily do [be] the
- same. In other words the basis of _representation_ may be the whole
- population, but the basis of _suffrage_ be property, adult years,
- &c. The power to choose rulers is lodged in the voters, and they may
- not exceed one tenth of the population.... That portion of the
- population in which political power is lodged, determines who shall
- fill the respective offices, make laws, etc. Although the members of
- that society may have possessed every requisite therefor, yet the
- moment they ceased to be citizens of the United States they ceased
- to belong thereto.
-
- That rule holds good with respect to every member, and the political
- society may, by death, disqualification of members, &c., be reduced
- to a very few persons. To state an extreme case, for illustration of
- the principle, Massachusetts formerly had a property qualification,
- and although her population entitled her to, say, thirteen
- Representatives in the United States House, her voters may not have
- exceeded fifty thousand. Suppose while that qualification remained,
- by some financial or other disaster, only one thousand or one
- hundred citizens retained the necessary income or property, would
- not the persons chosen to Congress by the few and only remaining
- voters be duly elected? So with regard to any other element of
- suffrage, as United States citizenship, if by its loss the voters
- are reduced to very few in number, do not those few constitute the
- political or voting power? As to the policy or impolicy of
- restricted suffrage, we are not now concerned, but are endeavoring
- to reach a constitutional and legal analysis of our governmental
- system.
-
- But here is encountered the startling and practical difficulty,
- “Shall a few persons be permitted to govern a State, despite the
- wishes of its inhabitants, and without giving them all a voice? Is
- that republican?”
-
- But it must be remembered that the few voters, say one seventh, or
- one tenth of the whole population, have always been intrusted with
- that power. Wisdom has fixed the basis of suffrage, without regard
- to relative numbers; that is, it has endeavored, under our popular
- system, to give the right or privilege to as many citizens as were
- supposed competent to exercise it intelligently. The rules
- prescribed as to age, sex, citizenship, &c., were deemed essential,
- right, and proper. Whether many or few come within the rules does
- not affect their validity.... If persons heretofore entitled to a
- vote chose to commit a felony, and incur thereby, as a penalty, the
- deprivation of their former right of suffrage, it is not supposed
- that the loss of such votes is anti-republican. If, then, a majority
- choose to perpetrate treason, or to expatriate themselves, or in any
- other way become disqualified, how does that action vitiate the
- rule? If they, after becoming disqualified, remain in the State, are
- they not bound to submit to its rulers and laws? If their rulers are
- chosen without their voice, is it not in consequence of their own
- voluntary action? Indeed, it often happens that the persons elected
- to office receive only a meager minority of the votes which could
- have been lawfully polled, yet that fact has no influence upon the
- legal result. So a person is often chosen by a minority of the votes
- actually cast, and is not the majority bound to submit?
-
-The author of this letter appears to have been more familiar with the
-Constitution, as it was understood by its framers, than almost any
-member of either House, notwithstanding the presence in Congress of many
-distinguished statesmen. In the following eight propositions Mr.
-Henderson then gave a masterly summary of the Presidential plan of
-reconstruction:
-
- 1. I hold that the seceded States are still in the Union and cannot
- get out of it except through amendment of the Constitution
- permitting it.
-
- 2. The seceded States being still in the Union are entitled to claim
- all the rights accorded to other States.
-
- 3. That each State now in the Union has the right to stand upon the
- form of its constitution as it existed at the time of its admission.
- The people of such State may change its constitution, provided they
- retain a republican form of government; but neither the President
- nor Congress can reform, alter, or amend such constitution, nor
- prescribe any alteration or amendment as a condition of association
- with the other States of the Union. The General Government may
- properly lend its aid to enable the people to express their will;
- but any attempt to exercise power constitutionally reserved to the
- State, beyond what may be demanded by the immediate exigencies of
- war, will not tend to restore the Union, but rather to destroy our
- whole system of government.
-
- 4. When citizens of a State rebel and take up arms against the
- General Government they lose their rights as citizens of the United
- States, and they necessarily forfeit those rights and franchises in
- their respective States which depend on United States citizenship.
-
- 5. If a seceded State be still in the Union, entitled to recognition
- as a State, and a majority of the people have voluntarily withdrawn
- their allegiance, the loyal minority constitute the State and should
- govern it.
-
- 6. Congress should not reject the governments presented because of
- mere irregularity in the proceedings leading to their
- reorganization.
-
- 7. If Congress has no right to make and impose a constitution upon
- the people of any State; if its power extends no further than to
- guaranty preëxisting republican forms of government; if the State
- still exists, and the loyal men are entitled to exercise the
- functions of its government, it follows that the only questions to
- be examined here are, first, is the constitution the will of the
- loyal men qualified to act? and, second, is it republican in form?
-
- 8. The constitutions of Louisiana and Arkansas are thought to be
- republican in form, and it is admitted that the loyal men of those
- States respectively acquiesce in them. Hence the duty of Congress to
- recognize them, and the duty of each House to admit their
- representatives.[407]
-
-On February 25 debate on Trumbull’s resolution was resumed. At this
-point Mr. Sumner offered an amendment in substance as follows:
-
- That it is the duty of the United States at the earliest practicable
- moment, consistent with the common defence and general welfare, to
- reëstablish by act of Congress republican governments in those
- States where loyal governments have been vacated by the existing
- rebellion, and thus, to the full extent of their power, fulfil the
- requirement of the Constitution, that “the United States shall
- guaranty to every State in this Union a republican form of
- government.”
-
- Sec. 2. _And be it further resolved_, That this important duty is
- imposed by the Constitution in express terms on “the United States,”
- and not on individuals or classes of individuals, or on any military
- commander or executive officer, and cannot be intrusted to any such
- persons, acting, it may be, for an oligarchical class, and in
- disregard of large numbers of loyal people; but it must be performed
- by the United States, represented by the President and both Houses
- of Congress, acting for the whole people thereof.
-
- Sec. 3. _And be it further resolved_, That, in determining the
- extent of this duty, and in the absence of any precise definition of
- the term “republican form of government,” we cannot err, if, when
- called to perform this guaranty under the Constitution, we adopt the
- self-evident truths of the Declaration of Independence as an
- authoritative rule, and insist that in every reëstablished State the
- consent of the governed shall be the only just foundation of
- government, and all men shall be equal before the law.
-
-Not less important is the declaration in the fourth section that “in the
-performance of this guaranty, there can be no power under the
-Constitution to disfranchise loyal people, or to recognize any such
-disfranchisement, especially when it may hand over the loyal majority to
-the government of the disloyal minority; nor can there be any power
-under the Constitution to discriminate in favor of the rebellion by
-admitting to the electoral franchise rebels who have forfeited all
-rights and by excluding loyal persons who have never forfeited any
-right.” To allow the reëstablishment of any State without proper
-safeguards for the rights of all the citizens, and especially without
-making it impossible for rebels to trample upon the rights of those who
-are now fighting the battles of the Union, would be, said the succeeding
-section, for the United States to fail in duty under the Constitution.
-
-More directly in opposition to the resolution reported by the chairman
-of the Judiciary Committee, however, was the seventh section, which
-declared “That a government founded on military power, or having its
-origin in military orders, cannot be a ‘republican form of government’
-according to the requirement of the Constitution; and that its
-recognition will be contrary not only to the Constitution, but also to
-that essential principle of our Government which, in the language of
-Jefferson, establishes ‘the supremacy of the civil over the military
-authority.’”
-
-The resolutions further asserted that a government founded on an
-oligarchical class, even if erroneously recognized as a “republican form
-of government,” could not sustain itself without national support; that
-such an organization was not at that moment competent to discharge the
-duties and execute the powers of a State, and that its recognition would
-tend to enfeeble the Union, to postpone the day of reconciliation and to
-endanger the national tranquillity. The ninth section renders clear one
-ground of Sumner’s hostility to the recognition of Louisiana. It asserts
-that
-
- Considerations of expediency are in harmony with the requirements of
- the Constitution, and the dictates of justice and reason, especially
- now, when colored soldiers have shown their military value; that as
- their muskets are needed for the national defence against rebels in
- the field, so are their ballots yet more needed against the subtle
- enemies of the Union at home; and that without their support at the
- ballot-box the cause of human rights and of the Union itself will be
- in constant peril.[408]
-
-It was agreed on motion of Mr. Sumner to have his amendment printed.
-
-Senator Howard, of Michigan, entered at this point into the debate. Much
-of what he said has already been related in the preceding narration of
-events leading up to the reinauguration of a loyal government in
-Louisiana. While admitting that the President’s plan had been undertaken
-for patriotic ends, he could not, he said, recognize in the Executive,
-without the subsidiary aid of an act of Congress, any right to assure a
-community, composed of voters numbering one tenth of the electors who
-participated in the Presidential contest of 1860, that it would be
-recognized as a legitimate government and entitled to the constitutional
-guaranty. This, he said, was a stretch of authority beyond any previous
-attempt, and he thought it time that Congress, in whom, he believed,
-rested solely the authority of readmitting and reconstructing the
-rebellious States, “should lay hold of this subject, assert their power,
-and provide by some statute of uniform application for the
-reconstruction, as it is called, and readmission of the insurrectionary
-States. That is their right and their duty; that is not the right, it is
-not the duty of the President.”
-
-A State he defined negatively as not “the geographical superficies,” the
-land, on which population resides, and positively as “a moral person, a
-political community, possessing the faculty of political government.”
-The land, he said, is the theatre on which the political community moves
-and acts, but is endowed with no thought, no right, no duty. The
-thinking beings residing upon it constitute the State.[409]
-
-“A State of the Union or a State in the Union is, therefore, a people
-yielding obedience to the laws of the Union, that is, the acts of
-Congress and the national treaties.... A people who have a State
-government which is republican in form; a people who were one of the
-original thirteen States which formed the United States, or a people who
-have, since the adoption of the Constitution, been, in the language of
-that Constitution, ‘admitted by the Congress into this Union’ as States
-upon an equal footing with the original States; for this equality of
-rights and powers as States is plainly implied by the language and the
-manifest intention of the instrument; and no other people except such
-original State or admitted State; none but a State which permits the
-laws of the Union to have full scope and force within its limits; none
-but a State which sends Senators and Representatives to Congress
-friendly to the Government itself, willing to vote men and money to
-support and uphold it, who believe that a person forcibly resisting its
-authority is a traitor and deserving of death; none but a State which is
-willing to bring to trial, to convict such a traitor, and to punish him
-for his treason; none but a State whose population is capable of
-furnishing both the grand jury to indict and the traverse jury to
-convict such a traitor; none but a State whose population and whose
-authorities are in favor not only of permitting the laws of the United
-States relating to civil rights to be executed, but who are willing that
-the punitive code of the nation, the code of vengeance against its
-enemies, shall be carried out; none but such are States of the Union....
-
-“To be in fact a State of the Union and in the Union, this will or
-consent of the people must be in harmony with the Constitution, and its
-movements subsidiary to it. It must regard the Constitution as its
-highest political good; its injunctions as the highest human law, its
-commands as the infallible and final measure of civil duty. In short, to
-be in the Union is to be actively and willingly coöperating with other
-States in the performance of all those acts and things without which the
-Federal Government cannot act or move, cannot perform the functions
-required of it by the Constitution; it is to elect Senators and
-Representatives to the Congress of the United States; to permit the
-courts of the United States to be held within their limits, and its
-citizens to act as jurors and officers of the court; to permit the
-judgments and sentences of the court to be executed against its
-citizens; to permit the United States mail to be carried through the
-State and its contents distributed according to law; to permit the
-officers of the United States to collect the Federal revenue whether
-derived from foreign or domestic products; to permit the United States
-to manage and control their own property, whether consisting of forts,
-dockyards, arsenals, mints, or public lands; to make such elections of
-Senators and Representatives freely and as the means of maintaining
-itself as a State in the Union; and to permit all these things willingly
-and freely as rights belonging to the Federal Government with which
-neither the State government nor the people of the State have any right
-whatever to interfere. In short, to be a State in the Union is to use
-all those powers of the State which have a relation to the Federal
-Government in a manner friendly to that Government, friendly to its
-existence and continuance, in a manner promotive of the objects of that
-Government; and to permit without hindrance the exercise within the
-State of all the powers of the Federal Government.”
-
-Though he declined to discuss the question whether a State by omitting
-to send Representatives and Senators to Congress would on that account
-cease to be a member of the Union, he gave it as his opinion that mere
-failure to be represented in Congress would not be followed by such
-consequences; but if a State not only refused to participate in Federal
-legislation but went farther, and as a political community made war upon
-the General Government, he declared that “it would be folly, madness, to
-say that the State was not our enemy in every sense in which that term
-can be employed to describe hostile relations between independent
-communities.... No one will pretend that such a community is in the
-Union in fact, for that would be to make an admission and in the same
-breath to contradict it. _De facto_, such a community, and, if it be
-bounded by State lines, such a State, is as completely out of the Union
-as is Canada or Mexico, from the moment it assumes the attitude of
-hostility until it is subdued and conquered by our arms, or until it
-voluntarily lays down its arms, ejects its hostile government and
-returns _in fact_ to its once friendly sentiments and friendly relations
-to the Federal Government.”
-
-“Loyalty,” continued Senator Howard, “thus becomes the final test in
-solving the question, what is a State in the Union? If a State by its
-overt acts has shown a want of this friendship, it is no longer in the
-Union _de facto_, and cannot be treated as if it were. The Supreme
-Court, acting upon the soundest principles of public law, have decided
-the waging of war by a State, although acting under an illegitimate and
-revolutionary government, renders her territory enemy’s territory, and
-the people there resident enemies of the United States, in the sense of
-the laws of war. And their decision could not have been different.”
-
-The State, he argued further, was in fact, though wrongfully, out of the
-Union because its actual government was disloyal and treasonable. Out of
-it because unsubdued rebellion made it for the time being an independent
-though unrecognized nation on the earth’s surface, throwing off its
-allegiance to its paramount Government, and assuming by the sword to
-assert its separate nationality.
-
-“But we are at war with the rebel States, and are told ... that the
-Government, so far at least as the rebel States are concerned, is under
-some peculiar constitutional restraint by which its hands are tied; that
-we are prohibited from ‘subjugating’ those States; that all we can do,
-under the Constitution, is to break up the military array of the rebels,
-disperse their armed bands, take away their arms, and do that very
-indefinite duty, _restore order_; that thereupon our task is ended and
-the rebel States have a constitutional right to come back into the Union
-and participate in the enactment of Federal laws and the conduct of the
-Federal Government. And we are menaced both in Congress and out with
-terrible retributions if we conquer or attempt to conquer, if we
-subjugate or attempt to subjugate, the rebel States. It is admitted by
-these our critics that in an international war ... we should have all
-the rights and powers of other independent nations, and might rightfully
-conquer our adversary, ... that we might make a complete conquest of his
-people and his territory....
-
-“Now, it is lawful to wage such a foreign war, for the purpose of
-effectuating such a complete conquest, and of course lawful to attain
-it; ... lawful to substitute the political authority of the United
-States for that of a hostile foreign nation;” otherwise, he argued, the
-war could not be a successful one; hence in a war with a member of the
-Union the United States could substitute for the authority of such
-hostile commonwealth its own authority. There was no difference between
-the two cases. The former actual hostile government should be supplanted
-by the Federal Government. No other government had a right to give the
-law. Had the conquered rebel people that right? No; for that would be to
-allow them at once to expel their conquerors by a popular decree, and to
-deny the supremacy of the Federal Government which had subdued them. Had
-the old State government, he asked, the once loyal government, the right
-to govern the conquered people? No; there was no such government. It had
-long since ceased to exist. “In fact, there is no government there, none
-at all, which can for a moment be recognized or permitted by the United
-States, as the party now holding the actual mastery of the country; and
-like every other case where the possession of a country has arisen from
-the use of superior force, the will of the conqueror is the law—that is,
-the will of the United States expressed, in the absence of acts of
-Congress, by the Commander-in-Chief of the Army, but by the acts of
-Congress after Congress has spoken.
-
-“... No one will deny that we have a right to subdue by arms and to
-reduce to quietude and submission a rebel State, that is, the people of
-a State in insurrection. But how absurd to make this concession, and at
-the same time to deny to us the constitutional power to occupy and hold
-the territory and its people in our military grasp—an occupation just as
-necessary to the end in view as the firing of cannon, the charging of
-cavalry, or any other operation in the field.
-
-“... The true objects of the war ... are the suppression of the
-rebellion, the reëstablishment of the original Federal authority within
-the State, and the revival of the loyalty of the people of the State as
-the sole foundation and condition of all its civil rights as a State of
-the Union and of the right of its people to be treated as friends and
-not as enemies. Although the United States have the full and complete
-right which conquest gives, for the purpose of subjecting these domestic
-enemies to the exercise of the powers granted by the Constitution to
-Congress, and for the purpose of restoring to the body-politic its vital
-blood, loyalty to the Government, yet those purposes, those distinct
-ends, are without doubt limits beyond which we cannot go. We are
-restrained by the manifest objects for which the national Government was
-formed; but restrained by no particular clause of the Constitution. The
-instrument contains no such clause, and the limitation and restraint are
-of precisely the same nature as those which any other government is
-under in subduing an insurrection of its own subjects or citizens; the
-plain object of the war in both cases being the restoration of
-legitimate authority and the revival of allegiance. And until this
-revival of allegiance there must be the same need of military occupation
-and repression in both cases.”
-
-After showing that the existence of the States is indispensable to that
-of the Federal Government, he proceeded, “it is not permissible by mere
-interpretation to clothe that Government with a power permanently to
-abolish the State government by way of punishing or suppressing the
-rebellion; or to convert the States into mere Territories of the United
-States, that is, public domain, to be divided up afterward by lines
-different from those of the States, and again admitted into the Union
-like matured Territories, with such new geographical limits as Congress
-may see fit to establish.”
-
-Article IV., Section 3, Clause 1 of the Constitution the Senator
-regarded as an express prohibition to change the boundaries of any State
-once in the Union without its consent; “its consent in its capacity as a
-State, freely given by its own Legislature.” He believed that the
-Amnesty Proclamation of President Lincoln indicated that its author held
-a different opinion.
-
-He rejected the idea that the rebellious States could be converted into
-Territories. This term, under our system, he added, “implies land never
-lying in any State, land ceded to the United States either by the old
-States, or purchased or conquered from foreign nations. The term never
-has been used to describe a State or any part of a State; and it implies
-not only the ownership of the soil and right of disposition, but full
-and complete political jurisdiction in the Federal Government over the
-people resident there....”
-
-The objects of the conquest being as stated above, such forcible
-occupation was, he continued, in its very nature temporary and ought to
-cease the moment those objects were attained. This could not be done
-without establishing a government to preserve order, life and property—a
-provisional government, for that is the true historic name to be applied
-in all cases where an old government has been overthrown; a provisional
-government instituted by the conqueror, and to be continued just so long
-as Congress deemed it necessary to continue it for the attainment, and
-while attaining, those high objects. The occupancy, that is, the
-possession of all the reins of local government by the Federal
-authorities would be but temporary, provisional, fiduciary. It should
-necessarily last until the Federal Government had done its duty in the
-reëstablishment of order and the revival of loyalty. Until then it was,
-and should continue, the omnipotent sovereign of the State, holding
-actually by right of conquest, though for a particular purpose, and
-being itself necessarily the final judge to determine when its tutelary
-mission had been accomplished.
-
-He avoided, he said, a discussion of the question whether a State can
-commit suicide, that is, extinguish its own being by waging a rebellious
-war against the Federal Government; instead of presenting any such
-abstract question of political dialectics, the case, he declared, merely
-presented the usual question which arose whenever and wherever there had
-been a forcible revolution. What, he inquired, was the duty of the
-paramount and lawful government in its treatment of insurgent
-communities? And was not the Government doing its whole duty in
-punishing the ringleaders in the revolt and restoring the old and
-constitutional Government over those districts?
-
-The Government, Mr. Howard proceeded, must be the final judge of the
-duration of this military occupation. It was bound by the plain terms of
-the Constitution not only to suppress the insurrection, which was done
-the moment it had obtained firm possession of the whole of the hostile
-territory, but to guarantee to the conquered State a republican form of
-government. To perform this high and sacred trust, time of course was
-necessary; likewise a great variety of means and instrumentalities, “of
-all which the Government of the United States must, because it has no
-superior, no equal in the matter, be the sole and final judge. These
-means may embrace acts of provisional legislation, creating private
-rights and duties not previously in existence, but existing by law and
-of a permanent nature, paramount to all subsequent State legislation
-because arising under the supreme authority of the nation, as, for
-instance, the giving freedom to slaves; or they may undoubtedly embrace
-conditions to be performed by the subdued States on taking their places
-again in the Union, such as would be an ordinance forever abolishing
-slavery in the State....
-
-“Yet while thus in our military power, awaiting our action, looking to
-their restoration, nothing is clearer than that the citizens of the
-rebel States, though owing obedience to all the laws of the United
-States, possess no political rights under the Constitution except
-protection. They are not free to act, because their freedom to act
-would, if indulged, lead them again to draw the sword against the United
-States.... They have no right to send members to this body or to the
-House of Representatives, much less to participate in the election of
-President and Vice-President. They are the ward-provinces of the United
-States, progressing toward the maturity of revived loyalty, but not yet
-entitled to exercise the elective franchise or to participate in the
-enactment of laws.
-
-“If I am asked what I mean by the Government of the United States, and
-whether I mean that the President as Commander-in-Chief has the
-exclusive power to establish these provisional governments, I answer, I
-do not. He has the right to regulate military occupation until Congress
-has acted upon the subject; ... but the establishment of provisional
-governments, the quieting of the rebellious province and the
-reëstablishment of legitimate authority over it, pertains to the
-sovereign power, that is, the law-giving power of the nation. With us
-that power is lodged in Congress and not in the President; and in my
-opinion it is the business of Congress, and Congress alone, to establish
-and uphold these provisional governments.... We need not doubt that
-whatever we see fit to enact will be approved and carried out by the
-President. We cannot be more truly anxious than he to fix upon a stable,
-firm policy for restoring peace and union; but we ought not to shut our
-eyes to the necessities he will continually be under, to the almost
-irresistible importunities he will encounter, to provide some sort of
-civil government for the subdued States or districts; or to the
-consequences of leaving such mighty questions for him to decide. It is
-our plain duty to establish a uniform rule on the subject, so that all
-may be treated alike and the same remedy be applied with a paternal but
-firm and resolute hand to each delinquent State.”
-
-He opposed for two reasons the “scheme” of allowing one tenth or any
-other minor part of the male citizens of a commonwealth to organize a
-government and assume to act as a State: first, “because as against the
-will of an actual majority the government of such a minority must
-necessarily come to a speedy end and thus invite a renewal of the civil
-war, in that locality at least; and second, because government by a
-minority is of evil example and inconsistent with the genius of American
-liberty.... As a Republican I would sooner hazard ten slaveholders’
-rebellions than risk liberty in a government by a minority.” In this
-connection he assigned an additional motive for his attitude toward the
-resolution. The will of the friendly element, he said, could prevail
-only by military support, and such an organization, if intended as a
-civil government, was not republican in the sense of the Constitution.
-When such aid was withdrawn the majority, he asserted, would wreak
-vengeance on the weakened minority.
-
-Concluding this part of his argument, he added: “The measure now before
-you proposes to acknowledge eight thousand citizens of Louisiana as a
-State, and to give them the rights and privileges exercised by a voting
-population of more than fifty thousand in 1860. Eight thousand are thus
-to give the law or assume to give it to forty-two thousand—to more than
-five times their number. This they may do so long as their decrees are
-sustained by the presence and consent of a competent military force; but
-we all know, both parties there know, the world knows, and, sir,
-posterity will know, that it is not the eight thousand who govern the
-State, but the fear of the bayonet, and the fear is inspired solely by
-the President of the United States, as Commander-in-Chief of the Army
-and Navy! Disguise it, or attempt to disguise it, as we may, to this
-complexion doth it come at last. Yes, sir, both the eight thousand and
-the forty-two thousand voters are governed not by themselves, but by the
-bayonet! And this is at present the only government in Louisiana. The
-object of the present measure is to continue this hybrid, unnatural
-government there. It allows the meager and almost contemptible
-proportion of less than one sixth of the voting population to govern the
-whole State, and to have the influence of the whole State in our
-legislation here, while we know that if the military forces were
-withdrawn that privileged one sixth part would be swept away like chaff
-before the hurricane breath of the enraged majority. Sir, such a
-government is the merest bubble, especially if unsustained by military
-power. This is too obvious to need further comment.”
-
-“All this we might possibly endure,” continued Senator Howard, “were it
-not that the measure before us clothes this mockery of a government,
-this king of shreds and patches, this mistletoe State _régime_ that
-falls to the earth the moment it ceases to cling around the flag-staff
-of the national forces, with the high attribute of voting upon and
-determining questions of legislation, questions of war or peace,
-questions of prosecuting or ceasing to prosecute the present war, in
-this Hall and in the Hall of the House of Representatives. This measure
-introduces here Senators and Representatives whose immediate friends and
-relatives at home have deliberately aided and assisted to put to death
-myriads of Union soldiers from the North, and in swelling up that vast
-debt of more than two thousand million dollars which now rests upon the
-country. Think you that such Senators and Representatives, whose
-constituents have already been stripped of their property by the rebel
-government, and brought down to the depths of poverty; a community
-without the habits of labor among the intelligent classes; naked,
-hungry, despondent and sullen; think you that their Representatives
-would at the present time be safe depositories of the power to tax their
-constituents to pay this debt? Is it not, on the other hand, the part of
-prudence to guard against the contingency of having that debt repudiated
-by such legislators and the still more disgraceful contingency of being,
-by their votes, aided by a Northern party, finally compelled to pay the
-rebel debt of $4,000,000,000? And tell me, what right has Louisiana, the
-majority of whose population is to-day, wherever they are, hostile to
-this Government and anxious for its overthrow; what right has she, upon
-any recognized principle of public law or justice, to be represented in
-Congress?”
-
-The treatment accorded Louisiana would, he feared, be a precedent for
-the ten remaining States. There would be the expense of holding each for
-a time in military occupation to bolster up their State governments. He
-preferred for Louisiana and the other insurgent States a provisional
-establishment for regulating domestic affairs, but without
-representation in Congress until the mass of their people plainly
-perceived their error in attempting to overthrow the General Government.
-
-Congress should, he thought, take the subject of readmission into their
-own hands. It was for them and not for the President to execute the
-important guaranty to each State of a republican form of government, and
-that duty became more and more urgent as the Federal armies swept on
-from victory to victory. In making good that guaranty the great
-indispensable necessity, he declared, was loyalty.[410]
-
-Mr. Howard was followed immediately by Reverdy Johnson, of Maryland, who
-to the great surprise of his fellow-Democrats argued in favor of the
-resolution. His remarks were introduced by a concise statement of the
-chief political events occurring in Louisiana between the capture of New
-Orleans and the ratification, in September, 1864, of the new
-constitution. Concluding this part of his speech he said:
-
-“These, sir, are the facts. The Committee on the Judiciary—and in the
-conclusion to which they came I concurred—were of opinion that under the
-circumstances in which the State was at the period when these
-proceedings were had, she could not be recognized as a State of the
-United States under that constitution adopted in 1864, except by an act
-of Congress. The committee were of opinion that it was not in the power
-of the Executive under the circumstances to bring the State back under
-that constitution. They were of opinion, however, that it was competent
-for Congress to do so, and the only question before the Committee was,
-whether, under the circumstances under which the State was at the time,
-it was not the duty of Congress to bring the State back so as to have
-her represented in the Union.”
-
-His objection to the conclusion of the committee was that the
-proceedings which led to the adoption of the constitution were
-instituted at the instance and under the power of the Federal military
-authorities. The precedent, he admitted, was really a bad one, and the
-proposition upon which the committee were called to decide was whether,
-if they were satisfied that the number of votes said to have been cast
-were in fact cast, and the persons voting were loyal citizens, they
-should be denied the privilege of being represented in the councils of
-the nation and subjected to a continuance of military power. Mr. Johnson
-added: “My impression is that, no matter how the proceedings were
-instituted, whether it was by the military authority, or by the coming
-together of the people of the State, if in point of fact the people of
-the State did act voluntarily and were competent to act under the
-original constitution, and were authorized to act by being loyal at the
-time they did act, it is the duty of the government of the United States
-to receive them back.
-
-“Another objection was that, however true it might be that it would be
-in the power of all the voters of the State to adopt a constitution for
-themselves, or to claim the right of coming back to the Union under the
-constitution existing at the time of the rebellion, it was not true that
-it was in the power of fourteen [eleven] thousand, four hundred and
-fourteen voters, when the entire voting population of the State was
-fifty-one thousand, to take that course. As it seemed to me then, and
-seems now, there is no evidence to show that a single citizen of
-Louisiana was excluded from the right of voting.”
-
-It was not so certain, he argued further, that the eleven thousand
-voters who participated were not a large majority of the actual electors
-in Louisiana, for the war engaged the greater part of the voting
-population, and nine tenths of those who entered the Confederate service
-had forfeited their lives upon the battlefield; of those above or below
-the military age many had gone elsewhere, or if they remained in the
-State it was as disloyal citizens.
-
-It was not pretended, he said, in discussing the relation of the loyal
-minority to the General Government, that by the act of secession they
-ceased to be citizens of the United States. Their fidelity to the Union
-entitled them to Federal protection. If loyal, they had forfeited no
-rights belonging to them before the commencement of the rebellion. No
-Federal law had been violated, no constitutional obligation evaded by
-them. They could not ask admission into the Union, because to speak such
-a desire was to subject themselves to punishment; when the protection of
-the United States was afforded them and they could once more declare
-their sentiments without hazard they met at their several election
-polls, organized their government under existing law, and then, wishing
-to change it, met in convention and adopted the constitution which had
-been submitted to the Senate. “Why,” inquired Mr. Johnson, “should we
-not receive it?” The right of eleven thousand citizens to change their
-constitution was not denied, but their action was questioned because
-there were others, then in arms against the Government of the United
-States, who did not join them in asserting it. In examining the question
-who were to exercise the authority of the State, he argued: “Now, if it
-be true that the secession ordinance had no operation to carry the State
-out, and that I understand even the Senator from Massachusetts [Mr.
-Sumner] admitted last night; if it be true that the State is in the
-Union notwithstanding the ordinance, then the only question to be
-considered is, who are the people of Louisiana that are to exercise the
-sovereign authority belonging to the State of Louisiana? Are they the
-loyal or the disloyal? There can be but one answer to that inquiry. It
-must only be the loyal.”
-
-Senator Howard admitted, continued Mr. Johnson, that it is not in the
-power of the United States to change the territorial limits of the
-States that had gone out, because the Constitution prohibits it. If he
-had thought for a moment he would have seen that the Constitution
-equally prohibits any interference on the part of the General Government
-with the exercise of the right of suffrage in a State. He then combated
-at some length the intimation of Senators Howard and Sumner that any
-power without a State had a right to prescribe qualifications for the
-exercise of the suffrage.
-
-Mr. Powell, too, concurred in this view and asked by what authority
-General Banks and the President undertook to prescribe the
-qualifications of voters in Louisiana. The Maryland Senator replied that
-this question had been anticipated. The eleven thousand four hundred and
-fourteen voters, according to the proof before the Senate, were all
-loyal men and entitled to vote by the original constitution of
-Louisiana, no matter how they were brought together. If, coming
-together, they did an act which they would have been authorized to do if
-they had come together voluntarily they ought to be received.
-
-Powell then inquired, what right had the Senate to presume that there
-may not have been twelve thousand loyal voters in Louisiana who were
-deprived of the right of suffrage because of this order of General
-Banks? As the Kentucky Senator understood it, no man could vote “unless
-he would go forward and take the oath prescribed by the President and
-swear to support and sustain all proclamations in regard to African
-slavery already issued and all that might afterward be issued.” Mr.
-Johnson acknowledged this difficulty and admitted that he had always
-felt it; but they had the same difficulty, he asserted, in his own
-State, and a much greater one; he would be sorry to think Maryland was
-not in the Union. “Maryland is in the Union,” said Senator Powell. “The
-constitution,” observed Johnson in reply, “which now makes her a State
-in the Union was adopted the other day. I mean the one which governs
-her. She has manumitted her slaves by force of that constitution. No man
-in Maryland seriously contests the obligation of that constitution in
-that particular or in any other. But it was adopted, in fact, by the
-exclusion of a good many men who were entitled to vote.”
-
-Mr. Johnson at this point became engaged in an argument, not wholly
-relevant, with Sumner in which he gained some advantage over the
-Massachusetts Senator. As a specimen of the latter’s parliamentary
-tactics at this time it may not be irrelevant to reproduce a passage
-from the _Congressional Globe_.
-
- =Mr. Sumner.= Allow me to ask the Senator [Johnson] whether, in his
- opinion, the Ordinance governing the Northwest Territory,
- prohibiting slavery everywhere throughout that Territory, and which
- was declared to be a perpetual compact, could be set aside by any
- one of the States in the Territory now.
-
- =Mr. Johnson.= I certainly think they can, except so far as rights
- are vested.
-
- =Mr. Sumner.= The Senator, then, thinks Ohio can enslave a
- fellow-man?
-
- =Mr. Johnson.= Just as much as Massachusetts can.
-
- =Mr. Sumner.= Massachusetts cannot.
-
- =Mr. Johnson.= Why not?
-
- =Mr. Sumner.= Massachusetts cannot do an act of injustice.
-
- =Mr. Johnson.= Oh, indeed! I did not know that. [Laughter.][411]
-
-Notwithstanding this claim for his native State Sumner admitted a moment
-later that Massachusetts had united in the Convention of 1787 with South
-Carolina to deny to Congress authority to prohibit the slave trade for
-twenty years, and he confessed that such action was unjust. His
-inconsistency was still further exposed by Senator Henderson, who called
-attention to the fact that the educational qualification imposed by the
-Massachusetts constitution would exclude from the franchise almost every
-negro in Louisiana if the provisions were applicable in the latter
-State.[412]
-
-After this colloquy, not uninteresting to the student of constitutional
-history, the Maryland Senator resumed his remarks:
-
-“One word more, sir, and I have done. If Congress passes this
-resolution, and the State is admitted, no court will hereafter be able
-to decide that she is not a State in the Union, and no court therefore
-can call in question the validity or effect of any provision to be found
-in her constitution. One of the provisions of this constitution is that
-all the slaves of Louisiana are emancipated. Pass this resolution, admit
-the State, and that provision is effectual at once.”[413]
-
-Mr. Sumner, having in mind the fundamental condition imposed by Congress
-upon the admission of Missouri, offered the following amendment of the
-resolution from the Committee on the Judiciary:
-
- _Provided_, That this shall not take effect except upon the
- fundamental condition that within the State there shall be no denial
- of the electoral franchise, or of any other rights on account of
- color or race, but all persons shall be equal before the law. And
- the Legislature of the State, by a solemn public act, shall declare
- the assent of the State to this fundamental condition, and shall
- transmit to the President of the United States an authentic copy of
- such assent whenever the same shall be adopted, upon the receipt
- whereof he shall, by proclamation, announce the fact; whereupon,
- without any further proceedings on the part of Congress, this joint
- resolution shall take effect.[414]
-
-Though Senator Clark favored the principle of Sumner’s amendment, he
-opposed it, as it stood, because it affected a resolution which proposed
-“to recognize the government in the State of Louisiana,” which in his
-judgment was still a State in the Union, “having its constitution
-overthrown, but desiring and attempting to establish a new” one; and he
-added, “I hold that we have no power to amend that constitution; and
-that is the reason why I shall be obliged to vote against it here.”
-
-He spoke for the adoption of Trumbull’s resolution and, in doing so,
-traveled some of the ground gone over by Henderson. The government of
-Louisiana, Mr. Clark believed, belonged to the Union people. He was not
-aware that any definite number of persons was required to constitute a
-State, nor did he understand how the majority by going into rebellion
-could take away the rights of the loyal minority.
-
-The guaranty of a republican form of government was made, he asserted,
-to meet precisely such a case as had arisen in Louisiana. In this view
-it became the duty of Congress to protect the government established by
-the minority.[415]
-
-Mr. Pomeroy, speaking to the principle of Sumner’s amendment, declared
-that he would vote against all measures that looked like Congressional
-interference with the right to vote in the States. Saulsbury interrupted
-him to inquire what he would have done had the President, or his
-Secretary of War, sent armed soldiers to the polls and imposed a test
-upon voters as was done in Delaware, where Democrats were chased into
-swamps and compelled in the night time to lie out in the snow. Pomeroy’s
-only reply to this was to relate his own experience under Democratic
-supremacy in the early days of Kansas. He resumed his remarks on
-Louisiana, but these had been anticipated by the speakers who preceded
-him. In conclusion he asserted that there were two reasons for
-recognizing Arkansas where there was but one in favor of Louisiana.[416]
-
-The Delaware Senator did not fail to call attention to Pomeroy’s
-evasion, and said he was glad to observe a change in the spirit of some
-of his Republican friends. “I think,” he said, “they begin to scent the
-danger in the distance; that they begin to see that if a Government of
-law is to be destroyed, and power is to be concentrated in Executive
-hands, or in the hands of Executive agents, there is an end of liberty
-in this country. I hail the dawn, therefore, of a better day.”[417]
-
-Mr. Henderson again entered into the discussion, and in the course of
-his remarks drew from Senator Sumner this remarkable statement
-concerning Louisiana: “It is in and it is not. [Laughter.] The territory
-is in; but as yet there is no State government that is in.” In this
-discussion Sumner asserted also that when the bill of his friend Senator
-Wade was before Congress no one questioned its constitutionality though
-it proposed to interfere in the suffrage and to impose a condition upon
-States at the time of their reconstruction. Pomeroy dissented from the
-doctrine that Congress could reconstruct the insurgent States, and
-maintained that the only question then was whether they would recognize
-what the people of Louisiana had done.
-
-Reverdy Johnson pointed out to Sumner the great increase of
-representation in Congress which the South would acquire by an extension
-of the suffrage to negroes. The three fifths provision, he said, would
-be done away with, and he made the further observation that for years to
-come the entire colored vote of that section would be in the hands of a
-few white men. He urged recognition of both Louisiana and Arkansas, so
-that the constitutional amendment would become binding, for unless
-ratified by three fourths of all the States it would be open to doubt.
-
-The session was drawing rapidly toward its close; it was late in the
-evening of February 25, and the resolution under discussion was too
-important to be passed without due consideration. These circumstances
-offered Mr. Wade, who vehemently opposed the measure, a decent pretext
-for demanding the “yeas” and “nays” on his motion to postpone the
-subject till the first Monday of December following, 1865.
-
-Before a vote was reached on this motion, however, Powell spoke again at
-considerable length. In addition to his former arguments, many of which
-were repeated, he said that “all the loyal Union men in the State of
-Louisiana who refused, like supple menials and slaves, to crouch beneath
-the iron military power of General Banks, and take that oath were
-excluded from voting,” and he added, “I believe to-day there are more
-men of that description in Louisiana than voted to ratify this
-constitution.”
-
-When asked by Mr. Henderson whether he had heard of any objection to it
-on the part of the loyal men of Louisiana, Powell answered that Thomas
-J. Durant and thirty-one others, distinguished, leading, loyal men of
-that State, had made earnest and powerful protest against it, and
-remonstrated against the admission to Congress of Senators and
-Representatives from Louisiana. They were also opposed to counting her
-electoral vote. Mr. Durant, he believed, was the first district-attorney
-appointed in Louisiana by the present Executive. Henderson insinuated by
-an inquiry that Durant was himself a candidate for office at that
-election and took the oath prescribed. Powell not being informed on
-these points, the matter was left in doubt.
-
-The Kentucky Senator took this opportunity to characterize the manner of
-General Banks in his statement before the Judiciary Committee as that of
-a “swift witness, to make a case that he thought would cause Louisiana
-to be admitted.” He also called upon some advocate of the resolution to
-explain a support of the present measure after voting a few days before
-for the resolution declaring that the electoral vote of Louisiana should
-not be counted. If Louisiana was then a legitimate government, why, he
-asked, was she not entitled to cast her electoral vote? He did not then
-believe it a legitimate government and so opposed the counting of her
-electoral vote; but the Senator from Maryland [Mr. Johnson] and the
-Senator from Missouri [Mr. Henderson], who then voted with him, now
-supported the resolution.[418]
-
-Wade’s motion to postpone further consideration of the joint resolution
-till the first Monday of December was defeated by a vote of 17 to
-12.[419]
-
-In the course of the discussions to postpone Sumner said that he would
-regard its passage as a national calamity. It would be the political
-Bull Run of that Administration, sacrificing, as it would, a great cause
-and the great destinies of this Republic. When Trumbull taxed him with
-intent to postpone discussion by dilatory motions the Massachusetts
-Senator admitted his opposition and declared that to defeat the measure
-he would employ any weapon in the arsenal of parliamentary warfare.
-
-The friends of the Administration endeavored to press their adversaries
-to take final action on the resolution. The earnestness of the two
-factions provoked rather sharp censure of Sumner and the few Republicans
-who acted with him and were attempting by dilatory motions to fatigue
-the Senate into a postponement. Doolittle was especially severe on them,
-and particularly on Sumner, who replied with much asperity. He was
-supported by Howard and Chandler, while Trumbull, Foster and Doolittle
-undertook a defence of the resolution and its advocates. This wrangling
-appears to have delighted the Democratic members. Mr. Hendricks, indeed,
-made no attempt to conceal his satisfaction.
-
-“The discordant elements of the Republican party are exhibiting
-themselves here,” said the Indiana Senator, “and I venture the prophecy
-that a like exhibition will be witnessed over the country within a very
-few years. But four years ago, at the Chicago Convention, when Mr.
-Lincoln was nominated for the Presidency a solemn pledge was made to the
-people of this country that that party, when it came into power, would
-not undertake to interfere with the institutions of the States. As soon
-as the disturbed condition of the country gave the pretext for it, the
-undertaking was commenced; and now, when, in the judgment of some, it
-has been accomplished, there comes up the grave question, what is to be
-done, and what is to be the political condition of the four million
-negroes when they are set free? And upon that question the real strife
-of to-night has been witnessed. That is the subject and it need not be
-disguised. It is growing out of the discordant elements of the party
-that now governs the country.”[420]
-
-Trumbull, in reply to an inquiry of Senator Wade, said that he had voted
-against receiving the electoral vote of Louisiana because it had not
-been recognized. Now he proposed to put it in a condition where it could
-cast electoral votes, and do all other acts belonging to a State.
-
-To this Wade replied that “If the President of the United States,
-operating through his major-generals, can initiate a State government,
-and can bring it here and force us, compel us, to receive as associates
-on this floor these mere mockeries, these men of straw who represent
-nobody, your Republic is at an end.
-
-“Sir, I have heard a great deal about this pretended election in
-Louisiana that did not come from Major-General Banks, and I pronounce
-the proceeding a mockery. It is not pretended that there could be
-drummed up from the riffraff of New Orleans and sent into the vicinity
-under the mandate of a Major-General more than about six thousand votes,
-where over fifty thousand were formerly polled.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Talk not to me of your ten per cent. principle. A more absurd,
-monarchical, and anti-American principle was never announced on God’s
-earth——“[421]
-
-At this point Senator Sherman, of Ohio, interposed to obtain
-consideration for a revenue measure which he had in charge, whereupon
-his colleague changed somewhat the declamation against the resolution to
-a denunciation of its advocates, especially Trumbull, upon whom he
-retorted the charge of retarding legitimate business. Howard resented
-the charge of radical factiousness and denounced Trumbull with
-considerable warmth. Sherman suggested that enough had been said on both
-sides, and in the lighter skirmishing of the breathing-spell which
-followed, Mr. Sprague, of Rhode Island, hitherto a silent spectator of
-these exciting scenes, declared that he held in his possession a paper
-indicating the names of the members of the Louisiana Legislature, and it
-showed that twenty-five, or twenty-seven or thirty of those gentlemen
-who constituted that assembly were officeholders of the Federal
-Government, or the government of the State, which, he said, was the same
-thing.[422]
-
-While Sherman’s measure and Trumbull’s resolution were competing for
-priority of consideration Sumner remarked that during the preceding
-summer, 1864, he had met a distinguished gentleman just returned from
-Louisiana; he had been present at some of the sittings of the
-convention, having been in New Orleans in discharge of important public
-duties. This gentleman, added Sumner, said compendiously that the
-convention was “nothing but a stupendous hoax.”
-
-When Reverdy Johnson inquired the name of Sumner’s informant, Senator
-Grimes replied that he could furnish a large number of names of persons
-present in New Orleans when the convention was held, and added: “If the
-Senate will give a committee I will undertake to prove and I will prove
-that the voters whose votes were polled in the outlying parishes at
-Thibodeaux and Placquemines, and other places, were carried in army
-transports to those places where they polled the votes, being discharged
-soldiers and persons belonging in New Orleans, and were brought back to
-New Orleans, and were not residents of the places where they purported
-to vote.”[423]
-
-Sumner, immediately after the uncontroverted statement of Mr. Grimes,
-added, with more energy than elegance: “The pretended State government
-in Louisiana is utterly indefensible whether you look at its origin or
-its character. To describe it, I must use plain language. It is a mere
-seven-months’ abortion, begotten by the bayonet in criminal conjunction
-with the spirit of caste, and born before its time, rickety, unformed,
-unfinished—whose continued existence will be a burden, a reproach, and a
-wrong. That is the whole case; and yet the Senator from Illinois now
-presses it upon the Senate at this moment to the exclusion of the
-important public business of the country.”[424]
-
-The urgency of the army and navy appropriation bills prevented for the
-time further consideration of the Louisiana question. The subject,
-however, was again brought before the Senate on March 2, 1865, by Mr.
-Doolittle, who had received and had been requested to file with the
-secretary of the Senate a certificate, under seal of the State of
-Louisiana, of the election of Michael Hahn as a Senator of the United
-States from the State of Louisiana for six years from March 4, 1865. Mr.
-Davis, of Kentucky, opposed its reception. Doolittle’s motion to have it
-laid on the table and filed was, however, agreed to.
-
-Only two days of the session remained; in the temper of the Senate it
-was impossible that the resolution could pass at that time, and the
-House had not yet taken it up for discussion. In these circumstances the
-measure was abandoned, though very reluctantly, by its champions.
-
------
-
-Footnote 399:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1395.
-
-Footnote 400:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 971–974.
-
-Footnote 401:
-
- Ibid., p. 903.
-
-Footnote 402:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1011.
-
-Footnote 403:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 404:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 405:
-
- Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1061–1064.
-
-Footnote 406:
-
- While this chapter was in press an interesting letter from Senator
- Henderson informed the author that the Hon. Samuel Treat, of St.
- Louis, formerly Judge of the United States Court for the Eastern
- District of Missouri, is the distinguished jurist referred to in the
- text.
-
-Footnote 407:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1065–1070.
-
-Footnote 408:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1091.
-
-Footnote 409:
-
- In support of this view the Senator cited Penhallow’s Case, 3 Dallas,
- p. 94.
-
-Footnote 410:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1091–1095.
-
-Footnote 411:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1097.
-
-Footnote 412:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 413:
-
- Ibid., pp. 1095–1098.
-
-Footnote 414:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1099.
-
-Footnote 415:
-
- Ibid., pp. 1101–1102.
-
-Footnote 416:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1101–1102.
-
-Footnote 417:
-
- Ibid., p. 1102.
-
-Footnote 418:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1106–1107.
-
-Footnote 419:
-
- Ibid., p. 1107.
-
-Footnote 420:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1111.
-
-Footnote 421:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1128.
-
-Footnote 422:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1129.
-
-Footnote 423:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 424:
-
- Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1129.
-
-
-
-
- XI
- INCIDENTS OF RECONSTRUCTION
-
-
-The Emancipation Proclamation did not affect, as is well known, the
-status of slaves in the loyal border States or in the excepted parts of
-Virginia and Louisiana. The State of Tennessee, too, as we have seen,
-was not named in the edict of freedom; that was published by the
-President simply as a measure of military necessity, and was not
-regarded by him or by others as operative to prevent, when war had
-ceased, a revival of servitude in the insurgent States, for negroes
-could easily be imported from those loyal commonwealths still tolerating
-that institution. It was uncertain, too, how the proclamation would
-affect the status of slaves in those districts not yet overrun by the
-Union armies. In the border States, in Tennessee and in the excepted
-parts of Louisiana and Virginia there were probably 2,000,000 men in
-bondage. In order, then, to abolish universally as well as permanently
-to prohibit involuntary servitude an amendment of the Constitution was
-proposed in the familiar language of the sixth section of the ordinance
-of 1787. Though it passed the Senate, April 8, 1864, it failed at that
-time to receive in the House the requisite two thirds vote. It has been
-seen how upon the recommendation of Mr. Lincoln it was reconsidered and
-passed by the Representatives at a succeeding session, January 31, 1865,
-and submitted to the States for their action. It was adopted by his own
-State, Illinois, on the following day. By the close of February sixteen
-others had followed its example, and before the President’s death twenty
-in all had ratified the Amendment. To Mr. Lincoln, who had long held
-anti-slavery opinions, this expression of public sentiment was extremely
-grateful; indeed, less than two months before his assassination he
-declared his satisfaction at the popular verdict, and his confidence
-that the States would consummate what Congress had so nobly begun. The
-Thirteenth Amendment, however, was not announced as part of the organic
-law until after the Presidential plan of reconstruction had been ignored
-by the Thirty-ninth Congress. This subject, therefore, need not be
-further discussed in these pages.
-
-The extraordinary amount of work actually completed by the national
-Legislature can be comprehended only by considering the degree of
-perfection to which the committee system has been carried under
-congressional government. Measures that conduct the reader over vast
-stretches of the records of Congress occupy but a day or two in the
-calendar. The discussions described in the two preceding chapters did
-not, as might be supposed, engage the entire attention of Federal
-legislators. It was desirable, if, indeed, it was not essential, that
-the sentiments of the lawmaking body of the nation be authoritatively
-declared on the question of admitting members to Congress from those
-States reconstituted under the Executive plan; definitive action in the
-matter of the electoral votes which they presented was also awaited with
-not a little interest. Scarcely inferior in importance and more
-instructive than these measures was the passage of an act, approved
-March 3, 1865, which created in the War Department a “Bureau of
-Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands.” As the system of relief then
-inaugurated was destined to become an important agency in the work of
-reconstruction a brief account of its origin and institution may not be
-deemed superfluous.
-
-A former chapter has related how great numbers of “contrabands,” by
-assembling early in the war at Fortress Monroe and Newport News, taxed
-the ingenuity of even General Butler to provide for their maintenance;
-it also noticed an attempt under Mr. E. L. Pierce to improve the
-condition of abandoned slaves in South Carolina, and the friendly
-interest of Secretary Chase in that experiment. But the hundreds of
-fugitives within Federal lines in May, 1861, had grown to be millions by
-the beginning of 1865. Of this army of homeless freedmen the policy of
-enlisting colored troops provided directly for nearly 200,000
-able-bodied males. The women, the children and the large class
-unsuitable for military service left a multitude still unprovided for.
-Some relief, it is true, was afforded by the Treasury Department, which
-undertook to establish on abandoned and confiscated lands colonies of
-self-supporting negroes, but the ignorance and rapacity of many persons
-entrusted with the supervision of this work led to its general failure.
-Here and there, indeed, more satisfactory results were obtained, though
-these isolated successes seldom reached the point of actual
-encouragement. The South Carolina experiment may, therefore, be properly
-regarded as the germ of the Freedmen’s Bureau.
-
-The progress of these communities had been watched anxiously by the
-abolition and the kindred associations which sprang up to continue the
-work that anti-slavery men had begun. On this subject a committee
-representing the Freedmen’s Aid Societies of Boston, New York,
-Philadelphia and Cincinnati addressed, December 1, 1863, an able
-memorial to the President. Without expressing a favorable opinion of the
-plan suggested by the petitioners, Mr. Lincoln referred the question, as
-one of great magnitude and importance, to the consideration of Congress.
-The Freedmen’s Aid Societies, however, had been anticipated by
-Representative Eliot, of Massachusetts, who had offered, January 12,
-1863, a bill to establish a Bureau of Emancipation, which was referred
-to a select committee; but other business, regarded as more urgent,
-prevented them from reporting at that time a measure which had been
-prepared. At the succeeding session the proposition was offered again.
-After numerous efforts to secure favorable action, efforts extending
-over a period of two years, Congress took the subject into
-consideration. The House proposed one, the Senate a different measure; a
-committee of conference suggested something unlike either, though
-embodying important features of both. This, like every proposition
-affecting the negro, encountered considerable opposition. The creation
-of such a bureau, said its adversaries, conceded the very point that
-pro-slavery men had always maintained; namely, that the negro was
-incapable of taking care of himself. The extent of its powers, its
-duration and the cost of its maintenance were successively made grounds
-of opposition by those hostile to its establishment. Nor did its enemies
-fail to point out the great temptation to abuse which was offered by the
-system.
-
-The act established in the War Department, to continue during the
-rebellion and for one year thereafter, a bureau to which should be
-committed the management of all confiscated or abandoned lands, and the
-control of all subjects relating to refugees and freedmen from any
-district within the territory embraced in the operations of the army,
-under such regulations as might be adopted by the head of the bureau and
-approved by the President.
-
-The conduct of the bureau was entrusted to a commissioner appointed by
-the President with the concurrence of the Senate. In the exercise of his
-functions he was to be assisted by such clerks as the Secretary of War
-might assign him; their number, of course, was limited by law. For his
-compensation the head of the new bureau was to receive a sum fixed at
-$3,000 per annum. To aid in executing the provisions of the act the
-President was authorized to select, by and with the advice and consent
-of the Senate, one assistant commissioner for each of the States
-declared to be in insurrection, not, however, to exceed ten in number,
-each to receive an annual salary of $2,500.
-
-The Secretary of War, besides assigning clerks of the several grades
-mentioned in the law, was authorized to issue, under regulations which
-he might himself prescribe, such provisions, clothing and fuel as might
-be deemed needful for the immediate and temporary shelter and supply of
-destitute and suffering refugees and freedmen as well as their wives and
-children. Any military officer could be detailed to duty under the act,
-but without increase of pay or allowances.
-
-It was further provided that the commissioner, “under the direction of
-the President, shall have authority to set apart, for the use of loyal
-refugees and freedmen, such tracts of land within the insurrectionary
-States as shall have been abandoned, or to which the United States shall
-have acquired title by confiscation or sale, or otherwise, and to every
-male citizen, whether refugee or freedman, as aforesaid, there shall be
-assigned not more than forty acres of such land, and the person to whom
-it was so assigned shall be protected in the use and enjoyment of the
-land for the term of three years at an annual rent not exceeding six per
-centum upon the value of said land, as it was appraised by the State
-authorities in the year 1860, for the purpose of taxation, and in case
-no such appraisal can be found, then the rental shall be based upon the
-estimated value of the land in said year, to be ascertained in such
-manner as the commissioner may by regulation prescribe. At the end of
-said term, or at any time during said term, the occupants of any parcels
-so assigned may purchase the land, and receive such title thereto as the
-United States can convey, upon paying therefor the value of the land, as
-ascertained and fixed for the purpose of determining the annual rent
-aforesaid.”[425]
-
-It was made the duty of the assistant commissioners to submit a
-quarterly report of their proceedings to the commissioner, who in turn
-was required to report annually to the President before the commencement
-of each regular session of Congress. Special reports might from time to
-time be requested of either the head of the bureau or his subordinates.
-
-The bureau thus established was organized principally by officers of the
-regular army under direction of General Oliver O. Howard, who had been
-selected by President Johnson as commissioner. It soon grew to vast
-proportions. At first it was economically managed and beneficent in its
-influence; subsequently, however, it degenerated into an abuse.
-Interesting and instructive as would be an inquiry into its operations,
-the history of this politico-philanthropic experiment does not fall
-within the limits of this work.
-
-Since the adjournment, February 27, 1861, of the Peace Convention, which
-had been in session at Washington endeavoring to discover, if possible,
-a means of avoiding the irrepressible conflict, there was a large class
-who believed that if only they had been directing the policy of
-Government the outbreak could have been averted; even when war was
-flagrant and passions were highest this class, though diminished greatly
-in numbers, did not altogether despair of effecting a settlement between
-the sections. Besides these well-meaning patriots there were not a few
-who were ambitious of notoriety or possessed of an undue opinion of
-their own importance. Persons of both classes attempted from time to
-time to bring about an armistice which would facilitate negotiations
-between the two governments. The efforts of these men have no further
-bearing on the subject of reconstruction than as they serve to show Mr.
-Lincoln’s views in successive stages of the conflict.
-
-Prominent among these attempts was the Jacquess-Gilmore mission, which
-has been described in an interesting volume of Rebellion reminiscences
-by one of the participants.[426] Horace Greeley’s career as a diplomat
-is also a familiar story, which at once illustrates the guilelessness of
-the editor and the sagacity of the President. Mr. Greeley’s failure at
-Niagara Falls, however, did not discourage a similar undertaking by Hon.
-Jeremiah S. Black, who, with no greater success, had an interview in
-Canada with his former friend Jacob Thompson.[427]
-
-More important, because of its consequences, than the work of any of
-these volunteer commissioners was the visit of Francis P. Blair, Sr., to
-Richmond. This distinguished politician and editor had in the days of
-Nullification assisted in shaping the policy of the Government. The
-bosom friend and confidential adviser of Andrew Jackson, Mr. Blair
-thoroughly understood Southern feeling, and from long residence in
-Washington was intimately acquainted with Southern leaders. His
-political victories in the past encouraged, no doubt, the hope of some
-notable achievement to crown his maturer years. For some time he had
-been meditating a plan of reunion which would not only end the strife
-but contribute to heal the wounds of war. Though anxious to communicate
-his project to the President, he received no encouragement to do so. By
-requesting Blair to call upon him after the fall of Savannah Mr. Lincoln
-evaded a discussion of the subject. That contingency, however, was not
-remote, and late in December the veteran political leader received from
-the President a card bearing these words:
-
- Allow the bearer, F. P. Blair, Sr., to pass our lines, go South, and
- return.
-
- =A. Lincoln.=
-
- _December 28, 1864._
-
-With this credential Mr. Blair went at once to the camp of General
-Grant, whence under flags of truce he sent two communications to
-Jefferson Davis requesting, among other things, permission for an
-interview. This, after some delay, was granted, and on the 12th of
-January, 1865, he found himself in Richmond face to face with the
-Confederate President. What transpired is accurately known from accounts
-of the meeting by both Blair and Davis. The former admitted frankly that
-Mr. Lincoln afforded him no opportunity to explain the object of his
-mission, and, indeed, appeared anxious to avoid an interview on that
-subject. When he had been assured that the Confederate authorities were
-under no engagements to European powers that would prevent their
-entering into arrangements with the Government of the United States Mr.
-Blair unfolded his plan by reading to Mr. Davis a carefully prepared
-paper embodying the following suggestions:
-
-Slavery, he said, was doomed, for even the South itself had proposed to
-employ the slave in winning its independence. That institution,
-therefore, no longer remained as an obstacle to peace. Louis Napoleon,
-he continued, had declared publicly that his object was to make the
-Latin race supreme in the southern part of North America. This, indeed,
-had been an idea of the Emperor’s uncle, who desired at one time to make
-conquests of territory in the States bordering the Gulf, and the
-foothold already effected in Mexico was one step in the accomplishment
-of this grand design. After developing these points Mr. Blair added,
-“Jefferson Davis is the fortunate man who now holds the commanding
-position to encounter this formidable scheme of conquest, and whose fiat
-can at the same time deliver his country from the bloody agony now
-covering it in mourning. He can drive Maximilian from his American
-throne, and baffle the designs of Napoleon to subject our Southern
-people to the ‘Latin race.’”
-
-How this was to be accomplished Mr. Blair’s paper outlined. President
-Lincoln’s amnesty proclamation looked to an armistice, which could be
-enlarged to embrace all engaged in the war; then by secret preliminaries
-to a cessation of hostilities Mr. Davis could transfer to Texas such a
-portion of the Confederate army as was deemed adequate to his purpose.
-With a Southern force on the Rio Grande and Juarez conciliated it could
-enter Mexico and expel her invaders. If these combined forces were
-insufficient, multitudes from the Federal army, officers and men, would
-be found ready to engage in the enterprise. Both Republicans and
-Democrats of the North had declared their adherence to the Monroe
-Doctrine.
-
-After thus indicating for Mr. Davis a means of escape from his dilemma
-the adroit politician next appealed powerfully to his desire of fame.
-“He who expels the Bonaparte-Hapsburg dynasty from our Southern flank,”
-proceeded Mr. Blair, “which General Jackson in one of his letters warned
-me was the vulnerable point through which foreign invasion would come,
-will ally his name with those of Washington and Jackson as a defender of
-the liberty of the country. If in delivering Mexico he should model its
-States in form and principle to adapt them to our Union and add a new
-Southern constellation to its benignant sky while rounding off our
-possessions on the continent at the Isthmus, and opening the way to
-blending the waters of the Atlantic and Pacific, thus embracing our
-Republic in the arms of the ocean, he would complete the work of
-Jefferson, who first set one foot of our colossal Government on the
-Pacific by a stride from the Gulf of Mexico.”[428]
-
-Blair remarked in conclusion, “There is my problem, Mr. Davis; do you
-think it possible to be solved?” After a little consideration came the
-reply, “I think so.” Touching the question of bringing the sections
-together again Mr. Davis observed that though a spirit of vindictiveness
-had been engendered by the war, time and events would do something
-toward its removal. The circumstance of Northern and Southern armies
-united in a common cause would, he believed, assist greatly in restoring
-the old feeling. He also acknowledged to his visitor that European
-powers were pleased to see the sections exhausting their resources in
-mutual war.
-
-Thus was the Confederate leader persuaded to entertain the bold project
-of conquering Mexico under pretence of relieving the Monroe Doctrine
-from its peril. The explanation of this easy conversion, however, lies
-mainly in the fact that Mr. Davis, however he might endeavor to conceal
-his convictions, was convinced that the resources of the South were
-scarcely equal to another campaign. Like other leaders of the
-Confederacy he was anxious to seize any means of escape from an
-embarrassing situation. He proposed to Mr. Blair, therefore, the
-appointment of commissioners, and mentioned Judge Campbell, formerly of
-the United States Supreme Court, as one qualified by his talents and
-integrity to undertake such a mission.
-
-During his short sojourn in Richmond Mr. Blair learned from other
-prominent secessionists the hopelessness of the rebellion, and this,
-perhaps, was the only tangible result of his celebrated intrigue. To
-initiate the project Mr. Davis handed him a letter to be shown President
-Lincoln. That interesting communication was as follows:
-
- =Richmond, Virginia=, _12 Jany., ’65_.
-
- =F. P. Blair=, Esq.:
-
- =Sir=: I have deemed it proper, and probably desirable to you, to
- give you, in this form, the substance of remarks made by me, to be
- repeated by you to President Lincoln, etc., etc. I have no
- disposition to find obstacles in forms, and am willing now, as
- heretofore, to enter into negotiations for the restoration of peace;
- and am ready to send a commission whenever I have reason to suppose
- it will be received, or to receive a commission, if the United
- States Government shall choose to send one. That, notwithstanding
- the rejection of our former offers, I would, if you could promise
- that a commissioner, minister, or other agent, would be received,
- appoint one immediately, and renew the effort to enter into
- conference, with a view to secure peace to the two countries.
-
- Yours, etc.,
- =Jefferson Davis=.[429]
-
-Mr. Lincoln’s only response to the communication thus brought to his
-attention was to open a little wider the door for negotiation by sending
-to Mr. Blair the following letter:
-
- =Washington=, _January 18, 1865_.
-
- =F. P. Blair=, Esq.:
-
- =Sir=: You having shown me Mr. Davis’s letter to you of the 12th
- instant, you may say to him that I have constantly been, am now, and
- shall continue ready to receive any agent whom he, or any other
- influential person now resisting the National authority, may
- informally send to me, with the view of securing peace to the people
- of our one common country.
-
- Yours, etc.,
- =A. Lincoln=.
-
-With this note Mr. Blair returned to Richmond framing as best he could
-excuses why President Lincoln rejected the overtures of Jefferson Davis
-for a joint invasion of Mexico. With the nature of these explanations
-this essay is not concerned. To cover his retreat from an unsuccessful
-intrigue the disappointed commissioner then suggested that, perhaps,
-Grant and Lee could enter into negotiations for peace with more
-assurance of success than politicians could hope to do. Though Mr. Davis
-offered no objection to this proposal, Blair was forced soon after to
-report that military negotiations were out of the question.
-
-The Confederate leader was then compelled to choose between obstinate
-perseverance in his policy of a war for Southern independence or to
-accept frankly Mr. Lincoln’s offer of reunion. Blair’s first visit to
-Richmond did not escape observation, and, when his second conference was
-known, interest in the purpose of his mission became intense. Without
-some effort at negotiation Mr. Davis could not afterward satisfy the
-peace party in the South without subjecting himself to the injurious
-imputation of preferring war. In these circumstances, and after
-consultation with his cabinet, he authorized Alexander H. Stephens, John
-A. Campbell and R. M. T. Hunter to proceed to Washington as a commission
-for the purpose of informally conferring with Mr. Lincoln “upon the
-issues involved in the existing war, and for the purpose of securing
-peace to the two countries.” They were burdened with no instructions,
-and only one condition was insisted upon, that is, an acknowledgment of
-Southern independence.
-
-Toward the end of January they presented themselves at the Federal
-military lines near Richmond, and, after an exchange of telegrams with
-the authorities in Washington, were permitted to pass on to Fortress
-Monroe. It was the original intention of President Lincoln to intrust
-the work of the conference wholly to Secretary Seward, and for this
-purpose he gave him the following written instructions:
-
- =Executive Mansion,
- Washington=, _January 31, 1865_.
-
- Hon. =William H. Seward=, _Secretary of State_:
-
- You will proceed to Fortress Monroe, Virginia, there to meet and
- informally confer with Messrs. Stephens, Hunter, and Campbell, on
- the basis of my letter to F. P. Blair, Esq., of January 18, 1865, a
- copy of which you have. You will make known to them that three
- things are indispensable, to wit: _First_. The restoration of the
- national authority throughout all the States. _Second._ No receding
- by the executive of the United States on the slavery question from
- the position assumed thereon in the late annual message to Congress,
- and in preceding documents. _Third._ No cessation of hostilities
- short of an end of the war and the disbanding of all forces hostile
- to the Government. You will inform them that all propositions of
- theirs, not inconsistent with the above, will be considered and
- passed upon in a spirit of sincere liberality. You will hear all
- they may choose to say and report it to me. You will not assume to
- definitely consummate anything.
-
- Yours, etc.,
- =Abraham Lincoln=.[430]
-
-The different if not conflicting statements as to the object of their
-mission nearly led to a return of the Confederate representatives
-without any interview whatever. General Grant, fearing the unfavorable
-influence on the Union cause of such a result, sent to Secretary Stanton
-a confidential dispatch in which he referred to the evident sincerity of
-Stephens and Hunter. He also expressed his regret that they were about
-to return without an expression on the subject of their mission from any
-person in authority. President Lincoln, who was about to recall Mr.
-Seward by telegraph, decided, on reading Grant’s message, to join his
-Secretary at Fortress Monroe, for which place he set out at once.
-
-The famous conference, which took place February 3, 1865, on board a
-steamer at Hampton Roads, has been treated in detail by nearly every
-historian of the Rebellion, and, therefore, need only be briefly noticed
-in these pages. An informal discussion of four hours occurred on the
-_River Queen_. By a previous agreement no writings or memoranda were
-made; hence our principal knowledge of what transpired at that
-celebrated interview is derived from accounts subsequently written out
-from memory by the Confederate commissioners, and from Secretary
-Seward’s letter to Charles Francis Adams, United States Minister to
-England.
-
-Mr. Stephens, who began the discussion, asked whether there was no way
-of restoring former relations; to this Mr. Lincoln replied, “There was
-but one way that he knew of, and that was, for those who were resisting
-the laws of the Union to cease that resistance.” Stephens observed that
-they had been led to believe that both sections might for a time cease
-their present strife and unite on some continental question until
-passion had somewhat subsided and accommodation become possible.
-
-To this suggestion Mr. Lincoln replied promptly: “I suppose you refer to
-something that Mr. Blair has said. Now it is proper to state at the
-beginning that whatever he said was of his own accord, and without the
-least authority from me.” The President then stated that before the
-visit to Richmond he had flatly refused to hear Mr. Blair’s
-propositions; he was willing, however, to hear proposals for peace on
-the conditions expressed in his reply to the letter of Mr. Davis. The
-restoration of the Union was a _sine qua non_ with him, therefore his
-instructions that no conference be held except on that basis.
-
-Though the Confederate statesmen had resolved not to enter into any
-agreement that would require their forces to unite in an invasion of
-Mexico, Mr. Stephens continued to press the subject, and this after Mr.
-Lincoln had refused even to discuss the question. The President then
-brought the conversation back to the original object of the meeting, and
-declared that he could not entertain a proposition looking to an
-armistice until the paramount question of reunion was first determined.
-
-The terms of reunion were then discussed. On this subject Mr. Lincoln is
-reported by the commissioners to have said that the shortest way to
-effect this was to disband the insurgent armies and permit “the National
-authorities to resume their functions.” As to the admission of members
-to Congress from the seceding States the President believed they ought
-to be received, and also that they would be; however, he could enter
-into no stipulations on that subject. By the cessation of resistance, he
-is alleged to have declared, the States would be immediately restored to
-their practical relations to the Union. This sentiment was probably
-ascribed to him for party purposes.
-
-As the enforcement of the confiscation and other penal laws was left
-entirely with him he assured them that the Executive power would be
-exercised with the utmost liberality. The courts could determine all
-questions involving rights of property, and Congress, after passion had
-been somewhat composed, would, no doubt, be liberal in making
-restitution of forfeited property, or would indemnify those who had
-suffered.
-
-The President refused to promise any modification whatever of the terms
-of his Emancipation Proclamation. He regarded it as a judicial question.
-How the courts would decide it he did not know. His own opinion was that
-as the proclamation was only a war measure, as soon as the war ceased it
-would be inoperative for the future. It would be held to apply only to
-such slaves as had come under its operation while it was in active
-exercise. The courts, however, might hold that it effectually
-emancipated all the slaves in the States to which it applied at the
-time. He is reported further to have said that he interfered with
-slavery to maintain the Union, and then only with hesitation and under
-pressure of a public necessity. He had always favored emancipation, but
-not immediate emancipation.
-
-On the same occasion he is said to have stated as his belief that the
-people of the North were not less responsible for slavery than those of
-the South; if the war should then cease, with the voluntary abolition of
-slavery by the States, he would favor, individually, payment by the
-Government of a fair indemnity for the loss to owners. That feeling, he
-believed, had an extensive existence in the loyal States. He knew some
-who were in favor of an appropriation as high as $400,000,000 for that
-purpose. However, he could enter into no stipulation. He merely
-expressed his own views and what he believed to be the views of others
-upon the subject.
-
-Relative to the division of Virginia Mr. Lincoln said he could give only
-“an individual opinion, which was, that Western Virginia would continue
-to be recognized as a separate State in the Union.”
-
-Seward brought to the notice of the commissioners one topic which to
-them was new, that is, the passage by Congress three days earlier of the
-proposed amendment to the Federal Constitution. He is reported to have
-said that it was passed in deference to the war spirit, and that if the
-South would agree to immediate restoration its ratification might be
-defeated. This, however, is doubtful, for the Cabinet as well as the
-President approved the action of Congress in submitting the Thirteenth
-Amendment to the consideration of the States; besides, it is not in
-harmony with Mr. Seward’s anti-slavery record.
-
-In urging on Mr. Stephens separate State action to effect a cessation of
-hostilities, the President said: “If I resided in Georgia, with my
-present sentiments, I’ll tell you what I would do if I were in your
-place. I would go home and get the Governor of the State to call the
-Legislature together, and get them to recall all the State troops from
-the war; elect Senators and Members to Congress, and ratify this
-constitutional amendment prospectively, so as to take effect—say in five
-years. Such a ratification would be valid, in my opinion. I have looked
-into the subject, and think such a prospective ratification would be
-valid. Whatever may have been the views of your people before the war,
-they must be convinced now that slavery is doomed. It cannot last long
-in any event, and the best course, it seems to me, for your public men
-to pursue would be to adopt such a policy as will avoid, as far as
-possible, the evils of immediate emancipation. This would be my course,
-if I were in your place.”[431]
-
-The advice was wasted. When the party was on the point of separating,
-Mr. Stephens again asked the President to reconsider the plan of an
-armistice on the basis of a Mexican expedition. “Well, Stephens,”
-replied Mr. Lincoln, “I will reconsider it; but I do not think my mind
-will change.” Thus ended the famous Hampton Roads conference.
-
-On their return to Richmond the commissioners made a formal report to
-Mr. Davis of the failure of negotiations; this he transmitted to the
-Confederate Congress with an artful letter designed to strengthen the
-war party in the South, and to silence effectually the adversaries of
-his administration. To improve this advantage a day was appointed for
-the purpose of getting a popular expression on the result of the
-conference. Business was generally suspended, and the people crowded
-every building in the city suitable for holding large assemblies.
-Churches, theatres and halls of legislation were engaged for the
-occasion. Twenty orators, among the ablest in the South, told their
-hearers of the Northern “ultimatum,” not omitting to describe eloquently
-all the consequences of subjugation. The old war spirit appeared to have
-been kindled once more; “But,” says Mr. Pollard, “it was only the sickly
-glare of an expiring flame; there was no steadiness in the excitement;
-there was no virtue in huzzas; the inspiration ended with the voices and
-ceremonies that invoked it; and it was found that the spirit of the
-people of the Confederacy was too weak, too much broken to act with
-effect, or assume the position of erect and desperate defiance.”[432] In
-March General Lee revealed the weakness of his army at Fort Steadman;
-Grant’s movements around Petersburg followed in April; the rest is a
-familiar story.
-
-From this brief discussion of topics only allied to the Presidential
-method of reunion it is time to resume our examination of the main
-theme.
-
-It is almost a trite observation to remark that President Lincoln’s
-opinions on public questions were formed only after mature deliberation,
-and that to the conclusions thus reached he adhered with inflexible
-tenacity. Notwithstanding the sentiments of Congress on the question of
-reconstruction he evinced a decided preference for his own. This is
-proved by a number of letters and speeches from which two may be
-selected both because of the time of their appearance and the station of
-the persons to whom they were addressed. To General Hurlbut, who had
-temporarily succeeded Banks in command at New Orleans, the President
-wrote, November 14, 1864, the following admonitory letter:
-
- Few things, since I have been here, have impressed me more painfully
- than what, for four or five months past, has appeared a bitter
- military opposition to the new State government of Louisiana. I
- still indulged some hope that I was mistaken in the fact; but copies
- of a correspondence on the subject between General Canby and
- yourself, and shown me to-day, dispel that hope. A very fair
- proportion of the people of Louisiana have inaugurated a new State
- government, making an excellent new constitution—better for the poor
- black man than we have in Illinois. This was done under military
- protection, directed by me, in the belief, still sincerely
- entertained, that with such a nucleus around which to build we could
- get the State into position again sooner than otherwise. In this
- belief a general promise of protection and support, applicable alike
- to Louisiana and other States, was given in the last annual message.
- During the formation of the new government and constitution they
- were supported by nearly every loyal person, and opposed by every
- secessionist. And this support and this opposition, from the
- respective standpoints of the parties, was perfectly consistent and
- logical. Every Unionist ought to wish the new government to succeed;
- and every disunionist must desire it to fail. Its failure would
- gladden the heart of Slidell in Europe, and of every enemy of the
- old flag in the world. Every advocate of slavery naturally desires
- to see blasted and crushed the liberty promised the black man by the
- new constitution. But why General Canby and General Hurlbut should
- join on the same side is to me incomprehensible.
-
- Of course, in the condition of things at New Orleans, the military
- must not be thwarted by the civil authority; but when the
- constitutional Convention, for what it deems a breach of privilege,
- arrests an editor in no way connected with the military, the
- military necessity for insulting the Convention and forcibly
- discharging the editor is difficult to perceive. Neither is the
- military necessity for protecting the people against paying large
- salaries fixed by a legislature of their own choosing very apparent.
- Equally difficult to perceive is the military necessity for forcibly
- interposing to prevent a bank from loaning its own money to the
- State. These things, if they have occurred, are, at the best, no
- better than gratuitous hostility. I wish I could hope that they may
- be shown to not have occurred. To make assurance against
- misunderstanding, I repeat that in the existing condition of things
- in Louisiana, the military must not be thwarted by the civil
- authority; and I add that on points of difference the commanding
- general must be judge and master. But I also add that in the
- exercise of this judgment and control, a purpose, obvious and
- scarcely unavowed, to transcend all military necessity, in order to
- crush out the civil government, will not be overlooked.[433]
-
-A similar communication, though less peremptory in tone, he felt
-constrained to send to General E. R. S. Canby, who had been assigned to
-command in the military division of West Mississippi. Under date of
-December 12, 1864, he wrote that officer:
-
- I think it is probable that you are laboring under some
- misapprehension as to the purpose, or rather the motive, of the
- Government on two points—cotton and the new Louisiana State
- government.
-
- It is conceded that military operations are the first in importance;
- and as to what is indispensable to these operations, the department
- commander must be judge and master.
-
- But the other matters mentioned I suppose to be of public importance
- also; and what I have attempted in regard to them is not merely a
- concession to private interest and pecuniary greed.
-
- * * * * *
-
- As to the new State government of Louisiana. Most certainly there is
- no worthy object in getting up a piece of machinery merely to pay
- salaries and give political consideration to certain men. But it is
- a worthy object to again get Louisiana into proper practical
- relations with the nation, and we can never finish this if we never
- begin it. Much good work is already done, and surely nothing can be
- gained by throwing it away.
-
- I do not wish either cotton or the new State government to take
- precedence of the military while the necessity for the military
- remains; but there is a strong public reason for treating each with
- so much favor as may not be substantially detrimental to the
- military.[434]
-
-That Mr. Lincoln never modified these opinions is conclusively proved by
-the last public utterance of his life. In addressing the citizens of
-Washington, who were holding a demonstration in consequence of Lee’s
-surrender, the President on the evening of April 11 said:
-
- By these recent successes the reinauguration of the national
- authority—reconstruction—which has had a large share of thought from
- the first, is pressed much more closely upon our attention. It is
- fraught with great difficulty. Unlike a case of war between
- independent nations, there is no authorized organ for us to treat
- with—no one man has authority to give up the rebellion for any other
- man. We simply must begin with and mold from disorganized and
- discordant elements. Nor is it a small additional embarrassment that
- we, the loyal people, differ among ourselves as to the mode, manner,
- and measure of reconstruction. As a general rule, I abstain from
- reading the reports of attacks upon myself, wishing not to be
- provoked by that to which I cannot properly offer an answer. In
- spite of this precaution, however, it comes to my knowledge that I
- am much censured for some supposed agency in setting up and seeking
- to sustain the new State government of Louisiana.
-
- In this I have done just so much as, and no more than, the public
- knows. In the annual message of December, 1863, and in the
- accompanying proclamation, I presented a plan of reconstruction, as
- the phrase goes, which I promised, if adopted by any State, should
- be acceptable to and sustained by the executive Government of the
- nation. I distinctly stated that this was not the only plan which
- might possibly be acceptable, and I also distinctly protested that
- the executive claimed no right to say when or whether members should
- be admitted to seats in Congress from such States. This plan was in
- advance submitted to the then Cabinet, and distinctly approved by
- every member of it. One of them suggested that I should then and in
- that connection apply the Emancipation Proclamation to the
- theretofore excepted parts of Virginia and Louisiana; that I should
- drop the suggestion about apprenticeship for freed people, and that
- I should omit the protest against my own power in regard to the
- admission of members of Congress. But even he approved every part
- and parcel of the plan which has since been employed or touched by
- the action of Louisiana.
-
- The new constitution of Louisiana, declaring emancipation for the
- whole State, practically applies the proclamation to the part
- previously excepted. It does not adopt apprenticeship for freed
- people, and it is silent, as it could not well be otherwise, about
- the admission of members to Congress. So that, as it applies to
- Louisiana, every member of the Cabinet fully approved the plan. The
- message went to Congress, and I received many commendations of the
- plan, written and verbal, and not a single objection to it from any
- professed emancipationist came to my knowledge until after the news
- reached Washington that the people of Louisiana had begun to move in
- accordance with it. From about July 1862, I had corresponded with
- different persons supposed to be interested [in] seeking a
- reconstruction of a State government for Louisiana. When the message
- of 1863, with the plan before mentioned, reached New Orleans,
- General Banks wrote me that he was confident that the people, with
- his military coöperation, would reconstruct substantially on that
- plan. I wrote to him and some of them to try it. They tried it, and
- the result is known. Such has been my only agency in getting up the
- Louisiana government.
-
- As to sustaining it, my promise is out, as before stated. But as bad
- promises are better broken than kept, I shall treat this as a bad
- promise, and break it whenever I shall be convinced that keeping it
- is adverse to the public interest; but I have not yet been so
- convinced. I have been shown a letter on this subject, supposed to
- be an able one, in which the writer expresses regret that my mind
- has not seemed to be definitely fixed on the question whether the
- seceded States, so called, are in the Union or out of it. It would
- perhaps add astonishment to his regret were he to learn that since I
- have found professed Union men endeavoring to make that question, I
- have purposely forborne any public expression upon it. As appears to
- me, that question has not been, nor yet is, a practically material
- one, and that any discussion of it, while it thus remains
- practically immaterial, could have no effect other than the
- mischievous one of dividing our friends. As yet, whatever it may
- hereafter become, that question is bad as the basis of a
- controversy, and good for nothing at all—a merely pernicious
- abstraction.
-
- We all agree that the seceded States, so called, are out of their
- proper practical relation with the Union, and that the sole object
- of the Government, civil and military, in regard to those States is
- to again get them into that proper practical relation. I believe
- that it is not only possible, but in fact easier, to do this without
- deciding or even considering whether these States have ever been out
- of the Union, than with it. Finding themselves safely at home, it
- would be utterly immaterial whether they had ever been abroad. Let
- us all join in doing the acts necessary to restoring the proper
- practical relations between these States and the Union, and each
- forever after innocently indulge his own opinion whether in doing
- the acts he brought the States from without into the Union, or only
- gave them proper assistance, they never having been out of it. The
- amount of constituency, so to speak, on which the new Louisiana
- government rests, would be more satisfactory to all if it contained
- 50,000, or 30,000, or even 20,000, instead of only about 12,000, as
- it does. It is also unsatisfactory to some that the elective
- franchise is not given to the colored man. I would myself prefer
- that it were now conferred on the very intelligent, and on those who
- serve our cause as soldiers.
-
- Still, the question is not whether the Louisiana government, as it
- stands, is quite all that is desirable. The question is, will it be
- wiser to take it as it is and help to improve it, or to reject and
- disperse it? Can Louisiana be brought into proper practical relation
- with the Union sooner by sustaining or by discarding her new State
- government? Some twelve thousand voters in the heretofore slave
- State of Louisiana have sworn allegiance to the Union, assumed to be
- the rightful political power of the State, held elections, organized
- a State government, adopted a free State constitution, giving the
- benefit of public schools equally to black and white, and empowering
- the legislature to confer the elective franchise upon the colored
- man. Their legislature has already voted to ratify the
- constitutional amendment recently passed by Congress, abolishing
- slavery throughout the nation. These twelve thousand persons are
- thus fully committed to the Union and to perpetual freedom in the
- State—committed to the very things, and nearly all the things, the
- nation wants—and they ask the nation’s recognition and its
- assistance to make good their committal.
-
- Now, if we reject and spurn them, we do our utmost to disorganize
- and disperse them. We, in effect, say to the white man: You are
- worthless or worse; we will neither help you, nor be helped by you.
- To the blacks we say: This cup of liberty which these, your old
- masters, hold to your lips we will dash from you, and leave you to
- the chances of gathering the spilled and scattered contents in some
- vague and undefined when, where, and how. If this course,
- discouraging and paralyzing both white and black, has any tendency
- to bring Louisiana into proper practical relations with the Union, I
- have so far been unable to perceive it. If, on the contrary, we
- recognize and sustain the new government of Louisiana, the converse
- of all this is made true. We encourage the hearts and nerve the arms
- of the twelve thousand to adhere to their work, and argue for it,
- and proselyte for it, and fight for it, and feed it, and grow it,
- and ripen it to a complete success. The colored man, too, in seeing
- all united for him, is inspired with vigilance, and energy, and
- daring, to the same end. Grant that he desires the elective
- franchise, will he not attain it sooner by saving the already
- advanced steps toward it than by running backward over them? Concede
- that the new government of Louisiana is only to what it should be as
- the egg is to the fowl, we shall sooner have the fowl by hatching
- the egg than by smashing it.
-
- Again, if we reject Louisiana we also reject one vote in favor of
- the proposed amendment to the national Constitution. To meet this
- proposition it has been argued that no more than three fourths of
- those States which have not attempted secession are necessary to
- validly ratify the amendment. I do not commit myself against this
- further than to say that such a ratification would be questionable,
- and sure to be persistently questioned, while a ratification by
- three fourths of all the States would be unquestioned and
- unquestionable. I repeat the question: Can Louisiana be brought into
- proper practical relation with the Union sooner by sustaining or by
- discarding her new State government? What has been said of Louisiana
- will apply generally to other States. And yet so great peculiarities
- pertain to each State, and such important and sudden changes occur
- in the same State, and withal so new and unprecedented is the whole
- case that no exclusive and inflexible plan can safely be prescribed
- as to details and collaterals. Such exclusive and inflexible plan
- would surely become a new entanglement. Important principles may and
- must be inflexible. In the present situation, as the phrase goes, it
- may be my duty to make some new announcement to the people of the
- South. I am considering, and shall not fail to act when satisfied
- that action will be proper.
-
-The promised announcement was never made; for within three days the
-great career of Abraham Lincoln was brought to a close. The inherent
-difficulties of reconstruction, as well as the mischievous consequences
-of faction among Union men, he perceived and acknowledged at the outset.
-Precisely how he would have removed the one and, without breaking with
-his party, have avoided the other we can never know. His uniform success
-in dealing with other embarrassing questions appears to justify the
-opinion that he would not have failed altogether in solving the greater
-problem presented by the return of peace. This subject will be further
-discussed in the succeeding chapter.
-
------
-
-Footnote 425:
-
- Globe, 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 141 (appendix).
-
-Footnote 426:
-
- Personal Recollections of Abraham Lincoln, by James R. Gilmore.
-
-Footnote 427:
-
- Gorham’s Life and Public Services of Edwin M. Stanton, Vol. II. pp.
- 148–153.
-
-Footnote 428:
-
- N. and H., Vol. X. pp. 101–102.
-
-Footnote 429:
-
- N. and H., Vol. X. p. 107.
-
-Footnote 430:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 644–645.
-
-Footnote 431:
-
- An interesting account of this entire subject will be found in Nicolay
- and Hay’s Lincoln, Vol. X. ch. VI.; see also Raymond’s Life of
- Lincoln, pp. 647–662.
-
-Footnote 432:
-
- The Lost Cause, pp. 684–685.
-
-Footnote 433:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 597–598.
-
-Footnote 434:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 616–617.
-
-
-
-
- XII
- CULMINATION OF THE PRESIDENTIAL PLAN
-
-
-Able and candid exponents of public opinion in the South, even those who
-were a part of the “Lost Cause,” are almost unanimous in regarding the
-assassination of President Lincoln as one of the greatest calamities
-that befell their section of the Union.[435] Indeed, the writer has
-heard a distinguished editor ascribe to Jefferson Davis himself the
-opinion that next to the failure of the Confederacy the untimely death
-of Mr. Lincoln was the severest blow inflicted on Southern
-interests.[436] Many of the evils experienced by their States during the
-early years of Congressional reconstruction would have been avoided,
-they believe, under a continuance of the wise and considerate policy of
-the martyr President. While it is true that the confidence which he
-enjoyed among the masses in the loyal States, his unquestionable
-integrity and his splendid intellectual powers would have made him a
-formidable adversary even in a controversy with Congress, yet we have no
-assurance that these undoubted elements of strength would have enabled
-him, in the confused times following the Rebellion, to do more than
-postpone a contest with the Legislative branch in which a desire to
-discipline the South was even then winning adherents. The passions of
-the hour would have discovered a weakness in his clemency to the
-vanquished, while his very breadth of soul and sense would have been
-regarded by radical members of his party as only an evidence of his
-desire to facilitate the restoration to power of red-handed rebels. But
-it is idle to speculate on what might have been the result of his
-endeavors to heal the wounds of war, for, by the assassin’s bullet, the
-execution of his policy passed into other hands.
-
-While the terrible tragedy of April 14 was still unknown to a great
-majority of American citizens, Andrew Johnson was quietly installed in
-the office of President. As every detail of the simple ceremony in the
-Kirkwood Hotel is familiar to this generation of readers, that event
-requires only a passing allusion. In the presence of the constitutional
-advisers of his predecessor, except Secretary Seward, who had been
-dangerously wounded by one of Booth’s accomplices, the oath of office
-was administered by Chief Justice Chase, who, with the Attorney-General,
-had examined the precedents and the law. Besides these officials a few
-members of Congress, who still lingered at the capital, were in
-attendance as witnesses.
-
-Something of Andrew Johnson’s political career has been related in the
-chapter on Tennessee. As military governor of that State his high
-courage, his acknowledged patriotism, his honesty of purpose and
-principle were evident to all. Traits of character suspected, but not
-then fully disclosed, were developed by more complex conditions. The
-problem that confronted him may be briefly stated.
-
-When Mr. Johnson succeeded to the Presidential office Confederate armies
-somewhat broken, indeed, but still capable of mischief were retarding
-the victorious march of Sherman’s legions. Measures for disbanding the
-former became necessary when Southern leaders, recognizing the
-hopelessness of further resistance, made overtures looking to an
-armistice which took place and to the surrender that subsequently
-followed. It became necessary to discontinue at once the enlistment of
-men in the loyal States, and, to economize expense, to muster out of
-service as expeditiously as possible the grand army of Union volunteers.
-The energy and promptness with which this task was accomplished were not
-the least of Secretary Stanton’s services to the nation. The perfection
-to which years of experience had brought the machinery of the War
-Department enabled the bulk of the Union armies to return without delay
-to their homes, where, discarding the character of soldiers, they melted
-insensibly into the civil population and speedily resumed the pursuits
-of peace. Relations with France were somewhat strained, and, owing to a
-succession of unfriendly acts, a war with Great Britain was not
-improbable. The public finances, too, required attention. To provide a
-revenue adequate to the extraordinary demands of the time was beginning
-to tax the resources of Government. A satisfactory settlement of even
-the least of these might well have appeared a serious question. The
-cessation of hostilities, however, presented a problem far transcending
-the greatest of them in importance.
-
-Many of the late Confederate States were threatened with anarchy, for in
-those commonwealths the recent authority had been extinguished and no
-organizations existed which the Administration could recognize as State
-governments. The political reconstruction of four of them, it is true,
-had been commenced under encouragement and direction of the national
-Executive, but even in those much remained to be done. Before examining
-the condition of the insurgent States as a whole it may be well,
-therefore, to summarize the most important events that occurred in
-Arkansas, Tennessee, Louisiana and Virginia between the institution of
-loyal governments in those commonwealths and the meeting of the
-Thirty-ninth Congress in December, 1865.
-
-The General Assembly of Arkansas, though lacking its full membership,
-convened in March, 1865, and unanimously adopted on April 14 succeeding
-the proposed amendment to the Federal Constitution. The action of
-Congress, however, in submitting that proposition to the States had been
-anticipated by the Union men of that commonwealth, for their organic law
-had already abolished involuntary servitude; by the same instrument they
-had repudiated all debts created in the conduct of the war, thereby
-complying with three of the principal conditions required for restoring
-their State to the Union.
-
-During the same session an act passed the Legislature disfranchising all
-citizens who had aided the Confederate cause after the organization,
-April 18, 1864, of a loyal government. By the adversaries of this
-measure it was claimed that the lawmaking body exceeded its powers,
-because the act in effect prescribed qualifications for the suffrage
-different from those required by the State constitution, and, so far as
-it attempted to deprive citizens of their privileges without judicial
-conviction of crime, was contrary to the law of the land. This statute
-awakened the indifferent, and, as the time approached for holding
-Congressional elections, excited considerable discussion.
-
-In the mean time the new government silently extended its authority over
-those parts of the State occupied by Southern soldiers until the
-cessation of hostilities. Governor Flanigan on retiring suggested that
-Confederate county officers be continued under his successor. This
-proposal, however, was promptly rejected and the secession establishment
-in all its parts completely ignored. Governor Murphy then published a
-proclamation urging the people in those regions hitherto dominated by
-the enemy, which comprised nearly half the counties in the State, to
-assemble and renew their local organizations. His address was favorably
-received, and his administration soon acquiesced in throughout the
-commonwealth. Outrages ceased with the disappearance of Confederate
-soldiers, and by the beginning of July judicial tribunals had been
-revived in nearly every county. Some of the courts had been in session,
-and most of them were prepared to meet regularly for the transaction of
-business. Taxes were collected as quietly as before the war, and civil
-process could be executed in every part of the State. Hundreds had
-returned from the South to their former homes and resumed the pursuits
-of peace. Discontent, so far as any existed in the State, was confined
-to some ex-Confederate officers and to a few non-combatants who had
-sympathized with the rebellion. Both classes advised disregard of the
-disfranchising law, but as a rule the returned soldiers on both sides
-were quiet and orderly. All accounts concur in representing the
-pacification of Arkansas as complete toward the end of summer, and by
-October 13, 1865, the Secretary of State was able to report officially
-that the new government was in successful operation, the civil
-organization of every county having been effected. Governor Murphy in
-approving a circular published near the close of the same month by
-Brigadier General Sprague, an assistant commissioner of the Freedmen’s
-Bureau, enjoined both civil officers and citizens to give all possible
-encouragement to the officers and appointees of the bureau.[437]
-
-The President on receiving intelligence of this satisfactory condition
-of affairs sent to Governor Murphy the following dispatch:
-
- There will be no interference with your present organization of
- State government. I have learned from E. W. Gantt, Esq., and other
- sources, that all is working well, and you will proceed and resume
- the former relations with the Federal Government, and all the aid in
- the power of the Government will be given in restoring the State to
- its former relations.[438]
-
-As the time approached for an election of national Representatives, the
-Governor issued another address in which he advised the choice of
-persons who could take the oath required by Congress. Three members were
-elected, namely: William Ryers, G. H. Kyle and James M. Johnson, who
-subsequently appeared at Washington and presented their
-credentials.[439]
-
-The foregoing account of the situation in Arkansas is confirmed by the
-testimony of General Reynolds, military commander of the department, who
-had sent officers into all the counties. These reported civil government
-as everywhere reëstablished. The State, they asserted, had never enjoyed
-greater tranquillity. There was not a shadow of conflict between the
-civil and the military authority, for the latter in sustaining the
-former was careful not to encroach on any of its functions. In short,
-the restoration of civil law in that State was universally admitted.
-
-In two thirds of the counties, however, great destitution prevailed.
-Early in the summer the General Government felt compelled to distribute
-among indigent freedmen and refugees vast quantities of food, and
-Northern generosity alone, the Governor declared, could prevent great
-distress during the ensuing winter. Nor was his expectation
-disappointed. It is a splendid tribute to the character of Americans
-that one of the most destructive conflicts in history, with all the
-animosities which protracted civil wars engender, did not perceptibly
-impair in them the feelings of humanity.
-
-The organization of a Union government in Tennessee has elsewhere been
-described. The Assembly chosen under its authority met at Nashville on
-the 2d of April, 1865, and three days later ratified the Thirteenth
-Amendment. On the 21st the President was requested to proclaim the
-insurrection at an end in that commonwealth, though a few weeks later he
-was called upon for troops to guarantee a republican form of government
-and to protect the State against invasion and domestic violence. Besides
-appointing executive officers the Legislature elected to the United
-States Senate David T. Patterson and Joseph S. Fowler.
-
-The most important measure of the session, however, was the enactment on
-June 5 of a severe law affecting the elective franchise. By it the right
-to vote was restricted, as formerly, to white males who had attained
-their twenty-first year. To the classes excepted by the Proclamation of
-December 8, 1863, were added all those who had left seats in the General
-Assembly, all who were absentees from the United States for the purpose
-of aiding the rebellion and all who had fled within the Confederate
-lines with the same intention. These were disfranchised for the period
-of fifteen years from the passage of the act.[440]
-
-During this session there was presented by the freedmen of the State a
-petition for the elective franchise. The “colored citizens of
-Tennessee,” as they styled themselves, received no response to their
-prayer beyond the approval of an order for printing 500 copies of their
-memorial. The motion for this trifling concession was carried by a vote
-of 41 to 10.
-
-On June 12 the Legislature adjourned until the first Monday in October.
-On the same day Governor Brownlow ordered an election to be held on
-August 2 for Representatives to Congress in each of the eight districts
-into which the State had just been divided. Vacancies in the General
-Assembly were directed to be filled at the same time.
-
-The disfranchising act, with the oath required thereunder, had the
-effect of excluding a large number, probably three fourths, of the
-citizens from voting. Its adversaries declared the law unconstitutional,
-and it encountered much opposition, especially in Middle and West
-Tennessee. Its constitutionality, however, was sustained by one of the
-State courts in a decision rendered June 29, and the Governor, in a
-proclamation of July 10 succeeding, argued in favor of the statute.
-Those who should unite to defeat its execution would be “declared in
-rebellion against the State of Tennessee, and dealt with as rebels.” It
-was further signified that votes cast in violation of the law would not
-be taken into account by the Secretary of State.
-
-Nor were these idle threats, for the civil officers were instructed “to
-arrest and bring to justice all persons who, under pretence of being
-candidates for Congress or other office, are traveling over the State
-denouncing and nullifying the Constitution and laws of the land, and
-spreading sedition and a spirit of rebellion.”[441]
-
-It was relative to these measures that President Johnson on July 20,
-1865, sent the following despatch to Governor Brownlow:
-
- I hope and have no doubt you will see that the recent amendments to
- the constitution of the State as adopted by the people, and all the
- laws passed by the last Legislature in pursuance thereof, are fairly
- executed, and that all illegal votes in the approaching election be
- excluded from the polls, and the election for members of Congress be
- legally and fairly conducted. When and wherever it becomes necessary
- to employ force for the execution of the laws and the protection of
- the ballot-box from violence and fraud, you are authorized to call
- upon Maj.-Gen. Thomas for sufficient military force to sustain the
- civil authorities of the State. I have received your recent address
- to the people, and think it well timed, and hope it will do much
- good in reconciling the opposition to the amendment to the
- constitution and the laws passed by the last Legislature. The law
- must be executed and the civil authority sustained. In your efforts
- to do this, if necessary, Gen. Thomas will afford a sufficient
- military force. You are at liberty to make what use you think proper
- of this despatch.[442]
-
-Though no violence marked the election, considerable irregularities,
-notwithstanding the Governor’s precautions, appear to have crept into
-modes of registration, and he felt compelled in consequence to reject
-the ballots of twenty-nine counties. In this contest 61,783 citizens
-participated, but when those illegally enrolled were disregarded the
-number was reduced to 39,509. The defective vote, which applied to all
-the candidates, was thrown out in every county, though it changed the
-result in only one district. Of the eight Representatives chosen all
-were Union men; four, however, were conservatives, opposed both to test
-oaths and measures of disfranchisement.[443] Governor Brownlow because
-of his action was severely censured, but was supported by a majority of
-the General Assembly.
-
-In October, when the Legislature reassembled, a bill to render persons
-of African and of Indian descent competent witnesses in the State courts
-passed the Senate by the close vote of 10 to 9, but failed altogether to
-receive the approval of the House. The Representatives of his State
-declined at that time, by a vote of 35 to 25, to pass a simple
-resolution endorsing the Administration of President Johnson, but almost
-unanimously adopted in place of that proposition the following:
-
- _Resolved_, That we endorse the administration of his Excellency the
- President of the United States, and especially his declaration that
- treason shall be made odious, and traitors punished.[444]
-
-A colored convention representing the freedmen of the State was held at
-the capital during the week succeeding the election. If the Legislature
-did not grant before December 1, 1865, their petition for the elective
-franchise, this body resolved to protest against the admission of the
-Tennessee delegation to Congress. On the question of negro suffrage the
-Governor in his October message said:
-
- I think it would be bad policy, as well as wrong in principle, to
- open the ballot-box to the uninformed and exceedingly stupid slaves
- of the Southern cotton, rice, and sugar fields. If allowed to vote,
- the great majority of them would be influenced by leading
- secessionists to vote against the Government, as they would be
- largely under the influence o£ this class of men for years to come,
- having to reside on and cultivate their lands. When the people of
- Tennessee become satisfied that the negro is worthy of suffrage,
- they will extend it, and not before; and I repeat that this question
- must be regulated by the State authorities and by the loyal voters
- of the State, not by the General Government.[445]
-
-Apprehending trouble from the antagonism of races Mr. Brownlow advocated
-the old idea of colonization for the black man. He believed, however,
-that negroes should be admitted to testify in the courts and argued in
-favor of conferring such a privilege. Repugnance to their testimony, he
-declared, was due principally to education and habit.
-
-If the following account from _The Knoxville Whig_ of September 27 is
-trustworthy the freedmen of Tennessee had but a slender claim to the
-right to vote. That journal said:
-
- Thousands of free colored persons are congregating in and around the
- large towns in Tennessee, and thousands are coming in from other
- States, one third of whom cannot get employment. Indeed, less than
- one third of them want employment, or feel willing to stoop to work.
- They entertain the erroneous idea that the Government is bound to
- supply all their wants, and even to furnish them with houses, if, in
- order to do that, the white occupants must be turned out. There is a
- large demand for labor in every section of the State, but the
- colored people, with here and there a noble exception, scorn the
- idea of work. They fiddle and dance at night, and lie around the
- stores and street corners in the day time.[446]
-
-The Governor’s message, sent in at this session, was hopeful in tone. He
-favored some amendment but not a repeal of the franchise law. He advised
-also a “full pardon to the masses—the young and the deluded, who
-followed blindly the standard of revolt, provided they act as becomes
-their circumstances.” The unrepentant, however, should suffer the period
-of disfranchisement; while the active leaders, he believed, were
-entitled “neither to mercy nor forbearance.” To some negroes he would
-give the right of suffrage, but, believing it unsafe, he was opposed to
-conferring it on them all.
-
-Tennessee, over which advancing and retreating armies had repeatedly
-passed, suffered even more severely than Arkansas, for besides having
-been the principal theatre of operations for the contending hosts in the
-West, her territory had also been in the early rule of Governor Johnson
-the scene of local strife. Old family feuds that for various reasons had
-been allowed to slumber were in many instances revived, and the most
-lawless outrages perpetrated in the face of day. These disorders,
-however, had practically ceased toward the conclusion of his
-governorship, and peace reigned once more within the borders of that
-community. The existence there of a considerable demand for labor
-assisted greatly in diminishing the burden of the authorities.
-
-The closing months of the war found the loyal government of Louisiana
-endeavoring with the influence of the Union army to extend its
-jurisdiction over all the territory that had been brought under Federal
-control. Notwithstanding its contracted area this commonwealth for
-certain purposes was treated as a restored member of the Union. Like the
-Northern States it was affected by the draft which, on February 15, took
-place in some districts included in the Department of the Gulf. But the
-great struggle that for four years had employed the attention and tested
-the resources of the Government soon reached its close, thus rendering
-unnecessary any field service from the recruits then obtained.
-
-Though the attitude of Congress toward the Banks government has been
-described in the preceding pages, that was not believed the proper place
-to examine the nature of the election which was held on September 5, or
-the _personnel_ of the Legislature chosen on that occasion. In
-connection with the appointment by that assembly of Messrs. Smith and
-Cutler as United States Senators the subject was noticed incidentally.
-The action of Congress on the question of admitting members from
-Louisiana was, however, fully entered into in that relation.
-
-Some additional information affecting the validity of that election is
-afforded by a proclamation published May 13, 1865, by the acting
-Governor, J. Madison Wells.[447] This document asserts that the Register
-of Voters for the city of New Orleans declared officially that there had
-been enrolled 5,000 persons who did not possess the legal qualifications
-for electors. To ascertain the political people, therefore, a new
-registration was thought desirable. Mr. Wells accordingly declared the
-old records closed from the date of his proclamation. The certificates
-granted thereon, as well as the enrollment, were pronounced null and
-void. He then authorized the opening on June 1, 1865, of a new set of
-books, the enrollment to be made in accordance with the qualifications
-prescribed by the constitution and laws of Louisiana. The old
-registration having been made under an order of General Banks this
-announcement led at once to a difference between the Department
-Commander and the acting Governor. Many names recorded on the old books
-were alleged to have been those of colored men, and a circumstance
-presently to be related tends to support the assertion.
-
-About that time the Confederate Governor, Allen, transferred to Federal
-officials all the important military records in his possession, and from
-his capital at Shreveport published a communication in which he
-announced his administration closed on that day. He said in part: “The
-war is over, the contest is ended, the soldiers are disbanded and gone
-home, and now there is in Louisiana no opposition whatever to the
-Constitution and laws of the United States.”[448]
-
-On June 10 an address to the people of thirty-five parishes was issued
-by the new Governor, who congratulated them on their return to the
-protection of the national flag. It was not with the past, he reminded
-them, but with the present and the future that their welfare was bound
-up. They were exhorted to go manfully to work and reëstablish civil
-government. The submission to law and the prompt acquiescence of those
-recently hostile to the United States he regarded as a hopeful sign.
-Even the soldiers, he said, returned to their homes better and wiser
-men, promising by a cheerful obedience to law to atone for past errors.
-All citizens were urged to imitate their example. Provisional
-appointments to county offices would be made until they could be filled
-by election. In naming persons for such places the Governor promised to
-be guided by the recommendation of the people if they selected men of
-good reputation who had taken the amnesty oath, which would be a
-prerequisite in every case. If the people did not act promptly he would
-feel compelled to make appointments upon the best information
-obtainable. If errors were made, then citizens would be themselves to
-blame for neglecting promptly to suggest the proper persons. A
-provisional judiciary would also be constituted.
-
-Important elections, he announced, would take place in the autumn, when
-Representatives to Congress and members of a Legislature would be
-chosen. If each parish was provided with the proper officers to open the
-polls an election for governor and other State officers would take place
-at the same time. The people addressed were informed that in making the
-new constitution its framers did not intend to deprive them of their
-rights. The response to this appeal was a local reorganization in nearly
-all the parishes affected.
-
-Governor Wells, on September 21, in a second order appointed the 6th of
-November succeeding as the day for holding the election, and also
-defined the qualifications of voters. White male citizens of the United
-States who had attained the age of twenty-one years and had resided
-twelve months in the commonwealth were declared entitled to exercise the
-suffrage. Evidence was also required of every elector that he had taken
-the oath of amnesty contained in the proclamation of December 8, 1863,
-or that prescribed, May 29, 1865, by Mr. Johnson. The excepted classes
-could vote only upon receiving a special pardon from the President. In
-other respects the election would be conducted in accordance with the
-constitution of 1852.
-
-By a Democratic convention, held October 2 in New Orleans, at which
-twenty-one parishes were unrepresented, Mr. Wells was unanimously
-nominated for Governor. The preamble to a body of resolutions adopted on
-that occasion asserts that the issue which for four years had tried the
-strength of the Government had been made openly and manfully; that the
-decision having been adverse they now came forward in the same spirit of
-frankness and honor to support the Federal Government under the
-Constitution.
-
-The “National Democratic” party they believed to be the only agency by
-which radicalism, to which they imputed a tendency toward consolidation,
-could be successfully encountered, and through which the General
-Government could be restored to its pristine purity. On the subject of
-reorganization they endorsed President Johnson’s policy, which, it was
-alleged, preserved unimpaired the rights of the States and maintained
-their equality in the Union.
-
-Noticing a question already assuming importance, they declared that, in
-accordance with the constant adjudication of the Federal Supreme Court,
-persons of African descent could not be regarded as citizens of the
-United States; that under no circumstances could there exist any
-equality between the white and other races; that as the national
-Government was instituted by, so it was designed to be perpetuated for
-the exclusive benefit of, white men. For the time they were content with
-this oblique reference to the subject of negro suffrage. Another
-resolution advised the calling of a convention to frame a constitution
-for the State, that of 1864 being characterized as the creation of
-fraud, violence and corruption.
-
-This convention, which admitted the effectual abolition of slavery in
-the South, assumed that those who had sustained loss by the policy of
-emancipation could rightfully petition Congress for compensation. The
-repeal was also advocated of those statutes and ordinances not in
-harmony with the Federal Constitution. Believing it consonant with “the
-chivalrous magnanimity” of President Johnson the convention earnestly
-appealed for an early general amnesty and a prompt restitution of
-property.
-
-Almost a month preceding the meeting of this convention an address was
-circulated by the “National Conservative Union” party, whose
-representatives assembled one week later than the Democratic delegates.
-Its members opposed both an extension of suffrage to negroes and the
-calling of a new constitutional convention. Like the Democratic
-delegates they endorsed the reconstruction policy of the President. They
-approved the attitude of their conservative Northern friends who opposed
-radicalism and an elevation of the freedmen to political equality with
-whites. The doctrine of secession was repudiated, and to the payment of
-all obligations created in carrying on the war they declared themselves
-inflexibly opposed. They, too, favored the speedy passage of an act of
-general amnesty as well as a repeal of the confiscation law.
-
-Governor Wells was also the choice of this convention. He accepted both
-nominations and perceived no inconsistency in doing so, never, he
-asserted, having been a strict party man. Mr. Wells, who had formerly
-been a Red River planter, proved his loyalty to the Federal Government
-by coming within the Union lines as soon as they were established, and
-bringing with him his slaves, thereby endangering somewhat his
-ownership.
-
-Though he had not yet returned to his home, the friends of Henry Watkins
-Allen, the late Confederate executive, named him as their candidate for
-governor.
-
-In the election, which was held at the appointed time, the entire vote
-polled was 27,808, of which Governor Wells received 23,312, and
-ex-Governor Allen, 5,497. In every county except one the Democratic
-ticket for members of the Legislature was successful.
-
-Perhaps the most instructive incident of this contest was the part
-played by those known as “Radical” Republicans. These held a
-mass-meeting in the city of New Orleans on November 13 at which were
-adopted resolutions claiming the election to Congress of Henry C.
-Warmoth as territorial Delegate. When he subsequently appeared in
-Washington his case was brought to the attention of the House by
-Thaddeus Stevens, who offered, December 20, 1865, what purported to be a
-certificate of Warmoth’s election as Delegate from the “Territory of
-Louisiana.” On request of the Pennsylvania leader this document was
-referred to the Joint Committee on Reconstruction.[449]
-
-This extreme element, which assumed to regard Louisiana as a Territory,
-polled 19,000 votes, most of which were alleged to have been cast by
-colored men. It declared the State organization repugnant to the Federal
-Constitution both in law and effect. The President, it was asserted,
-could not restore Louisiana by proclamation, for reinstatement could be
-accomplished in a constitutional manner only by petitioning Congress for
-admission whenever a majority of the people deemed such a course
-expedient, and the temper of the whites, nine tenths of whom were
-disloyal, rendered it inadvisable at that time to take such a step. The
-meeting rejoiced that the Republican party in the North had triumphed in
-the recent elections, for these victories pointed to ultimate success.
-The premature admission of Louisiana Congressmen, by placing the Union
-people under rebel rule, would be disastrous. However, as loyal citizens
-they would confine themselves to peaceable means of redress.
-
-Warmoth appears shortly before the end of the war to have gone into
-Louisiana with the Union army, in which he is said by one authority to
-have acquired the reputation of a brave soldier and by another to have
-merited dismissal from its ranks.[450] By organizing the freedmen and
-insisting upon their political rights he won their confidence; his
-shrewdness and engaging address retained their gratitude. In this
-election his adherents not only sought to determine the Federal
-relations of Louisiana, but also conferred upon negroes the privilege of
-voting, for there was then no law of either the General or State
-government investing them with any such right.
-
-The Legislature, which was convoked in special session, assembled at New
-Orleans on the 23d of November. The Governor’s message on that occasion
-related chiefly to such local objects as required the attention of the
-lawmaking body. By recommending an election of United States Senators
-Mr. Wells repudiated the action of the General Assembly, which, at the
-preceding session, had appointed Messrs. Smith and Cutler to represent
-the State. Acting upon the Governor’s suggestion, the latter was again
-chosen, with Hahn for his colleague. These appointments were intended to
-fill vacancies caused by the withdrawal, February 5, 1861, of John
-Slidell and Judah P. Benjamin.
-
-One of the first acts of the lower House was the selection of a
-committee to consider a resolution which provided for assembling a
-convention to draft a State constitution. For reasons already assigned
-the majority report of this committee recommended the calling of a
-convention and counselled the Governor to order an election in which the
-question could be voted on by the people. The minority recognized the
-constitution of 1864 as binding, and on the ground of public economy
-preferred its amendment, especially as it had already acted favorably on
-the abolition of slavery. The adoption of the Thirteenth Amendment and
-the repeal of the ordinance of secession were mentioned by them as
-conditions essential to the recognition of Louisiana as a State and as
-indispensable to a restoration of all the privileges which that
-condition implied.
-
-As early as February 17 preceding the Legislature established under the
-constitution of 1864 had ratified the Thirteenth Article amending the
-Constitution. By a vote of two to one the Assembly again approved that
-action. The session came to an end on the 22d of December.
-
-This commonwealth, a veritable Eden when the strife began, had been
-sadly changed in its progress. A generous Government, indeed, by
-repairing the levees protected her fairest parishes from inundation. The
-same beneficent authority maintained many public institutions of charity
-that must else have ceased their noble work. Distress and want had
-already invaded that once prosperous community, and in the city of New
-Orleans alone 16,000 persons were dependent upon and maintained by
-Federal bounty. Silence reigned in the great cotton market of the world.
-The wreck of her public finances has elsewhere been described. Her
-opulent commerce had been destroyed, agriculture everywhere languished.
-Plantations that but lately teemed with rich harvests showed the effects
-of interrupted cultivation, and the mighty river that had annually
-poured into her metropolis the productions of a dozen States now flowed
-untroubled to the Gulf.
-
-To show the attitude of Congress toward the Alexandria government events
-in Virginia have in part been anticipated. The Legislature of the loyal
-portion of that Commonwealth was composed of members from only ten
-counties and parts of other counties. It was by delegates from this
-restricted area that the constitution of 1864 was framed and adopted.
-
-By this instrument the elective franchise was confined to male whites
-that had attained the age of twenty-one years, who had resided twelve
-months in the State and were willing to swear support of the Federal
-Constitution and the restored government; but officials and voters were
-required in addition to make oath, or affirmation, that they had not,
-since January 1, 1864, voluntarily given aid or assistance to those in
-rebellion against the General Government. The Assembly, however, was
-empowered, when it was deemed safe to do so, to restore to citizenship
-all who would be disfranchised by this provision of the organic law.
-
-Involuntary servitude was also abolished. While great numbers of negroes
-were thus set at liberty, nothing was then done to elevate them to the
-dignity of citizens. The question of making them voters was, of course,
-still more remote.
-
-The General Assembly was prohibited from making provision for the
-payment of any debt or obligation created in the name of the
-Commonwealth by the pretended State authorities at Richmond; and it was
-also forbidden to permit any county, city or corporation to levy or
-collect taxes for the discharge of any debt incurred for the purpose of
-aiding any rebellion against the State or the United States, or to
-provide for the payment of any bonds held by rebels in arms.[451]
-
-The Confederate capital, long deemed impregnable, fell on the 2d of
-April. Within a week came tidings of the surrender of Lee’s entire army,
-greatly reduced in numbers, it is true, but hitherto the main reliance
-of the Confederacy. Mr. Lincoln, apparently, was not altogether without
-expectation of some such fortunate outcome of the extensive preparations
-that had been made for ensuring the success of the final campaign, and
-on the following day, April 10, 1865, he sent from Washington to the
-executive head of the restored State this telegram:
-
- =Governor Pierpont=, _Alexandria, Virginia_:
-
- Please come up and see me at once.[452]
-
- =A. Lincoln.=
-
-Mr. Pierpont, as the writer has been credibly informed, called by
-request on President Lincoln during the week of his assassination,
-evidently in response to this telegram, when they spent three hours
-together in conversation. No third party appears to have been present at
-their consultation. The topic discussed it is not difficult to imagine.
-Shortly before his death, which occurred in March, 1899, Governor
-Pierpont informed his daughter that he never believed Andrew Johnson
-carried out Mr. Lincoln’s idea in the reconstruction of Virginia.[453]
-That policy, however, had not then, April 10, assumed definitive form in
-the mind of the President himself, for he expressly stated to Mr.
-Pierpont that he had no plan for reorganization, but must be guided by
-events. His last public utterance establishes the correctness of this
-statement.
-
-Four weeks later President Johnson by executive order recognized the
-Alexandria establishment, and toward the close of the same month, May
-26, 1865, Mr. Pierpont, with other members of his government, arrived in
-Richmond. The sneer of Thaddeus Stevens that the archives and property
-of loyal Virginia were conveyed to the new capital in an ambulance
-affords at least an adequate idea of the feeble condition of the
-restored State. But notwithstanding the absence of all pomp and his lack
-of the usual emblems of authority the Governor, we are told, was
-received in a very flattering manner.
-
-Virginia, which emerged from the struggle crippled by the loss of an
-important part of her domain, suffered more in the destruction of the
-elements of wealth than any of her errant sisters, and though entering
-somewhat reluctantly on a career of rebellion, she was the only member
-of the Confederacy that was permanently weakened. Industry could never
-repair the alienation of her territory. While it may appear that the
-General Government acted harshly toward a State to which the Union owed
-so much, the preceding pages show clearly that the loss of her
-trans-Alleghany counties was due chiefly to an unwise administration of
-her internal affairs. Notwithstanding the statement of Mr. Blaine, the
-writer does not think that Virginia was singled out for punishment. But
-even apart from her dismemberment the ravages of war fell most heavily
-on the Old Dominion. There it was that the Army of the Potomac and the
-Army of Northern Virginia contended longest for supremacy. Troops in
-their marches and countermarches foraged liberally on her people,
-sometimes without distinction of friend or foe. Concrete illustrations
-will occur to every reader acquainted with the military history of the
-great conflict. The devastation of the Shenandoah valley was only a
-striking example of what was constantly occurring within more restricted
-areas of the State. Barns and dwelling houses, fences and crops perished
-in the universal destruction. Cattle were either killed or carried off,
-and even the implements of husbandry were frequently devoted to the
-flames. The injury thus sustained by agricultural interests was followed
-in many districts by an alarming scarcity of food during the ensuing
-years, and to escape starvation numbers of her citizens fled from once
-happy homes. Newspaper correspondents in their progress through the
-State describe scenes of wretchedness and distress. In exploring for
-their journals wide regions that had recently been the theatre of war
-they witnessed spectacles of want, hunger and despair. Uncultivated
-tracts in the wake of the armies contributed to heighten the picture of
-desolation. Richmond, the centre of so many interesting historical
-associations, though long exempt from pillage, perished ultimately in a
-conflagration. In short, nearly every landmark of prosperity was effaced
-by the calamities of war.
-
-To repair these ravages, to repeople these solitudes, to revive commerce
-and agriculture, to restore tranquillity and maintain order was the
-stupendous task before Governor Pierpont, in whose public career it may
-be regarded as the second stage. After the formation of West Virginia,
-in which he had acted a conspicuous and honorable part, and one that can
-scarcely be overrated, his exertions barely sufficed to preserve the
-continuity of a loyal government in his native State. In the former
-undertaking he had the coöperation of nearly every person of
-consideration beyond the Alleghanies. His efforts in Richmond, however,
-received but indifferent support. Whites of little influence and negroes
-who were still but prospective citizens made up the greater number of
-his adherents. A handful of secessionists, it is true, set the example
-of obedience to the laws, though they found among their late associates
-but few imitators. It was from such material and in such circumstances
-that Mr. Pierpont was to reconstruct the grand old Commonwealth. The
-Governor, however, applied himself at once to the duties imposed by his
-office. He appointed persons to reorganize the various counties by
-holding elections for local officers, though in numerous instances he
-merely authorized to act for the preservation of peace those citizens
-whom the military officers might select. The difficulties of the
-situation were such that he summoned the Legislature to meet in special
-session at Richmond on the 20th of June.
-
-In response to this request the lawmaking body assembled at the
-appointed time. The Executive message on that occasion related concisely
-what had been done by the restored government subsequent to June, 1861.
-It also stated that since his arrival at the capital the Governor had
-conversed with intelligent men of every shade of political opinion and
-representing every part of Virginia. He was convinced, he said, that if
-the test of loyalty prescribed by their constitution was enforced in the
-election and qualification of officers, it would render organization
-impracticable in most of the counties. It was folly to suppose that a
-State could be administered “under a republican form of government where
-in a large portion of the State, nineteen twentieths of the people are
-disfranchised and cannot hold office. But, fortunately, by the terms of
-the constitution, the General Assembly has control of this subject. The
-restricting clauses of the constitution were devised in time of war....
-Men accept the facts developed by the logic of the past four years,
-declare that they have taken the oath of allegiance to the Government of
-the United States without mental reservation, and intend to be, and
-remain, loyal to the Government of their fathers. It would not be in
-accordance with the spirit of that noble Anglo-Saxon race, from which we
-boast our common origin, to strike a fallen brother, or impose upon him
-humiliating terms after a fair surrender.”[454]
-
-For the oath required by the State constitution he suggested the
-substitution of that prescribed by the President, or one of similar
-character; he also recommended the passage of an act to legalize
-marriage between persons of color, and the appointment of a day for
-holding elections of Representatives to Congress and for members of the
-Legislature in those counties where none had been chosen.
-
-The subject of disfranchisement was immediately taken up in both Houses,
-and the result of their action was to allow the suffrage to those who,
-upon taking the amnesty oath, had not held office under the Confederacy
-or its State governments. Those who had done so could neither vote nor
-hold office. The Legislature submitted to the people, to be determined
-at the election in October succeeding, the question of removing this
-restriction upon officeholders.
-
-This action of the Assembly was followed by the appearance of a large
-number of competitors for office, and considerable interest was
-awakened. Finding, however, that they would be unable to take the oath
-required by Congress many of the candidates for the national Legislature
-withdrew. The President was asked by some citizens of Albemarle County
-whether, in his opinion, Congress would probably insist upon the oath.
-The following reply to their inquiry was made by Attorney-General Speed:
-
- The President has referred to me your letter, dated Charlottesville,
- Virginia, September, 1865, and I am instructed by him to say that he
- has no more means of knowing what Congress may do in regard to the
- oath about which you inquire than any other citizen. It is his
- earnest wish that loyal and true men, to whom no objections can be
- made, should be elected to Congress.
-
- This is not an official letter, but a simple expression of
- individual opinion and wish.[455]
-
-The election was held on October 12, the vote polled being the smallest
-ever given in the history of the State. In the first eight Congressional
-districts, however, it exceeded 40,000. The constitutional amendment met
-with very little opposition, many counties voting unanimously to remove
-the restriction upon the suffrage.[456] The Assembly then chosen
-convened at Richmond on December 4, 1865, the time fixed for the meeting
-of Congress.
-
-While it is true that there were grounds for apprehension regarding the
-stability of the new governments instituted in these four States, the
-principal cause of anxiety to the Administration was the disorganized
-political and social condition of the remaining members of the late
-Confederacy. It was universally agreed that with the destruction of its
-military power the authority of that government was completely
-extinguished. From that moment until the revival within them of Federal
-laws these commonwealths were destitute of all legislation of a general
-character. Under our dual principle of government, however, this could
-be endured temporarily. But the absence of a central organism would soon
-be evident in the reappearance of those alarming symptoms which marked
-American political and industrial life in the critical period between
-the Treaty of Paris, in 1783, and the inauguration, nearly six years
-later, of the present national system. In that unhappy interval,
-however, the authority of the various States was ample for the
-regulation of domestic affairs, while in the deranged and confused times
-succeeding the Rebellion seven entire commonwealths were left without
-any general or any particular government. Their territory, indeed, had
-passed under control of the Union forces, for when the Administration of
-Jefferson Davis was overthrown the disloyal State establishments, of
-which it was only an emanation, fell likewise. Though internal progress
-was not seriously to be expected in this situation, tolerable order was
-preserved by Federal soldiers, who occupied the entire region between
-the Potomac and the Rio Grande, for even in those States reorganized
-under Executive auspices civil authority was not yet established on a
-foundation sufficiently secure to maintain itself without assistance
-from the military power of the nation.
-
-Besides the absence of all civil government there were other elements of
-discord that tended to increase the confusion in these States. Their
-population, it need scarcely be observed, was not homogeneous. The
-decree of emancipation together with the incidents of war had brought
-freedom to almost the entire slave population of the South. This was
-soon to be confirmed by the proposed constitutional amendment, which was
-designed both to place beyond question the status of freedmen and to
-strike the shackles from the limbs of the last bondman in the loyal as
-well as in the disloyal States. About the middle of December nearly
-4,000,000 negroes bereft of the hand that bestowed their daily
-sustenance found themselves suddenly dependent for support upon their
-own exertions. The General Government, it is true, by creating the
-Bureau of Freedmen and Refugees, diminished considerably the danger from
-this source, though this relief by no means solved the problem of
-transforming the recent slave into a useful member of society; besides,
-the bureau itself subsequently degenerated into a fruitful source of
-abuse.
-
-Nor were Southern whites by any means unanimous as to the best policy to
-adopt in the circumstances in which an unsuccessful rebellion had placed
-them. Between Union men and secessionists there existed a feeling of
-extreme bitterness. Even among members of the latter class there was
-considerable difference of opinion, as in North Carolina, where the
-former Whigs, by the moderation of their views as much as by constantly
-agitating the question of reconstruction, had somewhat embarrassed the
-Richmond authorities while war was still flagrant. Add to these causes
-of disorder the discontent of thousands of disbanded soldiers who
-returned in the gloom of defeat not infrequently to ruined homes and
-wasted fields. Then, too, there was the disappointment and humiliation
-naturally felt by a brave and impulsive people who had fought gallantly
-in support of a cause condemned, indeed, by the civilized world, but
-believed by them to be not only just but indispensable to their
-prosperity and happiness.
-
-Though a volume could be profitably employed in describing, town by town
-and county by county, the extent of destruction inflicted on the South,
-a few brief paragraphs must suffice to suggest an imperfect idea of the
-enormous loss of wealth sustained by that section. The wreck of four
-members of the Confederacy has been noticed in the preceding pages. That
-rapid sketch, however, took no account of the damage to individuals by
-the liberation of their slaves, for, except in those instances where
-negroes left the commonwealth, that was not in any sense a loss to the
-State. If it were, a community, by reducing to servitude a part of its
-inhabitants, could at any time increase the amount of its capital. It is
-only from the slaveholder’s point of view, therefore, that emancipation
-can be regarded as a pecuniary loss. Immense damage was sustained by
-both North and South in the withdrawal of millions of men from the
-various fields of production. The energy of these multitudes, which was
-rapidly making the United States the most opulent and powerful nation on
-the globe, had exerted itself for four years in the destruction of
-former accumulations.
-
-Almost at the moment that the star of the Confederacy had begun to
-decline the imperial State of Georgia, hitherto exempt from punishment,
-was wasted by fire and sword. Sometimes the Southern, sometimes the
-Northern army stripped the country of everything capable of supporting
-life. Crops had been harvested, indeed, but this served only to
-facilitate their destruction. In the retreat of Johnston and the advance
-of Sherman toward Atlanta highways had been injured, bridges burned and
-many lines of railroad completely destroyed. Dwellings, when they
-interfered with military operations, were levelled by even the
-Confederate army, and the Union forces could not be expected to show
-greater consideration for the property of public enemies. General Hood
-not only wasted the vast stores accumulated in Atlanta but burned
-habitations when they stood in the way of his fortifications. Though
-winter was rapidly approaching, the Federal commander deemed it
-necessary after the capture of that stronghold to expel from their
-abodes a considerable part of its population. A brief truce, it is true,
-enabled the miserable inhabitants to remove a part of their effects
-farther south; thousands, outcasts from their ruined homes, were thus
-driven to wander among strangers whose bounty had already been taxed by
-earlier fugitives; both classes were dependent for their maintenance on
-the precarious charity of an impoverished people. Crowded dwellings
-forced great numbers in the inclement weather to seek shelter in the
-neighboring forests, where they found a safe refuge, indeed, but a
-scanty subsistence. Over the region traversed by Sherman and Johnston
-the forces of Hood soon after traced a devastating march northward to
-Dalton. The mischiefs of the great march to Savannah have frequently
-been described. Its beginning was announced by the blaze of burning
-buildings, and when the last of the Federal soldiers had set their faces
-toward the sea the city of Atlanta was little more than a mass of
-smoking ruins. Though the region traversed was probably the richest in
-the State, extensive misery accompanied the progress of the army. The
-meat and the vegetables needed for his command were taken by the Union
-General. Horses, mules and wagons were freely appropriated; slaves also
-were assisted to escape from their masters. Mills and cotton-gins were
-frequently devoted to the flames. In Milledgeville factories,
-storehouses and public buildings were destroyed. The principal edifices
-of Macon perished about the same time. Indeed, Augusta was the only
-considerable place in the State that escaped serious harm. The people in
-northwestern Georgia were in the utmost destitution, large families
-being frequently for whole days without food; venerable persons of both
-sexes, sinking under the weight of years and infirmities, often walked
-fifteen and even twenty miles to procure food enough to prevent
-starvation. The injury to all the usual means of transportation greatly
-increased the difficulty of bringing relief. When the conflict had
-ended, however, Federal officers did what they could to alleviate the
-almost universal distress, and their magnanimity was not without
-influence on the future conduct of many an ex-Confederate veteran.
-
-South Carolina, the fatal State that woke the sword of war, did not
-suffer greatly in the earlier stages of the conflict, though even then
-her foreign commerce was extinguished and her agriculture interrupted
-along the coast. Before its close, however, she was destined to
-experience most of its horrors. A restless generation of agitators had
-assiduously inculcated the notion that the South was ruthlessly
-oppressed by Yankee avarice. This teaching bore fruit, and the people of
-South Carolina, coming to regard themselves as little better than
-tributary slaves, were easily persuaded to resort to the wager of
-battle. With the progress of the contest this proud State was growing
-weaker within, hostile pressure was constantly increasing from without.
-Time at length and the fortunes of war had brought round their revenge,
-and when the veterans of Sherman turned northward from Savannah the
-Palmetto State was powerless to prevent, or seriously to retard, their
-advance. Transportation was greatly embarrassed by the destruction of
-the bridges as well as the tracks of almost every important railway
-within the State. Immense quantities of cotton and numbers of cotton
-warehouses, uncounted dwellings and depots, machine shops and foundries,
-as well as several sailing vessels and steamboats were consumed by
-flames. Besides these blackened memorial’s of disaster and defeat, the
-stately cities of Charleston and Columbia were almost simultaneously
-laid in ruins by great conflagrations. The inability of the civil
-authorities to furnish food for his army constrained General Sherman to
-forage for supplies. In this manner all the cattle, hogs, sheep and
-poultry, even the little stores of meal, treasured as the last barrier
-against want, were consumed, and the people left entirely without
-subsistence. To prevent general starvation the Confederate commander was
-compelled to distribute the rations of his soldiers among the wretched
-inhabitants. From various causes many ancient and wealthy families found
-themselves suddenly reduced to a condition of beggary, and so low was
-the condition of the public treasury that the Legislature as early as
-the mid-summer of 1865 had already begun seriously to discuss the
-question of repudiation.
-
-With some slight alterations this picture of South Carolina’s ills will
-serve for that of her northern and more deserving sister, so far at
-least as concerns those parts overrun by the contending hosts. The
-cessation of hostilities stopped the carnival of death and silenced the
-engines of destruction before half of North Carolina’s territory had
-been crossed. From the first years of the war there were numerous
-instances of privation among the loyalists of that State. Toward its
-close the more favored classes also began to feel the pressure of want.
-The negroes required and received assistance from the Freedmen’s Bureau.
-The whites, refugees as well as secessionists, were aided by the
-commanders of the rival forces.
-
-Florida, fortunately for her people, was so remote from the principal
-scenes of war that she felt few of its evils. Battles, it is true,
-occurred within the State, but they were as skirmishes compared to the
-bloody engagements which took place elsewhere. The same observations are
-substantially true of Texas. A fringe of Mississippi’s territory, too,
-had been swept by the furnace-blast of war. The extensive movements
-around Corinth, Iuka, Vicksburg, Jackson and Port Hudson will suggest
-the extent of destruction that visited the northern half of that State.
-There existed considerable privation in that section, though no general
-distress as in other members of the Confederacy.
-
-All the Gulf States, however, were not equally fortunate. Though long
-impending, the fate of Alabama came swiftly. Almost in the same hour she
-was invaded from the north and menaced from the south. A large portion
-of her material resources was already exhausted when the cavalry raids
-of General Wilson spread terror and devastation through the interior
-counties. The city of Selma was laid in ashes; smaller towns and
-villages were likewise consumed by flames; schools and colleges, private
-buildings and public edifices perished in the universal wreck. Monuments
-of ruin were everywhere conspicuous throughout a region the most
-productive, probably, in all the South. Silence and desolation reigned
-where but lately stood proud and hospitable mansions. Nor was the
-destruction of wealth or its elements the only injury sustained, for
-industry would soon repair the losses of capital. Labor itself had been
-severely crippled. Of the army of 122,000 soldiers which Alabama
-furnished to the cause of secession 35,000, it was estimated, had been
-left on the field of battle, and at least an equal number had been
-disabled for life. Mobile, enriched by the cotton trade, was silent as
-some ancient necropolis. Her splendid commerce was ruined; her stately
-ships were gone, and the wave broke unheeded on the shores of her
-deserted harbor.
-
-This hurried summary conveys only a very inadequate notion of the
-complex problem which Mr. Johnson was forced to consider. His arduous
-duty was to repair the ravages of military violence, to evoke order from
-the discord of civil strife, to heal the wounds which the imperious
-power of slavery had inflicted upon industries and institutions; in a
-word, to restore the harmony of that Republic founded by the wisdom of
-Washington and preserved by the policy of Lincoln. The sentiments of the
-Chief Magistrate who was about to attempt this difficult but
-indispensable task it is now time to consider. His deliberate
-conclusions and his spontaneous utterances are best examined, it is
-believed, in something like chronological order.
-
-On June 9, 1864, almost a year before his accession to the Presidency,
-he had said in addressing the people of Nashville:
-
- But in calling a convention to restore the State, who shall restore
- and reëstablish it?... Shall he who brought this misery upon the
- State be permitted to control its destinies? If this be so, then all
- this precious blood of our brave soldiers and officers so freely
- poured out will have been wantonly spilled....
-
- Why all this carnage and devastation? It was that treason might be
- put down and traitors punished. Therefore I say that traitors should
- take a back seat in the work of restoration. If there be but five
- thousand men in Tennessee loyal to the Constitution, loyal to
- freedom, loyal to justice, these true and faithful men should
- control the work of reorganization and reformation absolutely. I say
- that the traitor has ceased to be a citizen, and in joining the
- rebellion has become a public enemy. He forfeited his right to vote
- with loyal men when he renounced his citizenship and sought to
- destroy our Government.... If we are so cautious about foreigners
- who voluntarily renounce their homes to live with us what should we
- say to the traitor, who, although born and reared among us, has
- raised a parricidal hand against the Government which always
- protected him? My judgment is that he should be subjected to a
- severe ordeal before he is restored to citizenship.... Before these
- repenting rebels can be trusted, let them bring forth the fruits of
- repentance.... Treason must be made odious, and traitors must be
- punished and impoverished. Their great plantations must be seized,
- and divided into small farms, and sold to honest, industrious men.
- The day for protecting the lands and negroes of these authors of the
- rebellion is past. It is high time it was.[457]
-
-Though he had never been accustomed to conceal his opinions on questions
-of public interest, and though there was no reason for supposing that
-his views on reorganization had changed in the months intervening
-between the Nashville speech and his inauguration, there was
-considerable curiosity, if not indeed impatience, to learn his
-sentiments on the paramount issue before the nation. Even the
-unparalleled excitement and profound regret occasioned by the
-assassination of Mr. Lincoln could not make men forget the grave
-questions which the changed conditions of the Union presented for the
-consideration of statesmen. Therefore the brief remarks addressed by the
-new Executive to those who were present at his inauguration were eagerly
-scrutinized for some indication of the principles which he was likely to
-adopt in the conduct of his Administration. The absence, however, of
-even a hint on that interesting subject gave universal disappointment,
-and anxious patriots were not reassured by his failure to announce any
-expression of a purpose to continue the policy of his predecessor. By
-his intimate friends this omission was construed as an intention to
-pursue in dealing with the South a less generous course than, it was
-believed, Mr. Lincoln had marked out.
-
-Among the more extreme “Radicals” this surmise occasioned little regret,
-for they did not object to the accession of an Executive made, as they
-believed, of sterner stuff than the late incumbent. From his fierce
-denunciation of secessionists both while military governor of Tennessee
-and subsequently, it was generally understood that more stringent
-methods would be adopted by Mr. Johnson than had hitherto been employed.
-Among other things he said in his inaugural: “As to an indication of any
-policy which may be pursued by me in the administration of the
-Government, I have to say that that must be left for development, as the
-administration progresses. The message or declaration must be made by
-the acts as they transpire. The only assurance that I can now give of
-the future, is by reference to the past.”[458]
-
-Delegations of citizens who waited upon him to tender their cordial
-support were assured in the most explicit terms that his past course
-was an indication of what his future policy would be. Three days after
-entering upon the duties of his office a deputation of distinguished
-persons called on Mr. Johnson under circumstances at once unusual and
-touching. The remains of the late President still lay in the White
-House. Before the sad procession of the dead left the national Capital
-for Springfield, Governor Oglesby, with other gentlemen from Illinois,
-called to assure the new Executive of their respect and confidence.
-His record, they declared, gave assurance to their State that in his
-hands they could safely trust the destinies of the Republic. The
-President responded in a speech discussing a far wider range of topics
-than he had treated in his inaugural. Appropriate reference to his
-predecessor, the tragical close of whose career was scarcely alluded
-to in his first address, was made in this more extended discourse. He
-spoke with unaffected and profound emotion. “The beloved of all hearts
-has been assassinated,” said he, “and when we trace this crime to its
-cause, when we remember the source whence the assassin drew his
-inspiration, and then look at the result, we stand yet more astounded
-at this most barbarous, most diabolical act.... We can trace its cause
-through successive steps back to that source which is the spring of
-all our woes. No one can say that if the perpetrator of this fiendish
-deed be arrested, he should not undergo the extremest penalty of the
-law known for crime: none will say that mercy should interpose. But is
-he alone guilty? Here, gentlemen, you perhaps expect me to present
-some indication of my future policy. One thing I will say: every era
-teaches its lesson. The times we live in are not without instruction.
-The American people must be taught—if they do not already feel—that
-treason is a crime and must be punished.... When we turn to the
-criminal code we find arson laid down as a crime with its appropriate
-penalty. We find theft and murder denounced as crimes, and their
-appropriate penalty prescribed; and there, too, we find the last and
-highest of crimes,—treason.... Let it be engraven on every mind that
-treason is a crime, and traitors shall suffer its penalty.... I do not
-harbor bitter or resentful feelings towards any.... When the question
-of exercising mercy comes before me it will be considered calmly,
-judicially—remembering that I am the Executive of the Nation. I know
-men love to have their names spoken of in connection with acts of
-mercy, and how easy it is to yield to that impulse. But we must never
-forget that what may be mercy to the individual is cruelty to the
-State.”
-
-Commenting on this speech Mr. Blaine, from whom it is quoted, says that
-it “was reported by an accomplished stenographer, and was submitted to
-Mr. Johnson’s inspection before publication. It contained a declaration
-intimating to its hearers, if not explicitly assuring them, that ‘the
-policy of Mr. Lincoln in the past shall be my policy in the future.’
-When in reading the report he came to this passage, Mr. Johnson queried
-whether his words had not been in some degree misapprehended; and while
-he was engaged with the stenographer in modifying the form of
-expression, Mr. Preston King, of New York, who was constantly by his
-side as adviser, interposed the suggestion that all reference to the
-subject be stricken out. To this Mr. Johnson promptly assented. He had
-undoubtedly gone farther than he intended in speaking to Mr. Lincoln’s
-immediate friends, and the correction—inspired by one holding the
-radical views of Mr. King—was equivalent to a declaration that the
-policy of Mr. Lincoln had been more conservative than that which he
-intended to pursue.”[459]
-
-To a deputation of New Hampshire citizens he said in part: “This
-Government is now passing through a fiery, and, let us hope, its last
-ordeal—one that will test its powers of endurance, and will determine
-whether it can do what its enemies have denied—suppress and punish
-treason.” Though he had been urged, he asserted, by friends whose good
-opinion he valued, he refrained from foreshadowing in a public manifesto
-the policy which would guide him. He further observed on this occasion:
-“I know it is easy, gentlemen, for any one who is so disposed, to
-acquire a reputation for clemency and mercy. But the public good
-imperatively requires a just discrimination in the exercise of these
-qualities.... To relieve one from the penalty of crime may be productive
-of national disaster. The American people must be taught to know and
-understand that treason is a crime.... Treason is a crime, and must be
-punished as a crime. It must not be regarded as a mere difference of
-political opinion. It must not be excused as an unsuccessful rebellion,
-to be overlooked and forgiven. It is a crime before which all others
-sink into insignificance; and in saying this it must not be considered
-that I am influenced by angry or revengeful feelings.” He added, that to
-those who had been deluded and deceived by designing men, to those who
-had been only technically guilty of treason, he would accord amnesty,
-leniency and mercy. On the instigators of rebellion, however, should be
-visited “the full penalty of their crimes.”[460]
-
-Replying, April 21, to an address of Governor Morton, who introduced a
-delegation from Indiana, he said: “Mine has been but one straightforward
-and unswerving course, and I see no reason why I should depart from
-it....
-
-“I hold it as a solemn obligation in any one of these States where the
-rebel armies have been driven back or expelled—I care not how small the
-number of Union men, if enough to man the ship of State—I hold it, I
-say, a high duty to protect and secure to them a republican form of
-government. This is no new opinion.... In adjusting and putting the
-government upon its legs again, I think the progress of this work must
-pass into the hands of its friends. If a State is to be nursed until it
-again gets strength, it must be nursed by its friends, and not smothered
-by its enemies.”[461] To this delegation he declared himself not less
-opposed to consolidation than to dissolution and disintegration. In a
-brief reply on the same day to a deputation from Ohio he added nothing
-of value to these observations, and on the 24th of April he addressed in
-a similar strain a body of exiles from the South.
-
-“The colored American asks but two things,” said the spokesman of a
-negro delegation about the same time, “that he have, first, complete
-emancipation, and secondly, full equality before American law.” To this
-the President replied, among other things, that he feared leading
-colored men did not “understand and appreciate the fact that they have
-friends on the south side of the line. They have, and they are as
-faithful and staunch as any north of the line. It may be a very easy
-thing, indeed popular, to be an emancipationist north of the line, but a
-very different thing to be such south of it. South of it, it costs a man
-effort, property, and perhaps life.”[462]
-
-Two months later, June 24, in replying to an address of a South Carolina
-committee, he said in part: “The friction of the rebellion has rubbed
-out the nature and character of slavery. The loyal men who were
-compelled to bow and submit to the rebellion should, now that the
-rebellion is ended, stand equal to loyal men everywhere. Hence the wish
-of reconstruction, and the trying to get back the States to the point at
-which they formerly moved in perfect harmony.” He reminded them that as
-an institution slavery was gone, and said there was no hope that the
-people of South Carolina would be admitted into either the Senate or the
-House of Representatives until by their conduct they had afforded
-evidence of this truth. In their circumstances the true policy was to
-restore the State government, not through military rule, but by the
-action of the people.[463]
-
-Desiring to relieve all loyal citizens and well-disposed persons from
-unnecessary trade restrictions, and to encourage a return to peaceful
-pursuits, the President removed, April 29, 1865, the interdict on all
-domestic and coastwise intercourse in that portion of the late
-Confederate States east of the Mississippi and within the lines of
-national military occupation. From this order, however, certain named
-articles contraband of war were excepted. Military and naval regulations
-in conflict with his proclamation were revoked. On May 22 following he
-announced that ports in the same district would be reopened to foreign
-commerce after July 1, 1865, though certain places in Texas were still
-denied this privilege.
-
-The insurrection hitherto existing in Tennessee was declared at an end
-on June 13, 1865. The authority of the United States, this Proclamation
-asserted, was unquestioned within the limits of that commonwealth, and
-duly commissioned Federal officials were in undisturbed exercise of
-their functions. All disabilities attaching to the State and its
-inhabitants were therefore removed; but nothing contained in the order
-was to be construed as affecting any of the penalties and forfeitures
-for treason which had previously been incurred.
-
-Ten days later, June 23, the blockade of Galveston and other ports
-beyond the Mississippi was rescinded. These were to be opened to foreign
-trade on the 1st of July succeeding. It was ordered, August 29, 1865,
-that after September 1 all restrictions upon internal, domestic and
-coastwise commerce be removed, so that even articles contraband of war
-might be imported into and sold in the late insurgent States, the
-necessity for prohibiting intercourse in those articles having in great
-measure ceased.
-
-In an order dated May 9, 1865, the President declared null and void all
-acts and proceedings of the military and civil organizations of Virginia
-which had been in rebellion against the General Government; also that
-all persons who should exercise or attempt to exercise any authority,
-jurisdiction or right under Jefferson Davis, and his confederates, or
-under John Letcher or William Smith,[464] and their confederates, or any
-pretended commission or authority issued by them, or any of them, since
-April 17, 1861, would be deemed and taken as in rebellion against the
-United States, and dealt with accordingly. By the same order the
-authority of the United States was revived within the geographical
-limits known as Virginia, and the heads of the several Executive
-Departments were instructed to enforce therein all Federal laws the
-administration of which belonged to their respective offices.
-
-To carry into effect the constitutional guaranty of a republican form of
-government and “afford the advantage and security of domestic laws, as
-well as to complete the reëstablishment of the authority of the laws of
-the United States, and the full and complete restoration of peace within
-the limits aforesaid, Francis H. Pierpont, Governor of the State of
-Virginia,” was assured of such assistance from the Federal authorities
-as was believed necessary in any lawful measures that he might adopt for
-extending the State government throughout that Commonwealth.[465]
-
-The Secretary of the Treasury was directed to nominate without delay
-assessors of taxes and collectors of customs and internal revenue, and
-such other officers of his Department as were authorized by law, to
-execute the revenue laws of the United States. Preference in making
-appointments was to be given to qualified loyal residents of the
-districts in which their respective duties were to be performed; but if
-suitable persons could not be found residing there, then citizens of
-other States or districts should be named.
-
-In the matter of appointments similar instructions were given to the
-Postmaster-General, who was empowered to establish post offices and post
-routes, and to enforce the postal laws of the United States in the State
-of Virginia.
-
-The heads of the remaining Executive Departments, State, War, Navy and
-Interior, were likewise ordered to enforce the acts of Congress
-pertaining to their respective offices. The judge of the United States
-District Court for Virginia was directed to hold courts in that
-Commonwealth, while it was made the duty of the Attorney-General to
-instruct the proper officers to libel and bring to judgment,
-confiscation and sale, property subject to confiscation, and to provide
-for the administration of justice within the said State in all matters
-of which the Federal courts had cognizance.
-
-It was this recognition of his government, and this assurance of
-support, that induced Mr. Pierpont less than three weeks afterward to
-remove his capital from Alexandria. An account of this event as well as
-of the nature of the Governor’s duties in his enlarged jurisdiction, has
-been anticipated.
-
-In recognizing Mr. Pierpont as Governor of Virginia, President Johnson
-merely concluded to retain for reconstruction what had already been
-accomplished by the loyal minority of that Commonwealth. Nor is it easy
-to perceive why, by rejecting what had been done, he should have
-increased the difficulties of a situation even then sufficiently
-complicated. While military governor of Tennessee he had executed, and,
-so far as appears, without remonstrance, all the measures recommended by
-Mr. Lincoln, so that when he succeeded to the Presidency he was to some
-extent committed to the policy of his predecessor. He preserved his
-consistency by endeavoring to maintain that system in which he had
-formerly acquiesced, and in sustaining the reconstructed governments of
-Louisiana, Arkansas, Tennessee and Virginia it is somewhat hazardous to
-affirm that he acted unwisely. More than this the adherents of President
-Lincoln could not reasonably have expected. Mr. Johnson was not,
-however, required by any consideration of moment to apply that mode of
-restoration to the seven remaining States; nor is it by any means
-certain that he had a legal right to do so. With President Lincoln the
-problem was to preserve the Union. To effect that object he believed it
-necessary to institute loyal governments, and his action in so doing
-appears to have been clearly within his powers as Commander-in-Chief.
-Had his course been unwise or even prejudicial to national interests,
-the reorganization of those States was still a legitimate war measure to
-which his discretion undoubtedly extended. When Andrew Johnson became
-President, however, the nature of the problem had greatly changed, for
-even though no proclamation had yet announced the termination of the
-Rebellion, hostilities had entirely ceased before he issued the first of
-his orders on reconstruction. It was only by something like a legal
-fiction, therefore, that the war powers could longer be exercised. It is
-believed that his failure to recognize the different circumstances was
-an error of judgment. The danger of a renewal of the conflict was not
-sufficiently real to justify a continuance of the unlimited authority
-that might be deemed necessary in time of war. He was aware that
-Congress had refused to admit representatives or to count electoral
-votes from those States reorganized during the Rebellion, when the
-action of the Executive rested on the firm, if somewhat undefined,
-foundation of the war powers. After a majority, even in these
-circumstances, had pronounced against that system, on what ground could
-the new President base his expectation of success? Without first
-assuring himself of the coöperation of the Legislative branch he should
-not have undertaken the arduous task of reviving Union governments in
-those commonwealths where even the very image of civil authority had
-been effaced. Perhaps he had been convinced that the method of
-restoration was analogous to the process of terminating war with a
-foreign power in which the initiative is to be taken by the Executive
-Department of Government. On this subject Mr. Blaine acutely remarks,
-that, “There is nothing of which a public officer can be so easily
-persuaded as of the enlarged jurisdiction that pertains to his
-station.”[466] It was while executing his measures of reconstruction
-that Mr. Lincoln discovered the real sentiments and, to his surprise, no
-doubt, encountered the determined opposition of Congress. In the case of
-his successor the same excuse cannot be urged, for he was aware of the
-temper of the Republican majority, and appears to have consulted only
-his courage in espousing a cause already condemned by many of the most
-influential leaders of the party to which he principally owed his
-election.
-
-As the order recognizing the Alexandria government marked no distinct
-Executive policy, speculation could still amuse or employ itself on the
-expected announcement by the new President. The first step in that
-momentous undertaking was the appointment, May 29, 1865, of William W.
-Holden as Provisional Governor of North Carolina. The order promulgating
-that measure was as follows:
-
- Whereas the fourth section of the fourth article of the Constitution
- of the United States declares that the United States shall guarantee
- to every State in the Union a republican form of government, and
- shall protect each of them against invasion and domestic violence;
- and whereas the President of the United States is, by the
- Constitution, made commander-in-chief of the army and navy, as well
- as chief civil executive officer of the United States, and is bound
- by solemn oath faithfully to execute the office of President of the
- United States, and to take care that the laws be faithfully
- executed; and whereas the rebellion, which has been waged by a
- portion of the people of the United States against the properly
- constituted authorities of the Government thereof, in the most
- violent and revolting form, but whose organized and armed forces
- have now been almost entirely overcome, has, in its revolutionary
- progress, deprived the people of the State of North Carolina of all
- civil government; and whereas it becomes necessary and proper to
- carry out and enforce the obligations of the United States to the
- people of North Carolina, in securing them in the enjoyment of a
- republican form of government:
-
- Now, therefore, in obedience to the high and solemn duties imposed
- upon me by the Constitution of the United States, and for the
- purpose of enabling the loyal people of said State to organize a
- State government, whereby justice may be established, domestic
- tranquillity insured, and loyal citizens protected in all their
- rights of life, liberty, and property, I, Andrew Johnson, President
- of the United States, and Commander-in-Chief of the army and navy of
- the United States, do hereby appoint William W. Holden, Provisional
- Governor of the State of North Carolina, whose duty it shall be, at
- the earliest practicable period, to prescribe such rules and
- regulations as may be necessary and proper for convening a
- convention, composed of delegates to be chosen by that portion of
- the people of said State who are loyal to the United States, and no
- others, for the purpose of altering or amending the constitution
- thereof; and with authority to exercise, within the limits of said
- State, all the powers necessary and proper to enable such loyal
- people of the State of North Carolina to restore said State to its
- constitutional relations to the Federal Government, and to present
- such a republican form of State government as will entitle the State
- to the guarantee of the United States therefor, and its people to
- protection by the United States against invasion, insurrection, and
- domestic violence; _Provided_, that in any election that may be
- hereafter held for choosing delegates to any State convention, as
- aforesaid, no person shall be qualified as an elector, or shall be
- eligible as a member of such convention, unless he shall have
- previously taken the oath of amnesty, as set forth in the
- President’s proclamation of May 29, A. D. 1865, and is a voter
- qualified as prescribed by the Constitution and laws of the State of
- North Carolina, in force immediately before the 20th day of May,
- 1861, the date of the so-called ordinance of secession; and the said
- convention when convened, or the Legislature that may be thereafter
- assembled, will prescribe the qualifications of electors, and the
- eligibility of persons to hold office under the Constitution and
- laws of the State, a power the people of the several States
- composing the Federal Union have rightfully exercised from the
- origin of the Government to the present time.
-
- And I do hereby direct:
-
- _First._ That the military commander of the Department, and all
- officers and persons in the military and naval service aid and
- assist the said Provisional Governor in carrying into effect this
- proclamation, and they are enjoined to abstain from, in any way,
- hindering, impeding or discouraging the loyal people from the
- organization of a State Government, as herein authorized.
-
-Then followed instructions, similar to those contained in the order of
-May 9, relative to Virginia, directing the heads of the several
-Executive Departments to enforce those Federal laws in North Carolina of
-which the administration belonged to their respective offices.
-
-Somewhat earlier on the same day was published an Amnesty Proclamation,
-renewing in effect the provisions of that issued by Mr. Lincoln on the
-8th of December, 1863. It increased, however, the number of classes
-excepted from the benefits of the original offer by adding the
-following:
-
- All persons who have been or are absentees from the United States
- for the purpose of aiding the rebellion.
-
- All military and naval officers in the rebel service, who were
- educated by the Government in the Military Academy at West Point or
- the United States Naval Academy.
-
- All persons who held the pretended offices of governors of States in
- insurrection against the United States.
-
- All persons who left their homes within the jurisdiction and
- protection of the United States, and passed beyond the Federal
- military lines into the pretended confederate States for the purpose
- of aiding the rebellion.
-
- All persons who have been engaged in the destruction of the commerce
- of the United States upon the high seas, and all persons who have
- made raids into the United States from Canada, or been engaged in
- destroying the commerce of the United States upon the lakes and
- rivers that separate the British Provinces from the United States.
-
- All persons who, at the time when they seek to obtain the benefits
- hereof by taking the oath herein prescribed, are in military, naval,
- or civil confinement, or custody, or under bonds of the civil,
- military, or naval authorities, or agents of the United States, as
- prisoners of war, or persons detained for offences of any kind,
- either before or after conviction.
-
- All persons who have voluntarily participated in said rebellion, and
- the estimated value of whose taxable property is over twenty
- thousand dollars.
-
- All persons who have taken the oath of amnesty as prescribed in the
- President’s proclamation of December 8, A. D. 1863, or an oath of
- allegiance to the Government of the United States since the date of
- said proclamation, and who have not thenceforward kept and
- maintained the same inviolate.[467]
-
-The proclamation provided, however, that persons belonging to the
-excluded classes could make special application for pardon, when such
-liberal clemency would be exercised by the President as was deemed
-consistent with the facts in each case, and with the peace and dignity
-of the United States.
-
-Secretary Seward, who attested the proclamation, approved its general
-tenor as well as its details. At first he appears to have opposed the
-“Twenty-thousand-dollar exclusion,” but finally yielded to the arguments
-of the President, who by this description had hoped to include a
-numerous class that did not come under any of those specified. In this
-respect it possessed the comprehensive as well as the convenient
-character of a general warrant. All attempts to fix responsibility for
-secession have proved futile, and it is difficult to explain the
-President’s attitude toward Southern men of property unless, indeed, he
-meant to humiliate a class that he personally disliked, or, perhaps, he
-intended to act upon the principle that to be mild it is necessary first
-to appear cruel. Precisely why the other classes were excepted from the
-offer of indemnity the reader of Rebellion literature need not be
-informed. The amnesty proclamation applied to all the insurgent States.
-
-Like the “Louisiana plan,” the order appointing Mr. Holden was based on
-that clause of the Federal Constitution which guarantees “to every State
-in this Union a republican form of government.” It was in his character
-of Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy, as well as Executive, that
-he assumed to appoint a provisional governor. The Rebellion, which in
-its progress had “deprived the people of the State of North Carolina of
-all civil government,” he described as having been “almost entirely
-overcome.” This condition rendered it necessary to fulfill the Federal
-obligation to secure to the people of that State a republican form of
-government. The order being self-explanatory, it only remains to observe
-that none but “loyal people” were to participate in electing delegates
-to the convention, which it was made the duty of the Governor to
-convoke. The term “loyal people” included all who would take the oath
-and receive the pardon provided for in the proclamation. These were
-required to be qualified voters under the laws in force immediately
-before the act of secession. By this provision the negroes of the State
-were excluded from the electoral people, and the work of reconstruction
-left entirely in the hands of the whites. The convention chosen by these
-citizens, or the Legislature that might be thereafter assembled, was
-authorized to “prescribe the qualifications of electors, and the
-eligibility of persons to hold office under the constitution and laws of
-the State, a power,” added the order, which “the people of the several
-States composing the Federal Union have rightfully exercised from the
-origin of the Government to the present time.”
-
-Governor Holden in a proclamation of June 12, 1865, announced his
-appointment and declared his purpose to order an election of delegates
-to a State convention, the object of calling which was briefly noticed.
-He also made known his intention to commission justices of the peace for
-the purpose of administering the oath of allegiance and opening the
-polls. He urged the people to resume their accustomed pursuits; refugees
-were encouraged by an offer of protection to return to the State, and
-freedmen were instructed in the duties peculiar to their altered
-circumstances.
-
-By a second proclamation, dated August 8, the choice of delegates to the
-proposed convention was fixed for September 21 succeeding. Some delay in
-appointing a date for holding the election was occasioned by a desire to
-afford the people an opportunity of enrolling their names and obtaining
-the required certificates.
-
-By such voters as were not included in any of the excepted classes,
-together with the few who had been able to procure the Presidential
-pardon, full delegations were chosen in all but three counties. The
-details of this election accessible to the writer are exceedingly
-meagre. Owing much to the timely publication and the admirable character
-of the orders of General Schofield, who had exercised the functions of
-military governor until superseded by Mr. Holden, the contest appears to
-have been free from unusual violence, though newspaper correspondents,
-it is true, reported disturbances at several polling places and mention
-rumors of rioting.
-
-The convention, which assembled at Raleigh on October 2, was composed
-for the most part of members who had either openly opposed or
-reluctantly joined the secession movement. There were few, however, who
-had not given aid and comfort to the enemy. In other words, they were
-Whigs and conservative Democrats. Every representative readily took the
-oath to support the Constitution of the United States. The convention
-organized by electing Edwin G. Reade, an ex-member of the Thirty-fifth
-Congress, as president. On taking his seat Mr. Reade made an appropriate
-and conciliatory address.
-
-The Provisional Governor also submitted to the members of the convention
-a brief message in which he observed that their duties were too plain to
-require any suggestions from him. North Carolina, he said, attempted in
-May, 1861, to separate herself from the Union. That attempt involved her
-in protracted and disastrous war. She entered the rebellion a
-slaveholding and emerged from it a non-slaveholding State. “In other
-respects,” he declared, “so far as her existence as a State and her
-rights as a State are concerned, she has undergone no change.”[468] He
-assumed that the convention would insert in the organic law a provision
-forever prohibiting involuntary servitude in North Carolina. The
-language abolishing that institution, the form of the resolution
-abrogating the ordinance of secession and the nature of the action to be
-taken on the war debt were the most important questions before the
-convention.
-
-On October 7 the repealing ordinance was passed unanimously in the
-following terms:
-
- The ordinance of the convention of the State of North Carolina,
- ratified on the 21st day of November, 1789, which adopted and
- ratified the Constitution of the United States, and also all acts
- and parts of acts of the General Assembly ratifying and adopting
- amendments to the said Constitution, are now, and at all times since
- the adoption and ratification thereof, have been, in full force and
- effect, notwithstanding the supposed ordinance of the 20th of May,
- 1861, declaring the same to be repealed, rescinded, and abrogated;
- and the said supposed ordinance is now, and at all times hath been,
- null and void.[469]
-
-The resolution abolishing slavery, reported on the following day, was
-adopted on the 9th of October, and is as follows:
-
- _Be it declared and ordained by the delegates of the people of the
- State of North Carolina in convention assembled, and it is hereby
- declared and ordained_, That slavery and involuntary servitude,
- otherwise than for crimes, whereof the parties shall have been duly
- convicted, shall be, and is hereby, forever prohibited within the
- State.[470]
-
-Not without some reluctance there was also adopted a resolution
-prohibiting any future Legislature from assuming or paying any State
-debt created directly or indirectly for the purpose of aiding the
-Rebellion. There seems to have been in the convention a strong element
-opposed to the passage of such a measure, or at all events who preferred
-to refer it to a popular vote. The decision of the convention on this
-subject appears to have been influenced by a telegram from the President
-to Governor Holden, in which the former says:
-
- Every dollar of the debt created to aid the rebellion against the
- United States should be repudiated finally and forever. The great
- mass of the people should not be taxed to pay a debt to aid in
- carrying on a rebellion which they in fact, if left to themselves,
- were opposed to. Let those who have given their means for the
- obligations of the State look to that power they tried to establish
- in violation of law, Constitution, and will of the people. They must
- meet their fate. It is their misfortune, and cannot be recognized by
- the people of any State professing themselves loyal to the
- Government of the United States and in the Union....[471]
-
-The convention adjourned October 19 to reassemble on the fourth Thursday
-of May, 1866. Judge Reade, its president, previously delivered a
-farewell address, in which he said: “Our work is finished. The breach in
-the Government, as far as the same was by force, has been overcome by
-force; and so far as the same has had the sanction of legislation, the
-legislation has been declared to be null and void. So that there remains
-nothing to be done except the withdrawal of military power when all our
-governmental relations will be restored, without further asking, on the
-part of the United States. The element of slavery, which so long
-distracted and divided the sections, has by an unanimous vote been
-abolished. Every man in the State is free. The reluctance which for a
-while was felt to the sudden and radical change in our domestic
-relations—a reluctance which was made oppressive to us by our kind
-feelings for the slave, and by our apprehensions of the evils which were
-to follow him—has yielded to the determination to be to him, as we
-always have been, his best friends; to advise, protect, educate and
-elevate him; to seek his confidence, and to give him ours, each
-occupying appropriate positions to the other.... It remains for us to
-return to our constituents and engage with them in the great work of
-restoring our beloved State to order and prosperity.”[472]
-
-An election, fixed for November 9, was ordered by Mr. Holden for the
-choice of Governor, members of a General Assembly, county officers and
-Representatives in Congress. On the same occasion the people were to
-vote on the ordinance abolishing and prohibiting slavery. The action of
-the convention on the Confederate debt being final, that subject was not
-referred to the popular judgment.
-
-On behalf of the convention the president and other delegates soon after
-adjournment proceeded to Washington to acquaint Mr. Johnson with the
-result of their deliberations. They related to him what has already been
-placed before the reader. As the convention had yielded what was
-involved in the war, President Johnson was requested to declare on the
-part of the Federal authorities that the governmental relations of North
-Carolina had been reconciled. Notwithstanding what had been done they
-feared that their State delegation would be excluded from Congress by
-the imposition of a test oath which few men in that commonwealth could
-take. The convention, therefore, petitioned Congress, through Mr.
-Johnson, to repeal the requirement. The President, after expressing his
-satisfaction with what North Carolina had done, reminded the delegates
-that to make restoration practicable one thing still remained to be
-accomplished, namely, their acceptance of the amendment abolishing
-slavery throughout the United States.
-
-The ordinances submitted to the people were ratified at the November
-election, when Jonathan Worth was chosen Governor over Mr. Holden by a
-majority of 6,730, in a total of 58,554 votes. The repeal of the
-secession ordinance was ratified by a vote of 20,506 to 2,002, and that
-prohibiting slavery by 19,039 against 3,970.
-
-In a dispatch of November 27, President Johnson, thanking the
-Provisional Governor for the efficient manner in which he had executed
-his duties, said that the result of the election was greatly to damage
-the prospects of the State in the restoration of its government, that if
-the action and spirit of the Legislature were in the same direction it
-would greatly increase the harm already done, and might prove fatal. He
-hoped the mischief would be repaired.[473]
-
-Meanwhile the Legislature during a brief session ratified, with only six
-dissenting votes, the Thirteenth Amendment, and elected John Pool and
-William A. Graham United States Senators. Seven Representatives in
-Congress had been previously chosen.
-
-Mr. Holden, who continued to perform the functions of his office until
-the inauguration of his successor on the 15th of December, probably owed
-his appointment to his reputation as a Democratic editor. Though his
-rise to political prominence was similar to that of the President, he
-had not the latter’s inflexibility of principle. A secessionist in 1856,
-when the success of Fremont appeared probable, he soon began to recede
-from that position, and in 1859 was opposed to disunion; subsequently he
-drifted with the popular current and even went so far in an advanced
-stage of the Rebellion as to advocate a “last-dollar-and-last-man”
-resolution. But even this, together with the expression of extreme
-opinions, did not restore him to public confidence, and before the end
-of the war the _Standard_, which he edited, became the organ of the
-disaffected. Notwithstanding this wavering and inconsistent career the
-fact that he was generally regarded as an enemy of secession singled him
-out as the proper person to reorganize the government of North Carolina.
-
-Though the President was not indifferent to the demoralized condition of
-his native State, that consideration alone does not appear to have
-induced him to begin the process of reconstruction with that
-commonwealth. There is strong testimony to prove that Mr. Lincoln had
-prepared a similar proclamation for restoring the former relations of
-North Carolina, and on July 8, 1867, General Grant testified before the
-Joint Committee on Reconstruction that he had twice heard read at
-meetings of Mr. Lincoln’s Cabinet a paper embodying the same provisions
-as that published by President Johnson.
-
-Before taking the second step a brief interval elapsed; perhaps the
-President was hesitating; however this may be, he informed Hon. George
-S. Boutwell that “the measure was tentative.” The fears of the
-Massachusetts statesman and his concern for harmony in the Republican
-party, of which he was an able and honored leader, induced him, in
-company with Senator Morrill, of Vermont, to call on the President.
-During their conversation Mr. Johnson, when the dangers of his policy
-were indicated, assured his visitors “that nothing further would be done
-until the experiment had been tested.”[474]
-
-Notwithstanding this deliberate assurance, the President at that time
-appears to have almost determined on the system that he intended to
-adopt, for scarcely two weeks had passed when he appointed, by a
-proclamation similar to that for North Carolina, William L. Sharkey,
-Provisional Governor of Mississippi. Within a month from the date of Mr.
-Holden’s appointment others were made for all the remaining States
-except Florida, the order for reorganizing which was delayed till July
-13.[475]
-
-The origin and development of the Executive plan having now been traced
-with some degree of minuteness, it is not the design of this essay to
-pursue circumstantially the institution of that system in the six
-remaining States. By proclamations almost identical with that issued in
-the case of North Carolina, provisional governors were appointed in all
-of those commonwealths before the middle of July. Though the method of
-reorganization in these States presented similar features, several were
-distinguished in some respects from the others. Observations on those
-differences will employ nearly all that remains to be said on
-Reconstruction under President Johnson.
-
-The appointment of Mr. Holden alarmed Republican leaders; the successive
-proclamations for restoring the other States directed public attention
-to the questions involved in reconstruction. Seeing that Congress was
-not in session, that the President had assumed an expectant attitude,
-and that every plan of reunion proposed was liable to serious objection,
-it is not a matter of wonder that the recent Confederate authorities
-attempted of themselves to restore Federal relations.
-
-These were among the considerations that induced Governor Clarke, of
-Mississippi, to summon the Legislature of that State to meet on May 18.
-In his address convoking the disloyal assembly he urged the people, in
-order to remove the necessity for sending Federal troops among them, to
-restore and preserve peace. The Legislature came together accordingly,
-and, among other measures, provided for the election, on June 19, of
-delegates to a State convention. Before that date, however, the
-President had appointed William L. Sharkey, an eminent jurist,
-Provisional Governor, thus ignoring both the measures of Mr. Clarke and
-the insurgent assembly. The latter was dispersed by a military order,
-while the Governor was carried off to a fortress in Boston harbor.
-
-Mr. Sharkey, in a dutiful and able address, appointed August 7 as the
-day for holding an election of delegates to a State convention which was
-to meet at the city of Jackson one week later. In this proclamation, he
-said: “The negroes are now free—free by the fortunes of war—free by
-proclamation—free by common consent—free practically, as well as
-theoretically, and it is too late to raise questions as to the means by
-which they became so.”[476] Though the Governor, to avoid the delay of
-separate county organization, had appointed many local officials who had
-held their posts during the Rebellion, he required all of them to take
-the oath of allegiance prescribed by the President.
-
-The convention, which assembled at the appointed time, declared the
-ordinance of secession null and void, prohibited slavery and made it the
-duty of the next Legislature to provide for the protection of the person
-and the property of freedmen. The lawmaking body was also to take
-measures for guarding both the negroes and the commonwealth against any
-evils that might arise from sudden emancipation. The first Monday in
-October was appointed for the election of State officers and members of
-Congress. A memorial was also adopted urging the President to remove the
-colored troops from the State. The members, acting apparently in their
-individual capacity, united in a petition for the pardon of Jefferson
-Davis and of Governor Clarke. The amendment of the State constitution
-abolishing slavery was adopted by the decisive vote of 86 to 11. After
-South Carolina, Mississippi contained the greatest proportion of slaves,
-and was thus very deeply involved in the system.
-
-While the convention was in session the President sent to Governor
-Sharkey a telegram in which he made the following remarkable suggestion:
-
- I am gratified to see that you have organized your convention
- without difficulty.... If you could extend the elective franchise to
- all persons of color who can read the Constitution of the United
- States in English and write their names, and to all persons of color
- who own real estate valued at not less than two hundred and fifty
- dollars and pay taxes thereon, you would completely disarm the
- adversary and set an example the other States will follow. This you
- can do with perfect safety, and you would thus place Southern States
- in reference to free persons of color upon the same basis with the
- free States. I hope and trust your convention will do this, and as a
- consequence the radicals, who are wild upon negro franchise, will be
- completely foiled in their attempts to keep the Southern States from
- renewing their relations to the Union by not accepting their
- Senators and Representatives.[477]
-
-From the view point of practical politics this recommendation was
-undoubtedly a wise one, but it will scarcely be contended that it was
-the suggestion of enlightened statesmanship. The South, distrusting the
-President’s sincerity, refused to adopt his suggestion. The
-communication is reproduced, not to show that the President was not
-always impelled by the highest motives so much as to show that even
-before Congress had assembled he had already come to regard as “the
-adversary” those whose exertions secured his election.
-
-In his proclamation appointing a date for the election of delegates
-Governor Sharkey advised the people, when it might be necessary in
-consequence of the remoteness of a military force, to form a county
-patrol for the apprehension of offenders. Information having reached him
-that in many parts of the State organized bands had been robbing and
-plundering, and that the Federal troops were insufficient to suppress
-these disorders, he urged citizens, especially the young men who had “so
-distinguished themselves for gallantry,” to organize promptly in each
-county volunteer companies, one of cavalry and one of infantry if
-practicable, to assist in detecting, punishing and preventing crime.
-
-From his headquarters at Vicksburg, General Slocum, the Federal
-commander, immediately published an order to prevent the proposed
-reorganization of the militia. The contemplated force, he said, would be
-numerically superior to his own, and, as many of the Union troops on
-duty in Mississippi were freedmen, collisions would be unavoidable. The
-crimes referred to by Mr. Sharkey were, the General asserted, committed
-against Northern men, Government couriers and negroes. Southerners, it
-was true, had been halted by these marauders, but were promptly released
-and informed that they had been stopped by mistake. Citizens who
-recognized the persons were unwilling to disclose the names of these
-lawless members of the community. The State, too, he declared, had not
-yet been relieved from the attitude of hostility which she assumed
-against the General Government. Those engaged in attempts to organize
-the militia would be arrested.
-
-Fearing that the President would not support General Slocum, Carl
-Schurz, who had been sent South on a mission to assist in carrying out
-the Administration policy, expressed in a communication to the President
-some doubt as to the wisdom of the Governor’s action. To this the
-President, in a reply of August 30, said he presumed that General
-Slocum, without first consulting the Government, would issue no order
-interfering with Mr. Sharkey in his effort to restore the functions of
-the State government. In the matter of organizing patrols Mr. Johnson
-took the same view as the Governor, and in that connection said, “The
-people must be trusted with their government, and, if trusted, my
-opinion is that they will act in good faith and restore their former
-constitutional relations with all the States composing the Union.”[478]
-
-The lapse of fifteen months had worked a revolution in the opinions of
-the President. Circumstances, it is true, had changed since the delivery
-of his Nashville speech; the main question, however, had not greatly
-altered, for it was still important to determine the political people of
-the late insurgent States. From declaring that “rebels” must take a back
-seat in the work of restoration, the President had come to believe that
-“the people must be trusted with their government.” It is not to convict
-Mr. Johnson of inconsistency that his opinions are here brought into
-juxtaposition, but rather to inquire whether every important
-consideration for ignoring secessionists in 1864 had disappeared by
-1865.
-
-On representation from the Provisional Governor that the Federal
-commander interfered to prevent the execution of his proclamation for
-reorganizing the militia, the President on September 2 required General
-Slocum to revoke his military order. Under instructions somewhat
-peremptory in tone, that officer two days later rescinded his
-proclamation.
-
-The condition of the freedmen, as well as their exact legal status,
-became about this time the subject of much discussion in Mississippi.
-While many continued in the service of their old masters, numbers roamed
-about the country in idleness, and nearly all of them had very
-extravagant notions of their newly acquired rights and privileges.
-Though the whites admitted of necessity the complete freedom, they were
-for the most part unprepared to grant equal rights to negroes. Between
-them and their employers, however, there occurred but little serious
-trouble. All labor was contracted for, and owners of plantations,
-apprehensive that labor would be difficult to secure at the beginning of
-the season, were anxious to make contracts for the year 1866. Toward the
-close of September the assistant commissioner of the Freedmen’s Bureau
-turned over to the civil authorities all the business of his court. To
-get rid of military tribunals, Governor Sharkey promised that in all
-cases involving the rights of negroes their testimony would be accepted.
-
-In the election, which was held on October 9, General Benjamin G.
-Humphreys, late of the Confederate army, was chosen Governor;
-immediately thereafter he was pardoned by the President. Five
-Representatives in Congress were also elected. By the Legislature, which
-convened and organized one week later, Governor Sharkey was appointed
-United States Senator to fill the unexpired term of Jefferson Davis. For
-the long term, Mr. J. L. Alcorn was elected. The legislation relative to
-freedmen will be subsequently considered.
-
-Besides his complaint to the President relative to the interference of
-General Slocum with the proposed reorganization of the militia, Governor
-Sharkey expressed dissatisfaction with the military authorities who
-refused to obey writs of _habeas corpus_ issued by local judges. To this
-Secretary Stanton replied that the grant of a provisional government did
-not affect the proper jurisdiction of military courts, and that this
-jurisdiction was still called for in cases of wrong done to soldiers,
-whether white or colored, and in cases of wrong done to colored
-citizens, and where the local authorities were unable or unwilling to do
-justice, either from defective machinery, or because some State law
-declared colored persons incompetent as witnesses. Mississippi was to a
-considerable extent still under military law, and the suspension of the
-writ of _habeas corpus_ had not been revoked. To a similar remonstrance
-the Secretary of State replied that, the commonwealth being still under
-martial law, the military power was supreme.
-
-On receiving tidings of General Johnston’s surrender, Governor Brown, of
-Georgia, called a session of the Confederate Legislature, but General
-Gilmore, who commanded the department including that commonwealth,
-issued a counter-proclamation annulling the late Executive’s order.
-General Wilson, in writing the ex-Governor, used expressions that were
-needlessly harsh, and whether the language was his own or that of the
-President, to whom the commander ascribed it, the style was neither
-dignified nor magnanimous. Whoever may have been responsible for the
-phraseology, the Union General appears to have believed in a rigorous
-exercise of the rights of conquest. With the defeat of this attempt of
-the recent authorities to restore their commonwealth to its old status,
-Georgia remained in military hands till the appointment, June 17, of
-James Johnson as Provisional Governor.
-
-In the work of reconciling the people of that State the Provisional
-Executive was assisted by a sensible address of ex-Governor Brown, and
-by the support of many leading secessionists. Now that the
-“irrepressible conflict” had been settled, the people appeared anxious
-for the reorganization of their State. The 4th of October was early
-fixed as the date for holding an election of delegates. The suffrage of
-citizens was solicited and received by candidates of ability and
-character. These were pledged to advocate the necessary measures for
-restoring their commonwealth.
-
-The convention assembled at Milledgeville on October 25, was called to
-order by the Provisional Governor, and elected Herschel V. Johnson as
-its president. Instead of declaring the nullity of the secession and
-kindred ordinances the convention “repealed” them. On the question of
-repudiating the war debt the vote stood 133 to 117 in favor of the
-proposition. This resolution, however, was not carried until November 7,
-and appears even then to have been passed only after considerable
-pressure from Washington, whence the President directed or assisted by
-telegraph the proceedings in all the reconstruction conventions. The war
-debt thus declared void amounted to $18,135,775. The necessity for this
-action is evident; the hardships occasioned thereby can be easily
-imagined.
-
-The State constitution, which was thoroughly revised, recognized the
-changes that had occurred in civil and social affairs. In that
-instrument the freedom of slaves was expressly declared, and the
-Legislature was required to make regulations respecting the altered
-relations of this class of persons. The constitution as thus amended was
-unanimously adopted by the convention.
-
-Though Georgia was not the most loyal supporter of Jefferson Davis in
-the time of his prosperity, now that adversity had overtaken him, the
-convention, in a memorial to President Johnson, invoked the Executive
-clemency in behalf of their late chief. The convention assumed for the
-people their share in the crime for which Mr. Davis and a few others
-were undergoing punishment.
-
-As in the case of Mississippi, the President approved the organization
-of “a police force” in the several counties, for the purpose of
-arresting marauders, suppressing crime and enforcing authority.
-
-The Legislature, which was elected November 15, assembled at
-Milledgeville on the 4th of December following. With its proceedings we
-are not now concerned more than to observe that the Thirteenth Amendment
-was adopted by that body five days subsequently.[479] The measures of
-the Georgia Assembly were not before Congress when it convened.
-
-Like the chief magistrates in several other Southern States, the
-Confederate Governor of Texas, when convinced after the surrender of
-General Kirby Smith that the war had ceased, took steps toward bringing
-his commonwealth into its old practical relations with the Union. He
-accordingly ordered an election of delegates to a convention to be held
-on June 19, but was anticipated by President Johnson, who two days
-earlier had appointed Andrew J. Hamilton Provisional Governor. Though
-the latter did not promptly appoint a day for holding the election, he
-announced his intention of doing so at an early date. There was probably
-in the minds of the less intelligent Texans a notion that emancipation
-was to be gradual, or that it was not yet an accomplished fact. To
-dispel any such idea the new Executive circulated an address which
-informed the public that if, “in the action of the proposed convention,
-the negro is characterized or treated as less than a freeman,” Senators
-and Representatives from Texas would vainly seek admission to the halls
-of Congress. The choice of delegates having been fixed for January 8,
-1866, an account of the convention or of the proceedings in the Assembly
-subsequently organized in that State does not fall within the scope of
-this work. In the interval justice was administered by officers
-temporarily commissioned for that purpose.
-
-The negro population, which, because of the influx from other Southern
-States, had doubled since 1860, presented a difficult problem in the
-reorganization of Texas. They knew little of the uses of freedom and
-were kept systematically at work only by the candid admonitions of
-General Granger and the Governor. Toward the close of December, however,
-a better feeling prevailed among them; but it appears to have been a
-serious problem to have kept the freedmen of Texas steadily at work.
-Planters throughout the State lost heavily by their inability to engage
-or to retain in their service laborers enough to gather the standing
-cotton crop. The full consideration of this subject is inseparable from
-an analysis of Texan legislation relative to freedmen. Though well
-advanced, the reconstruction of Texas under the Executive plan was not
-completed before the meeting of the Thirty-ninth Congress.
-
-Nothing in the reorganization of Alabama or of South Carolina calls for
-especial mention. The same is true of Florida. Both the spirit and
-tendency of Southern legislation, however, require to be noticed, and
-with that examination a brief recapitulation will complete this
-investigation.
-
-Before concluding this inquiry two related topics require briefly to be
-noticed, namely, the character of the reconstruction conventions, and
-the _personnel_ as well as the spirit of the legislatures organized
-under their authority. As to the former it may be observed that there
-were several modes in which constitutional conventions could have been
-assembled; all, however, were objectionable because of an element of
-irregularity. Considering them chronologically, rather than logically,
-the first was the method employed by the Union men of western Virginia.
-The Wheeling convention of June, 1861, was composed of delegates chosen
-at elections called, not by the constituted authorities, for they were
-already committed to a policy of rebellion, but by a spontaneous popular
-movement inaugurated by loyal and influential leaders. The work of this
-body, even though revolutionary, or at least irregular in its origin,
-was acquiesced in by the people affected and subsequently approved by
-the General Government. So few, however, were the loyalists of the
-insurgent States generally, that it was not practicable elsewhere in the
-South to reorganize governments in a similar manner.
-
-A second mode was that adopted by Mr. Lincoln. Under this method, the
-President, as Commander-in-Chief, protected Union minorities in their
-efforts to reëstablish local governments in harmony with the Federal
-Constitution. This plan, it is evident, could be justified merely as a
-military measure, and, therefore, was lawful only during the continuance
-of the Rebellion. On the return of peace all such provisional schemes
-would disappear unless tolerated by the neglect or confirmed by the
-legislation of Congress. The conventions held under this theory rested
-on the authority of the commanding officer, who was himself acting by
-Executive direction. In reorganizing the government of Louisiana,
-General Banks, it will be remembered, declared that the fundamental law
-of that commonwealth was martial law, which was no more than his
-arbitrary will. In purging the electoral people and amending the
-constitution of that State he acted in strict conformity with that
-assumption. If in the preceding pages the reconstruction measures of Mr.
-Lincoln have been characterized as legitimate, it must not be supposed
-that it was intended to assert that they would have been lawful in time
-of peace, for under the American system it has never been deemed
-competent for the national Executive to call a convention. Though the
-establishments instituted under his authority, except in the case of
-Tennessee, never received the permanent sanction of Congress, the
-conventions which organized these governments stand on a foundation
-somewhat different from those assembled by the appointees of President
-Johnson, for in the summer of 1865 the plea of military necessity could
-no longer be urged. If, therefore, the conventions held in Louisiana,
-Arkansas and Tennessee were tainted with irregularity, those assembled
-in the remaining States were undoubtedly revolutionary. Technically,
-however, the conventions of both classes stand on the same footing.
-Governor Perry, of South Carolina, regarded as revolutionary the body
-which he convoked to reorganize his commonwealth, and for that reason,
-as he alleged, dissolved the convention before it had taken final action
-on the important question of the Southern debt.
-
-The course of the Confederate governors of Mississippi, Georgia and
-Texas, who summoned the insurgent legislatures of their respective
-States for the purpose of calling conventions, suggests a third mode in
-which the machinery of government could have been set in motion. This
-plan, however, presented an evident difficulty, inasmuch as these
-assemblies could not have been recognized without admitting in some sort
-the validity of the secession and kindred ordinances. Mr. Lincoln, it is
-true, intended, before hostilities had ceased, to permit the members of
-the Virginia Legislature to meet as influential individuals for the
-purpose of recalling their State troops from the Confederate army. The
-surrender of Lee occurring soon after, and the President’s action having
-been misunderstood, he withdrew this permission, and did it the more
-readily as the necessity which suggested it had passed completely away.
-The department commanders prevented any response to the proclamations of
-the Executives in the three States named above, and President Johnson by
-his prompt appointment of provisional governors ignored or anticipated
-their action. To say nothing of the revolutionary course contemplated by
-the ex-Confederate governors, the success of their plan required the
-approval or at least the connivance of Federal authorities.
-
-Still another manner of proceeding was for Congress, by calling or
-authorizing conventions, to inaugurate the movement for reconstruction;
-but the power of the national Legislature extends only to the passage of
-enabling acts for Territories, and these commonwealths appear to have
-been neither constitutional Territories nor constitutional States.
-However, as some irregularity was inseparable from any system of
-reorganization, the Legislative branch of Government was the authority
-least objectionable for controlling informal changes in the nature of
-the Union. If powers not conferred by the Constitution must be assumed,
-it is better in the interests of civil liberty for the representatives
-of the people to transcend the organic law.
-
-The second mode, it need scarcely be observed, was that embodied in the
-Executive plan. The conventions which assembled under encouragement and
-direction of President Johnson had an opportunity unequaled since the
-formation of the Constitution of winning the gratitude of the nation. By
-adopting an enlightened and humane policy they could have furnished an
-example of patriotism that would serve to influence the deliberations
-not only of the first assemblies to meet under the new order, but of all
-future legislatures in those States. It is well known that they did not
-prove equal to this emergency; the concessions to Northern opinion were
-not gracefully yielded, and lost much of their merit by having been
-extorted from the fears of the delegates. In some instances the
-conventions, by assuming functions of the ordinary legislative
-character, transcended their powers, and many of them “repealed” the
-ordinances without condemning the principle of secession. They amended
-and even adopted constitutions that were never submitted to the people.
-The civil rights of the negro were abandoned to the mercy of those who
-had fought to perpetuate human servitude. No provision was made for
-freedmen in the fundamental law, it having been assumed that the new
-legislatures could be trusted to extend justice equally to all classes
-in the community. In a word, those were disappointed who had expected
-from the conventions a display of civic virtues commensurate to the
-occasion.
-
-The remaining topic, that is, the character of the reconstructed
-governments as well as the spirit and tendency of their legislation, may
-in this place be briefly dismissed. Not, indeed, that the subject is
-unimportant, for it was mainly upon this question that the Thirty-ninth
-Congress justified its refusal to admit members from the South, and
-vindicated its rigorous treatment of the subjugated States. While an
-investigation of public opinion in that section is essential to a
-correct understanding of legislative action, the full consideration of
-the subject belongs properly to a treatise on Congressional
-reconstruction, a theme to which this essay is only introductory. For
-the present purpose, therefore, a brief outline must suffice.
-
-Though the reconstruction conventions were correctly regarded as
-revolutionary, that character would not affect the legislatures
-instituted by their authority if the people concerned acquiesced in
-their proceedings. Americans of that day were not altogether indifferent
-to the sacred right of revolution, even if the principle was not so
-highly esteemed as formerly. An objection far more serious than the
-irregular origin of these conventions was the spirit which animated
-Southern legislators.
-
-When the Thirty-ninth Congress convened at its first session members had
-before them only the merest fragments of the mass of testimony
-subsequently reported by the Joint Committee on Reconstruction, though
-even then they possessed evidence of the temper of the Southern mind
-sufficient, they believed, to recommend the most deliberate procedure.
-It would not be difficult to collect from contemporary literature proofs
-of hostility to the General Government sufficient to justify the
-attitude of Congress when it assembled on the 4th of December, 1865.
-From various sources the Northern people had caught glimpses of the
-actual condition of affairs within the late Confederacy. These
-manifestations of unfriendliness to the Union were enough to excite
-suspicion, and, in a matter affecting the future welfare of a great and
-powerful nation, suspicion is a just ground for inquiry.
-
-The alacrity with which the Southern people rushed to battle, as well as
-the vigor with which they prosecuted the war, was a phenomenon not more
-remarkable than the unanimity and promptness with which they apparently
-acquiesced in the result. It was long before the people of the North
-could believe that the rebellion was anything more than a leaders’
-insurrection, and they could not easily be persuaded after its close
-that those who had fought so desperately to destroy, were sincere in
-their professions of loyalty to, the Union. It was not unnatural,
-therefore, that the late adversaries of the South would look with
-suspicion on her instant submission. With few exceptions Southern
-statesmen seemed desirous of effecting an early reunion. While various
-reasons might be assigned to explain this dutiful and almost unlimited
-obedience, it is certain that the argument chiefly relied upon by the
-provisional governors was that it was only by such a course that they
-could hope soon to be relieved of the presence among them of Yankee
-soldiers. Apprehension that more burdensome conditions might be imposed
-by Stevens and other radical leaders in Congress was, perhaps, not
-altogether without influence in producing this general acquiescence in
-the policy of the President.[480] As every citizen who engaged in
-rebellion had forfeited both his life and his estate, it would be
-prudent temporarily to conceal any feeling of resentment, or any desire
-of revenge. These considerations were not without influence on the
-conduct of both the leaders and the people. With the quick upgrowth,
-however, of a feeling of personal safety, encouraged, no doubt, by a
-lavish distribution of pardons, and with an expectation, not unfounded,
-that reconciliation would speedily be followed by either a restoration
-of, or indemnity for, confiscated property, this policy of conformity
-would vanish. Thus under exterior tranquillity rankled bitter memories
-of disaster and defeat nourishing a state of unrest which even the
-unquestioned influence of their late commanders could not always keep
-from expressing itself in acts of violence. However, as Henry Winter
-Davis had foretold, the Southern population generally put on the seemly
-garb of peace and observed the form of holding elections.
-
-Notwithstanding that many of their most enlightened citizens
-recommended, and that their most trusted leaders enjoined, submission to
-the new order, the transition from a state of hostility was marked even
-at the outset by acts of the highest indiscretion. Nor were these
-confined to irresponsible individuals whose utterances might have been
-justly regarded as the momentary inspiration of passion. Some of the
-acts referred to were the deliberate convictions of legislative bodies,
-and, as these measures appear to have escaped criticism, they may fairly
-be supposed to reflect the sentiments of the South. In the circumstances
-this was especially unfortunate, postponing as it did the day of peace
-and reconciliation; it afforded also a decent pretext to the “Radicals,”
-if they desired one, for excluding the Southern delegations from
-Congress. It justified inquiry, and investigation was fatal to Southern
-claims of universal submission.
-
-Though the exclusion of representatives undoubtedly intensified, it did
-not occasion the change in Southern feeling, for the Mississippi
-measures, presently to be noticed, were passed before the meeting of
-Congress. Acts of frequent occurrence tended to confirm the worst fears
-of that body, and long before the Joint Committee had completed their
-labors they were supplied with new species of violence if any
-description of outrage was lacking to crown their indictment. With due
-allowance for the fact that during many years preceding the war outrages
-were much more numerous in the slave than in the free States, it soon
-became apparent that it was unsafe to leave to the justice of Southern
-courts either the few Unionists who had remained faithful in that
-section or the recently enfranchised slaves. The estimation in which the
-former were held appears in the fact that in competition for office they
-were uniformly defeated by ex-Confederate candidates, sometimes by
-unpardoned, and even unrepentant ones. The feeling toward freedmen was
-one of extreme bitterness. Overlooking scattered acts of violence and
-outrage of which negroes were generally, though not always, the victims,
-Southern hostility toward them found unmistakable expression in the
-November legislation of Mississippi. On the 22d of that month was
-enacted a law regulating the relation of _master_ and _apprentice_ in
-the case of “freedmen, free negroes and mulattoes.” Among other things
-this statute provided:
-
- That it shall be the duty of all ... civil officers ... in this
- State to report to the probate courts of their respective counties,
- semiannually, ... all freedmen, free negroes, and mulattoes, under
- the age of eighteen, within their respective counties, beats or
- districts, who are orphans, or whose parent or parents have not the
- means, or who refuse to provide for and support said minors, and
- thereupon it shall be the duty of said probate court to order the
- clerk of said court to apprentice said minors to some competent and
- suitable person, on such terms as the court may direct, having a
- particular care to the interest of said minors: Provided, That the
- former owner of said minors shall have the preference, when in the
- opinion of the court, he or she shall be a suitable person for that
- purpose.
-
- Sec. 2.... That the said court shall be fully satisfied that the
- person or persons to whom said minor shall be apprenticed shall be a
- suitable person to have the charge and care of said minor, and fully
- to protect the interest of said minor. The said court shall require
- the said master or mistress to execute bond and security, payable to
- the State of Mississippi, conditioned that he or she shall furnish
- said minor with sufficient food and clothing, to treat said minor
- humanely, furnish medical attention in case of sickness, teach or
- cause to be taught him or her to read and write, if under fifteen
- years old, and will conform to any law that may be hereafter passed
- for the regulation of the duties and relation of master and
- apprentice: Provided, that said apprentice shall be bound by
- indenture, in case of males until they are twenty-one years old, and
- in case of females until they are eighteen years old.
-
- Sec. 3.... That in the management and control of said apprentices,
- said master or mistress shall have power to inflict such moderate
- corporeal chastisement as a father or guardian is allowed to inflict
- on his or her child or ward at common law: Provided, That in no case
- shall cruel or inhuman punishment be inflicted.
-
- Sec. 4.... That if any apprentice shall leave the employment of his
- or her master or mistress, without his or her consent, said master
- or mistress may pursue and recapture said apprentice, and bring him
- or her before any justice of the peace of the county, whose duty it
- shall be to remand said apprentice to the service of his or her
- master or mistress; and in the event of a refusal on the part of
- said apprentice so to return, then said justice shall commit said
- apprentice to the jail of said county, on failure to give bond,
- until the next term of the county court; and it shall be the duty of
- said court, at the first term thereafter, to investigate said case,
- and if the court shall be of opinion that said apprentice left the
- employment of his or her master or mistress without good cause, to
- order him or her to be punished, as provided for the punishment of
- hired freedmen, as may be from time to time provided for by law, for
- desertion, until he or she shall agree to return to his or her
- master or mistress: Provided, that the court may grant continuances,
- as in other cases; and provided further, that if the court shall
- believe that said apprentice had good cause to quit his said master
- or mistress, the court shall discharge said apprentice from said
- indenture, and also enter a judgment against the master or mistress,
- for not more than one hundred dollars, for the use and benefit of
- said apprentice, to be collected on execution, as in other cases.
-
- Sec. 5.... That if any person entice away any apprentice from his or
- her master or mistress, or shall knowingly employ an apprentice, or
- furnish him or her food or clothing, without the written consent of
- his or her master or mistress, or shall sell or give said apprentice
- ardent spirits, without such consent, said person so offending shall
- be deemed guilty of a high misdemeanor, and shall, on conviction
- thereof before the county court, be punished as provided for the
- punishment of persons enticing from their employer hired freedmen,
- free negroes or mulattoes.[481]
-
-In the matter of apprenticing minors it will be observed that the former
-owner, when a person satisfactory to the court, was to have the
-preference; in the event of his death his widow or other member of his
-family was, if deemed suitable, to have the preference in
-re-apprenticing the minor. When there was no record testimony of the
-date of birth, judges of county courts were empowered to fix the age of
-the minor. The act was to go into force immediately after its
-passage.[482]
-
-The act of November 25, conferring civil rights on emancipated slaves,
-provided:
-
- That all freedmen, free negroes and mulattoes may sue and be sued,
- implead and be impleaded in all the courts of law and equity of this
- State, and may acquire personal property and chooses in action, by
- descent or purchase, and may dispose of the same, in the same
- manner, and to the same extent that white persons may; Provided,
- that the provisions of this section [1] shall not be so construed as
- to allow any freedman, free negro or mulatto, to rent or lease any
- lands or tenements, except in incorporated towns or cities in which
- places the corporate authorities shall control the same.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Sec. 5.... That every freedman, free negro and mulatto, shall, on
- the second Monday of January, one thousand eight hundred and
- sixty-six, and annually thereafter, have a lawful home or
- employment, and shall have written evidence thereof, as follows, to
- wit: if living in any incorporated city, town or village, a license
- from the mayor thereof, and if living outside of any incorporated
- city, town or village, from the member of the board of police of his
- beat, authorizing him or her to do irregular and job work, or a
- written contract, as provided in section six of this act, which
- licenses may be revoked for cause, at any time, by the authority
- granting the same.
-
- Sec. 6.... That all contracts for labor made with freedmen, free
- negroes and mulattoes, for a longer period than one month shall be
- in writing and in duplicate, attested and read to said freedman,
- free negro or mulatto, by a beat, city or county officer, or two
- disinterested white persons of the county in which the labor is to
- be performed, of which each party shall have one; and said contracts
- shall be taken and held as entire contracts, and if the laborer
- shall quit the service of the employer, before the expiration of his
- term of service, without good cause he shall forfeit his wages for
- that year, up to the time of quitting.
-
- Sec. 7.... That every civil officer shall, and every person may
- arrest and carry back to his or her legal employer any freedman,
- free negro or mulatto, who shall have quit the service of his or her
- employer before the expiration of his or her term of service without
- good cause, and said officer and person shall be entitled to receive
- for arresting and carrying back every deserting employee aforesaid,
- the sum of five dollars, and ten cents per mile from the place of
- arrest to the place of delivery, and the same shall be paid by the
- employer, and held as a set-off for so much against the wages of
- said deserting employee: Provided, that said arrested party after
- being so returned may appeal to a justice of the peace or member of
- the board of the police of the county, who on notice to the alleged
- employer, shall try summarily whether said appellant is legally
- employed by the alleged employer and has good cause to quit said
- employer; either party shall have the right of appeal to the county
- court, pending which the alleged deserter shall be remanded to the
- alleged employer, or otherwise disposed of as shall be right and
- just, and the decision of the county court shall be final.
-
- Sec. 8.... That upon affidavit made by the employer of any freedman,
- free negro or mulatto, or other credible person, before any justice
- of the peace or member of the board of police, that any freedman,
- free negro or mulatto, legally employed by said employer, has
- illegally deserted said employment, such justice of the peace or
- member of the board of police, shall issue his warrant or warrants,
- returnable before himself, or other such officer, directed to any
- sheriff, constable or special deputy, commanding him to arrest said
- deserter and return him or her to said employer, and the like
- proceedings shall be had as provided in the preceding section; and
- it shall be lawful for any officer to whom such warrant shall be
- directed to execute said warrant in any county of this State, and
- that said warrant may be transmitted without indorsement to any like
- officer of another county, to be executed and returned as aforesaid,
- and the said employer shall pay the cost of said warrants and arrest
- and return, which shall be set off for so much against the wages of
- said deserter.
-
- Sec. 9.... That if any person shall persuade or attempt to persuade,
- entice or cause any freedman, free negro or mulatto, to desert from
- the legal employment of any person, before the expiration of his or
- her term of service, or shall knowingly employ any such deserting
- freedman, free negro or mulatto, or shall knowingly give or sell to
- any such deserting freedman, free negro or mulatto, any food,
- raiment or other thing, he or she shall be guilty of a misdemeanor,
- and upon conviction shall be fined not less than twenty-five dollars
- and not more than two hundred dollars and the costs, and if said
- fine and costs shall not be immediately paid, the court shall
- sentence said convict to not exceeding two months’ imprisonment in
- the county jail, and he or she shall moreover be liable to the party
- injured in damages: Provided, if any person shall, or shall attempt
- to persuade, entice, or cause any freedman, free negro or mulatto,
- to desert from any legal employment of any person with the view to
- employ said freedman, free negro or mulatto, without the limits of
- this State, such person, on conviction, shall be fined not less than
- fifty dollars and not more than five hundred dollars and costs, and
- if said fine and costs shall not be immediately paid, the court
- shall sentence said convict to not exceeding six months’
- imprisonment in the county jail.
-
-This arbitrary and cruel act, wholly inconsistent with a state of
-personal freedom, by forbidding the lease to freedmen, free negroes and
-mulattoes of either lands or tenements outside of cities, not only made
-of the emancipated slaves a landless and homeless class, but deprived
-them of all hope of rising out of that condition. On the second Monday
-of January, 1866, less than two months after the passage of this act,
-and annually thereafter, they were required to have a lawful home or
-employment, and to possess written evidence thereof. This requirement
-extended to the doing of even irregular and job work, and a written
-contract for all labor for a longer period than one month. If the
-laborer, without good cause, left the service of his employer before the
-expiration of his term, he forfeited all wages for that year up to the
-time of quitting. As the freedmen were wholly without representation in
-the State judiciary, the master class could in every instance determine
-the sufficiency of the cause. The intermarriage of the races was made a
-felony, and the white or the black person convicted of that crime was to
-be confined in the State penitentiary for life.[483] Southern whites had
-no objection to the personal attendance, even in first-class railway
-coaches, of colored servants, but as other than a servant, the freedman
-was considered exceedingly obnoxious, and this sentiment was enacted
-immediately before either of the statutes mentioned, into a law which
-excluded negroes from riding in cars of the first class.[484]
-
-There was some apprehension lest this and similar legislation would lead
-to bloody outbreaks. The colored race generally was growing distrustful
-and discontented. The fear of violence was probably not unconnected with
-the passage of a law approved November 29, which provided:
-
- Sec. 1.... That no freedman, free negro or mulatto, not in the
- military service of the United States Government, and not licensed
- so to do by the board of police of his or her county, shall keep or
- carry fire-arms of any kind, or any ammunition, dirk, or
- bowie-knife, and on conviction thereof, in the county court, shall
- be punished by fine, not exceeding ten dollars, and pay the costs of
- such proceedings, and all such arms or ammunition shall be forfeited
- to the informer, and it shall be the duty of every civil and
- military officer to arrest any freedman, free negro or mulatto,
- found with any such arms or ammunition, and cause him or her to be
- committed for trial in default of bail.
-
- Sec. 2.... That any freedman, free negro or mulatto, committing
- riots, routs, affrays, trespasses, malicious mischief and cruel
- treatment to animals, seditious speeches, insulting gestures,
- language or acts, or assaults on any person, disturbance of peace,
- exercising the function of a minister of the Gospel without a
- license from some regularly organized church, vending spirituous or
- intoxicating liquors, or committing any other misdemeanor, the
- punishment of which is not specifically provided for by law, shall,
- upon conviction thereof, in the county court, be fined not less than
- ten dollars and not more than one hundred dollars, and may be
- imprisoned, at the discretion of the court, not exceeding thirty
- days.
-
- Sec. 3.... That if any white person shall sell, lend or give to any
- freedman, free negro or mulatto, any fire-arms, dirk or bowie-knife,
- or ammunition, or any spirituous or intoxicating liquors, such
- person or persons so offending, upon conviction thereof, in the
- county court of his or her county, shall be fined, not exceeding
- fifty dollars, and may be imprisoned at the discretion of the court,
- not exceeding thirty days....
-
- Sec. 4.... That all the penal and criminal laws now in force in this
- State, defining offences, and prescribing the mode of punishment for
- crimes and misdemeanors committed by slaves, free negroes or
- mulattoes, be and the same are hereby re-enacted, and declared to be
- in full force and effect, against freedmen, free negroes and
- mulattoes, except so far as the mode and manner of trial and
- punishment have been changed or altered by law.
-
- Sec. 5.... That if any freedman, free negro or mulatto, convicted of
- any of the misdemeanors provided against in this act, shall fail or
- refuse, for the space of five days after conviction, to pay the fine
- and costs imposed, such person shall be hired out by the sheriff or
- other officer, at public outcry, to any white person who will pay
- said fine and all costs, and take such convict for the shortest
- time.[485]
-
-Though the General Government was solemnly pledged to guarantee the
-entire freedom of the negro, he was completely disarmed by these
-statutes, which were to be administered by men who had been but recently
-serving the Confederate cause. The purpose of the last measure is
-rendered clear by Section 4, which reënacted against freedmen all the
-penal and criminal laws that had applied to slaves. It revived, in
-short, the black code of _ante bellum_ times.
-
-Persons convicted of vagrancy, under an amendatory act, approved
-November 24, 1865, were subject to a fine not exceeding one hundred
-dollars and costs, besides a maximum imprisonment of ten days. The first
-section, which defined who were vagrants, was general in its
-application. The provisions especially affecting freedmen were the
-following:
-
- Sec. 2.... That all freedmen, free negroes and mulattoes in this
- State, over the age of eighteen years, found on the second Monday in
- January, 1866, or thereafter, with no lawful employment or business,
- or found unlawfully assembling themselves together either in the day
- or night time, and all white persons so assembling with freedmen,
- free negroes or mulattoes, or usually associating with freedmen,
- free negroes or mulattoes on terms of equality, or living in
- adultery or fornication with a freedwoman, free negro or mulatto,
- shall be deemed vagrants, and on conviction thereof shall be fined
- in the sum of not exceeding, in the case of a freedman, free negro
- or mulatto, fifty dollars, and a white man two hundred dollars, and
- imprisoned at the discretion of the court, the free negro not
- exceeding ten days, and the white man not exceeding six months.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Sec. 5.... That all fines and forfeitures collected under the
- provisions of this act shall be paid into the county treasury for
- general county purposes, and in case any freedman, free negro or
- mulatto, shall fail for five days after the imposition of any fine
- or forfeiture upon him or her for violation of any of the provisions
- of this act, to pay the same, that it shall be, and is hereby made
- the duty of the sheriff of the proper county to hire out said
- freedman, free negro or mulatto, to any persons who will, for the
- shortest period of service, pay said fine or forfeiture and all
- costs: Provided, a preference shall be given to the employer, if
- there be one, in which case the employer shall be entitled to deduct
- and retain the amount so paid from the wages of such freedman, free
- negro or mulatto, then due or to become due; and in case such
- freedman, free negro or mulatto cannot be hired out, he or she may
- be dealt with as a pauper.[486]
-
- * * * * *
-
-No extended knowledge of human affairs is necessary to perceive that, by
-a rigorous enforcement of these laws, the great mass of freedmen could
-be easily restored to a state of practical servitude during the season
-when their labor was desirable, and that for the remainder of the year
-their condition would be little better than that of the pauper. That the
-two races were regarded as equal before the law will scarcely be
-contended. An act approved December 1 made it a misdemeanor in certain
-cases for either a white or a black man to hunt hogs or other stock upon
-any lands other than his own; the white man was liable, on conviction,
-to a fine of from $100 to $500, or imprisonment from one to three months
-in the county jail, or both, at the discretion of the court. For the
-same offence no imprisonment was provided in the case of freedmen, and
-the fine was fixed between $10 and $20. The latter, however, could be
-hired at public outcry to the lowest bidder who would pay the fine and
-cost. The employer, it was provided, was to have the preference in
-hiring.[487]
-
-The Legislature first to meet under the reformed government not only
-expressed for the people of Mississippi no profound regret for resisting
-the Federal authority, but left no doubt in what estimation it held
-those who fought for Southern independence by releasing ex-Confederate
-soldiers from indictments for misdemeanors committed before the
-war.[488] In perfect harmony with the spirit of this act of oblivion was
-one which changed the name of Jones County to that of Davis, and the
-name of Ellisville in the same county to Leesburg.[489] This, it should
-be observed, was only three days before the meeting of Congress.
-
-This legislation, by no means the most severe enacted under the new
-governments, marks in Southern sentiment a reaction no less unexpected
-than the complete and almost instantaneous submission following the
-surrender of Johnston. The sudden change in opinion has been ingeniously
-and even absurdly accounted for. In the latter class of explanations may
-be included the notion that the people of the South were exasperated by
-the interference of Congress, that body, as already mentioned, not
-having convened till after the passage of the obnoxious laws. On the
-other hand, it was not generally known, even in Mississippi, that the
-President in the work of reorganization had resolved to ignore the
-coördinate political branch of Government; he had, indeed, fairly
-signified to Governor Sharkey the position that he intended to assume,
-but his communication to that official, which was never designed for
-publication, was not immediately circulated through the State; the
-knowledge, therefore, that the Executive had concluded to oppose the
-policy of Congress could not have been a factor in disturbing the brief
-repose of the seceding States, and we must seek elsewhere for the cause.
-
-In many of the insurgent commonwealths rebellion had involved almost
-every citizen in the guilt of treason, almost every estate in the
-liability to confiscation. The President and his advisers hoped by a
-generous distribution of pardons to win the esteem and confidence of
-this numerous and influential class, and to leave to “Radical” members
-of Congress the ungrateful office of punishment. This policy contributed
-to awaken the undaunted spirit of the South, and was, no doubt, an
-element in unsettling the conditions that prevailed after the surrender.
-Northern magnanimity, which was content to regard the defeat of
-secession as sufficient discipline for the rebellious States, and the
-attitude of the Democratic party were also important influences in
-misleading the South. More responsible for the reaction, however, than
-any of these was the unsatisfactory administration of the Freedmen’s
-Bureau. The testimony of General Grant can be cited to prove that, while
-accomplishing much that was desirable, this institution was retarding
-somewhat the progress of reconstruction. In a hurried tour of the late
-Confederate States he had observed that it was not conducted with good
-judgment or economy, and remarked in his report to the President that
-“the belief widely spread among the freedmen of the Southern States,
-that the lands of their former owners will, at least in part, be divided
-among them, has come from the agents of this bureau. This belief is
-seriously interfering with the willingness of the freedmen to make
-contracts for the coming year.... Many, perhaps the majority, of the
-agents of the Freedmen’s Bureau advise the freedmen that by their own
-industry they must expect to live. To this end they endeavor to secure
-employment for them, and to see that both contracting parties comply
-with their engagements. In some instances, I am sorry to say, the
-freedman’s mind does not seem to be disabused of the idea that a
-freedman has the right to live without care or provision for the future.
-The effect of the belief in division of lands is idleness and
-accumulation in camps, towns, and cities.”[490]
-
-Though its management was open to criticism, the necessity for the
-existence of the bureau, to afford at least temporary protection to the
-newly enfranchised, was perceived and acknowledged by the General. It
-probably accorded well with the political aspirations of bureau agents
-to create in the minds of freedmen a belief that the Government would
-give to each of them “forty acres of land and a mule”; for this
-expectation would be a pledge of allegiance to the Federal
-representative, without the approval of whom no negro could seriously
-hope to secure so enviable a start in his career of freedom.
-
-That confusion would follow the violent overthrow of a long-established
-industrial system was to be expected, and it was not unnatural for the
-South to ascribe to the influence of bureau agents much of the mischief
-inseparable from immediate emancipation. While the complaints of the
-late insurgents were commonly considered with deference, it was scarcely
-to be expected that they would not sometimes be despised, and it would
-be easy to impute to their discontent every outrage reported to the
-officers of the bureau or the commanders of the posts. Though Federal
-representatives as a rule labored faithfully to restore and preserve
-order, it would be singular if some of them, assuming the arrogant
-manner of conquerors, did not occasionally depart from that system of
-conciliation which the generous nature of Mr. Lincoln had adopted.
-
-These were among the causes of the Southern reaction. It is no
-justification of these severe and even cruel enactments to show, as Mr.
-Herbert has done, that similar laws disgraced the statute books of many
-Northern States. In the settlement then in progress the Southern people
-conceded nothing of importance that was not won in the war, and if they
-were as sincere in their desire for reunion as some writers contend,
-they should not have feared the paradox of improving by their example
-the ancient legislation of the free States, or have been alarmed at the
-innovation of reducing to practice the principles of the Declaration of
-Independence.
-
-It is not to be denied that there was considerable ground for complaint
-because of the influence of many employees of the bureau in demoralizing
-the Southern system of labor, but the further punishment of a race that
-had been trodden down by oppressive generations does not commend itself
-as either a humane or an enlightened remedy; besides, the South was
-greatly indebted to the fidelity of the negro, who during the war
-possessed, without abusing, the opportunity as well as the capacity for
-mischief. On the other hand, there was some obligation to Northern men
-for their magnanimity, and under wiser counsels their wishes, and even
-their prejudices, would have been respected. In the victorious section
-public opinion, then in the formative stage, was watching anxiously the
-progress and the proceedings of the new governments. Except a few
-extremists, the voters of the loyal States did not dream at that time,
-as was persistently asserted at the South, of forcing negro suffrage on
-the rebellious States. They did, however, desire to see embodied in the
-new State constitutions such provisions as would establish before the
-law the equality of all classes.
-
-While the policy of President Johnson did not altogether escape
-criticism at the South, so general and so prompt was the acquiescence in
-his plan, that when Congress convened nearly all the States recently in
-rebellion had remodeled their governments and elected members of
-Congress who were at the national capital waiting to be admitted to
-seats. Without separately considering the new establishments, they may
-be described concisely and with sufficient accuracy as governments
-differing but little from those extinguished by the fall of the
-Confederacy. The members of the former, it is true, had taken an oath of
-allegiance, and the influence of that act upon their conduct will
-presently be noticed. Though it certainly was not the original
-intention, and appears never to have become the fixed purpose of Mr.
-Johnson to entrust to enemies of the Government the work of restoring
-the insurgent States, the result of his endeavors was that
-reconstruction was left almost exclusively in the hands of those who had
-attempted to destroy the Union. It was precisely such a contingency that
-Mr. Lincoln had in mind when he declared in his message of December 8,
-1863, that, “An attempt to guarantee and protect a revived State
-government, constructed in whole or in preponderating part from the very
-element against whose hostility and violence it is to be protected, is
-simply absurd.”[491]
-
-This deliberate statement, as well as the subsequent administrative acts
-of Mr. Lincoln, sufficiently disposes of the notion that he favored a
-rather loose system of reconstruction. Without attempting to distinguish
-between theories really identical, there was still a considerable
-difference in the reorganization effected under the two Executives. The
-conditions which confronted the President and Congress in December,
-1865, could have arisen only from disregarding the principle laid down
-by Mr. Lincoln. From his solemn and reiterated declarations there can be
-little doubt that he would have rejected without hesitation any system
-of which the first fruits were little more than a nullification of his
-decree of emancipation.
-
-Notwithstanding his tireless threats of severity, we can easily perceive
-in the reorganization directed by Mr. Johnson, a noticeable falling back
-from the Executive plan of December, 1863, as announced and enforced by
-his predecessor. Nor did this retrogression proceed from the greater
-humanity, but rather from the greater weakness of the new President.
-Even in the matter of fealty there was a difference; for while the
-conflict was still doubtful, the taking of an oath of allegiance to the
-General Government was a serious step for the Southern Unionist, because
-the record thereafter singled him out, if not for destruction, at least
-for annoyance, or for punishment by the friends of secession, and,
-perhaps, the oath then effected some such object as it was designed to
-accomplish. When war had ceased, however, there was no longer a choice
-of sides, and thenceforth universal swearing as an instrument of
-government became practically worthless. It was not regarded, at all
-events, as an efficient security for the future. Mr. Johnson probably
-continued to exact oaths of allegiance because they were formerly of
-value in distinguishing the friends from the enemies of the Government.
-Though professing the same general opinion on the subject of amnesty,
-the principles on which the two Presidents granted pardons were
-sufficiently distinct.
-
-We have seen that President Johnson, who had once declared that “rebels”
-should take a back seat in the work of reconstruction, so far changed
-his opinion that he subsequently said the people must be trusted in the
-restoration of their governments; he likewise modified his early
-impressions as to the permanence of the establishments instituted under
-his predecessor, for it was his original opinion that those governments
-were merely provisional in their nature, and would require the
-confirmation or the approval of Congress. Ultimately, however, he came
-to regard himself as the judge of their sufficiency. The evidence of
-this is conclusive. In a telegram of July 14, 1865, to Governor Sharkey,
-Secretary Seward said:
-
-“The government of the State [Mississippi] will be provisional only
-until the civil authorities shall be restored, with the approval of
-Congress. Meanwhile military authority cannot be withdrawn.”[492]
-
-If it be contended that Mr. Seward made this important declaration upon
-his personal responsibility the argument fails, because in a dispatch to
-Governor Marvin, of Florida, dated September 12, 1865, nearly two months
-later, the Secretary of State repeated the substance of the message in
-language even more explicit. On that occasion he said: “It must,
-however, be distinctly understood that the restoration to which your
-proclamation refers will be subject to the decision of Congress.”[493]
-
-The determination of President Johnson to retain the members of Mr.
-Lincoln’s Cabinet would indicate his original intention of applying to
-the subjugated States the system adopted by his predecessor. The
-influence which led to the modification of the method of enforcing
-without abandoning the principles underlying that plan it is not easy to
-discover. His change of attitude toward the South has been variously
-explained. By Mr. Blaine it has been ascribed to the flattery of
-Southern leaders, as well as to the personal influence of Secretary
-Seward, whose wide culture, and consequent humanity, would favor a
-policy of conciliation. Without intending to underestimate the
-insinuating address of the New York statesman it may be observed that
-his powers of persuasion appear to have exerted themselves with most
-success in the direction of the President’s inclination. The attention
-of Southern leaders, a class of men by whom the President had hitherto
-been ignored, deserves, however, to be noticed in any enumeration of
-even the probable cause of the change. Another theory has it that Mr.
-Johnson both feared and hated several of the leading Republicans,
-because of their connection with a movement to procure his resignation
-from the Vice-Presidency, a station which, they believed, he had
-disgraced by appearing in an intoxicated state to take the oath of
-office. His desire to punish those who had constituted themselves
-custodians of the national dignity, it is asserted, was a principal
-motive in his surrender to the South. A more reasonable explanation of
-the change which occurred in the President’s attitude toward his own
-section is that offered by Dr. Chadsey, who regards Mr. Johnson as an
-inconsistent advocate of State Sovereignty.[494] In this principle he
-believed as firmly as Jefferson Davis himself, though unlike the
-Confederate chieftain he refused, by stopping short of secession, to
-accept its logical results. Nearly all his administrative acts are those
-which might have been expected from a Democrat of the strict
-construction school, and Andrew Johnson never professed allegiance to
-any other political party.
-
-The governments of which the reorganization has been described in the
-preceding pages continued in operation until suspended by the
-Reconstruction Act of March 2, 1867. Except Texas all these
-establishments, as previously observed, had sent members to the
-Thirty-ninth Congress. Their claims to seats, it is well known, were
-completely ignored, and a select body, consisting of nine members from
-the lower and six from the upper House, was appointed to investigate the
-condition of the late Confederate States, and to report whether any of
-them were entitled to representation in either branch of Congress. With
-the conclusions of the celebrated Joint Committee this essay is not
-concerned further than to observe that on the recommendation of the
-majority the Tennessee delegation was admitted on the 24th of July,
-1866. Long before that event, however, the task of restoring the Union
-had been taken altogether out of Executive hands.
-
-If we reflect how much swifter in a political organism is the progress
-of ruin than that of repair, and consider that four years had been
-abandoned to the destruction and disorders of civil war, we cannot but
-be surprised at the attempt of the President, single-handed, to adapt
-and execute in less than three months a series of measures designed to
-restore tranquillity and revive prosperity among the impoverished
-inhabitants of a wasted country. In this view his failure in the work of
-reconstruction can excite little astonishment. One reason for this
-precipitate action was a desire to reunite the sections before the
-meeting of Congress, and it was so far a praiseworthy if not a prudent
-course to adopt. But had he proceeded ever so leisurely there would
-still have existed undoubted obstacles to success. To say that he was
-lacking in the tact of his predecessor, that he was naturally of an
-obstinate and even of a combative disposition, and that he possessed
-defects, both of temper and judgment, would be merely to repeat a few
-trite observations.[495] Conditions were rapidly changing, but with Mr.
-Johnson, conditions passed for almost nothing, though in reality
-circumstances make legislative acts beneficial or otherwise. Like the
-measures of the Thirty-eighth Congress for restoring the Union, those of
-Mr. Johnson may be carefully examined without discovering any
-considerable traces of originality. Indeed, if we except President
-Lincoln, this entire period seems to have been somewhat lacking in
-constructive statesmanship, though no branch of the public service was
-without officials of integrity, judgment and ability.
-
-In the course of the preceding pages the inaugurals, the messages, the
-letters and other communications of Mr. Lincoln have been freely quoted
-to show his opinions on all of the principal and most of the subordinate
-phases of reconstruction. To complete the design of this inquiry, there
-remains to be considered but a single topic related to the main theme,
-namely, the limitations of the Presidential plan for restoring the
-Union. Many of these defects having been incidentally noticed, a general
-recapitulation does not appear to be required, and the subject, it is
-believed, may be appropriately concluded by an examination of those
-features of the Executive system which the narrative has not hitherto
-sufficiently emphasized.
-
-This summary disclaims, however, any intention of attempting the
-absurdity of testing the statesmanship of Abraham Lincoln by contrasting
-a method of reconstruction proposed in 1863 with that deemed adequate by
-Congress to meet the changed conditions of 1867. We may, indeed, fairly
-and even profitably compare the sentiments of the two political
-departments in the summer of 1864, when, for the first time during the
-war, they were arrayed in opposition on a fundamental policy of civil
-administration. Because of its variance with received notions of
-representative government, the so-called “ten _per cent._ principle”
-will be first considered.
-
-The proportion of the political people that Mr. Lincoln offered to
-recognize as constituting a State encountered, probably, more opposition
-than any single feature of his plan. While its merits and its defects
-were equally evident, the latter, as might be expected, were given by
-its adversaries the place of prominence in all their criticisms.
-Exception was taken as well to the legality as to the expediency of the
-principle. The former has been fully discussed, and on that subject all
-that need be observed is that President Lincoln believed it
-constitutional to preserve the Union, and every measure conducive to
-that end he regarded as lawful.
-
-On the question of expediency, however, several considerations suggest
-themselves. Apart from its repugnance to the American idea of majority
-rule, its palpable weakness was that governments founded on the consent
-of a minimum proportion of the electors would require the support of
-Federal power. Here occurs the question, did the forces thus engaged so
-greatly impair the efficiency of the main armies as sensibly to retard
-the work of destroying the enemy? It cannot be denied that there were
-occasions when a few additional regiments could have been employed to
-advantage; but neither the reverses nor the disasters of the Union
-armies were caused by lack of numbers so much as by the need early in
-the war of commanders of military genius. On the other hand, the troops
-who sustained the new governments, besides weakening the Confederacy,
-were affording protection to organizations that otherwise could not have
-been recruited. There is record of not less than sixty-five regiments
-furnished by the States restored during the Presidency of Mr.
-Lincoln.[496] But even more important than this gratifying result was
-the influence which the reinstatement of four seceding commonwealths
-exerted on the attitude of those European powers which had proved early
-in the conflict their hostility to the United States. The “Johnson
-governments,” so-called, were never required to furnish any such
-unquestioned evidence of reviving loyalty, and that fact should not be
-overlooked in any comparison of the results accomplished by the two
-Executives.
-
-Notwithstanding the general existence of a strong opposition to minority
-rule, the revolutionary proceedings in western Virginia were sanctioned
-by every department of Government. Members from the loyal eastern
-counties were at first admitted to seats in both branches of Congress;
-their successors, however, were in turn refused this indulgence until
-there was presented the novel spectacle of a single Senator representing
-the diminished glory of the Old Dominion. Louisiana, too, which for a
-few days was heard in the lower House, was subsequently excluded
-altogether by the changing views of Congress. The revived bill of Wade
-and Davis provided in one of its many forms for recognizing that State
-as well as Arkansas, and even when the extremists obtained control of
-Congress the loyal government organized in Tennessee was approved by
-avowed opponents of the Executive plan. Mr. Lincoln, indeed, clearly
-perceived the inherent weakness of his system, and no one could have
-been more anxious than he to secure a wider constituency. These facts
-seem to indicate that between him and Congress there was not then so
-wide a gulf as, for partisan purposes, is sometimes represented. It is
-true that there was a difference of principle between the two
-departments; that there was a powerful party in Congress who believed
-that reconstruction was essentially a work of peace and, therefore,
-pertained exclusively to the national Legislature. The holders of this
-view were, doubtless, confirmed in their opinion by a conviction that
-the Executive was encroaching on a coördinate branch of government.
-
-The Presidential system as well as the contemporary theory of Congress
-restricted the suffrage of whites, by whom it was almost universally
-engrossed at the foundation of the Republic. On the ground of justice
-and to encourage the cultivation of civic virtues among the negroes, Mr.
-Lincoln would admit those qualified to exercise this important
-privilege. His successor acknowledged in a private communication that
-for party purposes he favored some extension of the elective franchise
-to freedmen. Though Congress advanced rapidly toward negro suffrage, the
-first essay of that body in the work of reconstruction included no
-provision for conferring on the colored race a right to participate in
-government. By Wade and Davis it was not then deemed necessary even as a
-defensive power. Only a few bold innovators, considered almost fanatic
-on the question, were in favor of bestowing the right to vote on the
-multitudes maintained by the Freedmen’s Bureau; it was not then deemed
-within the commission of the general Government, the teachings of
-political science were still respected by the majority in Congress, and
-the fruits of victory, it was hoped, could be secured without a resort
-to radical measures.
-
-The form of an oath to support the proclamations and laws respecting
-slavery appeared in the Presidential plan as a condition indispensable
-to reinstatement. On this subject the difference between the Executive
-and Congress was merely one of degree; for the Wade-Davis bill,
-doubtless in imitation of the Presidential system, imposed terms
-precedent, and the new constitutions were to repudiate the rebel debt,
-abolish slavery and prohibit the higher insurgent officials, civil as
-well as military, from holding the office of governor, from serving in
-the State legislatures and even from voting.
-
-By its adversaries the plan of Mr. Lincoln was condemned for its failure
-to exact any security for the future beyond the oath of allegiance, the
-telegraphic supervision by the President and the power of Congress over
-the admission of members. This defect the legislative theory endeavored
-to supply, but even the guardianship proposed by Wade and Davis could
-give no assurance that the rebellious communities would not, after
-reinstatement, eliminate by constitutional amendment the conditions
-imposed on their readmission.[497]
-
-However crude we may now consider Mr. Lincoln’s system it should not be
-forgotten that with him the paramount consideration was the overthrow of
-the Confederacy. With that purpose all his measures harmonized, and it
-is scarcely critical to examine them from any other point of view. How
-far necessity, which had originally suggested, would subsequently have
-modified his plan it is now impossible to state. Without detracting a
-particle from his well-won fame it may be admitted that his method,
-which could not have foreseen the rapid succession of changes following
-his death, was but indifferently adapted to solve the problem with which
-Congress was compelled to deal in 1867; but the measure of permanent
-success which attended the deliberate legislation of that body by no
-means justifies the conclusion that some other system would have proved
-a total failure. With all its immaturity the plan of the President was
-not without its advantages. It aimed to restore with as little
-innovation as possible the Union of the Fathers; with some exceptions
-the natural leaders of Southern society were to participate in the work
-of reorganization, and the author of this simple plan approached his
-difficult task in a generous and enlightened spirit.
-
-On the life and character of Abraham Lincoln an admiring generation has
-exhausted the language of panegyric; the terms of censure have been
-reserved almost exclusively for his method of restoring the Union; but
-neither the critic’s ken, nor the ambitious phrase of eulogy, nor all
-the thoughts that since his death have dropped from poets’ pens affords
-that clear insight into his nature which is unconsciously revealed in
-the simple and beautiful exhortation that concludes his last inaugural.
-The sentiments which immortalize that celebrated state paper could have
-proceeded only from the depths of a noble soul—a soul that would have
-imposed silence on the voice of vengeance and would never have consented
-to the revenge of section upon section. In this book an endeavor has
-been made fully to discuss his plan of reconstruction; the spirit in
-which he approached that difficult task is best stated in his own
-generous and patriotic words, with which may be fittingly closed this
-long though interesting inquiry: “With malice toward none; with charity
-for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right,
-let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation’s
-wounds; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his
-widow, and his orphan—to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and
-lasting peace among ourselves, and with all nations.”[498]
-
-
- THE END.
-
------
-
-Footnote 435:
-
- Why the Solid South? p. 1.
-
-Footnote 436:
-
- This recollection has been verified by correspondence with Col. A. K.
- McClure, the gentleman referred to.—=Author.=
-
-Footnote 437:
-
- Ex. Doc. No. 70, H. of R., 1 Sess. 39th Cong., p. 78.
-
-Footnote 438:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 28.
-
-Footnote 439:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 28.
-
-Footnote 440:
-
- Acts of the State of Tennessee, 1865, p. 33.
-
-Footnote 441:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 779.
-
-Footnote 442:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 443:
-
- This election resulted in the choice of Nathaniel G. Taylor, Horace
- Maynard, Edmund Cooper, Isaac R. Hawkins, John W. Leftwich, William B.
- Stokes, William B. Campbell and Dorsey B. Thomas. The last named,
- however, was affected by the Governor’s recount, and Daniel W. Arnell,
- who was declared the successful candidate, was admitted to Congress
- with the other Tennessee Representatives on the 24th of July, 1866.
- See Why the Solid South? pp. 182–183.
-
-Footnote 444:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 780.
-
-Footnote 445:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 781.
-
-Footnote 446:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 447:
-
- Having been elected United States Senator, Mr. Hahn resigned the
- governorship on the 4th of March and was succeeded in office by
- Lieutenant-Governor Wells.
-
-Footnote 448:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 510.
-
-Footnote 449:
-
- Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 39th Cong., p. 101.
-
-Footnote 450:
-
- Three Decades of Federal Legislation, p. 429; also Why the Solid
- South? p. 397.
-
-Footnote 451:
-
- Poore’s Charters and Constitutions, Vol. II. p. 1938 _et seq._
-
-Footnote 452:
-
- Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 670.
-
-Footnote 453:
-
- Letter of Mrs. Anna Pierpont Siviter to the author.
-
-Footnote 454:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 817.
-
-Footnote 455:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Footnote 456:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 817.
-
-Footnote 457:
-
- McPherson’s Hand-Book of Politics, 1868, p. 46.
-
-Footnote 458:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 800.
-
-Footnote 459:
-
- Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. II. pp. 9–11.
-
-Footnote 460:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 800.
-
-Footnote 461:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hand-Book, 1868, pp. 45–46.
-
-Footnote 462:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, pp. 801–802.
-
-Footnote 463:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 802.
-
-Footnote 464:
-
- Letcher and Smith were Governors of Virginia during the war.
-
-Footnote 465:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hand-Book, 1868, p. 8.
-
-Footnote 466:
-
- Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. II. p. 70.
-
-Footnote 467:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hand-Book, 1868, pp. 10–11.
-
-Footnote 468:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 626.
-
-Footnote 469:
-
- This ordinance was ratified by a vote of 20,506 to 2,002; Poore’s
- Charters and Constitutions, Vol. II. p. 1419n; also Three Decades of
- Federal Legislation, p. 385.
-
-Footnote 470:
-
- Ratified by 19,039 to 3,970 votes. Poore’s Charters and Constitutions,
- Vol. II. p. 1419n.
-
-Footnote 471:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hand-Book, 1868, p. 19.
-
-Footnote 472:
-
- Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, Vol. XXXII., p. 127.
-
-Footnote 473:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 628.
-
-Footnote 474:
-
- McClure’s Magazine, Dec., 1899, p. 174.
-
-Footnote 475:
-
- The Provisional appointments were made in the following order: June
- 13, 1865, William L. Sharkey, Mississippi; June 17, James Johnson,
- Georgia, and Andrew J. Hamilton, Texas; June 21, Lewis E. Parsons,
- Alabama; June 30, Benjamin F. Perry, South Carolina; July 13, William
- Marvin, Florida.
-
-Footnote 476:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 580.
-
-Footnote 477:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 581.
-
-Footnote 478:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 583.
-
-Footnote 479:
-
- Constitution of the United States, by Francis N. Thorpe, p. 49.
-
-Footnote 480:
-
- See Why The Solid South? pp. 9–10, for an ingenious explanation of the
- unanimity and promptness with which the Presidential policy of
- reconstruction was accepted by the South.
-
-Footnote 481:
-
- Laws of Mississippi, pp. 86–88.
-
-Footnote 482:
-
- Ibid., pp. 89–90.
-
-Footnote 483:
-
- Laws of Mississippi, 1865, pp. 82–86.
-
-Footnote 484:
-
- Ibid., p. 231.
-
-Footnote 485:
-
- Laws of Mississippi, 1865, pp. 165–167.
-
-Footnote 486:
-
- Laws of Mississippi, 1865, pp. 90–93.
-
-Footnote 487:
-
- Laws of Mississippi, 1865, pp. 199–200.
-
-Footnote 488:
-
- Ibid., pp. 210–211.
-
-Footnote 489:
-
- Ibid., p. 240.
-
-Footnote 490:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1866, p. 132.
-
-Footnote 491:
-
- Ann. Cycl., 1863, pp. 780–781.
-
-Footnote 492:
-
- Gorham’s Life of Stanton, Vol. II. p. 255.
-
-Footnote 493:
-
- McPherson’s Pol. Hand-Book, 1868, p. 25.
-
-Footnote 494:
-
- President Johnson and Reconstruction, pp. 33–34.
-
-Footnote 495:
-
- In this connection his repudiation of the Sherman-Johnston agreement
- will occur to the reader.
-
-Footnote 496:
-
- Strait’s Roster of Regimental Surgeons and Assistant Surgeons, p. 314.
- This estimate includes all the troops furnished by the new State of
- West Virginia.
-
-Footnote 497:
-
- The author believes himself fortunate in being able to place before
- his readers a letter from the pen of Hon. J. B. Henderson, the only
- surviving Senator who participated in the debates summarized in
- chapter X., and, so far as the writer is informed, the only living
- member who served in the United States Senate during that eventful
- period. Coming, as it does, from one who supported many of Mr.
- Lincoln’s most cherished measures, the letter will be welcomed as a
- valuable historical document. It contrasts forcibly the Presidential
- plan with the theory of Senator Sumner, and though written on August
- 21, 1901, more than a generation after the occurrence of the principal
- events discussed in this book, it is characterized by the clearness
- and the energy of expression which marked even the unpremeditated
- addresses of the Senator’s Congressional career. On the subject of
- reunion he writes as follows:
-
- “Time, in my judgment, has stamped its approval on Mr. Lincoln’s views
- touching the questions of reconstruction during the Civil War. He was
- always calm and judicial. He was philosophical in periods of the most
- intense excitement. He never lost his head, but under all
- circumstances preserved his temper and his judgment. He was not the
- buffoon described by his enemies. On the contrary, he was a wise
- statesman, a learned lawyer, and a conscientious patriot; and, better
- than all, an honest man.
-
- “The infirmity in Mr. Sumner’s theories of reconstruction came from
- the great exuberance of his learning. He ransacked history, ancient
- and modern, for precedents growing out of civil wars. But these
- precedents all antedated the American Constitution. They grew out of
- monarchical systems of government, and had no relation to the
- republican forms created by our Constitution. Under our system there
- can be no suicide of a State. Individual citizens by rebellion and
- disloyalty may forfeit their political rights, but the State as an
- entity commits no treason and forfeits no rights to existence. Under
- our Constitution the State cannot die. It is the duty of the Federal
- Government to see that it does not die—that it shall never cease to
- exist. If the State be invaded from without, the duty of the General
- Government is to protect and defend it. If domestic violence threatens
- the subversion of the local government, the nation’s duty is to
- intervene and uphold the hands of those who maintain the laws. The
- trustee of an express trust cannot excuse himself to a minority of the
- beneficiaries because the majority repudiate his agency.
-
- “‘The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a
- republican form of government.’ No State government is republican in
- form that does not acknowledge the supremacy of the Federal
- Constitution. This is the essential test of republicanism. No State
- can enter the Union without conforming its Constitution to this
- supreme organic law. And whenever by force or violence, a majority of
- its citizens undertake to withdraw the State from its obedience to
- Federal law and to repudiate the sovereignty of the Federal
- Government, it at once becomes the duty of Congress to act.
-
- “This duty of Congress is not to destroy the State or to declare it a
- suicide, and proceed to administer on its effects. On the contrary,
- the duty clearly is to preserve the State, to restore it to its old
- republican forms. Its duty is not to territorialize the State and
- proceed to govern it as a conquered colony. The duty is not one of
- demolition, but one of restoration. It is not to make a Constitution,
- but to guarantee that the old Constitution or one equally republican
- in form, and made by the loyal citizens of the State, shall be upheld
- and sustained.
-
- “If a majority of the people of a State conspire to subvert its
- republican forms, that majority may be, and should be, put down by the
- Federal power, while the minority, however few, sustaining republican
- forms may be constitutionally installed as the political power of the
- State.
-
- “These, as I understand, were the views of Mr. Lincoln; and they were
- not the views of Mr. Sumner, as enunciated in his resolutions of 1862
- and advocated by him in his subsequent career in the Senate.
-
- “A departure from these views gave us the carpet-bag governments of
- the Southern States, and brought upon us divers other evils in our
- ideas and theories of government, whose effects are yet visible.”
-
-Footnote 498:
-
- N. & H., Vol. X., p. 145.
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX A
- THIRTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS
-
-
- SENATE
-
-First session, July 4, 1861, to August 6, 1861. Republicans (31) in
-Roman, Democrats (10) in _Italics_, Unionists (7) in =SMALL CAPITALS=,
-vacancies 2.
-
-Second session, Dec. 1, 1862, to Mar. 4, 1864.
-
- CALIFORNIA.—_Milton S. Latham_ and _James A. McDougall_ (_vice_ E.
- D. Baker, who died).
-
- CONNECTICUT.—James Dixon and Lafayette S. Foster.
-
- DELAWARE.—_James A. Bayard_ and _Willard Saulsbury_.
-
- ILLINOIS.—Lyman Trumbull and Orville H. Browning.
-
- INDIANA.—Henry S. Lane and _Jesse D. Bright_ (expelled Feb. 5, 1862,
- and was succeeded by _David Turpie_).
-
- IOWA.—James W. Grimes and James Harlan.
-
- KANSAS.—James H. Lane and Samuel C. Pomeroy.
-
- KENTUCKY.—_Lazarus W. Powell_ and =Garrett Davis= (_vice_ _John C.
- Breckenridge_, expelled).
-
- MAINE.—Lot M. Morrill and William Pitt Fessenden.
-
- MASSACHUSETTS.—Charles Sumner and Henry Wilson.
-
- MARYLAND.—=Anthony Kennedy= and _James A. Pearce_ (died Dec. 20,
- 1862, and was succeeded by =Thomas H. Hicks=).
-
- MICHIGAN.—Zachariah Chandler and Jacob M. Howard.
-
- MINNESOTA.—_Henry M. Rice_ and Morton S. Wilkinson.
-
- MISSOURI.—=John B. Henderson= (_vice_ Trusten Polk, expelled) and
- =Robert Wilson= (_vice_ Waldo Porter Johnson, expelled).
-
- NEW HAMPSHIRE.—John P. Hale and Daniel Clark.
-
- NEW YORK.—Preston King and Ira Harris.
-
- NEW JERSEY.—John C. Ten Eyck and _John R. Thomson_ (died Sept. 12,
- 1862, Richard S. Field was temporarily appointed to fill the
- vacancy, and James W. Wall was subsequently elected for the
- unexpired term).
-
- OHIO.—Benjamin F. Wade and John Sherman (_vice_ Salmon P. Chase, who
- resigned Mar. 6, 1861).
-
- OREGON.—Edward D. Baker (died Oct. 21, 1861, and was succeeded by
- =Benjamin F. Harding=) and _James W. Nesmith_.
-
- PENNSYLVANIA.—Edgar Cowan and David Wilmot (_vice_ Simon Cameron,
- who resigned in March, 1861).
-
- RHODE ISLAND.—Henry B. Anthony and James F. Simmons (resigned,
- =Samuel G. Arnold= elected to fill the unexpired term).
-
- VERMONT.—Solomon Foot and Jacob Collamer.
-
- VIRGINIA.—=Waitman T. Willey= and =John S. Carlile=.
-
- WISCONSIN.—James R. Doolittle and Timothy O. Howe.
-
-
- HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
-
- CALIFORNIA.—Aaron A. Sargent, Timothy G. Phelps, Frederick F. Low.
-
- CONNECTICUT.—Dwight Loomis, _James E. English_, Alfred A. Burnham,
- _George C. Woodruff_.
-
- DELAWARE.—=George P. Fisher.=
-
- ILLINOIS.—Elihu B. Washburne, Isaac N. Arnold, Owen Lovejoy, William
- Kellogg, _William A. Richardson_, _James C. Robinson_, _Philip B.
- Fouke_, _John A. Logan_.
-
- INDIANA.—_John Law_, _James A. Cravens_, William McKee Dunn,
- _William S. Holman_, George W. Julian, Albert G. Porter, _Daniel
- W. Voorhees_, Albert S. White, Schuyler Colfax, William Mitchell,
- John P. C. Shanks.
-
- IOWA.—James F. Wilson, William Vandever.
-
- KANSAS.—Martin F. Conway.
-
- KENTUCKY.—=James S. Jackson= (died in 1862 and was succeeded by
- =George H. Yeaman=), =Henry Grider=, =Aaron Harding=, =Charles A.
- Wickliffe=, =George W. Dunlap=, =Robert Mallory=, =John J.
- Crittenden=, =William H. Wadsworth=, =John W. Menzies=, =Samuel L.
- Casey= (_vice_ Mr. Burnett, expelled).
-
- MAINE.—John N. Goodwin, Charles W. Walton (resigned, Thos. A. D.
- Fessenden elected to fill vacancy), Samuel C. Fessenden, Anson P.
- Morrill, John H. Rice, Frederick A. Pike.
-
- MARYLAND.—=John W. Crisfield=, =Edwin H. Webster=, =Cornelius L. L.
- Leary=, _Henry May_, =Francis Thomas=, =Charles B. Calvert=.
-
- MASSACHUSETTS.—Thomas D. Eliot, James Buffinton, Benjamin F. Thomas
- (sometimes classed as a Unionist), Alexander H. Rice, Samuel
- Hooper, John B. Alley, Daniel W. Gooch, Charles R. Train,
- Goldsmith F. Bailey (died May 8, 1862, and was succeeded by Amasa
- Walker), Charles Delano, Henry L. Dawes.
-
- MICHIGAN.—Bradley F. Granger, Fernando C. Beaman, Francis W.
- Kellogg, Rowland E. Trowbridge.
-
- MINNESOTA.—Cyrus Aldrich and William Windom.
-
- MISSOURI.—Francis P. Blair, jr. (resigned in 1862), =James S.
- Rollins=, =William A. Hall=, _Elijah H. Norton_, =Thomas L.
- Price=, _John S. Phelps_, _John W. Noell_.
-
- NEW HAMPSHIRE.—Gilman Marston, Edward H. Rollins, Thomas M. Edwards.
-
- NEW JERSEY.—John T. Nixon, John L. N. Stratton, _William G. Steele_,
- _George T. Cobb_, _Nehemiah Perry_.
-
- NEW YORK.—_Edward H. Smith_, _Moses F. Odell_, _Benjamin Wood_,
- _James E. Kerrigan_, William Wall, Frederick A. Conkling, _Elijah
- Ward_, _Isaac C. Delaplaine_, _Edward Haight_, Charles H. Van
- Wyck, _John B. Steele_, Stephen Baker, Abraham B. Olin, _Erastus
- Corning_, James B. McKean, William A. Wheeler, Socrates N.
- Sherman, _Chauncey Vibbard_, Richard Franchot, Roscoe Conkling, R.
- Holland Duell, William E. Lansing, Ambrose W. Clark, Charles B.
- Sedgwick, Theodore M. Pomeroy, Jacob P. Chamberlain, Alexander S.
- Diven, Robert B. Van Valkenburg, Alfred Ely, Augustus Frank, Burt
- Van Horn, Elbridge G. Spaulding, Reuben E. Fenton.
-
- OHIO.—_George H. Pendleton_, John A. Gurley, _Clement L.
- Vallandigham_, _William Allen_, James M. Ashley, _Chilton A.
- White_, =Richard A. Harrison=, Samuel Shellabarger, _Warren P.
- Noble_, Carey A. Trimble, Valentine B. Horton, _Samuel S. Cox_,
- Samuel T. Worcester, Harrison G. Blake, _Robert H. Nugen_, William
- P. Cutler, _James R. Morris_, Sidney Edgerton, Albert G. Riddle,
- John Hutchins, John A. Bingham.
-
- OREGON.—George K. Shiel.
-
- PENNSYLVANIA.—_William E. Lehman_, _Charles J. Biddle_, John P.
- Verree, William D. Kelley, William Morris Davis, John Hickman,
- _Thomas B. Cooper_ (died April 4, 1862, and was succeeded by John
- D. Stiles), _Sydenham E. Ancona_, Thaddeus Stevens, John W.
- Killinger, James H. Campbell, =Hendrick B. Wright=, _Philip
- Johnson_, Galusha A. Grow, James T. Hale, _Joseph Baily_, Edward
- McPherson, Samuel S. Blair, John Covode, _Jesse Lazear_, James K.
- Moorhead, Robert McKnight, John W. Wallace, John Patton, Elijah
- Babbitt.
-
- RHODE ISLAND.—=George H. Browne=, =William P. Sheffield=.
-
- TENNESSEE.—=Horace Maynard.=
-
- VERMONT.—Ezekiel P. Walton, Justin S. Morrill, Portus Baxter.
-
- VIRGINIA.—=Charles H. Upton=, =Edmund Pendleton=, =William G.
- Brown=, =Jacob B. Blair=, =Killian V. Whaley=, =Joseph E. Segar=.
-
- WISCONSIN.—John F. Potter, Luther Hanchett (died Nov. 24, 1862, and
- was succeeded by Walter McIndoe), A. Scott Sloan.
-
-
- DELEGATES FROM TERRITORIES
-
- COLORADO.—Hiram P. Bennett.
-
- DAKOTA.—John B. S. Todd.
-
- NEBRASKA.—Samuel G. Daily.
-
- NEVADA.—_John C. Cradlebaugh._
-
- NEW MEXICO.—John S. Watts.
-
- UTAH.—_John M. Bernhisel._
-
- WASHINGTON.—James H. Wallace.
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX B
- THIRTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS
-
-
- SENATE
-
-First regular session, Dec. 7, 1863, to July 4, 1864.
-
-Second session from Dec. 5, 1864, to March 3, 1865.
-
- CALIFORNIA.—John Conness and _James A. McDougall_.
-
- CONNECTICUT.—James Dixon and Lafayette S. Foster.
-
- DELAWARE.—_Willard Saulsbury_ and _George Read Riddle_ (_vice_
- Senator _Bayard_, who resigned).
-
- ILLINOIS.—_William A. Richardson_ and Lyman Trumbull.
-
- INDIANA.—_Thomas A. Hendricks_ and Henry S. Lane.
-
- IOWA.—James Harlan and James W. Grimes.
-
- KANSAS.—Samuel C. Pomeroy and James H. Lane.
-
- KENTUCKY.—=Garrett Davis= (Senator =Davis= is sometimes mentioned as
- a Democrat) and _Lazarus W. Powell_.
-
- MAINE.—Lot M. Morrill and William Pitt Fessenden (resigned in 1864,
- and was succeeded by Nathan A. Farwell).
-
- MASSACHUSETTS.—Charles Sumner and Henry Wilson.
-
- MARYLAND.—=Reverdy Johnson= and =Thomas H. Hicks= (died Feb. 13,
- 1865).
-
- MICHIGAN.—Zachariah Chandler and Jacob M. Howard.
-
- MINNESOTA.—Alexander Ramsey and Morton S. Wilkinson.
-
- MISSOURI.—John B. Henderson (sometimes mentioned as a Unionist) and
- B. Gratz Brown (_vice_ Waldo Porter Johnson, expelled, Robert
- Wilson having been appointed _pro tem._).
-
- NEW HAMPSHIRE.—Daniel Clark and John P. Hale.
-
- NEW JERSEY.—_William Wright_ and John C. Ten Eyck.
-
- NEW YORK.—Edwin D. Morgan and Ira Harris.
-
- OHIO.—Benjamin F. Wade and John Sherman.
-
- OREGON.—Benjamin F. Harding and _James W. Nesmith_.
-
- PENNSYLVANIA.—_Charles R. Buckalew_ and Edgar Cowan.
-
- RHODE ISLAND.—William Sprague and Henry B. Anthony.
-
- VERMONT.—Solomon Foot and Jacob Collamer.
-
- VIRGINIA.—=Lemuel J. Bowden= and =John S. Carlile= (sometimes
- mentioned as a Democrat).
-
- WEST VIRGINIA.—Waitman T. Willey and Peter G. Van Winkle.
-
- WISCONSIN.—James R. Doolittle and Timothy O. Howe.
-
- NEVADA.—James W. Nye and William M. Stewart.
-
-
- HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
-
- CALIFORNIA.—Thomas B. Shannon, William Higby, Cornelius Cole.
-
- CONNECTICUT.—Henry C. Deming, _James E. English_, Augustus
- Brandegee, John H. Hubbard.
-
- DELAWARE.—Nathaniel B. Smithers.
-
- ILLINOIS.—Isaac N. Arnold, John F. Farnsworth, Elihu B. Washburne,
- _Charles M. Harris_, Owen Lovejoy (died Mar. 25, 1864, and was
- succeeded by Ebon C. Ingersoll), Jesse O. Norton, _John R. Eden_,
- _John T. Stuart_, _Lewis W. Ross_, _Anthony L. Knapp_, _James C.
- Robinson_, _William R. Morrison_, _William J. Allen_, _James C.
- Allen_.
-
- INDIANA.—_John Law_, _James A. Cravens_, _Henry W. Harrington_,
- _William S. Holman_, George W. Julian, Ebenezer Dumont, _Daniel W.
- Voorhees_, Godlove S. Orth, Schuyler Colfax, _Joseph K. Edgerton_,
- _James F. McDowell_.
-
- IOWA.—James F. Wilson, Hiram Price, William B. Allison, J. B.
- Grinnell, John A. Kasson, A. W. Hubbard.
-
- KANSAS.—A. Carter Wilder.
-
- KENTUCKY.—Lucien Anderson, =George H. Yeaman=, =Henry Grider=,
- =Aaron Harding=, =Robert Mallory=, Green Clay Smith, Brutus J.
- Clay, William H. Randall, =William H. Wadsworth=.
-
- MAINE.—_Lorenzo D. M. Sweat_, Sidney Perham, James G. Blaine, John
- H. Rice, Frederick A. Pike.
-
- MARYLAND.—John A. J. Cresswell, Edwin H. Webster, Henry Winter
- Davis, Francis Thomas, _Benjamin G. Harris_.
-
- MASSACHUSETTS.—Thomas D. Eliot, Oakes Ames, Alexander H. Rice,
- Samuel Hooper, John B. Alley, Daniel W. Gooch, George S. Boutwell,
- John D. Baldwin, William B. Washburn, Henry L. Dawes.
-
- MICHIGAN.—Fernando C. Beaman, Charles Upson, John W. Longyear,
- Francis W. Kellogg, _Augustus C. Baldwin_, John F. Driggs.
-
- MINNESOTA.—William Windom, Ignatius Donnelly.
-
- MISSOURI.—=Francis P. Blair=, jr. (seat successfully contested by
- Samuel Knox of St. Louis), Henry T. Blow, _John G. Scott_, Joseph
- W. McClurg, Sempronius H. Boyd, _Austin A. King_, Benjamin F.
- Loan, _William A. Hall_, _James S. Rollins_.
-
- NEW HAMPSHIRE.—_Daniel Marcy_, Edward H. Rollins, James W.
- Patterson.
-
- NEW JERSEY.—John F. Starr, _George Middleton_, _William G. Steele_,
- _Andrew J. Rogers_, _Nehemiah Perry_.
-
- NEW YORK.—_Henry G. Stebbins_ (resigned in 1864 and was succeeded by
- _Dwight Townsend_), _Martin Kalbfleisch_, _Moses F. Odell_,
- _Benjamin Wood_, _Fernando Wood_, _Elijah Ward_, _John W.
- Chanler_, _James Brooks_, _Anson Herrick_, _William Radford_,
- _Charles H. Winfield_, _Homer A. Nelson_, _John B. Steele_, _John
- V. L. Pruyn_, _John A. Griswold_, Orlando Kellogg, Calvin T.
- Hulburd, James M. Marvin, Samuel F. Miller, Ambrose W. Clark,
- _Francis Kernan_, DeWitt C. Littlejohn, Thomas T. Davis, Theodore
- M. Pomeroy, Daniel Morris, Giles W. Hotchkiss, Robert Van
- Valkenburg, Freeman Clark, Augustus Frank, _John B. Ganson_,
- Reuben E. Fenton (resigned Dec. 10, 1864).
-
- OHIO.—_George H. Pendleton_, _Alexander Long_, Robert C. Schenck,
- _J. F. McKinney_, _Frank C. Le Blond_, _Chilton A. White_, _Samuel
- S. Cox_, _William Johnson_, _Warren P. Noble_, James M. Ashley,
- _Wells A. Hutchins_, _William E. Fink_, _John O’Neill_, _George
- Bliss_, _James R. Morris_, _Joseph W. White_, Ephraim R. Eckley,
- Rufus P. Spaulding, James A. Garfield.
-
- OREGON.—John R. McBride.
-
- PENNSYLVANIA.—_Samuel J. Randall_, Charles O’Neill, Leonard Myers,
- William D. Kelley, M. Russell Thayer, _John D. Stiles_, John M.
- Broomall, _Sydenham E. Ancona_, Thaddeus Stevens, _Myer Strouse_,
- _Philip Johnson_, _Charles Dennison_, Henry W. Tracy, _William H.
- Miller_, _Joseph Bailey_, _Alexander H. Coffroth_, _Archibald
- McAllister_, James T. Hale, Glenni W. Scofield, Amos Myers, _John
- L. Dawson_, James K. Moorhead, Thomas Williams, _Jesse Lazear_.
-
- RHODE ISLAND.—Thomas A. Jenckes, Nathan F. Dixon.
-
- VERMONT.—Frederick E. Woodbridge, Justin S. Morrill, Portus Baxter.
-
- VIRGINIA.—Had Senators but no Representatives. =Joseph Segar=,
- =Lucius H. Chandler= and =Benjamin M. Kitchen=, claimants for
- seats, were not admitted.
-
- WEST VIRGINIA.—Jacob B. Blair, William G. Brown, Killian V.
- Whaley.[499]
-
- WISCONSIN.—_James S. Brown_, Ithamar C. Sloan, Amasa Cobb, _Charles
- A. Eldridge_, _Ezra Wheeler_, Walter D. McIndoe.
-
-
- DELEGATES FROM TERRITORIES
-
- ARIZONA.—Charles D. Poston.
-
- COLORADO.—Hiram P. Bennett.
-
- DAKOTA.—William Jayne (seat successfully contested by John B. S.
- Todd).
-
- IDAHO.—William H. Wallace.
-
- MONTANA.—Samuel McLean.
-
- NEBRASKA.—Samuel G. Daily.
-
- NEVADA (admitted as a State).—Gordon N. Mott (Henry G. Worthington
- was elected Representative when Nevada became a State).
-
- NEW MEXICO.—Francisco Perea.
-
- UTAH.—_John F. Kenney._
-
- WASHINGTON.—_George E. Cole._
-
------
-
-Footnote 499:
-
- The West Virginia Representatives took their seats Dec. 7, 1863.
-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
- _A_
-
- Abolition societies, Southern, ended by new industrial era, 5
-
- Adams, Charles Francis, 50
-
- Alabama, in Federal control, 50;
- Arkansas Legislature addressed by commissioner from, 77;
- insurrection in, 314;
- injury sustained by, 437
-
- Alabama, The, 50, 288
-
- Albemarle, The, destruction of, 288
-
- Alexandria, capital of loyal Virginia, 129;
- convention meets at, 130;
- blockade of, rescinded, 133;
- Legislature assembles at, 137;
- ceases to be capital, 446;
- recognition of government of, marks no distinct Executive policy, 448
-
- Alleghany Mountains, Virginia divided by, 96
-
- Allegiance, oath of, 24;
- Governor Johnson’s modification of, 27;
- registration of, 28;
- required of Louisiana voters, 45;
- value of, 487
-
- Allen, Henry Watkins, end of administration of, 418;
- mentioned for governor of Louisiana, 422
-
- Amendment, Thirteenth, Hampton Roads conference refers to, 399;
- adoption of, by Georgia Legislature, 466
-
- Amnesty and Reconstruction, Lincoln’s proclamation of, 23, 24, 25, 224;
- authority for, 24;
- classes excepted from benefits of, 25;
- explanation of, 28;
- applied in Louisiana, 61;
- Howard’s reference to, 365;
- Johnson’s proclamation of, 450;
- Seward’s approval of, 451;
- all insurgent States affected by, 452.
- See Reconstruction
-
- Anthony, Lieutenant-Colonel, arrest of, 169
-
- Antietam, Md., Lee defeated at, 186
-
- Arkansas, effect of Union victories in, 10;
- enrolling agent sent to, 27;
- loyal part of, 77;
- Alabama commissioner addresses Legislature of, 77;
- position of, 77;
- interests of, 77;
- opposition to separate State action in, 77;
- convention bill passed by, 77;
- conditional secession defeated in, 78;
- influence of President’s inaugural in, 78;
- secession of, 78;
- secession favored by Governor of, 78;
- military preparations in, 78;
- confiscation ordinance of, 78;
- Confederate Congress admit delegates from, 79;
- convention conflicts with government of, 79;
- military division of, 79;
- dissatisfaction among soldiers of, 80;
- troops of, in Confederate army, 80;
- indifference of Germans and Irish, 80;
- bonds of, 81;
- Union sentiment in, 81;
- menaced by Federal troops, 81;
- flight of Governor, 82;
- troops sent to Corinth from, 82;
- John S. Phelps, military governor of, 82;
- regiments furnished Union army by, 83;
- return of leading secessionists, 83;
- Federal reverses in, 84;
- reconstruction of, 85;
- amended constitution of, 88;
- Confederate debt repudiated by, 88;
- division among Union men of, 88;
- Lincoln’s letter on reconstruction in, 89;
- Gen. Steele’s address to people of, 90;
- election in, 90;
- adoption of amended constitution for, 90;
- Congressman elected in, 91;
- Congress excludes Representatives from, 91;
- no Presidential election in, 92, 195;
- legality of government of, maintained by Lincoln, 195;
- loyal government in, 286;
- insurrection in, 314;
- Reverdy Johnson favors recognition of, 378;
- Thirteenth Amendment ratified by, 409;
- slavery abolished by constitution of, 410;
- disfranchising act of, 410;
- loyal government acquiesced in, 410;
- pacification of, 411;
- destitution in parts of, 412
-
- Arnell, Daniel W., election of, 415
-
- Arnold, Isaac N., resolution introduced by, 170
-
- Army of the United States, Provost Court of, 40;
- discontinuance of enlistments for, 408;
- mustering out of volunteers in the, 409
-
- Ascension, parish of, vote in, 74
-
- Ashley, James M., reconstruction bill reported by, 289;
- proposal to confer suffrage on negro soldiers and sailors, 294;
- no provision for education of negroes in bill of, 298;
- effects of reconstruction bill of, 302;
- substitute introduced by, 304;
- remarks on reconstruction by, 304;
- motives for compromise offered by, 306;
- reconstruction bill of, tabled, 311;
- revived bill of, 312;
- explanation of inconsistency of, 312;
- reconstruction bill of, tabled, 313;
- remarks on reconstruction by, 313
-
- Atlantic Monthly, The, Sumner’s article in, 200
-
-
- _B_
-
- Baker, Joshua, member-elect from Louisiana, 56
-
- Baldwin, Augustus C., reconstruction bill opposed by, 241
-
- Baltimore convention, Lincoln renominated by, 32;
- Lincoln did not openly influence, 34;
- adjournment of, 277
-
- Bancroft, George, relief meeting presided over by, 150;
- address of, 151;
- letter of, to Lincoln, 151;
- Lincoln’s letter to, 152
-
- Banks, N. P., expedition of, 43;
- at Port Hudson, 49;
- plans for invasion of Texas, 51;
- petition of New Orleans convention to, 59;
- intention of ordering an election, 61;
- Free State General Committee’s attack of, 61;
- decides against Free State Committee, 64;
- Gen. Shepley’s disagreement with, 64;
- Lincoln’s letter to, 65;
- reconstruction letter of, 66;
- Lincoln appreciates services of, 67;
- urged by President to reconstruct Louisiana, 67;
- date for election fixed by, 67;
- Shepley’s registration approved by, 68;
- proclamation by, 69;
- order of, relative to election, 69;
- letter to Lincoln, 70;
- date of delegate election fixed by, 74;
- before Congressional committee, 75;
- Boutwell’s defence of, 255;
- Powell’s criticism of, 346;
- Governor Wells not in harmony with, 418
-
- Bates, Edward, Attorney-General, letter to A. F. Ritchie, 105;
- on admission of West Virginia, 123;
- on Norfolk affairs, 135;
- letter to Marshal McDowell, 147
-
- Batesville, Gen. Curtis’s occupation of, 82
-
- Baton Rouge, secession convention in, 36
-
- Baxter, Elisha, election of, 91
-
- Bayard, James F., 103;
- admission of West Virginia Senators opposed by, 193
-
- Bell, Joseph M., 40
-
- Bell and Everett, vote for in Louisiana, 37
-
- Belmont, August, Lincoln’s letter to, 39
-
- Benjamin, Judah P., resignation of, 76, 424
-
- Bent, Charles, 12
-
- Berkeley County, provision for annexing to West Virginia, 110;
- annexation of, 127
-
- Bingham, John A., debate on West Virginia closed by, 119
-
- Black, Jeremiah S., diplomatic mission of, 390
-
- Blaine, James G., 73;
- existence of schism in Republican party ignored by, 313;
- quotation from, 441;
- Johnson’s change of policy explained by, 489
-
- Blair, Francis P., Sr., Lincoln interviewed by, 390;
- camp of Gen. Grant visited by, 391;
- Jefferson Davis interviewed by, 391;
- plan of reunion proposed by, 391;
- Mr. Davis’s letter to, 393;
- Lincoln’s letter to, 394;
- mission a failure, 394
-
- Blair, Montgomery, on admission of West Virginia, 123;
- time of emancipation deemed inopportune by, 188;
- reply to Sumner by, 208
-
- Bliss, C. C., 88
-
- Blockade of Louisiana ports, 37
-
- Blow, Henry T., remarks on reconstruction by, 301
-
- Bonzano, M. F., election of, 76;
- seat in Congress claimed by, 341;
- report by Committee of Elections on, 341
-
- Bordeaux, visit of Confederate naval agent to, 50
-
- Border States, Lincoln supported by delegates from, 1;
- Cotton States expected aid from, 161;
- Lincoln interviewed by Congressmen from, 163, 171;
- interests of South bound up with, 171;
- majority reply of Congressmen from, 173;
- emancipation proclamation did not affect status of slaves in, 383
-
- Boreman, Arthur I., 100, 128, 129
-
- Bouligny, John E., 43
-
- Boutwell, George S., reconstruction speech of, 254;
- President Johnson visited by, 458
-
- Bowden, Lemuel J., 131, 138
-
- Boyers, J. E., 128
-
- Bradley, General, 79
-
- Bragg, General, raid of, 19
-
- Brandegee, Augustus, 342
-
- Brazos, battle of, 50
-
- Breckenridge, John C., election of, 316
-
- Bright, Hon. John, Sumner’s letters to, 200, 290
-
- Brooks, James, inquiry of, 225
-
- Brown, B. Gratz, substitute of, 264;
- amendment of, 272
-
- Brown John, 142
-
- Brown, William G., bill of, 113;
- remarks on admission of West Virginia, 114
-
- Brownlow, William G., 7;
- unites in call for convention, 21, 29;
- nomination of, 31;
- election of, 32;
- Mr. Johnson’s dispatch to, 414;
- remarks on negro suffrage, 416;
- policy recommended by, 417
-
- Brownson, Orestes, theory of State suicide summarized by, 210
-
- Bryant, William Cullen, 150
-
- Buchanan, James, election of, 316
-
- Buell, General Don Carlos, army of, 3, 10, 19;
- treatment of fugitive slaves by, 158
-
- Bullett, Cuthbert, Lincoln’s letter to, 39
-
- Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands. See Freedmen’s Bureau
-
- Burke, Edmund, 200
-
- Burnside, General Ambrose E., 150
-
- Butler, General Benjamin F., 33;
- investigation of, 38, 39;
- relieved from command, 40;
- Lincoln’s letter to, 44;
- new department assigned to, 133;
- Pierpont criticised by, 134;
- Attorney-General criticised by, 135;
- Lincoln’s letter to, 136;
- department of Virginia commanded by, 143;
- fugitive slaves arrive at camp of, 144, 147;
- legal defence of attitude toward slaves, 146
-
-
- _C_
-
- Caldwell, A. B., 128
-
- California, Upper, 12;
- admission of, 13;
- first election in, 350
-
- Cameron, Simon, Butler’s treatment of slaves approved by, 146
-
- Campbell, John A., commissioner to Hampton Roads conference, 393, 395
-
- Campbell, William B., election of, 415
-
- Canby, General E. R. S., Lincoln’s letter to, 402
-
- Carey, John B., fugitive slave law pleaded by, 144
-
- Carlile, John S., 98;
- election of, 103;
- admission of, to United States Senate, 104;
- speech on admission of West Virginia, 111;
- term expires, 131;
- reconstruction speech of, 267
-
- Chadsey, Charles E., President Johnson’s surrender to the South
- explained by, 489
-
- Chandler, Lucius H., Representative-elect from Virginia, 131;
- remarks of, 132;
- exclusion of, 133
-
- Chandler, Zachariah, interest in reconstruction bill, 274;
- Sumner’s opposition to Trumbull’s resolution supported by, 380
-
- Chase, Salmon P., on admission of West Virginia, 121;
- authorized to organize labor of abandoned slaves, 160, 386;
- emancipation favored by, 180;
- quotation from diary of, 186;
- conservatism of Lincoln observed by, 275;
- Andrew Johnson takes oath of office before, 408
-
- Chattanooga, 4;
- taken by Federal forces, 22
-
- Clark, Daniel, remarks on reconstruction by, 376
-
- Clarke, Governor Charles, insurgent legislature convoked by, 459;
- imprisonment of, 460;
- petition for pardon of, 460
-
- Clarke, Isaac E., 43
-
- Cleveland, Tennessee, 4
-
- Colfax, Schuyler, on admission of West Virginia, 115
-
- Collamer, Jacob, on admission of West Virginia, 111;
- substitute of, 328;
- amendment of substitute, 334;
- defeat of amendment of, 334;
- defeat of substitute of, 336;
- remarks on electoral vote of Louisiana by, 328, 335
-
- Colonization, suggested by Lincoln, 153;
- resolutions of Baltimore Union Convention on, 167;
- message of Governor Brownlow on, 416
-
- Colored troops, Lincoln urges raising of, 20, 22;
- General Hunter recommends raising of, 180;
- policy of enlistment of, 386
-
- Committee, Central Executive of Louisiana, 53
-
- Committee, Free State General of Louisiana, 47, 54, 59, 61;
- controversy of, with General Banks, 62;
- confers with General Shepley, 63;
- friends of, protest against election, 70
-
- Confederate army, Louisiana troops in, 37;
- Arkansas troops in, 80;
- driven from western Virginia, 98
-
- Confederate Government, offer of Arkansas to, 80;
- Arkansas not aided by, 81, 82;
- hold of, weakened in Arkansas, 83;
- aid from border States expected by, 171
-
- Confederate officers, disfranchisement of, 236
-
- Confederate States, theory that disunionists were in a minority in,
- 192;
- functionaries in, not bound by oaths, 204;
- governments of, vacated, 205;
- governments could be organized by Congress in, 206;
- Constitution the only law in, 206;
- power of Congress over, 210;
- people of, unable to plead Constitution, 212;
- original idea relative to reorganization of, 213;
- Stevens’s idea of status of, 214;
- status of, 260;
- approaching disruption of, 286;
- rights of citizens in, 366;
- political rights of people in, 367;
- no foreign engagements entered into by, 391;
- anarchy threatens many of, 409, 431;
- Federal troops preserve order in, 432;
- obstacles to restoration in, 432;
- blockade of, 444;
- importance of understanding public opinion in, 471;
- legislation of, 472;
- prompt acquiescence of, 472;
- sentiments of citizens of, 474;
- Congress excludes delegations from, 474;
- reaction in, 482;
- Northern example no defence of legislation in, 485;
- reconstructed not very different from disloyal governments of, 486;
- States represented at opening of 39th Congress, 489;
- Congress ignores claims of members from, 490
-
- Confiscation, in Arkansas, 78
-
- Congress, amnesty authorized by, 24;
- President disclaims authority to admit members to, 26;
- electoral vote of Tennessee excluded by, 35;
- Representatives from Louisiana admitted to, 46;
- Louisiana elects members to, 55;
- organization of, 55;
- Louisiana not redistricted by, 57;
- A. P. Field denied admission to, 60;
- Louisiana elects members to, 76;
- government of Louisiana not recognized by, 76;
- electoral vote of Louisiana excluded by, 76;
- Arkansas elects members to, 91;
- consents to transfer of Virginia counties, 127;
- resolution on compensated emancipation passed by, 167;
- slavery in Territories abolished by, 170;
- confiscation act of, 179;
- restored Virginia recognized by, 191;
- President in agreement with, 191;
- slavery in rebellious States should be ended by, 197;
- power possessed over seceding States by, 206;
- doctrines of Stevens abhorrent to members of, 216;
- unanimity of, 221;
- reconstruction discussed by, 224;
- form of State government should be determined by, 228;
- reconstruction bill passed by, 273;
- Lincoln’s contest with, 284;
- President disclaims right to admit members to, 287;
- constitutional amendment passed by, 288;
- exclusion of electoral votes by resolution of, 338;
- protest against admission of members to, 341;
- power to readmit States resides in, 358;
- authority over rebellious States possessed by, 365;
- desire to discipline South winning adherents in, 407;
- Johnson’s distrust of, 461;
- why reconstruction conventions should have been called by, 470;
- Southern States reorganized at meeting of, 486;
- Johnson intended to be guided by, 488;
- Presidential system suspended by legislation of, 489;
- Southern members not admitted to, 490;
- reconstruction assumed by, 490;
- suffrage in the first reconstruction measure, 494
-
- Confederate Congress, 36;
- admission of Arkansas delegates to, 79
-
- Contrabands, multitudes of, in camp of General Butler, 147
-
- Constitution, The, those who repudiate cannot plead provisions of, 212,
- 213;
- ceases to be a restraint on Government, 213;
- State in rebellion not embraced by, 214;
- scope of not contracted by secession ordinances, 218;
- necessity as an interpreter of, 222;
- number of States necessary to ratify amendment of, 232;
- Georgia adopts Thirteenth Amendment of, 466
-
- Constitutional Union men, attitude of, 7
-
- Convention bill, defeated by popular vote in Tennessee, 8
-
- Convention, Lincoln nominated by the Chicago, 1;
- Southern commercial held at Knoxville, 6;
- the Greeneville, 9;
- the Nashville, 30;
- meeting of the Louisiana constitutional, 75;
- the Arkansas constitutional, 87;
- the Richmond secession, 93;
- the Wheeling, 99, 104;
- ordinances of the Wheeling, 100;
- the Wheeling votes on dismemberment, 101;
- the Wheeling adjourns, 101, 107;
- the Wheeling authorizes formation of new State, 105;
- slavery in the Wheeling, 107;
- meeting of the Baltimore Union, 167;
- revolutionary character of the Wheeling, 468
-
- Conventions, the reconstruction, character of, 468;
- irregularity of those called under Presidential plan, 469;
- why Congress should have called, 470;
- character and work of those called by President Johnson, 470;
- origin would not affect work of, if acquiesced in, 472
-
- Conway, Martin, speech on West Virginia by, 113
-
- Cooper, Edmund, election of, 415
-
- Cooper Union, Lincoln’s address in, 1;
- relief meeting in, 150
-
- Cottman, Thomas, 48;
- election of, 56;
- Lincoln’s letter to, 64
-
- Cotton States, aid from border States expected by, 161
-
- Cowan, Edgar, on admission of Mr. Segar, 139;
- remarks on electoral vote of Louisiana, 330, 332;
- inquiry of, concerning electoral votes, 338
-
- Cox, Samuel S., reconstruction speech of, 252
-
- Crane, Samuel, 128
-
- Cravens, James A., reconstruction speech of, 249
-
- Creole, The, 6
-
- Crisfield, John W., interview with Lincoln reported by, 163
-
- Crittenden, John J., speech on West Virginia by, 116
-
- Crittenden Resolution, introduction of, 220;
- Mr. Strouse refers to, 249
-
- Cruisers, Confederate, 50
-
- Curtin, Governor Andrew G., 98
-
- Cutler, R. King, Senator-elect from Louisiana, 76, 343, 424
-
-
- _D_
-
- Davis, Garrett, admission of West Virginia Senators opposed by, 128;
- resolutions of, 210
-
- Davis, Henry Winter, remarks on Louisiana election, 58;
- amendment of, 225;
- chairman of Committee on Rebellious States, 226;
- reconstruction address of, 226;
- on Southern loyalists, 231;
- on modes of establishing republican governments, 232;
- Thirteenth Amendment approved by, 232;
- policy of Lincoln criticised by, 232;
- protest of against policy of Lincoln, 279;
- character of, 283;
-
- defeat of, for renomination, 284;
- postponement of Ashley’s bill opposed by, 295;
- reconstruction speech of, 307;
- last reconstruction speech in Congress, 310;
- alliance with Stevens, 311;
- motion relative to Louisiana, 341
-
- Davis, Jefferson, Blair’s interview with, 391;
- proposal for joint invasion of Mexico entertained by, 392;
- letter to Mr. Blair, 393;
- on Lincoln’s assassination, 407;
- members of Mississippi convention intercede for, 460;
- Georgia convention invokes Executive clemency in behalf of, 466
-
- Davis-Wade Bill, passed by House, 262;
- passed by Senate, 273;
- Lincoln’s action on, 273;
- proclamation concerning, 277;
- no provision for negro suffrage in, 494
-
- Dawes, Henry L., on Louisiana Representatives, 56;
- on admission of West Virginia, 116;
- report on Mr. Segar’s election, 131;
- on election of Mr. Chandler, 132;
- reconstruction speech of, 295;
- Mr. Davis’s criticism of, 306;
- bill of Representative Wilson criticised by, 312;
- report on election of Mr. Bonzano, 341;
- remarks of, 342
-
- Delaware, slave interest in, 155;
- Lincoln’s bill for compensated emancipation in, 155;
- Federalist party in, 157;
- Federal interference in, 377
-
- Democratic party, defeat of, 1;
- vote of, in West Virginia, 129;
- reconstruction theory of, 218;
- attitude on reconstruction, 220;
- negro suffrage opposed by New Orleans convention of, 421;
- South misled by attitude of, 483
-
- Dennison, Charles, reconstruction speech of, 247
-
- Dennison, William, 32
-
- Dickinson, Daniel S., 33
-
- District of Columbia, slaves not allowed to depart from, 148;
- colored persons liable to arrest if found in, 152;
- compensation to owners of slaves in, 167
-
- Dix, General John A., 33;
- treatment of fugitive slaves by, 149
-
- Donnelly, Ignatius, reconstruction speech of, 245
-
- Doolittle, James R., credentials of Mr. Underwood offered by, 141;
- reconstruction bill opposed by, 273;
- on electoral vote of Louisiana, 324, 326, 333;
- remarks on Louisiana, 348;
- policy of Administration supported by, 380;
- credentials of Mr. Hahn offered by, 383
-
- Doubleday, General Abner, treatment of fugitive slaves by, 159
-
- Douglas-Lincoln debates, 1
-
- Dorr, Thomas W., government under, 350
-
- Dunlap, George W., admission of West Virginia opposed by, 214
-
- Durant, Thomas J., 47;
- Attorney-General of Louisiana, 48;
- registry conducted by, 51;
- spokesman of planters, 53;
- enrollment by, satisfactory to Lincoln, 63;
- disagreement with General Banks, 65;
- protest of, against election, 348;
- recognition of Louisiana opposed by, 378
-
- Durell, E. H., 75
-
-
- _E_
-
- East, E. H., 28
-
- Edgerton, Joseph K., reconstruction speech of, 219, 301
-
- Election, Presidential, loss of a pretext for secession, 1;
- in Tennessee, 29;
- in Arkansas, 92;
- in West Virginia, 129;
- electoral votes in, 338;
- result of, 339
-
- Elections, Committee of, report on Louisiana Representative, 56
-
- Electoral College, bill on representation in, 314
-
- Eliot, Thomas W., amendment to reconstruction bill offered by, 289;
- reconstruction speech of, 292;
- Stevens’s interruption of, 294;
- Davis’s criticism of, 306;
- bill for bureau of emancipation introduced by, 386
-
- Emancipation, in Tennessee, 22;
- East Tennessee convention favors immediate, 29;
- Lincoln’s proclamation of, 47;
- proclamation of not to be revoked, 52;
- vote on, in West Virginia, 110;
- in West Virginia constitution, 125;
- Lincoln suggests compensated, 155;
- Lincoln considering, 178;
- discussion in Cabinet, 180;
- draft of proclamation of, 181;
- urged by Chicago clergymen, 184;
- not hastened by deputations, 186;
- Lincoln reads proclamation of, 187;
- Sumner proposes to convert proclamation of, into law, 272;
- effect of proclamation on status of slaves, 384;
- discussed at Hampton Roads Conference, 398;
- Lincoln favored gradual, 398
-
- Emancipation, compensated, Lincoln prepares bill on, 155;
- message refers to, 161;
- New York Tribune favors, 164;
- resolution of Congress on, 167;
- Baltimore Union convention’s resolution on, 167;
- House of Representatives appoints committee on, 168
-
- Emancipator, The, 5
-
- England, Cromwell’s division of, 200
-
- Europe, the civil war pleasing to powers of, 393
-
-
- _F_
-
- Federalist, The, 269
-
- Fellows, John Q. A., nomination of, 69;
- defeat of, 70
-
- Fishback, William M., Lincoln’s letter to, 89;
- election of, 91
-
- Fisher, George P., interest in compensated emancipation, 155
-
- Flanders, Benjamin F., election of, 46;
- Lincoln’s letter to, 52;
- vote received by, 60;
- interview with Lincoln, 63;
- nomination of, 69;
- defeat of, 70;
- hostility of Congress toward Louisiana said to have been promoted by,
- 73
-
- Florida, martial law proclaimed over, 168;
- unworthy of a place in the Union, 256;
- insurrection in, 314;
- damage sustained by, 436;
- nature of reorganized government of, 488
-
- Florida, The, capture of, 288
-
- Forfeiture, State, idea of, 204
-
- Forrest, General, 15
-
- Fort Donelson, General Grant in possession of, 10
-
- Fort Henry, Federal occupation of, 10
-
- Fortress Monroe, fugitive slaves at, 144, 385
-
- Foster, Lafayette S., reconstruction policy of Lincoln supported by,
- 380
-
- Fowler, Joseph S., election of, 413
-
- France, relations with, 409
-
- Franchise, elective, in Tennessee to be fixed by Legislature, 30;
- free negroes of Louisiana petition for, 55;
- States have always exercised right to confer, 452
-
- Franchise, negro, Lincoln’s opinion concerning, 73.
- See Negroes
-
- Frederick City, 184
-
- Frederic County, provision for annexing to West Virginia, 110
-
- Freedmen, no provision for education of, 298;
- Brownlow would admit testimony of, 416;
- character of, 416;
- Southern feeling toward, 475;
- Mississippi legislation relative to, 475
-
- Freedmen’s Aid Societies, Lincoln memorialized by, 386
-
- Freedmen’s Bureau, act of Congress relative to, 385, 387;
- germ of, 386;
- duties of commissioner of, 387;
- Governor of Arkansas coöperates with, 411;
- influence in producing Southern reaction, 483;
- political aspirations of agents of, 484
-
- Fremont, General John C., proclamation concerning slaves, 148;
- Lincoln’s letter to, 148;
- reply to Lincoln, 149
-
- Fugitive slaves, repeal of acts for rendition of, 144;
- exclusion from Department of Washington, 148
-
-
- _G_
-
- Gantt, General E. W., secession abjured by, 83
-
- Garrison, William Lloyd, 7
-
- Georgia, martial law proclaimed over, 168;
- Boutwell would exclude from restored Union, 256;
- insurrection in, 314;
- injuries sustained by, 433;
- Governor Brown’s efforts at restoration of, 465;
- appointment of provisional governor for, 465;
- leading ex-Confederates aid governor, 465;
- reconstruction convention of, 465;
- convention repeals secession ordinance, 465;
- war debt repudiated by, 465;
- slaves freed by constitution of, 466;
- Executive clemency in behalf of Jefferson Davis invoked by
- convention, 466
-
- Germans, The, indifferent to secession, 80
-
- Gilmore-Jacquess mission, 389
-
- Gooch, Daniel W., reconstruction address of, 250
-
- Government, a republican form guaranteed by reconstruction
- proclamation, 26;
- perfection of Congressional system, 385
-
- Grant, General Ulysses S., in possession of Forts Henry and Donelson,
- 10;
- martial law proclaimed by, 15;
- at Mission Ridge and Lookout Mountain, 23;
- Lee driven back by, 288;
- Blair visits camp of, 391;
- influence in bringing about Hampton Roads Conference, 396;
- movements by army of, 401;
- management of Freedmen’s Bureau criticised by, 484
-
- Great Britain, relations with, 409
-
- Greeley, Horace, 390
-
- Greeneville, Tennessee, 4, 9
-
- Grimes, James W., remarks on Louisiana election, 382
-
- Gulf, Department of, Butler relieved from command in, 40;
- General Banks in command of, 49
-
-
- _H_
-
- Hahn, Michael, election of, 46;
- Lincoln’s letter to, 52;
- vote of, 60;
- nomination of, 69;
- election of, 70;
- oath of, 72;
- Lincoln’s letter to, 73;
- election of delegates authorized by, 74;
- election called by, 75;
- credentials filed in U. S. Senate, 383, 418, 424
-
- Hall, Ellery R., 107
-
- Hall, John, 107
-
- Hale, John P., on admission of West Virginia, 111;
- on electoral vote of Louisiana, 325
-
- Halleck, General H. W., Tennessee included in department of, 20;
- General Buell instructed by, 21;
- General Banks instructed by, 51;
- order on surrender of fugitive slaves, 158
-
- Hamilton, Andrew J., appointment of, 467
-
- Hampton Roads Conference, 396;
- Confederate commissioners to, report failure, 400;
- results of, 400
-
- Harris, Ira, remarks on Crittenden resolution by, 222;
- remarks on electoral vote of Louisiana, 323, 334;
- amendment offered by, 334
-
- Harris, Isham G., authorized to appoint commissioners, 8;
- Legislature convoked at Memphis by, 15
-
- Harlan, James, bill of, 195
-
- Hawkins, Isaac R., election of, 415
-
- Hay and Nicolay, account of Lincoln’s message by, 24;
- quotation from history of, 273
-
- Helena, Arkansas, Union occupation of, 82, 86
-
- Henderson, John B., reply to Lincoln’s appeal, 177;
- reconstruction bill opposed by, 273;
- recognition of Louisiana favored by, 348;
- inconsistency of Sumner exposed by, 375, 377;
- inquiry concerning Louisiana loyalists, 378;
- letter on reconstruction, 495
-
- Hendricks, Thomas A., Republican factiousness agreeable to, 380
-
- Hiestand, Judge J., appointment of, 41
-
- Holden, William W., appointment of, 448;
- proclamation of, 450;
- message of, 454;
- President Johnson’s telegram to, 455;
- public career of, 457;
- Republican leaders alarmed at appointment of, 459
-
- Holman, William S., resolution introduced by, 222
-
- Hood, General J. B., 30
-
- Hooker, General Joseph, treatment of fugitive slaves, 158
-
- Howard, Jacob M., on electoral vote of Louisiana, 328;
- on recognition of Louisiana, 358;
- Sumner’s opposition to Trumbull’s resolution supported by, 380
-
- Howard, Oliver O., General, Freedmen’s Bureau organized by, 389
-
- Howe, Timothy O., speech on Ten Eyck’s amendment, 321
-
- Howell, Rufus K., 41
-
- Hughes, Augustus de B., 43
-
- Humphreys, Benjamin G., election and pardon of, 464
-
- Hungary, similarity of ideas lacking in, 237
-
- Hunter, General David, freedom of slaves proclaimed by, 168;
- authority to arm negroes requested by, 180
-
- Hunter, Robert M. T., authorized to act as commissioner, 395
-
- Hurlbut, General S. A., on reorganization of Tennessee, 21;
- Lincoln’s letters to, 84, 401
-
-
- _I_
-
- Illinois, amendment abolishing slavery adopted by, 384
-
- Indiana, troops from, assist western Virginians, 98
-
- Intelligencer, The National, 61
-
- Ireland, unsuccessful campaign of James II in, 203;
- similarity of ideas lacking in, 237
-
- Irish, The, indifference to secession, 80
-
-
- _J_
-
- Jacks, T. M., Congressman-elect, 91;
- proposed compensation to, 342
-
- Jackson, General Andrew, new industrial era marked by inauguration of,
- 5;
- invasion by way of Mexico expected by, 392
-
- Jacquess-Gilmore mission, 389
-
- James II, King, abdication of, 202
-
- Jefferson County, provision for annexation of, 110;
- annexation of, 127
-
- Jefferson, Thomas, declaration of, 357
-
- Johnson, Andrew, 12;
- in Thirtieth Congress, 14;
- people of Nashville addressed by, 15;
- activity of, 18;
- Nashville saved by, 19;
- Lincoln’s opinion of, 19;
- addresses of, 19;
- urged to raise negro troops, 20;
- Lincoln’s letter to, 22;
- enlarged authority of, 23;
- Nashville meeting called by, 27;
- election of county officers authorized by, 27;
- proclamation of, 31;
- nomination of, for Vice-Presidency, 32;
- Nashville address of, 32;
- letter of, to Mr. Dennison, 32;
- popularity in the North, 33;
- credentials of West Virginia Senators presented by, 103;
- resolution offered by, 221;
- election of, as Vice-President, 339;
- installation of, as President, 408;
- problem confronting, 408;
- letter to Governor Murphy, 411;
- despatch to Governor Brownlow, 414;
- reconstruction policy endorsed by National Democratic party, 420;
- Lincoln’s policy alleged to have been changed by, 426;
- Pierpont’s government recognized by, 427;
- Nashville speech of, 438;
- forecast of policy of, 439;
- addresses of, 440;
- visit of Illinois delegation to, 440;
- visit of Indiana delegation to, 442;
- visit of negro delegation, 443;
- South Carolina delegation addressed by, 443;
- blockade partly raised by, 444;
- blockade of trans-Mississippi ports rescinded by, 445;
- work done for reconstruction retained by, 447;
- Lincoln’s policy need not have been adopted by, 447;
- at inauguration sentiments of Congress already known to, 448;
- results of attempting reunion without coöperation of Congress, 448;
- reconstruction of North Carolina begun by, 448;
- amnesty proclamation of, 450;
- cases excluded from benefits of amnesty, 450;
- reconstruction plan of, based on guaranty clause of Constitution,
- 452;
- telegram to Governor Holden, 455;
- visit of North Carolina delegation to, 456;
- North Carolina election unsatisfactory to, 457;
- interview of Boutwell and Morrill with, 458;
- William L. Sharkey appointed Provisional Governor by, 459;
- appointment of provisional governors by, 459;
- telegram to Governor Sharkey, 461;
- attitude of Congress characterized by, 461;
- Governor Sharkey’s reorganization of militia approved by, 462;
- Mississippi people trusted by, 463;
- change in sentiments of, 463, 488;
- General Slocum directed to revoke order by, 463;
- proceedings in reconstruction conventions directed by, 465;
- organization of a police force for Georgia approved by, 466;
- policy toward Congress unknown in the South, 483;
- prompt acquiescence of South in policy of, 486;
- reconstruction theory similar to Lincoln’s, 487;
- falling back from Lincoln’s plan, 487;
- Lincoln’s Cabinet retained by, 488;
- change of attitude of, 489;
- influence of Seward upon, 489;
- movement to procure resignation from Vice-Presidency, 489;
- limitations of, 490;
- reconstruction work of, not marked by originality, 491;
- negro suffrage, 494
-
- Johnson, Bradish, 48
-
- Johnson, Herschel V., election of, 465
-
- Johnson, James, appointment of, 459, 465
-
- Johnson, James M., election of, 91;
- proposed compensation to, 342;
- election of, 412
-
- Johnson, Reverdy, in New Orleans, 38;
- on electoral vote of Louisiana, 335;
- on President’s message, 339;
- remarks on recognition of Louisiana, 370;
- Sumner’s argument with, 374;
- remarks on negro suffrage, 378;
- recognition of Arkansas and Louisiana favored by, 378
-
- Johnson, R. W., secession of, 91
-
- Johnston, General Joseph E., retires to Murfreesboro, 11
-
- Jones, Hon. Ira P., 12
-
- Jordan, Warren, 27
-
-
- _K_
-
- Kanawha, proposed State of, 105;
- change in name of, 107
-
- Kearney, General Stephen W., 12
-
- Kelley, William D., reconstruction speech of, 252, 291;
- proposes amendment of Ashley’s bill, 312;
- Field’s assault of, 342
-
- Kernan, Francis, bill of Mr. Wilson criticised by, 312
-
- Kimball, General, 86
-
- King, Preston, Mr. Johnson influenced by, 441
-
- Kingwood, Va., Union meeting at, 99
-
- Kitchen, Benjamin M., Representative-elect, 131;
- denied admission to Congress, 133
-
- Knoxville, early capital of Tennessee, 4;
- Southern Commercial Convention held at, 6;
- taken by Federal forces, 22
-
- Kyle, G. H., election of, 412
-
-
- _L_
-
- Lamont, George D., 43
-
- Lane, James H., on electoral vote of Louisiana, 337
-
- LeBlond, Frank C., reconstruction speech of, 300
-
- Lee, General Robert E., Maryland invaded by, 183;
- repulse of, 186;
- driven back by Grant, 288;
- weakness of, 401;
- surrender of, 426
-
- Leftwich, John W., election of, 415
-
- Letcher, Governor John, United States could not recognize, 205, 445
-
- Lieber, Dr. Francis, 150, 151;
- Sumner’s letters to, 199, 289
-
- Lincoln, Abraham, Cooper Union address of, 1;
- conservatism of, 1;
- nomination of, 1;
- border State delegations support of, 1;
- popular vote received by, 1;
- peer of tried Republican leaders, 1;
- policy of, 2;
- sympathy for Tennessee loyalists, 3, 10;
- Andrew Johnson appointed by, 11;
- in Thirtieth Congress, 14;
- authority for appointing military governors, 14;
- view of their utility, 20;
- letter to Governor Johnson, 20, 22;
- authority of Johnson enlarged by, 23;
- reply to General Rosecrans, 23;
- proclamation issued by, 23;
- authority to admit members to Congress disclaimed by, 26;
- enrolling agents sent to Tennessee, Arkansas, and Louisiana by, 27;
- renomination of, 32;
- declined to interfere in nominating convention, 34;
- reply to protest of McClellan electors, 35;
- letter to Cuthbert Bullett, 39;
- letter to August Belmont, 39;
- Court of Record for Louisiana constituted by, 42;
- letter to General Butler and others, 44;
- restoration of Louisiana urged by, 44;
- letter to General Shepley, 44;
- Emancipation Proclamation published by, 47;
- requested to order an election, 48;
- reply to Louisiana committee, 48;
- more advanced ground taken by, 49;
- letter to General Banks and others, 51;
- urges restoration, 51;
- enrollment of Durant approved by, 63;
- willingness to recognize part of Louisiana, 63;
- letter to Thomas Cottman, 64;
- letter to General Banks, 65;
- General Banks’s letter to, 66;
- Banks’s services appreciated by, 67;
- authority conferred on General Banks by, 67;
- Banks on Louisiana election, 70;
- letter to Governor Hahn, 73;
- authority of Mr. Hahn enlarged by, 73;
- letter to General Hurlbut, 84;
- letter to General Steele, 89;
- letter to William M. Fishback, 89;
- result of Arkansas election gratifying to, 91;
- requests opinion of Cabinet on admission of West Virginia, 119, 124;
- approves bill for admission of West Virginia, 125;
- proclamation concerning West Virginia, 126;
- letter to General Butler, 136;
- slavery in first inaugural of, 143;
- letter to General Fremont, 148;
- General Fremont instructed by, 149;
- Bancroft’s letter to, 151;
- letter to Mr. Bancroft, 152;
- emancipation and colonization suggested by, 153;
- advance in position of, 154;
- arming of slaves opposed by, 154, 180;
- bill for compensated emancipation drafted by, 155;
- Mr. Pierce’s interview with, 160;
- compensated emancipation proposed by, 161;
- further advance in position of, 162;
- letter to Henry J. Raymond, 163;
- border State Congressmen interview, 163;
- letter to James A. McDougall, 165;
- proclamation of General Hunter rescinded by, 168;
- Sumner’s letter concerning, 170;
- border State Congressmen appealed to, 171;
- emancipation proposed by, 178;
- confiscation act approved by, 179;
- draft of emancipation proclamation read by, 181;
- rebellious citizens warned by, 183;
- Chicago clergymen interview, 184;
- resolves to issue postponed proclamation, 186;
- meeting of Cabinet, 186;
- emancipation proclamation read by, 187;
- first inaugural of, 190;
- central idea of reconstruction plan of, 190;
- confidence in ultimate success, 191;
-
- Congress substantially agrees with, 191;
- change in policy of, 193;
- only one plan of reconstruction proposed by, 194;
- remarks on Blair-Sumner controversy, 208;
- reconstruction plan of, criticised by Henry Winter Davis, 232;
- Mr. Donnelly’s character of, 245;
- Mr. Boutwell defends reconstruction policy, 254;
- treatment of reconstruction bill by, 273;
- Sumner’s opinion of, 275;
- proclamation on reconstruction bill, 277;
- Wade-Davis manifesto concerning action of, 279;
- result of contest with Congress, 284;
- reëlection of, 286;
- silence as to controversy with Congress, 286;
- no right over admission of Congressmen claimed by, 287;
- adoption of more vigorous measures hinted at, 287;
- resolution relative to electoral votes approved by, 339;
- electoral votes received by, 339;
- popular approval of Thirteenth Amendment pleasing to, 385;
- Freedmen’s Aid Societies appeal to, 386;
- Mr. Blair’s visit to, 390;
- Blair’s mission not officially sanctioned by, 391;
- letter to Mr. Blair, 394;
- letter to Secretary Seward, 395;
- conference opposed by, except on basis of reunion, 397;
- last speech on reconstruction, 403;
- assassination of, a calamity to the South, 407;
- policy would have saved South from many evils, 407;
- telegram to Governor Pierpont, 426;
- Pierpont’s interview with, 426;
- attitude toward Confederate legislatures, 470;
- a loose system of reconstruction opposed by, 487;
- reconstruction theory of, similar to Johnson’s, 487;
- President Johnson retains Cabinet of, 488;
- constructive statesmanship of, 491;
- a wide constituency favored by, 493;
- conditions on returning States imposed by, 494;
- Mr. Henderson’s views on, 495
-
- Lincoln-Douglas debates, 1
-
- Little Rock, seized by Confederate troops, 79;
- threatened by Federal forces, 82;
- capture of, 83;
- loyal newspaper published in,83;
- Union convention at, 87
-
- Liverpool, abandoned by Confederate naval agent, 50
-
- Longyear, John W., reconstruction address of, 244
-
- Lookout Mountain, battle of, 23, 224
-
- Louisiana, effect of Union victories in, 10;
- enrolling agent sent to, 27;
- secession spirit in, 36;
- secession of, 36;
- prosperity at the beginning of the war, 36;
- treasury of, 37;
- citizens of, in Confederate army, 37;
- blockade of ports in, 37;
- attitude toward Richmond government, 37;
- loyalists of, 37;
- secessionists of, intimidated, 38;
- activity of Unionists in, 38;
- necessity of courts in, 40;
- courts established in, 41;
- court of record for, 42;
- Supreme Court of, 43;
- Lincoln urges restoration of, 44;
- Union associations request an election, 45;
- proclamation for an election in, 45;
- members of Congress elected in, 46;
- vote cast in, 46;
- admission of Representatives to Congress, 46;
- named as one of the rebellious States, 47;
- parishes excepted from emancipation proclamation, 47;
- disagreement among Unionists of, 47;
- enrollment of citizens in, 48;
- Lincoln visited by committee from, 48;
- reorganization interrupted, 49;
- portion covered by Union arms, 50;
- Lincoln urges reconstruction of, 52;
- condition of, 53;
- amended constitution of 1852 destroyed by rebellion, 54;
- voting in, 55;
- franchise asked by free negroes, 55;
- credentials of Representatives from, 56;
- suppression of election in, 56;
- constitution altered by General Shepley, 58;
- citizens from, in Union army, 60;
- General Banks to order an election in, 61, 64;
-
- Banks on reconstruction in, 66;
- Banks fixes date of election for, 67;
- constitution modified by proclamation of General Banks, 68;
- provision for voting of loyalists in, 69;
- election in, 70;
- protest against election in, 70;
- Hahn inaugurated Governor, 72;
- civil subordinate to military power, 73;
- Free State leaders unite with Radicals in Congress, 74;
- election in, 74;
- vote on constitution, 75;
- Legislature chosen in, 76;
- Presidential electors appointed for, 76, 195;
- Senators elected by, 76;
- government of, not recognized by Congress, 76;
- electoral vote of, 129, 314;
- radicals propose to recognize government of, 290;
- insurrection in, 314;
- amendment to except from joint resolution, 315;
- Ten Eyck’s speech on electoral vote of, 318;
- Howe’s speech on electoral vote of, 321;
- Trumbull’s speech on electoral vote of, 321;
- highest vote cast in, 323;
- remarks of Harris on electoral vote of, 323;
- speech of Doolittle on electoral vote of, 324;
- remarks of Hale on electoral vote of, 325;
- remarks of Collamer on electoral vote of, 328;
- Howard’s speech on electoral vote of, 328;
- Cowan’s remarks on electoral vote of, 330;
- Powell on electoral vote of, 331;
- Wade’s remarks on electoral vote of, 332;
- loss of Ten Eyck’s amendment concerning, 334;
- Johnson’s remarks on electoral vote of, 335;
- Pomeroy’s amendment, 337;
- passage of joint resolution, 338;
- Cowan’s inquiry, 338;
- Senate debate on recognition of, 341;
- Representatives-elect from, 341;
- protest against admission of members from, 341;
- compensation to claimants from, 341;
- United States Senators chosen in, 343;
- Trumbull’s resolution relative to, 343;
- Powell opposes recognition of, 344;
- Henderson favors recognition of, 348;
- recognition of, would enfeeble Union, 358;
- Howard’s speech on recognition of, 358;
- governed by bayonet, 367;
- Howard characterizes government of, 369;
- Reverdy Johnson’s argument on recognition of, 370, 377;
- Sprague’s remarks on election in, 381;
- Grimes’s remarks on election in, 382;
- slavery in parts of, not affected by emancipation proclamation, 384;
- draft in, 417;
- election in, 418;
- Mr. Wells chosen Governor, 422;
- Warmoth elected as Territorial Delegate, 422;
- United States Senators chosen, 424;
- Thirteenth Amendment ratified by, 424;
- injuries which rebellion inflicted on, 424
-
- Lovejoy, Owen, resolution offered by, 132;
- resolution of, relative to emancipation, 170;
- doctrines of Thaddeus Stevens repudiated by, 217
-
- Lundy, Benjamin, Genius of Universal Emancipation published by, 5
-
- Lyon, General Nathaniel, 79
-
-
- _M_
-
- Madison, parish of, 75
-
- Malhiot, E. E., 48
-
- Mallory, Robert, yeas and nays on Ashley’s bill demanded by, 311;
- bill of Mr. Wilson criticised by, 312
-
- Manassas, battle of, 183
-
- Mann, W. D., Representative-elect from Louisiana, 76;
- seat in Congress claimed by, 341
-
- Manumission Intelligencer, The, 5
-
- Marcy, William, Secretary, 12
-
- Marvin, Governor, Seward’s message to, 488
-
- Maryland, attitude on emancipation, 165
-
- Mason, James M., 103
-
- Mason, Richard B., 13, 14
-
- Massachusetts, sentiments on slavery, 375
-
- Maynard, Horace, 9, 10; joins in call for convention, 21;
- emancipation policy of Lincoln approved by, 177;
- election of, 415
-
- Memphis, Legislature convenes in, 15
-
- Mexico, 12, 13;
- French interests in, 50;
- invasion of, a part of Napoleon’s policy, 391;
- proposal for joint invasion of, 392
-
- Mileage, allowed to Arkansas claimants, 91
-
- Military commissions, 12
-
- Military Governor, office of, 11, 12, 14, 193
-
- Minority, loyal, rule by, inconsistent with American principles, 205,
- 217;
- should institute government for their own protection, 353;
- further examination of, 491
-
- Mission Ridge, battle of, 23, 224
-
- Missouri, provisional government appointed in, 10;
- origin of government of, 350
-
- Mississippi, State of, in Federal control, 50;
- insurrection in, 314;
- injury sustained by, 437;
- Provisional Governor for, 459;
- Governor Clarke summons insurgent Legislature of, 459;
- secession ordinance declared null and void, 460;
- slavery abolished in, 460;
- people advised to form a patrol, 461;
- disorder in, 462;
- General Slocum prevents organization of militia in, 462;
- freedmen of, 463;
- election in, 464;
- conflict of civil and military authorities, 464;
- supremacy of military in, 464;
- November legislation of, 475;
- practical revival of black code in, 480;
- spirit of reconstructed Legislature, 482;
- character of reorganized government, 488
-
- Monroe Doctrine, Northern Democrats and Republicans adhere to, 392;
- Mexico to be conquered under pretence of defending, 393
-
- Morrill, Justin S., President Johnson visited by, 458
-
- Morton, Oliver P., Governor, President Johnson interviewed by, 442
-
- McClellan, electors, protest of, 34;
- ticket in Tennessee withdrawn, 35
-
- McClellan, George B., General, proclamation concerning slaves, 145;
- instructions to, 152;
- collapse of Richmond campaign of, 178;
- Union army again commanded by, 184;
- Lee defeated by, 186;
- vote for Presidency received by, 339
-
- McCulloch, General, 79
-
- McDougall, James A., on admission of Mr. Segar, 139;
- Lincoln’s letter to, 165–166
-
- McDowell, General Irwin, treatment of fugitive slaves by, 144
-
- McDowell, J. L., inquiry concerning fugitive slaves, 147
-
-
- _N_
-
- Napoleon III, 50;
- policy of, 391
-
- Nashville, occupation of, 10;
- panic in, 11;
- occupied by General Nelson, 15;
- Governor Johnson arrives in, 15;
- Governor Johnson addresses people of, 15;
- mayor and council imprisoned, 17;
- press under restraint, 17;
- treatment of clergymen in, 17;
- Union convention at, 21;
- action of convention, 21;
- public meeting at, 27;
- convention at, 29;
- convention of January, 1865, 30;
- Legislature meets at, 32
-
- National Conservative Union party, negro suffrage opposed by, 421;
- reconstruction policy of Mr. Johnson endorsed by, 421;
- Mr. Wells nominated for governor by, 422
-
- Navy, proportions of, 286
-
- Negroes, free, elective franchise asked by, 55;
- North Carolina denies franchise to, 452;
- condition of, in Mississippi, 463;
- testimony of, 464;
- numbers in Texas, 467
-
- Nelson, General, enters Nashville, 15
-
- Nelson, Thomas A. R., 9
-
- New Hampshire, President Johnson addresses citizens of, 442
-
- New Mexico, 12
-
- New Orleans, State troops from, seize Federal property, 36;
- enthusiasm in, 37;
- bankruptcy of, 37;
- importance to Confederacy, 38;
- capture of, 38;
- results of Federal occupation of, 39;
- members of court of record arrive in, 43;
- excepted from emancipation proclamation, 47;
- menaced by General Taylor, 49;
- General Shepley forbids election in, 56;
- amount of taxes paid by, 58;
- without civil government, 58;
- extent of the State of Louisiana, 75;
- constitutional convention in, 75;
- unqualified voters enrolled in, 418;
- new registration in, 418;
- J. Madison Wells nominated by convention held in, 420
-
- Newport News, fugitive slaves arrive at, 144, 386
-
- New York, electoral vote not counted in Washington’s election, 326
-
- Nicolay and Hay. See Hay and Nicolay
-
- Noell, John W., on admission of West Virginia, 118;
- inquiry of, 164
-
- Norfolk, Va., destitution in, 133
-
- North Carolina, Union victories in, 10;
- secession spirit in, 150;
- insurrection in, 314;
- injuries sustained by, 436;
- Provisional Governor appointed for, 448;
- “loyal people” of, 452;
- suffrage withheld from negroes of, 452;
- nearly all counties choose delegates, 453;
- ordinance of secession repealed by, 454;
- abolition of slavery in, 454;
- payment of rebel debt prohibited by, 455;
- adjournment of convention, 455;
- convention ordinances ratified, 457;
- election unsatisfactory to President Johnson, 457;
- Thirteenth Amendment ratified by, 457;
- Congressmen chosen by, 457;
- why President began reconstruction policy with, 458
-
-
- _O_
-
- Oglesby, Governor, President Johnson visited by, 440
-
- Ohio, western Virginians assisted by troops of, 98
-
- Olin, Abraham B., on admission of West Virginia, 116
-
- Olustee, battle of, a result of administration policy, 253
-
- Orange, William, Prince of, 203
-
- Orleans, courts established in, 41
-
-
- _P_
-
- Paine, Colonel, arrest of, 169
-
- Parker, Granville, anti-slavery work of, 108
-
- Parliament, absolute power vested in, 203
-
- Patterson, David T., election of, 413
-
- Patterson, General, proclamation relative to slaves, 145
-
- Peabody, Charles A., appointment of, 42
-
- Peace and Constitutional Society, in Arkansas, 81
-
- Pea Ridge, battle of, 82
-
- Pendleton, George H., reconstruction speech of, 257;
- votes received by, for Vice-Presidency, 339
-
- Pensacola, Florida, Louisiana soldiers vote at, 70
-
- Perry, Nehemiah, reconstruction address of, 250
-
- Phelps, General John S., alleged opposition to rule of, 38;
- military governor, 82
-
- Pierce, E. L., labor of abandoned slaves organized by, 160, 386;
- Lincoln interviewed by, 160
-
- Pierpont, Francis Harrison, chosen Governor of restored Virginia, 101;
- inauguration of, 101;
- views of the Constitution, 102;
- message of, 109;
- address of, 128;
- elected Governor, 129;
- duties of, 133;
- protests against military interference, 134;
- application for assistance, 191;
- Lincoln’s telegram to, 426;
-
- Lincoln visited by, 426;
- reception at Richmond, 427;
- the problem confronting, 428
-
- Placquemines, voting in parish of, 56;
- vote of, 74
-
- Poland, similarity of ideas lacking in, 237
-
- Polk, President James K., message of, 13
-
- Pollard, E. A., quotation from “Lost Cause” of, 400
-
- Pool, John, election of, 457
-
- Pomeroy, Samuel C., on electoral vote of Louisiana, 330;
- amendment offered by, 337;
- remarks on reconstruction by, 376;
- extent of Congressional power over reconstruction stated by, 377
-
- Port Hudson, General Banks at, 49;
- fall of, 49
-
- Portsmouth, Va., Union vote in, 132;
- destitution in, 133
-
- Powell, Lazarus W., remarks on Louisiana, 331;
- recognition of Louisiana opposed by, 344;
- General Banks denounced by, 346;
- proclamation of Banks quoted by, 347;
- remarks on Trumbull’s resolution by, 373
-
- Property, Federal, seizure of, in Baton Rouge, 36
-
-
- _R_
-
- Raleigh, convention assembles at, 453
-
- Raymond, Lincoln’s letter to, 163
-
- Reade, Edwin G., North Carolina convention presided over by, 453;
- farewell address of, 455
-
- Reconstruction, in Tennessee, 1;
- Lincoln’s proclamation of, 23;
- in Louisiana, 36, 44, 61;
- loyal minority authorized to restore States, 25;
- Lincoln’s plan not indispensable to, 26;
- interrupted in Louisiana, 49;
- Lincoln’s letter relative to, 51;
- President urges in Louisiana, 52;
- Banks’s plan of, 66;
- proposed for Arkansas, 85;
- Lincoln’s letters on, 89;
- in Louisiana connected with war powers of President, 36;
- emancipation introduced into, 189;
- theories and plans of, 190;
- central idea of Lincoln’s plan, 190;
- both parties agree on Presidential plan, 193;
- great number of theories and plans of, 193;
- difficulties of, increased by abolition, 194;
- Lincoln propounded only one plan of, 194;
- “Louisiana plan” and negro suffrage, 195;
- sensation caused by Sumner’s scheme of, 198;
- final work of, influenced by Sumner’s resolutions, 199;
- Stevens’s theory of, 211;
- first act of, a modification of Stevens’s theory, 212;
- theory held at commencement of rebellion, 213;
- Democratic theory of, 217;
- Edgerton’s speech on, 219;
- attitude of Democratic party toward, 220;
- conservative views of Senators on, 220;
- House of Representatives on, 220;
- resolution of Thaddeus Stevens concerning, 224;
- resolution of Henry Winter Davis, 225;
- address of Mr. Davis, 226;
- of Southern States premature, 230;
- President’s plan criticised by Mr. Davis, 232;
- address of Representative Scofield on, 236;
- address of Representative Williams on, 238;
- indemnity, security and punishment, elements of, 240;
- bill opposed by Mr. Baldwin, 241;
- address of Representative Thayer on, 242;
- remarks of Representative Yeaman on, 243;
- address of Representative Longyear on, 244;
- speech of Ignatius Donnelly on, 245;
- speech of Representative Dennison, 247;
- remarks of Thaddeus Stevens on, 247;
- bill opposed by Representative Strouse, 249;
- opposition of Mr. Cravens, 249;
- Representative Gooch on, 250;
- Representative Perry’s remarks on, 250;
- Fernando Wood’s opposition to bill for, 251;
- remarks of William D. Kelley on, 252;
- speech of S. S. Cox on, 252;
- Mr. Boutwell’s speech on, 254;
- speech of George H. Pendleton, 257;
- bill for, unconstitutional, 258;
- Representatives pass bill on, 262;
- provisions of bill on, 262;
- Senator Wade on, 264;
- Senator Carlile’s speech on, 267;
- Congress passes bill on, 273;
- Lincoln’s treatment of bill on, 273;
- interest of Mr. Chandler in bill on, 274;
- Lincoln’s proclamation concerning bill on, 277;
- notice of in annual message, 286;
- progress of, 287;
- forced upon attention of Congress by Union victories, 288;
- Mr. Ashley reports bill on, 289;
- Representative Eliot offers amendment to bill on, 289;
- provisions of Ashley’s bill, 289;
- revived bill recognizes Louisiana and Arkansas, 289;
- new bill a substitute for Wade-Davis bill, 290;
- Kelley’s speech on, 291;
- Eliot’s speech on, 292;
- consideration of bill postponed, 295;
- Mr. Dawes resumes debate on, 295;
- power conferred on President by bill, 296;
- remarks of Fernando Wood on, 300;
- speech of Mr. LeBlond on, 300;
- remarks of Representative Blow, 301;
- speech of J. K. Edgerton, 301;
- Edgerton’s summary of bill, 302;
- substitute for Ashley’s bill, 304;
- further remarks of Ashley on, 305;
- Ashley explains compromise, 306;
- Henry Winter Davis speaks on, 306;
- Mr. Davis’s last words in Congress on, 310;
- Mr. Wilson’s bill, 311;
- revival of Ashley’s bill on, 312;
- defects of Presidential plan of, 358;
- Howard’s speech on, 358;
- Reverdy Johnson’s remarks on, 370;
- Sumner proposes conditions of, 376;
- remarks of Senator Clark, 376;
- remarks of Senator Pomeroy, 377, 378;
- Presidential plan of, ignored by Congress, 385;
- Lincoln’s conditions for effecting, 395, 397;
- Lincoln’s letter to General Hurlbut on, 401;
- Lincoln’s letter to General Canby, 402;
- Lincoln’s last words on, 403;
- culmination of Presidential plan of, 407;
- President Johnson’s policy of, endorsed by Democratic convention,
- 420;
- views of Louisiana Republicans on, 422;
- Andrew Johnson’s views of, in 1864, 438;
- Johnson under no obligation to accept Lincoln’s plan of, 447;
- Mr. Johnson’s policy of, 449;
- steps to, in Mississippi, 458;
- obstacles to, in Texas, 467;
- conventions called under Presidential plan, 468;
- course of Confederate governors relative to, 469;
- Lincoln’s intention to employ Confederate legislatures in work of,
- 470;
- expected results of, 473;
- prediction of Henry Winter Davis relative to, 473;
- enemies of Union entrusted with, 486;
- Lincoln opposed a loose system of, 486;
- Lincoln’s and Johnson’s theories identical, 487;
- organizations effected under Lincoln different from “Johnson
- governments,” 487;
- Johnson’s original policy of, 488;
- acts of Congress suspend governments established under Presidential
- plan, 489;
- Joint Committee on, 490;
- Presidential plan examined, 491;
- the suffrage in the Presidential system of, 494;
- precedent conditions for returning States, 494;
- Senator Henderson’s letter on Lincoln’s plan, 495
-
- Rector, Governor, call for troops, 81;
- threat of seceding from Confederacy, 82;
- flight of, 82
-
- Red River, General Taylor retires to, 50
-
- Republican electoral ticket, none offered for suffrage of Tennesseeans
- in 1860, 7
-
- Republican form of government, Sumner’s resolutions relative to, 196;
- position that war was fought to fulfil guaranty of, untenable, 209;
- Henry Winter Davis on, 228;
- duty of Congress to guarantee, 228;
- Mr. Davis on modes of establishing, 232;
- Fernando Wood on, 251;
-
- Pendleton on, 259, 260, 261;
- Carlile on, 268, 269;
- cannot originate in military orders, 357;
- military government not republican under the Constitution, 368
-
- Republican party, radical members of, unite with Free State leaders,
- 74;
- Sumner’s resolutions disavowed by leaders of, 199;
- relations of Stevens to, 216;
- change in attitude of, 220;
- revolutionary policy of, 257;
- beginning of division in, 273;
- some radical members of, opposed controversy with President, 289;
- schism in, 313;
- change in sentiments of, 377;
- Hendricks on factiousness of, 380;
- mass-meeting in New Orleans held by radical members of, 422
-
- Representation, basis of, 354
-
- Representatives, House of, committee on compensated emancipation
- appointed by, 168;
- reconstruction views of, 220;
- reconstruction bill passed by, 262;
- Ashley’s reconstruction bill tabled by, 311, 312;
- resolution of Mr. Wilson introduced into, 314;
- measure excluding electoral votes of certain States passed by, 314;
- constitutional amendment abolishing slavery passed by, 384
-
- Revenue, surplus of 1837, distribution of, 157
-
- Revolution, American, legal forms not ignored in effecting, 206
-
- Revolution, English, 202
-
- Reynolds, General, report on government of Arkansas, 412
-
- Rhode Island cases, 228
-
- Richmond, Arkansas messenger sent to, 80;
- secession convention meets in, 93;
- work of convention denounced, 100;
- fall of, 426
-
- Richmond government, offers concessions to western Virginia, 97;
- resistance to, 97
-
- Riddell, John Leonard, certificate from, 56
-
- Riley, General Bennett, 13
-
- Ritchie, A. F., letter to Attorney-General Bates, 105
-
- Rogers, A. A. C., Congressman-elect, 91;
- proposed compensation of, 342
-
- Rosecrans, General W. S., inactivity of, 21;
- suggestion to Lincoln, 23;
- removed from command, 23, 224
-
- Ryers, William, election of, 412
-
-
- _S_
-
- Saulsbury, Willard, 103;
- on admission of Mr. Segar, 139;
- admission of West Virginia Senators opposed by, 193;
- Administration criticised by, 377
-
- Schenck, General, 251
-
- Schofield, General, Governor Holden assisted by, 453
-
- Schurz, General Carl, Governor Sharkey criticised by, 462
-
- Scofield, Glenni W., address of, 236
-
- Sebastian, William K., resignation from United States Senate, 85;
- return to loyalty, 85
-
- Secession, in Tennessee, 8;
- Tennessee abrogates act of, 30;
- spirit of, in Louisiana, 36;
- ordinance of, 36;
- in Arkansas, 78;
- Germans and Irish of Arkansas indifferent to, 80;
- in Virginia, 93;
- western Virginia refuses to acquiesce in, 97;
- war powers unlocked by, 213;
- attitude of Democratic party toward, 218;
- Henry Winter Davis on, 227;
- Pendleton on acts of, 259;
- Henderson on potency of, 351;
- Sumner denies that States were taken out of Union by, 351
-
- Secessionists, in Arkansas, 77
-
- Segar, Joseph E., on admission of West Virginia, 118;
- remarks of, 131;
- Committee of Elections reports concerning, 131;
- denied admission to Congress, 133;
- election to United States Senate, 138
-
- Senate, The United States, reconstruction bill in, 264;
- exclusion of States from Electoral College, 315;
- Trumbull’s resolution abandoned by, 383;
- amendment abolishing slavery passed by, 384
-
- Seward, William H., on admission of West Virginia, 120;
- General McClellan instructed by, 152;
- Lincoln broaches emancipation to, 178;
- postponement of emancipation recommended by, 182;
- Lincoln’s letter to, 395;
- injuries prevented attendance at inauguration of Mr. Johnson, 408;
- message to Governor Marvin, 488;
- President Johnson influenced by, 489
-
- Sharkey, William L., appointment of, 459;
- address of, 460;
- Johnson’s telegram to, 461;
- conduct of, criticised by Carl Schurz, 462;
- negro testimony to be considered by, 464
-
- Shelbyville, Tenn., Andrew Johnson’s address at, 19
-
- Shenandoah Valley, discontent of, 96;
- proposed annexation to West Virginia, 109
-
- Shepley, General George F., appointment of, 39;
- system of courts established by, 41;
- Lincoln’s letter to, 44;
- requested to hold an election, 45;
- proclamation for an election issued by, 45;
- plan of Louisiana Free State Committee approved by, 48;
- Attorney-General for Louisiana appointed by, 48;
- orders an enrollment of loyal citizens, 53;
- election prohibited by, 56, 58;
- conference of Free State Committee with, 63;
- disagreement with General Banks, 64, 65;
- General Banks approves registration of, 68;
- Norfolk proclamation of, 134
-
- Sheridan, General Philip H., at Mission Ridge and Lookout Mountain, 23;
- a Confederate army destroyed by, 288
-
- Sherman, John, on election of Mr. Segar, 140;
- on electoral vote of Louisiana, 332
-
- Sherman, General Thomas W., instructions of War Department to, 149
-
- Sherman, General William Tecumseh, projected march of, 286;
- safety of, 288
-
- Shreveport, movement toward, 51;
- ceases to be capital of Louisiana, 419
-
- Slavery, abolition of, in British colonies, 6;
- to be ignored in reconstruction, 27;
- Nashville convention urges abolition of, 29;
- amended Tennessee constitution abolishes, 30;
- constitution of Arkansas abolishes, 88;
- introduction into Virginia, 94;
- in the Wheeling convention, 107;
- Lincoln’s views of, 143;
- Congress claims no right to interfere with, 167;
- advance of Northern opinion on, 167;
- abolished in District of Columbia, 167;
- not possible for negroes freed by war, 194;
- reconstruction rendered more difficult by abolition of, 194;
- ceases to exist when State ceases to exist, 197;
- duty of Congress to put an end to, 197;
- recognition of, by a Federal officer analogous to treason, 197;
- government should protect persons in a state of, 198;
- Chicago platform on, 207;
- Emancipation Proclamation not necessary to abolish in seceding
- States, 207;
- destruction of, not an end of the war, 222;
- the one subject of estrangement in the Union, 237;
- theory of the Fathers concerning, 237;
- anti-slavery amendment recommended to consideration of Congress, 287;
- Congress passes joint resolution relative to, 288;
- restoration useless with, 352;
- sentiments of Massachusetts and South Carolina on, 375;
- not affected by emancipation proclamation in certain States, 384;
- Congress passes anti-slavery amendment, 384;
- amendment ratified by 20 States, 384;
- Arkansas abolishes, 410;
- Virginia abolishes, 425;
- abolition an injury to slave owners, 433;
- North Carolina abolishes, 454;
- Mississippi abolishes, 460;
- Georgia abolishes, 466
-
- Slaves, bred in Virginia, 94;
- number in Virginia, 94;
- in western Virginia, 95;
- policy of commanders relative to fugitive, 144, 145, 158, 159;
- declared contraband of war, 146;
- compensated emancipation of, 153;
- colonization of, 153;
- abandoned by masters, 160;
- to organize labor of abandoned, 160;
- General Hunter proclaims freedom of, 168;
- Lincoln asserts right to emancipate, 168;
- employment of, 169;
- confiscation of property in, 179;
- proposed emancipation of, 182;
- Stevens on employment of, against United States, 212;
- abandoned lands to be colonized by, 385
-
- Slidell, John, resignation from United States Senate, 423
-
- Slocum, General, organization of Mississippi retarded by, 462;
- orders of, revoked by President, 463
-
- Smith, Caleb B., resignation of, 119
-
- Smith, Charles, Senator-elect from Louisiana, 76, 343
-
- Smith, General E. Kirby, 50
-
- Smith, Governor William, nullity of acts of, 445
-
- Snow, William D., election of, 91
-
- Society, civil not necessarily identical with political, 354;
- political liable to reduction, 354;
- political may be reduced by loss of citizenship, 354
-
- South Carolina, martial law proclaimed over, 168;
- Stevens on secession ordinance of, 215;
- Boutwell would exclude from restored Union, 256;
- insurrection in, 314;
- sentiments on slavery, 375;
- damage sustained by, 435;
- Mr. Johnson receives citizens of, 443;
- revolutionary character of convention, 469
-
- Southern States, reorganization of, premature, 230;
- black code of, 293;
- an asylum for broken-down politicians, 297;
- proposed taxation of, 297;
- power of Congress over, 362;
- not convertible into Territories, 364.
- See Confederate States
-
- Speed, Attorney-General, reply to Albemarle County voters, 430
-
- Sprague, William, remarks on Louisiana election, 381
-
- Stanton, Edwin M., aids western Virginians, 98;
- on admission of West Virginia, 122;
- disbanding of army by, 409
-
- State, indestructibility of, 192;
- suicide of a, 197, 201, 209;
- effect of termination of, 197;
- slavery terminated by termination of, 197;
- Federal restraints upon action of a, 198;
- difficulty of defining, 201;
- basis of suicide theory, 208;
- levying war changes status of, 217;
- the people of, constitute the, 218;
- constitutions must be formed by people of, 218;
- only successful revolution can unmake, 218;
- attitude of Democratic party on suicide of, 219
-
- St. Bernard, parish of, voting in, 56
-
- Steele, General Frederick, Lincoln’s letters to, 85, 86, 89
-
- Stephens, A. H., peace commissioner, 395;
- Lincoln’s advice to, 399
-
- Stevens, Thaddeus, on admission of West Virginia, 117, 214;
- reconstruction theory of, 211;
- characteristics of, 211;
- consistency of, 212;
- remarks on slaves employed in hostility to Government, 212;
- taxation of seceding States proposed by, 213;
- secession discussed by, 215;
- relations to his party defined by, 216;
- conquered province theory of, 217;
- remarks on minority government, 217;
- resolution relative to President’s message, 224;
- on constitutional amendments, 232;
- reconstruction speech of, 247;
- distributing President’s message, 288;
- Mr. Eliot interrupted by, 294;
- remarks of, 342;
- credentials of Warmoth offered by, 422;
- sneer at Pierpont’s government, 427
-
- Stokes, William B., election of, 415
-
- Strouse, Myer, reconstruction speech of, 249
-
- Suffrage, Representative Kelley on, 291;
- provisions of Ashley’s bill on, 294, 304;
- a restricted electorate favored by Government, 354;
- basis of, 354;
- qualifications for, in Massachusetts, 354;
- proposal to confer on negroes, 358;
- Reverdy Johnson on, 378;
- negroes petition for, 413;
- Brownlow opposes conferring on negroes, 416;
- National Conservative party on, 421;
- provision of Virginia constitution on, 425;
- North did not intend to force on South, 486
-
- Sumner, Charles, on admission of West Virginia, 110;
- letter on policy of Lincoln, 170;
- faith of, 191;
- resolutions of, 196;
- sensation produced by restoration scheme of, 198;
- letters to Francis Lieber, 199, 289;
- public character of, 199;
- letters to John Bright, 200, 290;
- article in Atlantic Monthly, 200;
- Mr. Blair replies to, 208;
- preamble to resolutions of, 210;
- proposal relative to emancipation proclamation, 272;
- estimate of Lincoln, 275;
- substitute offered by, 344;
- amendment offered by, 356;
- Reverdy Johnson’s argument with, 374;
- inconsistency of, 375;
- conditions of reunion proposed by, 376;
- remarks on Trumbull’s resolution, 379, 382;
- Howard and Chandler support position of, 380;
- remarks on Louisiana election, 382
-
- Sumter, influence of fall, on Arkansas, 78
-
- Supreme Court, The United States, opinion in Cross _vs._ Harrison, 13;
- decision relative to rebellious States, 362
-
-
- _T_
-
- Taliaferro, Robert W., seat in Congress claimed by, 341
-
- Taney, Roger B., Chief Justice, quoted by Mr. Davis, 228
-
- Tarr, Campbell, 98, 128
-
- Taylor, Nathaniel, attitude of loyal Tennesseeans defined by, 7;
- election of, 415
-
- Taylor, General Richard, 37, 49, 50
-
- Ten Eyck, John C., reconstruction bill opposed by, 273;
- amendment offered by, 315;
- remarks in support of amendment, 318;
- defeat of amendment offered by, 334
-
- Tennessee, Presidential reconstruction in, 1;
- no Republican electoral ticket in, 7;
- league with Confederacy authorized by, 8;
- turns military force over to the Confederacy, 8;
- secession of, 8;
- activity of loyalists in, 9;
- proposed dismemberment of, 9;
- Confederates losing hold of, 10;
- derangement of government in, 10;
- Legislature assembles at Memphis, 15;
- Andrew Johnson appointed military governor of, 15;
- condition in the Union, 16;
- judges imprisoned, 18;
- reprisals on secessionists, 18;
- lawlessness of, 18;
- citizens in Union army, 20;
- included in department of General Halleck, 20;
- ready for restoration, 21;
- free from armed insurrectionists, 22;
- emancipation in, 22;
- excluded from effects of emancipation proclamation, 22, 384;
- enrolling agent sent to, 27;
- county elections in, 27;
- returns, 28;
- reconstruction in, 29;
- Presidential election in, 29, 195;
- amended constitution of, 30;
- abrogates act of secession, 30;
- bonds of disloyal government, 30;
- constitution ratified by, 31;
- slaves emancipated in, 31;
- meeting of loyal Legislature, 31;
- McClellan electors, 35;
- electoral vote of, 35, 76, 129;
- Lincoln maintains legality of government in, 195;
- Mr. Davis on Unionists of, 230;
- insurrection in, 314;
- electoral vote of, 334;
- exclusion of electoral votes, 338;
- Cowan’s inquiry concerning vote of, 338;
- Thirteenth Amendment ratified by, 412;
- United States Senators chosen by, 413;
- disfranchising act of, 413;
- irregularities in election, 414;
- negroes and Indians made witnesses, 415;
- harshness to traitors favored by, 414;
- franchise demanded by freedmen of, 415;
- ravages of war in, 417;
- insurrection ended in, 444;
- Joint Committee recommend admission of, 490
-
- Tennessee, Bank of, notes of, irredeemable, 30
-
- Tennessee, East, slavery in, 3;
- loyalty of, 3;
- services in Revolution, 4;
- resources of, 4;
- anti-slavery journals in, 5;
- abolition movement in, 5;
- a thoroughfare to the south-west, 6;
- Yancey agitates in, 7;
- treatment of loyalists in, 9;
- importance of, 21;
- convention of, revived, 29
-
- Tennessee, West, politics influenced by industries of, 4;
- martial law in, 15
-
- Texas, expedition into, 50, 51;
- insurrection in, 314;
- damages sustained by, 437;
- blockade of, 444;
- appointment of Provisional Governor for, 467;
- obstacles to restoration in, 467;
- negro population of, 467;
- reconstruction incomplete, 467;
- not represented at opening of Thirty-ninth Congress, 490
-
- Thayer, General, 89
-
- Thayer, M. Russell, reconstruction address of, 242
-
- Thomas, Dorsey B., counted out, 415
-
- Thomas, General George, at Mission Ridge and Lookout Mountain, 23;
- a Confederate army crippled by, 288
-
- Thompson, Jacob, Mr. Black’s visit to, 390
-
- Thompson, General Jefferson, 245
-
- Treat, Hon. Samuel, excerpt from letter of, 354
-
- Tribune, The New York, emancipation favored by, 164;
- protest of Wade and Davis printed in, 279
-
- Trumbull, Lyman, on admission of Mr. Segar, 139;
- remarks on Crittenden resolution, 221;
- reconstruction bill opposed by, 273;
- speech on Ten Eyck’s amendment, 316;
- on electoral vote of Louisiana, 321, 327;
- resolution offered by, 343;
- Sumner’s offer to amend resolution of, 356;
- Howard’s speech on resolution of, 358;
- Wade moves postponement of resolution, 378;
- Powell’s speech on resolution of, 378;
- consistency of, 380;
- resolution recognizing Louisiana abandoned, 383
-
- Tyng, Rev. Doctor, 151
-
-
- _U_
-
- Underwood, John C., Senator-elect from Virginia, 141
-
- Union, dismemberment of, 1;
- admission of new States into, 207
-
- Union army, Arkansas troops in, 83;
- troops of restored Virginia in, 109
-
- Union associations, demand an election in Louisiana, 45;
- delegates appointed by, 47
-
- Unionists, importance of Southern, 3;
- in Louisiana, 37, 38, 47;
- Lincoln’s advice to, 38;
- numbers in Arkansas, 77;
- loyalty in Arkansas, 88;
- conflicting views of, 88;
- difficulty of enlisting in Virginia, 133;
- oath of allegiance taken by, in North Carolina, 150;
- Henry Winter Davis on Southern, 231
-
- Union party, vote of, in West Virginia, 129
-
- United States, The, policy toward conquered provinces, 12;
- Tennessee promised republican form of government by, 16;
- oath of allegiance required of Louisiana voters, 45;
- policy toward loyal minorities, 105, 349;
- policy toward South after rebellion, 190;
- number of States not diminished by secession, 192;
- republican governments obligatory on members of, 208;
- duty of each to be represented in Congress, 208;
- union of, perpetual, 218, 219;
- Chase’s dictum concerning nature of, 219;
- Government not to interfere in affairs of States, 220;
- authorized to impose conditions on returning States, 366;
- demand for revenue felt by, 409;
- disloyal governments not recognized by, 409
-
- Universal Emancipation, The Genius of, 5
-
- Upshur County, emancipation favored by citizens of, 108
-
-
- _V_
-
- Van Winkle, P. G., election of, 128
-
- Vicksburg, surrender of, 49
-
- Virginia, rebel government abrogated in, 10;
- loyalists without civil government, 93;
- secession of, 93;
- opposition to secession in, 94;
- physical features of, 94;
- slavery introduced into, 94;
- slaves in, 94;
- historical part of, 94;
- birthplace of many illustrious Americans, 94;
- settlement of trans-Alleghany region, 95;
- population of western, 95;
- sympathy of people in western, 95;
- representation in Legislature, 96;
- taxation in, 96;
- power in hands of slaveholders, 96;
- dismemberment of, discussed, 96;
- danger of insurrection in, 96;
- change of representation in, 96;
- expenditure of revenue, 96;
- concessions to western, 97;
- western refuses to acquiesce in secession, 97;
- the disloyal in, 97;
- State officials favor secession, 97;
- Federal Government aids western, 98;
- ravages of war in western, 98;
- movement for dismemberment, 98;
- secession denounced by Clarksburgh meeting, 99;
- State government reconstituted, 100;
- Legislature of restored government, 102;
- election of United States Senators, 102;
- State of Kanawha to be erected in, 105;
- dismemberment ratified, 107;
- convention of, 107;
- Legislature meets, 109;
- Legislature consents to formation of new State, 110;
- Assembly consents to transfer of Berkeley County, 126;
- act annexing counties to West Virginia, 127;
- transfer of Berkeley and Jefferson counties, 127;
- opposition to transfer, 127;
- removal of capital, 129;
- Legislature passes convention bill, 130;
- who were voters in, 130;
- amended constitution of, 130;
- civil in conflict with military authorities, 134;
- Legislature meets, 137;
- attitude of Congress and army toward, 138;
- feebleness of restored government, 138;
- admission of Senators from, 141;
- disloyal government discusses emancipation, 162;
- United States should protect loyalists of, 191;
- electoral vote from restored government, 314;
- slavery in parts of, excepted from emancipation proclamation, 384;
- division permanent, 399;
- constitution of 1864, 425;
- suffrage in, 425;
- slavery abolished in, 425;
- prohibitions on Legislature, 425;
- President Johnson recognizes government of Pierpont, 427, 445;
- ravages of war in, 427;
- steps to restoration of, 428;
- election in, 431;
- acts of secession authorities void, 445;
- acts of Congress to be enforced in, 446;
- Alexandria ceases to be capital of, 446
-
-
- _W_
-
- Wade, Benjamin F., bill for admission of West Virginia reported by,
- 110;
- remarks on admission of West Virginia, 111;
- reconstruction bill reported by, 264;
- address of, 264;
- protest of, with Henry Winter Davis, 279;
- character of, 283;
- on electoral vote of Louisiana, 333;
- remonstrance offered by, 343;
- postponement of Trumbull’s resolution moved by, 378;
- motion to postpone, defeated, 379;
- Louisiana election criticised by, 381
-
- Wade-Davis bill, House of Representatives passes, 262;
- Senate passes, 273;
- President’s action on, 273;
- President’s proclamation concerning, 277;
- revival of, 290;
- no provision for negro suffrage in, 494
-
- War, expenses of, 161;
- condition of cessation of, 161, 397;
- obligations between States abrogated by, 214;
- Crittenden resolution on objects of, 221;
- objects of, 364;
- vindictiveness engendered by, 393
-
- Ward, Artemus, 186
-
- War Department, application of part of contingent fund of, 43
-
- Warmoth, Henry C., election of, 422;
- elements of political strength possessed by, 423
-
- Washburne, Elihu B., remarks of, 342
-
- Webster, Daniel, prediction of, 126
-
- Welles, Gideon, on admission of West Virginia, 122;
- Lincoln broaches emancipation to, 178;
- quotation from diary of, 178;
- narrative of, 188
-
- Wells, J. Madison, proclamation of, 418;
- General Banks not in harmony with, 418;
- address of, 419;
- qualifications of voters defined by, 420
-
- Wells, T. M., seat in Congress claimed by, 341
-
- Wellsburgh, meeting at, 97;
- appointment of commissioners by, 98;
- arms and ammunition stored at, 98
-
- West Virginia, Congress admits Senators from, 104, 193;
- prosecution of war favored by, 104;
- stay law passed by, 104;
- of revolutionary origin, 105;
- convention for, 107;
- slavery in, 107;
- vote on constitution, 109;
- vote on emancipation, 110;
- Senate bill for admission of, 110;
- allotment of Representatives to, 110;
- Sumner on admission of, 110;
- proposal to prohibit slavery in, 111;
- Senate on admission of, 110;
- Senate passes bill to admit, 113;
- House bill for admission of, 113;
- House on admission of, 113;
- House passes bill for admission, 119;
- Lincoln approves bill for admission of, 125;
- constitutional amendment, 125;
- convention approves constitution, 126;
- constitution ratified by voters, 126;
- becomes a State, 126;
- Berkeley County transferred to, 126;
- proposal to annex counties to, 127;
- election in, 128;
- inauguration of, 128;
- United States Senators chosen by, 128;
- opposition to admission of Senators from, 128;
- Democrats alienated by President’s recognition of, 193;
- Stevens finds no warrant in constitution for admission of, 214;
- strong enough to maintain a loyal government, 230
-
- Wheeling, delegate convention at, 99;
- resolutions adopted by convention of, 100;
- adjournment of convention, 101;
- convention reassembles at, 104
-
- Whiskey Insurrection, effects on status of Pennsylvania, 335
-
- White, R. T. J., 88
-
- Whittaker, John S., 41
-
- Wickliffe, Charles A., Lincoln interviewed by, 165
-
- Willey, Waitman T., election of, 103, 128;
- admitted to seat, 104;
- on admission of West Virginia, 112;
- remarks on credentials of Mr. Segar, 138, 140
-
- Williams, General, treatment of fugitive slaves by, 159
-
- Williams, Thomas, reconstruction address of, 238
-
- Wilson, Henry, on recognition of restored Virginia, 140
-
- Wilson, James F., previous question on Ashley’s bill demanded by, 295;
- reconstruction bill introduced by, 311;
- joint resolution introduced by, 314
-
- Wisconsin, electoral vote of, 316
-
- Wood, Fernando, reconstruction bill opposed by, 251;
- remarks on Ashley’s bill, 300;
- remarks on Wilson’s bill, 312
-
-
- _Y_
-
- Yancey, William L., 7
-
- Yeaman, George H., reconstruction address of, 243
-
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-
-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's Lincoln's Plan of Reconstruction, by Charles H. McCarthy
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Lincoln's Plan of Reconstruction
-
-Author: Charles H. McCarthy
-
-Release Date: November 23, 2017 [EBook #56039]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LINCOLN'S PLAN OF RECONSTRUCTION ***
-
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-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
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-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'><span class='color_red'>Lincoln’s Plan of Reconstruction</span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='small'><em>By</em></span></div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHARLES H. McCARTHY</span></div>
- <div><span class='sc'>Ph.D.</span> (<em>Pa.</em>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/title.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='color_red'><span class='small'>New York</span></span></div>
- <div><span class='large'>McCLURE, PHILLIPS &amp; CO.</span></div>
- <div>MCMI</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><em>Copyright</em>, 1901 <em>by</em></div>
- <div>McCLURE, PHILLIPS &amp; CO.</div>
- <div class='c002'>PUBLISHED NOVEMBER, 1901</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <th class='c006'></th>
- <th class='c007'>Page</th>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'><span class='sc'>Introduction</span></td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_xv'>xv</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>I</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>TENNESSEE</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Election and Policy of Lincoln</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>East Tennessee</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_3'>3</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Secession</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_8'>8</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Federal Victories</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_10'>10</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>A Military Governor</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_11'>11</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Origin of Military Governors in the United States</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_12'>12</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Measures of Governor Johnson</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_17'>17</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Negro Troops</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_20'>20</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Nashville Convention of 1863</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_21'>21</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_23'>23</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Steps to Restoration</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_27'>27</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Nashville Convention of 1865</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_30'>30</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Election of William G. Brownlow</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_32'>32</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Nomination of Lincoln and Johnson</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_32'>32</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Presidential Election in Tennessee</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_34'>34</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>II</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>LOUISIANA</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Popularity of Secession</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_36'>36</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Financial Embarrassment</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_37'>37</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Capture of New Orleans</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_38'>38</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Lincoln’s Advice</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_38'>38</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>General Shepley appointed Military Governor</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_39'>39</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span>Election of Representatives to Congress</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_45'>45</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Division among Unionists</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_47'>47</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Military Operations</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_49'>49</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Lincoln Urges Reconstruction</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_51'>51</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Political Activity among Loyalists</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_53'>53</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Title of Louisiana Claimants</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_58'>58</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Opposition to General Banks</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_61'>61</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Plan of Reconstruction proposed</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_66'>66</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Election of 1864</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_70'>70</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Inauguration of Civil Government</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_72'>72</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Lincoln’s Letter on Negro Suffrage</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_73'>73</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Constitutional Convention</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_75'>75</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Congressional Election</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_76'>76</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>III</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>ARKANSAS</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Indifference to Secession</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_77'>77</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Fall of Sumter</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_78'>78</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Seizure of Little Rock</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_79'>79</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Military Matters</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_79'>79</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Threat of Seceding from Secession</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_82'>82</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>General Phelps appointed Military Governor</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_82'>82</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Enthusiasm of Unionists</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_83'>83</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Lincoln’s Interest in Arkansas</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_83'>83</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Inaugurating a Loyal Government</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_84'>84</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Election of 1864</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_90'>90</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>IV</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>VIRGINIA</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Secession</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_93'>93</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Physical Features and Early Settlements</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_94'>94</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Society and Its Basis</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_95'>95</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>The Counter-Revolution</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_97'>97</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Convention at Wheeling</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_99'>99</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Organizing a Union Government</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_100'>100</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Legislature of Restored Virginia</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_103'>103</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The State of Kanawha</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_105'>105</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Attorney-General Bates on Dismemberment</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_105'>105</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Making a New State</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_107'>107</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Compensated Emancipation</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_108'>108</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Formation of New State discussed in Congress</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_110'>110</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Cabinet on Dismemberment</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_120'>120</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Lincoln on Dismemberment</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_124'>124</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Webster’s Prediction</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_126'>126</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Inauguration of New State</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_128'>128</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Reorganizing the Restored State</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_129'>129</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Right of Commonwealth to Representation in Congress</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_131'>131</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Rupture between Civil and Military Authorities</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_133'>133</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The President Interposes</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_135'>135</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Congress Refuses to Admit a Senator-Elect</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_138'>138</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>V</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>ANTI-SLAVERY LEGISLATION</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Compensated Emancipation in Congress</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_142'>142</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Contrabands</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_143'>143</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Military Power and Fugitive Slaves</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_144'>144</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Lincoln on Military Emancipation</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_148'>148</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Andrew Jackson and Nullification</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_151'>151</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Lincoln on Compensated Emancipation</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_152'>152</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Compensated Emancipation in Delaware</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_155'>155</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Abandoned Slaves</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_160'>160</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Border Policy Propounded</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_163'>163</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>General Hunter and Military Emancipation</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_168'>168</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Slavery Prohibited in the Territories</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_170'>170</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_viii'>viii</span>Attitude of Border States on Slavery</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_172'>172</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Lincoln Resolves to Emancipate Slaves by Proclamation</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_177'>177</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>VI</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>THEORIES AND PLANS OF RECONSTRUCTION</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Presidential Plan</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_190'>190</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Sumner’s Theory of State Suicide</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_196'>196</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>“Conquered Province” Theory of Stevens</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_211'>211</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Theory of Northern Democrats</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_217'>217</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Crittenden Resolution</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_220'>220</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>VII</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>RISE OF THE CONGRESSIONAL PLAN</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Bill to Guarantee a Republican Form of Government</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_224'>224</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Henry Winter Davis on Reconstruction</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_226'>226</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>House Debates on Bill of Wade and Davis</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_236'>236</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Pendleton’s Speech on Reconstruction</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_257'>257</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Provisions of Wade-Davis Bill</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_262'>262</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Senate Debate on Bill of Wade and Davis</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_264'>264</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>President’s Pocket Veto</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_273'>273</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Proclamation concerning Reconstruction</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_278'>278</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Manifesto of Wade and Davis</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_279'>279</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>VIII</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>AN ATTEMPT TO COMPROMISE</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>President ignores Controversy with Congress</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_286'>286</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Summary of Military and Naval Situation</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_288'>288</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Attempt to Revive the Pocketed Bill</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_289'>289</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>House Debates on Ashley’s Reconstruction Bill</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_291'>291</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Defeat of Ashley’s Bill</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_311'>311</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_ix'>ix</span>IX</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>THE ELECTORAL VOTE OF LOUISIANA</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Resolution excluding Electoral Votes of Rebellious States</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_314'>314</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Amendment of Senator Ten Eyck</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_315'>315</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Senate Debate on Ten Eyck’s Amendment</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_316'>316</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Defeat of the Amendment in favor of Louisiana</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_334'>334</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Senate Passes Joint Resolution</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_338'>338</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Counting the Electoral Vote</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_339'>339</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The President’s Message</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_339'>339</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>X</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>SENATE DEBATE ON LOUISIANA</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Congressmen from Louisiana at the National Capital</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_341'>341</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Proposal to Recognize Louisiana</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_343'>343</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Powell’s Speech opposing Recognition</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_344'>344</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Henderson’s Argument for Recognition</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_348'>348</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Howard’s Argument in Opposition</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_358'>358</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Reverdy Johnson’s Speech for Recognition</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_370'>370</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>General Discussion on Louisiana</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_374'>374</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>XI</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>INCIDENTS OF RECONSTRUCTION</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Thirteenth Amendment</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_384'>384</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Freedmen’s Bureau</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_385'>385</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Volunteer Diplomats</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_389'>389</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Hampton Roads Conference</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_395'>395</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Lincoln’s Letter to General Hurlbut</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_401'>401</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Lincoln’s Letter to General Canby</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_402'>402</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Lincoln’s Last Words on Reconstruction</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_403'>403</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_x'>x</span>XII</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>CULMINATION OF THE PRESIDENTIAL PLAN</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Lincoln and the South</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_407'>407</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Inauguration of Andrew Johnson</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_408'>408</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Arkansas after the War</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_409'>409</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Condition of Tennessee</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_412'>412</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Louisiana</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_417'>417</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Reorganization of Virginia</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_425'>425</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Wreck of the Confederacy</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_431'>431</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Andrew Johnson on Reconstruction in 1864</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_438'>438</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Johnson’s Speeches after Accession to the Presidency</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_440'>440</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Raising the Blockade</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_444'>444</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Executive Department Recognizes Virginia</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_445'>445</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Restoration of North Carolina</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_448'>448</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The President Hesitates</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_458'>458</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Executive Policy in Mississippi</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_460'>460</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Restoration of Georgia</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_465'>465</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Texas</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_466'>466</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Reconstruction Conventions</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_468'>468</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Temper of the South</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_472'>472</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Mississippi Legislation relative to Freedmen</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_475'>475</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Southern Reaction</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_482'>482</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The President’s Change of Opinion</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_487'>487</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Examination of Lincoln’s Plan</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_491'>491</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>APPENDIX A</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'><span class='sc'>Thirty-Seventh Congress</span></td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_499'>499</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c008' colspan='2'>APPENDIX B</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'><span class='sc'>Thirty-Eighth Congress</span></td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#Page_502'>502</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xi'>xi</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>Preface</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'><em>Much of the material included in this volume
-was collected several years ago while the
-author was a graduate student at the University
-of Pennsylvania. The researches then commenced
-probably first suggested to him the lack in our
-political literature of an ample and interesting account
-of the return of the States. Students, librarians, and
-even professors of history knew no adequate treatise on
-the era of reconstruction, and their testimony was confirmed
-by the authority of Mr. Bryce, who happily
-describes the succession of events in those crowded times
-as forming one of the most intricate chapters of American
-history. No apology is offered, therefore, for
-considering in this essay so important and so long-neglected
-a theme as the rise of the political revolution that
-occurred before reunion was finally accomplished.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><em>On the general subject several excellent monographs
-have recently appeared; these, however, are nearly all
-employed in discussing the second stage in the process
-of restoration, and, except incidentally, anticipate
-scarcely anything of value in the present work, which,
-so far at least as concerns any logical exposition, conducts
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xii'>xii</span>the reader over untraveled ground. As the
-introduction indicates with sufficient accuracy both the
-scope and method of this study, nothing is required here
-beyond a concise statement of the author’s obligations.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><em>Like many other students of American institutions,
-the writer cheerfully acknowledges his indebtedness to
-the works of Brownson, Hurd and Jameson, and, by
-transferring some of their opinions to his book, has
-shown a practical appreciation of their researches. In
-addition to these obligations, in which the author is not
-singular, he profited for four years by the lectures of
-Dr. Francis N. Thorpe, his professor in constitutional
-history. Except in a very few instances, where the
-name of an author was forgotten, credit for both suggestions
-and material is uniformly given in the references
-and footnotes.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><em>For the selection, arrangement, and treatment of
-topics the author alone is responsible; he desires, however,
-to take this opportunity of acknowledging generous
-assistance received from three intimate friends: his
-colleague, Dr. Charles P. Henry, found time in the
-midst of arduous literary engagements to read the whole
-of the manuscript and to make many valuable suggestions,
-especially in matters of style and diction; the
-book is not less fortunate in having been critically read
-by Thomas J. Meagher, Esq., whose extensive and
-accurate knowledge of public as well as private law
-contributed to a more clear and scientific statement of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xiii'>xiii</span>many of the constitutional questions discussed; the
-technical skill and the superior intelligence of Mr.
-George M. Schell were of considerable assistance to the
-author in correcting the proofs of the entire book. Nor
-must he omit to record his appreciation of the courtesy
-of Mr. L. E. Hewitt, the efficient librarian of the
-Philadelphia Law Association. Finally the writer
-gratefully acknowledges his chief obligation to the scholarship
-of his former teacher, Dr. John Bach McMaster,
-who kindly interrupted the progress of his
-great historical work long enough to read a considerable
-portion of this essay. Indeed, it was the encouragement
-of that eminent author which first suggested the
-publication of these pages.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><em>Before concluding his remarks the writer wishes to
-disclaim any sympathy with the progressive school of
-historical criticism, which derides the Constitution as a
-thing of the past and learnedly characterizes all veneration
-for its authority as the worship of a fetich. This
-book will have attained one of its principal purposes if,
-in the language of a distinguished surviving statesman
-of the war period, it will teach “the constant and ever-important
-lesson that the Constitution is always a more
-reliable guide for the legislator than those fierce passions
-which war never fails to excite.”</em></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Philadelphia</span>, September 14, 1901.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xv'>xv</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>INTRODUCTION</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>So closely blended with the essential principles of our
-federal system of government were the causes of
-the Civil War that a clear understanding of its results
-appears to require some account of the origin, the
-independence and the permanent union of these States.
-Upon the eventful years between the Treaty of Paris and
-the Declaration of Independence, crowded as they are with
-work of note, one could linger with pleasure; this epoch,
-however, has already engaged the pens of so many writers,
-eminent as well as obscure, that a re-study of the blunders
-of England’s ministers and the revolt of her distant colonies
-might justly be regarded as a piece of presumption.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nor does it seem necessary to recite the familiar achievements
-of the succeeding period; for, perhaps, the portion
-of American history most attractive to the general reader
-is included between the 4th of July, 1776, and the 4th of
-March, 1789. To these years belong the most conspicuous
-services of that giant race of leaders whose swords relieved
-a gallant people from oppression and whose wisdom
-established a form of government not, indeed, in universal
-harmony with popular prejudice, but admirably designed
-for the popular welfare.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was at the outset of what may properly be styled
-the national era that there appeared the remarkable group
-of statesmen who guided the infant Republic on its dim
-and perilous way. On their broad experience gleamed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xvi'>xvi</span>a vision of the future touching all their work with elements
-of immortality. By them was skillfully established a system
-of revenue and of finance adequate to all the exigencies of
-the time, and a foreign policy inaugurated which for generations
-together preserved unbroken harmony with the
-world outside. They doubled by wise and peaceful acquisition
-the area of that Union whose independence had been
-wrested from George the Third, and with no less wisdom
-prescribed the procedure and defined the jurisdiction of
-Federal courts.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The forty years following March 4, 1789, form an
-epoch with characteristics of its own. This was the period
-of Virginian ascendency, the Adamses alone breaking the
-line of illustrious Presidents furnished by the Old Dominion.
-Introduced by an experiment in government which
-aroused the slumbering energies of the nation, its conclusion
-was marked by the disappearance from political life
-of the splendid ideals and rich traditions of the Fathers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The election of General Jackson coincides with the beginning
-of a new phase in American political and industrial
-development. It was not that the fame of a splendid
-military record had raised its possessor to an office for
-which long experience in governmental affairs had hitherto
-been thought indispensable, or that the selection of Presidents
-had passed from an intellectual few to the control of
-a much more numerous class who were willing to bestow
-on politics the attention and energy requisite for success in
-trade; but it was about this time that the imperious power of
-slavery entered upon its career of aggression. Philosophic
-statesmen of a previous epoch had ardently hoped that the
-institution would be permitted quietly to disappear; indeed,
-the greatest among them, though divided upon a multitude
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xvii'>xvii</span>of political and economic questions, agreed in encouraging
-every movement designed for its extinction. These humane
-efforts, however, were not destined to win immediate
-success, and even with the coöperation of the General
-Government served only to demonstrate the difficulty of
-such an undertaking.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After 1820 all the dangers which menaced the integrity
-of the Union were, with one notable exception, traceable
-to this cause. When Mr. Lincoln in his discussions with
-Senator Douglas declared that it was the sole cause of all
-the troubles which had disturbed the nation, he meant,
-probably, to assert no more than that in his own time it had
-been the most conspicuous one.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Long before slavery became a subject of embittered controversy
-the doctrine of State Rights had agitated the
-country. As early as the summer of 1793 it had found in
-Justice Iredell an able advocate on the bench of the United
-States Supreme Court. For party purposes it was adopted
-five years later by Madison and Jefferson in the celebrated
-Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions, and during the second
-war with Great Britain these statesmen were startled to
-find New England Federalism vindicating its unpatriotic,
-if not treacherous, conduct in the exact language which
-they had invented to embarrass a former administration.
-With this instrument, too, Calhoun in 1832 shook the
-foundations of the Union. Both Northern and Southern
-statesmen of that generation, however, pushed the principle
-of State sovereignty as far only as their immediate object
-seemed to require.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is a popular mistake to suppose that beyond the
-limits of the South this erroneous doctrine found little
-favor in the minds of men; for on the eve of the War of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xviii'>xviii</span>1812 a Governor of conservative Pennsylvania had armed
-her citizen-soldiers against Federal power.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The illustrious Marshall could relate how, before the
-highest tribunal in the land, its champions with unwearied
-zeal renewed the battle for a hopeless cause. The eloquent
-voice of Webster hushed for a time the fretful agitation of
-South Carolina statesmen, and his genius fixed in imperishable
-literary form that interpretation of the Constitution
-which called forth the abundant resources of both the
-Nation and the States. In his conquering words lived
-those elevated thoughts that in future years sustained the
-defenders of the Republic.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>President Jackson, for the energy and promptness by
-which he defeated the projects of the Nullifiers, has been
-justly eulogized; but, when the excitement of the hour
-had passed away, the calmer judgment of even his admirers
-perceived that victory inclined rather to the side of
-Calhoun.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Discussion of the abstract question of State sovereignty
-might, probably, have long continued without endangering
-the Union had the principle not been invoked to defend
-the institution of human servitude; yoked to that
-powerful interest it was inevitable that both should go
-down together in undistinguishable ruin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the Protean fount of slavery flowed an hundred
-various streams coloring almost every important question
-in the tide of events. In the generation between the
-election of General Jackson and the inauguration of Mr.
-Lincoln its defeats were few, its triumphs numerous and
-important. Prosperity revealed its weaknesses and encouraged
-its experiments. The fruits of its greatest victory,
-the dismemberment of Mexico, revived those stormy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xix'>xix</span>scenes which thirty years before had for the first time been
-witnessed in an American legislative hall. Dissolution of
-the Union was once more threatened, and again averted
-by the genius and patriotism of the venerable triumvirate,
-who scarce outlived their noble work; but the compromise
-from which Clay, Calhoun and Webster expected a restoration
-of former tranquillity contained within itself the very
-seed-plot of even graver troubles.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After 1850 the attachment of Southern men to their industrial
-system was played upon by ambitious politicians
-more and more, until the final overthrow of themselves
-and the government which they sought to establish for its
-preservation. It could be shown how before that time
-one war was prolonged for the protection, and another
-undertaken chiefly for the extension, of that aggressive
-institution; how its existence was supposed to require
-Federal interference with the mails and an abridgment of
-even the ancient right of petition. Every power of the
-national Government and all the resources of the cotton
-States had been employed for its advantage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The United States Supreme Court was the last agent
-within the Union by which its advocates sought to dignify
-and perpetuate human servitude, and so successful were
-their efforts that an enlightened and humane Chief Justice
-was but little misrepresented in language or in sentiment
-when political opponents ascribed to him the doctrine
-that “the negro has no rights which the white man is
-bound to respect.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The moral progress of the United States during the
-last forty years finds, probably, in no single event a better
-illustration than the change in public opinion upon the
-interesting question of human rights. When the majority
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xx'>xx</span>opinion was delivered in the Dred Scott case it excited
-among members of the dominant political party but little
-surprise. The shock which a judicial utterance of such
-sentiments would give in our time to the ethical notions
-of the American people affords at once both a measure of
-the advance that has been made in the interval and an
-undoubted proof that progress has not been, as is commonly
-supposed, exclusively or even mainly along material
-lines. It is singular, too, that the first serious attempt of
-the Federal Supreme Court to set at rest a dangerous
-political question should have been followed by effects of
-so alarming a tendency.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is not intended to relate in these pages the origin or
-the fate of those compromises designed to avoid the inevitable
-conflict already in the closing months of President
-Buchanan’s administration casting ominous shadows in the
-pathway of the nation, nor to describe the uncertain policy
-of the General Government or attempt to determine the
-measure of its responsibility for the fearful rebellion which
-that hesitation encouraged.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The skill and industry of a multitude of laborers have
-gathered from the field of conflict a harvest as bountiful as
-the result was satisfactory. We have general histories
-and bird’s-eye views, military accounts and naval accounts
-of the Civil War; memoirs and diaries, by actors more or
-less prominent in the events which they describe, and narratives
-of battles and of sieges. In this varied and ample
-field even a belated worker might hope to glean something
-of value; but this study, whatever it may discuss
-incidentally, will be chiefly concerned with the subject of
-Reconstruction, a phase of our political and constitutional
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxi'>xxi</span>development which, though beginning during the progress,
-lies mainly beyond the close of the Rebellion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The organization into a separate government of the late
-Confederate States, with their resolute struggle for independence,
-is the chief event in the extraordinary career
-of this favored nation. The story of their submission to
-Federal power and the return to their former places in the
-Union is not inferior either in interest or instruction to
-any political event recorded in history. This return is
-what is commonly known as Reconstruction. Though
-the term on its introduction into political discussion was
-frequently objected to as inaccurate, it has been generally
-adopted in the writings of publicists as well as in popular
-speech. The word “restoration,” which was at first preferred,
-was soon found to be inexact; for while former relations
-were resumed by the erring States, they came back,
-one with diminished territorial extent and all with domestic
-rights greatly abridged. They had, in fact, been <em>reconstructed</em>.
-It is true that even the loyal States did not
-emerge unscathed from this political revolution. In the
-South, however, the established industrial system had been
-swept completely away.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The theme falls naturally under two heads, Presidential
-Reconstruction and Congressional Reconstruction. An
-account of the former, which extended from the summer
-of 1861 to the autumn of 1865, occupies the whole of this
-volume. Any adequate treatment of the latter, including
-as it does the eventful period from the meeting of Congress
-in December, 1865, to the withdrawal of Federal
-forces from the South in 1877, will require a narrative
-somewhat more ample.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The conspicuous landmarks of Reconstruction require
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxii'>xxii</span>no extraordinary talent to recognize and locate. It is the
-unfamiliar region between that is difficult accurately to
-map out. The failure hitherto to present in a single view
-the striking features of these neglected parts is chiefly
-responsible for the fact that Reconstruction remains one
-of the most obscure parts of our history. A candid and
-comprehensive account of the political events of the time
-appears to divest the subject of much of the difficulty
-commonly supposed to attend its investigation. From a
-sufficient body of essential facts the step to an understanding
-and exposition of every principle of moment is
-comparatively easy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though the general design of this volume will be suggested
-to the student of American history by an inspection
-of its principal subdivisions, it may not be unnecessary for
-the benefit of the general reader to add a brief outline of
-the plan that has been adopted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chapter I. relates the most important political events
-in the history of Tennessee from its attempted secession
-to the restoration, in March, 1865, of a civil government
-loyal to the United States. Military movements in that
-Commonwealth have been noticed only so far as to render
-intelligible the successive steps by which that reorganization
-was accomplished.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chapters II. and III. bring the affairs of Louisiana
-and Arkansas, respectively, down to about the same time.
-Events in those States have been treated, so far as conditions
-permitted, in the same manner as in the case of
-Tennessee.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chapter IV. is concerned with the secession, restoration
-and dismemberment of Virginia. The formation out of a
-portion of that Commonwealth of the new State of West
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxiii'>xxiii</span>Virginia, both because of the grave constitutional question
-which arose on a division of the parent State and the
-intrinsic interest of the subject, has been considered with
-some degree of minuteness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In Chapter V., which discusses anti-slavery legislation,
-it will appear how Mr. Lincoln, though never an Abolitionist
-or even a radical Republican, became by pressure
-of military necessity an instrument in the hands of God
-to destroy an institution opposed by a long line of
-American statesmen and condemned by the light of the
-nineteenth century.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The succeeding chapter considers the various theories
-and plans of restoration presented during the progress of
-the war. The rise of the Congressional plan, which
-ultimately prevailed, is treated separately in Chapter VII.
-Only the first stage of its development, however, falls
-within the limits of this inquiry, which ends with the
-meeting of the Thirty-ninth Congress in December,
-1865.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chapters VIII., IX. and X. trace the progress of the
-controversy between the Legislative and the Executive
-branches of Government. The culmination of this difference,
-however, in the impeachment and trial of President
-Johnson is a phase of Congressional Reconstruction.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The topics treated in the eleventh chapter, having frequently
-employed the pens of able and popular writers on
-the Rebellion, are considered in this study merely for the
-purpose of making it complete in itself; hence that section
-is little more than an epitome of what has already been
-said on those subjects.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The twelfth and last chapter brings every part of the
-narrative up to December 4, 1865. To clearly comprehend
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxiv'>xxiv</span>the arduous task that confronted President Johnson
-this section includes a rapid survey of the wreck of the
-Confederate States. The principal part, however, is reserved
-for an account of the conventions assembled under
-his authority, the method of instituting loyal governments
-and the spirit and tendency of Southern legislation relative
-to freedmen. An examination of the Presidential
-plan of Reconstruction completes the volume.</p>
-
-<div class='ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>Lincoln’s Plan of Reconstruction</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>I<br /> <span class='large'>TENNESSEE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>While the celebrated joint debates with Senator
-Douglas in 1858, the Cooper Union and other
-addresses, marked Mr. Lincoln, in the new political
-party just rising to power, as the intellectual peer of able
-and trusted leaders like Sumner, Chase and Seward, his conservative
-opinions on the subject of slavery made his nomination
-by the Chicago Convention more acceptable to delegates
-from the border States. Though his competitors received, in
-the memorable contest which followed, almost a million votes
-in excess of the number cast for Mr. Lincoln and his associate,
-the fierce conflict among fragments of the Democratic party
-resulted, as is well known, in the choice of a decided majority
-of Republican electors.<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c010'><sup>[1]</sup></a> This rather unexpected defeat of a
-political organization that had lost but two Presidential contests
-since its first success under Jefferson afforded Southern
-leaders a pretext for urging a dismemberment of the Union.
-Indeed, there is evidence that the more impetuous among them
-had, four years earlier, seriously determined, in case of Fremont’s
-election, upon a similar course.<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c010'><sup>[2]</sup></a> Thus the present
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>event, so far from being an universal disappointment to members
-of the defeated party, had been ardently hoped for by
-many.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The choice of a minority party, and not at first possessing
-the entire confidence of even that minority, Mr. Lincoln, unable
-to divine the future, was compelled in dealing with the
-insurrection to proceed with the utmost caution. Washington
-himself, in organizing the Federal Government, had a
-task of less magnitude, and the renown of his military achievements
-silenced for a time even the boldest in opposition.
-President Lincoln’s victories, gained on a different field, gave
-no such unquestioned authority to his name. This peculiar
-situation forced him to adopt for the guidance of his administration
-a policy not altogether free from embarrassment to
-both himself and his successor. His purpose at that time
-appears to have been to meet the demands of the moment by
-the contrivances of the moment. Whether a different course
-would have been rewarded by earlier or by more complete
-success is a hazardous subject for speculation. If his theory
-of our national existence be liable to the multitude of objections
-which have grown up in these fruitful times of peace, no
-other has been suggested that is free from criticism. His
-political doctrine, too, had the advantage of always recommending
-measures scarcely less distinguished for enlarged
-views than those enlightened convictions which characterize
-his first inaugural address. Whatever may be concluded of
-its merits, the theory embraced at the outset exerted on many
-administrative acts of President Lincoln an influence that
-continued to be felt during his entire executive career; and
-without remembering this fact we shall not easily comprehend
-either the extent of his “Border Policy,” as the plan of
-compensated emancipation is often called, or his undoubted
-concern for persecuted Union men in the seceded States.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The sufferings of loyal citizens in East Tennessee had early
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>enlisted the President’s sympathies, and almost from the commencement
-of hostilities measures for their relief formed in
-his mind part of the plan of operations by the army under
-General Buell. Writing, January 6, 1862, to that commander
-he gives reasons for suggesting the occupation of some point
-there rather than Nashville, and adds: “But my distress is
-that our friends in East Tennessee are being hanged and
-driven to despair, and even now, I fear, are thinking of taking
-rebel arms for the sake of personal protection. In this we
-lose the most valuable stake we have in the South.”<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c010'><sup>[3]</sup></a> The
-cause of these outrages may be briefly explained in a digression.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In no part of the late Confederate States was the slave
-interest more feeble than in the thirty counties comprising
-East Tennessee.<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c010'><sup>[4]</sup></a> That portion of the State contained in 1860
-slightly over 300,000 inhabitants,<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c010'><sup>[5]</sup></a> of whom only about one
-tenth were slaves, while in many counties they formed no
-more than one in seventeen of the population. Here and
-there, indeed, were persons of wealth some of whom owned
-a few negroes. But though a majority of the people looked
-upon domestic slavery as something foreign to their social
-life, they had no strong philanthropic impulse to oppose it.
-While quite willing to allow their countrymen elsewhere to
-keep bondmen at pleasure, they did not regard it any concern
-of theirs to assist either in extending or perpetuating human
-servitude. If the existence of the Union or of slavery was
-the issue, they would have hesitated little in deciding which
-should perish. Though, as we shall presently see, they were
-as intolerant of the Republican party as any community in
-the South, they were devotedly attached to the Union. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>fact is partly explained by the industrial basis of society in
-this favored region.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Cut off from Middle Tennessee by lofty ranges of the
-Cumberland, and from North Carolina by the Great Smoky,
-the Black and the Stone mountains, this extensive district is
-traversed in its entire length by the Tennessee and its chief
-tributaries, the Clinch and the Holston; as the great river
-flows down to Alabama it receives, before turning west and
-north to join the Ohio, the waters of many important and
-beautiful streams, some of which, as the French Broad and
-Nolachucky, are associated with deeds of note in the War
-for Independence; indeed, one of its crowning victories was
-chiefly won by settlers from the banks of the Watauga.
-Other names, like Hiwassee, are familiar to readers of later
-events in Tennessee history, and Chickamauga Creek was
-destined shortly to become more famous than any.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Knoxville, in early times a capital of the State, was, in
-1860, the metropolis of East Tennessee; Chattanooga, at the
-southern extremity of the valley, is separated from Bristol, on
-the Virginia line, by a distance of more than two hundred and
-forty miles; Cleveland and Greenville were towns of less
-importance. The absence of large cities makes it evident that
-manufacturing had not yet begun to attract serious attention.
-Like early settlers everywhere in America, the pioneers of
-Tennessee sought the most immediate returns from the products
-of the forests and fields around them. The rich mineral
-deposits, then either unknown or almost untouched, had not
-given rise to those great extractive operations which in our
-time have so stimulated the commercial life of East Tennessee.
-Vast cotton plantations, worked by multitudes of
-slaves, like those in the western portion of the State, had no
-existence in these mountain valleys, though occasionally small
-“patches” were cultivated for domestic use.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Citizens of West Tennessee would naturally place upon the
-Federal Constitution an interested construction; their industries,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>they believed, required such an interpretation of that
-instrument as would place the institution of slavery beyond
-the reach of Congressional interference. While the people
-of East Tennessee, too, believed in the several sovereignty of
-the States, the question of slavery did not touch them so
-nearly. Indifferent to the subject themselves, they had little
-sympathy with those who had determined to break up the
-Union from a mere suspicion that their interests were menaced
-by the success of a new political party. But to ascribe
-to the want of interested motives their indifference to the
-great disturbing question of the time would be to assign
-but one and that, perhaps, not the chief cause.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Except on its northern and southern boundaries this delightful
-region is practically isolated from several adjacent
-States as well as from the remainder of Tennessee. It was in
-this by-place of nature and amidst such a population that <cite>The
-Manumission Intelligencer</cite>, a weekly newspaper, made its
-appearance in 1819.<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c010'><sup>[6]</sup></a> It was followed the next year by <cite>The
-Emancipator</cite> of Elijah Embree, a Pennsylvania Quaker; this
-in turn was soon succeeded by a more celebrated publication,
-<cite>The Genius of Universal Emancipation</cite>, conducted by Benjamin
-Lundy. While these publications served to perpetuate
-and to extend, they did not create the sentiment of which they
-became exponents, for, several years before their appearance,
-an anti-slavery society flourished in Jefferson County. Its
-existence is noticed as early as 1814.<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c010'><sup>[7]</sup></a> This anti-slavery feeling
-was part of the philosophic movement encouraged by
-nearly all Southern as well as Northern statesmen before
-the inauguration of General Jackson. A new industrial era,
-beginning about that time, put an end to the abolition societies
-in the South; and though Lundy’s paper was discontinued
-in Tennessee after 1824, events of frequent occurrence sustained
-the anti-slavery sentiments of the people.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>The Tennessee valley was a natural thoroughfare from Virginia
-to the south-west, and when slaves were purchased on
-the Potomac they were chained together, to prevent escape,
-and in that condition driven to the homes of their new
-masters.<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c010'><sup>[8]</sup></a> The plaintive songs of captives as they were
-marched in lines along the valley highways often caused the
-free mountaineer to pause in his labors and reflect on what
-was passing before his eyes. He “saw slavery in its bitterness
-and without disguise.” The remembrance of such
-spectacles was apt to strengthen in him anti-slavery feelings
-that had come down from Revolutionary times. But whether
-Southern leaders ascribed the sentiment to an inherited tendency
-or regarded it as a consequence of this odious phase of
-the domestic slave-trade, they did not think it beneath the
-dignity of attention; for it was, doubtless, to create a sympathy
-for their institution that a “Southern Commercial
-Convention” was held at Knoxville in 1857. It was too late,
-however, to root out the convictions of two generations; the
-counsels of the wise were soon to be confounded and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>fretful agitation of leaders soon to be hushed in the tempest
-of war.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>No Republican electoral ticket was presented in the great
-political battle of 1860 for the suffrage of Tennessee voters,
-and had any citizen openly advocated the election of Mr.
-Lincoln he would have had to endure insult or injury, or to
-abandon his home. This explains why the successful candidates
-received no vote in all the State. As “Parson”
-Brownlow, selecting extreme abolition and secession types,
-characteristically expressed it, his people were equally
-opposed to the William L. Garrisons and the William L. Yanceys
-of politics.<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c010'><sup>[9]</sup></a> In this situation the supporters of Bell,
-Breckenridge and Douglas were left to contend for victory
-among themselves. Addresses of the time reveal not only
-the emotions of individual speakers, but the excited state
-of public opinion. The attitude of Constitutional Union
-men was vigorously stated in a debate at Knoxville by Nathaniel
-G. Taylor, an elector on the Bell and Everett ticket.
-“The people of East Tennessee,” said the orator, “are determined
-to maintain the Union by force of arms against
-any movement from the South throughout their region of
-country to assail the government at Washington with violence,
-and that the secessionists of the cotton States in attempting
-to carry out their nefarious design to destroy the
-Republic would have to march over his dead body and the
-dead bodies of thousands of East Tennessee mountaineers
-slain in battle.”<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c010'><sup>[10]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When Yancey came up from Alabama to “precipitate” this
-section into rebellion the intrepid Brownlow made a similar
-reply.<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c010'><sup>[11]</sup></a> The energy or the elegance of such utterances may
-be questioned, but the deeds of loyal Tennesseeans during
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>eventful years to follow are evidence alike of the sincerity of
-the speakers and their insight into the temper of the times.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Except Tennessee, all the States that attempted secession
-did so by means of revolutionary bodies styled conventions;
-this description of them is justified both by the general powers
-of administration and government which they assumed and
-by the fact that the legislatures in convoking them transcended
-their authority, the members of every State legislature
-being “bound by oath or affirmation to support” the
-Federal Constitution, which forms a part of the fundamental
-law of each commonwealth. Though the Legislature of
-Tennessee, following the example of law-making bodies in
-other disloyal States, passed a “Convention Bill,” it was
-promptly defeated by a majority of 13,204 in a total vote of
-more than 120,000. Notwithstanding the constitutional prohibition
-that “no State shall enter into any treaty, alliance,
-or confederation,”<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c010'><sup>[12]</sup></a> the Legislature on May 1 authorized
-Governor Harris to appoint commissioners to form a military
-league with the Confederate States. Six days later the relations
-entered into by these agents were ratified in a secret
-session, the State government thereby turning over temporarily
-to the President of the Confederacy its entire military
-force. These matters disposed of, the plans of disunionists
-were completed by the passage on the same day of a declaration
-of independence and an ordinance dissolving all Federal
-relations between Tennessee and the United States. Though
-this measure was to be voted upon a month later, the Legislature,
-as if anticipating the result, adopted and ratified the
-Confederate constitution. What was so ardently desired by
-secessionists was finally accomplished, and on June 24 the
-Governor declared his State out of the Union, the vote being
-104,019 for, and 47,238 against, separation.<a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c010'><sup>[13]</sup></a> The Tennessee
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>Legislature did not assume the functions of a secession
-convention till after the commencement of hostilities; but
-from that date the forms of law ceased to be seriously regarded.
-While the disunion party scored a present triumph,
-loyalist leaders like Horace Maynard, Thomas A. R. Nelson
-and Andrew Johnson, at the imminent risk of injury or even
-of death, were speaking and working actively against the
-spirit of secession. The strong Union feeling thus excited resulted
-ultimately in local insurrections and in the meeting,
-June 17, of a convention at Greeneville in which a remonstrance
-was adopted and a committee appointed to petition the
-Legislature for the separation of East Tennessee and such
-counties of Middle Tennessee as were willing to coöperate in
-the formation of a new commonwealth. But the presence
-there during the following years of veteran Confederate
-armies prevented Union men from organizing a separate government,
-and saved the State from the fate of Virginia.
-All who were known to have had a connection, or who were
-suspected of sympathy, with this movement were especially
-obnoxious to the secession party, and at the hands of soldiers
-were subjected to many indignities. In various ways the
-feeling of opposition to the Confederacy was intensified, and
-it was not long before measures of retaliation were considered.
-Union people were quick to perceive the advantage which the
-South derived from the use of railways within the State, and,
-in expectation of assistance from Federal forces in Kentucky,
-five railroad bridges were burned. East Tennesseeans, however,
-were destined to be sorely disappointed in the matter of
-aid from the Union army; and, without effective organization
-or arms, were easily captured or dispersed. Of the former,
-many were sent as prisoners of war to Alabama, hundreds
-were crowded into loathsome jails in the State and others
-hanged, with circumstances of deliberate cruelty, near the
-scenes of their alleged crimes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>These were among the outrages to which Mr. Lincoln
-referred in his letter to the Federal commander. By Horace
-Maynard a Representative, and Andrew Johnson a Senator,
-in Congress the President was kept very accurately informed
-of events in the State and often importuned to relieve their
-constituents. This he constantly endeavored to do, but his
-intentions were effectually defeated by the inactivity of General
-Buell, who cherished other plans for destroying his
-antagonist. More than two years were to elapse, from the
-time President Lincoln urged his policy, before Tennesseeans
-received any aid from Federal armies; long before that time
-they had been ruthlessly punished for their patriotism, and
-then their oppressors were chastised by the hand of an abler
-warrior than General Buell.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Within a month from the date of President Lincoln’s letter
-of January 6 General Grant had possession of Fort Henry and,
-ten days later, February 16, received the surrender of Fort
-Donelson. Nashville, becoming unsafe, was evacuated on
-February 23, 1862; the State appeared for the first time to
-be slipping from the grasp of the Confederacy, and a question,
-hitherto more or less academic, presented itself for practical
-settlement. In the territory from which hostile armies were
-reluctantly retiring there would be involved a great derangement
-in the administration of local civil law from the necessary
-displacement there of all officials heretofore acting in
-obedience to the Confederate States.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By other Union victories in the Spring of 1862 the same
-situation confronted the Federal Government in Arkansas,
-in North Carolina and in Louisiana. Indeed, this identical
-question arose as early as 1861 in Virginia and Missouri,
-but in the former the rebel government was abrogated by a
-delegate convention that restored a loyal government from
-which in due time sprang the separate State of West Virginia.
-In Missouri a lawfully chosen convention appointed a provisional
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>government in sympathy with the Union. This subject,
-however, will be more conveniently discussed elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When General Johnston received tidings of the disaster
-at Donelson he retired with his army to Murfreesboro, leaving
-Nashville, which he was unable to protect, a scene of
-panic and dismay, first advising Governor Harris to secure
-the public archives and convoke the Legislature elsewhere. It
-was in these circumstances that President Lincoln, on the
-same day, February 23, nominated, and the Senate, March 5,
-1862, confirmed, Andrew Johnson as military governor of
-Tennessee with the rank of brigadier-general. As the commission
-antedates the action of the Senate by two days the
-President, no doubt, consulted the leaders of that body relative
-to the contemplated nomination, and received assurance
-of its favorable consideration.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nothing in any way connected with the appointment of
-Senator Johnson, who was destined to act so conspicuous a
-part in the important and difficult work of reconstruction, can
-fail to be of interest, and any account of the execution of his
-office would be incomplete without some observations on the
-nature of his commission of which the following is a copy:</p>
-
-<div class='c011'><span class='sc'>War Department</span>, <em>March 3, 1862</em>.</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>To the</em> <span class='sc'>Hon. Andrew Johnson</span>:</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='sc'>Sir</span>: You are hereby appointed military governor of the State of Tennessee,
-with authority to exercise and perform, within the limits of that
-State, all and singular the powers, duties, and functions pertaining to
-the office of military governor, including the power to establish all necessary
-offices, tribunals, etc.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Edwin M. Stanton</span>,</div>
- <div class='line in4'><em>Secretary of War</em>.<a id='r14' /><a href='#f14' class='c010'><sup>[14]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Quoting the essential part of this document a recent coöperative
-work has this comment: “The office [that of military
-governor] was new to the laws and history of the State
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>and country. Its powers and duties were limited only by the
-will of one man, the occupant.”<a id='r15' /><a href='#f15' class='c010'><sup>[15]</sup></a> From the commission itself
-we derive our prime conception of both the nature of the
-office and the functions which it comprehended. The authority
-of the incumbent extended to the exercise, within the
-limits of Tennessee, of all “the powers, duties, and functions
-pertaining to the office of military governor.” Nothing in
-this language implies that the office was of recent creation.
-Nor is its nature to be discovered by a perusal of the supplemental
-authority contained in the President’s letter of September
-19, 1863, to Governor Johnson, for the official conduct
-of the latter on his arrival in Nashville can not be seriously
-thought to have been influenced by instructions received
-nineteen months later. It is perfectly true, as Mr. Ira
-P. Jones, author of the chapter on Reconstruction in Tennessee,
-asserts, that the office of military governor had never
-been exercised within that State; but it is not a fact that it
-was new to the laws and history of the “country,” if by this
-indefinite expression he means the United States. During
-the war with Mexico the American people had been made
-familiar with military commissions and with military governors.
-Secretary Marcy prepared, June 3, 1846, for General
-Stephen W. Kearny the following instructions: “Should
-you conquer and take possession of New Mexico and Upper
-California, or considerable places in either, you will establish
-temporary civil governments therein.”<a id='r16' /><a href='#f16' class='c010'><sup>[16]</sup></a> To this direction
-general rules of conduct were added, and the letter authorized
-the assurance that “It is the wish and design of the United
-States to provide for them [the people of New Mexico] a
-free government with the least possible delay, similar to that
-which exists in our Territories.” By virtue of this authority
-General Kearny appointed Charles Bent governor of New
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>Mexico. Mr. Polk in his Message of July 6, 1848, to Congress
-maintained that with the termination of war his power
-to establish temporary civil governments over New Mexico
-and California had ceased; the legality of their previous existence
-he justified by the law of nations. By cession to the
-United States, the government of Mexico no longer pretended
-to any control over them.<a id='r17' /><a href='#f17' class='c010'><sup>[17]</sup></a> President Polk, differing
-from other leaders of his party, held that “until Congress
-shall act, the inhabitants will be without any organized government.”<a id='r18' /><a href='#f18' class='c010'><sup>[18]</sup></a>
-But Congress, notwithstanding urgent appeals
-of the Executive, moved very deliberately in the matter of
-abolishing the office of military governor. In May, 1847,
-Colonel Richard B. Mason assumed the office of Governor and
-commander-in-chief of the United States forces in California.
-Two months after ratification of the treaty with Mexico he
-received notice of the fact, but no intimation that the civil
-government instituted by the President was discontinued.
-Without other instructions than an order to extend over
-California “the revenue laws and tariff of the United States”
-he, as well as his successor, General Riley, continued the
-existing government.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After affirming the legality of its institution the United
-States Supreme Court (Cross <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">vs.</span></i> Harrison, p. 193, 16 Howard)
-says that the existing government did not cease as a
-consequence of the restoration of peace; the President might
-have dissolved it, but he did not do so. Congress could have
-put an end to it, but that was not done. “The right inference
-from the inaction of both is, that it was meant to be continued
-until it had been legislatively changed.” In fact it
-was so continued until the people in convention formed a
-government, subsequently recognized by Congress, when California
-was admitted during the autumn of 1850 as a State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>The authority, then, of both political departments, as well
-as the more deliberate opinion of the judicial branch, of the
-General Government had established a precedent with which
-Mr. Lincoln was thoroughly familiar; for, by a singular coincidence,
-both he and Mr. Johnson were serving together in
-the Thirtieth Congress, which began its first session in December,
-1847. They participated in, or were interested spectators
-of, all those stirring scenes that marked the beginning
-of one of the last legislative victories of slavery; so that this
-portion at least of American history was not strange to either
-the President or the Senator from Tennessee.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The question whether Tennessee was within or without
-the Union will be reserved for more ample discussion farther
-on; it is sufficient to observe here that its territory was held
-by an adverse party and its government hostile to the national
-authority. If the administration of Colonel Mason and his
-successor in California was not regarded by President Lincoln
-as a sufficient basis for his action there was still left an
-undoubted foundation. The appointment was deemed an
-element of strength to the Union forces operating in Tennessee,
-and, in this view, the act was entirely within the power
-of the President as Commander-in-Chief of the army and
-navy of the United States. Though its wisdom may be questioned
-and its results dismissed with a sneer, it was not a
-novelty nor can his admirers claim for Mr. Lincoln the merit
-of its invention; and if in its origin the office had a bearing
-on the extension, its present application was not wholly unconnected
-with the abolition of slavery. The remaining pages
-of this chapter and the two succeeding ones will be employed
-in tracing rapidly the operation of the system of military
-governors in those States in which it was seriously attempted
-to be enforced.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The movements of contending armies had already obliterated
-in many districts of Tennessee almost every trace of civil
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>government, and when State officials hurried away to Memphis,
-where Governor Harris had reassembled the Legislature,
-they left behind them an uncontrolled mob which General
-Forrest found it necessary to charge with his cavalry to
-remove a portion of Confederate military stores that had not
-been distributed among the poor or perished in the prevailing
-anarchy.<a id='r19' /><a href='#f19' class='c010'><sup>[19]</sup></a> General Grant had already, on February 22, from
-Fort Donelson, issued an order that “no courts will be allowed
-to act under State authority, but all cases coming
-within reach of the military arm will be adjudicated by the
-authorities the Government has established within the State.
-Martial law is therefore declared to extend over West Tennessee.”
-The order added, “whenever a sufficient number of
-citizens return to their allegiance to maintain law and order
-over the territory, the military restriction here indicated
-will be removed.”<a id='r20' /><a href='#f20' class='c010'><sup>[20]</sup></a> Union troops under General Nelson
-having occupied the city on the 25th, Governor Johnson on
-his arrival, March 12, 1862, from his seat in the United
-States Senate was not under the necessity of employing the
-harsh discipline of General Forrest to restore order in the
-deserted capital. For this part of his career he was, however,
-severely censured by political adversaries in Tennessee.
-Detached from their historical settings, indeed, his acts could
-justly be described as tyrannical. But it is precisely these
-figures in the back-ground that are necessary to harmonize
-the whole and set before us in its proper light a truthful picture
-of the times. As his professions preceded his administrative
-acts it is proper to introduce this portion of the subject
-by quoting from a speech which he delivered in Nashville
-the evening after his arrival. Five days later, March 18,
-it was printed under the style of “An Appeal to the People”
-of Tennessee. After some general observations on the tranquil
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>and prosperous existence of the State in the Union, and
-on the honors by which many of her sons had been distinguished,
-he noticed the fact that the very leaders of secession
-themselves had been the recipients of Federal bounty and
-patronage; had taken oaths to support the Constitution and
-yet labored to overturn Federal authority. Entering fairly
-upon his theme, he continued:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Meanwhile the State Government has disappeared. The Executive
-has abdicated; the Legislature has dissolved; the Judiciary is in abeyance.
-The great ship of State ... has been suddenly abandoned
-by its officers and mutinous crew, and left to float at the mercy of the
-winds, and to be plundered by every rover upon the deep.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Pausing to enumerate many acts of spoliation, he resumes:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In such a lamentable crisis the Government of the United States
-could not be unmindful of its high constitutional obligation to guarantee
-to every State in this Union a republican form of government, an obligation
-which every State has a direct and immediate interest in having
-observed towards every other State.... This obligation the national
-Government is now attempting to discharge. I have been appointed,
-in the absence of the regular and established State authorities,
-as Military Governor for the time being, to preserve the public property
-of the State, to give the protection of law actively enforced to her citizens,
-and, as speedily as may be, to restore her government to the same condition
-as before the existing rebellion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The “regular and established State authorities,” to whom
-Governor Johnson refers, were, of course, none other than
-those officials who administered affairs in Tennessee before
-the 6th of May. Of these some had actually abandoned their
-offices, while others had subordinated their functions to a
-power hostile to the constitution of the State. He proceeded:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>These offices must be filled temporarily, until the State shall be restored
-so far to its accustomed quiet, that the people can peaceably assemble
-at the ballot-box and select agents of their own choice....</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I shall, therefore, as early as practicable, designate for various positions
-under the State and county governments, from among my fellow-citizens,
-persons of probity and intelligence, and bearing true allegiance
-to the Constitution and Government of the United States, who will execute
-the functions of their respective offices until their places can be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>filled by the action of the people. Their authority, when their appointment
-shall have been made, will be accordingly respected and observed....
-Those who through the dark and weary night of rebellion
-have maintained their allegiance to the Federal Government will be honored.
-The erring and misguided will be welcomed on their return. And
-while it may become necessary, in vindicating the violated majesty of
-the law, and in reasserting its imperial sway, to punish intelligent and
-conscious treason in high places, no merely retaliatory or vindictive
-policy will be adopted.<a id='r21' /><a href='#f21' class='c010'><sup>[21]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To all who in private and unofficial capacity had assumed
-an attitude of hostility to the Government amnesty was offered
-for all past acts and declarations upon condition of yielding
-obedience to the supremacy of the laws. This the Governor
-advised them to do. Though the “Appeal,” brief, clear and
-characterized by the best temper, is a state paper of decided
-merit, there were many classes still residing at the capital
-upon whom it made little impression. The mayor and the
-city council were ordered to take the oath of allegiance to the
-United States, and on their refusal were imprisoned. Of the
-harshness of this measure it need only be observed that the
-essence of government is to govern, and had the new executive
-failed on this occasion to assert authority his administration
-would have been wrecked at the outset. For printing
-seditious matter the press was placed under restraint, and
-within a few months it was found necessary to punish with
-unusual severity, even ministers of the gospel. Clergymen,
-with a few exceptions, were not only hostile to the Union but
-actually encouraged treason from their pulpits. These
-offenders Governor Johnson summoned to take the oath of
-allegiance or to depart from the State. They appeared before
-him, as commanded to, refused compliance, but asked
-time for deliberation; this being granted, to the full extent
-desired, and still persisting in their refusal they were placed
-in confinement. That they were not proceeded against with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>undue haste appears from an entry in a diary kept by one of
-Governor Johnson’s biographers which fixes the date as
-June 28.<a id='r22' /><a href='#f22' class='c010'><sup>[22]</sup></a> Three months had fully elapsed since the arrival
-of Mr. Johnson before the ministers were punished for their
-seditious utterances. To prevent interference with his executive
-functions he sometimes imprisoned judges. Other
-measures no less arbitrary have been the subject of much
-criticism. He declared that whenever a loyal citizen was
-maltreated five or more sympathizers with the Rebellion
-should be arrested and dealt with as the nature of the case
-appeared to require. When the property of Union men was
-destroyed remuneration should be made them from the property
-of the disloyal. The President seems to have approved
-of these reprisals. Nothing more clearly shows the demoralized
-condition of society in Tennessee than the necessity of
-adopting measures similar to those employed eight centuries
-before by the Danish and Norman conquerors of England
-to protect their followers from private assassination by the
-natives. With the natural leaders of the people, including
-bankers, physicians and clergymen, encouraging treason, men
-of inferior intelligence and station could not be expected to
-remain peaceful and contented citizens, and as preachers
-of sedition seldom lack numerous and sympathetic audiences
-the spirit of lawlessness increased. The Governor himself
-was threatened with assassination in the public streets and in
-public meetings, but he set such menaces at defiance and on at
-least one occasion addressed an assembly with his pistol on
-a desk before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the repression of the disloyal and the restoration of
-order by no means included the whole of his duties. Functions
-not less important remain to be noticed. To the duties
-of governor and general he added those of quartermaster
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>and judge. Though thousands of loyal people flocked to
-him for arms and supplies, he proved equal to every demand,
-and from their number raised an army that did gallant service
-in the field. He fed, clothed and sheltered the poor
-without regard to the army in which their natural protectors
-were serving. Thus redressing grievances, relieving want
-and reinstating courts he worked with an intelligent and
-tireless energy, and when the timid prudence of General Buell
-would have allowed Nashville to fall into the hands of the
-enemy “the courage of Governor Johnson,” said a panegyrist,
-“stood a bulwark for its defence.”<a id='r23' /><a href='#f23' class='c010'><sup>[23]</sup></a> He had been scarcely
-three months in office when President Lincoln described him
-as “a true and valuable man, indispensable to us in Tennessee.”
-His zeal, his intense fidelity to the Union, his tremendous
-energy and undoubted courage peculiarly fitted him
-to rule in turbulent times. At the outset the only agencies
-left for the protection of life, liberty and property were force
-and arbitrary will; these he did not hesitate to employ.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The foregoing account does not notice his activity in
-another field. His ultimate object, the establishment of civil
-authority throughout Tennessee, was kept constantly in view.
-To prepare for this event he addressed in May, 1862, large
-assemblies at Nashville and Murfreesboro, and in June at
-Columbia and Shelbyville.<a id='r24' /><a href='#f24' class='c010'><sup>[24]</sup></a> This work, however, was brought
-suddenly to an end later in the summer by General Bragg’s
-raid into Kentucky.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From what has been related it appears, and the opinion
-will grow stronger with the progress of this narrative, that in
-appointing a military governor of Tennessee President Lincoln
-intended no more than to revive an office already known
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>to the people of the United States; and though Mr. Johnson
-was expected ultimately to reinaugurate a loyal government
-throughout the State, his office was regarded primarily as
-an inexpensive means of holding territory wrested from, and
-assisting in military operations against, an enemy. Indeed,
-it is only in this view that his administration of the office can
-be regarded as a success, and that it was so considered in the
-North his nomination on the ticket with Mr. Lincoln is
-undoubted proof.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Besides several colored regiments, the records for 1863
-show that 25,000 Tennesseeans were then serving in the
-Union army, and every succeeding month increased their
-number.<a id='r25' /><a href='#f25' class='c010'><sup>[25]</sup></a> That the political advantage to be gained by restoring
-a loyal government was not the only or even the
-principal purpose of the President may be fairly inferred from
-the following letter:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I am told you have at least thought of raising a negro military force.
-In my opinion the country now needs no specific thing so much as some
-man of your ability and position to go to this work. When I speak of
-your position, I mean that of an eminent citizen of a slave state and himself
-a slaveholder. The colored population is the great available and yet
-un-availed of force for restoring the Union. The bare sight of 50,000
-armed and drilled black soldiers upon the banks of the Mississippi would
-end the rebellion at once; and who doubts that we can present that sight
-if we but take hold in earnest? If you have been thinking of it, please
-do not dismiss the thought.<a id='r26' /><a href='#f26' class='c010'><sup>[26]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Besides supporting the view of the military governors
-taken above, this letter also makes it evident that the pressure
-of events had already convinced Mr. Lincoln that to save the
-Union it was necessary to possess the untrammeled use of
-every national resource.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As early as June 8, 1862, the State was included in the
-department of General Halleck, who ten days later was requested
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>by Mr. Lincoln to report any information of value
-relative thereto. The thought of a movement into East
-Tennessee was in the mind of the President again on June 30,
-when he informed the commander that he regarded the possession
-of the railroad near Cleveland fully as important as
-the taking of Richmond. Halleck, concurring in this opinion,
-telegraphed Buell that “the capture of East Tennessee should
-be the main object of the campaign,” the department commander
-believing its occupation would put an end to guerrilla
-warfare both in that region and Kentucky.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The inactivity of General Rosecrans for six months after
-the battle of Murfreesboro left in the interior of the State a
-strong Confederate force whose presence discouraged all but
-the most pronounced loyalists; these, by means of meetings
-and speeches, kept a latent Union feeling alive. A convention,
-called by Brownlow, Maynard and others, was held at
-Nashville, July 1, 1863. Delegates were in attendance from
-forty counties; they took an oath of allegiance to the United
-States, and in a set of resolutions pronounced the various
-secession laws and ordinances void. Deeming it vitally important
-to choose a legislature, they invited Governor Johnson
-to issue writs of election as soon as expedient; with this
-request, however, he did not then think it prudent to
-comply.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Other eyes were observing with interest the progress of
-events within the State. General Hurlbut, writing from
-Memphis, August 11, 1863, relative to the political situation
-in Arkansas, said he was satisfied that Tennessee was “ready,
-by overwhelming majorities, to repeal the act of secession,
-establish a fair system of gradual emancipation, and tender
-herself back to the Union. I have discouraged [he said] any
-action on this subject here until East Tennessee is delivered.
-When that is done, so that her powerful voice may be heard,
-let Governor Johnson call an election for members of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>Legislature, and that Legislature call a Convention, and in
-sixty days the work will be done.”<a id='r27' /><a href='#f27' class='c010'><sup>[27]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This desirable event was not long delayed, for by brilliant
-though bloodless victories both Knoxville and Chattanooga
-early in the following month were in possession of Federal
-armies. Then President Lincoln wrote his letter of September
-11, which, because of its great importance, deserves to be
-reproduced in full:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>All Tennessee is now clear of armed insurrectionists. You need not to
-be reminded that it is the nick of time for reinaugurating a loyal State
-government. Not a moment should be lost. You and the coöperating
-friends there can better judge of the ways and means than can be judged
-by any here. I only offer a few suggestions. The reinauguration must
-not be such as to give control of the State and its representation in Congress
-to the enemies of the Union, driving its friends there into political
-exile. The whole struggle for Tennessee will have been profitless to
-both State and nation if it so ends that Governor Johnson is put down
-and Governor Harris is put up. It must not be so. You must have it
-otherwise. Let the reconstruction be the work of such men only as can
-be trusted for the Union. Exclude all others, and trust that your government
-so organized will be recognized here as being the one of republican
-form to be guaranteed to the State, and to be protected against invasion
-and domestic violence. It is something on the question of time to remember
-that it cannot be known who is next to occupy the position I now
-hold, nor what he will do. I see that you have declared in favor of
-emancipation in Tennessee, for which may God bless you. Get emancipation
-into your new State Government—Constitution—and there will
-be no such word as fail for your case. The raising of colored troops, I
-think, will greatly help every way.<a id='r28' /><a href='#f28' class='c010'><sup>[28]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The reference in this communication to emancipation is
-explained by the fact that, in deference to the wishes of
-Andrew Johnson and other Tennessee loyalists, the President
-in his proclamation of January 1, 1863, had not mentioned
-that State.<a id='r29' /><a href='#f29' class='c010'><sup>[29]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Believing that his commission as military governor did not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>confer upon him powers adequate to every emergency that
-might arise in the important work of restoring a loyal government
-Mr. Johnson, to supply this deficiency, prepared a
-letter which he submitted for the approval of President Lincoln,
-who amended or modified it to read as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In addition to the matters contained in the orders and instructions
-given you by the Secretary of War, you are hereby authorized to exercise
-such powers as may be necessary and proper to enable the loyal
-people of Tennessee to present such a republican form of State government
-as will entitle the State to the guaranty of the United States therefor,
-and to be protected under such State government by the United States
-against invasion and domestic violence, all according to the fourth section
-of the fourth article of the Constitution of the United States.<a id='r30' /><a href='#f30' class='c010'><sup>[30]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This supplemental authority is dated September 19, and the
-private letter enclosing it informs Governor Johnson why his
-draft was altered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was about this time, while the President was thus urging
-Governor Johnson, that General Rosecrans, surrounded by a
-victorious enemy, inquired of Mr. Lincoln whether it would
-not be well “to offer a general amnesty to all officers and
-soldiers in the Rebellion?” In his reply next day the President,
-referring first, as was his wont, to the military situation,
-added, “I intend doing something like what you suggest
-whenever the case shall appear ripe enough to have it
-accepted in the true understanding rather than as a confession
-of weakness and fear.”<a id='r31' /><a href='#f31' class='c010'><sup>[31]</sup></a> The removal soon after of
-General Rosecrans from his command and the fortunate appearance
-at Chattanooga of those great soldiers of the first
-rank, Grant, Sherman, Thomas and Sheridan, made at Lookout
-Mountain and Mission Ridge the occasion which the
-President so much desired, and on December 8, 1863, he
-issued his famous Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction,
-a copy of which was transmitted with his third annual
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>message to Congress. The impression which its candid tone
-produces on the mind of a student to-day was the impression
-made at the time of its appearance upon thoughtful and enlightened
-men everywhere. Nicolay and Hay in an interesting
-chapter of their valuable history describe the satisfaction,
-and even enthusiasm, with which it was received by the adherents
-of all parties in Congress. This proclamation, around
-which the later controversy raged, was authorized by act of
-Congress approved July 17, 1862, which, among other provisions,
-empowered the President “at any time” thereafter
-“to extend to persons who may have participated in the
-existing Rebellion in any State or part thereof, pardon and
-amnesty, with such exceptions and at such time and on such
-conditions as he may deem expedient for the public welfare.”
-The time for the exercise of this discretion Mr. Lincoln believed
-had now arrived. Like every measure conceived in
-his fruitful mind it had been maturely considered and was
-especially fortunate in being introduced by the concluding
-paragraphs of the message. The very note of sincerity itself
-rings in these weighty lines. Perhaps it was the suggestion
-of unuttered arguments that gave a temporary adherence to
-the Executive plan, which, we are told, was put forth because
-“It is now desired by some persons heretofore engaged in
-said rebellion to resume their allegiance to the United States,
-and to reinaugurate loyal State governments within and for
-their respective States.” The proclamation informed “all
-persons who have, directly or by implication, participated in
-the existing rebellion, except as hereinafter excepted, that a
-full pardon is hereby granted to them and each of them, with
-restoration of all rights of property, except as to slaves, and
-in property cases where rights of third parties shall have intervened,
-and upon the condition that every such person
-shall take and subscribe an oath, and thenceforward keep and
-maintain said oath inviolate; and which oath shall be registered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>for permanent preservation.” This oath bound the
-subscriber thenceforth to “faithfully support, protect, and
-defend the Constitution of the United States, and the union
-of the States thereunder”; to “abide by and faithfully support
-all acts of Congress passed during the existing rebellion
-with reference to slaves” unless repealed, modified or held
-void by Congress, or by decision of the Supreme Court; to
-support “all proclamations of the President made during the
-existing rebellion having reference to slaves, so long and so
-far as not modified or declared void by decision of the Supreme
-Court.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The classes excepted from the benefits of the amnesty were
-all persons “who are, or shall have been, civil or diplomatic
-officers or agents of the so-called Confederate Government;
-all who have left judicial stations under the United States
-to aid the rebellion; all who are, or shall have been, military
-or naval officers of said so-called Confederate Government
-above the rank of colonel in the army or lieutenant in the
-navy; all who left seats in the United States Congress to
-aid the rebellion; all who resigned commissions in the
-Army or Navy of the United States and afterward aided the
-rebellion; and all who have engaged in any way in treating
-colored persons, or white persons in charge of such, otherwise
-than lawfully as prisoners of war, and which persons
-may have been found in the United States service, as soldiers,
-seamen, or in any other capacity.”<a id='r32' /><a href='#f32' class='c010'><sup>[32]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The proclamation provided further that whenever, in any
-of the States in rebellion, “a number of persons, not less than
-one tenth in number of the votes cast in such State at the
-presidential election” of 1860, “each having taken the oath
-aforesaid and not having since violated it, and being a qualified
-voter by the election law of the State existing immediately
-before the so-called act of secession, and excluding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>all others, shall reëstablish a State government which shall
-be republican, and in nowise contravening said oath, such shall
-be recognized as the true government of the State and the
-State shall receive thereunder the benefits of the Constitutional
-provision which declares that ‘The United States
-shall guaranty to every State in this Union a republican form
-of Government, and shall protect each of them against invasion;
-and, on application of the legislature, or of the executive
-(when the legislature cannot be convened), against domestic
-violence.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Any provision adopted by such State relative to its freed
-people “which shall recognize and declare their permanent
-freedom, provide for their education, and which may yet be
-consistent as a temporary arrangement with their present
-condition as a laboring, landless, and homeless class, will not
-be objected to by the national executive.” In constructing a
-loyal government in any State, it was thought not improper
-to suggest that “the name of the State, the boundary, the
-subdivisions, the constitution, and the general code of laws, as
-before the rebellion, be maintained, subject only to the modifications
-made necessary by the conditions hereinbefore stated,
-and such others, if any, not contravening said conditions,
-and which may be deemed expedient by those framing the
-new State government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To avoid every occasion of misunderstanding it was expressly
-stated that the proclamation “has no reference to
-States wherein loyal State governments have all the while
-been maintained.” The President disclaimed any authority
-to admit members to seats in Congress, each House being
-“the judge of the elections, returns, and qualifications of its
-own members.”<a id='r33' /><a href='#f33' class='c010'><sup>[33]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In conclusion it was observed that “while the mode presented
-is the best the executive can suggest, with his present
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>impressions, it must not be understood that no other possible
-mode would be acceptable.”<a id='r34' /><a href='#f34' class='c010'><sup>[34]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To get an enrollment of those willing to take the oath
-prescribed in the amnesty proclamation the President, about
-the middle of January, 1864, sent an agent to Tennessee, as
-he had already sent one to Louisiana and to Arkansas. About
-the same time Governor Johnson himself was considering
-the subject of reconstruction; and on the 21st, to begin proceedings,
-called a public meeting at Nashville. It was on this
-occasion that he said: “Treason must be made odious,
-traitors must be punished and impoverished;” slavery he
-pronounced dead and declared that reconstruction must leave
-it out of view. The meeting, which was largely attended,
-adopted resolutions recommending a constitutional convention
-and pledged support of only those candidates who favored
-immediate and universal emancipation. The Governor, however,
-was cautious, and, January 26, 1864, issued a call for an
-election, on the first Saturday of March following, for the
-choice of only county officers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The ex-Confederate and the loyalist having been placed
-by the amnesty proclamation on an equal footing, some dissatisfaction
-was aroused among unconditional Union men.
-To retain the confidence of this class and to set at rest the
-hostile feeling thus excited in the State, Governor Johnson
-framed the oath of allegiance more stringently than Mr. Lincoln
-had done. This variance occasioned discussion and
-delay and brought inquiries and protests to the President,
-who, to prevent confusion, telegraphed, February 20, 1864,
-Warren Jordan, of Nashville, as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In county elections you had better stand by Governor Johnson’s
-plan; otherwise you will have conflict and confusion. I have seen his
-plan.<a id='r35' /><a href='#f35' class='c010'><sup>[35]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>A week later he assured the Hon. E. H. East, Secretary of
-State for Tennessee, that</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There is no conflict between the oath of amnesty in my proclamation
-of eighth December, 1863, and that prescribed by Governor Johnson in
-his proclamation of the twenty-sixth ultimo.<a id='r36' /><a href='#f36' class='c010'><sup>[36]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While it is perfectly true that no discrepancy existed between
-the proclamation of the President and that of the
-military governor, the latter required an additional test. This
-the communication to Mr. East does not discuss.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To avoid, however, any possible mischief from this source
-Mr. Lincoln, March 26, issued a supplemental proclamation
-which explained that the amnesty applied only to “persons
-who being yet at large and free from any arrest, confinement,
-or duress, shall voluntarily come forward and take the said
-oath, with the purpose of restoring peace and establishing
-the national authority.”<a id='r37' /><a href='#f37' class='c010'><sup>[37]</sup></a> Prisoners excluded from the amnesty
-offered in the proclamation of December 8, like all other
-offenders, might apply to the executive for clemency and have
-their applications receive due consideration. This oath, it
-was made known, could be taken before any commissioned
-officer of the United States, civil, military or naval, or before
-any officer authorized to administer oaths, in a State or
-Territory not in insurrection. Such officers were empowered
-to give certificates thereon to persons by whom the oath was
-taken and subscribed. The original records, after transmission
-to the Department of State, were to be there deposited
-and to remain in the Government archives. The Secretary of
-State was required to keep a register of such oaths and upon
-application to issue certificates in proper cases in the customary
-form.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Meanwhile an election, the returns of which are extremely
-meagre, had been held on March 5 for the choice of county
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>officers. Though the event was not without influence in
-confirming the faith of Unionists, it was chiefly of value in
-attracting the attention of the disloyal to the chances afforded
-by the proclamation of rehabilitating themselves in their
-former political rights. The result, however, was not so
-favorable as was expected by Governor Johnson or the
-President, and reconstruction in Tennessee once more sank
-to rest. From this condition it was again revived by the
-irrepressible Union men of the State. The East Tennessee
-convention of 1861, by appointing a permanent committee,
-had kept its organization alive. In April or May, 1864, this
-body called a convention at Knoxville to discuss reconstruction.
-Of this gathering one element favored the Crittenden
-Resolutions; the other, immediate emancipation. Probably it
-was this antagonism that prevented further action. The next
-we hear is that Brownlow and others signed a call for a second
-convention, which was held at Nashville on September 5.
-In this body forty or fifty counties were represented, some
-of them irregularly; that is, by volunteer delegates. This
-assembly recommended the election of a constitutional convention,
-the abolition of slavery in the State, and provided for
-taking part in the approaching Presidential election. The
-programme, however, was only partially carried out. On
-September 30, Governor Johnson issued a proclamation for
-holding the election, at which Union voters, so far as the
-unsettled condition of military operations permitted, cast
-their ballots for electors of President and Vice-President.
-It does not appear that in this election any attempt was made
-to choose a governor, a legislature or a constitutional convention;
-but that which met in July, 1863, constituted an executive
-committee, composed of five members from each division
-of the State, which after the Presidential election issued calls
-for a State convention at Nashville, December 19, 1864.
-“The people meet,” said the call, “to take such steps as wisdom
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>may direct to restore the State of Tennessee to its once
-honored status in the great national Union.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c000'>“If you cannot meet in your counties, come upon your own
-personal responsibility. It is the assembling of Union men
-for the restoration of their own commonwealth to life and a
-career of success.”<a id='r38' /><a href='#f38' class='c010'><sup>[38]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Hood’s advance upon Nashville preventing a response to
-this address, the convention did not meet till January 9, 1865.
-The enemy had then been dispersed. The State being free
-from further alarms of war, the convention met and proposed
-important alterations in the State constitution.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The first article provided: “That slavery and involuntary
-servitude, except as a punishment for crime, whereof the party
-shall have been duly convicted, are hereby forever abolished
-and prohibited throughout the State”; also that “The legislature
-shall make no law recognizing the right of property in
-man.” The old constitution of Tennessee prohibited the assembly
-from passing laws to emancipate slaves without the
-consent of the owner; that prohibition was now removed.
-“The declaration of independence and ordinance dissolving
-the federal relations between the State of Tennessee and the
-United States of America,” passed by the Legislature, May 6,
-1861, was abrogated and declared “an act of treason and
-usurpation, unconstitutional, null and void.” All laws, ordinances,
-and resolutions of the usurped State government
-passed on and after the 6th day of May, 1861, providing for
-the issuance of State bonds; also all notes of the Bank of
-Tennessee or any of its branches issued on or after May 6,
-1861, and all debts created in the name of the State by
-said authority were declared unconstitutional, null and void.
-Future legislatures were restrained from the redemption of
-said bonds. It was further provided that “The qualification
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>of voters and the limitation of the elective franchise may be
-determined by the general assembly, which shall first assemble
-under the amended constitution.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The convention completed its labors on January 26, 1865.
-The amendatory articles were submitted, February 22, to the
-people, and ratified by a vote of 21,104 to 40. The schedule
-provided in the event of ratification that the loyal people of
-the State should, on the 4th of March next thereafter, proceed
-by <em>general ticket</em> to elect a governor and members to the
-general assembly to meet in the capitol at Nashville on the
-first Monday of April, 1865.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A proclamation of Governor Johnson, issued on January
-26, referred to the respectable character of the convention and
-commended its wisdom in submitting for the approval of the
-electors the result of its deliberations. His executive powers
-had been employed to enable the people freely to express their
-judgment on the grave question before them. Provision, he
-declared, would be made to collect the sentiments of loyal
-Tennesseeans in the army. The paper concludes with this
-vigorous exhortation: “Strike down at one blow the institution
-of slavery, remove the disturbing element from your
-midst, and by united action restore the State to its ancient
-moorings again, and you may confidently expect the speedy
-return of peace, happiness, and prosperity.”<a id='r39' /><a href='#f39' class='c010'><sup>[39]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>About a month later, February 25, he had the happiness to
-congratulate the people of Tennessee on the favorable result
-of the election. By their solemn act at the ballot-box the
-shackles had been stricken from the limbs of more than
-275,000 bondmen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The convention which proposed the constitutional amendments
-had, in anticipation of its ratification, nominated William
-G. [“Parson”] Brownlow for Governor, and recommended
-a full legislative ticket. The nominee of the convention
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>was chosen March 4, almost without opposition, receiving
-23,352 votes against 35 scattering. Having been elected
-on a general ticket the members of both the Senate and House
-of Representatives received the same support as the Governor.
-The Legislature met at Nashville, and in a few days thereafter
-Mr. Brownlow was inaugurated. Civil administration
-was thus formally begun.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That the successive steps to restoration in Tennessee may
-be easily traced, the narrative has not been interrupted to relate
-even matters of undoubted importance. Almost a year before
-the occurrences described, the Republican national convention
-had assembled in the city of Baltimore, and on June 6, 1864,
-unanimously nominated Andrew Johnson for Vice-President
-on the ticket with Mr. Lincoln. Tidings of the fact aroused
-great enthusiasm when it became known in Nashville. In
-addressing an immense meeting called for that occasion Governor
-Johnson, among other things, said: “While society is
-in this disordered state, and we are seeking security, let us fix
-the foundations of our government on principles of eternal
-justice, which will endure for all time. There are those in
-our midst who are for perpetuating the institution of slavery.
-Let me say to you, Tennesseeans, and men from the Northern
-States, that slavery is dead. It was not murdered by me. I
-told you long ago what the result would be if you endeavored
-to go out of the Union to save slavery; and that the result
-would be bloodshed, rapine, devastated fields, plundered villages
-and cities; and therefore I urged you to remain in the
-Union. In trying to save slavery you killed it, and lost your
-own freedom.”<a id='r40' /><a href='#f40' class='c010'><sup>[40]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In his letter to Hon. William Dennison, accepting the nomination,
-he wrote:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The authority of the Government is supreme, and will admit of no
-rivalry. No institution can rise above it whether it be slavery or any
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>organized power. In our happy form of government all must be subordinate
-to the will of the people, when reflected through the Constitution
-and the laws made pursuant thereto—State or Federal. This great principle
-lies at the foundation of every government, and cannot be disregarded
-without the destruction of the government itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In accepting the nomination I might here close, but I cannot forego
-the opportunity of saying to my old friends of the Democratic party
-<em>proper</em>, with whom I have so long and pleasantly been associated, that
-the hour has now come when that great party can justly vindicate its devotion
-to true democratic policy and measures of expediency. The war
-is a war of great principles. It involves the supremacy and life of the
-Government itself. If the rebellion triumphs, free government—North
-and South—fails. If, on the other hand, the Government is successful,
-as I do not doubt, its destiny is fixed, its basis permanent and enduring,
-and its career of honor and glory just begun. In a great contest like
-this, for the existence of free government, the path of duty is patriotism
-and principle. Minor considerations and questions of administrative
-policy should give way to the higher duty <em>of first preserving the Government</em>,
-and then there will be time enough to wrangle over the men and
-measures pertaining to its administration.<a id='r41' /><a href='#f41' class='c010'><sup>[41]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For reasons at which Mr. Lincoln hinted in his letter of
-March 26, 1863, few men in Congress exerted in the beginning
-of the war so decided an influence upon public opinion
-in the North as did Mr. Johnson. His conduct as military
-governor in no way diminished this popularity. His courage
-in that trying position no less than his devotion to the interests
-of the Union won him ardent admirers in every loyal State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Vice-President Hamlin appears to have been the victim of
-an intrigue which represented him as being no material source
-of strength to the government and as scarcely loyal to the administration.
-This injurious suspicion, which seems to have
-had no substantial basis in truth, happened to coincide with
-a growing conviction that the Republican party should
-strengthen itself by placing on the ticket with Lincoln some
-prominent leader of the opposition. In this connection the
-names of General Butler, John A. Dix, Daniel S. Dickinson
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>and Andrew Johnson were mentioned. The last named was
-charged in his administration of the office of military governor
-with harshness and even with oppression. Investigation
-proved these rumors to be without foundation, and
-Mr. Lincoln was not displeased to find them groundless.
-It does not appear that he was especially favorable to Johnson,
-but he regarded him as indispensable to the Union cause
-in Tennessee; Johnson was a slave-holder, was somewhat
-more outspoken than Butler or Dix, and a more conspicuous
-representative of the large class known as War Democrats;
-above all he was an able exponent of Southern Union sentiment
-and he came from the very heart of the Confederacy.
-Perhaps no single element of strength made him more acceptable
-to the majority of the convention than this last consideration.
-Even these qualifications might not have singled
-him out for the distinction conferred were it not for the enthusiasm
-created by a remarkable speech of Horace Maynard,
-which mentioned Mr. Johnson as a man who “stood in the
-furnace of treason.” His administration as military governor
-had been distinguished for vigor and ability, and it does
-not appear that the radical Republicans then regarded his
-State without the Union. Some of his measures were undoubtedly
-severe, but the peculiar situation in Tennessee required
-the employment of methods not adapted to times of
-peace. Mr. Lincoln could not, of course, show his hand in
-the Baltimore convention. In fact he repeatedly declined to
-interfere.<a id='r42' /><a href='#f42' class='c010'><sup>[42]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On October 15, 1864, the ten electors on the McClellan
-ticket presented through Mr. John Lellyett, one of their number,
-a protest to the President against the proclamation published
-by Governor Johnson relative to the pending election.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>His paper, they asserted, contained provisions for holding elections
-which differed materially from the mode prescribed by
-the laws of Tennessee. The proclamation, it was alleged,
-would admit persons to vote who were not entitled by the
-State constitution to participate in the election; by another provision
-which authorized the opening of but one polling-place
-in each county, many legal voters would be unable to exercise
-the franchise. The unusual and impracticable test oath proposed,
-was stated as a further grievance, and they complained
-generally of military interference with the freedom of elections.
-To their representations Mr. Lincoln replied orally
-that General McClellan and his friends could manage their
-side of the contest in their own way. He could manage his
-side of it in his way.<a id='r43' /><a href='#f43' class='c010'><sup>[43]</sup></a> In a written reply of the 22d, however,
-the President said that he perceived no military reason
-for interfering in the matter, and on the same occasion reminded
-the protestants that the conducting of a Presidential
-election in Tennessee under the old code had become an impossibility.<a id='r44' /><a href='#f44' class='c010'><sup>[44]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In their reply to the written communication of the President,
-they asserted that an orderly meeting of General McClellan’s
-friends had been broken up by Union soldiers, and
-a reign of terror inaugurated in Nashville. These acts having
-been countenanced by Governor Johnson, they announced
-the withdrawal of the McClellan electoral ticket in Tennessee.<a id='r45' /><a href='#f45' class='c010'><sup>[45]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In these circumstances the Union electors were, of course,
-chosen; but their votes, though offered, were not counted by
-Congress in the joint convention of February 8, 1865, for
-the reason that Tennessee was on November 8 preceding in
-such a state that no free election was held.<a id='r46' /><a href='#f46' class='c010'><sup>[46]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>II<br /> <span class='large'>LOUISIANA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>The first movement toward reconstruction in Louisiana,
-as in the case of Tennessee, was bound up with the
-war powers of the President, and, no doubt, was made
-with some expectation of aiding his military plans. The
-thought of restoring a loyal government there proceeded quite
-naturally from the peculiar situation in the State. Though
-not so nearly unanimous for secession as South Carolina, her
-people acted with energy and promptness when they received
-tidings of “this last insult and outrage,” as the election of
-Mr. Lincoln was sensationally styled.<a id='r47' /><a href='#f47' class='c010'><sup>[47]</sup></a> Three days were
-deemed sufficient for deliberation, and the convention, January
-25, 1861, passed an ordinance of secession. Two weeks before
-this assembly met at Baton Rouge, the arsenal and the
-forts, a public building and a revenue cutter had been seized
-by State troops from New Orleans. In the mint and the custom
-house of that city more than half a million dollars was
-secured for the Confederate States, and in accepting these
-funds the Montgomery Congress expressed its “high sense
-of the patriotic liberality” of Louisiana.<a id='r48' /><a href='#f48' class='c010'><sup>[48]</sup></a> This act of generosity,
-however, loses much of its merit when it is remembered
-that both the coin and bullion in the mint, as well as the
-customs, belonged to the Federal government. Besides, there
-was then no scarcity of money in the State, for Northern
-enterprise had found for her cotton and her sugar profitable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>markets both at home and abroad. It was benefits of
-this sort, enjoyed in the Union, that enabled Governor Moore
-in January, 1861, to report to his Legislature an overflowing
-treasury.<a id='r49' /><a href='#f49' class='c010'><sup>[49]</sup></a> This undoubted prosperity served only to aggravate
-the war fever. Enthusiasm in New Orleans was only
-less ardent and general than in Charleston. Business was almost
-suspended, and by the first of June no less than 16,000
-residents of Louisiana were serving in the Confederate army.<a id='r50' /><a href='#f50' class='c010'><sup>[50]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>President Lincoln’s proclamation of April 19 preceding
-had inaugurated a blockade of every port within the State.
-The early days of July witnessed the disappearance of Governor
-Moore’s boasted surplus, and during the summer New
-Orleans became bankrupt;<a id='r51' /><a href='#f51' class='c010'><sup>[51]</sup></a> her foreign commerce was destroyed
-by the blockade, her credit had vanished. Though
-enlistments continued without interruption, signs of financial
-distress multiplied with the approach of winter. Rebellion,
-it was soon discovered, was not attended with unmixed blessings;
-bad government had produced its usual consequences,
-and when Governor Taylor, late in the summer of 1862, undertook
-to raise an army for the defence of his State he was
-surprised at the universal apathy; neglect and disaster had
-brought disunionists to a condition little short of hostility
-to the Richmond government.<a id='r52' /><a href='#f52' class='c010'><sup>[52]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Union men in southern Louisiana had not been unobservant
-of these signs; permanent residents of this portion of the
-State had, for the most part, maintained their loyalty to the
-General Government. Indeed, a decided majority of them
-in the election of 1860 had voted for Bell and Douglas, and
-though here, as elsewhere in the South, ardent secessionists
-were found, the proceedings in the convention took the Union
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>men by surprise.<a id='r53' /><a href='#f53' class='c010'><sup>[53]</sup></a> In the interval they had refrained from
-violence, but had not become reconciled to oppression.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The importance of New Orleans to their cause had not
-been overlooked by Confederate authorities, and that city was
-held firmly in their grasp until the fleet of Captain Farragut,
-toward the close of April, 1862, steamed up in hostile array
-before its defences. The occupation by General Butler’s
-army of this strategic position ended in southern Louisiana
-the activity of the more extreme secessionists, and though
-some restlessness at the presence of Federal forces was pretended
-by even Union men, they had not until the surrender
-made any serious effort to help themselves. Under protection
-of the army, however, they commenced immediately to
-form Union associations for the purpose of developing the
-loyal sentiment in this part of the State. Resolutions recommending
-an election were passed by these organizations;
-newspapers discussed the question, and in various ways it
-was forced upon the attention of the President.<a id='r54' /><a href='#f54' class='c010'><sup>[54]</sup></a> The more
-prudent and intelligent among them began under encouragement
-of Federal troops to consider measures for relief; the
-less practical commenced writing complaints to friends in the
-North.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In a private letter of July 26, 1862, to Hon. Reverdy
-Johnson, then in New Orleans investigating General Butler’s
-relations with foreign consuls, Mr. Lincoln, noticing a reference
-to the restlessness of the people under the rule of General
-Phelps, asks the Maryland Senator to pardon him for
-believing the complaint “a false pretense.” A way to avert
-the inconveniences arising from military occupation was for
-the people of Louisiana “simply to take their place in the
-Union upon the old terms.”<a id='r55' /><a href='#f55' class='c010'><sup>[55]</sup></a> Writing two days later to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>Cuthbert Bullett, a Southern gentleman who appears to have
-enjoyed his personal esteem and confidence, the President,
-after mentioning difficulties in the way of establishing civil
-authority in the State, suggested a method of avoiding them:
-“The people of Louisiana who wish protection to person and
-property,” he wrote, “have but to reach forth their hands and
-take it. Let them in good faith reinaugurate the national
-authority, and set up a State government conforming thereto
-under the Constitution. They know how to do it, and can
-have the protection of the army while doing it. The army will
-be withdrawn so soon as such State government can dispense
-with its presence; and the people of the State can then, upon
-the old constitutional terms, govern themselves to their own
-liking.”<a id='r56' /><a href='#f56' class='c010'><sup>[56]</sup></a> If, however, Union men exerted themselves no
-further than criticism of the Federal Government, it was
-more than intimated that there were to be expected greater
-injuries than military necessity had yet inflicted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The pressure of events appears even then to have been
-forcing the President in the direction of emancipation. To
-August Belmont, of New York, who enclosed the complaints
-of a New Orleans correspondent, Mr. Lincoln, July 31, 1862,
-repeated in substance what had already been written to Mr.
-Bullett, and added: “Those enemies must understand that
-they cannot experiment for ten years trying to destroy the
-government, and if they fail still come back into the Union
-unhurt. If they expect in any contingency to ever have the
-Union as it was, I join with the writer [Mr. Belmont’s correspondent]
-in saying, ‘Now is the time.’”<a id='r57' /><a href='#f57' class='c010'><sup>[57]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The appointment in August, 1862, of General George F.
-Shepley as military governor may be regarded as the first
-act in the restoration of a loyal government for Louisiana.
-His selection, though probably intended as a private commendation
-of the judgment of General Butler, who had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>already designated him as Mayor of New Orleans, was never
-considered by that officer adequate atonement for the public
-censure implied in his removal, December, 1862, from command
-of the Department of the Gulf.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Upon the Federal occupation of New Orleans and adjacent
-territory all functions of the disloyal government therein immediately
-ceased. As controversies were constantly arising
-the establishment of courts had become a necessity. At first
-these questions were for the most part adjudicated by General
-Butler himself, but the pressure of military and other affairs
-compelled him soon to refer their settlement to civilians or to
-army officers especially chosen for the purpose. This uncertain
-system of justice, though immeasurably better than none,
-led to the institution of courts each of which was known by
-the name of the officer holding it. Accused persons were
-brought to trial, and judgments executed by soldiers detailed
-for such duty. No formal record of proceedings in these
-tribunals appears to have been kept, though memoranda of
-judgments rendered were, no doubt, made by an officer who
-came eventually to be designated as clerk.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For the decision of questions relating exclusively to the
-force under his command General Butler some time in June,
-1862, organized a tribunal known as the Provost Court of
-the Army of the United States, over which Major Joseph M.
-Bell presided. Questions in no way connected with the military,
-especially matters of police and the punishment of
-crimes, were often submitted for its determination. Aggrieved
-persons, without reflecting upon the consequence of
-their acts, naturally appealed for redress to the holder of
-power. Thus the authority of this institution silently extended,
-and by the autumn of 1862 it exercised unquestioned
-jurisdiction over all criminal cases arising in the city of New
-Orleans.<a id='r58' /><a href='#f58' class='c010'><sup>[58]</sup></a> In the absence of courts for adjudicating civil
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>questions they, too, were referred to its consideration. All
-functions of government having been suspended by the capture
-of the city, it became the duty of the Federal commander,
-and his right by the laws of war, to provide, among other
-things, for the administration of justice.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the early acts of General Shepley after his appointment
-as Military Governor was to establish a system of
-courts for the State. Most of the former officials having
-fled after the surrender, he was compelled practically to
-create new tribunals, and this task he greatly simplified by
-reviving those institutions of justice with which the people
-of Louisiana were already familiar. John S. Whittaker was
-accordingly appointed Judge of the Second District Court
-of the parish of Orleans. Besides possessing in civil matters
-the ordinary powers of a local court the old tribunal of that
-name had been a court of probates and successions. The new
-exercised all the powers of the old court. It should be remembered,
-however, that the latter derived its authority from
-the laws of Louisiana, while the former owed its existence to
-the war powers of the Federal Executive. Its jurisdiction
-extended to civil cases generally where the defendant resided
-in the parish of Orleans or was a non-resident of the State.<a id='r59' /><a href='#f59' class='c010'><sup>[59]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Judge Hiestand was appointed to the bench of the Fourth
-District Court of the parish of Orleans. Besides possessing
-the general authority of other district courts in that parish it
-entertained appeals from justices’ courts; indeed, these constituted
-a large part of its business.<a id='r60' /><a href='#f60' class='c010'><sup>[60]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Sixth District Court of the parish of Orleans, revived
-soon after the capture of the city, is, because of the incumbent
-of that bench, Judge Rufus K. Howell, of greater interest
-than either of the preceding. Under a commission received
-from the State of Louisiana before its attempted secession he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>continued to preside over that tribunal while the disunion
-party ruled New Orleans, and performed his functions up
-to the very hour of its surrender to the Federal authorities.
-Having early taken the oath of allegiance to the national
-Government he was permitted to resume his functions.<a id='r61' /><a href='#f61' class='c010'><sup>[61]</sup></a> Like
-the tribunals mentioned, this court retained and exercised
-all the powers that it possessed as originally constituted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>These courts, instituted during September and October,
-1862, entered upon the discharge of their duties about the 1st
-of November following. They were the only tribunals of
-civil jurisdiction in Louisiana, and that jurisdiction was
-limited, as against defendants resident of the State, to citizens
-of the parish of Orleans. As to inhabitants beyond the limits
-of that parish there was no court in which they could be
-sued. Though the Federal forces held several counties in
-this condition, their tenure fluctuated with the fortunes of
-war. A court was therefore needed whose jurisdiction would
-expand with the advance, and contract with the retreat, of
-the Union armies. The Provost Court was not deemed adequate,
-and indeed was never designed to meet such contingencies.
-To supply this deficiency a tribunal of very extensive
-powers, designated as “a court of record for the State
-of Louisiana,” was constituted by Executive order on October
-20. Of this flexible institution Charles A. Peabody, of New
-York, a friend of Secretary Seward, was made provisional
-judge. Besides being empowered to select a prosecuting attorney,
-a marshal and a clerk, and to make rules for the exercise
-of his jurisdiction, he was authorized “to hear, try and
-determine all causes, civil and criminal, including causes in
-law, equity, revenue and admiralty, and particularly all such
-powers and jurisdiction as belong to the District and Circuit
-Courts of the United States, conforming his proceedings, so
-far as possible, to the course of proceedings and practice
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>which has been customary in the Courts of the United States
-and Louisiana—his judgment to be final and conclusive.”
-These officers were to be paid out of the contingent fund of
-the War Department, and a copy of the Executive order,
-certified by the Secretary of War, was “held to be a sufficient
-commission” for the Judge.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This institution, made up as to its <em>personnel</em> in the North,
-was sent from New York with the great expedition of General
-Banks constituted and organized for immediate business to
-Louisiana. Though Judge Peabody, accompanied by Augustus
-de B. Hughes, Isaac Edward Clarke and George D. Lamont,
-who had been chosen, respectively, clerk, marshal and
-prosecuting attorney, arrived in New Orleans December 15,
-1862, the opening of court was delayed till the 29th of
-that month by a change of administration in that Department.<a id='r62' /><a href='#f62' class='c010'><sup>[62]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In addition to the tribunals described many other courts
-were established about this time; of these the Supreme Court
-of Louisiana is the only one which appears to require especial
-mention. In former times under the State judicial system
-appeals had lain to this institution, and it was accordingly
-held that decisions of the courts now created were subject
-to its revision. In this manner many of their judgments were
-stayed and in suspense, so that the new district courts were of
-little practical benefit. The necessity of a tribunal to remedy
-this deficiency and adjudicate the accumulated cases of former
-years soon became apparent, and in April, 1863, Mr. Peabody
-was appointed Chief Justice of the State Supreme Court;
-associated with him on this bench were judges chosen from
-among the people of Louisiana.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nearly a week before his appointment of Judge Peabody,
-Mr. Lincoln, by the hand of Hon. John E. Bouligny, who had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>not left his seat in the House of Representatives when Southern
-delegations withdrew from Congress, sent to General
-Butler, Governor Shepley and other Federal officers having
-authority under the United States in Louisiana a communication
-requesting each of them to assist Mr. Bouligny in his
-effort to secure “peace again upon the old terms under the
-Constitution of the United States.”<a id='r63' /><a href='#f63' class='c010'><sup>[63]</sup></a> This desirable end
-was to be attained by the election of “members to the Congress
-of the United States particularly, and perhaps a legislature,
-State officers, and United States senators friendly to
-their object.” Federal officers were instructed to give the
-people a chance to express their wishes at these elections.
-“Follow forms of law,” wrote the President, “as far as convenient,
-but at all events get the expression of the largest
-number of the people possible. All see how such action will
-connect with and affect the proclamation of September 22.
-Of course the men elected should be gentlemen of character,
-willing to swear support to the Constitution, as of old, and
-known to be above reasonable suspicion of duplicity.”<a id='r64' /><a href='#f64' class='c010'><sup>[64]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Loyal leaders, believing that Northern men holding office
-under the General Government in Louisiana would be set up
-as candidates, communicated their fears to the President, who
-sent to Governor Shepley a fortnight before the election a
-letter of which the essential portion is as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We do not particularly need members of Congress from there to enable
-us to get along with legislation here. What we do want is the conclusive
-evidence that respectable citizens of Louisiana are willing to be
-members of Congress and to swear support to the Constitution and that
-other respectable citizens there are willing to vote for them and send
-them. To send a parcel of Northern men here as representatives, elected,
-as would be understood (and perhaps really so), at the point of the bayonet,
-would be disgusting and outrageous; and were I a member of
-Congress here, I would vote against admitting any such man to a seat.<a id='r65' /><a href='#f65' class='c010'><sup>[65]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>The note of sincerity is unmistakable throughout, and in
-those Representatives and Senators opposed to Executive
-policy the concluding sentences especially must have excited
-strange emotions when they re-read in after years their impassioned
-attacks in Congress upon that dark spirit who,
-it was gravely alleged, labored with might unquestioned to
-subordinate the Legislative branch of Government.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Union associations referred to appointed committees
-who waited upon General Shepley and demanded an election.
-This he hesitated to call until considerable pressure had first
-been exerted. The sentiments of the President concurring
-with the local feeling in New Orleans, Shepley finally yielded,
-and on November 14, 1862, issued a proclamation for an
-election to be held December 3d following. This election, in
-the language of his proclamation, was ordered “for the purpose
-of securing to the loyal electors” of both the First
-and Second Congressional Districts “their appropriate and
-lawful representation in the House of Representatives of the
-United States of America, and of enabling them to avail
-themselves of the benefits secured by the proclamation of the
-President of the United States to the people of any State, or
-part of a State, who shall on the first day of January next
-be in good faith represented in the Congress of the United
-States, by members chosen thereto at elections wherein a
-majority of the qualified voters of such State have participated.”<a id='r66' /><a href='#f66' class='c010'><sup>[66]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In addition to the qualifications prescribed by the laws of
-Louisiana, General Shepley required each elector to take an
-oath of allegiance to the United States, and from among
-the old and respected citizens of the State appointed sheriffs
-and commissioners of election, who performed their duties
-to the entire satisfaction of both candidates and voters. The
-army, for reasons given above, refrained from all manner
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>of interference, and no Federal office-holder was a
-nominee.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For the first time in many years, it was admitted, every
-qualified elector might freely cast his ballot without fear
-of intimidation or violence. In a total of 2,643 votes Benjamin
-F. Flanders was chosen, with little opposition, for the
-First, and Michael Hahn, by a safe majority, for the Second
-Congressional District. A larger vote was actually cast for
-Flanders than had been received by his predecessor, and in
-both districts 7,760 citizens, or about half the usual number,
-appeared at the polls. When it is remembered that four thousand
-soldiers who enlisted in Butler’s army from this part
-of the State did not participate in the contest, that many
-citizens from this section were serving in the Confederate
-army and that not a few Union men were exiles in the North
-or in Europe the vote in this election was by no means light.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With credentials signed by Governor Shepley, Messrs.
-Hahn and Flanders appeared in Washington as claimants for
-seats in Congress. After a thorough investigation of the
-election and several ingenious arguments in opposition both
-were admitted, February 17, 1863, though not without considerable
-misgiving, as Representatives for the remainder of
-the term, which expired March 3 following. For their exclusion
-the opposition relied mainly upon these grounds:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><em>First.</em> The election, it was asserted, was brought about by
-a threat of interference with slave property if the State was
-not represented in Congress by January 1, 1863; this was a
-measure of coercion, and the compliance of citizens in appearing
-at the polls was ascribed to selfish motives rather than to
-loyal and patriotic sentiments.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><em>Second.</em> The existence of any vacancy in a constitutional
-sense was at least doubtful; and even if vacancies existed in
-these districts the authority of a military governor to call an
-election was denied.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span><em>Third.</em> It was objected that Governor Shepley had dispensed
-with the registry required by law and had empowered
-commissioners of election to decide upon the qualifications of
-voters; finally, by requiring an oath of allegiance to the
-United States, he had imposed upon electors a test unknown
-to the laws of Louisiana.<a id='r67' /><a href='#f67' class='c010'><sup>[67]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While the cases of Messrs. Hahn and Flanders were pending
-the edict of freedom had gone forth, for the President,
-as announced in his preliminary proclamation of September
-22, had declared, January 1, 1863, “as a fit and necessary
-war measure,” that “all persons held as slaves within said
-designated States and parts of States, are and henceforward
-shall be free.”<a id='r68' /><a href='#f68' class='c010'><sup>[68]</sup></a> Louisiana was named as one of the States
-in rebellion. From the operation of this measure, however,
-the city of New Orleans and thirteen parishes of the State
-were excepted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The admission, February 17, of Hahn and Flanders gave
-new life to the political reorganization of the State.<a id='r69' /><a href='#f69' class='c010'><sup>[69]</sup></a> But
-with this revival of interest there was discovered among
-the supporters of the Federal Government a difference of
-opinion as to the best course to be pursued in the circumstances.
-This division of sentiment arose concerning the wisdom
-of retaining slavery in those parishes not included in the
-President’s proclamation. The Union associations, each appointing
-five delegates, organized what they termed a Free
-State General Committee with Thomas J. Durant as president.
-This body, holding anti-slavery views and assuming
-that rebellion had destroyed the fundamental law, took measures
-to elect delegates to a general convention for the purpose
-of framing a new constitution prohibiting slavery.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>Their plan was approved by General Shepley, who, June 12,
-1863, appointed Mr. Durant Attorney-General for the State,
-with power to act as commissioner of registration.<a id='r70' /><a href='#f70' class='c010'><sup>[70]</sup></a> He was
-ordered on the same day to make an enrollment of all free
-white male citizens of the United States having resided
-six months in the State and one month in the parish, who
-should each take the oath of allegiance and register “as a
-voter freely and voluntarily for the purpose of organizing a
-State government in Louisiana, loyal to the Government of
-the United States.”<a id='r71' /><a href='#f71' class='c010'><sup>[71]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The conservative element, though less active, was by no
-means indifferent to these measures, and sent to Washington
-a committee of planters to consult the President. They
-represented in a communication to him that they had “been
-delegated to seek of the General Government a full recognition
-of all the rights of the State as they existed previous to
-the passage of an act of secession, upon the principle of the
-existence of the State constitution unimpaired, and no legal
-act having transpired that could in any way deprive them of
-the advantages conferred by that constitution.” They further
-requested him to direct the Military Governor to order an
-election on the first Monday of November following for all
-State and Federal officers.<a id='r72' /><a href='#f72' class='c010'><sup>[72]</sup></a> To this committee, composed of
-E. E. Malhiot, Bradish Johnson and Thomas Cottman, Mr.
-Lincoln, under date of June 19, 1863, replied “that a respectable
-portion of the Louisiana people desired to amend their
-State constitution, and contemplated holding a State convention
-for that object. This fact alone, as it seems to me, is a
-sufficient reason why the General Government should not
-give the committal you seek to the existing State constitution.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>I may add that while I do not perceive how such committal
-could facilitate our military operations in Louisiana, I really
-apprehend it might be so used as to embarrass them.”<a id='r73' /><a href='#f73' class='c010'><sup>[73]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is evident, when we recall the letter of July 26, 1862, to
-Reverdy Johnson, that the President, then only contemplating
-emancipation, had, since his proclamation had gone forth,
-taken much more advanced ground.<a id='r74' /><a href='#f74' class='c010'><sup>[74]</sup></a> The army was still
-his main reliance, and the wisdom of restoring a loyal government
-as well as the method of that restoration was regarded
-favorably or otherwise as it appeared to facilitate or embarrass
-military operations.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Relative to an election in November he said, “There is
-abundant time without any order or proclamation from me
-just now.” Though their request was courteously denied,
-he assured the committee that the people of Louisiana should
-not lack an opportunity for a fair election for both Federal
-and State officers by want of anything within his power to
-give them.<a id='r75' /><a href='#f75' class='c010'><sup>[75]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The political reorganization of the State was at this point
-interrupted by the absence at Port Hudson of General N. P.
-Banks, then in command of the Department of the Gulf. So
-energetic and successful was the Confederate General Taylor
-that by July 10, when he received intelligence of the fall of
-Port Hudson and the surrender of Vicksburg, his mounted
-scouts had been pushed to within sixteen miles of New Orleans.<a id='r76' /><a href='#f76' class='c010'><sup>[76]</sup></a>
-The surrender in these strongholds of more than 40,000
-men was a crushing blow to the Richmond Government;
-enough troops were disengaged by these victories to overwhelm
-the enemy that menaced New Orleans, and General
-Taylor hurriedly concentrated his army in the valley of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>Red River to observe the movements of the Federal commander.
-The Union picket line marked at this time the
-bounds of Governor Shepley’s civil jurisdiction; indeed, it
-was not greatly extended until the surrender of General
-E. Kirby Smith late in May, 1865, after the engagement at
-Brazos. Eastern Louisiana, with Alabama and Mississippi,
-had passed a few weeks earlier under Federal control.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The great numbers withdrawn from production in the
-South combined with a rigorous enforcement of the blockade
-had occasioned a cotton famine in the markets of the world.
-To relieve this condition an outlet was sought for the abundant
-crops of the Red River country; and this fact was probably,
-not without considerable influence, in determining the
-course of the expedition into Texas, which was intended
-to accomplish a very different though scarcely less important
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though the vigilance of Mr. Adams, United States Minister
-to England, was rewarded by the abandonment in that
-country of any further attempt to build cruisers of the Alabama
-type, the Confederate naval agent by no means despaired
-of dealing still severer blows to the commerce of
-the North, and, attracted by promises which appear to have
-been authorized by the ruler of France, changed his field of
-activity from Liverpool to Bordeaux, where a ship-builder
-was engaged to construct two formidable rams. With the
-attempts to get these under the Confederate flag this essay
-is not concerned.<a id='r77' /><a href='#f77' class='c010'><sup>[77]</sup></a> French interests in Mexico appeared at
-that time to require the cultivation of friendly relations with
-what some European States believed was destined to become
-a new power among the nations of the world; hence
-Napoleon’s encouragement to the Confederate representatives
-abroad. This situation was so seriously regarded by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>Government at Washington that even at considerable sacrifice
-it was determined to plant the Union flag somewhere in
-Texas. To effect this object General Banks had considered
-and submitted to the War Department plans of his own;
-these, however, appear to have been reluctantly abandoned because
-of repeated instructions from General Halleck, and the
-movement toward Shreveport in the spring and early summer
-of 1864 was begun. From the protracted and envenomed
-controversy to which it gave rise among the officers on
-both sides its disastrous ending is familiar to all.<a id='r78' /><a href='#f78' class='c010'><sup>[78]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While this joint land and naval expedition was yet in
-contemplation Mr. Lincoln found time to inform the Federal
-commander of his opinions respecting the establishment of a
-civil government in Louisiana. In his letter of August 5,
-1863, to General Banks he wrote:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>While I very well know what I would be glad for Louisiana to do,
-it is quite a different thing for me to assume direction of the matter. I
-would be glad for her to make a new constitution recognizing the
-emancipation proclamation, and adopting emancipation in those parts of
-the State to which the proclamation does not apply. And while she is
-at it, I think it would not be objectionable for her to adopt some practical
-system by which the two races could gradually live themselves out
-of the old relation to each other, and both come out better prepared for
-the new. Education for young blacks should be included in the plan.
-After all, the power or element of “contract” may be sufficient for this
-probationary period; and, by its simplicity and flexibility, may be the
-better.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As an anti-slavery man, I have a motive to desire emancipation which
-pro-slavery men do not have; but even they have strong enough reason
-to thus place themselves again under the shield of the Union; and to
-thus perpetually hedge against the recurrence of the scenes through which
-we are now passing.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He expressed his approval of the registry which he supposed
-Mr. Durant was making with a view to an election
-for a constitutional convention, the work of which, he hoped,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>would reach Washington by the meeting of Congress in
-December. Before concluding this letter he added: “For
-my own part, I think I shall not, in any event, retract the
-emancipation proclamation; nor, as executive, ever return
-to slavery any person who is freed by the terms of that proclamation,
-or by any of the acts of Congress.”<a id='r79' /><a href='#f79' class='c010'><sup>[79]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He again invites attention to the fact that if Louisiana
-should send members to Congress their admission would
-depend upon the respective Houses and not to any extent upon
-the wishes of the Executive.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Copies of this communication he intended to send to Hahn,
-Flanders and Durant. Three months later, when the gentleman
-last named informed him that nothing had yet been
-done toward the enrollment, Mr. Lincoln wrote immediately
-to General Banks a letter which at once reveals both the
-extent of his interest in this subject and his extreme disappointment
-on learning that his wishes had been but little
-regarded. Flanders, then in Washington, confirmed the account
-of Durant. “This disappoints me bitterly,” said the
-letter of November 5, 1863, and though the President did
-not blame either General Banks or the Louisiana leaders for
-this apparent neglect he urged them “to lose no more time.”
-“I wish him [General Shepley], ...” continued the
-letter, “without waiting for more territory, to go to work
-and give me a tangible nucleus which the remainder of the
-State may rally around as fast as it can, and which I can
-at once recognize and sustain as the true State government.
-And in that work I wish you and all under your command
-to give them a hearty sympathy and support.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The instruction to Governor Shepley bases the movement
-(and rightfully, too) upon the loyal element. Time is
-important. There is danger, even now, that the adverse
-element seeks insidiously to preoccupy the ground. If a few
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>professedly loyal men shall draw the disloyal about them, and
-colorably set up a State government, repudiating the Emancipation
-Proclamation and reëstablishing slavery, I cannot
-recognize or sustain their work. I should fall powerless in
-the attempt. This Government in such an attitude would be
-a house divided against itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have said, and say again, that if a new State government,
-acting in harmony with this government, and consistently
-with general freedom, shall think best to adopt a
-reasonable temporary arrangement in relation to the landless
-and homeless freed people, I do not object; but my word is
-out to be for and not against them on any question of their
-permanent freedom. I do not insist upon such temporary arrangement,
-but only say such would not be objectionable to
-me.”<a id='r80' /><a href='#f80' class='c010'><sup>[80]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It should be remembered that Thomas J. Durant, who
-was authorized to make the enrollment as well as to appoint
-“registers” to assist him, was spokesman of the wealthy and
-influential class of planters, or the conservative element whose
-interests opposed any disturbance of existing conditions. He
-appears to have drawn for the President a somewhat gloomy
-picture of the political situation in Louisiana, and finally to
-have protested against the government organized by the adverse
-party. The outlook there, however, was not so discouraging
-as represented; for as early as October 9 Governor
-Shepley had renewed his order for the registration,
-modifying the former one so far as to include “all loyal
-citizens.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Interest was somewhat quickened by the announcement of
-certain conservative leaders of an intention to hold a voluntary
-election in conformity with the old constitution and laws
-of the State. On October 27, 1863, an address signed by the
-president and vice-president of the Central Executive Committee
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>was published in the papers of New Orleans. This
-appeal, directed to the loyal citizens of Louisiana, begins:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The want of civil government in our State can, by a proper effort on
-your part, soon be supplied, under laws and a constitution formed and
-adopted by yourselves in a time of profound peace. It is made your duty,
-as well as your right, to meet at the usual places, and cast your votes for
-State and parish officers, members of Congress, and of the State Legislature.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c013'>The day, as fixed by our laws, is Monday, the 2d day of November
-next, 1863. There is nothing [proceeds the address] to prevent your
-meeting on the day fixed by law, and selecting your agents to carry on
-the affairs of government in our own State. The military will not interfere
-with you in the exercise of your civil rights and duties, and we
-think we can assure you that your action in this respect will meet the
-approval of the National Government.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The failure of those citizens addressed to exercise their
-rights, it was asserted, would subject “the country” to the
-danger of being thrown as “vacated” territory into the
-hands of Congress.<a id='r81' /><a href='#f81' class='c010'><sup>[81]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Free State Committee having been invited to coöperate,
-a correspondence ensued between the rival organizations;
-but, on the ground that this movement was both illegal and
-unjust, the Free State men declined to participate in the election.
-In their reply the latter assert that “There is no law
-in existence, as stated by you [The Executive Central Committee],
-directing elections to be held on the first Monday
-of November.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The constitution of 1852, as amended by the convention
-of 1861, was overthrown and destroyed by the rebellion of the
-people of Louisiana, and the subsequent conquest by the
-arms of the United States does not restore your political
-institutions.”<a id='r82' /><a href='#f82' class='c010'><sup>[82]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The reply then proceeds to discuss the injustice of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>movement, and upon this subject its reasoning is entitled to
-more respect. As to the status of the constitution of 1852, it
-is not easy to comprehend how the secession convention, a
-body universally regarded as revolutionary, could amend, in
-the manner attempted, the fundamental law, seeing that this
-revolution was not yet crowned with success.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though no general election was held in response to this
-address, voting took place in two parishes, and certain persons
-were chosen as Representatives in Congress. Before giving
-an account of this election of November 2, 1863, it may be
-proper to notice a petition submitted by the free colored people
-of New Orleans to Governor Shepley praying to be registered
-as voters so that they could “assist in establishing in the new
-Convention a Civil Government” for their “beloved State
-of Louisiana.” This address, prepared at a meeting on November
-5, and not without ability, recites in appropriate language
-the services rendered by free colored men to both the
-Nation and the State. It is sufficient to observe here that
-their prayer was not granted. The paper itself will be considered
-in discussing the successive steps which led to the
-complete enfranchisement of the race.<a id='r83' /><a href='#f83' class='c010'><sup>[83]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The preceding chapter has noticed President Lincoln’s
-Amnesty Proclamation of December 8 as well as that part of
-the accompanying message to Congress discussing his plan
-for restoring Union governments in the insurgent States.
-The House had not completed its organization for the
-Thirty-eighth Congress when Thaddeus Stevens, a Representative
-from Pennsylvania, either from curiosity or an anxiety
-to oppose, as he conceived, the policy of the President, inquired
-what names had been omitted in the call of members.
-At a later stage of its first meeting, December 7, 1863, he
-again referred to this subject by asking to have read the credentials
-of persons claiming to be Representatives “from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>so-called State of Louisiana.” The acting clerk facetiously
-promised compliance, and read a certificate signed by Mr.
-John Leonard Riddell naming A. P. Field, Thomas Cottman
-and Joshua Baker as persons elected to represent respectively
-the First, Second and Fifth Congressional Districts of the
-State.<a id='r84' /><a href='#f84' class='c010'><sup>[84]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On a resolution “That A. P. Field is not entitled to a seat
-in this House from the State of Louisiana,” reported January
-29, 1864, from the Committee of Elections, his right to admission
-was fully discussed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Under the apportionment of 1850 that State sent four, and
-by the census of 1860 became entitled to five, Representatives.
-By an act of Congress approved July 14, 1862, each State
-entitled to more than one member in the lower House was to
-be divided into as many districts as it had been allotted
-Representatives.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But, said Chairman Dawes, as Louisiana had never been
-so divided no person in that State had been chosen according
-to Federal law. The election under which Mr. Field claimed
-a seat occurred in the old First Congressional District, which,
-with a great portion of the city of New Orleans, included two
-adjacent parishes, Placquemines and St. Bernard. On November
-1, General Shepley issued a military order forbidding
-the election, and none was held in New Orleans. In the two
-outlying parishes, however, under the auspices of a citizens’
-committee, to which returns were made, a few voters appeared
-at the polls. In the parish of St. Bernard, the only
-locality in which the House had any proof that electors participated,
-Mr. Field received one hundred and fifty-six votes,
-and though no evidence in support of his statement had been
-offered, about the same number, he alleged, had been cast
-for him in Placquemines.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The question was, proceeded Mr. Dawes, whether a gentleman
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>with this constituency could be in any sense considered
-as having been elected. There were in his district over 10,000
-qualified voters, and of these the claimant received the
-support of only one hundred and fifty-six; hence nearly ten
-thousand electors expressed no opinion, armed interference
-having prevented 9,844 of them from indicating a preference.
-There was no evidence that this majority acquiesced in what
-was done by one hundred and fifty-six men in a corner of St.
-Bernard parish where an election was permitted. If no other
-objection existed, the State had not been districted as required
-by the Act of July, 1862; this consideration of itself
-appeared to the Committee a reason sufficient for his exclusion.
-Further, his certificate was signed by one John Leonard
-Riddell, himself chosen Governor at the same time and in
-the same parishes. His term, according to the laws of Louisiana,
-did not commence till January 1, 1864, and it was not
-easy to comprehend how he came to regard himself as Executive
-of the State on November 20, 1863, when he signed the
-certificate presented by the claimant. Mr. Riddell, indeed,
-had not then been inaugurated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Had not Congress failed to divide the State, the suppression
-of this election would have been without justification
-and have deserved the condemnation of the House. It, however,
-did not conform to the laws of Louisiana, for the votes
-were not cast nor were they counted or canvassed as prescribed
-thereby. This, in substance, was the argument of Mr.
-Dawes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By other members attention was invited to the fact that
-under the same laws and conditions an election had been
-held in Louisiana a year before, and in consequence two
-Representatives admitted. To this observation Mr. Stevens
-replied that Hahn and Flanders, the members referred to,
-had been seated by the power of the House without, as he
-then supposed, any law or right. Henry Winter Davis alone
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>among all who spoke on the question approved the action
-of the Military Governor on the ground that there was no
-legal right to hold an election, and the attempt of any number
-of persons to do so was an usurpation of sovereign authority
-which was properly prevented. Other Representatives, however,
-strongly condemned this act of Governor Shepley and
-at least one desired the House to express as an amendment
-to the resolution its disapproval of his conduct. Though not
-the question in debate, there could be no mistaking upon
-this point the sentiments of a majority of the members.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Field, permitted to address the House, observed that
-it was the fault of the General Government that Union men
-in Louisiana had not been aided by the previous administration.
-If they had been, the blood of Illinois and Massachusetts
-patriots would not have sprinkled the soil of his State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To show that some sort of government existed there he
-caused the clerk to read a list of one hundred and twenty-five
-officers acting in those parishes included within Federal
-military lines, and added that though New Orleans since its
-capture paid annually in taxes, collected through Governor
-Shepley, two and a half million dollars, besides a considerable
-sum in internal revenue, her people were represented neither
-in the local nor the national Government.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The constitution of Louisiana, he said, required that qualified
-electors should be white males who had attained the age
-of twenty-one years, and been residents of the State for
-twelve months immediately preceding the election. The provision
-was so modified by Governor Shepley that persons of
-this description were allowed to vote after a residence of six
-months. Mr. Field did not know whence was derived the
-authority to amend constitutions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To secure his coöperation in establishing a loyal government
-Union men met as early as September 19 in convention
-at New Orleans, and appointed a committee of nine to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>present an address to the Military Governor inviting his
-assistance. He declined, however, after a lengthy interview
-to order an election for Representatives until the State had
-first been divided. In fact, until instructions which he had
-requested, were received from Washington he refused to order
-any election whatever, though he volunteered to forward to
-Mr. Lincoln any communication which they desired to address
-him on that subject. Besides its correspondence with Governor
-Shepley, the New Orleans convention on September 21
-had sent a letter to General Banks, the Department commander,
-to secure if possible his approval of their movement.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Notice, dated October 20, was given that an election would
-be held, November 2, at the usual places in the parish of St.
-Bernard, and the State and Federal offices to be filled, as
-well as the precise places at which voters could cast their
-ballots, were mentioned. Since the military authorities had
-refused to assist them, and had then issued no order against
-an election, loyal men thought it not improper to express
-their opinions at the polls. As the Free State people considered
-Louisiana out of the Union they declined to participate,
-and though General Banks in obedience to instructions
-from the President had subsequently ordered an election they
-maintained the same attitude. The claimant’s party did not
-oppose this order; for if unable to restore their State in the
-manner most acceptable they were willing to coöperate in any
-method likely to accomplish that object.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Precisely what number of voters would be called a constituency
-Mr. Field had not been informed. In the portion of
-his Congressional District included in St. Bernard and
-Placquemines parishes there were only 2,400 electors, and the
-President’s plan required only one tenth of the number of
-votes cast in 1860. Though the election of November 2 preceded
-the Executive proclamation, that fact should not make
-it void. The electors in New Orleans were not free to express
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>a choice, and even if it had been otherwise the vote in
-the First District must have been greatly diminished since
-1860, for he was assured by two paymasters that 7,000 men
-had been recruited there for the Union army.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Some members admitted that the national Government had
-not given sufficient protection to Union men in Louisiana, and
-therefore should not now take advantage of that neglect to
-also deprive them of representation in Congress. These believed
-that if Mr. Field had received a majority of the votes
-in his district any informality in the election should be overlooked,
-for the right to representation in Congress grows
-out of the Constitution, and regulations governing such
-elections are matters of mere convenience. The fact that no
-State organization existed there did not create a legal impediment,
-and it was no objection that Louisiana had not been redistricted,
-for the additional member was not imposed as a
-burden but as a right which she was free to exercise or not;
-besides, the greater representation includes the less.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Notwithstanding these considerations, and strong, though
-not universal, testimony to the claimant’s loyalty, he was
-denied admission, February 9, 1864, by a vote of 85 to 48.<a id='r85' /><a href='#f85' class='c010'><sup>[85]</sup></a>
-His case, however, was not exactly similar to that of Messrs.
-Hahn and Flanders, as stated by one Representative, for they
-had received, in the circumstances, a comparatively large
-vote.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To this end came the movement of the planters designed
-primarily to counteract that inaugurated by the Free State
-Committee, which also, as we shall see, was soon at variance
-with the military authorities. Important changes had occurred
-in the shifting politics of his State before the House
-had taken final action in the case of Mr. Field; these will
-be briefly related.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Military necessity had led the President to issue, December
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>8, 1863, his Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction
-proposing, though not rigidly insisting upon, a plan for reinaugurating
-State governments wherever there existed such a
-loyal nucleus as could effectively assist in overthrowing the
-rebellion. In discussing the affairs of Tennessee that plan
-has been quoted at such length as to require no further mention
-in this place.<a id='r86' /><a href='#f86' class='c010'><sup>[86]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>General Banks on January 8, 1864, announced his intention
-of ordering an election of State officers. He was urged at
-this point by the Free State Committee to allow their election
-to go on, but he refused to yield even under pressure of an
-immense public meeting favorable to their object.<a id='r87' /><a href='#f87' class='c010'><sup>[87]</sup></a> Without
-his coöperation their plan was doomed to failure, and when
-entreaties did not avail to move him they promptly inveighed
-against his methods and his motives in the columns of <cite>The
-National Intelligencer</cite> at Washington. In a letter dated New
-Orleans, January 9, 1864, a correspondent writes:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>President Lincoln has started a Missouri case in Louisiana, and has
-made Banks our master; and Banks is another Schofield, only worse
-than he. Our mass meeting last evening was a complete success; but
-its object will be defeated by Banks, who, under orders direct from the
-President, declares his purpose to order an election for a convention;
-thus playing into the hands of Cottman, Riddle, and Fields, and their
-crew. The Union men—the true Union men—are thunderstruck by the
-course of the President in this matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We were not informed of the President’s orders to General Banks
-until the hour of the meeting last night, and the meeting was not informed
-at all. General Shepley, who is generally liked, and who has
-done all he could to promote the free State cause, and to organize a free
-State government, will resign, and the election ordered by Banks will be
-purely at military dictation, and will be so regarded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The correspondent does not know the secret springs of all
-these acts of the President, but thinks he has probably been
-deceived by base and interested men. “Banks,” he believes,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>“has the unchanged confidence of Mr. Lincoln.” The writer
-concludes by asking whether it is not possible to get the President
-to countermand his orders to Banks immediately, “and
-let the people manage matters as they have begun to do?”<a id='r88' /><a href='#f88' class='c010'><sup>[88]</sup></a>
-To prove that no line of policy would be acceptable to the
-Free State Committee Mr. Field, in his remarks before the
-House, read in full the communication from which these
-excerpts are taken.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To comprehend clearly the nature of the controversy which
-so suddenly arose between the Free State General Committee
-and the Federal commander in Louisiana it may be necessary
-to explain with some detail the precise attitude of that
-organization relative to the question at issue between the
-adverse parties. In discussing the respective merits of the
-State constitutions of 1852 and 1861 the organ of the Free
-State men says:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The question is altogether immaterial; for, in the conflict of arms
-incident to this rebellion, the predominant ideas of the good people of
-Louisiana have far preceded either constitution; and to reorganize now
-the State on the slave basis, which both constitutions and the laws passed
-under them recognized, has become an utter impossibility. Free soil and
-free speech have grown up into absolute necessities, directly resulting
-from the war, which has converted into dust and ashes all the constitutions
-which Louisiana has ever made, embodying the ideas of property
-in our fellow-man, and all the baneful results of this system of African
-slavery. The present war is nothing but the conflict of the ideas of
-slavery and liberty.... We cannot have peace until public opinion
-is brought quite up to this point. We cannot reorganize the civil government
-of our city, and still less that of our State, and get rid of the fearful
-incubus of martial law now pressing down our energies by its arbitrary
-influence, unless we believe, give utterance to and establish the fundamental
-principle of our national government: “all men are created
-free and equal.” We know of no better way to effect this than by calling
-a convention as soon as possible, to declare the simple fact that Louisiana
-now is and will forever be a free State.<a id='r89' /><a href='#f89' class='c010'><sup>[89]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>The party favoring this method insisted that in August,
-1863, when General Shepley was in Washington, their plan
-in all its parts was adopted in a Cabinet meeting, and that a
-special order issued from the War Department directing the
-Military Governor to carry it into execution. The movement
-for reorganizing the State would thus be placed under control
-of the steadfast opponents of slavery. They further claimed
-that Mr. Lincoln then preferred the calling of a convention
-to an election of State officers under the old constitution.
-His letter of August 5, 1863, to General Banks certainly
-leaves no doubt as to his sentiments at that time, for he
-expressed his approval of the enrollment being taken by Durant
-with a view to an election for a constitutional convention,
-the mature work of which, he thought, should reach Washington
-by the meeting of Congress. The impossibility of so
-expediting registration outside of New Orleans as to be ready
-for an election at that early date was explained to the President
-by the Free State Committee.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. B. F. Flanders returning from Washington in October,
-1863, reported the President as saying, in reply to an objection
-that enough territory and population were not under protection
-of the Union army to justify an election, that so
-great was the necessity for immediate action that he would
-recognize and sustain a State government organized by any
-part of the population of which the National forces then
-had control, and that he wished Flanders on his return to
-Louisiana to say so.<a id='r90' /><a href='#f90' class='c010'><sup>[90]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The registration under Governor Shepley, though frequently
-interrupted, had proceeded, and the Free State Committee,
-to insure the success of their object, conferred with
-him for the purpose of holding, about January 25, 1864, an
-election for delegates to a State convention which, as already
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>observed, intended to frame a new constitution abolishing
-slavery everywhere throughout the State. The announcement,
-then, on January 8, 1864, by General Banks of his intention
-to order an election of State officers under the old
-constitution was regarded by them as a decision for their
-adversaries. Their objections to the proclamation itself will
-be noticed in the proper place. It provided not only for an
-election of State officers on February 22 following, but also
-for the choice of delegates to a convention to be held in
-April for a revision of the constitution. The paramount
-objection of the Free State men was that the election of
-State officers would, under the course of General Banks,
-precede that for delegates to the convention, the point at
-which they desired to begin the work of reëstablishing a civil
-government for the State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To Thomas Cottman, who accompanied Mr. Field to
-Washington claiming a seat in Congress as Representative
-from the Second Louisiana District, Mr. Lincoln, on December
-15, wrote:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>You were so kind as to say this morning that you desire to return to
-Louisiana, and to be guided by my wishes, to some extent, in the part
-you may take in bringing that State to resume her rightful relation to
-the General Government.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My wishes are in a general way expressed, as well as I can express
-them, in the proclamation issued on the eighth of the present month, and
-in that part of the annual message which relates to that proclamation.
-It there appears that I deem the sustaining of the Emancipation Proclamation,
-where it applies, as indispensable; and I add here that I would
-esteem it fortunate if the people of Louisiana should themselves place
-the remainder of the State upon the same footing.<a id='r91' /><a href='#f91' class='c010'><sup>[91]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though this letter expressed as one of Mr. Lincoln’s
-strongest wishes a hope that all Union men in Louisiana
-would “eschew cliquism,” he was destined to be disappointed,
-for at this very time letters from General Banks, dated December
-6 and 16, informed him that Governor Shepley, Mr.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>Durant and others had given him to understand that they
-were charged exclusively with the work of reconstruction in
-Louisiana and hence he had not felt authorized to interfere.
-Other officers had set up claims to jurisdiction conflicting
-and interfering with his own powers of military administration.
-Annoyed that a misunderstanding was delaying work
-which he had been urging for a year, the President, on the
-24th of December, wrote General Banks as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I have all the while intended you to be master, as well in regard to
-reorganizing a State government for Louisiana, as in regard to the military
-matters of the department; and hence my letters on reconstruction
-have nearly, if not quite, all been addressed to you. My error has
-been that it did not occur to me that Governor Shepley or any one else
-would set up a claim to act independently of you; and hence I said nothing
-expressly upon the point.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Language has not been guarded at a point where no danger was
-thought of. I now tell you that in every dispute with whomsoever, you
-are master.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Governor Shepley was appointed to assist the commander of the department,
-and not to thwart him or act independently of him. Instructions
-have been given directly to him, merely to spare you detail labor,
-and not to supersede your authority. This, in its liability to be misconstrued,
-it now seems was an error in us. But it is past. I now distinctly
-tell you that you are master of all, and that I wish you to take the case
-as you find it, and give us a free State reorganization of Louisiana in the
-shortest possible time. What I say here is to have a reasonable construction.
-I do not mean that you are to withdraw from Texas, or
-abandon any other military measure which you may deem important.
-Nor do I mean that you are to throw away available work already done
-for reconstruction; nor that war is to be made upon Governor Shepley, or
-upon any one else, unless it be found that they will not coöperate with
-you, in which case, and in all cases, you are master while you remain in
-command of the department.<a id='r92' /><a href='#f92' class='c010'><sup>[92]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This letter making General Banks “master” of the situation
-in Louisiana the President concluded by thanking him
-for his successful and valuable operations in Texas. But
-before receiving this extensive authority and the undoubted
-assurance of Mr. Lincoln’s confidence the commander, on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>December 30, submitted to the President a plan of reconstruction
-based upon the Proclamation and the Message of the
-8th of that month. For evident reasons this communication
-deserves to be reproduced almost entire:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I would suggest [says General Banks], as the only speedy and certain
-method of accomplishing your object, that an election be ordered, of a
-State government, under the constitution and laws of Louisiana, except
-so much thereof as recognizes and relates to slavery, which should be
-declared by the authority calling the election, and in the order authorizing
-it, inoperative and void. The registration of voters to be made in
-conformity with your Proclamation, and all measures hitherto taken with
-reference to State organization, not inconsistent with the Proclamation,
-may be made available. A convention of the people for the revision of
-the constitution may be ordered as soon as the government is organized,
-and the election of members might take place on the same or a subsequent
-day with the general election. The people of Louisiana will accept
-such a proposition with favor. They will prefer it to any arrangement
-which leaves the subject to them for an affirmative or negative
-vote. Strange as this may appear, it is the fact. Of course a government
-organized upon the basis of immediate and universal freedom, with the
-general consent of the people, followed by the adaptation of commercial
-and industrial interests to this order of things, and supported by the army
-and navy, the influence of the civil officers of the Government, and the
-Administration at Washington, could not fail by any possible chance to
-obtain an absolute and permanent recognition of the principle of freedom
-upon which it would be based. Any other result would be impossible.
-The same influence would secure with the same certainty the selection
-of proper men in the election of officers.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Let me assure you that this course will be far more acceptable to the
-citizens of Louisiana than the submission of the question of slavery to
-the chances of an election. Their self-respect, their <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">amour propre</span></i> will
-be appeased if they are not required to vote for or against it. Offer
-them a government without slavery and they will gladly accept it as a
-necessity resulting from the war. On all other points, sufficient guarantees
-of right results can be secured; but the great question, that of immediate
-emancipation, will be covered <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ab initio</span></i>, by a conceded and absolute
-prohibition of slavery.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Upon this plan a government can be established whenever you wish—in
-thirty or sixty days; a government that will be satisfactory to the
-South and the North; to the South, because it relieves them from any
-action in regard to an institution which cannot be restored, and which
-they cannot condemn; and to the North, because it places the interests
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>of liberty beyond all possible accident or chance of failure. The result
-is certain.<a id='r93' /><a href='#f93' class='c010'><sup>[93]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Upon receiving this communication the President, who
-cherished no plan of restoration to which exact conformity
-was indispensable, expressed, January 13, 1864, in a letter to
-General Banks his gratitude for the zeal and confidence manifested
-by him on the question of reinaugurating a free State
-government in Louisiana. He hoped, because of the authority
-contained in the letter of December 24, that the Department
-Commander had already commenced work. “Whether you
-shall have done so or not,” continues the letter, “please, on
-receiving this, proceed with all possible despatch, using your
-own absolute discretion in all matters which may not carry
-you away from the conditions stated in your letters to me,
-nor from those of the message and proclamation of December
-8. Frame orders, and fix times and places for this and
-that, according to your own judgment.”<a id='r94' /><a href='#f94' class='c010'><sup>[94]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This letter repeats the idea of subordination to General
-Banks of all officials in his department holding authority
-from the President, and stated that the bearer of the communication,
-Collector Dennison, of New Orleans, understood
-the views of the commander and was willing to assist in
-carrying them out. Before Mr. Dennison arrived in New
-Orleans, however, General Banks had already, in his proclamation
-of January 11, 1864, fixed a date for the election.
-This action was determined, said the Department Commander,
-upon ample assurance “that more than a tenth of the population
-desire the earliest possible restoration of Louisiana to the
-Union”; hence he invited “the loyal citizens of the State
-qualified to vote in public affairs ... to assemble in
-the election precincts designated by law, ... on the
-22d of February, 1864, to cast their votes for the election of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>State officers herein named, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">viz.</span></i> Governor, Lieutenant-Governor,
-Secretary of State, Treasurer, Attorney-General, Superintendent
-of Public Instruction and Auditor of Public Accounts—who
-shall, when elected, for the time being, and
-until others are appointed by competent authority, constitute
-the civil government of the State, under the constitution and
-laws of Louisiana, except so much of said constitution and
-laws as recognize, regulate or relate to slavery, which being
-inconsistent with the present condition of public affairs, and
-plainly inapplicable to any class of persons now existing
-within its limits, must be suspended, and they are therefore
-and hereby declared to be inoperative and void. This proceeding
-is not intended to ignore the right of property existing
-prior to the rebellion, nor to preclude the claim for compensation
-of loyal citizens for losses sustained by enlistment
-or other authorized acts of Government.”<a id='r95' /><a href='#f95' class='c010'><sup>[95]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The qualifications of voters in this election were to be determined
-by the oath of allegiance prescribed by the President’s
-proclamation together with the condition annexed
-to the elective franchise by the constitution of Louisiana.
-Officers elected were to be duly installed on the 4th of
-March.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So much of the registration effected under direction of
-Governor Shepley and the several Union Associations as
-was not inconsistent with the proclamation and other orders
-of the President was approved. The proclamation further
-announced that arrangements would be made for the early
-election of members of Congress for the State, and, that the
-organic law might be made to conform to the will of the people
-and harmonize with the spirit of the age, an election of delegates
-to a convention for the revision of the constitution would
-be held on the first Monday of April following.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This proclamation declared, among other things, that</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>The fundamental law of the State is martial law.... The Government
-is subject to the law of necessity, and must consult the condition
-of things, rather than the preferences of men, and if so be that its
-purposes are just and its measures wise, it has the right to demand that
-questions of personal interest and opinion shall be subordinate to the
-public good. When the national existence is at stake, and the liberties of
-the people in peril, faction is treason.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The methods herein proposed submit the whole question of government
-directly to the people—first, by the election of executive officers, faithful
-to the Union, to be followed by a loyal representation in both Houses of
-Congress; and then by a convention which will confirm the action of the
-people, and recognize the principles of freedom in the organic law. This
-is the wish of the President.<a id='r96' /><a href='#f96' class='c010'><sup>[96]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On February 13, nine days before the election, General
-Banks issued an order relative to the qualifications of electors.
-It provided, in addition to the declarations on that subject in
-his proclamation, that Union voters expelled from their homes
-by the public enemy might cast their ballots for State officers
-in the precincts where they temporarily resided and that qualified
-electors enlisted in the army or navy could vote in those
-precincts in which they might be found on election day. If
-without the State, then commissioners would be appointed
-to receive their ballots wherever stationed, returns to be
-made to General Shepley.<a id='r97' /><a href='#f97' class='c010'><sup>[97]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For governor three candidates were nominated—B. F.
-Flanders, a representative of the Free State Committee;
-Michael Hahn, the choice of those who approved the measures
-of General Banks, and J. Q. A. Fellows, a pro-slavery
-conservative who favored “the Constitution and the Union
-with the preservation of the rights of all inviolate.” The
-friends of Hahn would deny to persons of African descent
-the privileges of citizenship, whereas the supporters of
-Flanders generally would extend to them such rights and
-immunities.<a id='r98' /><a href='#f98' class='c010'><sup>[98]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>On Washington’s birthday, as announced in the proclamation
-of General Banks, an election was held in seventeen
-parishes, Hahn receiving 6,183, Fellows 2,996 and Flanders
-2,232 votes, a total of 11,411, of which 107 were cast by
-Louisiana soldiers stationed at Pensacola, Florida.<a id='r99' /><a href='#f99' class='c010'><sup>[99]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Writing February 25 to the President General Banks says:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The election of the 22d of February was conducted with great spirit
-and propriety. No complaint is heard from any quarter, so far as I
-know, of unfairness or undue influence on the part of the officers of the
-Government. At some of the strictly military posts the entire vote of
-the Louisiana men was for Mr. Flanders, at others for Mr. Hahn, according
-to the inclination of the voters. Every voter accepted the oath
-prescribed by your proclamation of the 8th of December.... The
-ordinary vote of the State has been less than forty thousand. The proportion
-given on the 22d of February is nearly equal to the territory
-covered by our arms.<a id='r100' /><a href='#f100' class='c010'><sup>[100]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The friends of the Free State General Committee in a protest
-pronounced the result of the election “the registration
-of a military edict,” and “worthy of no respect from the
-representatives and Executive of the nation.” To the question
-whether this election had in the meaning of the President
-reëstablished a State government they promptly answered
-in the negative, for the commanding general recognized
-the Louisiana constitution of 1852 and ordered an election
-under it in which the votes of the people had nothing to
-do with reëstablishing government; his proclamation, by
-recognizing the existence of the old constitution, made the
-reëstablishment beforehand for them. The Governor and
-Lieutenant-Governor, together with the other executive officers
-chosen, did not, they argued, constitute a State government;
-for all the constitutions of Louisiana, including that
-of 1852, described the government as consisting of three departments:
-executive, legislative and judicial.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>Though not avowed, the reason of Banks’ failure to order
-an election for members of the Legislature was plain, for
-there was not, they claimed, within the Union lines a sufficient
-number of parishes to elect a majority of that body, and
-less than a majority was, by the constitution, not a quorum
-to do business; so that no officer elected could be legally
-paid, for that could be done by only a legal appropriation. The
-same constitution, they said further, provided that Justices
-of the Supreme and District Courts, as well as justices of the
-peace, should be elected by the people. The present incumbents
-had been simply appointed by General Shepley. Should
-Mr. Hahn under pretence of being civil governor undertake
-to appoint judicial officers, the act would be a mere usurpation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not only, they declared, had no State government been
-established by this election, but still further, the proclamation
-of the President had not in the matter of electors been
-complied with; for Article XII. of the constitution of 1852
-says: “No soldier, seaman, or marine in the army or navy
-of the United States ... shall be entitled to vote at
-any election in this State.” Yet, continued the protestants,
-it was a notorious fact that the general commanding permitted
-soldiers recruited in Louisiana, and otherwise qualified,
-to vote, and that many availed themselves of the privilege.
-Again, they went on to say, the Legislature by act of March
-20, 1856, provided for the appointment in New Orleans of
-a register of voters whose office should be closed three days
-before an election, and no one registered during that period.
-Now prior to the late election, the register having closed his
-office according to law, orders were at once given to two
-other officers, recorders of the city, who had no such powers
-or functions by law, to register voters, which they did night
-and day, and persons so registered were allowed to vote.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Referring to the declared intention of General Banks to
-order an election of delegates to a constitutional convention,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>and by a subsequent order fix the basis of representation,
-the number of delegates and the details of the election,
-they said: “This will put the whole matter under military
-control, and the experience of the last election shows that
-only such a convention can be had as the overshadowing influence
-of the military authority will permit. Under an election
-thus ordered, and a constitution thus established, a republican
-form of government cannot be formed. It is simply
-a fraud to call it the reëstablishment of a State government.
-In these circumstances, the only course left to the truly loyal
-citizens of Louisiana is, to protest against the recognition
-of this pretended Government, and to appeal to the calm
-judgment of the nation to procure such action from Congress
-as will forbid military commanders to usurp the powers
-which belong to Congress alone, or to the loyal people of
-Louisiana.”<a id='r101' /><a href='#f101' class='c010'><sup>[101]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But neither the protest nor the criticism of Free State
-men availed to arrest the march of events, and in the presence
-of a vast multitude Michael Hahn, who had received a majority
-of all the votes cast, was inaugurated Governor amidst
-great enthusiasm on March 4. To the oath prescribed in
-the amnesty and reconstruction proclamation of December 8,
-1863, given above, was added the following:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And I do further solemnly swear, that I am qualified according to the
-constitution of the State to hold the office to which I have been elected,
-and that I will faithfully and impartially discharge and perform all the
-duties incumbent on me as Governor of the State of Louisiana, according
-to the best of my abilities and understanding, agreeably to the Constitution
-and Laws of the United States, and in support of and according
-to the constitution and laws of this State, so far as they are consistent
-with the necessary military occupation of the State by the troops of the
-United States for the suppression of the rebellion, and the full restoration
-of the authority of the United States.<a id='r102' /><a href='#f102' class='c010'><sup>[102]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>This language clearly indicates the legal theory upon which
-General Banks was proceeding, and citizens understood that
-Mr. Hahn represented a popular power entirely subordinate
-to the armed occupation of the State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On March 13, 1864, the President wrote the following
-private letter to Governor Hahn:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I congratulate you on having fixed your name in history as the first
-free-state governor of Louisiana. Now you are about to have a convention,
-which, among other things, will probably define the elective franchise.
-I barely suggest for your private consideration whether some of
-the colored people may not be let in—as, for instance, the very intelligent,
-and especially those who have fought gallantly in our ranks. They
-would probably help, in some trying time to come, to keep the jewel of
-liberty within the family of freedom. But this is only a suggestion, not
-to the public, but to you alone.<a id='r103' /><a href='#f103' class='c010'><sup>[103]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Speaking of this personal note Mr. Blaine says: “It was
-perhaps the earliest proposition from any authentic source
-to endow the negro with the right of suffrage, and was an
-indirect but most effective answer to those who subsequently
-attempted to use Mr. Lincoln’s name in support of policies
-which his intimate friends instinctively knew would be abhorrent
-to his unerring sense of justice.”<a id='r104' /><a href='#f104' class='c010'><sup>[104]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the suggestion of General Banks, the President two days
-later invested Mr. Hahn until further order “with the powers
-exercised hitherto by the military governor of Louisiana.”<a id='r105' /><a href='#f105' class='c010'><sup>[105]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the sentiments of the Free State party it requires
-little insight into human affairs to foretell that in some
-manner they would soon be found in opposition. Their candidate,
-Mr. B. F. Flanders, who received fewer votes than
-either of his competitors, was a prominent official in the
-Treasury Department, and from this vantage ground, without,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>so far as appears, rebuke from Secretary Chase, began to
-stir up in Congress a feeling of hostility to the new government
-in Louisiana. Precisely why Mr. Lincoln decided to
-take into his own hands the entire subject of reconstruction
-may be collected without difficulty from what has already
-been said; but that this determination was confirmed by his
-knowledge of an alliance between the Free State leaders and
-the “Radicals” in Congress there can be little doubt.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Department Commander in a general order gave notice
-on March 11 that an election would be held on the 28th
-of that month for the choice of delegates to a State convention
-to meet in New Orleans “for the revision and amendment of
-the constitution of Louisiana.”<a id='r106' /><a href='#f106' class='c010'><sup>[106]</sup></a> Five days later, March 16,
-Governor Hahn, in a proclamation to the sheriffs and other
-officers concerned, authorized the election and commanded
-them to give due notice thereof to the qualified voters of the
-State and to make prompt returns to the Secretary of State in
-New Orleans.<a id='r107' /><a href='#f107' class='c010'><sup>[107]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Pursuant to these notices the election was held on the 28th,
-and resulted in the choice of ninety-seven members, two of
-whom were rejected because of irregular returns. The entire
-State was entitled to 150 delegates. The parish of Orleans
-was represented by sixty-three members, leaving to the
-country parishes but thirty-two. Of the vote, which was exceedingly
-light, no return appears to have been published.
-Because of their recent defeat no nominations were made by
-the Radicals, and this fact, together with heavy rains on election
-day, was assigned by Governor Hahn in a letter to the
-President as an explanation of the meagre vote. The Parish
-of Ascension, which in 1860 had a population of 3,940 whites,
-elected her delegates by 61 votes; Placquemines, which by the
-same census had 2,529 white inhabitants, cast 246, while the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>single delegate from Madison was chosen by only twenty-eight
-electors.<a id='r108' /><a href='#f108' class='c010'><sup>[108]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>General Banks informed a committee of Congress that all
-that section of the State as far up as Point Coupée voted; some
-men from the Red River cast their ballots at Vidalia. In his
-statement he declared that “The city of New Orleans is really
-the State of Louisiana”; yet at that time it contained less
-than half the population of the State.<a id='r109' /><a href='#f109' class='c010'><sup>[109]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The constitutional convention, which assembled April 6,
-1864, was organized on the 7th with E. H. Durell as president,
-and after a session of more than two and a half months
-adjourned July 25. A proclamation of the Governor appointed
-the 5th of September as the time for taking a vote on
-the work of the convention. The result was 6,836 for the
-adoption, and 1,556 for the rejection of the constitution.
-Besides these there were a number of electors who did not
-vote on either side of the question.<a id='r110' /><a href='#f110' class='c010'><sup>[110]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of the work of the convention General Banks spoke as
-follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In a State which held 331,726 slaves, one half of its entire population
-in 1860, more than three fourths of whom had been specially excepted
-from the Proclamation of Emancipation, and were still held <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">de jure</span></i> in
-bondage, the convention declared by a majority of all the votes to which
-the State would have been entitled if every delegate had been present
-from every district in the State:—</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Instantaneous, universal, uncompensated, unconditional emancipation
-of slaves!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It prohibited forever the recognition of property in man!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It decreed the education of all the children, without distinction of race
-or color!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It directs all men, white or black, to be enrolled as soldiers for the
-public defence!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It makes all men equal before the law!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It compels, by its regenerating spirit, the ultimate recognition of all
-the rights which national authority can confer upon an oppressed race!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>It wisely recognizes for the first time in constitutional history, the interest
-of daily labor as an element of power entitled to the protection of
-the State.<a id='r111' /><a href='#f111' class='c010'><sup>[111]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the same election, that of September 5, the following
-persons were chosen Representatives in Congress: M. F.
-Bonzano, A. P. Field, W. D. Mann, T. M. Wells and R. W.
-Taliaferro. A Legislature was elected at the same time, the
-members of which were almost entirely in favor of a free
-State, and by this body seven electors of President and Vice-President
-were appointed. On October 10th two United
-States Senators were elected—R. King Cutler for the unexpired
-term ending March 4, 1867, and Charles Smith for the
-vacancy created by the resignation of Judah P. Benjamin, and
-ending March 4, 1865.<a id='r112' /><a href='#f112' class='c010'><sup>[112]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is matter of familiar history that the State government
-thus organized was never recognized by Congress. The question
-was presented to that body December 5, 1864, at the
-opening of the second session of the Thirty-eighth Congress,
-when the claimants above named appeared in Washington
-applying for admission to seats, and again in January and
-February, 1865, upon consideration of a joint resolution declaring
-certain States not entitled to representation in the
-Electoral College. As in the case of Tennessee, however, the
-vote offered by Louisiana was not counted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The agency of the President in setting up this civil government,
-and the successive steps in its accomplishment have been
-related with some degree of minuteness, so that the nature of
-the controversy between the Executive and the Legislative
-branches of the Government may be better understood.
-Whether Mr. Lincoln exceeded his constitutional authority
-will be considered when an account has been presented of the
-result of his efforts to restore civil government in the States
-where Federal authority had been overthrown.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>III<br /> <span class='large'>ARKANSAS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>The people of northern Arkansas were strongly attached
-to the Union, and until December 20, 1860,
-when a commissioner from Alabama addressed its
-Legislature, no secession movement took place within the State.
-Her geographical position classed her with the Western, her
-productions bound up her interests with the Southern, States.<a id='r113' /><a href='#f113' class='c010'><sup>[113]</sup></a>
-As late as January 5, 1861, resolutions opposing separate action
-were adopted almost unanimously by the largest meeting
-ever held at Van Buren. Mr. Lincoln’s election was not then
-deemed a sufficient cause to dissolve the Union. Citizens of
-every party favored all honorable efforts for its preservation,
-and demonstrations to the contrary were regarded as the work
-of only an extreme and inconsiderable faction.<a id='r114' /><a href='#f114' class='c010'><sup>[114]</sup></a> So rapid,
-however, was the succession of events that scarcely two weeks
-had elapsed when she exhibited signs of resting uneasily in
-the Union; for on January 16 a bill submitting to popular
-vote the question of holding a convention passed the Legislature.<a id='r115' /><a href='#f115' class='c010'><sup>[115]</sup></a>
-At the election of delegates to this assembly 23,626
-votes were cast for the Union, against 17,927 for the secession,
-candidates. Though this convention, which assembled March
-4, was organized by the choice of Union officers, the proposal
-to hold it had been carried by a majority of 11,586 in the election
-of February 18. While secession was strongly urged, a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>conditional ordinance was defeated by a vote of 39 to 35.<a id='r116' /><a href='#f116' class='c010'><sup>[116]</sup></a>
-At Van Buren and Fort Smith salutes of thirty-nine guns
-were fired in honor of the loyal members. The inaugural of
-President Lincoln, received two days after organizing, produced
-a somewhat unfavorable impression. On the 17th an
-ordinance, reported by a self-constituted committee of seven
-secessionists and seven coöperationists, was unanimously
-adopted.<a id='r117' /><a href='#f117' class='c010'><sup>[117]</sup></a> This provided for an election on the first Monday
-of August, when the qualified voters in the State could cast
-their ballots either for “secession” or “coöperation.” The
-result, though not wholly satisfactory to either party, afforded
-time for deliberation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Tidings of the fall of Sumter, together with the President’s
-proclamation and a requisition for troops from the Secretary
-of War, interrupted the brief interval of repose following the
-adjournment of the convention. In these circumstances the
-State was compelled to make a choice of sides. Governor
-Rector’s reply, April 22, to this requisition shows him to have
-been ardently in favor of disunion; the president of the convention,
-concurring in this sentiment, issued a call for that
-body to reassemble May 6, when an ordinance of secession
-was promptly passed with but one dissenting vote.<a id='r118' /><a href='#f118' class='c010'><sup>[118]</sup></a> By a
-resolution the convention authorized the Governor to call out,
-if necessary, 60,000 men, and ordered the issue of $2,000,000
-in bonds. Another ordinance confiscated debts due to persons
-in non-slaveholding States.<a id='r119' /><a href='#f119' class='c010'><sup>[119]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The first military movement, after the ordinance of secession
-had been carried, aimed to secure Federal property within
-the State, and their value to the South singled out for seizure
-the arsenals at Fort Smith and Little Rock. The latter city
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>on February 5 was thrown into a great turmoil of confusion
-and excitement by the unexpected arrival of a body of troops
-from Helena with the avowed purpose of taking the arsenal;
-more soldiers arrived during that and the succeeding day until
-about 400 had assembled. Though the Governor, in response
-to their inquiry, informed the city council that this force was
-not there by his order, the troops believed they were acting
-under his command; at any rate they came to take the arsenal
-and were not to be diverted from their object. To prevent a
-collision, which must have followed a refusal of the commanding
-officer to surrender to a body of men disavowed by their
-Governor, the latter was easily persuaded to assume the responsibility
-of the movement and he consented to demand its
-surrender in the name of the State. This demand Captain
-Totten asked until three o’clock the next day to consider; then
-he made known his readiness to evacuate the arsenal, which
-about noon of the following day was delivered to the State
-authorities.<a id='r120' /><a href='#f120' class='c010'><sup>[120]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The delegates of Arkansas on May 18 took their seats in
-the Confederate Congress.<a id='r121' /><a href='#f121' class='c010'><sup>[121]</sup></a> The convention, it will be observed,
-assumed at the outset the functions of a law-making
-body, and, because of further extending its authority by the
-appointment of a Military Board, soon came into conflict with
-both the Governor and the Legislature. When the convention
-empowered the former to call out, if necessary, 60,000
-men it divided the State into two districts, an eastern and a
-western. General Bradley was elected to the command of the
-former and General Pearce, late of the United States Army,
-to that of the latter division. Before General McCulloch,
-stationed in the Indian Territory, could assume any offensive
-operations the Federal General, Lyon, in pursuit of Jackson,
-approached the southern boundary of Missouri; upon this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>the Military Board called out ten regiments for defence. On
-June 21 it despatched to Richmond a messenger who proposed
-to transfer to the Confederate Government all the State
-troops with their arms making, however, a condition precedent:
-they were to be employed for the protection of Arkansas;
-but as the Secretary of State could make no promise as
-to their future disposition the transfer was not then effected.<a id='r122' /><a href='#f122' class='c010'><sup>[122]</sup></a>
-On July 4 a second effort was made by a member of the Military
-Board who visited General Hardee, with whom an arrangement
-was completed by which a vote should be taken
-among the troops. If a majority of each company consented,
-those so consenting were to be turned over as a company. If
-a majority declined, the company was to be disbanded altogether.
-One entire company was thus mustered out, and
-from various motives two or three hundred soldiers returned
-home. This was from the eastern division. The western
-was not so easily disposed of. The Military Board after the
-battle of Springfield directed General Pearce to turn over his
-force to Hardee, who became angry when the agent proposed
-to submit the question of transfer, and refused to allow it to
-be done; this insubordinate conduct he followed up by writing
-an abusive letter to the Board. Pearce then separated his
-troops from McCulloch’s command and marched them back
-to Arkansas, where they were informally disbanded and sent
-home. Fearing such a result, the Board had ordered General
-Pearce to do nothing further in the matter, but their despatches
-arrived too late.<a id='r123' /><a href='#f123' class='c010'><sup>[123]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Governor Rector’s account shows Arkansas troops, claimed
-to be 22,000 in number, to have been at that time in a state of
-complete demoralization.<a id='r124' /><a href='#f124' class='c010'><sup>[124]</sup></a> The Germans and the Irish, as
-well as their descendants, showing little inclination to enlist,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>the Governor ascribed their indifference to a want of opportunity
-for promotion in the service. If this was not the cause,
-then, he thought, authority should be given to draft a regiment
-of each race.<a id='r125' /><a href='#f125' class='c010'><sup>[125]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>More than a third of the voting population was in the field,
-and as late as October they had received no pay except Arkansas
-war bonds, the worthlessness of which occasioned
-much murmuring. This discontent was heightened somewhat
-by the poor equipment of the regiments, many soldiers
-being without blankets or shoes.<a id='r126' /><a href='#f126' class='c010'><sup>[126]</sup></a> There were other symptoms
-of unrest within the State. On the charge of attempted
-insurrection two negro men and a girl were hanged in Monroe
-County.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All this occasioned much uneasiness, but the chief cause of
-alarm was the Union sentiment known to exist in the State.
-In October twenty-seven persons were brought to Little Rock
-as members of a secret Union organization in Van Buren
-County and placed in jail to await a civil trial. Many others
-also were taken about this time, and it was estimated that the
-“Peace and Constitutional Society” numbered 1,700 members
-in Arkansas.<a id='r127' /><a href='#f127' class='c010'><sup>[127]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The activity of Federal armies in the West excited so much
-apprehension that Governor Rector on the 18th of February,
-by proclamation, called into immediate service every man in
-the State subject to military duty.<a id='r128' /><a href='#f128' class='c010'><sup>[128]</sup></a> A Confederate force
-under Price was driven into Arkansas by General Curtis on
-the same day, and within a week the commandant at Pocahontas
-issued an appeal to every man “to turn out promptly,
-shoulder his musket, and drive the vandals from the State.”
-The Richmond Government being unable to assist Arkansas,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>she was forced to rely upon her own resources and such aid
-as might be obtained from Missouri, the Indian Territory and
-Texas.<a id='r129' /><a href='#f129' class='c010'><sup>[129]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Disaster and a conviction of neglect led the Governor in
-May, in an address to the people, to express his indignation
-and threaten to secede from secession. He said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>If the arteries of the Confederate heart do not permeate beyond the
-east bank of the Mississippi, let southern Missourians, Arkansians,
-Texans and the great West know it and prepare for the future. Arkansas
-lost, abandoned, subjugated is not Arkansas as she entered the Confederate
-Government. Nor will she remain Arkansas, a Confederate
-State, desolated as a wilderness. Her children, fleeing from the wrath
-to come, will build them a new ark, and launch it on new waters, seeking
-a haven somewhere of equality, safety and rest.<a id='r130' /><a href='#f130' class='c010'><sup>[130]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After the battle of Pea Ridge General Curtis moved to
-White River, and on May 1 occupied Batesville, where he
-witnessed many demonstrations of attachment to the Union.
-Judges of courts, clergymen and other leading citizens came
-forward and voluntarily took the oath of allegiance to the
-United States. A threatened advance of the Union forces
-upon Little Rock created the greatest excitement there, and the
-Governor by proclamation ordered the militia to repair immediately
-to its defence; but not finding himself sufficiently supported
-he fled.<a id='r131' /><a href='#f131' class='c010'><sup>[131]</sup></a> The concentration at Corinth of all available
-Confederate strength was the cause of the weakness of Arkansas
-at this time. Ten regiments had also been withdrawn from
-the army of General Curtis to reënforce the Federal troops in
-Mississippi. This left him in no condition to march upon the
-State capital, and for the time it was saved. Twelve thousand
-poorly equipped men had assembled there in response to the
-appeal of Governor Rector.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After the occupation of Helena by Federal troops Mr. Lincoln
-appointed John S. Phelps, of Missouri, military governor.<a id='r132' /><a href='#f132' class='c010'><sup>[132]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>On August 19, 1862, he left St. Louis for Helena; but
-as the contemplated movement was not then made his office
-was of little importance. From the Union refugees at that
-point two regiments of Arkansas men were organized. The
-fall of Vicksburg in July, 1863, however, enabled the Union
-army to assume offensive operations, and the summer had not
-greatly advanced before a strong column was moving on
-Little Rock, the capture of which, September 10, 1863, was a
-fatal blow to Confederate authority throughout the State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Amidst all its distresses the northern section of Arkansas
-had maintained its loyalty. Recent reverses to Confederate
-arms encouraged desertion from their ranks, Union sympathizers
-became active, and movements begun by them were
-joined by numbers who now regarded the Confederate cause
-as lost. Many, however, fearing a restoration of that authority,
-hesitated to identify themselves with the more pronounced
-loyalists. A newspaper favorable to the General
-Government was established at the capital. Meetings were
-held, and resolutions pledging unconditional support of the
-Union cause adopted. Citizens, both white and black, were
-organized, and by December, 1863, eight regiments of Arkansas
-troops had enlisted in the Federal service.<a id='r133' /><a href='#f133' class='c010'><sup>[133]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A still more encouraging symptom was the return of eminent
-persons who now came forward to advocate the Union
-cause. Prominent among these was Brigadier-General E. W.
-Gantt, of the Confederate army, recently a prisoner of war
-and pardoned under the Amnesty Proclamation of the President.
-Toward the close of 1863 he thus describes the feeling
-of the people:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Union sentiment is manifesting itself on all sides and by every indication—in
-Union meetings—in desertions from the Confederate army—in
-taking the oath of allegiance unsolicited—in organizing for home
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>defence, and enlisting in the Federal army. Old flags that have been hid
-in the crevices of rocks, and been worshipped by our mountain people as
-holy relics, are flung to the breeze, and followed to the Union army with
-an enthusiasm that beggars all description. The little county of Perry,
-that votes only about 600, and which has been turned wrong side out in
-search of conscripts by Hindman and his fellow-murderers and oppressors,
-with their retinue of salaried gentlemen and negro boys, sent down
-a company of ninety-four men. Where they came from, and how they
-kept their old flag during these three years of terror, persecution and
-plunder, I can’t tell. But they were the proudest-looking set of men I
-ever saw, and full of fight.<a id='r134' /><a href='#f134' class='c010'><sup>[134]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The retreat of General Banks from the Red River country
-changed greatly the aspect of Federal affairs in Arkansas,
-for it allowed all the Confederate forces in the vicinity to
-concentrate against the small army of General Steele, compelling
-him to act on the defensive at Little Rock. The
-State coming once more to a considerable extent under Confederate
-control, loyalists became scarce and gradually lost
-energy and hope.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Local reverses, however, were not allowed to interrupt the
-comprehensive policy of the President, and early in 1864 preparations
-were made to reorganize the State government.
-This movement, like those in Tennessee and Louisiana, was
-based upon the Amnesty and Reconstruction Proclamation of
-December 8, 1863. Even before this step had been taken
-the President was already moulding the diverse elements into
-a power that would ultimately undermine Confederate influence
-in the State. In the preceding summer, July 31, 1863,
-he had written General S. A. Hurlbut:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I understand that Senator Sebastian, of Arkansas, thinks of offering to
-resume his place in the Senate. Of course the Senate, and not I, would
-decide whether to admit or reject him. Still I should feel great interest
-in the question. It may be so presented as to be one of the very greatest
-national importance; and it may be otherwise so presented as to be
-of no more than temporary personal consequence to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>The emancipation proclamation applies to Arkansas.... I think
-I shall not retract or repudiate it. Those who shall have tasted actual
-freedom I believe can never be slaves or quasi-slaves again. For the
-rest, I believe some plan substantially being gradual emancipation would
-be better for both white and black. The Missouri plan, recently adopted,
-I do not object to on account of the time for ending the institution; but
-I am sorry the beginning should have been postponed for seven years,
-leaving all that time to agitate for the repeal of the whole thing. It
-should begin at once, giving at least the new-born a vested interest in
-freedom which could not be taken away. If Senator Sebastian could
-come with something of this sort from Arkansas, I, at least, should take
-great interest in his case; and I believe a single individual will have
-scarcely done the world so great a service. See him, if you can, and read
-this to him; but charge him to not make it public for the present.<a id='r135' /><a href='#f135' class='c010'><sup>[135]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Union officers in the West were urged by Mr. Lincoln in
-October, 1862, to assist and encourage repentant rebel communities
-to elect both State officers and members of Congress.<a id='r136' /><a href='#f136' class='c010'><sup>[136]</sup></a>
-As this involved a recognition of existing governments
-it need scarcely be observed that the march of events
-forced the President later to occupy somewhat different
-ground; nor is it more necessary to add, that to his main purpose,
-to undermine secession and restore the Union, he adhered
-inflexibly. With this fundamental object all his acts
-harmonize.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the time of her secession, W. K. Sebastian represented
-Arkansas in the United States Senate and abandoned his seat;
-he was now ready to assist in restoring his State to her old
-status. Of these evidences of disintegration in Confederate
-interests within the State the President was very exactly informed,
-and it was because of his conviction that many persons
-hitherto supporting that cause were either wavering in
-their allegiance or had become hostile to secession that he
-wrote, January 5, 1864, to General Steele:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I wish to afford the people of Arkansas an opportunity of taking the
-oath prescribed in the proclamation of December 8, 1863, preparatory to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>reorganizing a State Government there. Accordingly I send you by General
-Kimball some blank books and other blanks, the manner of using
-which will, in the main, be suggested by an inspection of them; and General
-Kimball will add some verbal explanations.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Please make a trial of the matter immediately at such points as you may
-think likely to give success. I suppose Helena and Little Rock are two
-of them. Detail any officer you may see fit to take charge of the subject
-at each point; and which officer, it may be assumed, will have authority
-to administer the oath. These books, of course, are intended to be permanent
-records. Report to me on the subject.<a id='r137' /><a href='#f137' class='c010'><sup>[137]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A week had scarcely elapsed when Mr. Lincoln approved
-the suggestions of General Banks relative to reinaugurating a
-civil government for Louisiana, and, doubtless, he knew no
-reason why similar work might not be going on simultaneously
-in Arkansas; therefore he repeated to General Steele
-what in substance he had already communicated to the
-Federal commander of the Department of the Gulf. His instructions,
-dated January 20, 1864, and quoted below, are
-self-explanatory, and in no important particular differ from
-the Louisiana Plan:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sundry citizens of the State of Arkansas petition me that an election
-may be held in that State, at which to elect a governor thereof; ...
-that it be assumed at said election and thenceforward that the constitution
-and laws of the State, as before the rebellion, are in full force, except
-that the constitution is so modified as to declare that “there shall be
-neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except in the punishment for
-crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted; but the General
-Assembly may make such provision for the free people as shall recognize
-and declare their permanent freedom, provide for their education, and
-which may yet be consistent, as a temporary arrangement, with their
-present condition as a laboring, landless, and homeless class;” and also
-except that all now existing laws in relation to slaves are inoperative and
-void; that said election to be held on the twenty-eighth day of March next
-at all the usual voting places of the State, or all such as voters may attend
-for that purpose; that the voters attending at each place at 8 o’clock in the
-morning of said day, may choose judges and clerks of election for that
-place; that all persons qualified by said constitution and laws, and taking
-the oath prescribed in the President’s proclamation of December the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>8th, 1863, either before or at the election, and none others, may be voters,
-provided that persons having the qualifications aforesaid, and being in
-the volunteer military service of the United States, may vote once wherever
-they may be at voting places; that each set of judges and clerks may
-make return directly to you on or before the eleventh day of April next;
-that in all other respects said election may be conducted according to said
-modified constitution and laws; that on receipt of said returns, you count
-said votes, and that if the number shall reach or exceed five thousand four
-hundred and six, you canvass said votes and ascertain who shall thereby
-appear to have been elected governor; and that on the eighteenth day of
-April next, the person so appearing to have been elected, and appearing before
-you at Little Rock to have, by you, administered to him an oath to
-support the Constitution of the United States and said modified constitution
-of the State of Arkansas, and actually taking said oath, be, by you,
-declared qualified, and be enjoined to immediately enter upon the duties
-of the office of governor of said State; and that you thereupon declare
-the constitution of the State of Arkansas to have been modified and
-amended as aforesaid by the action of the people as aforesaid.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>You will please order an election immediately, and perform the other
-parts assigned you, with necessary incidentals, all according to the foregoing.<a id='r138' /><a href='#f138' class='c010'><sup>[138]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By discussion and organization the elements opposed to
-the Richmond Government aroused so much enthusiasm that
-Unionists anticipated the wishes of the President by meeting,
-January 8, 1864, in convention at Little Rock. This assembly,
-composed of forty-four delegates representing, as
-they claimed, twenty-two of the fifty-four counties in the
-State, was made up of members elected at various mass meetings
-by very meagre votes. This at least was an objection
-then urged by those who were adverse to the purposes of the
-convention. They further stated that many of the counties
-represented were without the Federal military lines. It was
-admitted that if these counties lay beyond Union lines neither
-were they occupied by Confederate forces, and that generally
-the delegates were gentlemen of character and patriotism.<a id='r139' /><a href='#f139' class='c010'><sup>[139]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>In a published address the convention stated frankly:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We found after remaining at Little Rock about a week, under a temporary
-organization, that delegates were present from twenty-two counties,
-elected by the people, and that six other counties had held elections,
-and that their representatives were looked for daily. We then organized
-the Convention permanently, and determined that while we could not
-properly claim to be the people of Arkansas in Convention assembled,
-with full and final authority to adopt a constitution, yet, being the representatives,
-by election, of a considerable portion of the State, and understanding,
-as we believed, the sentiment of nearly all our citizens who desire
-the immediate benefits of a government under the authority of the
-United States, we also determined to present a constitution and plan of
-organization, which, if adopted by them, becomes at once their act as
-effectually as if every county in the State had been represented in the Convention.<a id='r140' /><a href='#f140' class='c010'><sup>[140]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>An amended constitution was adopted by this convention
-on January 22. By it the act of secession was declared null
-and void; slavery was abolished immediately and unconditionally,
-and the Confederate debt wholly repudiated.<a id='r141' /><a href='#f141' class='c010'><sup>[141]</sup></a> These
-important changes in the fundamental law of the State indicate
-the sentiments of the delegates. Isaac Murphy was appointed
-Provisional Governor; C. C. Bliss, Lieutenant-Governor
-and R. T. J. White, Secretary of State. These officers
-were inaugurated on the same day that the convention adopted
-the constitution; this by its schedule was to be submitted to
-a popular vote at an election to be held March 14, when State
-officers and Representatives in Congress would also be
-chosen.<a id='r142' /><a href='#f142' class='c010'><sup>[142]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Ignorant that the movement to restore a civil government
-had proceeded so far, Mr. Lincoln had sent his instructions
-to General Steele. As these had been carefully considered
-it was feared the work of the convention would differ in some
-essential particular from the plan outlined for the Federal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>commander. To prevent such a consequence the President
-wrote General Steele again on January 27 as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I have addressed a letter to you and put it in the hands of Mr. Gantt
-and other Arkansas gentlemen, containing a program for an election in
-that State. This letter will be handed you by some of these gentlemen.
-Since writing it, I see that a Convention in Arkansas having the same general
-object, has taken some action, which I am afraid may clash somewhat
-with my program. I therefore can do no better than to ask you to see
-Mr. Gantt immediately on his return, and with him do what you and he
-may deem necessary to harmonize the two plans into one, and then put
-it through with all possible vigor. Be sure to retain the free-State Constitutional
-provision in some unquestionable form and you and he can fix
-the rest. The points I have made in the program have been well considered.
-Take hold with an honest heart and a strong hand. Do not let
-any questionable man control or influence you.<a id='r143' /><a href='#f143' class='c010'><sup>[143]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The President’s interest in the proceedings of the convention
-and his anxiety about the outcome of its deliberations
-appear in a letter to General Steele written three days
-after the above.<a id='r144' /><a href='#f144' class='c010'><sup>[144]</sup></a> So favorable were his impressions of the
-progress reported that he believed the best his subordinate
-could do “would be to help them on their own plan”; of
-this, however, General Steele, who was on the ground, was to
-be the judge. To Governor Murphy he telegraphed, February
-6, that his order concerning an election was made in ignorance
-of any action which the convention might take; also
-that his subsequent communication to General Steele directed
-that officer to assist, not to hinder, the delegates.<a id='r145' /><a href='#f145' class='c010'><sup>[145]</sup></a> General
-Thayer also was informed that the apparent conflict between
-the President and the convention was altogether accidental.<a id='r146' /><a href='#f146' class='c010'><sup>[146]</sup></a>
-On February 17, Mr. Lincoln explained the situation more
-fully to William M. Fishback:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When I fixed a plan for an election in Arkansas I did it in ignorance
-that your convention was doing the same work. Since I learned the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>latter fact I have been constantly trying to yield my plan to them. I have
-sent two letters to General Steele, and three or four despatches to you
-and others, saying that he, General Steele, must be master, but that it
-will probably be best for him to merely help the convention on its own
-plan. Some single mind must be master, else there will be no agreement
-in anything, and General Steele, commanding the military and being on
-the ground, is the best man to be that master. Even now citizens are
-telegraphing me to postpone the election to a later day than either that
-fixed by the convention or by me. This discord must be silenced.<a id='r147' /><a href='#f147' class='c010'><sup>[147]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The President evidently had learned something from his
-recent experience with his friends and subordinates in Louisiana.
-General Steele from his headquarters at Little Rock
-issued on February 29 the following address to the people of
-Arkansas:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The convention of your citizens, held at Little Rock during the last
-month [says this proclamation], has adopted a constitution and submitted
-it to you for your approval or rejection. That constitution is based upon
-the principles of freedom, and it is for you now to say, by your voluntary
-and unbiased action, whether it shall be your fundamental law.
-While it may have defects, in the main it is in accordance with the views
-of that portion of the people who have been resisting the fratricidal attempts
-which have been made during the last three years. The convention
-has fixed the 14th day of March next on which to decide this great
-question, and the General commanding is only following the instructions
-of the Government when he says to you that every facility will be
-offered for the expression of your sentiments, uninfluenced by any considerations
-save those which affect your own interests and those of your
-posterity.... The election will be held and the return be made in
-accordance with the schedule adopted by the convention, and no interference
-from any quarter will be allowed to prevent the free expression
-of the loyal men of the State on that day.<a id='r148' /><a href='#f148' class='c010'><sup>[148]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The election pursuant to this notice began March 14, 1864,
-the polls remaining open for three days. For the constitution
-12,177, and against it 226, votes were cast.<a id='r149' /><a href='#f149' class='c010'><sup>[149]</sup></a> Isaac Murphy,
-against whom there was no opposing candidate, was
-chosen Governor by 12,430 votes cast by the citizens of more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>than forty counties. As early as March 18 the President
-appears to have received from the Governor-elect some favorable
-tidings,<a id='r150' /><a href='#f150' class='c010'><sup>[150]</sup></a> and on April 27, when more complete returns
-had reached him from the same source, he expressed in a
-telegram his gratification at the large vote, more than double
-that required by the Louisiana Plan, and also at the intelligence
-that the State government, including the Legislature,
-was organized and in working order.<a id='r151' /><a href='#f151' class='c010'><sup>[151]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Besides a Governor five other officers of the executive and
-several members of the judicial branch of government together
-with many county officials were chosen.<a id='r152' /><a href='#f152' class='c010'><sup>[152]</sup></a> At the
-same time three Representatives in Congress, T. M. Jacks, A.
-A. C. Rogers and J. M. Johnson, were elected from the First,
-Second and Third Districts respectively. The Legislature,
-composed of twenty-three Senators and fifty-nine members of
-Assembly, met on the 11th of April, and during the session,
-which ended June 1 succeeding, appointed William Fishback
-and Elisha Baxter United States Senators to fill vacancies
-caused by the secession of the late incumbents, R. W. Johnson
-and William K. Sebastian. After investigation by a committee
-of Congress, however, they were declared not entitled to
-seats; but as each possessed such a title to membership as to
-justify inquiry they were paid mileage. This consideration
-they were denied when, without new action, they subsequently
-presented themselves at a special session of the Senate; on that
-occasion they were accompanied by William D. Snow, who
-had been chosen to succeed Fishback. It was agreed, March 9,
-1865, to postpone till the next session of Congress consideration
-of the credentials of Mr. Snow. The House, without admitting
-as Representatives the three claimants for seats, had
-consented to allow them mileage. Arkansas, unlike Louisiana
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>and Tennessee, did not participate in the Presidential election
-of 1864, because of a feeling that its electoral vote would not
-be received even if offered. This course appears to have been
-adopted on the suggestion of their representatives, who returned
-with such a conviction from a sojourn in Washington.<a id='r153' /><a href='#f153' class='c010'><sup>[153]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A succeeding chapter, in tracing the origin and progress of
-the controversy between the Executive and Legislative
-branches of Government, will describe more fully the attitude
-of Congress toward Mr. Lincoln’s efforts at reconstruction
-and afford an opportunity for discussing both the nature of
-the conventions by which civil government had been restored
-in Tennessee, Louisiana and Arkansas, and the constitutionality
-of the various Executive acts by which this reëstablishment
-was assisted.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>IV<br /> <span class='large'>VIRGINIA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>The Federal Government, as already observed, was constrained
-at an early stage of the Civil War to define
-its attitude toward loyal citizens of the seceding
-States. The earliest indications of the policy adopted may be
-discerned in the case of Virginia, which presents the only instance
-of a people in any of the insurrectionary States organizing
-open resistance to revolution. All departments of government
-in that Commonwealth having gone over to rebellion,
-the loyal minority were left without any organization for
-the conduct of domestic affairs. In these circumstances they
-called a convention which by an original act of sovereignty reconstituted
-the government. The progress of the conflict was
-attended in that State by consequences not elsewhere observed,
-and it is chiefly because of this fact that a slight departure from
-exact chronological order is believed to be justified. The
-principles which guided the Administration will be easily
-comprehended by considering their application to the novel
-and somewhat embarrassing questions that arose before rebellion
-was finally crushed within the borders of that once
-glorious Commonwealth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Convention of Virginia” which, by authority of the
-Legislature, assembled at Richmond, February 13, 1861,
-passed on April 17 following an ordinance of secession from
-the United States.<a id='r154' /><a href='#f154' class='c010'><sup>[154]</sup></a> Though the injunction of secrecy was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>never removed from this proceeding, the tally, discovered
-soon after among the private papers of a member, shows that
-88 delegates favored and 55 opposed the measure; one was
-excused from voting, eight were either absent or silent.<a id='r155' /><a href='#f155' class='c010'><sup>[155]</sup></a>
-This strong opposition is explained in part by the physical
-characteristics of the State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The principal chain of the Alleghanies formed in the western
-portion of the Old Dominion a lofty range which parts
-the streams finding their way into the Ohio and the Potomac
-from those that reach the lower waters of Chesapeake Bay
-or the sounds of North Carolina. The country southeast of
-this ridge, including the Shenandoah Valley, the Piedmont
-district, the middle division and the tide-water region, contained
-about three fourths of the white inhabitants, and something
-less than three fourths of the area, of Virginia. In this
-section were found many large tobacco plantations cultivated
-almost exclusively by negroes. Indeed, it was in the light
-soil of the tide-water counties of Virginia that English
-settlers in America first attempted, nearly two and one half
-centuries before, the memorable experiment of African slave
-labor. Soon after 1808, when their importation was prohibited
-by act of Congress, slaves were bred in Virginia to
-supply the demand of Southern markets, and by 1860 the
-bondmen in that Commonwealth had become almost two
-thirds as numerous as the master race.<a id='r156' /><a href='#f156' class='c010'><sup>[156]</sup></a> It is sufficiently accurate
-to say that the triangular district bounded on the north
-by the winding course of the Potomac, by the parallel of 36°
-31′ on the south and stretching from the Atlantic to the crest
-of the Alleghany mountains, comprised all that part of “the
-good old commonwealth” which was then either historically
-important or interesting. This prolific soil was the birthplace
-of many of America’s most illustrious sons; its inhabitants for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>the most part were proud to trace their descent from the
-earliest settlers along the James; many were wealthy, and all
-had long been distinguished for their hospitality.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Beyond this favored region the country, which slopes
-gradually down to the upper Potomac and the Ohio, is
-marked by a succession of parallel ranges separated by fertile
-valleys; but like the large tract which encircled the Adirondacks
-and a similar one in northern Pennsylvania, the Virginian
-wilderness remained untouched by the ceaseless tide of
-immigration which at the close of the Revolution swept westward
-from the Atlantic seaboard. For this uninviting region
-the second Federal census indicates less than two inhabitants
-to the square mile; by 1810 pioneers from the line of the Ohio
-river encroached on its silent forests. At the next census,
-however, a portion was still unoccupied, but in the succeeding
-decennial period it received from various points, chiefly from
-Pennsylvania, Ohio and New England, many enterprising
-and thrifty settlers. The sixth census, that of 1840, represents
-the entire tract as sparsely inhabited.<a id='r157' /><a href='#f157' class='c010'><sup>[157]</sup></a> Its abundant resources,
-then but little developed, subsequently gave rise to a great
-variety of profitable industries, and it advanced rapidly in
-population. Extensive plantations, however, were few; the
-number of slaves, owing somewhat to the facility for escape,
-had always been small, and in the ten years preceding the outbreak
-of hostilities had actually diminished by upwards of two
-thousand.<a id='r158' /><a href='#f158' class='c010'><sup>[158]</sup></a> Though it then contained nearly one fourth of the
-whites, it included no more than one thirtieth of the negroes
-in the State. Their labor, too, except in other than agricultural
-occupations, afforded little remuneration. In consequence
-of its productions as well as its location both the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>interests and sympathies of the people were with the adjoining
-States of Ohio and Pennsylvania.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But, apart from geographical considerations, northwestern
-Virginia had a grievance of long standing: for years its inhabitants
-had complained that they were not fairly represented
-in the Legislature, and the immunity from taxation
-enjoyed by their fellow-citizens east of the mountains was a
-discrimination too gross to escape attention. The slave
-oligarchy, they declared, possessed and wielded for its own
-advantage the political power of the State. The question of
-its dismemberment had been discussed as early as 1829–30,
-when the mountain sons of Virginia were on the verge of
-revolution. The East then yielded a pittance of power, which,
-though far short of the demands of justice, reconciled western
-Virginians for the time. In 1850 they were again on the
-point of insurrection. On this occasion adequate representation
-was conceded in the lower though withheld in the upper
-chamber of the General Assembly, the dominant party thus
-retaining control of that body as well as the benefits of a constitutional
-provision by which slaves under the age of twelve
-years were exempt from taxation, and of those liable to assessment
-none could be valued at more than three hundred dollars
-even if worth in the market a thousand dollars or upwards.<a id='r159' /><a href='#f159' class='c010'><sup>[159]</sup></a>
-Moreover, much of the public revenue was expended upon internal
-improvements for the eastern section of the State. The
-Shenandoah Valley, at one time showing signs of discontent,
-was bound by the construction of railways, in social as well as
-in commercial life, more firmly to Richmond. In short, the
-Alleghanies formed a barrier almost completely cutting off
-intercourse between the two divisions. Their relations were
-well expressed by Governor Pierpont, who told Senator Wade
-that there was no communication whatever between the
-people except the furnishing a few members to the Legislature
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>and a few inmates of the penitentiary.<a id='r160' /><a href='#f160' class='c010'><sup>[160]</sup></a> Their different interests
-tended to alienate the sections; the hand of nature had
-traced the line of separation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Now, however, that a crisis was impending, the Richmond
-authorities, to harmonize every element within their Commonwealth,
-were willing to forego this privilege; to share the
-burdens of State administration, to meet State liabilities, and
-generally to place themselves on a footing of equality with
-their fellow-citizens along the Ohio. This concession, by a
-majority of 50,000, was actually extorted in an election from
-the prudence or the fears of disunionists whose magnanimity
-was duly emphasized by Governor Letcher in an appeal to
-the people of the northwest.<a id='r161' /><a href='#f161' class='c010'><sup>[161]</sup></a> The latter refused, notwithstanding,
-to acquiesce in the action of the secession convention
-which, so far as it was able to do so, carried their State, as a
-political organization, out of the Union.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It may be affirmed generally that the professional politicians
-and large property owners of this region were disloyal;<a id='r162' /><a href='#f162' class='c010'><sup>[162]</sup></a>
-State officials with surprising unanimity were ardent advocates
-of secession and active in committing their Commonwealth
-to its support. An overwhelming proportion of the
-plain people, however, were devotedly attached to the Union
-and determined on its preservation. Therefore when the
-Richmond State government attempted to execute its laws in
-these parts it encountered the most spirited resistance.
-Especially was this true in the Pan Handle counties, where
-opposition was promptly organized.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Probably the first consultation upon the grave questions
-that had arisen was held at the Court House in Wellsburgh,
-Brooke County, where a large number of citizens from that
-and the adjacent county of Hancock assembled to hear the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>report of Mr. Campbell Tarr, their delegate to Richmond.
-From Harrison came Hon. John S. Carlile, who, like Mr.
-Tarr, narrowly escaped with his life from that city, where
-he had represented his county in the convention. They reported
-the proceedings of that body and urged immediate
-preparation to resist. As a result of this discussion a committee
-of four was appointed to procure arms and ammunition
-in Washington. <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">En route</span></i> thither they had an interview
-at Harrisburg with Governor Curtin, who not only expressed
-sympathy with their object, but promised assistance if necessary.
-On arriving at the national capital they called upon Hon.
-Edwin M. Stanton, who was a native of Steubenville, Ohio,
-and a warm personal friend of each member of the committee.
-They were immediately presented to Mr. Cameron, Secretary
-of War, who, on learning the purpose of their visit, manifested
-some hesitation as to his legal right to comply with their
-request. Upon this Mr. Stanton declared with emphasis that
-“the law of <em>necessity</em> gives the right,” and added, “let them
-have arms and ammunition; we will look for the book law
-afterwards.”<a id='r163' /><a href='#f163' class='c010'><sup>[163]</sup></a> Two thousand rifles with suitable ammunition
-were then furnished, and as security for their proper
-use Mr. Stanton tendered his own name. From Wellsburgh,
-where they were temporarily kept in expectation of a rebel
-attack, these arms were sent for distribution to Wheeling.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>United States troops from Ohio and Indiana together with
-local volunteers soon drove the Confederate forces from this
-region, and subsequently, though often menaced, it was almost
-exempt from the ravages of war.<a id='r164' /><a href='#f164' class='c010'><sup>[164]</sup></a> Thus encouraged,
-Union men resolved to form a political organization coextensive
-with Virginia or to establish a separate and distinct State.
-Preliminary movements toward that end were promptly inaugurated,
-and, April 22, 1861, five days after the passage of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>the ordinance, nearly 1,200 citizens of Clarksburgh denounced
-in a public meeting the action of the secession convention
-and recommended the people of northwestern Virginia
-to assemble on May 13 at Wheeling. On the 4th a
-Union mass meeting had been held at Kingwood, near the
-northern border. The separation of western from eastern
-Virginia was declared by this body to be essential to the maintenance
-of their liberties. They also resolved to elect a Representative
-to Congress. On the following day there convened
-at Wheeling another assemblage, which considered the question
-of separating from that portion of the State in rebellion.
-About the same time other gatherings were held in different
-localities.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There were thousands of eager and earnest patriots in the
-city of Wheeling on May 13, when nearly four hundred delegates,
-mostly appointed by primary meetings, and representing
-twenty-six counties, assembled to deliberate on the situation.
-The best method of organizing opposition to treason
-was the question: how to inaugurate a government which
-the Federal authorities would recognize and protect?<a id='r165' /><a href='#f165' class='c010'><sup>[165]</sup></a> On
-this important subject there is said to have been considerable
-diversity of opinion; the decision finally reached was based
-upon a suggestion by one of the members that since Governor
-Letcher and other State officers, by adhering to the pretended
-ordinance of secession, had forfeited their powers, and the
-existing constitution made no provision for such an emergency,
-the only way was to ask the people, the source of all
-political power, to send delegates to a convention authorized
-to supply their places with loyal men. This proposal was
-presented to the meeting and adopted with great unanimity.<a id='r166' /><a href='#f166' class='c010'><sup>[166]</sup></a>
-A General State Committee, empowered to appoint sub-committees
-in all counties where practicable, was then named,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>and a stirring address put forth. It announced their purpose
-and urged all loyal citizens to elect representatives to a second
-convention. Copies of this appeal were sent to influential citizens
-throughout the State, and it was agreed after a session of
-three days to choose on May 26 delegates to the proposed
-convention.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This election having been held at the time appointed, representatives
-from nearly forty counties assembled at Wheeling
-on June 11. The convention, numbering 98 members,
-organized by selecting for its president Hon Arthur I. Boreman.
-Before proceeding to business the following oath was
-administered to the delegation from each county: “We
-solemnly declare that we will support the Constitution of the
-United States and the laws made in pursuance thereof, as the
-supreme law of the land, anything in the Ordinance of the
-Convention that assembled in Richmond on the 13th day of
-February last to the contrary notwithstanding, so help us
-God.”<a id='r167' /><a href='#f167' class='c010'><sup>[167]</sup></a> The State government was reconstituted on the 13th
-by an ordinance declaring vacant all places, whether legislative,
-executive or judicial, whose incumbents had espoused the
-cause of secession. This class, as already observed, included
-nearly every official in Virginia. These vacancies the convention
-supplied by the appointment of loyal men. In the constitution
-they made an important alteration which prescribed
-the number of delegates necessary to constitute a quorum in
-the General Assembly. All State, county and town officials
-were required to take an oath of allegiance which pledged
-support of both the Federal Constitution and the restored
-government of Virginia. On June 17 a declaration of independence
-was adopted without one dissenting voice; it denounced
-the usurpation of the Richmond convention, which
-had assumed to place the resources of Virginia at the disposal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>of the Confederate Government, to which power it repudiated
-allegiance. Resolutions expressing a determination never to
-submit to the ordinance of secession, but to maintain the rights
-of Virginia in the Union, were then passed. All persons in
-arms against the national Government were commanded to
-disband and to return to their allegiance. Though the members
-seriously endeavored to reorganize their government, it
-was with an express declaration that a division of the Commonwealth
-was a paramount object of their labors, and they
-decided, June 20, by a unanimous vote in favor of ultimate
-separation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Under an ordinance previously adopted Hon. Francis H.
-Pierpont was chosen Governor on the same day; a lieutenant-governor,
-an attorney-general and an executive council of five
-were also appointed. Other administrative offices were subsequently
-filled. The new incumbents were to exercise their
-functions for six months or until successors should be elected
-and qualified. The convention on June 25, subject in an emergency
-to be reassembled by the Governor and Council, then
-adjourned to August 6, 1861.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Before concluding this session the convention directed all
-members willing to swear fealty to the Union, who were
-elected to the assembly on May 23 preceding, to meet on the
-1st of July at Wheeling. At the time of their election these
-representatives were destined for Richmond. In addition to
-those regularly chosen under the old law of the Commonwealth,
-others pursuant to an ordinance of the convention
-were elected to fill vacancies. All were to qualify themselves
-by taking an oath or affirmation of allegiance to the
-United States and to the reorganized government of Virginia.
-These members, chiefly from the western counties, were to
-compose the law-making body, which was invested with all
-the powers and duties pertaining to the General Assembly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The new Governor was inaugurated on June 20, and, after
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>taking the oath of office, said: “We have been driven into
-the position we occupy to-day by the usurpers at the South,
-who have inaugurated this war upon the soil of Virginia, and
-have made it the great Crimea of this contest. We, representing
-the loyal citizens of Virginia, have been bound to assume
-the position we have assumed to-day for the protection of
-ourselves, our wives, our children, and our property. We,
-I repeat, have been driven to assume this position; and now
-we are but recurring to the great fundamental principle of
-our fathers, that to the loyal people of a State belongs the
-law-making power of that State. The loyal people are entitled
-to the government and governmental authority of the
-State. And, fellow-citizens, it is the assumption of that authority
-upon which we are now about to enter.”<a id='r168' /><a href='#f168' class='c010'><sup>[168]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It was not the object of the Wheeling convention,” he declared
-on a later occasion, “to set up any new government in
-the State, or separate, or other government than the one
-under which they had always lived.”<a id='r169' /><a href='#f169' class='c010'><sup>[169]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From these utterances his hearers must have concluded that
-the reorganized government was not for a part but for the
-whole of Virginia. Indeed, it was to the discernment of Mr.
-Pierpont that Virginia loyalists were chiefly indebted for a
-legal solution of the intricate problem that confronted them.
-While Carlile and others were urging a counter-revolution,
-Mr. Pierpont was carefully studying the provisions of the
-Federal Constitution. The clause of that instrument which
-guarantees a republican form of government was designed,
-he believed, to meet just such an emergency as had arisen.
-Though this conservative suggestion was not at first received
-with much favor, it continued gradually to win adherents until
-its propriety was universally recognized.<a id='r170' /><a href='#f170' class='c010'><sup>[170]</sup></a> By thus proceeding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>along constitutional lines a State government in all its
-branches was soon established in every county not occupied
-by an armed foe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Legislature of the restored State assembled, July 2, at
-Wheeling and assumed the full exercise of its powers. Two
-United States Senators, Waitman T. Willey, whose fidelity
-many considered doubtful, and John S. Carlile, an able, eloquent
-and then a trusted leader, were elected, July 9; the
-former to fill the vacancy occasioned by the withdrawal of
-James M. Mason, the latter to succeed Robert M. T. Hunter,
-who also had abdicated his seat in Congress. Both were
-admitted, though not without a vigorous protest from the
-minority, to seats at the first session of the Thirty-seventh
-Congress, which met on July 4, 1861.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Their certificates were presented, July 13, by Andrew Johnson.
-Senator Bayard entered a protest. Their admission, he
-said, would be a recognition of an organization that was not
-the regular government of the Commonwealth. Mr. Letcher
-was still Governor of Virginia, his term not having expired.
-The Senate had no authority to create a new State out of a
-part of an existing one. He then moved to refer their credentials
-to the Committee on the Judiciary. His colleague,
-Mr. Saulsbury, objected, that Mason and Hunter were not
-expelled until July 11, whereas the claimants were appointed
-two days previously, at a time when no vacancies had occurred.
-To this Senator Johnson replied that the vacancies did in
-fact exist at the time of their election, July 9, and that the
-expulsion of Mason and Hunter was not merely a declaration
-that vacancies existed, but their seats were regarded as filled,
-and the occupants expelled from the floor of the Senate.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Bayard denied that, even if Mason and Hunter were
-guilty of the alleged crimes, there was any power in either
-the Governor or Legislature to terminate their appointments;
-they might die, they could be removed by expulsion, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>vacancies could not be anticipated by the Legislature of Virginia.
-The name of Mr. Pierpont could convey no authority
-to their credentials. On the question of reference five Senators
-voted in the affirmative, thirty-five in the negative. The oath
-was therefore administered and they took their seats, July 13,
-at the special session which began on the 4th.<a id='r171' /><a href='#f171' class='c010'><sup>[171]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A resolution was passed by the House of Delegates of the
-reorganized government instructing the Senators and requesting
-their Representatives in Congress to vote the necessary appropriation
-of men and money for a vigorous prosecution of
-the war, and to oppose all compromise. A stay law was also
-enacted by the Legislature, and a bill passed which authorized
-the Governor to organize a patrol in such counties as might
-require it; two hundred thousand dollars were appropriated
-for military purposes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On August 6, 1861, the Wheeling convention reassembled.
-Hitherto in all its proceedings relative to a reorganization
-there had been great unanimity, but when the delegates returned
-they were conscious of a strong popular sentiment in
-favor of erecting a new State, a subject that had been introduced,
-though not much discussed, before adjournment. This
-determination among their constituents seriously troubled
-many of the members. Political aspirations had been awakened;
-many of them had enjoyed the benefits of the humbler
-offices under the mother State; the Union forces, it was confidently
-expected, would soon crush the insurrection in Virginia,
-and the reorganized government, with themselves at its head,
-would be acquiesced in by their recent oppressors. To their
-ambition this hope was far more flattering than the prospect
-of administering the affairs of a comparatively small State
-on the western frontier of the Old Dominion. Then, too, the
-idea of dismemberment was certain to wound Virginia State
-pride. Moreover, the movement to form an independent commonwealth,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>when the reorganized government itself had been
-scarcely recognized, would look premature. Sentiments of this
-nature had begun to possess the minds of many delegates
-about the time of their return.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In compliance with what appeared to be a popular demand,
-however, these considerations were disregarded, and the convention
-by a vote of 50 to 28 passed an ordinance authorizing
-the formation out of the Commonwealth of Virginia of a new
-State to be called Kanawha, which was to embrace thirty-nine
-counties between the Alleghanies and the Ohio, provided
-the people thereof, at an election to be held on October 24,
-should express themselves in favor of such a measure; on certain
-prescribed conditions other contiguous counties could be
-annexed. At the election which was to decide this important
-question delegates to a constitutional convention were also to
-be chosen, and, if separation was approved by the people, these
-representatives were to assemble at Wheeling on November
-26 and organize themselves into a convention. Any constitution
-which they might adopt was to be submitted to the
-qualified electors of the counties concerned. The new commonwealth
-was to assume a just proportion of Virginia’s
-public debt as it existed prior to January 1, 1861; private
-rights derived from her laws were to be valid under the proposed
-State, and were to be determined by the laws then existing
-in Virginia.<a id='r172' /><a href='#f172' class='c010'><sup>[172]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The convention, as previously noted, reassembled on
-August 6. Three days later one A. F. Ritchie, a member
-from Marion County, forwarded to Attorney-General Bates at
-Washington a letter which requested and received an immediate
-reply. Mr. Ritchie published the response, of which this
-is the important part:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The formation of a new State out of Western Virginia is an original,
-independent act of <em>revolution</em>. I do not deny the power of revolution (I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>do not call it right, for it is never prescribed; it exists in force only, and
-has and can have no law but the will of the revolutionists). Any attempt
-to carry it out involves a plain breach of <em>both the constitutions</em>—of Virginia
-and of the Nation. And hence it is plain that you cannot take such a
-course without weakening, if not destroying, your claims upon the sympathy
-and support of the General Government, and without disconcerting
-the plan already adopted by both Virginia and the General Government
-for the reorganization of the revolted States and the restoration of the
-integrity of the Union.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That plan I understand to be this: When a State, by its perverted
-functionaries, has declared itself out of the Union, we avail ourselves of
-all the sound and loyal elements of the State—all who own allegiance to
-and claim protection of the Constitution—to form a State government as
-nearly as may be upon the former model, and claiming to be the very State
-which has been in part overthrown by the successful rebellion. In this
-way we establish a constitutional nucleus around which all the shattered
-elements of the commonwealth may meet and combine, and thus restore
-the old State in its original integrity.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This, I verily thought, was the plan adopted at Wheeling, and recognized
-and acted upon by the General Government here. Your convention
-annulled the revolutionary proceedings at Richmond, both in the
-Convention and the General Assembly, and your new Governor formally
-demanded of the President the fulfillment of the constitutional guaranty
-in favor of Virginia—Virginia as known to our fathers and to us. The
-President admitted the obligation, and promised his best efforts to fulfill
-it. And the Senate admitted your Senators, not as representing a new
-and nameless State, now for the first time heard of in our history, but as
-representing “the good old commonwealth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Must all this be undone, and a new and hazardous experiment be ventured
-upon, at the moment when dangers and difficulties are thickening
-around us? I hope not.... I had rejoiced in the movement in
-Western Virginia, as a legal, constitutional, and safe refuge from revolution
-and anarchy; as at once an example and fit instrument for the restoration
-of all the revolted States.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I have not time now to discuss the subject in its various bearings.
-What I have written is written with a running pen and will need your
-charitable criticism.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>If I had time to think, I could give persuasive reasons for declining the
-attempt to create a new State at this perilous time. At another time I
-might be willing to go fully into the question, but now I can say no
-more.<a id='r173' /><a href='#f173' class='c010'><sup>[173]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>Mr. Ritchie, who had opposed a dismemberment of the old
-Commonwealth, was anxious, no doubt, to justify his vote by
-the endorsement of an eminent public character, and it is not
-improbable that before finally determining his action in so important
-a matter he was desirous of the opinion of some member
-of the Administration. Mr. Bates’s communication is
-dated the 12th; the convention did not adjourn till the 25th of
-August. At any time prior to January 1, 1862, it was subject
-to be reassembled by its president or by the Governor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The election of October 24, by a vote of 18,408 to 781, decided
-in favor of a division of the Commonwealth.<a id='r174' /><a href='#f174' class='c010'><sup>[174]</sup></a> At the
-same time fifty-three delegates, representing forty-one counties,
-were chosen to frame a constitution for the proposed
-State. Of this convention John Hall was elected president
-and Ellery R. Hall secretary. The task before it, by no means
-an easy one, was to draft a fundamental law that would secure
-the approval of the people of western Virginia, of the
-Legislature of the restored State and of Congress. After a
-session of nearly three months it adjourned, February 18,
-1862. Commissioners to convoke this body, should its work
-be recognized by Congress, had first been appointed. On December
-3 preceding the name of the new State was changed
-to West Virginia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the convention were many members who desired silence
-on the subject of slavery; others saw clearly that to ignore
-the cause of their present troubles would ensure a rejection
-of their work by Congress. This element felt assured that
-the temper of the national Legislature would not indulge
-the slave power by giving it two additional Senators besides
-an increase of strength in the Electoral College. There
-was also a sentiment which desired a postponement of the
-disturbing question until all others had first been determined.
-The friends of gradual emancipation were warned by leading
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>Republicans in Congress that the constitution would not be
-recognized without a satisfactory provision on this subject.
-The “peculiar institution,” however, still possessed influence
-enough to defeat such a purpose, and the convention adjourned
-without inserting any expression concerning slavery.
-Still, the friends of emancipation did not despair. Mr.
-Parker, one of these, caused to be printed in Ohio instructions
-to their assemblymen to make the following provision a part
-of their constitution if the speedy admission of the new State
-into the Union should appear to require it: “All children
-born of slave mothers in this State, after the constitution
-goes into operation, shall be free, males at the age of twenty-eight
-years, and females at the age of eighteen years, and the
-children of such females to be free at birth.”<a id='r175' /><a href='#f175' class='c010'><sup>[175]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This unauthorized action of Mr. Parker, in connection with
-appeals through the newspapers, was not without effect. At
-their county-seat the citizens of Upshur passed, among other
-resolutions, the following: “That we, the citizens of Upshur
-County, do endorse and accept the policy recommended by the
-present Chief Magistrate of the United States, (Abraham
-Lincoln) in his message of the 6th of March, 1862, to Congress,
-in regard to the emancipation of the slaves of the
-border States, as the policy that should be adopted by the
-people of West Virginia; and we do now pledge ourselves
-to advocate, defend and carry out the said policy, as the
-most promotive of our liberty, safety and prosperity in the
-Union.”<a id='r176' /><a href='#f176' class='c010'><sup>[176]</sup></a> Another resolution, adopted on this occasion, declared
-that the meeting expected the convention would have
-given the people an opportunity of expressing their sentiments
-on slavery in the proposed State. The convention, they complained,
-did not reflect the popular will.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Union men and the loyal press of other counties followed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>the example of Upshur by approving the measure or
-copying the “Instructions.” Thus at the time of voting on
-the constitution an informal poll on slavery was obtained in
-twenty counties.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A faction in the convention proposed to annex the Shenandoah
-Valley with its large negro population; the success of
-such a plan, it was well understood, would ensure a rejection
-of the new State by Congress. To anticipate somewhat the
-events presently to be narrated it may be remarked at this
-point that the adversaries of the measure in Washington employed
-precisely the same tactics to defeat the movement for
-erecting an independent State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The new establishment under Pierpont was regarded as representing
-the old Commonwealth. On December 2, 1861,
-the reorganized Legislature again assembled. The Governor
-recommended a repeal of the stay laws and confiscation of the
-property of secessionists. He congratulated the people that
-they had contributed their full quota, about 6,000 men, to the
-Union army.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The adversaries of slavery endeavored to obtain the consent
-of the restored Legislature to the condition that the
-gradual emancipation clause should become a part of the
-constitution as soon as ratified by the people. If Congress at
-its present session would give its consent and admit the new
-State on the same condition, the people, they declared, could
-be trusted to ratify afterward.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>An election held April 3, 1862, gave, including the soldiers’
-vote, 28,321 for and 572 against the constitution, no
-returns being received from ten counties.<a id='r177' /><a href='#f177' class='c010'><sup>[177]</sup></a> The vote for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>gradual emancipation, where an expression was had, was
-almost equal to that given for the constitution, both being
-nearly unanimous. The former received 6,052 for and 610
-against it. How far this informal expression of opinion
-influenced Congress will presently be noticed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At an extra session of the Legislature, convoked by Governor
-Pierpont, an act, in almost the identical language of that
-assenting to the formation of Kentucky, was passed, May 13,
-1862, giving consent to the erection within the jurisdiction of
-Virginia of a new State to include forty-eight named counties;
-the second section of this act provided that Berkeley,
-Jefferson and Frederic counties could be annexed whenever a
-majority of their votes, at an election to be held for that purpose,
-should ratify the constitution. The act, together with
-a certified original of the constitution, was to be transmitted
-to their Senators and Representatives in Washington, who
-were requested to use their endeavors to obtain the consent of
-Congress to the admission of West Virginia into the
-Union.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On June 23, 1862, Mr. Wade, from the Committee on
-Territories, reported to the United States Senate a bill for the
-admission of West Virginia into the Union, and three days
-later requested its consideration. It stipulated, among other
-things, that “the convention thereinafter provided for shall,
-in the constitution to be framed by it, make provision that
-from and after the fourth day of July, 1863, the children of
-all slaves born within the limits of the State shall be free”;
-it also allotted to the new Commonwealth as many Representatives
-in Congress as her population would justify under
-the apportionment then existing.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Charles Sumner observed that the former was the imposition
-of a condition which proposed to recognize the existence
-of slavery during that generation. “Short as life may be,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>he declared, “it is too long for slavery.” By the admission of
-West Virginia a new slave State would be added; he moved,
-therefore, to substitute for this requirement the Jeffersonian
-interdict that “within the limits of said State there shall be
-neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, otherwise than in
-punishment of crime whereof the party shall be duly convicted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Hale justly remarked that after consenting to the
-admission of so many States with pro-slavery constitutions
-it would be a singular fact if the first that ever applied
-with a provision for prospective emancipation should be
-rejected.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Collamer believed that if West Virginia was to
-enter on a footing of perfect equality with other members
-of the Union she should, like them, have the right to regulate
-domestic questions, including slavery, in her own way. The
-condition imposed by the bill denied her that right.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Wade disliked the proposition as it stood, because
-it was very objectionable to him “to say that a man born on
-the 4th day of July, 1863, shall be free, and one born the day
-before shall be forever a slave.” “I should much prefer,”
-he added, “to have it graduated so that all born after the
-adoption of this constitution shall be free, and that all between
-certain ages shall be free at a certain period.” At this point
-Sumner’s amendment was lost by a vote of 24 to 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Carlile, of Virginia, who was foremost in organizing
-resistance to secession, had from the beginning assumed the
-appearance of a friend, but, after giving direction to the movement
-for separation, acted as an adversary to the new State;
-he opposed all conditions on its admission and expressed a
-preference that it be permitted to enter on the constitution
-submitted by its people. He would never “consent to have
-the organic law of a State framed for its people by the Congress
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>of the United States.” There were 47,000 voters in
-the counties to be embraced within the proposed State; of
-that number only about 19,000 had voted on the constitution.
-At the last moment he delivered with his usual eloquence a
-strong argument against admission. An amendment which
-he submitted would have the effect certainly to postpone,
-perhaps altogether to defeat, the measure in the Senate. Failing
-to secure its adoption, he urged a postponement till December
-following; this motion, however, was voted down.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So surprised were his associates at this unexpected opposition
-that they inquired pointedly why these belated arguments
-had not been presented to the Committee on Territories
-when the measure was before them. Mr. Wade, its
-chairman, was especially severe in his condemnation of Carlile’s
-extraordinary course, for it was the reasoning of the
-Virginia Senator that had won their support; he had searched
-the precedents and submitted cheerfully to all the labors imposed
-by the Committee. Now by his opposition he brought
-everything to a stand-still.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His colleague, Mr. Willey, who had been converted in a
-rather advanced stage of the movement, declared that it was
-not the desire to be free from that part of the Commonwealth
-in rebellion that was responsible for the present attitude of
-western Virginia; the insurrection only precipitated the attempt
-to settle a controversy which was older than he. To
-enforce his remarks he added that great numbers of her citizens
-had determined to fix their abodes elsewhere unless
-West Virginia became an independent State. During this
-discussion the Senate had before it the constitution framed
-by the convention which met November 26, 1861, in the city
-of Wheeling.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After a vigorous address by Benjamin F. Wade, who had
-recently investigated the subject, and whose ardor had been
-aroused by a deputation of West Virginians then in Washington,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>the bill by a vote of 23 to 17 passed the Senate,
-July 14, 1862.<a id='r178' /><a href='#f178' class='c010'><sup>[178]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By Mr. Brown, of Virginia, a similar measure had already
-been introduced into the House on June 25. It was read
-twice and referred to the Committee on Territories.<a id='r179' /><a href='#f179' class='c010'><sup>[179]</sup></a> When
-called up on July 16 succeeding it was agreed to postpone
-consideration of the bill until the regular session in December,<a id='r180' /><a href='#f180' class='c010'><sup>[180]</sup></a>
-and on the 9th of that month, when Representative
-Bingham asked that it be put on its passage, discussion of
-the subject was resumed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Representative Conway said that if the application of
-West Virginia came in the proper manner he would be happy
-to vote for its admission; he regretted, however, that at
-the beginning of the rebellion a territorial government had
-not been organized there; Congress could then have passed
-an enabling act, and the State could be received in a manner
-to admit of no dispute. The question turned, he declared,
-on whether the State of Virginia, of which a Mr. Pierpont
-was Governor, was the lawful State. This he denied. A
-number of persons without authority met at Wheeling and
-organized a government. This establishment the President
-had recognized; one branch of Congress by admitting its
-Senators had also conceded its legality. These precedents,
-however, should not be binding on the House. Neither mobs
-nor mass-meetings, he asserted, make laws under our system,
-and such bodies had no authority to appoint Mr.
-Pierpont.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The President intended, Mr. Conway believed, to form
-similar organizations in all the seceded States. “A policy
-seems about to be inaugurated,” he added, “looking to an
-assumption of State powers by a few individuals, wherever
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>a military or other encampment can be effected in any of the
-rebellious districts. The utter and flagrant unconstitutionality
-of this scheme—I may say, its radically revolutionary
-character—ought to expose it to the reprobation of every
-loyal citizen and every member of this House. It aims at an
-utter subversion of our constitutional system. Its effect
-would be to consolidate all the powers of the Government
-in the hands of the Executive. With the admission of this
-new State, the President will have substantially <em>created</em> four
-Senators—two for Virginia and two for West Virginia.”
-In referring to an extension of this system he declared that
-the President and a few friends could exercise Federal authority
-in all those States. “The true policy of this Government,
-therefore, with regard to the seceded States, is to hold
-them as common territory wherever and whenever our arms
-are extended over them. This obviates the terrible dangers
-which I have alluded to, and is in harmony with the highest
-considerations of public utility, as well as with sound legal
-principles.”<a id='r181' /><a href='#f181' class='c010'><sup>[181]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Conway directed his criticisms against the President
-because he believed the Executive was first to recognize
-the new government. The action of the Senate was based
-upon this precedent, it being assumed that recognition was
-an Executive function.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Brown, who introduced the bill at the preceding
-session, related concisely the essential facts already placed
-before the reader. He reminded Representative Conway
-that, though a State could not commit treason, or any other
-crime, the officials of government could do so; that the legislative
-powers, being incapable of annihilation, returned to the
-people; that the spontaneous assembly at Wheeling merely
-organized and proposed a plan by which regular elections
-were to be held to fill vacancies caused by the withdrawal of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>disloyal representatives. A day was fixed, and wherever
-throughout the State loyal citizens chose to hold an election
-they could do so. The body thus elected assumed the legislative
-functions of the people.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In answer to an inquiry he replied that about five counties
-outside of West Virginia were represented in the Legislature
-which consented to the erection of the new State, and all
-the counties in the State were expressly invited to send representatives
-to the General Assembly. If they were loyal
-they should have coöperated; if not, they should have no
-voice in either the State Legislature or Congress. He referred
-in his remarks to a telegram which he had that morning
-received from Wheeling. It contained a resolution
-passed by the Assembly asking the House of Representatives
-to approve the bill for the admission of West Virginia, which
-had been favorably acted upon by the Senate at the preceding
-session.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It has been asserted,” he said in conclusion, “and understood
-in some quarters, that the organization of the government
-at Wheeling was for the purpose of forming a new
-State. I am prepared to say that when the convention
-originally met in Wheeling, although there were a few
-radicals there who wanted to form a new State without reinstating
-the old State of Virginia, we voted them down, and
-commenced the exercise of our original rights as freemen to
-build up the loyal government of Virginia; and although
-we designed eventually to ask for this separation, and it was
-what we anxiously desired, yet we determined to be a law-abiding
-people, and ask for what we desired through the
-forms of law.”<a id='r182' /><a href='#f182' class='c010'><sup>[182]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Representative Colfax in giving the reasons which should
-govern his vote stated that the restored government had
-been recognized by the Senate, by the President as well as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>other executive officers, and that the House, by admitting
-Mr. Segar, elected pursuant to a proclamation of Governor
-Pierpont, had also recognized the reorganized State. Even
-the political party in opposition voted for that member’s admission.
-He also remarked that the new State came knocking
-at the door for admission with the tiara of freedom on
-her brow.<a id='r183' /><a href='#f183' class='c010'><sup>[183]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Olin, who opposed the bill at the preceding session,
-said: “I shall vote for it now with reluctance. I shall vote
-for it mainly upon the ground that the General Government,
-whether wisely or unwisely I will not undertake to say, has
-encouraged this movement to create a division of the State
-of Virginia.”<a id='r184' /><a href='#f184' class='c010'><sup>[184]</sup></a> The people of West Virginia, with their experience
-of the evils which slavery brought on them, should
-not have permitted that institution to exist for an hour in
-their new government. For this deficiency, however, the bill
-provided a partial remedy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Crittenden observed that it was the party applying for admission
-that gave its consent to a division of the State.<a id='r185' /><a href='#f185' class='c010'><sup>[185]</sup></a> To
-this objection Representative Blair replied that there were
-counties outside of West Virginia which had assented to dismemberment.
-Other members, who had hitherto been hostile,
-now consented to support the measure from a conviction
-that it would weaken rebellion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Representative Dawes said that the primary elections which
-sent delegates to the Wheeling convention discussed not a
-reorganization of the Virginia government, but the formation
-of an independent State in western Virginia. To accomplish
-that, he said, the only way was to restore the government of
-the entire Commonwealth. That government then had two
-things to do: to set up a new State within itself and secondly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>to give its consent thereto. This suggestion, he understood,
-emanated from Washington.<a id='r186' /><a href='#f186' class='c010'><sup>[186]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In reference to the admission, Thaddeus Stevens said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I do not desire to be understood as being deluded by the idea that we
-are admitting this State in pursuance of any provisions of the Constitution.
-I find no such provision that justifies it, and the argument in favor
-of the constitutionality of it is one got up by those who either honestly
-entertain, I think, an erroneous opinion, or who desire to justify, by a
-forced construction, an act which they have predetermined to do.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c013'>Now, to say that the Legislature which called this seceding convention
-was not the Legislature of Virginia, is asserting that the Legislature
-chosen by a vast majority of the people of a State is not the Legislature
-of that State. That is a doctrine which I can never assent to. I admit
-that the Legislature were disloyal, but they were still the disloyal and
-traitorous Legislature of the State of Virginia; and the State, as a mere
-State, was bound by their acts. Not so individuals. They are responsible
-to the General Government, and are responsible whether the State
-decrees treason or not. That being the Legislature of Virginia, Governor
-Letcher, elected by a majority of the votes of the people, is the Governor
-of Virginia—a traitor in rebellion, but a traitorous governor of a traitorous
-State. Now, then, how has that State ever given its consent to this
-division? A highly respectable but very small number of the citizens of
-Virginia—the people of West Virginia—assembled together, disapproved
-of the acts of the State of Virginia, and with the utmost self-complacency
-called themselves Virginia.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c013'>I hold that none of the States now in rebellion are entitled to the protection
-of the Constitution, and I am grieved when I hear those high in
-authority sometimes talking of the constitutional difficulties about enforcing
-measures against this belligerent power, and the next moment
-disregarding every vestige and semblance of the Constitution by acts
-which alone are arbitrary. I hope I do not differ with the Executive in
-the views which I advocate. But I see the Executive one day saying “you
-shall not take the property of rebels to pay the debts which the rebels
-have brought upon the Northern States.” Why? Because the Constitution
-is in the way. And the next day I see him appointing a military
-governor of Virginia, a military governor of Tennessee, and some other
-places. Where does he find anything in the Constitution to warrant
-that?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>If he must look there alone for authority, then all these acts are flagrant
-usurpations, deserving the condemnation of the community. He must
-agree with me or else his acts are as absurd as they are unlawful; for I
-see him here and there ordering elections for members of Congress wherever
-he finds a little collection of three or four consecutive plantations
-in the rebel States, in order that men may be sent in here to control the
-proceedings of this Congress, just as we sanctioned the election held by
-a few people at a little watering place at Fortress Monroe, by which we
-have here the very respectable and estimable member from that locality
-with us. It was upon the same principle.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>... I say, then, that we may admit West Virginia as a new State,
-not by virtue of any provision of the Constitution, but under our absolute
-power which the laws of war give us in the circumstances in which we
-are placed. I shall vote for this bill upon that theory, and upon that
-alone; for I will not stultify myself by supposing that we have any warrant
-in the Constitution for this proceeding.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Union, he declared, could never be restored as it was.
-His consent would never be given to restore it with a constitutional
-provision protecting slavery. An additional reason
-for giving his vote in favor of the bill was that there was
-a provision which would make West Virginia a free State.<a id='r187' /><a href='#f187' class='c010'><sup>[187]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No right of persons, no right of property,” said Mr.
-Noell, “no social or domestic affairs, could be regulated or
-controlled by the people of western Virginia, under the circumstances
-in which they were placed, without recognizing
-the ordinance of secession, and acting as a State within the
-Southern Confederacy.”<a id='r188' /><a href='#f188' class='c010'><sup>[188]</sup></a> This showed both the necessity of
-reorganizing the government of Virginia and the recognition
-by Federal authorities of the establishment so constituted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Segar declared that eleven of the forty-eight counties
-to comprise the new State had not participated in its establishment,
-being represented neither in the reorganized Legislature
-nor the Wheeling convention; three others were unrepresented
-both in the House of Delegates and the conventions;
-ten cast no vote on the constitution and three had interests,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>social and commercial, which bound them up with the
-East. Then, too, the people of West Virginia made a fundamental
-law recognizing slavery; an anti-slavery constitution
-was to be imposed on them as a condition of admission.<a id='r189' /><a href='#f189' class='c010'><sup>[189]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>An able argument by Representative Bingham, of Ohio,
-who had charge of the bill, concluded the debate on December
-10, 1862, when it passed by 96 yeas to 55 nays.<a id='r190' /><a href='#f190' class='c010'><sup>[190]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With the President rested the fate of this important measure;
-if he vetoed it there would, probably, not be found a two
-thirds majority in its support. Many members, as will be
-seen from the preceding abridgment of the debates, yielded
-only a reluctant support.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On December 23, 1862, Mr. Lincoln sent to his constitutional
-advisers the following note:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Gentlemen of the Cabinet</span>:</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A bill for an act entitled “An act for the admission of the State of
-West Virginia into the Union and for other purposes” has passed the
-House of Representatives and the Senate, and has been duly presented
-to me for my action.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I respectfully ask of each of you an opinion in writing on the following
-questions, to wit:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>1st. Is the said act constitutional?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>2d. Is the said act expedient?<a id='r191' /><a href='#f191' class='c010'><sup>[191]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To this request six members of the Cabinet responded by
-submitting their written opinions. Three—Seward, Stanton
-and Chase—answered both questions in the affirmative.
-Bates, Blair and Welles replied in the negative; the remaining
-place in the Cabinet was vacant owing to the resignation of
-Caleb B. Smith, Secretary of the Interior, who had been raised
-to the Bench in Indiana. His successor had not yet been
-appointed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>Upon the constitutional point Mr. Seward said: “It seems
-to me that the political body which has given consent in this
-case is really and incontestably the State of Virginia. So
-long as the United States do not recognize the secession, departure,
-or separation of one of the States, that State must
-be deemed as existing and having a constitutional place within
-the Union, whatever may be at any moment exactly its revolutionary
-condition. A State thus situated cannot be deemed
-to be divided into two or more States merely by any revolutionary
-proceeding which may have occurred, because there
-cannot be, constitutionally, two or more States of Virginia....
-The newly organized State of Virginia is therefore,
-at this moment, by the express consent of the United
-States, invested with all the rights of the State of Virginia,
-and charged with all the powers, privileges, and dignity of
-that State. If the United States allow to that organization
-any of these rights, powers, and privileges, it must be allowed
-to possess and enjoy them all. If it be a State competent to
-be represented in Congress and bound to pay taxes, it is a
-State competent to give the required consent of the State to
-the formation and erection of the new State of West Virginia
-within the jurisdiction of Virginia.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Upon the question of expediency,” he wrote, “I am determined
-by two considerations. First. The people of Western
-Virginia will be safer from molestation for their loyalty,
-because better able to protect and defend themselves as a new
-and separate State than they would be if left to demoralizing
-uncertainty upon the question whether, in the progress of the
-war, they may not be again reabsorbed in the State of Virginia,
-and subjected to severities as a punishment for their
-present devotion to the Union. The first duty of the United
-States is protection to loyalty wherever it is found. Second.
-I am of opinion that the harmony and peace of the Union
-will be promoted by allowing the new State to be formed and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>erected, which will assume jurisdiction over that part of the
-valley of the Ohio which lies on the south side of the Ohio
-River, displacing, in a constitutional and lawful manner, the
-jurisdiction heretofore exercised there by a political power
-concentrated at the head of the James River.”<a id='r192' /><a href='#f192' class='c010'><sup>[192]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Chase, in discussing the constitutional question, said in
-part: “The Madison Papers clearly show that the consent of
-the Legislature of the original State was the only consent required
-to the erection and formation of a new State within its
-jurisdiction. That consent having been given, the consent
-of the new State, if required, is proved by her application for
-admission.... The Legislature of Virginia, it may
-be admitted, did not contain many members from the eastern
-counties; it contained, however, representatives from all counties
-whose inhabitants were not either rebels themselves, or
-dominated by greater numbers of rebels. It was the only
-Legislature of the State known to the Union. If its consent
-was not valid, no consent could be. If its consent was not
-valid, the Constitution, as to the people of West Virginia,
-has been so suspended by the rebellion that a most important
-right under it is utterly lost.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Relative to the question of expediency, he writes: “The
-act is almost universally regarded as of vital importance to
-their welfare by the loyal people most immediately interested,
-and it has received the sanction of large majorities in both
-Houses of Congress. These facts afford strong presumptions
-of expediency.... It may be said, indeed, that the
-admission of West Virginia will draw after it the necessity
-of admitting other States under the consent of extemporized
-legislatures assuming to act for whole States, though really
-representing no important part of their territory. I think this
-necessity imaginary. There is no such legislature, nor is
-there likely to be. No such legislature, if extemporized, is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>likely to receive the recognition of Congress or the Executive.”<a id='r193' /><a href='#f193' class='c010'><sup>[193]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Stanton responded more briefly than either Secretary
-Seward or Secretary Chase, observing, among other things:
-“I have been unable to perceive any point on which the act of
-Congress conflicts with the Constitution. By the erection of the
-new State, the geographical boundary heretofore existing
-between the free and slave States will be broken, and the
-advantage of this upon every point of consideration surpasses
-all objections which have occurred to me on the question of
-expediency. Many prophetic dangers and evils might be
-specified, but it is safe to suppose that those who come after
-us will be as wise as ourselves, and if what we deem evils
-be really such, they will be avoided. The present good is real
-and substantial, the future may safely be left in the care of
-those whose duty and interest may be involved in any possible
-future measures of legislation.”<a id='r194' /><a href='#f194' class='c010'><sup>[194]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One or two excerpts from the opinion of Mr. Welles will
-indicate the course of his argument in the negative: “Under
-existing necessities, an organization of the loyal citizens, or of
-a portion of them, has been recognized, and its Senators and
-Representatives admitted to seats in Congress. Yet we cannot
-close our eyes to the fact that the fragment of the State
-which, in the revolutionary tumult, has instituted the new
-organization, is not possessed of the records, archives,
-symbols, traditions, or capital of the Commonwealth. Though
-calling itself the State of Virginia, it does not assume the
-debts and obligations contracted prior to the existing difficulties.
-Is this organization, then, really and in point of fact anything
-else than a provisional government for the State? It
-is composed almost entirely of those loyal citizens who reside
-beyond the mountains, and within the prescribed limits of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>proposed new State. In this revolutionary period, there being
-no contestants, we are compelled to recognize the organization
-as Virginia. Whether that would be the case, and how the
-question would be met and disposed of, were the insurrection
-this day abandoned, need not now be discussed. Were Virginia,
-or those parts of it not included in the proposed new
-State, invaded and held in temporary subjection by a foreign
-enemy instead of the insurgents, the fragment of territory and
-population which should successfully repel the enemy and
-adhere to the Union would doubtless, during such temporary
-subjection, be recognized, and properly recognized, as Virginia.
-When, however, this loyal fragment goes farther, and
-not only declares itself to be Virginia, but proceeds by its
-own act to detach itself permanently and forever from the
-Commonwealth, and to erect itself into a new State within the
-jurisdiction of the State of Virginia, the question arises
-whether this proceeding is regular, legal, right, and, in honest
-good faith, conformable to, and within the letter and spirit
-of the Constitution.... Congress may admit new
-States into the Union; but any attempt to dismember or divide
-a State by any forced or unauthorized assumption would be
-an inexpedient exercise of doubtful power to the injury of
-such State. Were there no question of doubtful constitutionality
-in the movement, the time selected for the division of
-the State is most inopportune. It is a period of civil commotion,
-when unity and concerted action on the part of all loyal
-citizens and authorities should be directed to a restoration
-of the Union, and all tendency towards disintegration and
-demoralization avoided.”<a id='r195' /><a href='#f195' class='c010'><sup>[195]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Blair, likewise in the negative, added little of importance
-to what Secretary Welles had adduced on that side.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The first and rather hastily formed opinion of Attorney-General
-Bates has already been given together with an account
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>of the circumstances attending its publication; upon longer
-reflection he did not greatly change the ground of his original
-convictions and in an elaborate discussion still reasoned in the
-negative.<a id='r196' /><a href='#f196' class='c010'><sup>[196]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Between these evenly balanced and conflicting opinions of
-his advisers Mr. Lincoln argued as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The consent of the legislature of Virginia is constitutionally necessary
-to the bill for the admission of West Virginia becoming a law. A body
-claiming to be such legislature has given its consent. We cannot well
-deny that it is such, unless we do so upon the outside knowledge that the
-body was chosen at elections in which a majority of the qualified voters
-of Virginia did not participate. But it is a universal practice in the popular
-elections in all these States to give no legal consideration whatever
-to those who do not choose to vote, as against the effect of the votes of
-those who do choose to vote. Hence it is not the qualified voters, but
-the qualified voters who choose to vote that constitute the political power
-of the State. Much less than to non-voters should any consideration be
-given to those who did not vote in this case, because it is also matter
-of outside knowledge that they were not merely neglectful of their rights
-under and duty to this government, but were also engaged in open rebellion
-against it. Doubtless among these non-voters were some Union men
-whose voices were smothered by the more numerous secessionists; but
-we know too little of their number to assign them any appreciable value.
-Can this government stand, if it indulges constitutional constructions by
-which men in open rebellion against it are to be accounted, man for man,
-the equals of those who maintain their loyalty to it? Are they to be
-accounted even better citizens, and more worthy of consideration, than
-those who merely neglect to vote? If so, their treason against the Constitution
-enhances their constitutional value. Without braving these absurd
-conclusions, we cannot deny that the body which consents to the
-admission of West Virginia is the legislature of Virginia. I do not think
-the plural form of the words “legislatures” and “States” in the phrase
-of the Constitution “without the consent of the legislatures of the States
-concerned,” etc., has any reference to the new State concerned. That
-plural form sprang from the contemplation of two or more old States contributing
-to form a new one. The idea that the new State was in danger
-of being admitted without its own consent was not provided against,
-because it was not thought of, as I conceive. It is said, the devil takes
-care of his own. Much more should a good spirit—the spirit of the
-Constitution and the Union—take care of its own. I think it cannot do
-less and live.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>But is the admission into the Union of West Virginia expedient? This,
-in my general view, is more a question for Congress than for the Executive.
-Still I do not evade it. More than on anything else, it depends on
-whether the admission or rejection of the new State would, under all the
-circumstances, tend the more strongly to the restoration of the national
-authority throughout the Union. That which helps most in this direction
-is the most expedient at this time. Doubtless those in remaining Virginia
-would return to the Union, so to speak, less reluctantly without the division
-of the old State than with it; but I think we could not save as much
-in this quarter by rejecting the new State, as we should lose by it in West
-Virginia. We can scarcely dispense with the aid of West Virginia in
-this struggle; much less can we afford to have her against us, in Congress
-and in the field. Her brave and good men regard her admission
-into the Union as a matter of life and death. They have been true to the
-Union under very severe trials. We have so acted as to justify their
-hopes, and we cannot fully retain their confidence and coöperation if we
-seem to break faith with them. In fact, they could not do so much for us,
-if they would. Again, the admission of the new State turns that much
-slave soil, to free, and thus is a certain and irrevocable encroachment
-upon the cause of the rebellion. The division of a State is dreaded as a
-precedent. But a measure made expedient by a war is no precedent for
-times of peace. It is said that the admission of West Virginia is secession,
-and tolerated only because it is our secession. Well, if we call it by
-that name, there is still difference enough between secession against the
-Constitution and secession in favor of the Constitution. I believe the
-admission of West Virginia into the Union is expedient.<a id='r197' /><a href='#f197' class='c010'><sup>[197]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The bill passed by the House on the 10th was approved
-by the President on the 31st of December, 1862; after naming
-the forty-eight counties to constitute the new State the
-act declares, among other things, that since the convention
-framed the constitution for West Virginia its people had
-expressed a wish to change section seven of the eleventh article
-by inserting the following in its place, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">viz.</span></i>: “The children of
-slaves born within the limits of this State after the fourth day
-of July, eighteen hundred and sixty-three, shall be free; and
-that all slaves within the said State who shall, at the time
-aforesaid, be under the age of ten years, shall be free when
-they arrive at the age of twenty-one years; and all slaves over
-ten and under twenty-one years, shall be free when they arrive
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>at the age of twenty-five years; and no slave shall be permitted
-to come into the State for permanent residence therein.”<a id='r198' /><a href='#f198' class='c010'><sup>[198]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The constitution thus amended was unanimously ratified by
-the convention, which on a summons of the commissioners
-reassembled February 18, 1863, and also by the people, to
-whom it was submitted at an election held on May 26 following.<a id='r199' /><a href='#f199' class='c010'><sup>[199]</sup></a>
-President Lincoln on April 20 issued a proclamation
-declaring that the prescribed conditions having been complied
-with, the constitution would go into force in sixty days
-from that date; the formation of the new State was complete
-and it became a member of the Union on the 20th of
-June, 1863.<a id='r200' /><a href='#f200' class='c010'><sup>[200]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Daniel Webster, in an address delivered thirteen years before,
-at the laying of the corner-stone of an addition to the
-Federal Capitol, had asked: “And ye men of Western Virginia,
-... what benefit do you propose to yourself by
-disunion? If you ‘secede,’ what do you ‘secede’ from, and
-what do you ‘accede’ to? Do you look for the current of
-the Ohio to change, and to bring you and your commerce to
-the tide-waters of the eastern rivers? What man in his
-senses can suppose that you would remain part and parcel of
-Virginia a month after Virginia should have ceased to be
-part and parcel of the Union?”<a id='r201' /><a href='#f201' class='c010'><sup>[201]</sup></a> The remarkable prediction
-of the great orator was fulfilled; his inspired vision had
-pierced the future. The Old Dominion had separated forever
-along the line of the Alleghanies.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Before relating the subsequent history of the restored
-government, it is proper to notice a few important events in
-the early career of the new Commonwealth. On January
-31, 1863, an act passed the General Assembly of Virginia
-giving consent to the transfer of Berkeley County to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>State of West Virginia. The preamble of this act affirms
-that its people desired to be annexed to the proposed State.
-The question of transfer, however, was to be decided by a
-majority of voters at an election to be held on the fourth
-Thursday of May. If, however, the polls could not be safely
-opened on that day, the Governor was empowered to postpone
-the election by proclamation. The commissioners who
-superintended the polling were to certify the results to the
-Executive. On February 4 succeeding another act made it
-lawful for voters in certain districts including twenty-three
-counties to declare, at a general election to be held on the
-fourth Thursday of May, whether these specified counties
-should be annexed to West Virginia. The consent of the
-Legislature of that State was, of course, made a condition of
-the transfer, after which the jurisdiction of Virginia over such
-counties was to cease.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>West Virginia statutes of August 5 and November 2, 1863,
-in words, admit Berkeley and Jefferson counties, and they
-have ever since been under her jurisdiction. When admitted
-into the Union it was with a provision in her constitution
-that she might acquire additional territory; therefore Congress
-gave its consent in advance and it was not afterwards
-withdrawn. In brief, West Virginia accepted the transfer
-and it was authorized by the General Assembly of the Commonwealth
-of Virginia.<a id='r202' /><a href='#f202' class='c010'><sup>[202]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>State officers were elected on May 28, when the following
-unconditional Union candidates, receiving a vote of about
-30,000, were chosen without opposition: Arthur I. Boreman,
-Governor; J. E. Boyers, Secretary of State; Campbell Tarr,
-Treasurer; Samuel Crane, Auditor; A. B. Caldwell, Attorney-General;
-also three judges of a court of appeals.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The inauguration of the new State, which was marked by
-imposing ceremonies, took place at Wheeling, the capital, on
-June 20, 1863. Mr. Pierpont, the retiring executive of reorganized
-Virginia, briefly addressed the assembled citizens
-and urged them not to forsake the flag; he then introduced
-his successor, whom he pronounced “true as steel.” Governor
-Boreman in his short speech said that the only terms of
-peace were that the rebels should lay down their arms and
-submit to the regularly constituted authority of the United
-States.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Legislature of West Virginia convened on the same
-day. Waitman T. Willey and P. G. Van Winkle were elected
-United States Senators.<a id='r203' /><a href='#f203' class='c010'><sup>[203]</sup></a> In his first message Governor Boreman
-recommended to the General Assembly the immediate
-passage of laws effectually to extirpate slavery, and also the
-enactment of a law that no man should be permitted to vote or
-to hold office until he had taken the oath of allegiance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>In the Presidential election of 1864, the first held since the
-adoption of the Constitution in which any State deliberately
-neglected to appoint electors, 33,680 votes were polled in
-West Virginia; of this number the Union ticket received 23,223
-and the McClellan electors 10,457.<a id='r204' /><a href='#f204' class='c010'><sup>[204]</sup></a> Elections had also
-been held in Louisiana and Tennessee by authority of the
-governments established there under Mr. Lincoln’s plan of reconstruction;
-the Republican majority in Congress, however,
-denied the validity of the organizations in the two States last
-named and refused to count the votes which they presented.
-This question will be fully considered when we come to trace
-the development of the Congressional plan. At the regular
-State election Governor Boreman was chosen without opposition,
-receiving 19,098 votes. With the subsequent history of
-the new Commonwealth the subject of reconstruction is not
-much concerned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By the formation of an independent Commonwealth the
-counties beyond the Alleghanies were withdrawn from the
-jurisdiction of the restored government, which after the inaugural
-ceremonies at Wheeling selected for its capital the city
-of Alexandria, where it continued till May 25, 1865, to exercise
-its functions in those parts of the Old Dominion within
-the lines of the Union army. A State government was
-promptly organized by the election of a legislature and of executive
-officers. In this establishment the loyal eastern counties
-participated. Mr. Pierpont was elected Governor for the term
-of three years beginning January 1, 1864. A Lieutenant-Governor,
-a Secretary of State, a Treasurer, an Auditor, an
-Adjutant-General and an Attorney-General were also
-chosen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Governor in his message to the Assembly mentioned
-slavery as doomed, and recommended the calling of a convention
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>so to amend the State constitution as to abolish the
-institution forever. In compliance with this suggestion the
-Legislature, on December 21, 1863, passed an act directing a
-convention to be held at Alexandria on the 13th of February
-succeeding to amend the constitution and prohibit slavery in
-the counties of Accomac, Northampton, Princess Ann, Elizabeth
-City and York (including the cities of Norfolk and
-Portsmouth). These with Berkeley County had been excepted
-from the operation of the Emancipation Proclamation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>None but loyal citizens who had not assisted the
-insurgents since January 1, 1863, were allowed to take part,
-and those whose right to vote might be challenged were
-required to swear support of the Constitution and to declare
-that they had not in any way given aid or comfort to the
-enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The convention, consisting of sixteen members, assembled
-in the new capital at the appointed time and remained in
-session till April 11 following, when a constitution was
-adopted.<a id='r205' /><a href='#f205' class='c010'><sup>[205]</sup></a> Various amendments, relating chiefly to the regulation
-of the elective franchise and to the abolition of slavery,
-were discussed and agreed upon. The work of this miniature
-convention was ordered to be proclaimed without a submission
-to the people. It was not, however, recognized by Congress,
-though the civil government which authorized its formation
-was permitted to continue under it, provisionally only, and in
-all respects subject to the paramount authority of the United
-States at any time to abolish, modify, or supersede.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though the bill for the admission of West Virginia passed
-both Houses, yet Congress was by no means unanimous in
-giving its consent to that measure. In the debates, of which a
-synopsis has been given, the hostility of Thaddeus Stevens
-and other influential members is scarcely concealed. This
-opposition to executive policy slowly gathered strength, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>by 1863 had become formidable enough to defeat the admission
-of Representatives from the Alexandria government.
-The Senators, however, remained, Lemuel J. Bowden till his
-death, January 2, 1864, when his successor was refused admission,
-and John S. Carlile till the expiration of his term in
-1865.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the assembling of the 38th Congress, which commenced
-its first session December 7, 1863, Joseph E. Segar, Lucius H.
-Chandler and Benjamin M. Kitchen appeared as Representatives
-from Virginia. On May 17 succeeding Mr. Dawes from
-the Committee of Elections reported a resolution to the effect
-that Joseph E. Segar, from the First District of Virginia, was
-not entitled to a seat in that Congress. The case of Mr.
-Chandler, regarded as precisely similar, was considered at
-the same time.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The district which Mr. Segar claimed to represent was composed
-of twenty counties; of these, Chairman Dawes asserted,
-only four participated in the election. Polling places were not
-opened in any other part of the district, the Confederate authorities
-being in possession of the remaining counties. As
-there could be no free exercise of the franchise in this situation
-Mr. Segar, it was contended, was not properly chosen,
-and, therefore, was not entitled to a seat. The vote cast,
-though not accurately ascertained, was estimated at 1,677, of
-which the claimant received 1,300. Because of his loyalty and
-the sacrifices he had made, the Committee regretted the
-necessity of deciding against him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Segar, speaking in his own behalf, reminded the House
-that in a preceding election, when he received 559 out of
-1,018 votes polled in three counties, he was admitted after a
-delay of seven or eight weeks; but when he was sent by a
-larger constituency and came as the choice of four counties
-he was informed that he had no right to a seat, and some of his
-colleagues who favored his admission in 1862 voted to exclude
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>him. The Committee’s report, he asserted, admitted the
-existence of such a State as Virginia. He asked Chairman
-Dawes a rather embarrassing question when he inquired
-how a State could have two Senators and no Representative
-in Congress. In conclusion he pronounced restored State
-organization and gradual accretion to be the best method of
-reconstruction.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Concerning the title of Mr. Chandler, from the Second Congressional
-District, Chairman Dawes stated that of the 779
-votes polled in the election 778 were cast for the claimant.
-For the same reason as in the case of Mr. Segar only a small
-part of that District was free to participate in the election,
-and nearly all the votes were polled in the city of Norfolk.
-The committee reported against his admission on the same
-ground taken in Mr. Segar’s case.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chandler, who was permitted to state his case to the House,
-cited a resolution introduced by his former school-mate, Owen
-Lovejoy, the well-known abolitionist, authorizing the names
-of the three Virginia claimants to be enrolled as Representatives.
-That resolution, however, was tabled and their credentials
-referred to the Committee of Elections.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In 1860 the Union vote in his District was only 6,712;
-of that number 2,900, he said, were in Norfolk and Portsmouth;
-the latter city had cast more votes against secession
-than the remainder of his District. Great numbers of loyal
-men, however, left there at the beginning of the war. Electors
-being under no obligation to vote may allow an election to go
-by default when one citizen could return a member to Congress.
-Territorially restored Virginia was larger than Delaware
-and possessed twice the area of Rhode Island.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The case of Benjamin M. Kitchen, on which the Committee
-had previously made an adverse report, differed from
-those of the other two claimants in that he had received
-nearly all of his vote in Berkeley County, which possessed a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>sort of wandering character, for it was somewhat uncertain
-whether it was under the jurisdiction of the new or
-the old State. What action was taken on the Committee’s
-report does not appear, but it may be inferred from a facetious
-remark of one member who observed that, like Segar and
-Chandler, Kitchen had been privileged to retire to private life.
-The two former were refused admission by the decided vote
-of 94 to 23.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Besides endeavoring to win back the wavering, Governor
-Pierpont was occupied in taking measures for the relief of
-the distressed. In the vicinity of Norfolk and Portsmouth
-there was a large number of destitute persons whose natural
-supporters were still following the declining fortunes of the
-Confederacy or had been killed in its service. While it was
-universally agreed that their necessities should be relieved,
-the military and civil authorities were in conflict as to the
-mode of providing for them. The President in his efforts to
-establish amicable relations between the officers of the army
-and those of the State invoked the assistance of the Governor.
-As the restored Commonwealth could not be consistently
-recognized while its capital was in a state of blockade the
-President by proclamation, September 24, 1863, declared that
-the interdiction of trade with the port of Alexandria had
-ceased.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>General Butler with headquarters at Fortress Monroe took
-command of the Department of Virginia and North Carolina
-November 2, 1863. His predecessors, he asserted, had endeavored
-to recruit a regiment of Virginians; but after several
-months of energetic trial their efforts were abandoned. As
-eastern Virginia claimed to be a loyal and fully organized
-State, Butler renewed the attempt, whereupon Governor Pierpont
-protested vigorously. One and a half companies were all
-the recruits that the Commonwealth would furnish, and these,
-Butler asserts, were employed to defend lighthouses and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>protect Union inhabitants from outrages at the hands of their
-disloyal neighbors.<a id='r206' /><a href='#f206' class='c010'><sup>[206]</sup></a> This experience, it may be supposed, did
-not tend to raise the Alexandria government in the esteem of
-the Department Commander. We find accordingly that differences
-soon sprang up between the civil and military authorities.
-An attempt to regulate the liquor traffic in Norfolk and vicinity
-was the occasion of an open rupture. Civil officers
-continued to collect the payments imposed by law on those
-engaged in the business; the military power, to keep the traffic
-under better control, undertook to give to a few firms a
-monopoly of the importation. In this situation many small
-retailers refused to pay their licenses and were indicted in
-the local courts. To foil this purpose, General Shepley issued,
-June 22, 1864, an order providing that “on the day of the
-ensuing municipal election in the city of Norfolk a poll will
-be opened at the several places of voting, and separate ballot-boxes
-will be kept open during the hours of voting, in which
-voters may deposit their ballots, ‘yes’ or ‘no,’ upon the following
-question: Those in favor of continuing the present
-form of municipal government during the existence of military
-occupation will vote ‘yes.’ Those opposed to it will
-vote ‘no.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Governor Pierpont resented this action and promptly issued
-a proclamation protesting against it as a revolutionary proceeding
-in violation of the Federal Constitution, adding, “No
-loyal citizen, therefore, is expected to vote on the proposed
-question.” In a vigorous pamphlet discussing the “abuses of
-military power” he repeated his criticism.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Butler at this point took up the cudgels for his subordinate
-and in a general order, dated June 30, 1864, discussed the incident
-at some length. Pierpont was alluded to as “a person
-who calls himself Governor,” and as one “pretending to be the
-head of the restored government of Virginia, which government
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>is unrecognized by the Congress, laws, and Constitution
-of the United States.” The order further recited that as the
-loyal citizens of Norfolk had voted against the further trial of
-the experiment of municipal government “therefore it is ordered
-that all attempts to exercise civil office and power,
-under any supposed city election, within the city of Norfolk
-and its environs, must cease, and the persons pretending
-to be elected to civil offices at the late election, and those heretofore
-elected to municipal offices since the rebellion, must
-no longer attempt to exercise such functions; and upon any
-pretense or attempt so to do, the military commandant at
-Norfolk will see to it that persons so acting are stayed and
-quieted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A memorial to Mr. Lincoln enlisted his sympathy and
-secured for Pierpont the assistance of Attorney-General Bates,
-who on July 11 wrote the President a long official letter
-setting forth his sense of the serious military encroachment by
-General Butler upon civil law and the authority of Mr. Pierpont
-as Governor of Virginia. The Department Commander
-replied in a communication of forty pages in sharp criticism
-of the Alexandria government, which he characterized as a
-“useless, expensive, and inefficient thing, unrecognized by
-Congress, unknown to the Constitution of the United States,
-and of such character that there is no command in the
-Decalogue against worshiping it, being the likeness of nothing
-in the heavens above, the earth beneath, or the waters under
-the earth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Attorney-General, who was accused of a design to
-create a conflict between the civil and the military power, also
-came in for a share of rather violent criticism. In this altercation
-each party accused the other of being assisted by only
-secessionists and traitors.<a id='r207' /><a href='#f207' class='c010'><sup>[207]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was relative to this controversy that Mr. Lincoln, December
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>21, 1864, addressed to General Butler the following
-communication:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On the 9th of August last, I began to write you a letter, the enclosed
-being a copy of so much as I then wrote. So far as it goes it embraces
-the views I then entertained and still entertain.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A little relaxation of the complaints made to me on the subject, occurring
-about that time, the letter was not finished and sent. I now learn,
-correctly I suppose, that you have ordered an election, similar to the one
-mentioned, to take place on the eastern shore of Virginia. Let this be
-suspended at least until conference with me and obtaining my approval.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c012'>
- <div>[Inclosure.]</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c015'><span class='sc'>Executive Mansion, Washington</span>, <em>August 9, 1864</em>.</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Major-General Butler</em>:</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Your paper of the —— about Norfolk matters, is received, as also was
-your other, on the same general subject, dated, I believe, some time in
-February last. This subject has caused considerable trouble, forcing me
-to give a good deal of time and reflection to it. I regret that crimination
-and recrimination are mingled in it. I surely need not to assure you that
-I have no doubt of your loyalty and devoted patriotism; and I must tell
-you that I have no less confidence in those of Governor Pierpont and the
-Attorney-General. The former—at first as the loyal governor of all Virginia,
-including that which is now West Virginia, in organizing and furnishing
-troops, and in all other proper matters—was as earnest, honest,
-and efficient to the extent of his means as any other loyal governor.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The inauguration of West Virginia as a new State left to him, as he
-assumed, the remainder of the old State; and the insignificance of the
-parts which are outside of the rebel lines, and consequently within his
-reach, certainly gives a somewhat farcical air to his dominion, and I suppose
-he, as well as I, has considered that it can be useful for little else
-than as a nucleus to add to. The Attorney-General needs only to be
-known to be relieved from all question as to loyalty and thorough devotion
-to the national cause, constantly restraining as he does my tendency
-to clemency for rebels and rebel sympathizers. But he is the law-officer
-of the Government, and a believer in the virtue of adhering to law.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Coming to the question itself, the military occupancy of Norfolk is a necessity
-with us. If you, as department commander, find the cleansing of
-the city necessary to prevent pestilence in your army; street-lights and a
-fire department necessary to prevent assassinations and incendiarism
-among your men and stores; wharfage necessary to land and ship men
-and supplies; a large pauperism, badly conducted at a needlessly large
-expense to the government; and find that all these things, or any of them,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>are not reasonably well attended to by the civil government, you rightfully
-may and must take them into your own hands. But you should do so on
-your own avowed judgment of a military necessity, and not seem to admit
-that there is no such necessity by taking a vote of the people on the
-question.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Nothing justifies the suspending of the civil by the military authority
-but military necessity; and of the existence of that necessity, the military
-commander, and not a popular vote, is to decide. And whatever is not
-within such necessity should be left undisturbed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In your paper of February you fairly notified me that you contemplated
-taking a popular vote, and, if fault there be, it was my fault that I did not
-object then, which I probably should have done had I studied the subject
-as closely as I have since done. I now think you would better place
-whatever you feel is necessary to be done on this distinct ground of military
-necessity, openly discarding all reliance for what you do on any election.
-I also think you should so keep accounts as to show every item of
-money received and how expended.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The course here indicated does not touch the case when the military
-commander, finding no friendly civil government existing, may, under
-sanction or direction of the President, give assistance to the people to
-inaugurate one.<a id='r208' /><a href='#f208' class='c010'><sup>[208]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the same general subject the President one week later
-wrote General Butler this brief note:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I think you will find that the provost-marshal on the eastern shore
-has, as by your authority, issued an order, not for a meeting, but
-for an election. The order, printed in due form, was shown to me,
-but as I did not retain it, I cannot give you a copy. If the people, on
-their own motion, wish to hold a peaceful meeting, I suppose you
-need not hinder them.<a id='r209' /><a href='#f209' class='c010'><sup>[209]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It has elsewhere been observed that a Legislature representing
-what remained of the restored government was chosen
-at the time of Mr. Pierpont’s election. This body, however,
-was but the merest shadow of the Assembly of that once
-proud Commonwealth. Seven Delegates responded to the
-roll call when the House convened in December, 1863. They
-adjourned from day to day and on the 9th of that month organized
-with eight members in the popular branch. Precisely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>how many Senators composed the upper House does not appear
-in any notice of their proceedings accessible to the writer; the
-aggregate number in both chambers, however, is said not to
-have exceeded 16.<a id='r210' /><a href='#f210' class='c010'><sup>[210]</sup></a> This estimate is probably correct; for in
-the election, February 4, 1864, of a Secretary of State and a
-Treasurer the total vote on joint ballot was only 14.<a id='r211' /><a href='#f211' class='c010'><sup>[211]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is probable that neither Mr. Lincoln nor Governor Pierpont
-regarded this organization as anything more than a
-nucleus around which the loyal elements might rally. Both
-Congress and the military authorities, however, treated it
-with scant courtesy. It is not matter of surprise, therefore,
-that memorials were presented to the United States Senate
-petitioning for the substitution of a military for this feeble
-civil government. To offset this movement remonstrances
-from citizens of Alexandria and from citizens of Loudoun
-County were offered, January 17, 1865, by Senator Willey,
-of West Virginia. All the memorials of both classes were
-referred to the Committee on Territories.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By Mr. Willey credentials of Hon. Joseph Segar, Senator-elect
-from Virginia, were presented, February 17, 1865, to
-supply the vacancy caused by the death of Lemuel J. Bowden.
-Mr. Willey moved that the credentials be read and placed on
-the files, and that the oath of office be administered to Mr.
-Segar. The credentials were read and immediately after
-Mr. Sumner moved that the papers be referred to the Committee
-on the Judiciary. Senator Willey opposed the reference.
-The credentials, he believed, were proper on their face;
-they came to the Senate in due form under the seal of the
-State of Virginia. Mr. Segar was the accredited successor
-of Mr. Bowden, who died while a member of Congress. If
-Mr. Bowden was entitled to a seat his successor was likewise
-entitled if his credentials were regular and correct.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>Mr. Cowan also opposed the reference because he did not
-think it wise to abandon the policy hitherto pursued in dealing
-with loyal minorities in the rebellious States. He would
-be sorry, he said, if these States were repulsed when they were
-desirous to do all they could to achieve the very end for which
-the present tremendous struggle was taking place. When Mr.
-Bowden came to take his seat no such objection was made.
-A question by Senator Hale developed the fact, however,
-that Mr. Bowden presented himself before the vote was taken
-on the admission of West Virginia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Trumbull believed that a reference of the credentials, just as
-in the Arkansas case, would bring up the question. Senator
-Howard, who favored a reference, thought that the entire
-question of the right of Virginia to be represented in Congress
-should be gone into. He would thank the committee for a
-concise account of all the proceedings connected with the
-election of Mr. Segar and his colleague. He asked whether
-a State like Virginia, in armed rebellion, could have Senators
-on that floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Saulsbury pointed out the change that had come over
-the judgment of the Senate. When Messrs. Willey and
-Carlile appeared there was, he said, but a corporal’s guard who
-opposed their right to seats, because Virginia was in rebellion,
-and it was then held by the minority that Senators should represent
-the sovereignty of their States. Those who were
-then most zealous for the admission of the gentlemen claiming
-to represent Virginia had become most vehement in their
-opposition to the admission of Mr. Segar.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator McDougall believed that to refer the proposition to
-the committee would be to bury it, and no resurrection, he
-said, had been proclaimed for any such thing. He had his
-impressions and was as well prepared to discuss the question
-then as at any time. Virginia, according to his understanding
-of the philosophy of the Constitution, was a State of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>Union. He believed the Senator-elect, by reason of his credentials,
-could take the oath, though that was not conclusive
-of his right to a seat in the Senate.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry Wilson, of Massachusetts, believed that Congress
-because of its action for three years was bound to recognize
-the existence of both the Governor and Legislature of Virginia.
-He was disposed, however, to support the motion of his
-colleague, Charles Sumner, as well as the amendment thereto
-which authorized the committee to inquire into the election,
-returns and qualifications in the case of the claimant. Certain
-parts of Virginia, exempted by the President’s proclamation,
-were not in rebellion. Every square mile additional
-over which Federal authority was restored came by the terms
-of that proclamation into the same condition.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Willey asserted that the Legislature sneeringly referred
-to as “the Common Council of Alexandria” represented
-216,000 loyal people. He believed that county after county,
-as fast as they were relieved from the power of the rebellion,
-would come to the support of the loyal nucleus at Alexandria.
-It would place the Senate, he said, in a singular position to
-repulse the claimant while his State was represented by
-another Senator [Carlile].</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Sherman stated that Mr. Segar’s credentials purported
-to show that he had been elected a member of the Senate
-on the 8th of December and that they bore date of December
-12, 1864. Therefore he had slept for sixty or seventy days
-on his right to a seat which would, at any rate, expire on
-the 4th of March. The succeeding Congress, he said, would
-have ample time to decide the question, for, no doubt, at that
-time a gentleman claiming to be a Senator from Virginia
-would present himself. Then it could be deliberately determined.
-His motion to lay the credentials on the table
-prevailed by a vote of 29 to 13.<a id='r212' /><a href='#f212' class='c010'><sup>[212]</sup></a> When this action was taken
-Carlile was among the eight absentees.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>Pursuant to a proclamation of the President the Senate
-assembled at noon of March 4 in executive session. Five
-days later the question of admitting Senators from Virginia
-came again before the Senate on presentation by Mr. Doolittle
-of the credentials of Hon. John C. Underwood as Senator-elect
-from that State for six years from the 4th of March.
-His credentials were read and after some discussion it was
-agreed to postpone their consideration as well as those of Mr.
-Segar until the following session. Henderson and Doolittle
-spoke in favor of the early recognition by Congress of the
-local governments in those States which had been brought
-partly under Federal power. The account of Virginian affairs
-will be resumed in the final chapter.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>V<br /> <span class='large'>ANTI-SLAVERY LEGISLATION</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>The efforts of Union minorities in Tennessee, in
-Louisiana and in Arkansas to establish governments
-in harmony with the Constitution and laws of the
-United States, and the agency of President Lincoln in effecting
-that result, have been somewhat particularly described in
-the preceding pages. The principal events which marked the
-progress of secession in those States, the military successes
-which brought Federal authorities to consider the restoration
-of loyal governments within their borders, and the operation
-of those causes which ultimately overthrew rebellion have been
-more rapidly sketched. To trace the successive steps which
-led to the emancipation of slaves in the seceding States a
-somewhat more ample narrative will be required. This subject
-is not only of intrinsic interest but its culmination in the
-proclamation of September 22, 1862, marks the introduction
-into the President’s plan of restoration of an element hitherto
-left out of account.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In December, 1859, when John Brown, for his rash though
-courageous attempt to liberate slaves, was hanged by the
-authorities of Virginia a great majority of even Northern
-people looked on with indifference or with approval. The
-inhabitants of the free States, however, were rather law-abiding
-than pitiless and came in time to revere the memory
-of that stern old Puritan. Ideas in those times matured with
-amazing rapidity, and fourteen months had scarcely elapsed
-when James B. McKean, a Representative from New York,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>introduced into Congress, three days before the Confederate
-government was organized, the following resolution:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Whereas the “Gulf States” have assumed to secede from the Union,
-and it is deemed important to prevent the “border slave States” from
-following their example; and whereas it is believed that those who are
-inflexibly opposed to any measure of compromise or concession that involves,
-or may involve, a sacrifice of principle or the extension of slavery,
-would nevertheless cheerfully concur in any lawful measure for the emancipation
-of slaves: Therefore,</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><em>Resolved</em>, That the select committee of five be instructed to inquire
-whether, by the consent of the people, or of the State governments, or by
-compensating the slaveholders, it be practicable for the General Government
-to procure the emancipation of the slaves in some, or all, of the
-“border States”; and if so, to report a bill for that purpose.<a id='r213' /><a href='#f213' class='c010'><sup>[213]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Burnett, of Kentucky, desiring to discuss the proposition,
-it was laid on the table and received no further consideration.
-Whether Mr. Lincoln had much reflected upon the
-principle of this resolution or the reasoning in its preamble,
-he had not become on March 4 a convert to its essential idea,
-for in his inaugural address he was content, in expressing his
-sentiments on the institution of slavery, to re-affirm a declaration
-which he had formerly made. “I have no purpose,”
-said he, “directly or indirectly, to interfere with the institution
-of slavery in the States where it exists. I believe I have
-no lawful right to do so, and I have no inclination to do so.”<a id='r214' /><a href='#f214' class='c010'><sup>[214]</sup></a>
-Even if the occasion had not demanded the language of conciliation
-we might easily credit this solemn assurance. Indeed,
-for an entire year after this announcement he refrained
-in his public utterances from taking any attitude hostile to the
-continuance of slavery. The influences which forced him to
-adopt other opinions may be briefly related.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On May 22, 1861, General Butler arrived at Fortress
-Monroe and at once took command of the Department of Virginia;
-next day he sent a reconnoitering party to Hampton,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>and in the terror and confusion occasioned by the presence
-of Yankee soldiers three slaves of Colonel Mallory, a
-Confederate officer, effected their escape; during the afternoon
-they remained in concealment and at night reached the Union
-pickets. The following morning they were brought before
-the Federal commander, whom they informed of their master’s
-purpose to employ them in military operations in North Carolina.
-On the next day Major John B. Cary, also of the Confederate
-army, and a former delegate with Butler in the
-Baltimore Convention, came to the fort with a flag of truce,
-and as a representative of Colonel Mallory demanded the
-surrender of these runaways pursuant to the provisions of the
-Federal Constitution under which the Union commander
-claimed to act. With characteristic readiness came the reply
-that the Fugitive Slave Law could not be invoked in this
-case; Virginia assumed to be a foreign State and she must
-count it among the disadvantages of her position if, so far at
-least, she was taken at her word. These negroes further
-informed General Butler or his officers that if they were not
-returned others would come next day. On the 26th eight
-slaves were before him awaiting an audience; one squad of
-forty-seven came early on the 27th and another lot of a dozen
-arrived during the same day. Then they came by twenties,
-thirties and forties both to Fortress Monroe and Newport
-News.<a id='r215' /><a href='#f215' class='c010'><sup>[215]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thus arose an important question on which the Government
-had yet developed no policy. As the acts for the rendition of
-fugitive slaves were not repealed till June, 1864, the views of
-individual commanders temporarily prevailed. Without precedent
-or instructions General McDowell by an order entirely
-excluded them from his lines. Caprice, too, entered into a
-settlement of the problem, and even a whimsical solution
-was sometimes attempted. A felicitous invention for determining
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>these controversies between master and bondman is
-ascribed to the colonel of a Massachusetts regiment. Both
-the claimant and the claimed were put outside his tent for a
-trial of speed; the negro, proving the fleeter, was never heard
-of again.<a id='r216' /><a href='#f216' class='c010'><sup>[216]</sup></a> An institution which had practically determined
-both the foreign and domestic policy of the United States
-for an entire generation was suddenly become the sport of a
-subordinate officer of volunteers! The wise should have
-heeded these signs.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While the Federal commander in Virginia was exchanging
-arguments with Confederate officers, General McClellan at his
-headquarters in Cincinnati was considering a proclamation
-which on May 26 he issued to the Union men of western
-Virginia. This document, among other things, says: “All
-your rights shall be religiously respected, notwithstanding
-all that has been said by the traitors to induce you to believe
-our advent among you will be signalized by an interference
-with your slaves. Understand one thing clearly: not only will
-we abstain from all such interference, but we will, on the contrary,
-<em>with an iron hand crush any attempt at insurrection on
-their part</em>.”<a id='r217' /><a href='#f217' class='c010'><sup>[217]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Scarcely less explicit in its announcement concerning
-slavery was General Patterson’s proclamation of June 3, 1861,
-to troops of the Department of Pennsylvania. “You must
-bear in mind,” says its concluding paragraph, that “you are
-going for the good of the whole country, and that, while it is
-your duty to punish sedition, you must protect the loyal,
-<em>and, should the occasion offer, at once suppress servile
-insurrection</em>.”<a id='r218' /><a href='#f218' class='c010'><sup>[218]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Butler’s interview with Major Cary had been promptly
-communicated to the War Department, whose chief, Mr.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>Cameron, expressed in his reply of May 30 approval of the
-General’s action. The Secretary, however, endeavored to distinguish
-between interference with slave property and the
-surrender of negroes that came voluntarily within Federal
-lines. The commander was further directed to “employ such
-persons in the services to which they may be best adapted,
-keeping an account of the labor by them performed, of the
-value of it, and the expenses of their maintenance,”<a id='r219' /><a href='#f219' class='c010'><sup>[219]</sup></a> the question
-of their final disposition to be reserved for future
-determination.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In defence of his attitude toward masters of fugitives who
-had been employed in the batteries or on the fortifications of
-the enemy, international law supplied General Butler with an
-analogy that he skillfully applied to the novel conditions
-which had arisen. Articles of assistance in military operations
-cannot in time of war be imported by neutrals into an
-enemy’s country, and the attempt to introduce such goods
-renders them liable to seizure as lawful prize. It did not
-greatly embarrass this versatile lawyer that the term <em>contraband</em>
-applies exclusively to relations between a belligerent and
-a neutral, or that the decision of a prize court might be necessary
-to determine whether a particular article had been so designated.
-No doubt he believed firmly in the doctrine that the
-wants of war are contraband of war. In his correspondence
-with General Scott he had observed that “as a military question,
-it would seem to be a measure of necessity” to deprive
-disloyal masters of the services of their slaves, and this, on the
-pretext that they were contraband of war, he proceeded to do
-by refusing to surrender any negroes coming inside his lines.<a id='r220' /><a href='#f220' class='c010'><sup>[220]</sup></a>
-This method of settling the difficulty was what Secretary
-Cameron had approved. But this phase presented the question
-in its extreme simplicity. A refusal to return the slaves
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>of Confederate officers or of Confederate sympathizers was
-one thing; similar treatment of loyal slaveholders would not
-be so readily overlooked by authority. Though such cases
-were more likely to occur in Maryland, Kentucky or Missouri,
-that fact did not prevent the subject from assuming very great
-importance even in Virginia. Whole families escaped from
-their masters, and General Butler soon had on his hands
-negroes from three months to almost fourscore years of age.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Attorney-General Bates, writing July 23, 1861, to United
-States Marshal J. L. McDowell, of Kansas, who had asked
-whether he should give his official service in executing the
-fugitive slave law, said in response to the inquiry:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It is the President’s constitutional duty to “take care that the laws be
-faithfully executed.” That means all the laws. He has no right to discriminate,
-no right to execute the laws he likes, and leave unexecuted
-those he dislikes. And of course you and I, his subordinates, can have
-no wider latitude of discretion than he has. Missouri is a State in the
-Union. The insurrectionary disorders in Missouri are but individual
-crimes, and do not change the legal status of the State, nor change its
-rights and obligations as a member of the Union.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A refusal by a ministerial officer to execute any law which properly
-belongs to his office, is an official misdemeanor, of which I have no doubt
-the President would take notice.<a id='r221' /><a href='#f221' class='c010'><sup>[221]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Attorney-General in this instance merely amplified a
-suggestion contained in the inaugural.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Toward the close of July, 1861, the number of “contrabands”
-had increased to nine hundred, and the Union commander
-again requested instructions.<a id='r222' /><a href='#f222' class='c010'><sup>[222]</sup></a> Secretary Cameron’s
-reply on the 8th of August following merely authorized, what
-General Butler had all along been doing, employing them at
-such labor as they were adapted to and keeping a complete
-record, so that when peace was restored the essential facts
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>of each case could easily be ascertained.<a id='r223' /><a href='#f223' class='c010'><sup>[223]</sup></a> His tact in dealing
-with this question appears from an act of Congress approved
-August 6 in which his extension of meaning to the word
-<em>contraband</em> is adopted. This declared that if persons held
-to labor or service were employed in hostility to the United
-States, the right to their services should be forfeited and such
-persons be discharged therefrom.<a id='r224' /><a href='#f224' class='c010'><sup>[224]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Exclusion of fugitive slaves from the quarters and camps
-of troops serving in the Department of Washington was provided
-by a general order of July 17, 1861, and a few weeks
-later, August 10, the departure by railway of negroes from
-the District of Columbia was prevented unless evidence of
-freedom could be adduced.<a id='r225' /><a href='#f225' class='c010'><sup>[225]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Far more important, however, than these prudent regulations
-of the Adjutant-General was the celebrated proclamation
-of Fremont, dated St. Louis, August 31, 1861, which declared
-martial law throughout the entire State of Missouri and expressed
-a purpose both to confiscate the property and free the
-negroes of all persons in the State who should take up arms
-against the United States or who were shown to have taken
-an active part with their enemy in the field.<a id='r226' /><a href='#f226' class='c010'><sup>[226]</sup></a> The President,
-in a communication of September 2 following, wrote General
-Fremont expressing anxiety concerning the effects of this
-proclamation: “I think there is great danger,” said Mr.
-Lincoln, “that the closing paragraph, in relation to the confiscation
-of property and the liberating slaves of traitorous owners,
-will alarm our Southern Union friends and turn them
-against us; perhaps ruin our rather fair prospect for
-Kentucky.<a id='r227' /><a href='#f227' class='c010'><sup>[227]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>“Allow me therefore to ask that you will, as of your own
-motion, modify that paragraph so as to conform to the first
-and fourth sections of the act of Congress entitled, ‘An act
-to confiscate property used for insurrectionary purposes,’ approved
-August 6, 1861, and a copy of which act I herewith
-send you.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This letter is written in a spirit of caution, and not of
-censure.”<a id='r228' /><a href='#f228' class='c010'><sup>[228]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though General Fremont had acted wholly on his own
-responsibility he refused so to modify that portion of his proclamation
-relative to emancipating slaves as to conform to the
-act of Congress referred to, and in a letter requested the President
-“openly to direct” him “to make the correction.” Referring
-to this part of his communication Mr. Lincoln replied
-on the 11th: “Your answer, just received, expresses the
-preference on your part that I should make an open order for
-the modification, which I very cheerfully do. It is therefore
-ordered that the said clause of said proclamation be so modified,
-held, and construed, as to conform to, and not to transcend,
-the provisions on the same subject contained in the act
-of Congress” approved August 6, 1861.<a id='r229' /><a href='#f229' class='c010'><sup>[229]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As late as October 14 the War Department was guided by
-the principles developed in its correspondence with Butler, the
-instructions of that date to General T. W. Sherman being
-based upon this policy.<a id='r230' /><a href='#f230' class='c010'><sup>[230]</sup></a> A month later inhabitants of the
-eastern shore of Virginia were informed by General Dix
-that “special directions have been given not to interfere with
-the condition of any person held to domestic service;” to
-prevent any such occurrence slaves were not permitted to come
-within his lines.<a id='r231' /><a href='#f231' class='c010'><sup>[231]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>Besides those who favored military emancipation, a large
-class seriously expected that the war would not only preserve
-the integrity of the Union, but in some way result in a general
-liberation of slaves. This feeling, manifested in various ways,
-was rapidly gathering strength, and as early as November 8
-found enthusiastic expression at a public meeting of two thousand
-citizens held in Cooper Institute, New York city. This
-assembly, which convened at the suggestion of Mr. Lincoln,
-was presided over by Hon. George Bancroft and attended by
-many distinguished persons of both the nation and the State.
-Besides the remarks of its illustrious chairman addresses were
-made by William Cullen Bryant, General Ambrose Burnside,
-Professor Francis Lieber and others. Shortly before the
-speakers arrived a gentleman arose in the audience, and in a
-ringing voice proposed “Three cheers for John C. Fremont!”
-These were given, says a newspaper account, “with electrical
-effect and without a murmur of dissent.” The meeting was
-evidently not in entire sympathy with the President’s order
-modifying that General’s proclamation of the preceding
-August.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>North Carolina, as is well known, was not so ardent for
-secession as most of her sister States in the South; forced to
-take sides, however, she imitated the example of her neighbors.
-Even then all her people did not share the opinions of their
-leaders, and when Federal troops landed in the vicinity of
-Hatteras nearly four thousand loyal inhabitants of the coast
-flocked to their lines and readily took the oath of allegiance
-to the United States; for this conduct they incurred the extreme
-hatred of secessionists, who soon reduced them to a
-condition of distress. To relieve their destitution, by supplies
-of food and clothing, the meeting was called in Cooper Institute.
-Resolutions of sympathy were unanimously adopted; a
-committee of relief was appointed to collect from the city and
-elsewhere such funds as were necessary for the purchase of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>supplies, which were to be forwarded and distributed in the
-most judicious manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If the President,” said Mr. Bancroft, “has any doubt
-under the terrible conflict into which he has been brought,
-let him hear the words of one of his predecessors. Alien nullification
-raised itself in South Carolina. Andrew Jackson, in
-the watches of the night, as he sat alone finishing that proclamation,
-sent the last words of it to Livingston, his bosom
-friend and best adviser. He sent it with these words; I have
-had the letter in my own hands, handed to me by the only
-surviving child of Mr. Livingston. I know the letter which I
-now read is a copy: ‘I submit the above as the conclusion
-of the proclamation for your amendment and revision. Let it
-receive your best flight of eloquence to strike to the heart and
-speak to the feelings of my deluded countrymen of South
-Carolina. The Union must be preserved without blood if
-this be possible; but it must be preserved at all hazards and
-at any price.’” Mr. Bancroft added: “We send the army
-into the South to maintain the Union, to restore the validity
-of the Constitution. If any one presents claims under the
-Constitution, let him begin by placing the Constitution in
-power, by respecting it and upholding it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis Lieber referred to slavery as “that great anachronism,
-out of time, out of place in the nineteenth century,” and
-Rev. Doctor Tyng said, “if slavery is in the way of the
-Union, then tread slavery down into the dust.”<a id='r232' /><a href='#f232' class='c010'><sup>[232]</sup></a> These sentiments
-were received with applause.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Bancroft a week later wrote to the President:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Following out your suggestion, a very numerous meeting of New-Yorkers
-assembled last week to take measures for relieving the loyal
-sufferers of Hatteras. I take the liberty to enclose you some remarks
-which I made on the occasion. You will find in them a copy of an unpublished
-letter of one of your most honored predecessors, with which
-you cannot fail to be pleased.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>Your administration has fallen upon times which will be remembered
-as long as human events find a record. I sincerely wish to you the glory
-of perfect success. Civil War is the instrument of Divine Providence to
-root out social slavery. Posterity will not be satisfied with the result unless
-the consequences of the war shall effect an increase of free States.
-This is the universal expectation and hope of men of all parties.<a id='r233' /><a href='#f233' class='c010'><sup>[233]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the 18th Mr. Lincoln sent this reply:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I esteem it a high honor to have received a note from Mr. Bancroft
-inclosing the report of proceedings of a New York meeting taking measures
-for the relief of Union people of North Carolina. I thank you and
-all others participating for this benevolent and patriotic movement.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The main thought in the closing paragraph of your letter is one which
-does not escape my attention, and with which I must deal in all due
-caution, and with the best judgment I can bring to it.<a id='r234' /><a href='#f234' class='c010'><sup>[234]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We have here the key to President Lincoln’s treatment of
-the slavery question down to the hour of his lamented death.
-As the hostile employment of negroes constituted by act of
-August 6 a full answer to any claim for service General
-McClellan was informed by Secretary Seward, December 4,
-1861, that the arrest of such persons as fugitives from labor
-“should be immediately followed by the military arrest of
-the parties making the seizure.” These instructions were
-called forth by intelligence that Virginia slaves engaged in hostility
-to the United States frequently escaped from the enemy
-and took refuge within the lines of the Army of the Potomac.
-Coming afterward into the District of Columbia, such persons
-upon the presumption arising from color, were liable to be
-arrested by the Washington police.<a id='r235' /><a href='#f235' class='c010'><sup>[235]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On December 3, 1861, in his first annual message to Congress,
-Mr. Lincoln discussed without especial emphasis the
-question of aiding those slaves who had been freed under the
-act of August 6; he observed that this class was dependent
-upon the United States; it was believed that, for their own
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>benefit, many of the States would enact similar laws; he therefore
-recommended Congress to provide for accepting such
-persons from the States,</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>according to some mode of valuation, in lieu, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">pro tanto</span></i>, of direct taxes,
-or upon some other plan to be agreed on with such States respectively;
-that such persons, on such acceptance by the General Government, be at
-once deemed free; and that, in any event, steps be taken for colonizing
-both classes (or the one first mentioned, if the other shall not be brought
-into existence) at some place or places in a climate congenial to them.
-It might be well to consider, too, whether the free colored people already
-in the United States could not, so far as individuals may desire, be included
-in such colonization.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>To carry out the plan of colonization may involve the acquiring of territory,
-and also the appropriation of money beyond that to be expended in
-the territorial acquisition. Having practiced the acquisition of territory
-for nearly sixty years, the question of constitutional power to do so is
-no longer an open one with us. The power was questioned at first by
-Mr. Jefferson, who, however, in the purchase of Louisiana, yielded his
-scruples on the plea of great expediency. If it be said that the only legitimate
-object of acquiring territory is to furnish homes for white men, this
-measure effects that object; for the emigration of colored men leaves
-additional room for white men remaining or coming here. Mr. Jefferson,
-however, placed the importance of procuring Louisiana more on political
-and commercial grounds than on providing room for population.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On this whole proposition, including the appropriation of money with
-the acquisition of territory, does not the expediency amount to absolute
-necessity—that without which the Government itself cannot be perpetuated?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The war continues. In considering the policy to be adopted for suppressing
-the insurrection, I have been anxious and careful that the inevitable
-conflict for this purpose shall not degenerate into a violent and
-remorseless revolutionary struggle. I have, therefore, in every case
-thought it proper to keep the integrity of the Union prominent as the primary
-object of the contest on our part, leaving all questions which are not
-of vital military importance to the more deliberate action of the Legislature.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the exercise of my best discretion I have adhered to the blockade of
-the ports held by the insurgents, instead of putting in force, by proclamation,
-the law of Congress enacted at the last session for closing those
-ports.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>So, also, obeying the dictates of prudence as well as the obligations of
-law, instead of transcending I have adhered to the act of Congress to
-confiscate property used for insurrectionary purposes. If a new law upon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>the same subject shall be proposed, its propriety will be duly considered.
-The Union must be preserved; and hence all indispensable means must be
-employed. We should not be in haste to determine that radical and extreme
-measures, which may reach the loyal as well as the disloyal, are indispensable.<a id='r236' /><a href='#f236' class='c010'><sup>[236]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The President’s mastery of national affairs is seen in the
-ability and thoroughness with which he treated a great variety
-of important public questions; though his message touches
-with the utmost delicacy the paramount issue of slavery it
-really marked an advance in his position. However, he was
-not yet abreast of the aggressive anti-slavery party in the 37th
-Congress, which had just commenced its first regular session.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The “increase of free States,” which Mr. Bancroft hoped
-would result from the war, and which President Lincoln’s
-reply shows had not escaped his attention, was not to be
-effected by military emancipation in the field but by the voluntary
-action of the States themselves. The caution and judgment
-which he brought to bear on this subject are apparent
-from even a casual examination of the message, which refers
-to the number of slaves that had been freed by the incidents
-of war, and to the extreme probability that still others would
-be liberated in its progress. It contained also a recommendation
-of colonization, a topic which had long been familiar
-to Americans both North and South. To any new law emancipating
-slaves for the participation of their masters in rebellion,
-he promised to give due consideration. This part of the
-message had the additional merit of being easily expanded
-into a more definite policy. It was this characteristic prudence
-that led the President to suppress the following remarks in a
-report which the Secretary of War had prepared for the opening
-of Congress in December, 1861:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>If it shall be found that the men who have been held by the rebels as
-slaves are capable of bearing arms and performing efficient military service,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>it is the right, and may become the duty, of this government to arm
-and equip them, and employ their services against the rebels, under proper
-military regulation, discipline, and command.<a id='r237' /><a href='#f237' class='c010'><sup>[237]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Any legislation, or even any extended debate, on these
-recommendations was prevented by questions deemed more
-urgent by Congress. Indeed, the President does not appear
-to have seriously expected favorable action at this time upon
-his suggestions, for he resumed certain efforts which he had
-been carefully considering. He believed that by the pressure
-of war necessities the border States might be induced to take
-up the idea of voluntary emancipation if the General Government
-would pay their citizens the full property value of the
-slaves they were asked to liberate; and this experiment seemed
-most feasible in the small State of Delaware, which retained
-only the merest fragment of a property interest in the
-institution.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Even before the appearance of his message a plan of compensated
-abolishment had taken definite form in the mind
-of the President, for about November 26 he had prepared
-a draft of a bill for gradual emancipation in Delaware.<a id='r238' /><a href='#f238' class='c010'><sup>[238]</sup></a>
-Through Congressman George P. Fisher the proposition was
-laid before the General Assembly of that State and received
-favorable consideration in the lower House. By the Senate,
-which convened November 25, 1861, it was taken up for discussion
-on February 7 succeeding. Upon the question, 4
-voted in favor and 4 against concurring in the action of the
-more popular branch of the Legislature. The remaining
-Senator, McFerran, was absent or silent and is not accounted
-for in the journal of this special session. Therefore the
-measure was returned non-concurred in to the other chamber.
-The following preamble and joint resolution relative to the
-proposed emancipation bill are self-explanatory. The Federal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>suggestion was repelled as an unwarranted interference
-in the domestic concerns of that State:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><em>Whereas</em>, There has been circulating among the members of this General
-Assembly a printed draft for a law to be entitled “An act for the
-gradual emancipation of slaves in the State of Delaware with just compensation
-to their owners”; <em>and whereas</em> many of the members of this
-General Assembly have been requested to support it, the said draft being
-in the following words: [Then follows the title, together with the
-twenty-one sections composing the bill. To which is added:] <em>And
-whereas</em> it is uncertain that said proposition will be submitted to this
-General Assembly for its action, nevertheless, viewing it to be unworthy
-of their support, they desire to place upon record the grounds of their
-condemnation; therefore</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><em>Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the State of
-Delaware in General Assembly met</em>, That the members of this Legislature
-were not elected with a view to the passage of any act for the emancipation
-of slaves, but with the understanding, either expressed or implied,
-that legislation upon the distracting subject of slavery was hostile to the
-public peace, and therefore to be avoided; that the passage of the act
-drafted as aforesaid, inasmuch as it renders Congressional action necessary,
-would, upon the apparent application of the State of Delaware, introduce
-the slavery question into Congress, would encourage the abolition
-element therein, and fortify it in its purpose to destroy entirely all property
-in slaves, and furthermore, would be injurious to the quiet and harmony
-that prevail in this State.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><em>Be it further resolved by the authority aforesaid</em>, That it is the opinion
-of this General Assembly, that Congress has no right to appropriate a
-dollar for the purchase of slaves, and that such a proposal, coming from
-the source to which it is traceable, evinces a design on the part of those
-having control of our national affairs to abolish slavery in the States.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><em>Resolved further</em>, That this General Assembly having in mind the interests
-of the people of Delaware, are not willing, especially at a time of
-financial embarrassment, to make the State of Delaware a guarantor of
-any debt the payment of which depends upon the mere pledge of public
-faith; that the confidence of the people of this State that nothing would
-ever be done to promote a disunion of our National system, but that it
-would remain, as expressed by Webster “one and inseparable, now and
-forever,” having been impaired by the events of the last two years, we are
-and should be very cautious in resting our obligations on the mere faith of
-others; that by accepting the terms to be offered by the United States,
-we should, upon grounds of the plainest equity, be held to have pledged
-the faith of Delaware for the payment of nine hundred thousand dollars
-as mentioned in the draft aforesaid; that, keeping in mind the fact that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>the power of the nation is now put forth to suppress a rebellion prevailing
-throughout a very large portion of its territory, and that in consequence
-of such rebellion and the uncertainty of its being speedily quelled,
-the stocks of the United States, which heretofore brought in the market a
-sum far beyond the par value thereof, are now selling at a continually increasing
-rate of discount, we are unwilling to pledge the faith of Delaware
-(a faith which has never been violated) that the proposed mode of
-payment is safe and proper.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><em>Resolved further</em>, That when the people of Delaware desire to abolish
-slavery within her borders, they will do so in their own way, having due
-regard to strict equity; that any interference from without, and all suggestions
-of saving expense to the people, or others of like character, are
-improper to be made to an honorable people, such as we represent, and
-are hereby repelled—that though the State of Delaware is small, and her
-people not of the richest, they are beyond the reach of any who would
-promote an end by improper interference and solicitations.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><em>Resolved further</em>, That a copy of the foregoing resolutions, duly attested,
-be transmitted to each of our Senators, and to our Representative
-in Congress, to be laid before their respective houses.<a id='r239' /><a href='#f239' class='c010'><sup>[239]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thus ended, so far as Delaware was concerned, the question
-of compensated emancipation. Precisely why the offer
-of Federal assistance was rejected nowhere clearly appears
-except in the records of the General Assembly. The high
-ground assumed in the resolutions was, of course, the only
-one in harmony with public opinion in the State. There are,
-however, some facts in the history of that Commonwealth
-which afford a partial explanation of the action of its Legislature.
-When the Federalist party as a political force had
-disappeared everywhere outside of New England its principles
-and traditions still lingered on in Delaware. The same
-conservative tendency, the same distrust of innovation is seen
-again in the prudent manner in which the authorities of the
-State invested and improved her portion of the surplus revenue
-distributed among the States in 1837. With a half dozen exceptions
-the shares allotted to other members of the Union
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>have disappeared, in some instances expended patriotically,
-in others squandered on projects more or less visionary. It
-has frequently been observed, too, that a community whose
-population is chiefly agricultural is apt to view with suspicion
-any financial proposition of great magnitude. Whatever the
-true explanation of her opposition to the policy of the President,
-the question at once sank to rest in Delaware; it was
-soon to be revived elsewhere, however, as will presently be
-seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Meanwhile army officers continued to determine, on their
-own authority, very important questions relative to the surrender
-of fugitive slaves. Major-General Halleck declared in
-a proclamation of February 23, 1862, that “it does not belong
-to the military to decide upon the relation of master and slave.
-Such questions must be settled by the civil courts. No fugitive
-slave will therefore be admitted within our lines or camps,
-except when specially ordered by the General commanding.”<a id='r240' /><a href='#f240' class='c010'><sup>[240]</sup></a>
-General Halleck’s order No. 3 of November 20 preceding, as it
-cut off an opportunity for the escape of thousands, occasioned
-much bitter discussion both in and out of Congress. By Halleck
-it was explained in these words: “Unauthorized persons,
-black or white, free or slaves, must be kept out of our
-camps, unless we are willing to publish to the enemy everything
-we do or intend to do.” This statement, however, does
-not altogether harmonize with the spirit of his order.<a id='r241' /><a href='#f241' class='c010'><sup>[241]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>General Buell up to March 6 appears to have uniformly returned
-this class of persons, and on the 26th of that month
-General Hooker permitted nine citizens of Maryland to search
-for negroes supposed to have taken refuge with some of the
-regiments in his division. Notwithstanding the commander
-desired that no obstacles be thrown in their way, trouble occurred
-when the claimants showed their authority and demanded
-the surrender of their slaves. They were driven from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>camp because fears for their safety were entertained by some
-of the officers. The anger of the soldiers appears to have been
-especially aroused by the fact that when within a few yards
-of camp the slaveholders fired two pistol shots at a negro
-who was running past them.<a id='r242' /><a href='#f242' class='c010'><sup>[242]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>General Doubleday’s opinion, as stated April 6, 1862, by
-the Assistant Adjutant-General, was, “that all negroes
-coming into the lines of any of the camps or forts under his
-command, are to be treated as persons and not as chattels.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Under no circumstances,” continues this regulation, “has
-the commander of a fort or camp the power of surrendering
-persons claimed as fugitive slaves, as it cannot be done without
-determining their character.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The additional article of war recently passed by Congress
-positively prohibits this.”<a id='r243' /><a href='#f243' class='c010'><sup>[243]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Notwithstanding the unmistakable tone of the above, General
-Williams announced two months later from his headquarters
-at Baton Rouge that commanders of the camps and garrisons
-in that part of Louisiana were required to turn all
-fugitives beyond the limits of their guards and sentinels because
-of “the demoralizing and disorganizing tendencies to
-the troops of harboring runaway negroes.”<a id='r244' /><a href='#f244' class='c010'><sup>[244]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Enough has been said to show the divergence of sentiment
-among Federal commanders on the rendition of fugitive slaves.
-The party preferences of officers served as a rather reliable
-index to the treatment of the fugitive in any particular case.
-This confusion, it is scarcely necessary to add, arose from the
-failure of Congress to pass a law on the subject, and to a
-considerable degree from the absence of any clearly expressed
-policy by the Administration. Of the changing opinions of the
-President, however, we catch an occasional glimpse. Though
-the contrabands at Fortress Monroe had, no doubt, brought
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>before him the entire question of slavery, the sagacity of
-General Butler had postponed the necessity of any announcement
-in May, 1861; but the subject could not always be
-avoided, and the imprudence of Fremont forced a declaration
-in September following. The events of another year were
-destined to produce changes which even the wisest could not
-then foresee.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A new phase of this troublesome question resulted from
-the capture, November 7, of Hilton Head, South Carolina,
-and the Federal occupation of the Sea Islands, where the
-labor of slaves abandoned by their masters was organized
-under authority of the Treasury Department by Mr. E. L.
-Pierce. This was, probably, intended as nothing more than an
-experiment, to be extended if successful. To interest Government
-officials at Washington in the work among these freedmen,
-Mr. Pierce, at the suggestion of Secretary Chase, called,
-February 15, 1862, upon the President, who seemed rather
-annoyed at the visit, and, after listening a few moments, said
-somewhat impatiently that he did not think he ought to be
-troubled with such details; that “there seemed to be an itching
-to get negroes into our lines.” To this Mr. Pierce replied
-that the negroes were domiciled there when the Union
-forces took possession. The President then handed his visitor
-a card by which Mr. Chase was authorized to give what instructions
-he thought judicious relative to Port Royal contrabands.<a id='r245' /><a href='#f245' class='c010'><sup>[245]</sup></a>
-This impatience Mr. Pierce explains by saying that
-the President was in expectation of a personal bereavement.
-This certainly accounts for the anxiety and apparent annoyance
-of Mr. Lincoln, but his remark that there seemed to be
-an “itching” to get negroes inside Federal lines shows that he
-had not yet deliberately considered the novel case of abandoned
-slaves; abandoned masters had hitherto claimed his attention.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>Though slowly, as it may have appeared to radical members
-of his own party, the President was surely approaching the
-great question, and on March 6, 1862, sent to Congress a
-message which recommended the adoption, and even proposed
-the form, of a joint resolution declaring:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That the United States ought to coöperate with any State which may
-adopt gradual abolishment of slavery, giving to such State pecuniary aid,
-to be used by such State, in its discretion, to compensate for the inconveniences,
-public and private, produced by such change of system.<a id='r246' /><a href='#f246' class='c010'><sup>[246]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As one of the most efficient means of self-preservation it
-was recommended by the Executive to the coördinate branch
-of Government; for to deprive the cotton States of the hope
-of being joined by the border States would, he said, “substantially
-end the rebellion; and the initiation of emancipation
-completely deprives them of it as to all the States initiating it.
-The point is not that all the States tolerating slavery would
-very soon, if at all, initiate emancipation; but that while the
-offer is equally made to all, the more Northern shall, by such
-initiation, make it certain to the more Southern that in no
-event will the former ever join the latter in their proposed
-confederacy.” Gradual emancipation he believed better for all
-concerned. The current expenditures of the war would soon
-purchase, at a fair valuation, all the slaves in any named State.
-However, it was proposed as a matter of perfectly free choice.
-“In the annual message, last December,” continued the President,
-“I thought fit to say, ‘the Union must be preserved, and
-hence all indispensable means must be employed.’ I said this
-not hastily, but deliberately. War has been made and continues
-to be an indispensable means to this end. A practical
-re-acknowledgment of the national authority would render the
-war unnecessary, and it would at once cease. If, however,
-resistance continues, the war must also continue; and it is
-impossible to foresee all the incidents which may attend and all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>the ruin which may follow it. Such as may seem indispensable,
-or may obviously promise great efficiency, toward ending
-the struggle, must and will come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The message inquired “whether the pecuniary consideration
-tendered would not be of more value to the States and
-private persons concerned than are the institution and property
-in it, in the present aspect of affairs?”<a id='r247' /><a href='#f247' class='c010'><sup>[247]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This was really a great step in advance; by many it was
-regarded as a direct and positive interference with the domestic
-institutions of the States; it was certainly a preliminary
-movement to get rid of slavery. The deliberate opinion of
-the Delaware Legislature has already been noticed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Easily distinguished in principle from the opposition in
-Delaware were the sentiments expressed in Virginia when the
-equitable and generous proposal of the President came up for
-consideration in the Richmond Legislature. Mr. Collier submitted
-to that body a preamble and resolution relative to the
-proposition. In the former it was said that negro slaves having
-been the property of their masters for two hundred and
-forty years, by use and custom at first, and subsequently by
-recognition of the public law, ought not to be, and could not
-justly be, interfered with in such property relation by the State,
-by “the people in convention assembled to alter an existing
-constitution, or to form one for admission into the confederacy,
-nor by the representatives of the people of the State in the
-Confederate Legislature, nor by any means or mode which
-the popular majority might adopt; and that the State, whilst
-remaining republican in the structure of its government, can
-lawfully get rid of that species of property, if ever, only by the
-free consent of the individual owners.” For the State to deprive
-an individual of this species of property would contravene
-the indispensable principles of free government. This
-view, as further explained by its author, denied the power of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>even a majority, in making a new State constitution, to disturb
-a preëxisting and resident property.<a id='r248' /><a href='#f248' class='c010'><sup>[248]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Three days after sending his recommendation to Congress,
-the President wrote privately to Henry J. Raymond, editor of
-the <cite>New York Times</cite>:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I am grateful to the New York journals and not less so to the
-“Times” than to others, for their kind notices of the late special message
-to Congress.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Your paper, however, intimates that the proposition, though well intentioned,
-must fail on the score of expense. I do hope you will reconsider
-this. Have you noticed the facts that less than one-half day’s cost of this
-war would pay for all the slaves in Delaware at $400 per head—that
-eighty-seven days’ cost of this war would pay for all in Delaware, Maryland,
-District of Columbia, Kentucky, and Missouri at the same price?
-Were those States to take the step, do you doubt that it would shorten
-the war more than eighty-seven days, and thus be an actual saving of
-expense?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Please look at these things and consider whether there should not be
-another article in the “Times.”<a id='r249' /><a href='#f249' class='c010'><sup>[249]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By his request those Congressmen from the border States
-then in Washington called, March 10, on Mr. Lincoln, who
-explained that his recent message was not inimical to the interests
-they represented. In the progress of the war, slaves
-would come into camps and continual irritation be thus maintained.
-In the border States that condition kept alive a feeling
-of hostility to the Government. He told them further “that
-emancipation was a subject exclusively under the control of
-the States, and must be adopted or rejected by each for
-itself.”<a id='r250' /><a href='#f250' class='c010'><sup>[250]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Relative to this interview a memorandum of the Hon. John
-W. Crisfield, one of the Maryland Representatives present,
-contains the following entry: “He [the President] was constantly
-annoyed by conflicting and antagonistic complaints; on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>the one side a certain class complained if the slave was not
-protected by the army; persons were frequently found who,
-participating in these views, acted in a way unfriendly to the
-slave-holder; on the other hand, slaveholders complained that
-their rights were interfered with, their slaves induced to abscond
-and protected within the lines; these complaints were
-numerous, loud and deep; were a serious annoyance to him
-and embarrassing to the progress of the war ... [they]
-strengthened the hopes of the Confederates that at some day
-the border States would unite with them, and thus tend to prolong
-the war; and he was of opinion, if this resolution should
-be adopted by Congress and accepted by our [the border slaveholding]
-States, these causes of irritation and these hopes
-would be removed, and more would be accomplished toward
-shortening the war than could be hoped from the greatest victory
-achieved by Union armies; ... that he did not
-claim nor had this Government any right to coerce them”
-to accept the proposition.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To Mr. Noell’s remark that the <cite>New York Tribune</cite> favored
-the measure and understood it to mean that gradual emancipation
-must be accepted or the border States would get something
-worse, the President replied that he must not be expected
-to quarrel with that journal before the right time; he
-hoped never to have to do it. The message having said that
-“all indispensable means must be employed” to preserve the
-Union, Mr. Crisfield inquired pointedly, what would be the
-effect of the refusal of a State to accept this proposal. Did
-the President, he asked, look “to any policy beyond the acceptance
-or rejection of this scheme.” Mr. Lincoln candidly replied
-that he had “no designs beyond the action of the States
-on this particular subject,” though he should lament their
-refusal to accept it. Mr. Crisfield said “he did not think the
-people of Maryland looked upon slavery as a permanent institution;
-and he did not know that they would be very reluctant
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>to give it up if provision was made to meet the loss
-and they could be rid of the race; but they did not like to
-be coerced into emancipation, either by the direct action of
-the Government or by indirection, as through the emancipation
-of slaves in this District, or the confiscation of Southern
-property as now threatened; and he thought before they would
-consent to consider this proposition they would require to be
-informed on these points.” The President answered that
-“unless he was expelled by the act of God or the Confederate
-armies, he should occupy that house for three years; and as
-long as he remained there Maryland had nothing to fear
-either for her institutions or her interests on the points referred
-to.” Representative Crisfield immediately added: “Mr. President,
-if what you now say could be heard by the people of
-Maryland, they would consider your proposition with a much
-better feeling than I fear without it they will be inclined to
-do.” To this Mr. Lincoln said that a publication of his sentiments
-would not do; it would force him before the proper
-time into a quarrel which was impending with the Greeley
-faction. This he desired to postpone, or, if possible, altogether
-to avoid.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To an objection of Governor Wickliffe, of Kentucky, he said
-that the resolution proposed would be considered rather as
-the expression of a sentiment than as involving any constitutional
-question. He did not know how the project was received
-by the members from the free States; some of them had
-spoken to him and received it kindly; but for the most part
-they were as reserved and chary as the border State delegations;
-he could not tell how they would vote.<a id='r251' /><a href='#f251' class='c010'><sup>[251]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To James A. McDougall, of California, who was making
-some opposition in the Senate, he sent, March 14, this private
-communication while the resolution was still pending:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>As to the expensiveness of gradual emancipation with the plan of
-compensation, proposed in the late message, please allow me one or two
-brief suggestions.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Less than one half day’s cost of this war would pay for all the slaves in
-Delaware at four hundred dollars per head.</p>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Thus, all the slaves in Delaware by the census of 1860, are....</td>
- <td class='c007'>1,798</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c007'>400</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c007'><hr /></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Cost of slaves</td>
- <td class='c007'>$719,200</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>One day’s cost of the war</td>
- <td class='c007'>2,000,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c007'>=========</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c013'>Again, less than eighty-seven days’ cost of this war would, at the
-same price, pay for all in Delaware, Maryland, District of Columbia,
-Kentucky, and Missouri.</p>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Thus, slaves in</td>
- <td class='c006'>Delaware</td>
- <td class='c007'>1,798</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c006'>Maryland</td>
- <td class='c007'>87,188</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c006'>District of Columbia</td>
- <td class='c007'>3,181</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c006'>Kentucky</td>
- <td class='c007'>225,490</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c006'>Missouri</td>
- <td class='c007'>114,965</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c007'><hr /></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c007'>432,622</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c007'>400</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c007'><hr /></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Cost of slaves</td>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c007'>$173,048,800</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006' colspan='2'>Eighty-seven days’ cost of war</td>
- <td class='c007'>174,000,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c007'>============</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c013'>Do you doubt that taking the initiatory steps on the part of those
-States and this District would shorten the war more than eighty-seven
-days, and thus be an actual saving of expense?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A word as to the time and manner of incurring the expense.
-Suppose, for instance, a State devises and adopts a system by which
-the institution absolutely ceases therein by a named day—say January
-1, 1882. Then let the sum to be paid to such a State by the United
-States be ascertained by taking from the census of 1860 the number
-of slaves within the State, and multiplying the number by four hundred—the
-United States to pay such sums to the State in twenty equal
-annual installments, in six per cent. bonds of the United States.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The sum thus given, as to time and manner, I think, would not be
-half as onerous as would be an equal sum raised now for the indefinite
-prosecution of the war; but of this you can judge as well as I. I
-enclose a census table for your convenience.<a id='r252' /><a href='#f252' class='c010'><sup>[252]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>On the same day of the conference with the border State
-delegations, March 10, the resolution, in precisely the language
-suggested by the President, was introduced by Roscoe
-Conkling, and on the following day by a vote of 89 to 31
-passed the House.<a id='r253' /><a href='#f253' class='c010'><sup>[253]</sup></a> The Senate by 32 yeas to 10 nays took
-favorable action upon it on the 2d of April succeeding.<a id='r254' /><a href='#f254' class='c010'><sup>[254]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is important to notice that at this time, March, 1862,
-the Government set up no claim of a right by Federal authority
-to interfere with slavery within the limits of a State; also
-that public opinion in the North had advanced to the position
-occupied by Representative McKean more than a year before,
-when he introduced into Congress his resolution for compensated
-emancipation.<a id='r255' /><a href='#f255' class='c010'><sup>[255]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At a session, May 28, 1862, of the Union Convention of
-Baltimore its Business Committee reported a series of resolutions
-which were adopted unanimously, among them one approving
-the wise and conservative policy proposed by the
-President in his message of March 6; that it was not only
-the duty but the interest of the loyal people of Maryland to
-accept the offer of pecuniary aid tendered by the Government
-to inaugurate an equitable plan of emancipation and colonization.<a id='r256' /><a href='#f256' class='c010'><sup>[256]</sup></a>
-This was the dawn of emancipation in Maryland.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The President approved, April 16, six days after the passage
-of his cherished measure, an act prohibiting slavery and liberating
-slaves in the District of Columbia. It included both compensation
-to owners and the principle of colonization.<a id='r257' /><a href='#f257' class='c010'><sup>[257]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>Shortly before its passage, April 17, a resolution was favorably
-considered by the House to appoint a committee of nine
-empowered to report whether any plan could be proposed and
-recommended for the gradual emancipation of all African
-slaves and the extinction of slavery in Delaware, Maryland,
-Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee and Missouri by the people or
-local authorities thereof, and how far and in what way the
-United States could and ought equitably to aid in facilitating
-either of the above objects. This measure was adopted by
-a vote of 67 to 52, and one week later a committee was appointed
-by the Speaker.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>General Hunter by an order of April 25 had extended
-martial law over South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. Two
-weeks later he proclaimed persons in those States heretofore
-held as slaves forever free. “Slavery and martial law in a
-free country” he declared “altogether incompatible.” The
-President in his proclamation of May 19, 1862, rescinding this
-order once more reveals his sentiments on the slavery question.
-The act of the Department commander, he said, was
-wholly unauthorized. The document continues: “I further
-make known that, whether it be competent for me, as Commander-in-Chief
-of the army and navy, to declare the slaves
-of any State or States free, and whether, at any time, in any
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>case, it shall have become a necessity indispensable to the
-maintenance of the Government to exercise such supposed
-power, are questions which, under my responsibility, I reserve
-to myself, and which I cannot feel justified in leaving to the
-decision of commanders in the field.”<a id='r258' /><a href='#f258' class='c010'><sup>[258]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Lincoln took this opportunity to point out to those most
-nearly concerned the unmistakable signs of the times, and
-earnestly appealed to them to embrace the offer of compensated
-abolishment, quoting upon that subject the joint resolution of
-Congress. The order of General Hunter, so far as it concerned
-the President, could have been dismissed by its disavowal;
-but he went farther: he not only took advantage of
-this occasion earnestly to urge upon the border States very
-serious consideration of the principle of compensated emancipation,
-but he raised, without pausing to discuss it, the question
-of his right as Commander-in-Chief of the army and
-navy to declare the freedom of slaves within the limits of a
-State should such a measure become indispensable to the
-maintenance of the Union.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For refusing to employ his regiment in returning fugitive
-slaves of disloyal masters, Colonel Paine, of the Fourth Wisconsin
-Volunteers, was placed under arrest in the summer of
-1862; about the same time Lieutenant-Colonel Anthony was
-similarly disciplined both for refusing permission to search
-his camp and for ordering the arrest of those hunting for
-slaves.<a id='r259' /><a href='#f259' class='c010'><sup>[259]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Instructions from the War Department, dated July 22, and
-applying to all the States in rebellion except South Carolina
-and Tennessee, authorized the employment as laborers of so
-many persons of African descent as the military and naval
-commanders could use to advantage, and the payment of reasonable
-wages for their labor.<a id='r260' /><a href='#f260' class='c010'><sup>[260]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>On May 12, 1862, Representative Lovejoy proposed a bill,
-a substitute for one previously reported by him and introduced
-by Mr. Isaac N. Arnold:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>To the end that freedom may be and remain forever the fundamental
-law of the land in all places whatsoever, so far as it lies within
-the powers or depends upon the action of the Government of the United
-States to make it so: Therefore,</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><em>Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
-United States of America in Congress assembled</em>, That slavery or involuntary
-servitude, in all cases whatsoever (other than in the punishment
-of crime, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted) shall henceforth
-cease, and be prohibited forever in all the Territories of the
-United States, now existing, or hereafter to be formed or acquired in
-any way.<a id='r261' /><a href='#f261' class='c010'><sup>[261]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This measure passed by 85 yeas to 50 nays. In the Senate,
-June 9, it was reported amended by inserting this substitute:
-“That from and after the passage of this act there shall be
-neither slavery nor involuntary servitude in any of the Territories
-of the United States now existing, or which may at
-any time hereafter be formed or acquired by the United States,
-otherwise than in punishment of crimes whereof the party
-shall have been duly convicted.” In this form it passed by a
-vote of 28 to 10 and the House concurred by 72 yeas to 38
-nays.<a id='r262' /><a href='#f262' class='c010'><sup>[262]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Charles Sumner, writing June 5, 1862, to a correspondent
-who was impatient at what seemed the short-comings of the
-President, says:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Your criticism of the President is hasty. I am confident that, if you
-knew him as I do, you would not make it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Of course, the President cannot be held responsible for all the misfeasances
-of subordinates, unless adopted or at least tolerated by him.
-And I am sure that nothing unjust or ungenerous will be tolerated, much
-less adopted, by him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I am happy to let you know that he has no sympathy with Stanly in his
-absurd wickedness, closing the schools, nor again in his other act of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>turning our camp into a hunting ground for slaves. He repudiates
-both—positively. The latter point has occupied much of his thought;
-and the newspapers have not gone too far in recording his repeated
-declarations, which I have often heard from his own lips, that slaves
-finding their way into the national lines are never to be re-enslaved.
-This is his conviction, expressed without reserve.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Could you have seen the President—as it was my privilege often—while
-he was considering the great questions on which he has already
-acted—the invitation to emancipation in the States, emancipation in the
-District of Columbia, and the acknowledgment of the independence of
-Hayti and Liberia—even your zeal would have been satisfied, for you
-would have felt the sincerity of his purpose to do what he could to
-carry forward the principles of the Declaration of Independence. His
-whole soul was occupied, especially by the first proposition, which was
-peculiarly his own. In familiar intercourse with him, I remember
-nothing more touching than the earnestness and completeness with
-which he embraced this idea. To his mind, it was just and beneficent
-while it promised the sure end of slavery. Of course, to me who had
-already proposed a bridge of gold for the retreating fiend, it was
-most welcome. Proceeding from the President, it must take its place
-among the great events of history.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c013'>I wish that you really knew the President, and had heard the artless
-expression of his convictions on these questions which concern you so
-deeply. You might, perhaps, wish that he were less cautious, but you
-would be grateful that he is so true to all that you have at heart.
-Believe me, therefore, you are wrong, and I regret it the more because
-of my desire to see all our friends stand firmly together.<a id='r263' /><a href='#f263' class='c010'><sup>[263]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The President requested and obtained, July 12, 1862, an
-interview with the border State delegations. The near adjournment
-of Congress would deprive him of an opportunity
-of seeing them for several months. He believed they held
-more power for good than any other equal number of members,
-and felt that the duty of making an appeal to them
-could not be waived. This he did by reading a carefully
-prepared paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Confederate States, he said, would cling to the hope of
-an ultimate union with the border States as long as they perpetuated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>the institution of slavery. If the members had supported
-his plan of gradual emancipation in the preceding
-March the rebellion would now, 1862, be substantially ended.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Looking to the stern facts in the case he inquired whether
-they could do better for their States than to follow the course
-which he urged. If the war continued long, the institution
-“will be extinguished by mere friction and abrasion,”—by
-the incidents of war much of its value was already gone. He
-did not speak of immediate emancipation, “but of a decision
-at once to emancipate gradually.” Room for colonization
-could be procured in South America ample and cheap enough.
-When their numbers increased sufficiently to be company for
-one another the freed people would not be so reluctant to
-go. His repudiation of General Hunter’s proclamation had
-given offence to some whose support the Government could
-not afford to lose. The pressure from such persons was still
-upon him and the Congressmen from the border slave States
-could relieve him and the country. He begged them to reexamine
-his message of March 6, and commend it to the
-consideration of their constituents. The peril of their common
-country demanded the loftiest views and the boldest action if
-they desired to perpetuate popular government.<a id='r264' /><a href='#f264' class='c010'><sup>[264]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was represented to him, in a conversation which followed
-this appeal, that the resolution of Congress, being no more
-than an expression of sentiment, could not be regarded by them
-as a basis for substantial action. Mr. Lincoln admitted that,
-as a condition of taking into consideration a proposition so
-nearly affecting their social system, the border slave States
-were entitled to expect a substantial pledge of pecuniary
-aid.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was further represented at this conference that the people
-of the border States were interested in knowing the great importance
-which Mr. Lincoln attached to the policy in question,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>while it was equally due to the country, to the President
-and to themselves that they should publicly announce the
-motives under which they were called to act, and the considerations
-of public policy urged upon them and their constituents.
-With a view to such a statement of their position the members
-met in council to deliberate on the reply they should make,
-and two days later the majority sent the following paper to
-the President:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The undersigned ... have listened to your address
-with the profound sensibility naturally inspired by the
-high source from which it emanates, the earnestness which
-marked its delivery, and the overwhelming importance of the
-subject of which it treats. We have given it our most respectful
-consideration, and now lay before you our response....</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“... Repudiating the dangerous heresies of the
-secessionists, we believed, with you, that the war on their
-part is aggressive and wicked, and the objects for which it
-was to be prosecuted on ours, defined by your message at the
-opening of the present Congress, to be such as all good men
-should approve. We have not hesitated to vote all supplies
-necessary to carry it on vigorously....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This support, continues the response, was yielded “in the
-face of measures most distasteful to us and injurious to the
-interests we represent, and in the hearing of doctrines, avowed
-by those who claim to be your friends, [which] must be
-abhorrent to us and our constituents.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The greater number of them did not, however, vote for the
-measure recommended in his message of March 6, and they
-proceeded to state the principal reasons which influenced their
-action. First, it proposed a radical change in their social system;
-it was hurried through both Houses with undue haste;
-and was passed without any opportunity whatever for consultation
-with their constituents, whose interests it deeply involved.
-“It seemed,” said the majority, “like an interference
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>by this Government with a question which peculiarly and exclusively
-belonged to our respective States, on which they had
-not sought advice or solicited aid. Many of us doubted the
-constitutional power of this Government to make appropriations
-of money for the object designated, and all of us thought
-our finances were in no condition to bear the immense outlay
-which its adoption and faithful execution would impose upon
-the national Treasury. If we pause but a moment to think of
-the debt its acceptance would have entailed, we are appalled by
-its magnitude. The proposition was addressed to all the
-States and embraced the whole number of slaves.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The census of 1860 showed a slave population of nearly
-4,000,000; from natural increase the number in 1862 exceeded
-that. “At even the low average of $300, the price
-fixed by the emancipation act for the slaves of this District,
-and greatly below their real worth, their value runs up to the
-enormous sum of $1,200,000,000; and if to that we add the
-cost of deportation and colonization, at $100 each, which is
-but a fraction more than is actually paid by the Maryland
-Colonization Society, we have $400,000,000 more. They were
-not willing nor could the country bear a tax sufficient to pay
-the interest on that sum in addition to the vast and daily increasing
-debt already fixed upon them by the exigencies of
-the war. The proposition is nothing less than the deportation
-from the country of $1,600,000,000 worth of producing labor
-and the substitution of an interest-bearing debt of the same
-amount. Even if it were expected that only the border States
-would accept the proposition, that involved a sum too great
-for the financial ability of the Government at this time. The
-total number of slaves in those States according to the late
-census was 1,196,112. The same rate of valuation with expenses
-of deportation and colonization gives the enormous
-sum of $478,038,133.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We did not feel that we should be justified in voting for a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>measure which, if carried out, would add this vast amount to
-our public debt at a moment when the Treasury was reeling
-under the enormous expenditure of the war.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To them the resolution seemed no more than the enunciation
-of a sentiment. “No movement was then made to provide and
-appropriate the funds required to carry it into effect; and we
-were not encouraged to believe that funds would be provided.
-And our belief has been fully justified by subsequent events.
-Not to mention other circumstances, it is quite sufficient for
-our purpose to bring to your notice the fact that, while this
-resolution was under consideration in the Senate our colleague,
-the Senator from Kentucky, moved an amendment appropriating
-$500,000 to the object therein designated, and it was
-voted down with great unanimity. What confidence, then,
-could we reasonably feel that if we committed ourselves to
-the policy it proposed, our constituents would reap the fruits
-of the promise held out; and on what ground could we, as
-fair men, approach them and challenge their support?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They denied that if, as the President alleged, they had
-supported the resolution of March 6, the war would be substantially
-ended, and they added, “The resolution has passed
-and if there be virtue in it, it will be quite as efficacious as if
-we had voted for it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The war, they asserted, was prolonged not by reason of
-their conduct, but because of the union of all classes in the
-South. Those who wished to break down national independence
-and set up State domination, the State-rights party,
-could not be reconciled; but the large class who believed their
-domestic interests had been assailed by the Government might
-be if only they were convinced “that no harm is intended to
-them and their institutions,” but that the Government was
-simply defending its legitimate authority.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Twelve months ago,” adds this response, “both Houses
-of Congress, adopting the spirit of your message, then but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>recently sent in, declared with singular unanimity the objects
-of the war, and the country instantly bounded to your side
-to assist you in carrying it on. If the spirit of that resolution
-had been adhered to, we are confident that we should before
-now have seen the end of this deplorable conflict. But what
-have we seen?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In both Houses of Congress we have heard doctrines subversive
-of the principles of the Constitution, and seen measure
-after measure founded in substance on those doctrines proposed
-and carried through which can have no other effect than
-to distract and divide loyal men, and exasperate and drive still
-further from us and their duty the people of the rebellious
-States. Military officers, following these bad examples, have
-stepped beyond the just limits of their authority in the same
-direction, until in several instances you have felt the necessity
-of interfering to arrest them.... The effect of these
-measures was foretold, and may now be seen in the indurated
-state of Southern feeling.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To these causes, and not to the failure of the border delegations
-to support the measure, they attributed the terrible earnestness
-of those in arms against the Government. Nor was
-the institution of slavery the source of insurgent strength,
-but rather the apprehension that the powers of a common
-Government would be wielded against the institutions of the
-Southern States.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The reply concludes: “If Congress, by proper and necessary
-legislation, shall provide sufficient funds and place them
-at your disposal, to be applied by you to the payment of any
-of our States or the citizens thereof who shall adopt the abolishment
-of slavery, either gradual or immediate, as they may
-determine, and the expense of deportation and colonization of
-the liberated slaves, then will our State[s] and people take this
-proposition into careful consideration, for such decision as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>in their judgment is demanded by their interest, their honor,
-and their duty to the whole country.”<a id='r265' /><a href='#f265' class='c010'><sup>[265]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The minority, seven in number, in their reply of the 15th
-declared themselves ready to make any sacrifice to save the
-Government and the institutions of their fathers, and promised
-to ask the people of their States calmly, deliberately and fairly
-to consider the recommendations of the President; they were
-encouraged to assume this position because the leaders of the
-rebellion had offered to abolish slavery among them as a
-condition of foreign intervention in favor of their independence
-as a nation.<a id='r266' /><a href='#f266' class='c010'><sup>[266]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Horace Maynard, though not representing a border State
-proper, expressed his approval of the President’s policy and
-stated the physical impossibility of submitting to the consideration
-of his people that or any other proposition until Tennessee
-had first been freed from hostile arms.<a id='r267' /><a href='#f267' class='c010'><sup>[267]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A fourth paper submitted to the President was that of
-Senator J. B. Henderson, of Missouri, who had cheerfully
-supported the measure at the time of its introduction; he
-believed the proposition would have received the approbation
-of a large majority of the border State delegations if they
-could have foreseen that the war would have been protracted
-a twelvemonth and had felt assured that the dominant party in
-Congress would, like the President, be as prompt in practical
-action as they had been in the expression of a sentiment. “In
-this period of the nation’s distress,” says Senator Henderson,
-“I know of no human institution too sacred for discussion;
-no material interest belonging to the citizen that he should not
-willingly place upon the altar of his country, if demanded by
-the public good.”<a id='r268' /><a href='#f268' class='c010'><sup>[268]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Henderson did not agree with the opinion of the President
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>that “the war would now be substantially ended” had
-the members from the border States supported the measure
-in the preceding March. Personally he was favorable to the
-proposition, but remembered that he was the servant not the
-master of the people of Missouri.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To the sudden and unexpected collapse of McClellan’s
-Richmond campaign has been ascribed the determination of
-President Lincoln to adopt general military emancipation so
-much sooner than he otherwise would have done. The great
-and decisive element of military strength in the slave population
-which he saw so clearly a little later could not even then,
-June and July, 1862, have been altogether concealed from his
-keen insight into affairs. His personal appeal to the border
-Congressmen was made July 12; the result of that conference
-he easily anticipated. Nor was the receipt of their written
-replies necessary to inform him that his offer would be rejected.
-So much he could readily collect from their oral
-objections and verbal criticisms. The decision to give notice
-of his intention to issue a proclamation concerning slavery was
-probably made within a few hours after he had assured Mr.
-Crisfield that the emancipation policy extended no farther than
-to a refusal of the border States to accept his tender of pecuniary
-aid to any commonwealth voluntarily adopting the plan of
-gradual abolishment. However this may be, he confided on
-the following day, July 13, 1862, to Secretaries Seward and
-Welles his intention to emancipate slaves by proclamation
-if their masters did not cease to make war on the Government.
-From the diary of the latter, we learn under what
-circumstances this important communication was made.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>President Lincoln [writes Mr. Welles] invited me to accompany him in
-his carriage to the funeral of an infant child of Mr. Stanton. Secretary
-Seward and Mrs. Frederick Seward were also in the carriage. Mr.
-Stanton occupied at that time, for a summer residence, the house of a
-naval officer, some two or three miles west or northwesterly of Georgetown.
-It was on this occasion and on this ride that he first mentioned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>to Mr. Seward and myself the subject of emancipating the slaves by
-proclamation in case the rebels did not cease to persist in their war
-on the Government and the Union, of which he saw no evidence. He
-dwelt earnestly on the gravity, importance, and delicacy of the movement;
-said he had given it much thought, and had about come to the
-conclusion that it was a military necessity, absolutely essential for the
-salvation of the nation, that we must free the slaves or be ourselves subdued,
-etc., etc. This was, he said, the first occasion where he had
-mentioned the subject to any one, and wished us to frankly state how the
-proposition struck us. Mr. Seward said the subject involved consequences
-so vast and momentous that he should wish to bestow on it
-mature reflection before giving a decisive answer; but his present
-opinion inclined to the measure as justifiable, and perhaps he might say
-expedient and necessary. These were also my views. Two or three
-times on that ride the subject, which was of course an absorbing one
-for each and all, was adverted to, and before separating, the President
-desired us to give the subject special and deliberate attention, for he
-was earnest in the conviction that something must be done. It was
-a new departure for the President, for until this time, in all our previous
-interviews, whenever the question of emancipation or the mitigation
-of slavery had been in any way alluded to, he had been prompt
-and emphatic in denouncing any interference by the General Government
-with the subject. This was, I think, the sentiment of every
-member of the Cabinet, all of whom, including the President, considered
-it a local domestic question appertaining to the States respectively,
-who had never parted with their authority over it. But the
-reverses before Richmond, and the formidable power and dimensions
-of the insurrection, which extended through all the slave States and had
-combined most of them in a confederacy to destroy the Union, impelled
-the Administration to adopt extraordinary measures to preserve
-the national existence. The slaves, if not armed and disciplined, were
-in the service of those who were, not only as field laborers and producers,
-but thousands of them were in attendance upon the armies in
-the field, employed as waiters and teamsters, and the fortifications and
-intrenchments were constructed by them.<a id='r269' /><a href='#f269' class='c010'><sup>[269]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The session of Congress was drawing to a close, but before
-adjournment the Confiscation Act, passed July 17, 1862, was
-approved by the President. This with kindred laws increased
-the number of forfeitures of title to slaves for the crimes of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>treason and rebellion. These penalties were by him considered
-just and their imposition constitutional.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Within five days after the adjournment of Congress the
-President, July 21, 1862, reached his final conclusions on the
-subject of emancipation. The diary of Secretary Chase contains
-the following record:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>[Having received notice of a Cabinet meeting, Mr. Chase says:] I
-went to the President’s at the appointed hour and found that he was
-profoundly concerned at the present aspect of affairs, and had determined
-to take some definite steps in respect to military action and
-slavery. He had prepared several orders, the first of which contemplated
-authority to commanders to subsist their troops in the hostile
-territory; the second, authority to employ negroes as laborers; the third,
-requiring that both in case of property taken and negroes employed,
-accounts should be kept with such degree of certainty as would enable
-compensation to be made in proper cases. Another provided for the
-colonization of negroes in some tropical country.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A good deal of discussion took place upon these points. The first
-order was unanimously approved. The second was also unanimously
-approved; and the third by all except myself. I doubted the expediency
-of attempting to keep accounts for the benefit of inhabitants of rebel
-States. The colonization project was not much discussed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Secretary of War presented some letters from General Hunter, in
-which General Hunter advised the Department that the withdrawal of a
-large proportion of his troops to reënforce General McClellan rendered
-it highly important that he should be immediately authorized to enlist
-all loyal persons without reference to complexion. Mr. Stanton, Mr.
-Seward, and myself expressed ourselves in favor of this plan, and no
-one expressed himself against it. Mr. Blair was not present. The
-President was not prepared to decide the question, but expressed
-himself as averse to arming negroes.<a id='r270' /><a href='#f270' class='c010'><sup>[270]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This Cabinet meeting came to no final conclusion, and, as
-we learn from the same source, the discussion was resumed on
-the following day, July 22, when the question of arming the
-slaves was brought up.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I advocated it warmly [writes Secretary Chase].<a id='r271' /><a href='#f271' class='c010'><sup>[271]</sup></a> The President was
-unwilling to adopt this measure, but proposed to issue a proclamation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>on the basis of the Confiscation Bill, calling upon the States to return
-to their allegiance—warning rebels that the provisions of the act would
-have full force at the expiration of sixty days—adding, on his own part,
-a declaration of his intention to renew, at the next session of Congress,
-his recommendation of compensation to States adopting gradual abolishment
-of slavery—and proclaiming the emancipation of all slaves
-within States remaining in insurrection on the first day of January, 1863.<a id='r272' /><a href='#f272' class='c010'><sup>[272]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Chase promised the measure his cordial support, but
-preferred that no new expression on the subject of compensation
-be made at that time. Secretary Chase, in the diary mentioned,
-says: “The impression left upon my mind by the
-whole discussion was, that, while the President thought that
-the organization, equipment, and arming of negroes, like other
-soldiers, would be productive of more evil than good, he was
-not unwilling that commanders should, at their discretion, arm
-for purely defensive purposes, slaves coming within their
-lines.”<a id='r273' /><a href='#f273' class='c010'><sup>[273]</sup></a> On the kindred policy of emancipation, however,
-the President had reached a definite conclusion which was in
-advance of the opinions entertained by even the most radical
-members of his Cabinet. When, therefore, he read to them,
-on July 22, his draft of an emancipation proclamation they
-were for the most part taken completely by surprise. This
-momentous document deserves to be reproduced entire.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In pursuance of the sixth section of the act of Congress entitled “An
-act to suppress insurrection and to punish treason and rebellion, to
-seize and confiscate property of rebels, and for other purposes,” approved
-July 17, 1862, and which act and the joint resolution explanatory
-thereof are herewith published, I, Abraham Lincoln, President of the
-United States, do hereby proclaim to and warn all persons within the
-contemplation of said sixth section to cease participating in, aiding,
-countenancing, or abetting the existing rebellion, or any rebellion,
-against the Government of the United States, and to return to their
-proper allegiance to the United States, on pain of the forfeitures and
-seizures as within and by said sixth section provided.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And I hereby make known that it is my purpose, upon the next
-meeting of Congress, to again recommend the adoption of a practical
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>measure for tendering pecuniary aid to the free choice or rejection of any
-and all States which may then be recognizing and practically sustaining
-the authority of the United States, and which may then have voluntarily
-adopted, or thereafter may voluntarily adopt, gradual abolishment
-of slavery within such State or States; that the object is to practically
-restore, thenceforward to be maintained, the constitutional relation
-between the General Government and each and all the States wherein
-that relation is now suspended or disturbed; and that for this object
-the war, as it has been, will be prosecuted. And as a fit and necessary
-military measure for effecting this object, I as Commander-in-Chief
-of the army and navy of the United States, do order and declare that on
-the first day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight
-hundred and sixty-three, all persons held as slaves within any State
-or States wherein the constitutional authority of the United States
-shall not then be practically recognized, submitted to, and maintained,
-shall then, thenceforward, and forever be free.<a id='r274' /><a href='#f274' class='c010'><sup>[274]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The diary of Secretary Chase, as well as the President’s
-endorsement on his draft, shows the emancipation proclamation
-to have been read to the Cabinet July 22, 1862. Various
-suggestions were offered; but except an objection of Secretary
-Seward they had all been fully anticipated by Mr. Lincoln
-and settled in his own mind. Secretary Seward said: “Mr.
-President, I approve of the proclamation, but I question the
-expediency of its issue at this juncture. The depression of
-the public mind, consequent upon our repeated reverses, is so
-great that I fear the effect of so important a step. It may be
-viewed as the last measure of an exhausted Government, a
-cry for help; the Government stretching forth its hands to
-Ethiopia, instead of Ethiopia stretching forth her hands to the
-Government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Speaking afterwards of this incident, Mr. Lincoln said:
-“Seward’s idea was ‘that it would be considered our last
-<em>shriek</em> on the retreat. Now,’ added Mr. Seward, ‘while I
-approve the measure, I suggest, sir, that you postpone its issue,
-until you can give it to the country supported by military success,
-instead of issuing it, as would be the case now, upon the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>greatest disasters of the war!’ The wisdom of this view,”
-said Mr. Lincoln in recalling the occasion, “struck me with
-very great force. It was an aspect of the case that, in all my
-thought upon the subject, I had entirely overlooked. The
-result was that I put the draft of the proclamation aside, as
-you do your sketch for a picture, waiting for a victory.”<a id='r275' /><a href='#f275' class='c010'><sup>[275]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Instead of the proclamation so carefully discussed, a short
-one was published three days later, of which the most important
-part is as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In pursuance of the sixth section of the act of Congress entitled
-“An act to suppress insurrection and to punish treason and rebellion,
-to seize and confiscate the property of rebels, and for other purposes,”
-approved July 17, 1862, and which act, and the joint resolution explanatory
-thereof, are herewith published, I, Abraham Lincoln, President
-of the United States, do hereby proclaim to and warn all persons
-within the contemplation of said sixth section to cease participating in,
-aiding, countenancing, or abetting the existing rebellion, or any rebellion,
-against the Government of the United States, and to return to their
-proper allegiance to the United States, on pain of the forfeitures and
-seizures as within and by said sixth section provided.<a id='r276' /><a href='#f276' class='c010'><sup>[276]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This warning was required by the sixth section of the act
-mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>During the following month President Lincoln waited patiently
-for tidings of some unquestioned success that would
-justify the publication of his proclamation, but when instead
-he received in the closing days of August intelligence of the
-second disaster at Manassas his anxiety must have become intense.
-This victory, together with the succession of others recently
-attending Confederate arms, encouraged General Lee’s
-invasion of Maryland. An army, notwithstanding its late reverses,
-still formidable in numbers and once more thoroughly
-reorganized marched leisurely from the vicinity of Washington
-to locate and destroy him. When, where or how the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>battle-cloud would break was uncertain. All eyes were turned
-on McClellan, again in command of the Union forces and
-strengthened by every soldier that could be spared from the
-defences of the Federal capital. It was in this state of suspense,
-and on the very day, September 13, that Lee’s victorious
-legions entered Frederick City that the President gave audience
-to a deputation from the religious denominations of
-Chicago, presenting a memorial for the immediate issue of an
-emancipation proclamation, which was enforced by some remarks
-from the chairman. The President replied that he had
-for weeks past, even for months, thought much upon the
-subject of their memorial.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am approached,” said he, “with the most opposite
-opinions and advice, and that by religious men, who are
-equally certain that they represent the Divine will. I am
-sure that either the one or the other class is mistaken in that
-belief, and perhaps, in some respect, both. I hope it will not
-be irreverent for me to say that if it is probable that God
-would reveal His will to others, on a point so connected with
-my duty, it might be supposed He would reveal it directly to
-me; for, unless I am more deceived in myself than I often am,
-it is my earnest desire to know the will of Providence in this
-matter. And if I can learn what it is I will do it! These
-are not, however, the days of miracles, and I suppose it will
-be granted that I am not to expect a direct revelation. I must
-study the plain physical facts of the case, ascertain what is
-possible, and learn what appears to be wise and right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The difficulties of the subject and the impossibility of even
-anti-slavery men, in or out of Congress, agreeing upon any
-measure of emancipation were then referred to. However, he
-would discuss the merits of the case and asked pointedly:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What good would a proclamation of emancipation from
-me do, especially as we are now situated? I do not want to
-issue a document that the whole world will see must necessarily
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>be inoperative.... Would my word free the
-slaves, when I cannot even enforce the Constitution in the
-rebel States? Is there a single court, or magistrate, or individual
-that would be influenced by it there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He admitted to his visitors, however, that he raised no
-objections to such a proclamation as they desired on legal or
-on constitutional grounds; for, continued he, “as Commander-in-Chief
-of the Army and Navy, in time of war I suppose I
-have a right to take any measure which may best subdue the
-enemy, nor do I urge objections of a moral nature, in view of
-possible consequences of insurrection and massacre at the
-South. I view this matter as a practical war measure, to be
-decided on according to the advantages or disadvantages it
-may offer to the suppression of the rebellion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The committee replied, and the President added, “I admit
-that slavery is at the root of the rebellion.... I will
-also concede that emancipation would help us in Europe, and
-convince them that we are incited by something more than
-ambition. I grant, further, that it would help somewhat at
-the North, though not so much, I fear, as you and those you
-represent imagine.... Unquestionably, it would weaken the
-rebels by drawing off their laborers, which is of great importance;
-but I am not so sure we could do much with the blacks.”<a id='r277' /><a href='#f277' class='c010'><sup>[277]</sup></a>
-The President, too, called attention to the fact that the border
-slave States had 50,000 bayonets in the Union army. It
-would be a serious matter if in consequence of such a proclamation
-they should go over to the South. In conclusion he
-said that he had not decided against a proclamation of liberty
-to the slaves, but held the matter under advisement and assured
-them that the subject was on his mind by day and by night
-more than any other.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was currently reported among anti-slavery men in
-Illinois that the emancipation proclamation was extorted from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>the President by the pressure of such delegations as this from
-the Christian Convention.<a id='r278' /><a href='#f278' class='c010'><sup>[278]</sup></a> To determine how little foundation
-there is for this opinion it is only necessary to recall what
-had occurred in the Cabinet on July 22 preceding.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The repulse of Lee’s veterans at Antietam, September 17,
-1862, raised somewhat the hopes of the President. On the
-19th General McClellan telegraphed an account of his victory,
-and Mr. Lincoln three days later announced his intention to
-issue the postponed proclamation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All the Cabinet members, having been summoned by messenger
-from the State Department, were in attendance at the
-White House on September 22, 1862. After some talk of a
-general nature, and the reading by Mr. Lincoln of a humorous
-chapter from a book by Artemus Ward, the conversation assumed
-a more serious tone. What subsequently transpired on
-that eventful occasion we learn from the following record in
-the diary of Secretary Chase:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Gentlemen, [said the President] I have, as you are aware, thought a
-great deal about the relation of this war to slavery, and you all remember
-that, several weeks ago, I read to you an order I had prepared upon the
-subject, which, on account of objections made by some of you, was not
-issued. Ever since then my mind has been much occupied with this subject,
-and I have thought all along that the time for acting on it might
-probably come. I think the time has come now. I wish it was a
-better time. I wish that we were in a better condition. The action of
-the army against the rebels has not been quite what I should have
-best liked. But they have been driven out of Maryland, and Pennsylvania
-is no longer in danger of invasion. When the rebel army was
-at Frederick I determined, as soon as it should be driven out of Maryland,
-to issue a proclamation of emancipation, such as I thought most
-likely to be useful. I said nothing to any one, but I made a promise to
-myself and [hesitating a little] to my Maker. The rebel army is now
-driven out, and I am going to fulfill that promise. I have got you
-together to hear what I have written down. I do not wish your advice
-about the main matter, for that I have determined for myself. This
-I say without intending anything but respect for any one of you. But
-I already know the views of each on this question. They have been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>heretofore expressed, and I have considered them as thoroughly and
-as carefully as I can. What I have written is that which my reflections
-have determined me to say. If there is anything in the expressions
-I use or in any minor matter which any one of you thinks had
-best be changed, I shall be glad to receive your suggestions. One other
-observation I will make. I know very well that many others might,
-in this matter as in others, do better than I can; and if I was satisfied
-that the public confidence was more fully possessed by any one
-of them than by me, and knew of any constitutional way in which he
-could be put in my place, he should have it. I would gladly yield
-it to him. But though I believe that I have not so much of the
-confidence of the people as I had some time since, I do not know
-that, all things considered, any other person has more; and, however
-this may be, there is no way in which I can have any other man put
-where I am. I am here. I must do the best I can, and bear the
-responsibility of taking the course which I feel I ought to take.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The President then proceeded to read his Emancipation Proclamation,
-making remarks on the several parts as he went on, and showing that
-he had fully considered the subject in all the lights under which it had
-been presented to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After he had closed, Governor Seward said: “The general question
-having been decided, nothing can be said further about that. Would
-it not, however, make the proclamation more clear and decided to
-leave out all reference to the act being sustained during the incumbency
-of the present President; and not merely say that the Government
-<em>recognises</em>, but that it will maintain the freedom it proclaims?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I followed, saying: “What you have said, Mr. President, fully satisfies
-me that you have given to every proposition which has been made
-a kind and candid consideration. And you have now expressed the
-conclusion to which you have arrived clearly and distinctly. This it
-was your right, and, under your oath of office, your duty to do. The
-proclamation does not, indeed, mark out the course I would myself
-prefer; but I am ready to take it just as it is written and to stand by
-it with all my heart. I think, however, the suggestions of Governor
-Seward very judicious, and shall be glad to have them adopted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The President then asked us severally our opinions as to the modifications
-proposed, saying that he did not care much about the phrases
-he had used. Every one favored the modification, and it was adopted.
-Governor Seward then proposed that in the passage relating to colonization
-some language should be introduced to show that the colonization
-proposed was to be only with the consent of the colonists, and
-the consent of the states in which the colonies might be attempted.
-This, too, was agreed to, and no other modification was proposed.
-Mr. Blair then said that the question having been decided, he would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>make no objection to issuing the proclamation; but he would ask
-to have his paper, presented some days since, against the policy, filed
-with the proclamation. The President consented to this readily. And
-then Mr. Blair went on to say that he was afraid of the influence of
-the proclamation on the border States and on the army, and stated,
-at some length, the grounds of his apprehensions. He disclaimed most
-expressly, however, all objections to emancipation <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">per se</span></i>, saying he had
-always been personally in favor of it—always ready for immediate
-emancipation in the midst of slave States, rather than submit to the
-perpetuation of the system.<a id='r279' /><a href='#f279' class='c010'><sup>[279]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The foregoing account from the diary of Secretary Chase
-is fully corroborated by a narrative of Mr. Welles describing
-the same event.<a id='r280' /><a href='#f280' class='c010'><sup>[280]</sup></a> Mr. Blair, as already observed, believed
-the time inopportune for issuing the proclamation and feared
-as a result that the border States would go over to secession.
-The President, however, thought the difficulty not to act as
-great as to act. There were two sides, he said, to that
-question. For months he had labored to get those States to
-move in this matter, convinced in his own mind that it was
-their true interest to do so, but his labors were vain. “We
-must take the forward movement,” he declared. “They would
-acquiesce, if not immediately, soon; for they must be satisfied
-that slavery had received its death-blow from slave-owners—it
-could not survive the rebellion.”<a id='r281' /><a href='#f281' class='c010'><sup>[281]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When the Cabinet had concluded its deliberations the document
-was duly attested, the seal affixed and the President’s
-signature added. On the following morning, September 23,
-1862, the proclamation was published in full by all the leading
-newspapers of the loyal States, where it excited the most
-profound surprise. Indicating, as it does, the progress of
-opinion, it was the first great landmark of the war; behind it
-lay the old, before it the new order of things. The successive
-steps by which Mr. Lincoln reached this position have been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>sketched in the present chapter with fullness and, it is believed,
-with accuracy. It has been shown how fugitive slaves
-escaping to the Federal lines were at first surrendered to their
-masters; how soon afterward, as in the case of General Butler’s
-command, they were protected by the army and employed
-as laborers; how in a later stage, certain Union commanders
-who proposed to confiscate slave property or to arm negroes
-as soldiers were gently rebuked and their acts disavowed
-by the President. This forbearance, however, was without
-effect on the Southern people, whose hatred was quite as likely
-to ascribe it to Yankee cowardice as to Yankee magnanimity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With this account of the introduction into the problem of
-reconstruction of a novel and very perplexing element we are
-prepared to examine the various theories of State status held
-by those whose position and ability made them leaders of public
-opinion. That subject will be more properly discussed in a
-separate chapter.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>VI<br /> <span class='large'>THEORIES AND PLANS OF RECONSTRUCTION</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>In considering the different plans of reconstruction it is
-not deemed necessary to discuss further than has been
-done in the preceding pages the President’s theory of
-State status. There, in his effort to establish loyal governments
-in three of the rebellious States, as well as in the
-protection and encouragement extended to reorganized Virginia,
-we have seen practical applications of that theory. In
-his first inaugural Mr. Lincoln said: “It is safe to assert that
-no government proper ever had a provision in its organic law
-for its own termination,” and on the same occasion he added,
-“No State, upon its own mere motion, can lawfully get out of
-the Union; that <em>resolves</em> and <em>ordinances</em> to that effect are
-legally void.”<a id='r282' /><a href='#f282' class='c010'><sup>[282]</sup></a> From the principles of March 4, 1861, was
-logically deduced the central idea of the plan announced in December,
-1863, and maintained by the President till the last
-hour of his life. In his first message to Congress, submitted at
-the special session beginning July 4, 1861, he again attempted
-to remove the fears of those whose prejudice ascribed to the
-dominant political party a purpose to interfere in the domestic
-concerns of the slaveholding States. As will be seen by the
-following quotation he little more than reiterated on that occasion
-what he had solemnly declared four months earlier:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Lest there be some uneasiness in the minds of candid men as to
-what is to be the course of the Government towards the Southern
-States <em>after</em> the rebellion shall have been suppressed, the Executive
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>deems it proper to say, it will be his purpose then, as ever, to be guided
-by the Constitution and the laws; and that he probably will have no
-different understanding of the powers and duties of the Federal Government
-relatively to the rights of the States and the people, under the
-Constitution, than that expressed in the inaugural address.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He desires to preserve the Government, that it may be administered
-for all, as it was administered by the men who made it. Loyal citizens
-everywhere have the right to claim this of their Government, and the
-Government has no right to withhold or neglect it. It is not perceived
-that, in giving it, there is any coercion, any conquest, or any
-subjugation, in any just sense of those terms.<a id='r283' /><a href='#f283' class='c010'><sup>[283]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The first paragraph quoted expresses his perfect confidence
-in a successful conclusion of the war, and in this respect suggests
-the faith of Charles Sumner, in whose private correspondence
-the same thought constantly occurs. In his message
-the President observed also that Virginia had allowed
-“this giant insurrection to make its nest within her borders;
-and this Government has no choice left but to deal with it
-<em>where</em> it finds it. And it has the less regret, as the loyal
-citizens have, in due form, claimed its protection. Those
-loyal citizens this Government is bound to recognize, and
-protect, as being Virginia.”<a id='r284' /><a href='#f284' class='c010'><sup>[284]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As early as June, 1861, Mr. Lincoln, on application of
-Governor Pierpont, recognized the restored State of Virginia
-by promising assistance to repel invasion and to suppress
-domestic violence; his example was followed by both Houses
-of Congress: first, in the prompt admission of Senators and
-Representatives from that Commonwealth, and long afterward,
-when there was ample time for reflection, by consenting
-to admit the new State of West Virginia, to whose separate
-and independent existence the reorganized Legislature had
-formally assented. The recognition of Pierpont’s government,
-however, involved on the constitutional question little difference
-of opinion between the President and Congress. Thus far
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>the political departments, if not in complete harmony, were
-at any rate not in conflict. This act, though it marked no
-distinct Executive policy, was the occasion of some discordant
-notes which will be referred to in their proper relation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It may not be unnecessary to observe that underlying the
-early policy of the President was a conviction that the rebellion
-was effected by a small but treasonable faction; indeed,
-in the message of July 4 he expressed his belief that, with
-the probable exception of South Carolina, the disloyal were in
-a minority in all the seceding States. The great mass of
-Southern people, it was assumed, opposed disunion, and with
-Federal assistance would soon right themselves. Peaceful
-citizens of that section, being regarded as still under protection
-of the Constitution, were, therefore, not to be molested.
-The conflict waged by the General Government was a personal
-war against insurgents. Leaders who encouraged sedition
-and committed acts of hostility against the United
-States could be tried precisely as in a consolidated state like
-Great Britain, and upon conviction punished for their treason.
-This attitude was not only wise, but had the additional merit
-of greatly simplifying the method of restoration. It asserted
-further that the rebellious States were still in the Union,
-and under the existing compact could not lawfully withdraw
-from it; being in the Union, they were entitled to all the
-rights accorded to other members of the confederation. In
-brief, its essential idea was the indestructibility of a State,
-and it denied that the integrity of the national domain had
-been impaired or the number of States diminished by the
-ordinances of secession. The General Government could
-properly aid the people of a State to express their will, but,
-beyond what was demanded by the exigencies of the war,
-could not legally exercise those powers constitutionally reserved
-to the States. By the treasonable act of levying war
-against the Republic the rights and franchises incident to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>United States citizenship were forfeited. The power of Congress
-extended no further than to a guaranty of preëxisting
-republican forms of government.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To the correctness of these principles Democrats and Republicans
-alike gave almost universal assent. But the war
-was increasing in magnitude, and the measures adequate to
-the suppression of a gigantic rebellion proved to be very
-different from those adapted to a local insurrection. The
-President’s original intention was to overcome armed resistance
-to Federal power and as speedily as possible restore the
-States to their former relations. This task, however, was
-more easily conceived than accomplished, and in the terrible
-conflict that ensued political parties as well as individual
-statesmen were swept onward from point to point to very
-different resting-places. From this condition resulted the
-great number of theories of reconstruction presented before
-the end of the rebellion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The President early in the war adopted principles that
-found little favor with conservative Democrats. His readiness
-to recognize the restored State of Virginia was equivalent
-to a declaration that if a majority of the people in one of
-the seceded States voluntarily transferred their obedience and
-support to a hostile power the loyal minority constituted the
-State and should govern it. In this connection will be remembered
-the objections of Bayard and Saulsbury to receiving
-Senators Willey and Carlile from the reorganized government
-of Virginia. A further advance is indicated by
-Mr. Lincoln’s appointment, early in 1862, of military governors
-for those States that had been brought partly within
-Federal military lines. After the proclamation of September
-22, 1862, and that of January 1 succeeding, the question of
-restoration was left permanently out of view. If the erring
-States were ever to resume their places they must first recognize
-the anti-slavery legislation summarized in the preceding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>chapter. Hitherto the paramount consideration with the
-President was a speedy restoration of former relations;
-thenceforth “the Union as it was” became impossible, because
-slaves liberated in the progress of the war could never
-be returned to a condition of servitude. The introduction of
-this element greatly increased the difficulties of a problem
-already sufficiently intricate. But neither this nor any other
-consequence of his proclamation appears to have been overlooked
-by the Executive.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The message of December 8, 1863, together with the accompanying
-proclamation sketched in outline the only plan
-which Mr. Lincoln ever published on the subject of reconstruction,
-and even to this mode of reinstatement he did not
-require exact conformity, recognizing that its modification
-might be demanded by inherent differences in situation among
-the returning States. By its terms all persons participated
-in the rebellion, except certain described classes, were
-promised amnesty with restoration of property (excluding
-slaves and those cases of property in which rights of third
-parties intervened) upon taking an oath which pledged support
-of the Constitution and the Union; of the slavery legislation
-enacted during the war (unless such acts were repealed
-by Congress, or were modified or annulled by the Supreme
-Court), and adherence to all Executive proclamations on
-that subject so long and so far as not modified or declared
-void by the Judiciary. Whenever in any of the rebellious
-States a number of persons equal to one tenth of the voters
-participating in the Presidential election of 1860, who were
-qualified electors under the laws existing immediately before
-the ordinance of secession, should reëstablish a State government
-republican in form, and not contravening this oath,
-it would be recognized as the true government of that State
-and should receive the benefits of the constitutional guaranty.
-To the emancipated race renewed assurance of permanent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>freedom was given. It was also suggested that in reorganization
-the political framework of the States be maintained.
-The admission of members elected to Congress was a matter
-for the determination of its respective Houses.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is proper to notice in this method of reorganization,
-known afterward as “the Louisiana Plan,” the absence of
-any provision for conferring on the freedmen the elective
-franchise. In a private letter to Governor Hahn the President
-had, it is true, expressed his personal preference for
-including among the electors such of the colored race as had
-fought gallantly in the Union ranks and also the very intelligent
-among them<a id='r285' /><a href='#f285' class='c010'><sup>[285]</sup></a>. This, however, was only an unofficial
-suggestion. Nor were securities of any sort required for the
-future as a condition of reinstatement.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Under this plan, which was presented as only a rallying
-point, Union governments had been inaugurated in Tennessee,
-Louisiana and Arkansas; the first two participated in the
-Presidential election of 1864, and before the close of the war
-they had all elected members to Congress. The legality of
-these governments Mr. Lincoln always maintained. How
-Congress regarded them will be related in succeeding chapters.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Long before the announcement of any mode of reorganization
-by the Executive, members of the Legislative branch of
-Government had made some efforts in this field; these, however,
-were for the most part tentative and hesitant. The
-question had not yet been brought fairly before Congress;
-indeed, it was in discussing the results and tendencies of
-Presidential reconstruction that the Congressional plan, destined
-ultimately to prevail, slowly assumed definitive form.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As early as December, 1861, Mr. Harlan, of Iowa, introduced
-into the Senate a bill for the establishment of provisional
-governments for the territory embraced by the States
-of Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>and Tennessee. It was referred to the Committee on
-Territories, but was never reported.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>More important, however, than this proposed enactment,
-both because of the acknowledged position of their author
-and the influence which they exerted upon the mode of reconstruction
-finally adopted, were the nine resolutions offered,
-February 11, 1862, by Charles Sumner. These were “declaratory
-of the relations between the United States and the
-territory once occupied by certain States, and now usurped
-by pretended governments, without constitutional or legal
-right.” A preamble in the characteristic style of this celebrated
-statesman introduced his famous propositions, which
-were as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Whereas certain States, rightfully belonging to the Union of the
-United States, have through their respective governments wickedly
-undertaken to abjure all those duties by which their connection with the
-Union was maintained; to renounce all allegiance to the Constitution;
-to levy war upon the national Government; and, for the consummation
-of this treason, have unconstitutionally and unlawfully confederated
-together, with the declared purpose of putting an end by force to the
-supremacy of the Constitution within their respective limits; and
-whereas this condition of insurrection, organized by pretended governments,
-openly exists in South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama,
-Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, Tennessee, and Virginia, except
-in Eastern Tennessee and Western Virginia, and has been declared by
-the President of the United States, in a proclamation duly made in
-conformity with an act of Congress, to exist throughout this territory,
-with the exceptions already named; and whereas the extensive territory
-thus usurped by these pretended governments and organized into a
-hostile confederation, belongs to the United States, as an inseparable
-part thereof, under the sanctions of the Constitution, to be held in trust
-for the inhabitants in the present and future generations, and is so
-completely interlinked with the Union that it is forever dependent
-thereupon; and whereas the Constitution, which is the supreme law
-of the land, cannot be displaced in its rightful operation within this
-territory, but must ever continue the supreme law thereof, notwithstanding
-the doings of any pretended governments acting singly or in
-confederation, in order to put an end to its supremacy: Therefore:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>1. <em>Resolved</em>, That any vote of secession or other act by which any
-State may undertake to put an end to the supremacy of the Constitution
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>within its territory is inoperative and void against the Constitution,
-and when sustained by force it becomes a practical <em>abdication</em> by the
-State of all rights under the Constitution, while the treason which it
-involves still further works an instant <em>forfeiture</em> of all those functions
-and powers essential to the continued existence of the State as a body
-politic, so that from that time forward the territory falls under the
-exclusive jurisdiction of Congress as other territory, and the State
-being, according to the language of the law, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">felo-de-se</span></i>, ceases to exist.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>2. That any combination of men assuming to act in the place of such
-State, attempting to insnare or coerce the inhabitants thereof into a
-confederation hostile to the Union, is rebellious, treasonable, and destitute
-of all moral authority; and that such combination is a usurpation
-incapable of any constitutional existence and utterly lawless, so that
-everything dependent upon it is without constitutional or legal support.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>3. That the termination of a State under the Constitution necessarily
-causes the termination of those peculiar local institutions which,
-having no origin in the Constitution or in those natural rights which
-exist independent of the Constitution, are upheld by the sole and
-exclusive authority of the State.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>4. That slavery, being a peculiar local institution, derived from local
-laws, without any origin in the Constitution or in natural rights, is
-upheld by the sole and exclusive authority of the State, and must
-therefore cease to exist legally or constitutionally when the State
-on which it depends no longer exists; for the incident cannot survive
-the principal.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>5. That in the exercise of its exclusive jurisdiction over the territory
-once occupied by the States, it is the duty of Congress to see that the
-supremacy of the Constitution is maintained in its essential principles,
-so that everywhere in this extensive territory slavery shall cease to
-exist practically, as it has already ceased to exist constitutionally or
-legally.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>6. That any recognition of slavery in such territory, or any surrender
-of slaves under the pretended laws of the extinct States by any officer
-of the United States, civil or military, is a recognition of the pretended
-governments, to the exclusion of the jurisdiction of Congress
-under the Constitution, and is in the nature of aid and comfort to the
-rebellion that has been organized.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>7. That any such recognition of slavery or surrender of pretended
-slaves, besides being a recognition of the pretended governments, giving
-them aid and comfort, is a denial of the rights of persons who, by the
-extinction of the States, have become free, so that, under the Constitution,
-they cannot again be enslaved.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>8. That allegiance from the inhabitant and protection from the Government
-are corresponding obligations, dependent upon each other,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>so that while the allegiance of every inhabitant of this territory, without
-distinction of color or class, is due to the United States, and cannot
-in any way be defeated by the action of any pretended Government, or
-by any pretence of property or claim to service, the corresponding
-obligation of protection is at the same time due by the United States
-to every such inhabitant, without distinction of color or class; and it
-follows that inhabitants held as slaves, whose paramount allegiance
-is due to the United States, may justly look to the national Government
-for protection.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>9. That the duty directly cast upon Congress by the extinction of the
-States is reinforced by the positive prohibition of the Constitution that
-“no State shall enter into any Confederation,” or “without the consent
-of Congress keep troops or ships-of-war in time of peace, or enter
-into any agreement or compact with another State,” or “grant letters
-of marque and reprisal,” or “coin money,” or “emit bills of credit,”
-or “without the consent of Congress lay any duties on imports or
-exports,” all of which have been done by these pretended Governments,
-and also by the positive injunction of the Constitution, addressed
-to the nation, that “the United States shall guaranty to every State
-in this Union a republican form of government,” and that in pursuance of
-this duty cast upon Congress, and further enjoined by the Constitution,
-Congress will assume complete jurisdiction of such vacated territory
-where such unconstitutional and illegal things have been attempted,
-and will proceed to establish therein republican forms of government
-under the Constitution; and in the execution of this trust will provide
-carefully for the protection of all the inhabitants thereof; for the
-security of families, the organization of labor, the encouragement of
-industry, and the welfare of society, and will in every way discharge the
-duties of a just, merciful and paternal Government.<a id='r286' /><a href='#f286' class='c010'><sup>[286]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sumner, as already noticed, having confidence in the ultimate
-triumph of the national cause, began early in the
-war to reflect on the subject of reorganization. As might
-have been expected from his previous career, his opinion
-of the changes that would result from rebellion inclined
-him at the outset to adopt the views of the less extreme anti-slavery
-men. Notwithstanding this fact, however, his scheme
-of reconstruction, because of its radical and comprehensive
-character, caused something of a sensation when introduced
-in the Senate, and disturbed the repose of many conservative
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>patriots outside. By leading Republicans it was promptly
-disavowed as the policy of their party. These resolutions,
-though never adopted or even formally discussed by Congress,
-colored somewhat the final work of reconstruction. An account
-of the extent and the manner in which they influenced
-the legislative plan belongs properly to a consideration of the
-acts of March, 1867. What appeared to be a public necessity
-had by that time brought many members of his party
-fully abreast of Mr. Sumner.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The interval had been employed in various ways to keep
-his peculiar theory before the public. A private letter to
-Francis Lieber, dated March 29, 1862, shows that Sumner’s
-view of the measures essential to restoration had not been
-modified by the discussions of a month. “Assuming,” he says,
-“that our military success is complete, and that the rebel
-armies are scattered, what next? Unless I am mistaken, the
-most difficult thing of all,—namely, the reorganization. How
-shall it be done,—by what process? What power shall set
-a-going the old governments? Will the people coöperate
-enough to constitute self-government? I have positive opinions
-here. If successful in war, we shall have then before us
-the alternative: (1) Separation; or (2) subjugation of these
-States with emancipation. I do not see any escape. Diplomatists
-here and abroad think it will be separation. I think
-the latter, under my resolutions or something like.”<a id='r287' /><a href='#f287' class='c010'><sup>[287]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By a distinguished Confederate officer Sumner has been
-described as a statesman who seemed over-educated, and who
-had retained without having digested his learning;<a id='r288' /><a href='#f288' class='c010'><sup>[288]</sup></a> by an admirer
-of his own party as wanting in tact and practical wisdom
-as a legislator.<a id='r289' /><a href='#f289' class='c010'><sup>[289]</sup></a> Though it must be admitted that a grain of
-truth forms the basis of these criticisms, yet the letter to his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>friend Dr. Lieber shows no lack of insight into the events and
-tendencies of the times. Without anticipating a subsequent
-portion of this narrative it may be observed here that if his
-vision did not pierce the remote future, his knowledge and experience
-enabled him to see as much of coming events as the
-most gifted of his contemporaries. Writing a year later, July
-21, 1863, to Hon. John Bright, one of our few friends in England,
-he remarked that “so great a revolution cannot come to a
-close at once.”<a id='r290' /><a href='#f290' class='c010'><sup>[290]</sup></a> The defeat of General Lee at Gettysburg a
-few weeks earlier suggested the thought that the destruction of
-the Army of Northern Virginia would have precipitated on
-Congress the entire question of reconstruction, and time was
-an essential element in the development of Sumner’s most
-cherished plans.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not only in his private correspondence and in the discussion
-of every conceivable measure before Congress did he endeavor
-to enforce his theory of State status, but he also published
-in a leading periodical an elaboration and defence of his
-opinions. For many reasons the undelivered speech forming
-the basis of his article in the <cite>Atlantic Monthly</cite> for October,
-1863, is of remarkable interest. It reveals the mental habits
-of one of the most useful and influential characters then in
-public life; the statesman is really thinking aloud. He appears,
-for instance, to have been much impressed by the fact
-that, under the Commonwealth, Cromwell partitioned his
-country into military districts of which Sumner remarked that
-there were precisely <em>eleven</em>, just the number of States in
-rebellion. One view is enforced by an appropriate passage
-from Cicero, while of Edmund Burke it is asserted that had
-he lived during the Civil War his eloquence would have
-blasted Southern leaders for their folly and madness in entering
-upon a career of rebellion. All who are familiar with
-the debates of that period must have observed that Sumner
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>was considerably influenced by the authority of great names,
-and in consequence sometimes exposed himself to rebuke from
-men who, though in many respects inferior, had studied the
-questions of the day in the light of their own times.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is not intended, however, to trace the origin of the doctrine
-of State suicide or even to suggest all the arguments
-upon which he relied for its support, the purpose of these remarks
-being rather to show on what principles its essential
-propositions were based. This, it is believed, cannot be better
-done than by explaining the resolutions in his own language.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the <cite>Atlantic Monthly</cite> he wrote: “It is sometimes said
-that the States themselves committed <em>suicide</em>, so that as States
-they ceased to exist, leaving their whole jurisdiction open to
-the occupation of the United States under the Constitution.
-This assumption is founded on the fact that, whatever may
-be the existing governments in these States, they are in no
-respect constitutional, and since the State itself is known
-by the government, with which its life is intertwined, it must
-cease to exist constitutionally when its government no longer
-exists constitutionally.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He acknowledges the difficulty of defining the entity which
-we call a State. “Among us,” says Mr. Sumner, “the term
-is most known as the technical name for one of the political
-societies which compose our Union.... Nobody has
-suggested, I presume, that any ‘State’ of our Union has,
-through rebellion, ceased to exist as a <em>civil society</em>, or even
-as a <em>political community</em>. It is only as a <em>State of the Union</em>,
-armed with State rights, or at least as a <em>local government</em>,
-which annually renews itself, as the snake its skin, that it
-can be called in question. But it is vain to challenge for the
-technical ‘State,’ or for the annual government, that immortality
-which belongs to civil society. The one is an
-artificial body, the other is a natural body; and while the
-first, overwhelmed by insurrection or war, may change or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>die, the latter can change or die only with the extinction of
-the community itself, whatever may be its name or its
-form.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Phillimore is quoted in support of the proposition that a
-“State,” even in a broader signification, may lose its life.
-That author says: “A state, like an individual, may die,”
-and, among the various ways in which this may occur, adds,
-“by its submission and the donation of itself to another
-country.” “But in the case of our Rebel States,” resumes
-Mr. Sumner, “there has been a plain submission and donation
-of themselves,—<em>effective, at least, to break the continuity of
-government</em>, if not to destroy that immortality which has
-been claimed. Nor can it make any difference, in breaking
-this continuity, that the submission and donation, constituting
-a species of attornment, were to enemies at home rather than
-to enemies abroad,—to Jefferson Davis rather than to Louis
-Napoleon. The thread is snapped in one case as much as in
-the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But a <em>change of form</em> in the actual government may be
-equally effective. Cicero speaks of a change so complete as
-‘to leave no image of a state behind.’ But this is precisely
-what has been done throughout the whole Rebel region:
-there is no image of a <em>constitutional</em> State left behind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The first resolution of the series quoted declares “That
-any vote of secession or other act by which any State may
-undertake to put an end to the supremacy of the Constitution
-within its territory is inoperative and void against the Constitution,
-and when sustained by force it becomes a practical
-<em>abdication</em> by the State of all its rights under the Constitution.”
-Perhaps Mr. Sumner in the essay failed to strengthen his
-original statement of this proposition, which he believed was
-“upheld by the historic example of England, at the Revolution
-of 1688, when, on the flight of James II. and the abandonment
-of his kingly duties, the two Houses of Parliament
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>voted that the monarch, ‘having violated the fundamental
-laws, and having withdrawn himself out of the kingdom, <em>had
-abdicated the government</em>, and that the throne had thereby become
-vacant.’” This precedent, which Senator Sumner
-thought applicable, was by no means so formidable an argument
-against the rebellious States as he chose to regard it. If
-the term <em>abdicate</em> is equivalent to a species of informal resignation
-it did not apply strictly to the case of James II., for that
-unfortunate ruler presented to Englishmen the unusual spectacle
-of withdrawing from his kingdom under an escort of
-Dutch troops. Doubtless he remembered the saying of his
-father, who proved the truth of the adage in his own person,
-that the distance is short between the prison and the grave
-of a king. The expectation of recovering his throne was a
-motive with James scarcely less powerful than that of taking
-precaution for his personal safety. This intention appears
-from the unsuccessful campaign in Ireland, which he had
-selected as a rallying point. That monarch’s real offence was
-his violation of the laws of England. Many of his predecessors,
-as well as some of his successors, were as unreasonable
-and as obstinate as he. The charge of abdication was
-scarcely a decent pretext for declaring the throne vacant, and
-Mr. Sumner appears to have forgotten for the moment that
-the Federal Government is one of limited while Parliament
-is clothed with absolute powers. In reality James was coerced
-by the Prince of Orange into “withdrawing” from the
-Kingdom. It is not intended here to call in question the
-accepted vindication of the Revolution of 1688, but merely to
-show that the Massachusetts statesman was at times not
-above supporting an argument by a legal or an historical
-fiction.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The same resolution continues: “The treason which it
-[the attempt by force to terminate the supremacy of the
-Constitution] involves still further works an instant <em>forfeiture</em>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>of all those functions and powers essential to the
-continued existence of the State as a body politic.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the idea of State forfeiture his reasoning is entitled
-to more respect. He argues: “But again it is sometimes
-said that the States, by their flagrant treason, have <em>forfeited</em>
-their rights as States, so as to be civilly dead. It is a patent
-and indisputable fact, that this gigantic treason was inaugurated
-with all the forms of law known to the State; that it
-was carried forward not only by individuals, but also by
-States, so far as States can perpetrate treason; that the States
-pretended to withdraw bodily in their corporate capacities;—that
-the Rebellion, as it showed itself, was <em>by</em> States as well
-as <em>in</em> States; that it was by the governments of States as
-well as by the people of States; and that, to the common
-observer, the crime was consummated by the several corporations
-as well as by the individuals of whom they were composed.
-From this fact, obvious to all, it is argued that,
-since, according to Blackstone, ‘a traitor hath abandoned his
-connection with society, and hath no longer any right to the
-advantages which before belonged to him purely as a member
-of the community,’ by the same principle the traitor State
-is no longer to be regarded as a member of the Union. But
-it is not necessary, on the present occasion, to insist on the
-application of any such principle to States.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Discarding as not essential to his defence the theories of
-State forfeiture, State abdication, or even State suicide, the
-article adds: “It is enough, that, for the time being, and
-<em>in the absence of a loyal government</em>, they can take no part
-and perform no function in the Union, <em>so that they cannot be
-recognized by the National Government</em>. The reason is plain.
-There are in these States no local functionaries bound by
-constitutional oaths, so that, in fact, there are no constitutional
-functionaries; and since the State government is necessarily
-composed of such functionaries, there can be no State
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>government. Thus, for instance, in South Carolina, Pickens
-and his associates may call themselves the governor and
-legislature; and in Virginia, Letcher and his associates may
-call themselves governor and legislature; but we cannot recognize
-them as such. Therefore to all pretensions in behalf of
-State governments in the Rebel States I oppose the simple
-FACT, that for the time being no such governments exist.
-The broad spaces once occupied by those governments are
-now abandoned and vacated.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Discussing the question of transition to rightful government
-he says: “And here the question occurs, How shall this
-rightful jurisdiction be established in the vacated States?
-Some there are, so impassioned for State rights, and so anxious
-for forms even at the expense of substance, that they
-insist upon the instant restoration of the old State governments
-in all their parts, through the agency of loyal citizens,
-who meanwhile must be protected in this work of restoration.
-But assuming that all this is practicable, as it clearly is not,
-it attributes to the loyal citizens of a Rebel State, however
-few in numbers,—it may be an insignificant minority,—a
-power clearly inconsistent with the received principle of popular
-government, that the majority must rule, ... but
-the argument for State Rights assumes that all these rights
-may be lodged in voters as few in number as ever controlled
-a rotten borough of England.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Pray admitting that a minority may organize the new
-government, how shall it be done? and by whom shall it be
-set in motion?... It is not easy to see how the
-new government can be set in motion without a resort to
-some revolutionary proceeding, instituted either by the citizens
-or by the military power,—unless Congress, in the exercise
-of its plenary powers, should undertake to organize the
-new jurisdiction.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But every revolutionary proceeding is to be avoided. It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>will be within the recollection of all familiar with our history,
-that our fathers, while regulating the separation of the
-Colonies from the parent country, were careful that all should
-be done according to the forms of law, so that the thread
-of <em>legality</em> should continue unbroken. To this end the Continental
-Congress interfered by a supervising direction. But
-the Tory argument in that day denied the power of Congress
-as earnestly as it denies this power now.”...</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But, happily,” he says, “we are not constrained to any
-such revolutionary proceeding. The new governments can
-all be organized by Congress, which is the natural guardian
-of people without any immediate government, and within the
-jurisdiction of the Constitution of the United States. Indeed,
-with the State governments already <em>vacated</em> by rebellion, the
-Constitution becomes, for the time, the supreme and only
-law, binding alike on President and Congress, so that neither
-can establish any law or institution incompatible with it.
-And the whole Rebel region, deprived of all local government,
-lapses under the exclusive jurisdiction of Congress,
-precisely as any other territory; or, in other words, the lifting
-of the local governments leaves the whole vast region
-without any other government than Congress, unless the
-President should undertake to govern it by military
-power.”...</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This part of the essay concludes with a declaration that
-its author had no pride of opinion, but would cheerfully abandon
-his views when convinced of their error. He next
-proceeds to an examination of the sources of Congressional
-power. These, he asserts, are derived from the necessity of
-the case, for Congress must have jurisdiction over every portion
-of the United States <em>where there is no other government</em>;
-and from the <em>Rights of War</em>, which he deemed not less abundant
-for Congress than for the President. “It is Congress,”
-he contended, “that conquers; and the same authority that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>conquers must govern.” A third source of authority, common
-alike to Congress and the President, was the constitutional
-provision imposing on the United States the duty of
-guarantying republican forms of government. These ample
-powers were confirmed by an additional grant in the clause
-concerning the admission of new States “into this Union.”
-The latter left it with Congress to prescribe the time and
-manner of the return of the rebel States, assuming that they
-were no longer <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">de facto</span></i> States of the Union.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Among the “unanswerable reasons for Congressional
-governments” the article says: “Slavery is so odious that it
-can exist only by virtue of positive law, plain and unequivocal;
-but no such words can be found in the Constitution. Therefore
-Slavery is impossible within the exclusive jurisdiction
-of the National Government.... I am glad to believe
-that it is implied, if not expressed, in the Chicago Platform;
-... but if the rebel territory falls under the exclusive
-jurisdiction of the National Government, then Slavery will
-be impossible there.... The moment that the States
-fell, Slavery fell also; so that, even without any Proclamation
-of the President, Slavery had ceased to have
-a legal and constitutional existence in every rebel
-State.”<a id='r291' /><a href='#f291' class='c010'><sup>[291]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Let it be established in advance,” declared Mr. Sumner,
-“as an inseparable incident to every Act of Secession, that
-it is not only impotent against the Constitution of the United
-States, but that, on its occurrence, both soil and inhabitants
-will lapse beneath the jurisdiction of Congress, and no State
-will ever again pretend to secede.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The argument of which an epitome has been given was
-regarded by the Postmaster-General, Montgomery Blair, as
-formidable enough to merit attention, and he accordingly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>replied in a speech at Rockville, Maryland, in which Sumner,
-for arraying himself directly against the President on a question
-of fundamental policy in the conduct of the war, was
-mentioned with sharp censure. This brought upon the Cabinet
-member, and upon Mr. Lincoln over his shoulders, much
-vehement criticism. It was in relation to this address that
-the President said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The controversy between the two sets of men represented by Blair
-and by Sumner is one of mere form and little else. I do not think Mr.
-Blair would agree that the States in rebellion are to be permitted to
-come at once into the political family and renew their performances,
-which have already so bedeviled us, and I do not think Mr. Sumner
-would insist that when the loyal people of a State obtain supremacy
-in their councils and are ready to assume the direction of their own
-affairs they should be excluded. I do not understand Mr. Blair to
-admit that Jefferson Davis may take his seat in Congress again as a
-representative of his people. I do not understand Mr. Sumner to
-assert that John Minor Botts may not. So far as I understand Mr.
-Sumner, he seems in favor of Congress taking from the Executive the
-power it at present exercises over insurrectionary districts and assuming
-it to itself; but when the vital question arises as to the right and privilege
-of the people of these States to govern themselves, I apprehend
-there will be little difference among loyal men. The question at once
-is presented, In whom is this power vested? and the practical matter
-for discussion is how to keep the rebellious population from overwhelming
-and outvoting the loyal minority.<a id='r292' /><a href='#f292' class='c010'><sup>[292]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Concisely expressed, the theory of State suicide based reconstruction
-upon the right of Congress to legislate for
-Federal territories and to admit new States into this Union.
-In one view it rested on a provision in the Constitution which
-makes it obligatory on the States to have republican governments.
-This side of the doctrine shaded into the conservative
-view, according to which it is the duty of the States
-to be represented in Congress; but Sumner, as will subsequently
-appear, maintained that the Confederate States should
-not be counted when numbers were to be estimated in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>adoption of constitutional amendments; also that Congress
-had power to prescribe the qualifications of voters for conventions
-in those States. This view regarded the war as a
-conflict of ideas; it assumed to find authority in the individual
-conscience discerning the will of God, was inclined to
-disallow objective standards, and to consider all law as matter
-of subjective determination. From a careful perusal of his
-speeches Mr. Sumner appears to have insisted that a republican
-form of government could be such a one only as conformed
-to his subjective ideas. Except his own State, whose
-constitution of 1780 was held to have abolished slavery in
-that Commonwealth, no one of the States in 1789 possessed,
-according to his notions, a republican form of government.
-His touchstone of republicanism was the Declaration of Independence.
-In short, the requirements of the Constitution
-appear to have been found, not in the written instrument,
-but in his individual conceptions of political justice, equality
-and liberty whereby he constituted himself a new source of
-law. In the matter of a subjective standard of natural justice
-and the like, the “radicals” generally agreed with Sumner.<a id='r293' /><a href='#f293' class='c010'><sup>[293]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The position that the object of the war from the beginning,
-on the part of the Federal authorities, was to fulfill the guaranty
-of a republican form of government is untenable. It
-may well be doubted whether the community so guaranteed
-can be restricted to any particular government; indeed,
-it is difficult to see how a government not voluntarily instituted
-by the people of a State can be called republican.
-By having a government imposed by Congress they would
-resemble the people of a Territory, and the result would be
-an inequality among the States composing the Union.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>Though it has been commended as well written, there is
-some crude thinking and even cruder phraseology in the preamble
-as well as in the resolutions themselves. Mr. Sumner
-appears to have been much influenced by feudal and other historical
-analogies. It will be seen later how he recoiled somewhat
-from accepting fully the consequences of his own principles.<a id='r294' /><a href='#f294' class='c010'><sup>[294]</sup></a>
-The famous theory of State suicide, as tersely stated
-by an able advocate of the doctrine, was in effect that “a
-Territory by coming into the Union becomes a State; a State
-by going out of the Union becomes a Territory.”<a id='r295' /><a href='#f295' class='c010'><sup>[295]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To offset the resolutions of Sumner, Hon. Garrett Davis,
-of Kentucky, introduced two days later a series of eight propositions.
-Of these the first asserts that the rights, privileges
-and liberties which the Constitution assures to the
-people of the United States “are fixed, permanent, and immutable
-through all the phases of peace and war, until changed
-by the power and in the mode prescribed by the Constitution
-itself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the light of subsequent events, however, the last is the
-most interesting of the series. This declares “That the
-United States Government should march their armies into
-all the insurgent States, and promptly put down the military
-power which they have arrayed against it, and give protection
-and security to the loyal men thereof, to enable them
-to reconstruct their legitimate State governments, and bring
-them and the people back to the Union and to obedience and
-duty under the Constitution and the laws of the United
-States, bearing the sword in one hand and the olive branch
-in the other, and whilst inflicting on the guilty leaders condign
-and exemplary punishment, granting amnesty and oblivion
-to the comparatively innocent masses; and if the people
-of any State cannot, or will not reconstruct their State government
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>and return to loyalty and duty, Congress should
-provide a government for such State as a Territory of the
-United States, securing to the people thereof their appropriate
-constitutional rights.”<a id='r296' /><a href='#f296' class='c010'><sup>[296]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>These propositions, like the resolutions of Sumner, were
-never taken up for discussion, and they are referred to as
-containing a clear expression, by a Southern Democrat,<a id='r297' /><a href='#f297' class='c010'><sup>[297]</sup></a> of
-extra-constitutional powers in treating incorrigible States as
-Territories.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sumner was not alone in maintaining novel opinions concerning
-the relation of the seceded States to the Federal Government.
-A theory destined to exert even greater influence in
-shaping the plan of reconstruction finally adopted was announced
-at the very commencement of hostilities by Thaddeus
-Stevens, of Pennsylvania, then one of the foremost members
-of the Republican party and a few years later its acknowledged
-leader in the House. Unlike the Massachusetts Senator,
-Mr. Stevens never formulated his views of State status;
-but as he urged them on almost every conceivable occasion
-the essential principles of his system may be easily collected
-from his numerous speeches in Congress. Subjects of legislation
-only remotely related to his favorite topic appear to have
-been regarded by him as important chiefly because of the
-opportunity afforded to express his sentiments on the measures
-necessary to reorganization. These opinions, he declared,
-had been deliberately formed; we know that to the
-end they were persistently urged and ably defended. Because
-of their radical nature and the frequency with which they
-were reiterated Stevens was by many regarded as a sort of
-fanatic; this estimate was confirmed, no doubt, by his bodily
-deformity as well as by an apparent want of amiability and
-a certain bluntness of expression. Even by keen observers he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>was at first considered a man of mediocre ability. But, though
-not to be compared with the giant race of an earlier generation,
-he was a statesman far above the common-place. Among the
-multitude of plans and theories offered in Congress his system
-was distinguished for the harmony of its parts; and enemies
-who hated, no less than followers who feared, him were
-forced to admit the consistency of his principles.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The limitations of Stevens in the field of constructive
-statesmanship cannot now be discussed; for their consideration
-belongs properly to an examination of the first reconstruction
-act, which was no more than a modification of his theory.
-Long before Sumner’s plan had agitated timid conservatives
-the Pennsylvanian leader by his extreme opinions had astonished
-Congress. When the question of discharging from
-labor or service those slaves employed in hostility to the
-United States came before the House at the special session
-beginning July 4, 1861, Stevens said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Mr. Speaker, I thought the time had come when the laws of war
-were to govern our action; when constitutions, if they stood in the way
-of the laws of war in dealing with the enemy, had no right to intervene.
-Who pleads the Constitution against our proposed action?
-Who says the Constitution must come in, in bar of our action? It is the
-advocates of rebels, of rebels who have sought to overthrow the Constitution
-and trample it in the dust—who repudiate the Constitution.
-Sir, these rebels, who have disregarded and set at defiance that instrument,
-are, by every rule of municipal and international law, estopped
-from pleading it against our action. Who, then, is it that comes to
-us and says, “You cannot do this thing, because your Constitution does
-not permit it?” The Constitution! Our Constitution, which you repudiate
-and trample under foot, forbids it! Sir, it is an absurdity.
-There must be a party in court to plead it, and that party, to be
-entitled to plead it in court, must first acknowledge its supremacy, or
-he has no business to be in court at all. I repeat, then, that those who
-bring in this plea here, in bar of our action, are the advocates of rebels.
-They are nothing else, whatever they intend. I mean it, of course, in
-a legal sense. I mean they are acting in the capacity of counsellors-at-law
-for the rebels; they are speaking for them, and not for us—who
-are the plaintiffs in this transaction. I deny that they have any right to
-plead at all. I deny that they have any standing in court. I deny that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>they have any right to invoke this Constitution, which they deny has
-authority over them, which they set at defiance and trample under foot.
-I deny that they can be permitted to come here and tell us we must be
-loyal to the Constitution.<a id='r298' /><a href='#f298' class='c010'><sup>[298]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The expectation almost universally cherished at this time
-was that when the insurrection should have been suppressed,
-as it was confidently believed it speedily would be, the erring
-States, without the interposition of Federal authority, would
-resume their normal relations to the General Government.
-With this state of public opinion in mind it will readily be
-perceived how great an interval separated Mr. Stevens from
-both parties in Congress. The opening sentence of the remarks
-quoted contains the essential idea of his theory of the
-change resulting from rebellion. Armed secession had unlocked
-the war powers, and the Constitution, where it conflicted
-with these powers, had ceased to be a restraint upon
-government. The military had risen superior to the civil
-authority. The principle was boldly and emphatically announced
-that those who repudiated and defied the supreme
-law could not at the same time plead its provisions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On January 8, 1863, the appropriation bill being under
-consideration, an amendment was offered to add to the clause
-“for compensation of thirty-three commissioners, at $3,000
-each, and eleven clerks, at $1,200 each, $112,200,” the following:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><em>Provided</em>, A sufficient sum shall be collected in the insurrectionary
-States to pay said salaries: <em>And provided further</em>, That no greater sum
-shall at any time be paid to said commissioners, or to any of them,
-than shall have been collected from the taxes in the insurrectionary
-States, and paid into the Treasury of the United States.<a id='r299' /><a href='#f299' class='c010'><sup>[299]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The discussion which ensued brought out an expression of
-views relative to the position of the seceded States under the
-Federal Government. Stevens in the course of his remarks
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>said: “I did say, sir, that I find no warrant in the Constitution
-for the admission, under the Constitution, of West Virginia.
-I do not know whether the gentleman from Kentucky
-voted for that bill or not.” Mr. Dunlap, the member referred
-to, stated that he had voted against the bill, because he deemed
-it unconstitutional. After this explanation the Pennsylvania
-leader proceeded as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Then the gentleman voted against it upon the same opinion I expressed,
-that it was unconstitutional. But I went further and voted for it
-because I did not believe that the Constitution embraced a State now
-in arms against the Government of this Union and I hold that doctrine
-now. It was not said upon the spur of the occasion. It is a deliberate
-opinion, formed upon a careful examination of the law of the United
-States and the laws of nations.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Though it may be out of place just now, I will give one or two
-reasons for my opinion. The establishment of our blockade admitted
-the Southern States, the Confederates, to be a belligerent power. Foreign
-nations have all admitted them as a belligerent power. Whenever that
-came to be admitted by us and by foreign nations, it placed the rebellious
-States precisely in the condition of an alien enemy with regard
-to duties and obligations. Now, I think there is nothing more plainly
-written in the law of nations than that whenever a war, which is
-admitted to be a national war, springs up between nation and nation,
-ally and ally, confederate and confederate, every obligation which previously
-existed between them, whether treaty, compact, contract, or
-anything else, is wholly abrogated, and from that moment the belligerents
-act toward each other, not according to any municipal obligations,
-not according to any compacts or treaties, but simply according
-to the laws of war. And I hold and maintain that with regard to all
-the Southern States in rebellion. I do not speak of Kentucky, but of
-those States which have gone out under an act of legislation or convention—the
-Constitution has no binding influence and no application.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In answer to a question by Representative Dunlap he stated
-further that the seceded States, in his opinion, were not
-members of the Union. “The ordinances of secession,” he
-added, “backed by the armed power which made them a
-belligerent nation, did take them, so far as present operations
-are concerned, from under the laws of the nation.” When
-asked how, as Chairman of the Committee of Ways and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>Means, he proposed to pass an appropriation to pay officers
-to collect revenue in States which did not belong to the
-Union, he said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I propose to levy that tax, and collect it as a war measure. I would
-levy a tax wherever I can upon these conquered provinces, just as all
-nations levy them upon provinces and nations they conquer. If my
-views and principles are right, I would not only collect that tax, but I
-would, as a necessary war measure, take every particle of property, real
-and personal, life estate and reversion, of every disloyal man, and sell
-it for the benefit of the nation in carrying on this war. We have such
-power and we are to treat them simply as provinces to be conquered,
-and as a nation fighting in hostility to us until we do conquer them.
-To me it is a great absurdity to say that men, by millions, in arms, shall
-claim the protection of the provisions of the Constitution and laws made
-for loyal men, while they do not obey one of those laws, but repudiate
-their binding effect. There never was a principle more clear than that
-every obligation, whether in a national or civil point of view, in order to
-be binding, must be reciprocal; and that the moment the duty ceases
-upon the one part, the obligation ceases upon the other; and that, in my
-judgment, is precisely the condition of the rebel States now.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The secession ordinance of South Carolina he characterized
-in response to an inquiry as an act of treason and rebellion,
-and when asked whether the backing up of these ordinances
-by armed force imparted to them any validity, he replied:
-“I hold that so long as they remain in force against us as a
-belligerent power, and until they are conquered, it is in fact
-an existing operation. I will not say anything about its
-legality. [Laughter.] I hold that it is an existing <em>fact</em>,
-and that so far from enforcing any laws, you have not the
-power.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To Mr. Yeaman, who asked whether those people were then
-citizens of the United States, or whether they formed an independent
-nation, and if the latter whence was derived the
-right or the authority to wage war against them, and to tax
-them for the support of that war, Stevens answered: “I hold
-that the Constitution, in the first place, so far operated that
-when they went into secession and armed rebellion they committed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>treason; and that when they so combined themselves
-as to make themselves admitted as belligerents—not merely
-as men in insurrection, but as belligerents—they did acquire
-the right to be treated as prisoners of war, and all the other
-rights which pertain to belligerents under the laws of nations.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Some members held in utter abhorrence the principles of
-the Pennsylvania leader; others were astonished at their
-boldness. It was in the course of this discussion, participated
-in by many Representatives, that Stevens defined his existing
-as well as his past relations to his party, and referred, not
-without a touch of pride, to the fact that hitherto he had
-pointed out the way for the Republican majority—in short,
-that he had been the political prophet of his party. He
-declared:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I know perfectly well, as I said before, I do not speak the sentiments
-of this side of the House as a party. I know more than that: that for
-the last fifteen years I have always been a step ahead of the party I
-have acted with in these matters; but I have never been so far ahead
-with the exception of the principles I now enunciate, but that the
-members of the party have overtaken me and gone ahead; and they,
-together with the gentleman from New York, [Mr. Olin] will again
-overtake me and go with me, before this infamous and bloody rebellion
-is ended. They will find that they cannot execute the Constitution in the
-seceding States; that it is a total nullity there; and that this war must
-be carried on upon principles wholly independent of it. They will come
-to the conclusion that the adoption of the measures I advocated at the
-outset of the war, the arming of the negroes, the slaves of the rebels,
-is the only way left on earth in which these rebels can be exterminated.
-They will find that they must treat those States now outside of the
-Union as conquered provinces and settle them with new men, and drive
-the present rebels as exiles from this country; for I tell you they have
-the pluck and endurance for which I gave them credit a year and a
-half ago in a speech which I made, but which was not relished on this
-side of the House, nor by the people in the free States. They have such
-determination, energy, and endurance, that nothing but actual extermination
-or exile or starvation will ever induce them to surrender to this
-Government. I do not ask gentlemen to indorse my views, nor do I
-speak for anybody but myself; but in order that I may have some
-credit for sagacity, I ask that gentlemen will write this down in their
-memories. It will not be two years before they will call it up, or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>before they will adopt my views, or adopt the other alternative of a
-disgraceful submission by this side of the country.<a id='r300' /><a href='#f300' class='c010'><sup>[300]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For himself, for the Administration and for the Republican
-party even so radical an anti-slavery man as Owen Lovejoy
-made haste to repudiate these extreme opinions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In debate, January 22, 1864, Stevens enunciated still
-more clearly the fundamental principles of his system. “I
-mean to say,” he declared on that occasion, “that if a State,
-as a State, makes war upon the Government and becomes a
-belligerent power, we treat it as a foreign nation, and when
-we conquer it we treat it just as we do any other foreign
-nation.” “There can be no neutrals,” he added, “in a hostile
-State.” If loyal people domiciled in the South desired to
-avoid punishment or the hardships of public enemies, they
-should change their place of residence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Relative to discerning the State in the Union minority
-he observed: “If ten men fit to save Sodom can elect a
-Governor and other State officers for and against the eleven
-hundred thousand Sodomites in Virginia, then the democratic
-doctrine that the majority shall rule is discarded and dangerously
-ignored. When the doctrine that the <em>quality</em> and
-not the <em>number</em> of voters is to decide the right to govern, then
-we are no longer a republic, but the worst form of despotism.”
-It was a mere mockery, he affirmed, to say that a tithe of
-the residents, because they were holier or more loyal than
-others, could change the form and administer the government
-of an organized State. The people who took a State out of
-the Union were subject to the laws of the commonwealth,
-and, so far as the General Government is concerned, subject
-to the laws of war and of nations, both while the war
-continued and when it ended.<a id='r301' /><a href='#f301' class='c010'><sup>[301]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Northern Democrats, from the beginning to the end of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>reconstruction, were consistent advocates of a doctrine which
-involved no contradictions like the system of Sumner and no
-element of vindictiveness like the “conquered province”
-theory of Stevens. Ordinances of secession they held to be
-null and void; these measures in no way impaired the vitality
-or contracted the scope of the Constitution because the power
-by which they were temporarily maintained, however near
-to attaining its object, had not been crowned with success.
-The result of the conflict could alone determine whether the
-bond of union between the seceding and the loyal States had
-been severed. Armed resistance to the supreme law was
-treason in those so engaged, even though such resistance
-was decreed by States. <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ante bellum</span></i> relations would continue
-unimpaired if the General Government succeeded in
-suppressing the rebellion. This doctrine, once a State in
-the Union always a State, was, so far, in harmony with the
-policy adopted by the Administration at the commencement
-of hostilities.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With all the following propositions, however, the policy
-of the Government was not in entire accord, nor, indeed, was
-it in exact conformity with the principles above ascribed to the
-President. The people of a State, the Democratic leaders
-asserted, are the State, in the widest sense of that term,
-and they make its fundamental law; to be their constitution
-it must be their unrestrained and voluntary act, not a result
-of coercion or intimidation. When they have freely acted,
-then the only essential conditions of a State constitution, in
-its Federal relations, are that it should be republican in form
-and not conflict with the Constitution of the United States.
-South Carolina, for example, was made a member of the
-Union by the Constitution and the consent of her people;
-except successful revolution no other power could unmake
-her. That revolution being unsuccessful she was still in
-the Union. The idea that a State was partly out of and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>partly in the Union, Democratic doctrine regarded as an
-absurdity. State officers, indeed, could commit suicide; a
-majority of its people could commit suicide; but the State did
-not, therefore, cease to exist, for the idea of a State involved
-the fourfold notion of a defined territory, people occupying it,
-functions constituting a system of government and officers to
-administer it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Representative Joseph K. Edgerton, of Indiana, in an able
-speech delivered February 20, 1865, said that he accepted the
-principle of President Lincoln’s inaugural and only regretted
-that after so clear and sound a statement of constitutional law
-and good intentions the President had subsequently come to the
-same conclusion as Mr. Stevens. The theory then announced
-was the only one consistent with the true constitutional idea
-that the Federal Union is a perpetual union of States, and
-that each State, as an individual member of the Union, has
-in itself the same element of perpetuity that belongs to the
-aggregate Republic formed by the Federal union of States.
-The Union can be held to be perpetual only on the principle
-that the States composing it are perpetual corporations or
-bodies politic, and indestructible by any act of the aggregate
-body or by their own act. The States united cannot destroy
-a single commonwealth; power to do that is power to consolidate
-the States into one. A single member cannot destroy the
-Union; power to do that is power to secede, and neither consolidation
-nor secession is a principle of the Union. Here
-we have in amplified form the celebrated declaration of Chief
-Justice Chase, that the Constitution in all its provisions contemplates
-“an indestructible union of indestructible States.”<a id='r302' /><a href='#f302' class='c010'><sup>[302]</sup></a>
-For a different though a very able presentation of Democratic
-theory the reader is referred to the address of Mr. Pendleton
-on the bill to guarantee republican forms of government to the
-rebellious States.<a id='r303' /><a href='#f303' class='c010'><sup>[303]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>Though this theory of a perpetual Union was the one almost
-universally held at the beginning of the war, it came during
-the progress of the conflict to be little regarded by the dominant
-party in Congress; by Republican leaders it was soon cast
-aside with indignation or contempt; it remained unaltered
-when their views of State status were adapted to changed conditions,
-and the Democratic organization, so far at least as
-reconstruction was concerned, settled down into little more
-than a party of protest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The silence in which Sumner’s propositions were received
-may be regarded as a negative testimony to the conservative
-sentiments of Senators even after war had existed for nearly
-a year; the House, however, just twelve months before the
-Massachusetts Senator offered his plan, February 11, 1861,
-made a positive declaration of its opinion relative to the limitations
-of Federal authority by passing unanimously the following
-resolution: “That neither Congress, nor the people
-or the governments of the non-slaveholding States, have the
-right to legislate upon or interfere with slavery in any of
-the slaveholding States in the Union.”<a id='r304' /><a href='#f304' class='c010'><sup>[304]</sup></a> This deliberate expression
-establishes beyond question the fact that the Constitution,
-as then understood, gave no authority to the Federal
-Government to interfere with, control or regulate relations
-between master and slave in any State which recognized the
-right of property in man. On this subject the people were
-practically unanimous, their Representatives entirely so. Even
-three months of war, with all the antagonisms and all the bitterness
-excited, failed to shake this conviction.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On July 22, 1861, the day after the disaster at Bull Run,
-Representative Crittenden, of Kentucky, introduced the following
-resolution:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That the present deplorable civil war has been forced upon the
-country by the disunionists of the Southern States, now in arms against
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>the constitutional Government, and in arms around the capital; that
-in this national emergency, Congress, banishing all feelings of mere
-passion or resentment, will recollect only its duty to the whole country;
-that this war is not waged on their part in any spirit of oppression, or
-for any purpose of conquest or subjugation, or purpose of overthrowing
-or interfering with the rights or established institutions of those States,
-but to defend and maintain the <em>supremacy</em> of the Constitution, and to
-preserve the Union with all the dignity, equality, and rights of the
-several States unimpaired; and that as soon as these objects are accomplished
-the war ought to cease.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Only two votes were recorded against it.<a id='r305' /><a href='#f305' class='c010'><sup>[305]</sup></a> Four days later
-Andrew Johnson offered in the upper House a resolution in
-nearly the same language, and it was opposed by only five
-Senators. There is little doubt that this practical unanimity
-in Congress reflected the sentiment of almost the entire North.
-This conspicuous landmark, so frequently referred to before
-the reunion was completed, will be useful to show how far
-the warring factions drifted during the progress of the conflict.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Trumbull, of Illinois, who disliked certain expressions
-in the form in which it was proposed, said, relative to the
-object of the war as declared by the resolution:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I trust this war is prosecuted for the purpose of subjugating all
-rebels and traitors who are in arms against the Government. What
-do you mean by “subjugation”? I know that persons in the Southern
-States have sought to make this a controversy between States and the
-Federal Government, and have talked about coercing States and subjugating
-States; but, sir, it has never been proposed, so far as I know, on
-the part of the Union people of the United States, to subjugate States or
-coerce States. It is proposed, however, to subjugate citizens who are
-standing out in defiance of the laws of the Union, and to coerce them into
-obedience to the laws of the Union. I dislike that word in this connection.
-In its broadest sense I am opposed to it. If it means the war is not
-for the purpose of the subjugation of traitors and rebels into obedience to
-the laws, then I am opposed to it. I trust the war is prosecuted for that
-very purpose. I move to strike out the words “and in arms around
-the capital,” and also the words “or subjugation.”<a id='r306' /><a href='#f306' class='c010'><sup>[306]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>Mr. Harris, of New York, said: “If slavery shall be abolished,
-shall be overthrown as a consequence of this war, I
-shall not shed a tear over that result; but, sir, it is not the
-purpose of the Government to prosecute this war for the purpose
-of overthrowing slavery. If it comes as a consequence,
-let it come; but it is not an end of the war.”<a id='r307' /><a href='#f307' class='c010'><sup>[307]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the succeeding chapter will be traced with some degree
-of fullness the sentiments on reconstruction, in July, 1864, not
-only of the majority but of every important element composing
-Congress. The position then attained by the average
-Republican member, it must be repeated, was not reached at a
-single bound. Its progress has been described in the preceding
-pages. The vote on the Crittenden resolution marks the
-starting point. There was then, though war had existed for
-three months, no diversity of opinion worthy of notice. The
-successive advances from the declaration, February 11, 1861,
-that neither Congress nor the governments of the free States
-had a constitutional right to interfere with slavery in any
-slaveholding State of the Union to the passage by both
-Houses, July 2, 1864, of the Wade-Davis bill, which proposed
-by Federal law to regulate the franchise in the rebellious
-States, to appoint provisional governors (empowered to dissolve
-State conventions), and to prescribe provisions for their
-local constitutions, form one of the most instructive commentaries
-on the importance of necessity as a principle of constitutional
-interpretation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A resolution introduced December 4, 1861, by Mr. Holman,
-of Indiana, for the purpose of getting the House to re-affirm
-the Crittenden propositions of July 22 preceding, was
-tabled by a vote of 71 to 65.<a id='r308' /><a href='#f308' class='c010'><sup>[308]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A discussion of the various theories of reconstruction might
-seem to require in this place, by way of anticipation, at least
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>a summary of the Congressional plan; but as this was the
-mode of reorganization which was finally imposed on the
-South it is preferred to present its development chronologically
-and to consider it apart. Several of the remaining
-chapters will be devoted to an account of its successive modifications
-until the subject was taken, in December, 1865, altogether
-out of Executive hands.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>VII<br /> <span class='large'>RISE OF THE CONGRESSIONAL PLAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>A previous chapter, in relating the military events
-which succeeded the disaster at Chickamauga, noticed
-a suggestion of the defeated Federal commander as
-well as Mr. Lincoln’s reply relative to the publication at that
-time of a declaration of amnesty to those in arms against the
-Government.<a id='r309' /><a href='#f309' class='c010'><sup>[309]</sup></a> The double victory of Mission Ridge and
-Lookout Mountain, following the removal of Rosecrans, confirmed
-the President in his purpose of offering a general pardon
-to those who would lay down their arms and return to
-their obedience to the laws. The Proclamation of December
-8, 1863, followed promptly and brought the subject of reconstruction
-before the Thirty-eighth Congress at its first session.
-The preceding pages have alluded to the universal
-favor with which that announcement was received. Though
-opposition to Executive measures was hushed for the time,
-it appears only to have gathered strength in this brief interval
-of silence. One short week introduced into the House of
-Representatives a resolution the subsequent progress of which
-brought the dominant party in Congress to the support of a
-measure hostile to that submitted by the President. Its interesting
-history may be collected from the pages of the <cite>Congressional
-Globe</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On December 15, from the Committee of Ways and Means,
-Thaddeus Stevens reported among other resolutions one to
-refer so much of the President’s message as was contained in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>the Proclamation, and as related to the condition and treatment
-of rebellious States, to a special committee of nine to be
-appointed by the Speaker. Henry Winter Davis inquired
-whether Mr. Stevens would accept for that resolution an
-amendment pointing more directly to the purpose in view.
-This substitute read as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That so much of the President’s message as relates to the duty
-of the United States to guarantee a republican form of government
-to the States in which the governments recognized by the United
-States have been abrogated or overthrown, be referred to a select committee
-of nine, to be named by the Speaker, which shall report the
-bills necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing
-guaranty.<a id='r310' /><a href='#f310' class='c010'><sup>[310]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Stevens offering no objection, Representative Davis remarked
-that the language of the resolution was general, and,
-he believed, would cover the whole war; the committee, he
-supposed, intended to point to what, in the very inaccurate
-phraseology of the day, was known as the question of reconstruction;
-but believing there had been no destruction, he
-carefully avoided the use of that term.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Government of the United States, continued Mr.
-Davis, was engaged in two operations: the suppression of
-armed resistance to the supreme authority of the nation and a
-very delicate, and perhaps as high a duty—to see, when
-armed resistance should be overcome, that governments republican
-in form should be restored in all those States. His
-substitute directed the investigations of the committee to that
-one point. It was not intended as a peremptory instruction to
-the committee to report any particular measure, but to take
-such action as their wisdom should recommend.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Democratic feeling on this subject appears in an inquiry by
-Representative Brooks, of New York, as to whether republican
-governments had not been abrogated and overturned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>north as well as south of the Potomac since the revolution
-began.<a id='r311' /><a href='#f311' class='c010'><sup>[311]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The amendment of Mr. Davis prevailed, and of the special
-committee appointed he was made chairman. On January
-18, 1864, he asked unanimous consent to report a bill to guarantee
-certain States a republican form of government. Objection
-having been made, he moved a suspension of the rules;
-but failing to receive the necessary two thirds vote his motion
-was lost. On February 15 succeeding, when he brought the
-measure before the House again and requested a postponement
-of its consideration for two weeks, it encountered Democratic
-opposition. The bill was then read a first and second time,
-ordered to be printed, and returned to the committee.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On March 22 the bill came before the House on the question
-of ordering it to be engrossed and read a third time. In
-its support Mr. Davis made an able address in which he analyzed
-the plan proposed by the Executive and emphasized its
-deficiencies. He said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The bill which I am directed by the Committee on the Rebellious
-States to report is one which provides for the restoration of civil government
-in States whose governments have been overthrown. It prescribes
-such conditions as will secure not merely civil government to the people
-of the rebellious States, but will also secure to the people of the United
-States permanent peace after the suppression of the rebellion.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The bill challenges the support of all who consider slavery the
-cause of the rebellion, and that in it the embers of rebellion will always
-smoulder; of those who think that freedom and permanent peace are
-inseparable, and who are determined, so far as their constitutional authority
-will allow them, to secure these fruits by adequate legislation.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>... It is entitled to the support of all gentlemen upon this
-side of the House, whatever their views may be of the nature of the
-rebellion; and the relation in which it has placed the people and
-States in rebellion toward the United States, not less of those who
-think that the rebellion has placed the citizens of the rebel States
-beyond the protection of the Constitution, and that Congress, therefore,
-has supreme power over them as conquered enemies, than of that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>other class who think that they have not ceased to be citizens and
-States of the United States, though incapable of exercising political
-privileges under the Constitution, but that Congress is charged with a
-high political power by the Constitution to guarantee republican governments
-in the States, and that this is the proper time and the proper
-mode of exercising it. It is also entitled to the favorable consideration
-of gentlemen upon the other side of the House, who honestly and
-deliberately express their judgment that slavery is dead. To them it
-puts the question whether it is not advisable to bury it out of our
-sight, that its ghost may no longer stalk abroad to frighten us from our
-propriety.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It does not address itself to that class of gentlemen upon the other
-side of the House, if there be any, nor to that class of the people of the
-country who look for political alliance to the men who head the rebellion
-in the South....</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It purports, sir, not to exercise a revolutionary authority, but to be
-an execution of the Constitution of the United States, of the fourth
-section of the fourth article of that Constitution, which not merely
-confers the power upon Congress, but imposes upon Congress the
-duty of guaranteeing to every State in this Union a republican form
-of government. That clause vests in the Congress of the United
-States a plenary, supreme, unlimited political jurisdiction, paramount
-over courts, subject only to the judgment of the people of the United
-States, embracing within its scope every legislative measure necessary
-and proper to make it effectual; and what is necessary and proper the
-Constitution refers, in the first place, to our judgment, subject to no
-revision but that of the people. It recognizes no other tribunal. It recognizes
-the judgment of no court. It refers to no authority except
-the judgment and will of the majority of Congress, and of the people
-on that judgment, if any appeal from it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>[Secession he described as] the act of the people of the States,
-carrying with it all the consequences of such an act. And therefore it
-must be either a legal revolution which makes them independent, and
-makes of the United States a foreign country, or it is a usurpation
-against the authority of the United States, the erection of governments
-which do not recognize the Constitution of the United States,
-which the Constitution does not recognize, and, therefore, not republican
-governments of the States in rebellion. The latter is the view
-which all parties take of it. I do not understand that any gentleman on
-the other side of the House says that any rebel government which
-does not recognize the Constitution of the United States, and which is
-not recognized by Congress, is a State government within the meaning
-of the Constitution. Still less can it be said that there is a State
-government, republican or un-republican, in the State of Tennessee,
-where there is no government of any kind, no civil authority, no organized
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>form of administration except that represented by the flag
-of the United States, obeying the will, and under the orders of the
-military officer in command. It is the language of the President of
-the United States in every proclamation, of Congress in every law on the
-statute-book, of both Houses in their forms of proceeding, and of the
-Courts of the United States in their administration of the law. It is
-the result of every principle of law, of every suggestion of political
-philosophy, that there can be no republican government within the
-limits of the United States that does not recognize, but does repudiate,
-the Constitution, and which the President and the Congress of the
-United States do not, on their part, recognize. Those that are here represented
-are the only governments existing within the limits of the
-United States. Those that are not here represented are not governments
-of the States, republican under the Constitution. And if they be
-not, then they are military usurpations, inaugurated as the permanent
-governments of the States, contrary to the supreme law of the land,
-arrayed in arms against the Government of the United States; and it
-is the duty, the first and highest duty, of the Government to suppress and
-expel them. Congress must either expel, or recognize and support them.
-If it do not guarantee them, it is bound to expel them; and they who are
-not ready to suppress them are bound to recognize them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In the famous Rhode Island cases,” he continued, the
-Supreme Court of the United States by the mouth of Chief
-Justice Taney, declared “that a military government, established
-as the permanent government of a State, is not a republican
-government in the meaning of the Constitution, and
-that it is the duty of Congress to suppress it. That duty Congress
-is now executing by its armies. He [Justice Taney] further
-said in that case that it is the exclusive prerogative of
-Congress—of Congress, and not of the President—to determine
-what is and what is not the established government of
-the State; and, to come to that conclusion, it must judge of
-what is and what is not a republican government, and its judgment
-is conclusive on the Supreme Court, which cannot judge
-of the fact for itself, but accepts the fact declared by the political
-department of the Government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Davis resumed:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We are now engaged in suppressing a military usurpation of the
-authority of the State government. When that shall have been accomplished,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>there will be no form of State authority in existence which
-Congress can recognize. Our success will be the overthrow of all
-semblance of government in the rebel States. The Government of the
-United States is then, in fact, the <em>only</em> Government existing in those
-States, and it is there charged to guarantee them republican governments.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>... The duty of guaranteeing carries with it the right to pass all
-laws necessary and proper to guaranty.... It places in the hands
-of Congress the right to say what is and what is not, with all the light of
-experience and all the lessons of the past, inconsistent, in its judgment,
-with the permanent continuance of republican government; and if, in
-its judgment, any form of policy is radically and inherently inconsistent
-with the permanent and enduring peace of the country, with the permanent
-supremacy of republican government, and it have the manliness
-to say so, there is no power, judicial or executive, in the United States,
-that can even question this judgment but the <span class='sc'>People</span>; and they can do
-it only by sending other representatives here to undo our work. The
-very language of the Constitution and the necessary logic of the case
-involve that consequence. The denial of the right of secession means
-that all the territory of the United States shall remain under the jurisdiction
-of the Constitution. If there can be no State government which
-does not recognize the Constitution, and which the authorities of the
-United States do not recognize, then there are these alternatives, and
-these only: the rebel States must be governed by Congress till they
-submit and form a State government under the Constitution; or Congress
-must recognize State governments which do not recognize either Congress
-or the Constitution of the United States; or there must be an entire
-absence of <em>all</em> government in the rebel States; and that is anarchy. To
-recognize a government which does not recognize the Constitution is
-absurd, for a government is not a constitution; and the recognition of
-a State government means the acknowledgment of men as governors,
-and legislators, and judges, actually invested with power to make laws,
-to judge of crimes, to convict the citizens of other States, to demand the
-surrender of fugitives from justice, to arm and command the militia,
-to require the United States to repress all opposition to its authority,
-and to protect it from invasion—against our own armies; whose Senators
-and Representatives are <em>entitled</em> to seats in Congress, and whose
-electoral votes must be counted in the election of the President of a
-Government which they disown and defy!! To accept the alternative of
-anarchy as the constitutional condition of a State is to assert the failure
-of the Constitution and the end of republican government. Until, therefore,
-Congress recognize a State government, organized under its auspices,
-there is no government in the rebel States except the authority of
-Congress. In the absence of all State government, the duty is imposed
-on Congress ... to administer civil government until the people
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>shall, under its guidance, submit to the Constitution of the United
-States, and, under the laws which it shall impose, and on the conditions
-Congress may require, reorganize a republican government for themselves,
-and Congress shall recognize that government.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>... Is it yet time to reorganize the State governments? or is
-there not an intermediate period in which sound legislative wisdom
-requires that the authority of Congress shall take possession of and
-temporarily control the States now in rebellion until peace shall be
-restored and republican government can be established deliberately, undisturbed
-by the sound or fear of arms, and under the guidance of
-law?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After referring to the condition of the rebellion, Mr. Davis
-declared: “We have occupied a vast area wrested from its
-power, but to this day we have not expelled the rebels from
-<em>any State</em> they ever held.” In no portion of those States could
-military power “be withdrawn for a moment without instant
-insurrection”; and he added, “There is no rebel State held
-now by the United States enough of whose population adheres
-to the Union to be intrusted with the government of the State.
-One tenth cannot control nine tenths. Five tenths are nowhere
-willing to undertake the control of the other five
-tenths.” In West Virginia, he said, such a condition existed
-and had been recognized. “In no other State—the only one
-in respect to which a doubt can exist is Tennessee—in no
-other State is there such a portion of territory held, or any
-such portion of population under our control, or any such portion
-of it which is in our control inspired by such sentiments
-toward the Government of the United States, so free from
-fear of the returning wave of rebel invasion, so assured of the
-continued supremacy of the United States, that we ought to
-be willing to trust them with this power. You can get a
-handful of men in the several States who would be glad to
-take the offices if protected by the troops of the United States,
-but you have nowhere a body of independent, loyal partisans
-of the United States, ready to meet the rebels in arms, ready to
-die for the Republic, who claim the Constitution as their birthright,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>count all other privileges light in comparison, and resolve
-at every hazard to maintain it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Concerning the loyal masses of the South, of whom so
-much was heard at the beginning of the war, he remarked:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It is the most astounding spectacle in history that in the Southern
-States, with more than half of the population opposed to it, a great
-revolution was effected against their wishes and against their votes,
-without a battle, a riot, or a protest in behalf of the beneficent Government
-of their fathers—a revolution whose opponents hastened to lead it,
-without a martyr to the cause they deserted except the nameless heroes
-of the mountains of Tennessee, or a confessor of the faith they had
-avowed save the illustrious Petigru of South Carolina!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>... There is no fact that any one has stated on authority at all
-reliable that any respectable proportion of the people of the Southern
-States now in rebellion are willing to accept any terms that even our
-opponents on the other side of the House are willing to offer them.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c013'>What, then, are we to do with the population in these States? To
-make “confusion worse confounded” by erecting by the side of the
-hostile State government a new State government on the shifting sands
-of that whirlpool, to be supported by us while we are there and to
-turn its power against us when we are driven out? That would be to
-erect a new throne where</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Chaos umpire sits,</div>
- <div class='line'>And by decision more embroils the fray</div>
- <div class='line'>By which he reigns.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In my judgment, it is not safe to confide the vast authority of State
-governments to the doubtful loyalty of the rebel States until armed
-rebellion shall have been trampled into the dust, until every armed rebel
-shall have vanished from the State, until there shall be in the South no
-hope of independence and no fear of subjection, until the United States
-is bearded by no military power and the laws can be executed by courts
-and sheriffs without the ever-present menace of military authority.
-Until we have reached that point, this bill proposes that the President
-shall appoint a civil governor to administer the government under the
-laws of the United States in force in the States respectively at the outbreak
-of the rebellion, subject, of course, to the necessities of military
-occupation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When military opposition shall have been suppressed, continued
-Mr. Davis, then call upon the people to reorganize their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>governments in their own way, “subject to the conditions
-that we think essential to our permanent peace, and to prevent
-the revival hereafter of the rebellion....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To establish republican forms of government that the people
-of the United States would agree to, three modes were indicated:
-“One is to remove the cause of the war by an alteration
-of the Constitution of the United States prohibiting slavery
-everywhere within its limits. That, sir, goes to the root
-of the matter, and should consecrate the nation’s triumph.
-But there are thirty-four States—three fourths of them would
-be twenty-six. I believe there are twenty-five States represented
-in this Congress, so that we, on that basis, cannot
-change the Constitution. It is, therefore, a condition precedent
-in that view of the case, that more States shall have
-governments organized within them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He next noticed the calculation based on three fourths of
-the States then represented in Congress, a construction held
-by Thaddeus Stevens, but even that view was not without its
-difficulties. The States of New Jersey, Kentucky, Maryland
-and Delaware were named as doubtful. If such an
-amendment were adopted it still left “the whole field of the
-civil administration of the States prior to the recognition of
-State governments, all laws necessary to the ascertainment of
-the will of the people, and all restrictions on the return to
-power of the leaders of the rebellion, wholly unprovided for.”
-The constitutional amendment met his hearty approval, but
-it was not a complete remedy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Relative to the Administration policy, he observed:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The next plan is that inaugurated by the President of the United
-States in the proclamation of the 8th of December, called the amnesty
-proclamation. That proposes no guardianship of the United States
-over the reorganization of the governments, no law to prescribe who shall
-vote, no civil functionaries to see that the law is faithfully executed,
-no supervising authority to control and judge of the election. But
-if, in any manner, by the toleration of martial law, lately proclaimed the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>fundamental law, under the dictation of any military authority, or
-under the prescriptions of a provost marshal, something in the form of
-a government shall be presented, represented to rest on the votes of one
-tenth of the population, the President will recognize that, provided it
-does not <em>contravene</em> the proclamation of freedom and the laws of Congress;
-and, to secure that, an oath is exacted.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Now you will observe that there is no guarantee of law to watch over
-the organization of that government. It may combine all the population
-of a State; it may combine one tenth only; or ten governments may
-come competing for recognition at the door of the Executive mansion.
-The executive authority is pledged; Congress is not pledged. It may be
-recognized by the military power and may not be recognized by the civil
-power, so that it would have a doubtful existence, half civil and half
-military, neither a temporary government by law of Congress nor a State
-government, something as unknown to the Constitution as the rebel government
-that refuses to recognize it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In examining the operation of the Executive proclamation
-on the existence of slavery, Mr. Davis asked, how does it
-accomplish the reorganization of the government on the basis
-of universal freedom? and added:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The only prescription is that the government shall not <em>contravene</em> the
-provisions of that proclamation. Sir, if that proclamation be valid, then
-we are relieved from all trouble on that score; but if that proclamation
-be not valid, then the oath to support it is without legal sanction, for
-the President can ask no man to bind himself by an oath to support an
-unfounded proclamation or an unconstitutional law even for a moment,
-still less till it shall have been declared void by the Supreme Court of
-the United States.... If, therefore, he shall have taken the oath,
-he can, in good conscience as well as in good law, disregard it the
-next moment; so that, in point of fact, the law leaves us where the
-proclamation does; it adds nothing to its legality, nothing to its force.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But what is the proclamation which the new governments must not
-contravene? That certain negroes shall be free, and that certain other
-negroes shall remain slaves. The proclamation therefore recognizes the
-existence of slavery. It does just exactly what all the constitutions of
-the rebel States prior to the rebellion did; ... and, therefore, the
-old constitutions might be restored to-morrow without <em>contravening</em> the
-proclamation of freedom. Those constitutions do not say that the President
-shall not have the right, in the exercise of his military authority,
-to emancipate slaves within the States.... They do not even
-establish slavery.... They merely recognize it just as the proclamation
-recognizes its existence in parts of Virginia and in parts of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>Louisiana. So that the one tenth of the population at whose hands
-the President proposes to accept and guarantee a State government,
-can elect officers under the old constitution of their State in exactly the
-same terms and with exactly the same powers existing at the time of the
-rebellion, and may, under his proclamation, demand a recognition....
-So soon as the State government is recognized, the operation
-of the proclamation becomes merely a judicial question. The right of a
-negro to his freedom is a legal right divesting a right of property,
-and is to be enforced in the courts; and then the question is what the
-courts will say about the proclamation. Is it valid or invalid? Does
-it of itself confer a legal right to freedom on negroes who were slaves?
-Is it within the authority of the Executive?... How local State
-courts, created by the Southern people, will decide such a question
-<em>no one</em> can doubt.... It is, therefore, under the scheme of the
-President, merely a judicial question, to be adjudged by judicial rules, and
-to be determined by the courts.... I do not desire to argue the
-legality of the proclamation of freedom. I think it safer to <em>make it law</em>....
-Under the act of 1862 the President is authorized to use the
-negro population for the suppression of the rebellion; while the rebellion
-lasts, his proclamation in law exempts the slave from the duty of obeying
-his master, but after the rebellion is extinguished, the master’s rights
-are in his own hands, subject only to the opinion of the courts on the
-legal effect of the proclamation, without a single precedent to sanction
-it, and opposed by the solemn assertions of our Government against the
-principle worked to authorize it. Gentlemen are less prudent or less in
-earnest than I am if they will risk the great issues involved in this
-question on such authorities before the courts of justice.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>By the bill we propose to preclude the judicial question by the solution
-of a political question. How so? By the paramount power of
-Congress to reorganize governments in those States, to impose such conditions
-as it thinks necessary to secure the permanence of republican
-government, to refuse to recognize any governments there which do
-not prohibit slavery forever. Ay, gentlemen take the responsibility to
-say, in the face of those who clamor for speedy recognition of governments
-tolerating slavery, that the safety of the people of the United
-States is the supreme law; that their will is the supreme rule of law,
-and that we are authorized to pronounce their will on this subject—take
-the responsibility to say that we will revise the judgments of our
-ancestors; that we have experience written in blood which they had
-not; that we find now, what they darkly doubted, that slavery is really,
-radically inconsistent with the permanence of republican governments;
-and that, being charged by the supreme law of the land, on our conscience
-and judgment, to guarantee, that is, to continue, maintain, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>enforce, if it exist, to institute and restore when overthrown, republican
-governments throughout the broad limits of the republic, we will weed
-out every element of their policy which we think incompatible with its
-permanence and endurance.... It [the bill] adds to the authority
-of the proclamation the sanction of Congress....</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Gentlemen must deny the jurisdiction of Congress over the States
-where there are no recognized governments, or place a bound or limit
-to the discretion of Congress....</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And if the sentiments of State pride and State rights be touched by
-the assertion of this wide discretion, which men may deny but cannot
-expunge, I would admonish those who dislike it that it is a jurisdiction
-which nothing but the dereliction of the States can wake into activity,
-and they who wish to exclude it from their limits have only not to give
-occasion for its exercise by renouncing obedience to the Constitution
-and pulling down their own State governments. But now the jurisdiction
-has attached in all the rebel States. Until Congress has assented,
-there is no State government in any rebel State, and none will be
-recognized except such as recognize the power of the United States; so
-that we come down to this: whether we—and when I say we, I mean
-we upon this side of the House, who are firmly, thoroughly, and honestly
-convinced that the time has come not merely to strike the arms
-from the hands of the rebels, but to strike the fetters from the arms of
-the slaves, and remove that domineering and cohesive power without
-which we could have had no rebellion, and which now is its animating
-spirit, and which will die when it dies—....</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And if it be time [for Congress to assert its authority] then all I ask
-in conclusion is, that gentlemen will go and read that great argument of
-Daniel Webster in the Rhode Island case ... where he met this
-semi-revolutionary attempt to count heads and call that the people, and
-maintained—and so the Supreme Court judged when it refused to take
-jurisdiction of the question—that the great political law of America is
-that every change of government shall be conducted under the supervising
-authority of some existing legislative body throwing the protection
-of law around the polls, defining the rights of voters, protecting
-them in the exercise of the elective franchise, guarding against fraud,
-repelling violence, and appointing arbiters to pronounce the result and
-declare the persons chosen by the people.... He [Webster]
-maintained it to be the great fundamental principle of the American
-government that legislation shall guide every political change, and that
-it assumes that somewhere within the United States there is always a
-permanent, organized legal authority which shall guide the tottering footsteps
-of those who seek to restore governments which are disorganized
-and broken down.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>The bill, he asserted in conclusion, was an effort to apply
-this great principle of American law.<a id='r312' /><a href='#f312' class='c010'><sup>[312]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Representative Scofield, of Pennsylvania, said, April 29,
-1864, when the subject was again before the House, that the
-continuity of constitutional government in the seceded States
-had been broken, the regular transmission of political power
-interrupted. How, he inquired, should the severed thread
-be joined? By the unconstrained action of the people themselves,
-say the gentlemen in opposition. He indorsed that
-sentiment, and added that when the people of those States
-should ground the arms of their rebellion, and uncoerced
-take upon themselves the easy yoke and light burden of the
-ever gentle Federal Government it would mark a glad day in
-those uncheerful years of our history.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For those States from which hostile armies had been excluded
-Congress should legislate or leave the people in the
-rough hand of military law. The bill designed to discharge
-that duty was generally acceptable to any one who conceded
-the propriety of Congressional action, its three prohibitions
-being probably the only debatable points,—that is the assumption
-of Confederate debts, the prevention of Confederate
-officers from voting and the prohibition of involuntary servitude.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To assume the rebel debt, he asserted, would be to offer a
-high bounty for future rebellions; if rebel officers were permitted
-to vote, upon what principle of comparative justice
-could the privilege be denied to ordinary criminals? These
-officers were guilty of the highest crime against government.
-As to the third prohibition he had more to say.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If God shall give us victory,” continued Mr. Scofield,
-“and enable us to subdue or scatter the army of the enemy,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>is a voluntary reunion of the States possible? I say <em>voluntary</em>
-because I suppose nobody desires a Union always to be
-maintained by force; and I use the word <em>reunion</em> because nobody
-proposes a form of government different from our present
-system of State brotherhood. I am not now speaking of the
-several plans of reconstruction, for they are designed only
-as temporary devices, looking to a reunion.... My
-question looks beyond the battle and beyond reconstruction.
-When the victory is won, if won it shall be, and the transition
-over, will the insurgent States <em>willingly stay</em> where they have
-been <em>forcibly put</em> in their old places in the old Union?...
-Our own liberties could not survive their permanent subjugation.
-When the Federal Government becomes strong enough
-to hold eleven States as colonies, it will be too strong, I fear,
-for the people’s liberties.” All motives for those States ever
-to depart should be removed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Similarity of ideas he characterized as the bond of nationality,
-and named Ireland, Hungary and Poland to show the
-opposite. In the United States slavery was the one subject
-of estrangement. Could North and South be brought to
-think alike on that subject? The theory that each side could
-hold its own opinions on slavery and no evil consequences
-follow was somewhat to blame. That theory failed in practice
-and for that failure each side blamed the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The fathers, he said, lived under that theory, that slavery
-and freedom could coexist, but they expected that the institution
-would soon become extinct. Hence they only tolerated
-it. Slavery was to recede slowly and freedom to follow
-steadily. Upon <em>that</em> basis they got along very well and so
-could their descendants. Instead of consenting to go, slavery
-demanded expansion and perpetuity. This was reversing the
-compromise of the fathers; this change had to be discussed,
-the slave power took umbrage and secession followed. If one
-sentiment must prevail, then slavery, which could not stand
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>discussion, must yield if there was to be a reunion. To live in
-peace together the North must embrace slavery or the South
-must abandon it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To adopt slavery would mean the adoption by 20,000,000
-people of sentiments favorable thereto, whereas the institution
-never had any friends in the North. Those in that section
-so considered were only its apologists. If, three years ago,
-slavery had no real friends in the North, who would advocate
-it when it had attempted to destroy the most beneficent of
-governments? To reconcile the free States would necessitate
-a change of opinion—to adopt freedom as the dominant idea
-would require simply a change of <em>investment</em> in the sections.
-For the present extinguish the conflagration, for the future
-remove the inflammable material from which it was kindled.
-For the present seize the mad revolutionists of the
-South, for the future destroy the virus that poisoned their
-blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All who favored emancipation he favored as co-workers for
-a voluntary and peaceful reunion of the States; slavery was
-presented merely as an element of discord and disunion and
-as such he asked for its removal.<a id='r313' /><a href='#f313' class='c010'><sup>[313]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Williams said that the war was inaugurated on the
-theory that the States were <em>in</em>, whereas the great fact of war
-was a proclamation that they were <em>out</em>. Northern Democrats
-were willing to accept the fact that they were <em>out, without
-war</em>—to adopt the principle of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">laissez nous faire</span></i> of
-the rebel authorities and to treat with them upon the idea of
-a <em>reconstruction</em>; peaceful secession with <em>reconstruction by
-treaty</em>. The severance of the States was complete, though the
-hope of recovery remained. By releasing the crews of their
-privateers, by blockading their ports the Federal authorities
-had recognized them as a <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">de facto</span></i> government; Federal legislation
-had put them under the ban as alien enemies. In the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>minds of the framers of the Constitution the theory of an
-indissoluble Union referred to <em>the right</em>, to its organic law.
-They did not mean that it could not be ruptured by violence.
-If the governments of the States were dissolved “they must,
-of course, be reconstructed under the auspices of the conquering
-power, and that not by the Executive, but by the Legislature
-of the Union, whose sword he bears, and which only,
-consistently with the genius of our institutions, the past practice
-of the Government, and the letter as well as spirit of the
-Constitution, can venture to determine what use shall be made
-of the territories conquered by it, and when and upon what
-terms they shall be readmitted into full communion as members
-of this Government.... To permit any executive
-officer to declare its law, and set it in motion, and place
-it under the control of a minority—a mere tithe of its citizens—with
-power to send delegates to Congress with representation
-unimpaired and unaffected—even though he should reenact
-a part of its abrogated Constitution—would be, as I
-think, a monstrous anomaly, a violation of fundamental principles,
-and a precedent fraught with great danger to republican
-liberty.... To come back into the Union, it
-must either be born anew or come back with all its rights unimpaired,
-except those material ones which have been destroyed
-in the progress of the war. There is, I think, no
-middle ground, as there is no power either here or elsewhere
-to prescribe terms which shall abridge the rights or privileges
-of a State that has <em>not</em> been out of the Union, or returns to it
-in virtue of its original title.” The rebellious States, he declared,
-“are in the Union for correction, not for <em>heirship</em>.”
-In point of fact they were out.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Replying to an observation of Fernando Wood, Mr. Williams
-said: “We are in favor, at all events, of preserving all
-that is left of it [the Union], and intend, with the blessing of
-God, to win back the residue, and pass it through the fire until
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>it shall come out purged of the malignant element that has
-unfitted it for freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“... Say that they [the rebellious States] are in
-the Union as before, and all your sacrifices have been idle,
-and all the blood spilled by you has sunk into the earth in
-vain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The confiscation and distribution of the great baronial possessions
-of rebel leaders were in his judgment an essential
-element in any feasible plan of reconstruction. He deduced
-from passages in Bynkershoek and Barbeyrac that “everything
-belonging to the offending party is confiscated....
-<em>Indemnity</em>, <em>security</em>, and <em>punishment</em> are all, therefore, means
-of self-defense which may be legitimately used.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Is the forfeiture, he asked, of the estates and property of
-traitors, whether they consist of lands or slaves, required for
-these purposes? “<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Vae Victis</span></i>” is not the maxim of a humane
-conqueror. Though he would not exclude the idea of
-mercy, he was not clear as to “the wisdom of a proclamation
-of amnesty in advance as a measure of pacification, without
-limits as to time, and where submission after conquest, and
-when it is no longer a virtue but a necessity, is to be rewarded
-with the same impunity as a voluntary return to duty before
-that time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Speaking of the nature, cause and fury of the war, he continued:
-“Its suppression has become impossible without removing
-the cause of the strife, and disabling our enemy by
-liberating his slaves, and arming them against him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>No reparation was adequate for the injury inflicted; for,
-said he, “there can be no punishment, except in the divestiture
-of the rights and the seizure of the estates of the guilty leaders.
-There is no security except in the distribution of the
-latter.” From these he would carve out inheritances for the
-widow and the helpless offspring of the Northern soldier.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For eighteen months, he observed in conclusion, the war
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>was conducted upon the principle of inflicting as little injury
-as possible upon the enemy.<a id='r314' /><a href='#f314' class='c010'><sup>[314]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The speech of Mr. Williams was marked by considerable
-fluency as well as great elegance of diction; it was the effort
-of a scholar, though not confined strictly to the question before
-the House. He introduced with directness and vigor
-the ideas of indemnity, security and punishment; these, it
-may be remarked, became important elements in determining
-the mode of reinstatement that finally emerged from the chaos
-of resolutions and plans submitted to Congress.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Representative Baldwin, of Michigan, believed the bill “to
-be an utter subversion of the Constitution”; even a latitudinarian
-construction of that instrument would not justify it.
-It embraced a plan that could be enforced by only the military
-arm. It was the precursor of the establishment of a despotism.
-That measure, as well as the President’s plan, was
-fraught with danger.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He lamented interference with the elective franchise and
-the denial of the privileges of the writ of <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">habeas corpus</span></i>. For
-eighteen months the war had been waged for the destruction
-of the South, not for the restoration of the Union. Did not
-wisdom, he asked, suggest that all plans of reconstruction
-which tended only to intensify hate and postpone the day of
-peace be abandoned? Speaking of the effect of Mr. Lincoln’s
-policy he observed: “That it was intended that the
-amnesty proclamation of last December would hasten the end
-of this strife, I do not believe. We are told that nearly every
-Southern paper published it, and it only nerved them to the
-performance of more earnest deeds.” The President’s plan
-as well as that of Congress, he believed, were designed to perpetuate
-the present dominant party by the vote of reconstructed
-States. A considerable portion of his remarks was
-devoted to criticism of the Administration.<a id='r315' /><a href='#f315' class='c010'><sup>[315]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>Mr. Thayer, of Pennsylvania, believed that the powers
-delegated by the people of the United States to the national
-Government were sufficient for the great work of reconstruction,
-and added: “That the time has come in which Congress,
-in the exercise of the great powers conferred upon it,
-should settle and authoritatively declare the terms and conditions
-upon which the people of the rebellious districts should
-be restored to their State privileges and resume their just
-relations to the national Government, does not admit of
-doubt.” People occupying territory wrested from the rebellion
-should be restored with the least possible delay to the
-privileges of representative government. “Congress alone
-can enact the laws which are to reconstruct the political societies
-in which the fundamental principle of loyalty to the
-national Government and obedience to its laws and respect
-for its authority have been obliterated by the violence of rebellion.
-The President of the United States cannot enact
-these laws, and it is in my opinion a reproach to Congress that
-by its inaction up to the present time it has rendered it necessary
-that the national Executive should be obliged by a sense
-of obligation to the public welfare to resort to temporary expedients
-for the preservation of public order and the assertion
-of national supremacy in those districts and States which
-the valor of our soldiers has redeemed from the insulting
-domination of the rebel army.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Executive action, he asserted, was suggested by necessity.
-“What has been done in that respect by the President I believe
-to have been well done, wisely done, and patriotically
-done, and to have been demanded alike by the necessity
-of the case and for the welfare of the Republic.” The exclusive
-right over the subject, however, belonged to Congress,
-which should relieve the President of all responsibility therein.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Safeguards against the recurrence of similar outbreaks in
-the future should be required. He would support the measure
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>before the House because of these safeguards or pledges.
-Unconditional and perpetual loyalty in the new governments
-in the rebellious States to that of the United States, extirpation
-and perpetual prohibition of slavery and compulsory
-repudiation of the rebel debt were the chief among these.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The safety of the country,” said he, “its future repose,
-the continuance of the Union, and the firm establishment of
-our political system imperatively demand that in the reorganization
-of local governments in the rebel States the foundations
-of such governments must rest upon the principle of submission
-to the Constitution and laws of the United States.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“... It is also necessary to guard the elective
-franchise and the privilege of holding office in those States
-against the intrusion and treachery of all who have in any
-sense been leaders in the present rebellion. For this purpose
-prudence requires that all who have held office under the
-pretended rebel government should be excluded from these
-privileges.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The seventh section of the bill he would like to see so modified
-as to declare that no debt of the pretended Confederate
-States, and no debt contracted by the State for the purpose of
-prosecuting the war against the United States or of giving
-aid to its enemies, should be recognized or paid by the State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was a singular doctrine, he remarked in conclusion, that
-those who had thrown off all restraints of the Constitution
-and who for years had waged war for the purpose of overthrowing
-it should be entitled to demand its protection while
-engaged in armed hostility to it.<a id='r316' /><a href='#f316' class='c010'><sup>[316]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Yeaman did not believe Congress had a right to legislate
-away the laws and institutions of these States. The
-American people, he said, would come out of the contest with
-a better political education, an education having for its basis
-the idea that <em>they are a nation</em>, and he added, “a war to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>enforce the theory of secession will end in an increased consolidated
-nationality.” The theory expressed in the Virginia
-and Kentucky Resolutions was the fatal blow in our political
-history. His address was in the nature of an essay in political
-science and not altogether germane to the measure under
-consideration.<a id='r317' /><a href='#f317' class='c010'><sup>[317]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Pass a judicious enabling act,” urged Mr. Longyear,
-“with proper safeguards, of which the people may avail
-themselves to organize civil governments at the very earliest
-opportunity, and it will afford a rallying point for the Union
-sentiment remaining there, and tend to foster it and nourish
-it into a healthful and vigorous existence. It will prevent
-perplexing and complicated irregularities and diversities of
-action, and tend largely to harmony and strength in our future
-deliberations. No stronger illustration of the necessity and
-propriety of immediate action need be given than the case of
-Tennessee, Louisiana, and Arkansas.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The President’s proclamation does not solve the difficulty.
-As a proclamation of amnesty, as a general outline
-or plan for organizing new State governments, as a prescription
-of safeguards and conditions precedent to such organization,
-it will ever stand as a bright and glorious page in the
-history of the present Administration. But it is incomplete
-for lack of constitutional power. That can be conferred by
-Congress alone, under the power to admit new States.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c000'>“If we succeed [in the war] we make no conquest of territory,
-because that is already ours. We simply succeed, in
-that respect, in bringing that which is our own again under
-our control.” Because of rebellion the constitutions and laws
-of those States had ceased to exist, and as slavery was established
-solely in State laws that also ceased to exist. The only
-object of a constitutional amendment was to prohibit its establishment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>forever. Freedom, he added, was being substituted
-for slavery. In respect to slavery and the slave power
-we were in the midst of a revolution. They proved themselves
-inimical to civil liberty, to the Constitution and to republican
-institutions.<a id='r318' /><a href='#f318' class='c010'><sup>[318]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To the remark of Fernando Wood, of New York, that
-the South could not be subdued, Ignatius Donnelly replied,
-“We are doing it!” and he added, if the system of the
-President is deficient in the machinery that will ensure
-safety “it is our duty to supply that defect. The plan of
-the President, unsupported by any action on our part, hangs
-upon too many contingencies. It may be repealed by his
-successor; it may be resisted by Congress; it may be annulled
-by the Supreme Court. It rests the welfare of the
-nation upon the mind of one man; it rests the whole structure
-of social order upon the unstable foundation of individual
-oaths.” Upon this subject Mr. Donnelly observed
-that General Jefferson Thompson, C. S. A., noted in
-passing through those regions that men consulted their
-memorandum books to see what oath they had taken last.
-Thousands of rebel dead had been found on the battle field
-with oaths of allegiance, sworn to and subscribed, in their
-pockets. Mr. Donnelly favored the bill, and if any measure
-of greater security could be found he would support that.
-He desired, as soon as it could be attained, an amendment of
-the Constitution that would prohibit slavery.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am aware, Mr. Speaker,” he continued, “of the great
-claims which Mr. Lincoln has upon the people of the United
-States. I recognize that popularity which accompanies him,
-and which, considering the ordeal through which he has
-passed, is little less than miraculous. I recognize that unquestioning
-faith in his honesty and ability which pervades
-all classes, and the sincere affection with which almost the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>entire population regard him. We must not underrate him
-even in our praises. He is a great man. Great not after the
-old models of the world, but with a homely and original greatness.
-He will stand out to future ages in the history of these
-crowded and confused times with wonderful distinctness. He
-has carried a vast and discordant population safely and peacefully
-through the greatest of political revolutions with such
-consummate sagacity and skill that while he led he appeared
-to follow; while he innovated beyond all precedent he has
-been denounced as tardy; while he struck the shackles from
-the limbs of three million slaves he has been hailed as a conservative!
-If to adapt, persistently and continuously, just
-and righteous principles to all the perplexed windings and
-changes of human events, and to secure in the end the complete
-triumph of those principles, be statesmanship, then
-Abraham Lincoln is the first of statesmen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If the end of the war is to be a restoration <em>of the appearance</em>
-of the old Government; a patching together of the
-broken shreds and fragments; a propping up of the fabric in
-such style that the next Administration may possibly get out
-from under it before it falls, then that proclamation may be
-found all-sufficient. But for all other purposes it will be
-utterly unavailing. It does not reach the heart of the distemper....</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We owe more than this to ourselves; we owe more than
-this to the South. We must regenerate the South.”<a id='r319' /><a href='#f319' class='c010'><sup>[319]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This discriminating tribute to the character and genius of
-Mr. Lincoln was paid by no servile flatterer; it was not the
-eulogy of even a supporter of the Presidential plan of reconstruction;
-nor was it designed as a discharge of, or uttered in
-expectation of compelling, Executive favors, but appears rather
-to have been the spontaneous testimony of a keen interpreter of
-men and measures not less creditable to the insight of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>speaker than to the subject of his remarks. Others, it is true,
-refrained from misrepresenting the President’s attitude and
-cheerfully ascribed to him patriotic and enlightened motives in
-his public conduct. Mr. Donnelly alone condensed into a
-paragraph a panegyric with which the judgment of posterity
-is in complete accord. This portion of his speech is quoted
-both to show that there were men in Congress who fully
-appreciated the greatness of the President, and that criticism
-of his measures was not in many instances suggested by feelings
-of personal hostility.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Very different were the remarks of Mr. Dennison, who declared
-that “The passage of this law will be the final gathering
-up of the reserved rights of States, and the last vestige
-of protection of the citizen under State constitutions will be
-taken away, and all power centralized in the General Government.”
-He opposed the bill for the additional reason that it
-was intended to legalize and perpetuate the unconstitutional
-acts of the President. “There does not exist on the earth a
-more despotic government than that of Abraham Lincoln.
-He is a despot in fact if not in name.”<a id='r320' /><a href='#f320' class='c010'><sup>[320]</sup></a> These excerpts
-sufficiently indicate the character of his invective.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have offered a substitute to the bill of the committee,”
-said Thaddeus Stevens, “because that does not, in my judgment,
-meet the evil. It partially acknowledges the rebel
-States to have rights under the Constitution, which I deny,
-as war has abrogated them all. I do not inquire what rights
-we have under it, but they have none. The bill takes for
-granted that the President may partially interfere in their civil
-administration, not as conqueror but as President of the
-United States. It adopts in some measure the idea that less
-than a majority may regulate to some extent the affairs of a
-republic.”<a id='r321' /><a href='#f321' class='c010'><sup>[321]</sup></a> The chief objection of Mr. Stevens, however,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>was that it removed the opportunity of confiscating the property
-of the disloyal.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Representative Wadsworth, of Kentucky, he said, agreed
-with him that the people of the South could plead none of the
-constitutional provisions in their defence. Whatever rights
-they possessed were those of belligerents engaged in war.
-“When we come to enforce the rights of conquest,” continued
-the Pennsylvania member, “we should be justified
-in insisting upon the <em>extreme rights</em> of war, without yielding
-to the mitigations dictated by modern usage with regard
-to belligerents originally composed of foreign nations
-engaged in war which they deemed just.” Explaining
-former recommendations which in many quarters had called
-forth severe criticism, he said: “I thought that the women
-and children, the non-combatants, and those who were
-forced by the laws of their State into the armies, should
-be spared; and the property of the guilty, morally as well as
-politically guilty, only should be taken. And yet we hear a
-howl of horror from conservative gentlemen at the inhumanity
-of the proposition.” He still further explained his sentiments
-on this occasion. After stating that the people of the Confederate
-States were sovereign and acted through their representatives,
-he asserted that they had commenced and were
-continuing to wage an unjust war and therefore their private
-property was liable to confiscation. The right to take their
-property existed, but no one, he said, “advises the execution
-of the extreme right. But the right exists and ought to be
-enforced against the most guilty. To allow them to return
-with their estates untouched, on the theory that they have
-never gone out of the Union, seems to me rank injustice to
-loyal men.” Of those who denied that the Confederate States
-had gone out of the Union he inquired, “What are we making
-war upon them for? For seceding; for going out of
-the Union against law. The law forbids a man to rob or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>murder, and yet robbery and murder exist <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">de facto</span></i> but not
-<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">de jure</span></i>.” Hence the Constitution does not allow the States
-to go out of the Union. He referred also in his speech to a
-resolution introduced by Mr. Schenck, of Ohio, which passed
-the House without a division and declared the Confederate
-States a public enemy, engaged in a public war.<a id='r322' /><a href='#f322' class='c010'><sup>[322]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the same day, May 2, Representative Strouse remarked
-that immediately after the disaster of Bull Run the House
-almost unanimously passed the Crittenden Resolutions, which
-declared that “This war is not waged in any spirit of oppression,
-or for any purpose of conquest or subjugation, or purpose
-of overthrowing or interfering with the rights or established
-institutions of these States.” This announcement, he
-asserted, brought volunteers, whereas now, 1864, county, State
-and Federal bounties combined could not induce men to enlist,
-and the cause of the apathy was that the war had been perverted
-from the purpose announced in the resolutions referred
-to. The entire speech had little reference to the bill of Mr.
-Davis, but seemed rather designed, by an attack on the Administration,
-to please his Democratic constituents.<a id='r323' /><a href='#f323' class='c010'><sup>[323]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Cravens said that the dominant party did not distinguish
-between loyalty to the Administration and loyalty
-to the Government. The time for compromise had passed
-when the Republican party refused to accept the Crittenden
-Resolutions. That organization was in all essentials an
-abolition party. If there ever was a distinction it no longer
-existed. He cited a rather complete list of all the measures
-acted upon by Congress showing their concern for the negro;
-he charged neglect of the white soldier, his widow and orphans;
-quoted from the speech of Thaddeus Stevens on the
-admission of West Virginia, and named Representative Julian
-as uttering sentiments little behind the Pennsylvania member
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>in boldness and exhibiting no more reverence for the Constitution.
-The incapacity and dire wickedness of the President
-and his “courtiers” came in for a share of criticism.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Gooch on the following day, May 3, remarked that the
-rebellion was but the military phase of the conflict of ideas
-which began with the adoption of the Constitution. “When
-we shall have crushed the rebellion and restored peace to all
-parts of the country we shall hold this territory, not by a
-new title, but by the old, not as territory acquired by conquest,
-but territory defended and maintained against revolt....
-I can see no reason why the President, as Commander-in-Chief,
-should not, in the meantime, so use the
-military power as to aid and assist the loyal people of any
-one of these States in the organization of a loyal State government....
-All these acts by the President, or the
-military power under him, in thus aiding and assisting the
-loyal people in these States, impose no obligation upon Congress
-to recognize them until such time as it shall deem proper
-to do so, and any recognition the military power may see fit
-to give to these governments can never fix their status in the
-Union. Congress alone has the power to determine what
-government is the legitimate one in a State, and its decision
-is binding on the other departments of the Government.”<a id='r324' /><a href='#f324' class='c010'><sup>[324]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Perry, of New Jersey, spoke of the duration of the
-war, predicted the general bankruptcy which its great expense
-would bring about, and calculated that in eleven years
-the cost of the war would equal the assessed value of property.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Speaking of the Executive plan he said: “And here the
-President’s design is perfectly evident, to secure a majority
-of the delegates to the nominating convention of his party,
-and to provide for his own election by the House of Representatives
-in the event of there not being an election by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>people. By this plan the narrow foothold maintained by our
-armies in North Carolina, Louisiana, Texas, Alabama, Florida,
-Arkansas, and elsewhere may send the pretended full
-delegations of those States to this House. Mr. Speaker, I
-denominate the whole plan a political trick worthy of the
-most adroit and unscrupulous wire-puller of our ward primary
-meetings.” The State governments had not been destroyed,
-he added, “nor can they be destroyed unless the rebels are
-finally victorious, and establish their independence.”<a id='r325' /><a href='#f325' class='c010'><sup>[325]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Fernando Wood said that Mexico had a republican form of
-government, and that Texas came into the Union without
-changing the character of her government except to substitute
-a governor for President and to change the titles of some officials.
-Every Southern State possessed the same form of government
-which it did before secession. If, he asserted, they
-were then republican in form, “they are so now.” The Confederate
-constitution had all the elements of republicanism.
-The bill provided that hereafter none of the States in rebellion
-should hold slaves. It did not leave to the people the right to
-regulate their domestic institutions. Is it republicanism to take
-from the people this privilege? “To impose upon them a form
-of government of your own making, under the pretext of this
-bill, would be the worst kind of tyranny, whatever the provisions
-of your constitution might be.”<a id='r326' /><a href='#f326' class='c010'><sup>[326]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He defended himself against serious charges of General
-Schenck, whom he criticised severely. These accusations,
-however, were reiterated by Hon. William D. Kelley, of
-Pennsylvania, who at this point rose to speak on the merits
-of the bill.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The proposed measure did not meet his unqualified approval.
-It lacked some of the amendments suggested by Mr. Stevens.
-“I should like to see his distinct declaration,” said Congressman
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>Kelley, “that ‘The Confederate States are a public enemy,
-waging an unjust war, whose injustice is so glaring that
-they have no right to claim the mitigation of the extreme
-rights of war which are accorded by modern usage to an
-enemy who has the right to consider the war a just one.’”
-He would like to see the bill of Mr. Davis provide also for
-the exclusion from Congress of all those States that seceded,
-and every part of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As more immediately important, however, he would prefer
-to see included in the measure the proposition of Mr. Stevens
-respecting amendments of the Constitution; he denied the
-immortality of a State. It has its beginning, its transitions
-and may have its end. “A State may be killed, a State may
-commit suicide. An act of God, by destroying its inhabitants,
-might extinguish a State. A State could be conquered
-and held by some strong and hostile power. The political
-people of each of those States have overthrown the State.
-Through its corporate power each State destroyed its corporate
-life, and no one of them exists.” He also denied that
-a State could transfer to any foreign power territory within
-the jurisdiction of the United States. The Supreme Court
-had decided that the Southern States were alien enemies and
-entitled to only the rights of such.<a id='r327' /><a href='#f327' class='c010'><sup>[327]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The message of the President, Representative S. S. Cox
-believed, “should be welcomed, not so much for what it is
-as for what it pretends to be. It is his first adventure beyond
-the line of force into the field of conciliation....</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“To test the genuineness of this amnesty: five months have
-gone, but we see no signs of thousands of Southern citizens
-rushing to embrace this amnesty. Indeed, it is conceded that
-the rebellion is now more formidable than ever.” There was
-no genuine movement toward the restoration of the seceded
-States. He would not take the oath of allegiance and swear
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>support of the negro policies. How could Southern men be
-expected to take the oath? Its terms provoked or irritated
-them still more. The structure, he declared, was built on the
-Emancipation Proclamation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The bill of Mr. Davis had the same defects. That, too, was
-based upon the one tenth system and the policy of forced
-emancipation. “In some of its features,” he said, “it is an
-improvement upon the rickety establishment proposed by the
-President.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“... The emancipation act of the gentleman [Lincoln]
-can never be reconciled with the normal control of the
-States over their domestic institutions, so all oaths to sustain
-the same are oaths to subvert the old governments, Federal
-and State.... The President’s plan, therefore, whether
-intended or not, is an oath to encourage treason, and the plan
-of the gentleman from Maryland is a plan to consummate
-revolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“... If his [the President’s] plan of making one
-tenth rule in the States should succeed, then he will have
-ready at hand the electoral votes of Florida, Arkansas, Louisiana,
-Tennessee, North Carolina, and other States. He began
-this business in Florida the other day, and the blood which
-flowed at Olustee is the result of this scheme of personal ambition!</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c000'>“There is a sort of <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">odium historicum</span></i>,” proceeded Mr. Cox,
-“attached to all political test oaths.... They have
-been the bane and foil of good government ever since bigotry
-began and revenge ruled. You cannot make eight million
-people, nearly all in revolt at what they regard as the detestable
-usurpations of abolition, forswear their hatred to abolition.
-You force by this oath the freed negro into the very
-nostrils of the Southern man, whose submission to law you
-seek.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>“The conditions of pardon only inflame but do not quench
-rebellion....</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We may yet change the war from the diabolical purposes
-of those in power, by changing that power to other hands, and
-we are not ready to sever our Union while that hope remains.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Precedents and analogies from both ancient and contemporary
-history were cited to demonstrate the folly of attempting
-to hold the South in her place by force. These together
-with censure of the Administration and criticism of the dominant
-party in Congress made up a great part of Mr. Cox’s
-very long speech.<a id='r328' /><a href='#f328' class='c010'><sup>[328]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Representative Boutwell, of Massachusetts, referring, May
-4, to the remarks of his colleague, Mr. Ashley, of the committee
-which reported the bill, observed that “since this rebellion
-opened the Thirty-seventh Congress commenced its existence
-and ceased to exist; that this Congress is now closing
-the fifth month of its First Session, and that up to this time no
-efficient, indeed no legislative steps whatever have been taken
-by which the Executive is to be guided in the affairs of the
-people occupying the territory that has been reclaimed from
-rebel domination. Under these circumstances I think it due
-to the country that this House, at least, should do nothing
-which conveys any reflection upon his policy unless that policy
-be clearly and manifestly in contravention of the Constitution
-or of the well-ascertained and admitted principles of the Government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When the populous parts of Louisiana were torn from rebel
-domination, and the State of Arkansas indicated in various
-ways the growth of a sentiment of loyalty and returning
-allegiance to the General Government, the Executive had but
-one of three courses before him: either to be silent, to govern
-by military authority alone, or else to establish a civil government
-or at least to take initiatory steps toward such establishment.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>“It was unquestionably his right and duty, in the
-absence of all legislative action, to govern these territories as
-fast and as far as they were reclaimed by military power.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He defended both the President and General Banks, who
-had for years been consistent advocates of liberty. He then
-announced himself in favor of the bill of Mr. Davis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The gentleman from Pennsylvania [Mr. Stevens],” continued
-Mr. Boutwell, “maintains, as I understand, that these
-States are out of the Union; that their territory is alien territory,
-and that we are making war against alien enemies. I
-do not admit either of these positions to be true. I feel quite
-sure that these eleven once-existing States are no longer States
-of the Union. The evidence on which I rely in support of
-this position is found first in the declaration made by the authorities
-of those States that they no longer exist as States
-of the American Union. Next, we find that for three years
-and more they have been resisting the authority of the Government
-and have been carrying on a war against it. It is
-absurd to say that States or people are a part of the Government
-under the Constitution, and entitled to constitutional
-rights and privileges, when they have been carrying on war
-against the Government.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nor do I admit that the people in the rebellious States are
-aliens. They are not of any other country, they are not of
-any other legal jurisdiction, they are within the jurisdiction
-of the Union. Three years ago they were a portion of this
-Union, and although they have been carrying on a war, that
-war has not thus far been successful, their independence has
-not been acknowledged by us, nor has it been recognized by
-any other nation. They, therefore, are not aliens. They are,
-to be sure, public enemies, but they are not alien enemies.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“... These States as political organizations have
-by their own will ceased to exist.... The existence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>of a State is a fact within the control of the people themselves,
-and cannot be influenced by any extraneous power whatever,
-and therefore these States have by the will of the people
-thereof as political organizations ceased to exist.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Admitting that the Government of the United States had
-legal jurisdiction over this territory and over the people who
-occupied it, it was an absurdity, he declared, “to say that
-these States still exist and that the people there may without
-our consent elect officers and send Representatives to this body
-and Senators to the other branch of Congress.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To the taunt of the Democrats that the war had been
-changed from a war to restore the Union to one for the purpose
-of emancipating the slave, Mr. Boutwell replied by a denial
-of the fact, but added that even if it were so, it was not the
-first instance of the sort in human history. Up to 1774 every
-American expected to preserve the old relations with England,
-yet within two years Independence was declared. The pending
-measure, he asserted, had not elicited marked attention in
-Congress nor any great interest throughout the country, yet
-in it lay the germ of a new civilization for half a continent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The limitation of the elective franchise to white males did
-not meet his approval; for though the suffrage is not a
-natural, it is the highest political, right. Where the suffrage
-is denied to any large number of men, that community is
-never free from the danger of intestine commotion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As South Carolina and Georgia were responsible for breathing
-into slavery the breath of life after it had everywhere been
-condemned, he would not have them again reappear in the
-Union. Florida did not deserve a place in the Union and, by
-giving the colored men local suffrage in that district, South
-Carolina, Georgia and Florida, he would invite the blacks
-thither as fast as they could be spared from the industries in
-which they were elsewhere engaged. He would not ask to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>extend this principle to loyal Northern or to border States
-with a negro population.<a id='r329' /><a href='#f329' class='c010'><sup>[329]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Pendleton, of Ohio, made by far the ablest Democratic
-argument against the proposed enactment. Its details as well
-as its general policy, he said, required examination. After
-stating quite fully the provisions of the bill, he continued:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The gentleman from Maryland [Mr. Davis] facetiously entitles it “a
-bill to guaranty to certain States whose governments have been usurped
-or overthrown a republican form of government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At last the mask has been thrown off. At last the pretenses have all
-been laid aside. Three years of war have done their work, and the purposes
-and objects of the Republican party have been at last acknowledged.
-This bill is the consummation of its statesmanship the fruit of
-its experience, the demonstration of its purposes. The gentleman from
-Maryland introduced it; it is understood to be distasteful to some of
-his party friends; but it is a party measure; it will be voted for by every
-member of the Republican organization; it marks their policy of restoration;
-it defines their ideas of Union; it interprets their construction of the
-Constitution. As such I accept it. We have had double-dealing, hypocrisy
-and fraud for the last three years. We have had false professions,
-false names, and double-faced measures. We have had armies raised,
-taxes collected, battles fought, under the pretense that the war was for
-the Union, the old Union, the Union of the Constitution. These were
-the catchwords for the patriotic people. In the secret council-chambers
-of the party they were sneered at as devices with which to ensnare the
-innocent, to deceive the ignorant, to coax the obstinate. They were to
-be discarded as soon as, in the heat of war, in the exasperation of passion,
-in the exultation of victory, or in the bitterness of defeat and disaster
-and oppression, it would be safe to divulge the great conspiracy
-against the Union, the constitutional confederation, the principles of free
-government.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That time has come. The veil is drawn aside. We see clearly. The
-party in possession of the powers of the Government is revolutionary.
-It seeks to use those powers to destroy the Government, to change its
-form, to change its spirit. It seeks under the forms of law to make a
-new Government, a new Union, to ingraft upon it new principles, new
-theories, and to use the powers of the law against all who will not be persuaded.
-It is in rebellion against the Constitution; it is in treasonable
-conspiracy against the Government. It differs in nothing from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>armed enemies except in the weapons of its warfare. They fight to overthrow
-its authority over them, while it seeks to destroy that authority
-at home. They would curtail the limits of the jurisdiction of the Federal
-Government; it would extend those limits, but change the basis and principles
-upon which it rests. If revolt against constituted authority be a
-crime, if patriotism consist in upholding in form and spirit the Government
-our fathers made, those in power here to-day are as guilty as those
-who in the seceded States marshal armed men for the contest.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Revolutions move onward.” That is true. But call things by their
-true names. Admit you are in revolution; admit you are revolutionists;
-admit that you do not desire to restore the old order; admit that you do
-not fight to restore the Union. Take the responsibility of that position.
-Avow that you exercise the powers of the Government because you
-control them; that you are not bound by the Constitution, but by your
-own sense of right. Avow that resistance to your schemes is not treason,
-but war. Dissolve the spell which you have woven around the hearts
-of our people by the cunning use of the words conservatism, patriotism,
-Union. And we will cease all criminations, we will hush all reproaches
-for oaths violated, pledges falsified, faith betrayed. We will meet you
-on your own ground, we will fight you with your weapons, and by the
-issue of that contest, whether of argument or of arms, we will abide.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Am I to be told that I misrepresent the Republican party? The gentleman
-who has just taken his seat [Mr. Boutwell], an able and honored
-member of that party, has said in your hearing, “If I could direct the
-force of public sentiment and the policy of this Government, South
-Carolina as a State and with a name should never reappear in this
-Union. Georgia deserves a like fate. Florida does not deserve a name
-in this Union.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The gentleman from Maryland felt that this charge could be truthfully
-made. He sought to answer it in advance. He denied that the provisions
-of the bill contravened any clause of the Constitution. Where
-is the authority for it? Where is the authority to declare State governments
-overthrown? Where is the authority to reconstruct them?
-Where is the authority to appoint a governor; to call a convention to
-remodel their constitutions; to fix the qualifications of its members; to
-prescribe the conditions of their organic law; and until a <em>new</em> constitution
-shall be made, to administer by Federal officers such parts of the
-old constitution and laws as the governor, or the President, or Congress
-may select?...</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At this point he quoted Madison on the guaranty clause, a
-subject elaborated in the Senate by Carlile, of Virginia. Mr.
-Pendleton observed that if slavery, which, with one possible
-exception, existed in all the States at the time of the adoption
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>of the Constitution, was not inconsistent with a republican
-form of government then it was not inconsistent with it in
-1864.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And yet the advocates of this bill [continued Mr. Pendleton] propose
-to deprive the States of power over the question of slavery, power over
-their own indebtedness, power to regulate the elective franchise, and the
-right to hold office, under the pretense that they thereby execute the
-provision that the United States must guaranty a republican form of
-government to the States.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The gentleman from Massachusetts [Mr. Boutwell] has shown how he
-would execute it. South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida should never
-again appear as State[s] or in name in this Confederation. Is their
-exclusion a guarantee to them of a republican government?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>... If Congress may insist upon the three fundamental conditions
-prescribed in this bill, ... by a parity of reasoning it ought to insist
-upon their incorporation into the constitution of the States remaining
-steadfast by the Union. If they are essential to republicanism in the
-one class of States they are equally so in all.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c013'>... Gentlemen must not palter in a double sense. These acts of
-secession are either valid or they are invalid. If they are valid, they
-separated the State from the Union. If they are invalid, they are void;
-they have no effect; the State officers who act upon them are rebels to
-the Federal Government; the States are not destroyed; their constitutions
-are not abrogated; their officers are committing illegal acts,
-for which they are liable to punishment; the States have never left the
-Union, but so soon as their officers shall perform their duties or other
-officers shall assume their places, will again perform the duties imposed
-and enjoy the privileges conferred by the Federal compact, and this not
-by virtue of a new ratification of the Constitution, nor a new admission
-by the Federal Government, but by virtue of the original ratification, and
-the constant, uninterrupted maintenance of position in the Federal Union
-since that date.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Acts of secession are not invalid to destroy the Union, and valid to
-destroy the State governments and the political privileges of their citizens.
-We have heard much of the two-fold relation which citizens of the
-seceded States may hold to the Federal Government—that they may be
-at once belligerents and rebellious citizens. I believe there are some judicial
-decisions to that effect. Sir, it is impossible. The Federal Government
-may possibly have the right to elect in which relation it will deal
-with them; it cannot deal with them at one and the same time in inconsistent
-relations. Belligerents being captured are entitled to be treated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>as prisoners of war; rebellious citizens are liable to be hanged. The
-private property of belligerents, according to the rules of modern war,
-shall not be taken without compensation; the property of rebellious citizens
-is liable to confiscation. Belligerents are not amenable to the local
-criminal law, nor to the jurisdiction of courts which administer it;
-rebellious citizens are, and the officers are bound to enforce the law, and
-to exact the penalty of its infraction. The seceded States are either in
-the Union or out of it. If in the Union, their constitutions are untouched,
-their State governments are maintained; their citizens are
-entitled to all political rights, except so far as they may be deprived of
-them by the criminal law which they may have infracted. This seems
-incomprehensible to the gentleman from Maryland. In his view the
-whole State government centers in the men who administer it; so that
-when they administer it unwisely, or put it in antagonism to the Federal
-Government, the State government is dissolved, the State constitution is
-abrogated, and the State is left, in fact and in form, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">de jure</span></i> and <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">de facto</span></i>,
-in anarchy, except so far as the Federal Government may rightfully intervene.
-This seems to be substantially the view of the gentleman from
-Massachusetts [Mr. Boutwell]. He enforces the same position, but he
-does not use the same language.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>... If by a plague or other visitation of God every officer of a
-State government should at the same moment die, so that not a single
-person clothed with official power should remain, would the State
-government be destroyed? Not at all. For the moment it would not be
-administered, but as soon as officers were elected and assumed their
-respective duties it would be instantly in full force and vigor.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>If these States are out of the Union their State governments are still
-in force unless otherwise changed. And their citizens are to the Federal
-Government as foreigners, and it has in relation to them the same rights,
-and none other, as it had in relation to British subjects in the war of
-1812, or to the Mexicans in 1846. Whatever may be the true relation of
-the seceded States, the Federal Government derives no power in relation
-to them or their citizens from the provision of the Constitution now
-under consideration, but in the one case derives all its power from the
-duty of enforcing the “Supreme law of the land;” and in the other from
-the power “to declare war.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c013'>The gentleman [Mr. Davis] states his case too strongly. The duty
-imposed on Congress is doubtless important, but Congress has no right
-to use a means of performing it forbidden by the Constitution, no matter
-how necessary or proper it might be thought to be. But, sir, this
-doctrine is monstrous. It has no foundation in the Constitution. It
-subjects all the States to the will of Congress; it places their institutions
-at the feet of Congress. It creates in Congress an absolute unqualified
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>despotism. It asserts the power of Congress in changing the State governments
-to be “plenary, supreme and unlimited”—“subject only to revision
-by the people of the whole United States.” The rights of the people
-of the State are nothing, their will is nothing. Congress first decides,
-the people of the whole Union revise. My own State of Ohio is liable at
-any moment to be called in question for her constitution. She does not
-permit negroes to vote.... From that decision of the Congress
-there is no appeal to the people of Ohio, but only to the people of
-Massachusetts, and New York, and Wisconsin, at the election of Representatives;
-and if a majority cannot be elected to reverse the decision,
-the people of Ohio must submit. Woe be to the day when that doctrine
-shall be established, for from its centralized despotism we will appeal to
-the sword!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The rights of the States, he said in conclusion, had reconciled
-liberty with empire, the freedom of the individual with
-increase of the public domain; by the proposed measure these
-were all swept instantly away. It substituted “despotism for
-self-government; despotism the more severe because vested in
-a numerous Congress elected by a people who may not feel
-the exercise of its power.... It maintains integrity of
-territory but destroys the rights of the citizen.” Finally he
-declared that he preferred separation to the unity which the
-bill would create.<a id='r330' /><a href='#f330' class='c010'><sup>[330]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Debate was concluded by Henry Winter Davis, who rose
-for the purpose of perfecting the pending measure by moving
-as a substitute a bill essentially the same as that under consideration
-in the House; from that plan, however, it differed
-in two not unimportant particulars. First, it excluded what
-his friend Mr. Cox had objected to, the rule of one tenth, and
-required a majority to concur in forming a government. The
-other softened the operation of the clause excluding officers
-of the State and Confederate government, by saving merely
-ministerial officers and the inferior military officers; so that
-the exclusion merely affected persons of dangerous political
-influence. By an arrangement with Thaddeus Stevens, instead
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>of having a direct vote on his substitute, a portion of it
-was proposed as a preamble to this bill, which, of course,
-would be voted on separately and take whatever fate the
-House might assign to it. With these observations Mr.
-Davis said, “I offer this as a substitute, and move the previous
-question upon it.” The substitute was agreed to, and
-the amendment to the preamble adopted, the preamble itself
-being rejected. By 73 yeas to 59 nays, the bill passed the
-House, May 4, 1864.<a id='r331' /><a href='#f331' class='c010'><sup>[331]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This important measure authorized the President, by and
-with the advice and consent of the Senate, to appoint for each
-of the States declared in rebellion a provisional governor, with
-pay and emoluments not to exceed that of a brigadier-general
-of volunteers, and who was to be charged with the civil administration
-of such State until a government was recognized as
-existing therein. As soon as military resistance to Federal
-authority had been suppressed, and the people had sufficiently
-returned to their obedience to the Constitution and the laws,
-it was made the duty of the governor to direct the United
-States marshal to enroll all white male citizens of the United
-States, resident in the State, in their respective counties; and
-wherever a majority of them took the oath of allegiance, the
-loyal people of the States were, by proclamation, to be invited
-by the governor to elect delegates to a convention to act
-upon the reëstablishment of a State government, the proclamation
-to prescribe the details of the election. Qualified electors
-in the army could vote at the headquarters of their respective
-commands. No person who had held or exercised any civil,
-military, State or Confederate office under the rebel occupation,
-and who had voluntarily borne arms against the United
-States, could either vote or be eligible as a delegate. The convention
-was required to insert in the constitution the following
-provisions:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>First. No person who has held or exercised any office, civil or military,
-except offices merely ministerial and military offices below colonel,
-State or Confederate, under the usurping power, shall vote for or be a
-member of the Legislature, or Governor.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Second. Involuntary servitude is forever prohibited, and the freedom
-of all persons is guaranteed in said State.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Third. No debt, State or Confederate, created by or under the sanction
-of the usurping power, shall be recognized or paid by the State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Upon the adoption of such a constitution by the convention
-and its ratification by the voters of the State the provisional
-governor should so certify to the President, who,
-after obtaining the assent of Congress, was empowered by
-proclamation to recognize the government so established, and
-none other, as the constitutional government of the State;
-from the date of such recognition, and not before, Senators
-and Representatives as well as electors for President and
-Vice-President could be legally chosen in such State. Until
-reorganization the provisional governor was to enforce the
-laws of the Union, and of the State before rebellion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The remaining provisions were as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Section 12 declared that “all persons held to involuntary
-servitude or labor in the States referred to, are emancipated
-and discharged therefrom, and they and their posterity are
-declared to be forever free. And if any such persons or their
-posterity shall be restrained of liberty, under pretense of any
-claim to such service or labor, the courts of the United States
-shall, on <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">habeas corpus</span></i>, discharge them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Section 13 provided that “if any person declared free by
-this or any law of the United States, or any proclamation of
-the President, be restrained of liberty; with intent to be held
-in or reduced to involuntary servitude or labor, the person convicted
-before a court of competent jurisdiction of such act
-shall be punished by a fine of not less than $1,500, and be
-imprisoned not less than five nor more than twenty years.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By section 14 it was declared that “every person who shall
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>hereafter hold or exercise any office, civil or military, except
-offices merely ministerial, and military offices below the grade
-of colonel, in the rebel service, State or Confederate, is declared
-not to be a citizen of the United States.”<a id='r332' /><a href='#f332' class='c010'><sup>[332]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the following day the proposed measure came up in the
-Senate, was read twice by its title and referred to the Committee
-on Territories. On May 27 Mr. Wade reported the
-bill with amendments, and on June 30 succeeding moved to
-postpone all prior orders and proceed to its consideration.
-His motion, however, was not agreed to, and it was not till
-July 1, when the session was drawing rapidly to a close, that
-its discussion began. To save time the amendments proposed
-by the committee were voted down. Senator Brown, of Missouri,
-believed that the subject of reconstruction could and
-should be postponed to a later day, and offered for the bill, by
-way of amendment, a substitute which declared incapable of
-voting “for electors of President or Vice-President of the
-United States, or of electing Senators or Representatives in
-Congress,” until the rebellion was abandoned, the inhabitants
-of all those States hitherto proclaimed in a state of insurrection.
-That question he regarded as the necessity of the hour.<a id='r333' /><a href='#f333' class='c010'><sup>[333]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Wade hoped this amendment would not prevail; there
-was nothing, he asserted, in the argument that sufficient time
-did not remain for its careful consideration, because it was
-early and thoroughly debated in the House and had been
-fully discussed by the Senate Committee. It was five months
-on their desks and the attention of Senators had often been
-called to it. On Republicans at least its consideration had
-frequently been urged by himself. More than ordinary care
-had been taken in this matter, and if the bill was not then
-understood it never would be.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The question would arise in the ensuing campaign. Senators,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>he said, had been refused admission to Congress, and
-the principles on which they would be received should be declared.
-They were announced in the bill which had passed the
-House. It protected the Government against Confederate
-sympathizers and guarded the interests of loyal Southerners
-during the period of transition.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The status of the seceded States was a question upon which
-men differed widely. It was a question to be ascertained and
-declared by Congress, “for the Executive ought not to be permitted
-to handle this great question to his own liking. It
-does not belong, under the Constitution, to the President to
-prescribe the rule, and it is a base abandonment of our own
-powers and our own duties to cast this great principle upon
-the decision of the executive branch of the Government....
-I know very well that the President from the best
-motives undertook to fix a rule upon which he would admit
-these States back into the Union. It was not upon any principle
-of republicanism; it would not have guarantied to the
-States a republican form of government, because he prescribed
-the rule to be that when one tenth of the population would
-take a certain oath and agree to come back into the Union
-they might come in as States. When we consider that in
-the light of American principle, to say the least of it, it was
-absurd. The idea that a State shall take upon itself the great
-privilege of self-government when there are only one tenth
-of the people that can stand by the principle is most anti-republican,
-anomalous, and entirely subversive of the great
-principles that underlie all our State governments and the
-General Government. Majorities must rule, and until majorities
-be found loyal and trustworthy for State government,
-they must be governed by a stronger hand....</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“... I hold that once a State of this Union, always
-a State; that you cannot by wrong and violence displace the
-rights of anybody or disorganize the State.” It was marvellous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>to him how gentlemen could fancy that States forfeited
-their rights because more or less of the people had gone
-off into rebellion, and he added, “This bill proceeds upon that
-idea and discards absolutely the notion that States may lose
-their rights and that they may be abrogated and may be
-reduced to the condition of Territories. It denies any such
-thing as that. No sound principle can be adopted that warrants
-any such thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Noticing the imposition of conditions on the admission or
-on the readmission of a State, he remarked that this feature
-of the bill would probably receive more criticism than any
-other, and declared, “that the great Union party of the
-country are altogether convinced that slavery mixed up in
-a Government is so unsafe, so liable to overthrow that it
-cannot be admitted as an element in a State government....
-Therefore this bill has taken special pains to say
-that the new government shall, in its constitution, proclaim
-emancipation as a condition upon which it shall be permitted
-to come into the Union.” There was a time, he admitted,
-when it would have been deemed unconstitutional in Congress
-to prescribe any particular principle for a constitution
-when a State was seeking to come into the Union. “We
-have done so, however,” he asserted, “in every State that
-we have ever admitted,” and yet perhaps the question was
-never entirely settled. “Would it be wise for us,” he asked,
-“in admitting States back into this Union to permit them
-to come with the very element that carried them out, with
-the very seeds of destruction which had destroyed them
-already? The framers of this bill,” he continued, “have
-sedulously shut it out, and made it a condition on which the
-seceded States shall come back that it shall be a fundamental
-principle of their constitution that slavery is excluded.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The amendment of Senator Brown he characterized as a
-bare negative; it did not inform the people of the seceded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>States upon what principle they were to be again admitted
-into the Union.<a id='r334' /><a href='#f334' class='c010'><sup>[334]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Carlile, of Virginia, observed on entering into the discussion
-that everything the bill proposed to do in the way of
-remedying existing evils would be accomplished by adopting
-the amendment offered by the Senator from Missouri. The
-provisions of the bill were not to be enforced and were not
-to have any life until after the suppression of the rebellion,
-and, therefore, there could be no pressing necessity for action
-at that time, when a large majority of Senators expected in
-three or four days to leave Washington for their homes.
-Senator Wade interrupted him to point out that there was
-provided a military governor whose duties could be performed
-in any stage of the rebellion, from the time Federal forces
-obtained a foothold in any State until it was in the Union
-again. The Virginia Senator agreed with Mr. Wade as to
-the extent of the President’s power in the matter, and in the
-belief that once a State in the Union always a State; but the
-bill, he said, not only maintained that State governments were
-overthrown, but so far as it could do so, recognized and
-assumed the right to overthrow the State governments if that
-work was not already accomplished. If the President had
-not the right to prescribe rules for the return of rebellious
-States, where was the constitutional provision which authorized
-Congress to do so? The title of the bill was an
-insult, he declared, to the understanding of every enlightened
-man in the nation and the bill itself one of the most revolutionary
-that ever was proposed in a deliberative body claiming
-to be the representatives of a free people.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The question mooted in Congress forty years before, he
-continued, was insignificant compared to the present. That
-was a proposition to impose upon the inhabitants of a Territory
-seeking admission into the Union a restriction upon their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>right of self-government when they became a State. After
-one of the most exhaustive and learned debates that ever
-graced the Capitol of the nation that assumption for Congress
-was abandoned. It was permitted to rest as the settled law
-of the land that Congress had no power to impose limitations
-affecting the right of the people of a State to regulate their
-own domestic affairs, even when sought to be applied to the
-inhabitants of a Territory seeking admission to the Union.
-This continued the settled action of Congress until reversed
-at the preceding session by assuming to create an independent
-State out of a portion of the Commonwealth which he represented.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No State can have a Republican form of government,”
-he declared, “no State has a republican government, when
-that government, no matter what are its provisions, is prescribed
-to them by another outside of their limits. A republican
-form of government must emanate and emanate alone
-from the people that are to be governed. It belongs not to
-the Congress of the United States; it belongs not to the
-thirty-three States of this Union to prescribe for the smallest
-State within its folds a constitution or form of government.
-If you have a right to impose a limitation upon this power as
-to one subject of domestic legislation you have a right to
-impose it upon every subject. If you have a right to make
-one provision of a constitution for a people you have the
-right to make the entire instrument itself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>An interruption of his argument by Mr. Wade drew from
-the Virginia Senator a query rather embarrassing to the Ohio
-statesman. “Where,” asked Carlile, “does the Senator derive
-the power to appoint a governor for a State, a State which
-he acknowledges to be in existence, a State government that he
-acknowledges to be in existence, a State government that he
-acknowledges it to be his duty to protect and maintain? By
-what provision of the Constitution does the Senator derive
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>the authority to appoint for such a State an executive head?”
-Mr. Wade replied that when the Constitution imposed the
-duty of guaranteeing a republican form of government it
-conferred the power to do so, and he in turn inquired, “Is
-not that good law?” “No, sir,” answered Carlile, who proceeded:
-“Now, Mr. President, I will satisfy the Senator himself,
-I think; and really it is not necessary for me to attempt
-to satisfy him, for he is too good a lawyer not to know the
-meaning of the word ‘guaranty.’ What is it? Does the
-authority to ‘guaranty to each State in this Union a republican
-form of government’ authorize this Union to set up a
-government, to create a government, or to make a government?
-Is the maker of a note the man who guaranties its
-payment? There is no man in the Senate who knows better
-the definition and legal significance of the word ‘guaranty’
-than the Senator from Ohio, and none, I am sure, is more
-familiar, too, with the power that was intended to be conferred
-by this provision of the Constitution.” After admitting that
-he would bring the power of the Government to bear on a
-faction who undertook to establish a monarchical form of government,
-Mr. Wade put this hypothetical case: “Suppose
-now that we have conquered them and the people are still
-bent on their monarchy, shall we not guaranty a republican
-government to them by putting one over them?” “If the
-Senator be right,” answered Carlile, “Mr. Madison, the author
-of the Constitution, was wrong.” He then quoted from
-the forty-third number of the Federalist:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“To guaranty to every State in the Union a republican form of
-government; to protect each of them against invasion; and on application
-of the Legislature, or of the Executive (when the Legislature
-cannot be convened), against domestic violence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In a confederacy founded on republican principles and composed of
-republican members, the superintending government ought clearly to
-possess authority to defend the system against aristocratic or monarchical
-innovations.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>“The very case put by Senator Wade,” observed Carlile;
-“and how it is to be done is stated:”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The more intimate the nature of such a Union may be, the greater interest
-have the members in the political institutions of each other; and
-the greater right to insist that the forms of government under which the
-compact was entered into should be <em>substantially</em> maintained.... It
-may possibly be asked, what need there could be of such a precaution, and
-whether it may not become a pretext for alterations in the State governments,
-without the concurrence of the States themselves. These questions
-admit of ready answers. If the interposition of the General Government
-should not be needed, the provision for such an event will be a
-harmless superfluity only in the Constitution. But who can say what
-experiments can be produced by the caprice of particular States, by the
-ambition of enterprising leaders, or by the intrigues and influence of
-foreign powers? To the second question it may be answered that if the
-General Government should interpose by virtue of this constitutional
-authority, it will be, of course, bound to pursue the authority. But the
-authority extends no further than to a <em>guaranty</em> of a republican form
-of government, which supposes a <em>preëxisting government</em> of the form
-which is to be guarantied.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sustained in his position by Madison’s commentary Carlile
-resumed: “Now, sir, is the Senator answered?...
-It is not claimed or pretended, I suppose, by the Senator from
-Ohio, or by any advocate of this bill, that under any other provision
-of the Constitution can a pretext be afforded for the
-assertion of such a power as this bill proposes to assert.” To
-Senator Wilkinson’s inquiry, what would the Government of
-the United States do if the people of South Carolina determined
-that they would not have a republican form of government
-in that State, the Virginia Senator answered:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I would have the Government of the United States do
-nothing that it has not the power under the Constitution to
-do, because I believe that the Government of the United States
-is a Government of limited powers. I believe it to be its
-duty under the grant of power in the Constitution to guaranty
-the existence of a preëxisting republican government. That
-government existed in South Carolina; the people have not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>determined, at least before this war they had not determined,
-to have any other than a republican form of government.
-We had recognized that government as a republican form of
-government by the recognition of the State in all its departments
-and the admission of all its national representatives.
-It is made the duty of the Government of the United States,
-not of Congress; and I desire to call the attention of the
-Senator to that, because it bears upon his assumption for Congress
-of power which does not belong to the Executive. It
-is not alone the duty of Congress to guaranty a republican
-form of government to the people of the several States; the
-extent of that guarantee is not limited alone to the means
-which Congress may employ; but the words of the Constitution
-are ‘the United States shall guaranty.’ Hence every
-department of the Government is equally bound; and Congress
-being the legislative branch of course participates to a
-greater extent in the discharge of that duty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After a discussion with Mr. Clark, Carlile proceeded in his
-argument: “But, sir, the Senator from Ohio says the Union
-is to be preserved. So say I. Upon what principle are these
-States to come back into the Union? The people, says the
-Senator from Ohio, will meet you with that inquiry. Sir,
-when was ever such an inquiry suggested to the brain of any
-loyal man in this Union? When was such an inquiry ever
-put? Never until after a policy different from that which
-characterized the commencement of this struggle was entered
-upon by the party in power. All said the Union was to be
-restored; all accepted the struggle as the use of the military
-power of the Government in the restoration of the Union.
-What Union? The Union of the Constitution. The Union
-into which new States are to be admitted. It is not into ‘a
-Union’ but into ‘this Union’ that the States are admitted.
-What Union? The Union of the Constitution, none other;
-and he who seeks to preserve the Union can only do it by an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>observance of the Constitution and of the constitutional means
-to restore it, not reconstruct it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“... In this Union, created by this Constitution,
-of limited and delegated powers, all prescribed and written in
-the instrument, you propose to exercise your legislative power
-by usurping the rights and liberties of the people, a power
-which all the people you represent could not use or could not
-exert without the destruction of the Union which the Constitution
-formed. There is no power in this Government, there
-is no power in the parties to this Government, there is no
-power in all the States of this Union to prescribe a constitution
-for the little State of Rhode Island. If every other State
-in the Union, the adhering as well as the rebellious States, if
-every man, woman, and child in them were to meet and prescribe
-a constitution for the people of Rhode Island, they
-would have no power or authority to do so under the Union;
-and tell me where the people’s representatives derive the power
-to do that which all the people in their collective capacity, save
-the small minority which constitutes that State, cannot do?”<a id='r335' /><a href='#f335' class='c010'><sup>[335]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Carlile emphasized the fact that the bill under consideration
-was not a war measure. In a running argument with
-several Senators he showed both a ready and comprehensive
-knowledge of the Constitution and made some telling points
-against the bill as well as against the radical tendencies in
-Congress. His speech was, perhaps, the very ablest delivered
-by any Senator in opposition to the proposed measure. At
-its conclusion Mr. Brown’s amendment was agreed to.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>An amendment offered by Charles Sumner to enact the
-Emancipation Proclamation into a law was rejected by a vote
-of 21 to 11. The Massachusetts statesman did not wish, he
-said, to see the edict of freedom “left to float on a Presidential
-proclamation.”<a id='r336' /><a href='#f336' class='c010'><sup>[336]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>The bill concerning States in insurrection against the
-United States then passed the Senate by 26 yeas to 3 nays.<a id='r337' /><a href='#f337' class='c010'><sup>[337]</sup></a>
-When the vote was taken 20 Senators were absent. On the
-succeeding day, July 2, 1864, a message announced the disagreement
-of the House to the Senate amendment and requested
-a committee of conference. A subsequent motion of
-Mr. Wade that the Senate recede from its amendment and
-agree to the bill of the House was carried after some discussion
-by a vote of 18 to 14, thus passing the bill on the same
-day.<a id='r338' /><a href='#f338' class='c010'><sup>[338]</sup></a> The names of Doolittle, Henderson, Ten Eyck and
-Trumbull voting with the Democrats in opposition foreshadowed
-that division in the Republican ranks which afterwards
-occurred.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The history of this famous bill from the moment of its
-passage by Congress until the publication a week later of the
-President’s proclamation concerning it is best related in the
-Life of Mr. Lincoln by his private secretaries, Messrs. Nicolay
-and Hay. These writers possessed an unusual opportunity
-for ascertaining the sentiments of the President upon nearly
-every question of public interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Congress,” says the diary of Mr. Hay, “was to adjourn
-at noon on the Fourth of July; the President was in his room
-at the Capitol signing bills, which were laid before him as
-they were brought from the two Houses. When this important
-bill was placed before him he laid it aside and went
-on with the other work of the moment. Several prominent
-members entered in a state of intense anxiety over the fate
-of the bill. Mr. Sumner and Mr. Boutwell, while their nervousness
-was evident, refrained from any comment. Zachariah
-Chandler, who was unabashed in any mortal presence,
-roundly asked the President if he intended to sign the bill.
-The President replied: ‘This bill has been placed before me
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>a few moments before Congress adjourns. It is a matter of
-too much importance to be swallowed in that way.’ ‘If it is
-vetoed,’ cried Mr. Chandler, ‘it will damage us fearfully in
-the Northwest. The important point is that one prohibiting
-slavery in the reconstructed States.’ Mr. Lincoln said:
-‘That is the point on which I doubt the authority of Congress
-to act.’ ‘It is no more than you have done yourself,’ said
-the Senator. The President answered: ‘I conceive that I
-may in an emergency do things on military grounds which
-cannot be done constitutionally by Congress.’ Mr. Chandler,
-expressing his deep chagrin, went out, and the President, addressing
-the members of the Cabinet who were seated with
-him, said: ‘I do not see how any of us now can deny and
-contradict what we have always said, that Congress has no
-constitutional power over slavery in the States.’ Mr. Fessenden
-expressed his entire agreement with this view. ‘I
-have even had my doubts,’ he said, ‘as to the constitutional
-efficacy of your own decree of emancipation, in those cases
-where it has not been carried into effect by the actual advance
-of the army.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The President said: ‘This bill and the position of these
-gentlemen seem to me, in asserting that the insurrectionary
-States are no longer in the Union, to make the fatal admission
-that States, whenever they please, may of their own motion
-dissolve their connection with the Union. Now we cannot
-survive that admission, I am convinced. If that be true, I
-am not President; these gentlemen are not Congress. I have
-laboriously endeavored to avoid that question ever since it first
-began to be mooted, and thus to avoid confusion and disturbance
-in our own councils. It was to obviate this question that
-I earnestly favored the movement for an amendment to the
-Constitution abolishing slavery, which passed the Senate and
-failed in the House. I thought it much better, if it were possible,
-to restore the Union without the necessity of a violent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>quarrel among its friends as to whether certain States have
-been in or out of the Union during the war—a merely metaphysical
-question, and one unnecessary to be forced into discussion.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Although every member of the Cabinet agreed with the
-President, when, a few minutes later, he entered his carriage
-to go home, he foresaw the importance of the step he had resolved
-to take and its possibly disastrous consequences to himself.
-When some one said to him that the threats made by the
-extreme radicals had no foundation, and that people would
-not bolt their ticket on a question of metaphysics, he answered:
-‘If they choose to make a point upon this, I do not
-doubt that they can do harm. They have never been friendly
-to me. At all events, I must keep some consciousness of
-being somewhere near right. I must keep some standard or
-principle fixed within myself.’”<a id='r339' /><a href='#f339' class='c010'><sup>[339]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A perusal of the preceding abridgment of debates shows
-clearly that the bill was designed by Congress as a measure
-of reconstruction and intended by many of its leading advocates
-as a rebuke of the President. He was not, however, a
-statesman whom even the deliberate censure of a coördinate
-branch of Government could hurry into an act of rashness;
-he had never been precipitate; indeed, the burden of radical
-criticism was that Mr. Lincoln was provokingly slow. This
-was the opinion which Charles Sumner expressed in confidential
-correspondence with his English friends<a id='r340' /><a href='#f340' class='c010'><sup>[340]</sup></a> and which
-Secretary Chase entered in the pages of his diary.<a id='r341' /><a href='#f341' class='c010'><sup>[341]</sup></a> The
-President was, it is true, the most cautious of men, and the
-fact goes far to explain the absence during his eventful
-administration of even a single serious blunder; the discovery
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>of a gross error of judgment seldom or never rewarded
-the researches of his ablest critics. Though his modesty was
-scarcely less than his prudence, he entertained a just conception
-of the dignity of his office; long reflection upon constitutional
-questions, which made him familiar with the extent
-of executive power, taught him likewise to recognize those
-limitations which the fundamental law had imposed upon legislative
-action. Another characteristic which made him a
-formidable adversary in every controversy was a constant
-purpose to be always, as he expressed it himself, “somewhere
-near right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The measure had been so long under consideration that
-none of its provisions could have taken him by surprise, and
-we are justified in concluding that when the bill was presented
-for his approval he had already determined on his course of
-action. Indeed there is evidence that some of his supporters
-in Congress had written to their friends in Louisiana predicting
-the very fate that afterward befell the bill. Their outline
-of the President’s course admits of no other explanation than
-that he had communicated to them his intentions respecting
-it. The progress of the measure in the Senate was to be so
-retarded that the adjournment of Congress would relieve him
-of the necessity of exercising the veto, and that is precisely
-what happened. In the very last hour of the session it was
-submitted for his approval; his disposal of the bill on that
-occasion has already been noticed; his approval was withheld
-and Congress rose before the expiration of the ten days which
-would enact the bill into a law without his signature. Though
-an interested view had not been overlooked, he disregarded in
-discharge of his duty every personal consequence of the important
-step which he purposed to take. His hostility to the
-measure had long been suspected, but when knowledge of his
-failure to approve it had become a certainty the anger of the
-more radical members of his party became extreme. They
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>had clearly been outwitted by the President and many of them,
-eager for retaliation, returned to their homes meditating
-schemes of revenge.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For the present, at least, anything like adequate discipline of
-Mr. Lincoln was not within their power, for the Baltimore
-convention, which renominated him for the Presidency, had
-adjourned nearly a month before. This at least was secure.
-His election, though not entirely a foregone conclusion, was
-reasonably assured; few of the discomfited members even
-imagined the thought of injuring their party to embarrass the
-President. It is easy to believe, however, that they intended
-such criticism of his policy as would be consistent with party
-success. But even here he resolved to dispute with them a
-field of operations which they believed entirely their own. The
-President, it is true, could not, even if so inclined, justify his
-conduct in person before the voters of every State in the
-Union; he could, however, and did forestall expected criticism
-from Congressmen by publishing a proclamation vindicating
-his “pocket” veto, thus destroying whatever hope remained
-to radical Republicans of diminishing his popularity by ascribing
-to him base or selfish motives for opposing the sense of
-the Legislative department of Government. As on other
-critical occasions so on this he found no precedent to guide
-him, but with characteristic firmness proceeded deliberately
-to establish one. When some of the Congressmen reached
-their States they found their constituents already pondering
-the proclamation of July 8, 1864. Its importance requires
-that it be quoted in full:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Whereas, at the late session, Congress passed a bill to “guarantee to
-certain States, whose governments have been usurped or overthrown,
-a republican form of government,” a copy of which is hereunto annexed;</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And whereas the said bill was presented to the President of the United
-States for his approval less than one hour before the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">sine die</span></i> adjournment
-of said session, and was not signed by him;</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And whereas the said bill contains, among other things, a plan for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>restoring the States in rebellion to their proper practical relation in
-the Union, which plan expresses the sense of Congress upon that subject,
-and which plan it is now thought fit to lay before the people for their
-consideration:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Now, therefore, I, Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States,
-do proclaim, declare, and make known, that, while I am (as I was in December
-last, when by proclamation I propounded a plan for restoration)
-unprepared, by a formal approval of this bill, to be inflexibly committed
-to any single plan of restoration; and, while I am also unprepared to declare
-that the free-State constitutions and governments already adopted
-and installed in Arkansas and Louisiana shall be set aside and held for
-naught, thereby repelling and discouraging the loyal citizens who have set
-up the same as to further effort, or to declare a constitutional competency
-in Congress to abolish slavery in States, but am at the same time sincerely
-hoping and expecting that a constitutional amendment abolishing slavery
-throughout the nation may be adopted, nevertheless I am fully satisfied
-with the system for restoration contained in the bill as one very proper
-plan for the loyal people of any State choosing to adopt it, and that I
-am, and at all times shall be, prepared to give the Executive aid and
-assistance to such people, so soon as the military resistance to the United
-States shall have been suppressed in any such State, and the people
-thereof shall have sufficiently returned to their obedience to the Constitution
-and laws of the United States, in which cases Military Governors
-will be appointed, with directions to proceed according to the bill.<a id='r342' /><a href='#f342' class='c010'><sup>[342]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This unexpected publication was very differently received
-by the various elements composing the Republican party; a
-large majority of those acting with that organization still confided
-in Mr. Lincoln; by the radical wing, however, he was
-sharply censured. Notwithstanding the necessity for harmony
-in the approaching campaign two of the boldest leaders, disregarding
-every consideration of prudence, arraigned the
-President in language which for severity was never surpassed
-by the invectives of his ablest political opponents. In the entire
-experience of the Republic no Executive had ever assumed
-to reject those provisions in a legislative measure which he
-disliked and adopt those that were acceptable. This is precisely
-what Mr. Lincoln did, and the reasons for his action he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>declared to the people with a confidence which forcibly recalls
-the direction of Andrew Jackson to the editor of his official
-organ: “Speak out to the people, sir, and tell them that instead
-of supporting me and my policy Congress is engaged in
-President-making.” There was, however, this difference:
-Abraham Lincoln addressed the people directly and ventured
-no criticism of their representatives. Like his more impulsive
-though not less popular predecessor he was not deceived in
-the reliance which he placed in the patriotic instincts of the
-multitude, which cared little for nice metaphysical distinctions;
-by the masses of the people he was trusted to the
-end.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By Henry Winter Davis and Benjamin F. Wade, chief authors
-of the bill, its progress had been watched with feverish
-anxiety; when convinced that their labor was lost they became
-greatly agitated and made no effort to conceal their
-indignation at the conduct of the President. Their joint protest,
-printed in the <cite>New York Tribune</cite> of August 5, was, perhaps,
-the most bitter attack made upon Mr. Lincoln during his
-Presidential career. Their fierce manifesto, addressed “To
-the supporters of the Government,” declares that the writers
-had “read without surprise, but not without indignation, the
-proclamation of the President of the 8th of July, 1864.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The supporters of the Administration are responsible to
-the country for its conduct; and it is their right and duty to
-check the encroachments of the Executive on the authority of
-Congress, and to require it to confine itself to its proper
-sphere.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The paper then related the history of the bill. Its treatment
-by the President, they declared, indicated a persistent
-though unavowed purpose to defeat the will of the people by
-the Executive perversion of the Constitution. They insinuated
-that only the lowest personal motives could have dictated
-this action. “The President,” they said, “by preventing this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>bill from becoming a law, holds the electoral votes of the
-rebel States at the dictation of his personal ambition.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If those votes turn the balance in his favor, is it to be
-supposed that his competitor, defeated by such means, will
-acquiesce?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If the rebel majority assert their supremacy in those
-States, and send votes which elect an enemy of the Government,
-will we not repel his claims?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And is not that civil war for the Presidency inaugurated
-by the votes of the rebel States?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Seriously impressed with these dangers, Congress, ‘<em>the
-proper constitutional authority</em>,’ formally declared that there
-are no State governments in the rebel States, and provided
-for their erection at a proper time; and both the Senate and
-the House of Representatives rejected the Senators and
-Representatives chosen under the authority of what the
-President calls the free constitution and government of Arkansas.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The President’s proclamation ‘holds for naught’ this
-judgment, and discards the authority of the Supreme Court,
-and strides headlong toward the anarchy his proclamation of
-the 8th of December inaugurated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If electors for President be allowed to be chosen in either
-of those States, a sinister light will be cast on the motives
-which induced the President to ‘hold for naught’ the will of
-Congress rather than his government in Louisiana and Arkansas.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The judgment of Congress which the President defies
-was the exercise of an authority exclusively vested in Congress
-by the Constitution, to determine what is the established
-government in a State, and in its own nature and by the
-highest judicial authority binding on all other departments of
-the Government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They ridiculed the President’s expressed hope that the constitutional
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>amendment abolishing slavery might be adopted.
-“We curiously inquire,” continue Messrs. Wade and Davis,
-“on what his expectation rests, after the vote of the House of
-Representatives at the recent session, and in the face of the
-political complexion of more than enough of the States to
-prevent the possibility of its adoption within any reasonable
-time; and why he did not indulge his sincere hopes with so
-large an installment of the blessing as his approval of the bill
-would have secured?</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c000'>“A more studied outrage on the legislative authority of the
-people has never been perpetrated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Congress passed a bill; the President refused to approve
-it, and then by proclamation puts as much of it in force as he
-sees fit, and proposes to execute those parts by officers unknown
-to the laws of the United States, and not subject to the
-confirmation of the Senate.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The bill directed the appointment of provisional governors
-by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The President, after defeating the law, proposes to appoint,
-without law and without the advice and consent of the
-Senate, military governors for the rebel States!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He has already exercised this dictatorial usurpation in
-Louisiana, and defeated the bill to prevent its limitation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Scarcely an expression of the proclamation, which was examined
-in detail, escaped its share of censure or of ridicule.
-To suppose that the President was ignorant of the contents
-of the bill was out of the question, for it had been discussed,
-they asserted, during more than a month in the House of Representatives,
-by which it was passed as early as the 4th of
-May. It passed the Senate in absolutely the form in which it
-came from the House. Indeed, at the President’s request, a
-draft of a bill substantially the same in material points, and
-almost identical in those features objected to by the proclamation,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>was submitted for his consideration during the winter
-of 1862–1863.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The “Protest” included also a sharp contrast between the
-Executive plan of December 8, 1863, and that embodied in
-the bill which had passed Congress. That measure, said
-Messrs. Wade and Davis, required a majority of the voters to
-establish a State government, the proclamation was satisfied
-with one tenth; “the bill requires one oath, the proclamation
-another; the bill ascertains voters by registering, the proclamation
-by guess; the bill exacts adherence to existing territorial
-limits, the proclamation admits of others; the bill governs
-the rebel States <em>by law</em>, equalizing all before it, the
-proclamation commits them to the lawless discretion of military
-governors and provost marshals; the bill forbids electors
-for President (in the rebel States), the proclamation and
-defeat of the bill threaten us with civil war for the admission
-or exclusion of such votes....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This arraignment of the President’s course concluded with
-the language of admonition, if not indeed of absolute menace:
-“The President has greatly presumed on the forbearance
-which the supporters of his Administration have so long practised,
-in view of the arduous conflict in which we are engaged,
-and the reckless ferocity of our political opponents.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But he must understand that our support is of a cause,
-and not of a man; that the authority of Congress is paramount
-and must be respected; that the whole body of the
-Union men of Congress will not submit to be impeached by
-him of rash and unconstitutional legislation; and if he wishes
-our support, he must confine himself to his Executive duties,—to
-obey and execute, not make the laws,—to suppress by
-arms armed rebellion, and leave political reorganization to
-Congress.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If the supporters of the Government fail to insist on this,
-they become responsible for the usurpations which they fail
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>to rebuke, and are justly liable to the indignation of the people
-whose rights and security, committed to their keeping, they
-sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Let them consider the remedy for these usurpations, and,
-having found it, fearlessly execute it.”<a id='r343' /><a href='#f343' class='c010'><sup>[343]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The authors of this remarkable paper were eminent in the
-councils of their party and stood high in the estimation of
-Union men everywhere. Senator Wade was distinguished
-no less for his physical than for his moral courage—qualities
-impaired somewhat, it is true, by a temper fierce and vindictive.
-Henry Winter Davis, whose zeal for civil liberty
-will constitute his best claim to the gratitude of
-posterity, possessed literary gifts scarcely surpassed by any
-statesman then in public life. Though treated with extreme
-fairness, not to say generosity, by the President, he pursued
-toward the Administration a course of consistent hostility.
-This opposition, which even Mr. Lincoln’s tact could never
-disarm, has been ascribed to disappointment at his failure to
-obtain a place in the Cabinet. While the selection of Montgomery
-Blair from his own State of Maryland may have been
-a cause of estrangement, a sense of what Mr. Davis regarded
-as public duty contributed, doubtless, to intensify this feeling,
-which led him ultimately to think the President scarcely entitled
-to courteous treatment. With the Ohio Senator the
-pitiless maxim, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">vae victis</span></i>, had an undoubted influence. Both
-were gentlemen of wide experience and acknowledged ability,
-and yet their vigorous and fearless arraignment of the President
-revealed an astonishing lack of political sagacity. They
-inquired, for example, on what foundation he rested his expectation
-of an adoption of the constitutional amendment
-abolishing slavery. The incorporation, soon after, of such
-a provision in the fundamental law shows their want of
-insight into the tendencies of the times. The fire of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>prophet, indeed, was present in the protest; his inspiration
-was altogether wanting. Their absurd assertion that the
-electoral votes of Louisiana, Arkansas and Tennessee were
-the prime consideration with the President must be attributed
-to the passion rather than to the reason of his critics, for
-few men of that generation were more familiar with the
-Constitution in all its relations. Better than most of their
-readers they knew that the duty of counting such votes was
-entrusted not to a possibly interested Executive, but to a
-joint convention of both Houses. If the Maryland member
-believed the President had committed the misdemeanors
-charged and insinuated it was his duty to bring before the
-House the question of impeachment. Far less than was expressed
-in the protest would have been ground for investigation.
-If tenderness to Lincoln, a weakness of which Mr.
-Davis at least was never suspected, or a concern for party
-welfare prevented such a step, then he was himself guilty of
-a gross neglect of duty. Doubtless this consideration, together
-with the want of moderation shown in the manifesto,
-subjected its authors to a suspicion of insincerity. Indeed,
-one does not read a dozen lines of their arraignment without
-discovering the chief if not the sole cause of its publication.
-“The President,” they say, “did not sign the bill ‘to guarantee
-to certain States whose governments have been usurped,
-a republican form of government’—passed by the supporters
-of his Administration in both Houses of Congress after mature
-deliberation.” In brief, the political departments of
-Government had entered upon a struggle for power; Congress
-had been defeated, and its discomfited leaders sought
-to relieve their feelings by railing at the President.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Except that it probably defeated the renomination of Mr.
-Davis for Congress, their protest was followed by no political
-result of moment.<a id='r344' /><a href='#f344' class='c010'><sup>[344]</sup></a> In it the mass of Republicans perceived
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>only the seeds of dissension within their ranks. In this view
-it was a source of delight to Democrats, though they felt little
-sympathy with either the defeated bill or the purposes of
-its chief authors.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>VIII<br /> <span class='large'>AN ATTEMPT TO COMPROMISE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>When Congress met in December, 1864, Mr. Lincoln,
-who received the electoral votes of twenty-two
-of the twenty-five States participating in
-the contest, had again been chosen President. In the struggle
-for power he had refrained with his usual prudence from improving
-his advantage over the Legislative department. The
-annual message omitted all reference to the controversy occasioned
-by his failure to sign, and his proclamation concerning,
-the bill of Messrs. Wade and Davis; the question
-of reconstruction was noticed in only the most casual manner.
-A statement of the satisfactory condition of foreign relations
-introduced the Executive communication; the subject of
-finance received the consideration that its importance required.
-The vast proportions and the efficient state of the
-navy were mentioned as matter of congratulation. General
-Sherman’s projected march of three hundred miles through
-hostile regions was characterized as the most remarkable feature
-in the military operations of the year. This with other
-evidences of approaching disruption in the Confederacy led
-logically to a summary of what had been accomplished toward
-reorganization in those States already wrested from insurgent
-armies. On this subject the message observed: “Important
-movements have also occurred during the year to the
-effect of molding society for durability in the Union. Although
-short of complete success, it is much in the right
-direction that twelve thousand citizens in each of the States
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>of Arkansas and Louisiana have organized loyal State governments,
-with free constitutions, and are earnestly struggling
-to maintain and administer them.”<a id='r345' /><a href='#f345' class='c010'><sup>[345]</sup></a> Movements in the same
-direction, he said, more extensive though less definite, were
-in progress elsewhere and should not be overlooked. No
-plan of reconstruction was proposed, or even alluded to in
-the message.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Among questions beyond Executive authority to adjust
-was specified the admission of members to Congress. In disclaiming
-power over this subject he anticipated the criticism
-of those Senators and Representatives who later in the session
-ascribed to him a design to usurp important functions of the
-Legislative branch of Government.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From its concluding paragraphs we are enabled to collect
-the sentiments of the President relative to his offer, a year
-before, of a general pardon to designated classes upon specified
-terms. In this connection he said: “But the time may
-come—probably will come—when public duty shall demand
-that it [the door open to repentant rebels] be closed; and
-that, in lieu, more rigorous measures than heretofore shall be
-adopted.” This seems to establish beyond question the fact
-that Mr. Lincoln feared some measures more stringent than
-he had been hitherto pursuing might be rendered necessary
-by the failure of a policy of clemency to recall any large
-number of insurgents to their obedience to the Constitution
-and the laws.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He ventured to recommend a reconsideration of the proposed
-constitutional amendment abolishing slavery throughout
-the United States, which at the preceding session had
-passed the Senate, but failed to receive in the House the requisite
-two thirds vote. Though the present, he reminded them,
-was the same Congress and composed of nearly the same members,
-their judgments were, no doubt, influenced by an intervening
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>election, which, though it imposed on them no obligation
-to change their views, made it reasonably certain that if
-they did not submit the amendment to the States the succeeding
-Congress would. He inquired, since its passage was
-merely a question of time, whether they would not agree that
-the sooner the better? The voice of the people, he added,
-had for the first time been heard on that question.<a id='r346' /><a href='#f346' class='c010'><sup>[346]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As the President believed, the House had been so far converted
-to his views that a joint resolution adopting the
-amendment was passed early in the session by a vote of 119
-to 56.<a id='r347' /><a href='#f347' class='c010'><sup>[347]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When Congress assembled the public was occupied chiefly
-in watching the progress of naval and military operations.
-The sinking of the <em>Alabama</em> and the capture of the <em>Florida</em>
-practically ended Confederate privateering, for any expectations
-based upon the escape of the <em>Albemarle</em> were frustrated
-by the enterprise and daring of Lieutenant Cushing. One
-army had been destroyed by Sheridan, another crippled by
-Thomas. Tidings of telling blows inflicted by General Sherman
-gave something like assurance of his safety. Though
-not without heavy loss, Grant had forced Lee within the defences
-of Richmond and Petersburg. Some of the lesser
-Union advantages had, it is true, been offset by Southern
-victories; signs of disintegration within the Confederacy,
-however, were multiplying, and this condition forced upon
-Congress the inevitable question of reconstruction.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By unanimous consent of the House Thaddeus Stevens,
-on December 8, offered resolutions distributing the President’s
-message. To the Committee on the Rebellious States was
-referred so much of it as was alleged to relate “to the duty
-of the United States to guaranty a republican form of government
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>to the States in which the governments recognized
-by the United States have been abrogated or overthrown.”<a id='r348' /><a href='#f348' class='c010'><sup>[348]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nothing whatever in the message or the accompanying
-documents related to any such duty on the part of the United
-States, and the resolution assumed such a recommendation, no
-doubt, for the purpose of bringing the subject before Congress.
-One week later, Mr. Ashley, of Ohio, reported a
-bill, on the subject of Stevens’s resolution, which was read
-twice, ordered to be printed and returned to the Committee.
-On January 12 succeeding Representative Eliot, of
-Massachusetts, gave notice of his intention to offer at the
-proper time an amendment to the bill in charge of Mr.
-Ashley. No objection having been made, it was ordered
-to be printed. This was, in fact, a substitute for the bill reported
-by the Ohio member, and provided “that no State
-engaged in rebellion against the Government of the United
-States shall be allowed to resume its political relations with
-the Government of the United States until by the action of
-the loyal citizens within the limits of the same a State constitution
-shall be ordained and established, republican in form,
-forever prohibiting involuntary servitude within the State,
-and guarantying to all persons freedom and equality of rights
-before the law.” Its second section provided “that the State
-of Louisiana shall be permitted to renew its political relations
-with the Government of the United States under the
-constitution adopted by the convention assembled at New
-Orleans on the 6th of April, 1864.”<a id='r349' /><a href='#f349' class='c010'><sup>[349]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That some of the more influential among the radical members
-desired to avoid, if possible, a controversy with the President
-may be fairly inferred from a letter of Charles Sumner,
-written December 27, 1864, to Doctor Lieber. Among other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>things the Senator says: “I have presented to the President
-the duty of harmony between Congress and the Executive.
-He is agreed. It is proposed to admit Louisiana (which
-ought not to be done), and at the same time pass the reconstruction
-bill for all the other States, giving the electoral
-franchise to ‘all citizens’ without distinction of color. If
-this arrangement is carried out, it will be an immense political
-act.”<a id='r350' /><a href='#f350' class='c010'><sup>[350]</sup></a> A communication to John Bright, written a few days
-after the above, January 1, 1865, confirms this view. On that
-occasion Mr. Sumner said: “The President is exerting every
-force to bring Congress to receive Louisiana under the Banks
-government. I do not believe Louisiana is strong enough in
-loyalty and freedom for an independent State. The evidence
-on this point seems overwhelming. I have discussed it
-with the President, and have tried to impress on him the
-necessity of having no break between him and Congress on
-such questions. Much as I am against the premature recognition
-of Louisiana, I will hold my peace if I can secure a rule
-for other States, so that we may be saved from daily anxiety
-with regard to their condition.”<a id='r351' /><a href='#f351' class='c010'><sup>[351]</sup></a> These passages explain the
-amendment to the revived bill. Sumner was willing to remain
-a neutral spectator of the debates on the recognition of Louisiana
-provided the reorganization of the remaining States
-should be made on the lines indicated by Congress.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On January 16, Ashley’s bill was reached in the regular
-order of business; by direction of the Committee on the Rebellious
-States, it was offered as a substitute for the original
-measure, from which it differed in one very important particular.
-It expressly recognized the loyal governments of both
-Louisiana and Arkansas. By unanimous consent the proposed
-enactment, considered as an original bill, was offered for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>plan submitted by Henry Winter Davis at the preceding
-session.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Representative William D. Kelley, of Pennsylvania, would
-amend the clause providing for the enrollment of “all the
-white male citizens of the United States” by inserting the
-words “and all other male citizens of the United States who
-may be able to read the Constitution thereof.” Mr. Eliot
-then introduced the amendment of which he had previously
-given notice. By Representative Arnold another amendment
-was offered to that of Eliot.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Judge Kelley opened the debate by declaring that indemnity
-for the past the victors in the war could not hope to
-obtain; they could, however, demand security for the future.
-In a very long speech he discussed the status of the negro in
-the early days of the Republic; this portion of his address
-was concluded with the remark that his amendment did not
-contemplate that the entire mass of people of African descent,
-degraded and brutalized by laws and customs, be immediately
-clothed with all the rights of citizenship, but only those so
-far fitted by education for its judicious exercise as were able
-to read the Constitution and the laws of the United States.
-This, indeed, he admitted, was only an entering wedge and
-was to be regarded as an aid to their improvement; when
-sufficiently advanced they were to be endowed with every
-right necessary to their protection. A strong plea was made
-to confer the suffrage on the colored man; otherwise, asked
-the Pennsylvania member, how will it be possible to prevent
-his subjugation? He would not rely on men’s abstract sense
-of justice, for that had not prevented outrages in the past.
-Justice should be embodied in laws and constitutions while
-it was in the power of Congress to do so. That body was to
-determine who should select delegates to the conventions
-that were to frame governments for the insurgent States.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>The Union minorities in the South required the political support
-of every loyal man in their communities. It was the
-power, he reminded Representatives, not the spirit of the
-rebellion that Federal armies were overthrowing. In conclusion
-he declared himself in favor of conferring the suffrage
-on “every man who fights or pays,” a doctrine which
-he ascribed to Jefferson, in whose party he said he had been
-trained.<a id='r352' /><a href='#f352' class='c010'><sup>[352]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Eliot, who spoke on January 17, regretted that he had
-not been able to support the amended bill reported from the
-select committee. Partly because of the interest, he said,
-which his friend Henry Winter Davis took in the subject he
-came to its consideration prepossessed in its favor. The provisions
-of the measure passed at the preceding session, however,
-were not then discussed. There were strong reasons for
-action at that time which no longer existed to the same extent.
-There was time enough on the present occasion, January,
-1865, to make it more perfect and more practicable than the
-plan offered by the committee.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Entering upon an examination of the bill he declared that its
-terms were peremptory; eleven States were in rebellion, and by
-the first section the President was called upon to appoint for
-each of them a provisional governor. Such appointments were
-to be made when the measure became a law. Except in Louisiana,
-Arkansas and Tennessee these appointments would be
-not only useless but a needless source of expense, and though
-section <em>fifteen</em> recognized the governments established in the
-two former, the machinery of the bill would be applied to all
-the States in rebellion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It imposed upon the several governors proposed to be appointed
-executive duties which they could not assume until
-the power of the United States had vindicated itself within
-those States; there were other duties which they should not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>be required to perform. They were to see that the laws
-which were in force in that section in 1860 should be faithfully
-executed, with no knowledge on the part of the House
-of the import of those laws. Why should Congress assume
-responsibility for enforcing the black code? Why demand the
-enforcement, he asked, of minute police regulations in States
-where complexion appointed or reduced punishment? Other
-laws were specified, such as those punishing the circulation of
-books or writings advocating human rights, laws requiring
-the removal from those States of free persons of color, prohibiting
-them from engaging in business, and punishing by
-the lash upon suspicion of false testimony and before conviction.
-There was a law, he said, in one of those States requiring
-the imprisonment of free colored sailors in her ports.<a id='r353' /><a href='#f353' class='c010'><sup>[353]</sup></a>
-These provisions and many others of the same tenor were
-contained in the statute books of those States in 1860 and
-had been enforced. The penalty differed according to color;
-offences when committed by a white man were punished in
-one way, and when committed by colored men in another way.
-The provisional governor was charged with the faithful execution
-of such laws.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The provision for the assessment and collection of taxes
-he characterized as a remarkable proposition; they were to be
-imposed without representation, without any persons at the
-national capital to enlighten Congress on the subject; they
-were to be laid without the knowledge of the parties concerned
-or the parties to be affected.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The sixth section, he continued, provided that every person
-who should thereafter hold certain offices in the Confederacy
-was “declared not to be a citizen of the United
-States.” That, Mr. Eliot contended, was applying the punishment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>before the offence had been committed. If Congress
-declared that a man should for a certain offence be deprived
-of citizenship, could he, then, be indicted for treason subsequently
-committed?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The question of electing delegates to constitutional conventions
-presented a practical difficulty. Colored soldiers and
-sailors in the service were made voters by the bill; but they
-were not enrolled, they were not registered or credited to any
-county or parish; they were aggregated. They had no legal
-local habitation. They may have belonged to men owning
-plantations in several districts. The bill did not designate.
-With the white soldier the case was different, for he was
-known to belong to a certain district. If colored men entitled,
-because of military or naval service, to participate in the
-choice of delegates should be out of the service before the
-election occurred, and others should have taken their places,
-which class could vote, those in the service of the Government
-when the election for delegates took place, or those serving
-when the bill passed Congress?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Whether the difficulties pointed out were inseparable from
-any bill on the subject, he would not undertake to say. But
-in his judgment it would be unsafe for Congress to permit
-a measure containing such provisions to become a law.
-“Why,” he asked, “is it not more wise to take the States as
-they shall present themselves for admission?” Arkansas had
-acted in one way, Louisiana in another, and Tennessee was
-proceeding in still a different manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Notwithstanding his objections to some features of the
-Louisiana constitution, he favored her recognition. From
-information derived from the highest sources, he had no
-doubt that her Legislature would supply such deficiencies.
-There were influences bearing on that body which he believed
-could not be resisted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thaddeus Stevens inquired, “If Louisiana and those other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>States are in the Union, by what authority do we legislate
-for their internal police?” This provoked laughter on the
-Democratic side of the House. “If they are in the Union,”
-answered Mr. Eliot, “just as Pennsylvania is, we ought not
-to; but the difficulty is that they are not in the Union in that
-sense, to that extent, thus fully. They are not out of the
-Union territorially, and yet rebellion has overthrown their
-governments for a time, and it is needful that the Congress
-of the United States should intervene and should legislate.”
-To this the Pennsylvania leader further observed, “I understand
-the gentleman to say that they are partly in the Union,
-and partly out. About how much are they in the Union and
-about how much out?” This keen thrust was greeted by
-more laughter from the Democratic members.<a id='r354' /><a href='#f354' class='c010'><sup>[354]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On his motion to postpone further consideration for two
-weeks Mr. Wilson demanded the previous question. Henry
-Winter Davis appealed to him to withdraw the motion. This
-Mr. Wilson declined to do, upon which the Maryland member
-observed, “a vote to postpone is equivalent to a vote
-to kill the bill.” By 103 yeas to 34 nays, however, further
-debate was postponed till the 1st of February succeeding.<a id='r355' /><a href='#f355' class='c010'><sup>[355]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though Representative Washburne, of Illinois, moved on
-February 7 a further postponement of two weeks, the subject
-was before the House again on the following day, when
-it went over informally. Debate was not resumed till the
-20th, when Mr. Dawes, of Massachusetts, took the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Thirty-eighth Congress, he said, was in the last days
-of its last session; a bill containing the main features of the
-measure under consideration, though it passed both Houses,
-failed at the preceding session to become a law; this circumstance
-led him to make a careful examination of the subject.
-The proposed enactment was not designed to invigorate the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>army, the navy or the Executive; it was intended rather to
-follow the army. It was intended to be applied to the condition
-in which the army left the State. “it is an attempt,”
-he said, “to gather up the ‘<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">disjecta membra</span></i>’ of those States,
-the broken and torn fragments of those communities, and out
-of the chaos, as well as the ruins and <em>debris</em> that are left in
-the march of those armies, to create a State capable of discharging
-the functions, exercising the authority, and invoking
-the recognition of this Government, and of the people under
-which it lives....</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“... The bill proceeds upon the supposition not
-only that there are States still existing, but that their old constitutions
-and laws are still in full force and operation”; for
-it imposed upon the provisional governor the faithful execution
-of those laws in force when rebellion overthrew their
-State governments, with the single exception of the provision
-touching the enforcement of laws against slavery and the
-mode of trial and punishment of colored people. Two remarkable
-features of the bill, he asserted, were those empowering
-the Executive in Washington, by and with the
-advice and consent of the Senate, to appoint governors in
-every one of those States; then, no matter what provisions
-for their election existed in the State law, the President was
-authorized to appoint just as many and just as few officers as
-he pleased. It might be a judge of the highest court of
-judicature in the State; or it might be the humblest road-master;
-it might be any one or all of the countless corps
-between them. There was no provision in the bill that they
-should be even residents of the State. “An army of officers,”
-he continued, “in one paragraph of four lines, is here created,
-subject to the sole authority and control of the President of
-the United States.” In a Confederate report Mr. Dawes noticed
-that there were 13,000 of them in a single State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>“What,” he asked, “is the effect to be on the people over
-whom, from every quarter of this Union, broken-down politicians,
-men without place, foot-loose, are to be placed?
-Sir, it is a reproach to our Government at this hour that
-there are, about this capital and in the Northern States,
-men who have been appointed to the judgeships of district
-and other courts of the rebel States and Territories, drawing
-quarterly the salaries of those offices, although they have
-never been able, from the hour they received their commissions
-to the present moment to set foot in the States over
-whose courts they have been appointed. They could not go
-one rod into the State, positions in whose highest courts they
-have held for more than a year, without being hung on the
-first tree.... But my friend [Mr. Ashley] has reported
-a bill here which authorizes an army of thousands of
-these officeholders to go into those States, with commissions
-from this capital in their pockets, to lord it over the poor,
-miserable inhabitants left behind the army there. These
-rebel States may be thus converted into asylums for broken-down
-politicians.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the language of indignation he entered into a criticism
-of that policy which proposed to levy on the houseless
-and homeless wanderers in the South, even then only
-saved from starvation by the charity of the North, precisely
-the same amount of taxes raised in 1860 when, by comparison,
-the people were in a princely state. “Sir,” he
-declared, “there is not an army, great as our army is, that
-has power enough to accomplish that one single feat provided
-for in this bill, for the very plain reason that there is not
-money enough left in any one of these States outside the
-Government with which to pay that round sum for one single
-year.... This wise, efficacious policy is resorted to
-in this bill to hasten on, I suppose, that other day mentioned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>in it, when a majority of these people, molded by this process,
-won by its benignity ‘shall voluntarily take the oath of
-allegiance.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He asserted, as Eliot had done, that the committee were
-calling upon Congress to sanction all the black codes of those
-States, save only that part which held men in bondage, and
-that was allowed to enforce itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The omissions, he asserted, were not less remarkable than
-the provisions of the bill. The state of things established by
-it was of indefinite duration. There was no provision for the
-peculiar conditions existing there. “There is no attempt at
-any adaptation of these laws to the new state of things consequent
-upon the rebellion, and consequent upon our constitutional
-action here. Not only is there no provision for the
-new wants and necessities of this wasted and wretched people
-who have been involved in the rebellion, but for that other
-people who have now passed into freedom by our legislation,
-and by the military consequences of this rebellion, who are
-now without food, without subsistence, without knowledge,
-and without opportunity to support and maintain themselves;
-yes, sir, without homes, literally without where to lay their
-heads.” There were 3,000,000 of these people, he added,
-whose very existence was ignored by the bill; there was no
-provision for schools; no provision for even a poorhouse;
-no provision to teach them the arts of civilization, no provision
-for kindling in them hope, for holding up before them
-incentives to industry or securing to them its reward. Under
-the operations of the bill they were the objects of free plunder;
-they were to go forth to be hunted, despoiled and persecuted:
-outcasts in the land.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By the bill it was left in the discretion of the provisional
-governor, he asserted, to terminate the system set over them.
-He, as well as the army of officeholders under him, would be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>interested in prolonging the period until the people had <em>sufficiently</em>
-returned to their obedience. Before the initiatory
-steps could be taken, even if the provisional governor were
-willing, a majority of the people in each State must of their
-own choice signify their loyalty by taking the oath of allegiance.
-This made the matter dependent not upon the wish of
-the loyal, but of the disloyal persons who constituted the
-majority in those States.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The plan, he further stated, ignored the principle that the
-American people have the right to shape and alter for themselves
-the rules by which they are to be governed. If the
-matter was left in the hands of the disloyal, the time would
-be far distant when Union governments would be instituted
-in those States. The only wise policy was to establish a
-government among the loyal; even though it might be weak
-and inefficient at first, it would finally win back those who
-desired to be reconciled. The other numerous class, those
-who deserved to be hanged, were not provided for in the
-bill. He was opposed to the provision which would turn over
-to insurgents the loyal minorities in those States, and was not
-less opposed to prescribing a fixed iron rule by conformity to
-which alone out of chaos and anarchy might be made a loyal
-government.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Further, the bill proceeded upon the assumption that there
-was no power in these people, except what was conferred on
-them by Federal legislation, to establish State governments.
-This he denied, and the authors of the proposed measure, by
-offering to recognize the establishments otherwise organized
-in Arkansas and Louisiana had conceded as much. In
-the people, he said, and in them alone, existed the authority
-to form an organic law subject to the constitutional
-provision that the government should be republican in form.
-He favored a recognition of the Louisiana government not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>because it was formed under the guidance of General Banks,
-but because it was made by the loyal people of that State,
-was acquiesced in by them, and because under it they were
-building up a loyal government.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Governors Hahn and Murphy and the officials chosen in
-Louisiana and Arkansas who had been exercising their functions
-for a year would be dispossessed by foreigners sent
-amongst them by the President, who was empowered to do so
-by the bill; bickerings, heartburnings and discontent would
-follow any attempt to enforce this policy. Sooner or later
-the people of those States must be allowed to form governments
-for themselves, protected by the parental care of the
-central authority.<a id='r356' /><a href='#f356' class='c010'><sup>[356]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Fernando Wood declared that he had listened with interest
-and pleasure to words of conciliation for the South; little
-but subjugation, devastation and annihilation had thus far
-been heard from the party, the Administration and the people
-represented by Mr. Dawes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The seceding States, Mr. Wood contended, had republican
-forms of government which the treason of individuals did not
-affect. Nor did individual crimes destroy the rights of the
-people to regulate their domestic institutions. The forms of
-government were the same as those that existed in the rebellious
-States six years before. Even admitting that they
-had not such governments in existence among them, the bill
-did not provide a <em>republican</em> form of government for those
-States.<a id='r357' /><a href='#f357' class='c010'><sup>[357]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He was followed in opposition to the proposed enactment
-by Mr. LeBlond, of Ohio, who discussed both the status of
-the rebellious States and their form of government. His
-speech on the former question added nothing of value to what
-Representative Pendleton had said at the preceding session,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>nor did he enter upon so able an examination of the clause
-guaranteeing a republican form of government as did Senator
-Carlile on that occasion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry T. Blow, of Missouri, made an appeal for the admission
-of Arkansas and Louisiana to prevent destructive military
-raids into those States as well as his own. He would
-support any measure that would restore them and strengthen
-their loyal population. However, he did not favor negro
-suffrage. His remarks scarcely touched the measure before
-the House.<a id='r358' /><a href='#f358' class='c010'><sup>[358]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Joseph K. Edgerton, of Indiana, who followed in a lengthy
-speech in opposition, said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The forerunner of this measure of legislation, so far as this House is
-concerned, may be found in the territorial bill reported by the gentleman
-from Ohio [Mr. Ashley] from the Committee on Territories in the
-Thirty-seventh Congress, in March, 1862. It was aptly termed at the
-time by the gentleman’s colleague from the Cincinnati district of Ohio
-[Mr. Pendleton] “A bill to dissolve the Union and abolish the Constitution
-of the United States.” The bill was summarily, if not indignantly,
-rejected by the House without a second reading. But, sir, men
-and events have since changed, if the Constitution of the United States
-has not changed, and the stone of revolutionary reconstruction then
-rejected by the master-builders in this House bids fair to become the
-head of the corner. Then the Constitution was not altogether repudiated
-as the foundation of our legislation; now revolutionary opinions and
-plans override it as a thing of the past. Not many are there in this
-Congress, and fewer there will be in the next, I fear, to do reverence to
-the Constitution and obey its commands.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The President’s proclamation of December 8, 1863, was
-then noticed, and his usurpation of authority denounced; the
-subject of the Louisiana government was also entered upon
-and fully discussed. He next referred to the introduction
-early in the preceding session of a resolution by Henry Winter
-Davis providing for the appointment of a special committee
-authorized to report a bill guaranteeing a republican form of
-government to the rebellious States. The fate of that bill,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>President Lincoln’s proclamation concerning it, and the protest
-of Wade and Davis were successively dwelt upon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The question between the President and his two Congressional
-friends, Wade and Davis, was to Mr. Edgerton’s
-mind “one between two usurping powers, the Executive and
-the Legislative”; but, he continued, “I am free to say my
-sympathies were with the legislators and not with the President.
-Executive edicts have done more than acts of Congress
-during the last four years to sap the foundations and
-remove the landmarks of the Constitution.” The majority in
-Congress, he asserted, by consenting to recognize the governments
-of Louisiana and Arkansas, kissed the hand that smote
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He opposed a recognition of the Louisiana government
-because of its unconstitutional origin; Arkansas, he said,
-differed from it in no material respect. After stating the
-provisions of the bill he gave the following summary of its
-effects:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>1. To take from the people of the State all power to initiate proceedings
-to reorganize their own State government in harmony with the Constitution
-of the United States, or even to prescribe the qualifications of
-suffrage. The bill ignores the idea that there is any vital power in the
-people to restore their State government—not only taken from them by
-rebellion but kept from them by Federal power—....</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>2. The effect is to exclude from the reorganization the entire white
-population of the State who shall have held office or voluntarily borne
-arms against the United States, or who shall not take the oath of July
-2, 1862.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>3. To confine the right of suffrage and power of reorganization to
-enrolled men and Federal soldiers taking the oath; and the law affords
-no guaranty that even the enrollment shall embrace a majority of males
-over twenty-one years of age. The majority required as a basis of action
-is so many of enrolled persons taking the oath as, with the soldiers,
-shall constitute a majority of the persons enrolled; that majority,
-through defect or fraud in enrollment, may be not even one tenth of the
-males of the State over twenty-one years of age.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>4. The effect is the absolute disfranchisement of eleven States and their
-continuance in a state of war until they accept “the abandonment of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>slavery,” as dictated to them by the United States, and until by organic
-law they declare that all persons shall have “equality of civil rights before
-the law” of the State; a well-seeming phrase of broad import; the
-precise meaning of which I do not understand. A woman is a person,
-a negro is a person, an alien is a person, and the right of suffrage is a
-civil right. Does this high-sounding phrase of the bill mean that women,
-negroes, and aliens shall have equal right to vote in a regenerated State
-with white male citizens? What does “equality of civil rights before
-the law for all persons” mean?</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c013'>In fact and in purpose, then, the bill before the House is one to
-abolish slavery in the United States, and to enfranchise and elevate
-negroes, and to disfranchise and degrade white men; a bill to change
-the social and industrial systems and internal policy of eleven States;
-a bill to take from those States their inherent reserved constitutional
-right to regulate in their own way their internal policy, not inconsistent
-with the Constitution of the United States. It is a bill to punish treason
-without trial or conviction; a bill to confiscate private property without
-adequate compensation; in short, a bill to reconstruct States and make
-State constitutions, when in truth no States or their constitutions have
-been destroyed, or need reconstruction, unless by the voluntary action of
-their own people.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c013'>If this is a revolutionary Congress, you have a revolutionary power
-to pass this bill; but if it be, as I am bound by my oath of office to
-believe and assert, a Congress sitting under the Constitution of the
-United States, and having no powers outside of or unknown to it, then
-you cannot constitutionally pass this bill.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He stated further that the bill “embodies a spirit and
-purpose toward the Southern people which, if impolitic and
-vindictive one year ago, when the bill first came before the
-House, and when our enemy was far stronger and more
-defiant than now, is still more impolitic and vindictive at this
-time, when the minds of all good men are searching diligently
-for ways of reconciliation and peace.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In conclusion he declared: “The Congress of the United
-States, the legislative power of the Union, and the Constitution,
-is asked by this bill to be the minister and executioner
-of the great revenge of section upon section, States
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>North upon States South. For one, sir, I wash my hands of
-the deed.”<a id='r359' /><a href='#f359' class='c010'><sup>[359]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The passages quoted convey no adequate idea of the able
-and comprehensive character of Mr. Edgerton’s speech. It
-was concerned not only with the subject under discussion,
-but extended to a rather searching examination of Republican
-professions in 1861 and the revolutionary practices of a later
-time. It was marked throughout by perfect temper, but was
-not on that account less effective. Any extension of time,
-however, even twenty minutes, was denied him by the
-majority.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At this point, February 21, Ashley withdrew a motion he
-had previously made to recommit the bill, and by authority
-of his committee withdrew the measure which was the original
-text and, in lieu thereof, introduced another. With this
-substitution the pending amendments fell. Representative
-Wilson desired his substitute to hold its original place.
-Messrs. Wilson, Kelley and Eliot then modified their amendments
-to the measure hitherto under discussion, and Ashley
-explained his action in a brief address.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He referred to the bill which at the preceding session
-failed to receive the President’s approval. Since then he had
-labored earnestly to conciliate members on his side of the
-House who had scruples about the measure as it originally
-passed, and, if possible, obtain a united vote in its favor.
-For that purpose he consented to a compromise in providing
-for the recognition of Louisiana, Arkansas and Tennessee.
-The conditions were not such as he would prescribe if those
-States stood alone. But in order to secure what he thought
-of paramount importance—universal suffrage to the liberated
-black men of the South—he consented to insert in the bill
-which he had proposed a few days previously, a conditional
-recognition of existing governments in the States of Louisiana
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>and Arkansas, and the government then being organized in
-Tennessee.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Disappointed in his efforts to win the coöperation of
-Representatives who entertained practically the same opinions
-which he did in favor of universal suffrage for the colored
-man, and in favor of the early recognition of every Confederate
-State with a population sufficient to maintain a government,
-he now declined to offer his substitute. At the request
-and with the concurrence of his committee the bill of the
-preceding session was offered with some modifications. These
-alterations were to strike out all that the bill contained to
-which gentlemen had raised objection, in that it seemingly
-authorized the execution of State laws as they existed at the
-commencement of the rebellion. To make it perfectly clear
-what the committee intended, they had inserted a provision
-that the governor should execute only such laws as related to
-the protection of persons and property; that all laws inconsistent
-with the proposed enactment, and all laws recognizing
-the relation of master and slave, should not be enforced. The
-section which authorized the collection of taxes had been
-omitted. He preferred not to commit himself to a recognition
-of the Louisiana and Arkansas governments, unless
-he could secure what he thought of paramount importance
-in reorganizing the other States.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is very clear to my mind,” he asserted, “that no bill
-providing for the reorganization of loyal State governments
-in the rebel States can pass this Congress. I am pretty sure
-that this bill and all the amendments and substitutes offered
-will fail to command a majority of this House.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The course of debate had shown on the Republican side,
-he said, so strong an individuality that no compromise could
-bring them together on the great question of reconstruction.
-Many on his side were capital leaders in the minority; they
-were good at pulling down, but not so good at leading
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>majorities and building up. He admitted their utter inability
-to agree on the subject, and had consented to a conditional
-recognition of certain State governments because he knew
-they could be upheld by military power until the rebellion
-should be crushed. Republicans were so nearly unanimous
-at the preceding session, he said, that he felt the concessions
-embodied in his substitute would enable them to agree without
-much discussion or without consuming the valuable time of
-the House so late in the session. His remarks not only
-showed disappointment at the attitude of his party, but
-clearly revealed the existence of a schism in its ranks.<a id='r360' /><a href='#f360' class='c010'><sup>[360]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry Winter Davis then rose to state the case for the
-House. The bill, he said, to which amendments were pending
-was the same as that which at the preceding session received
-the assent of both Houses of Congress, with some
-modifications to suit the tender susceptibilities of gentlemen
-from Massachusetts: “first, the sixth section, declaring rebel
-officers not citizens of the United States, has been stricken
-out; second, the taxation clause has been stricken out; third,
-the word ‘government’ has been inserted before ‘trial and
-punishment,’ to meet the refined criticisms of the two gentlemen
-from Massachusetts who suppose that penal laws would
-be in force and operative when the penalties were forbidden
-to be enforced; that discriminating laws could survive the
-declaration that there should be no discrimination between
-different persons in trial or punishment. There has been
-one section added to meet the present aspect of public affairs;
-that section authorizes the President, instead of pursuing the
-method prescribed in the bill in reference to the States where
-military resistance shall have been suppressed, in the event
-of the legislative authority under the rebellion in any rebel
-State taking the oath to support the Constitution of the
-United States, annulling their confiscation laws and ratifying
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>the amendment proposed by this Congress to the Constitution
-of the United States, before military resistance shall be suppressed
-in such State, to recognize them as constituting the
-legal authority of the State, and directing him to report those
-facts to Congress for its assent and ratification. With these
-modifications, the bill which is now the test for amendment is
-the bill which was adopted by this House at the last session.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He need not be at the trouble, he said, to answer the arguments
-of gentlemen who at the preceding session voted for
-the bill, and who, in the repose of the intervening period,
-had criticised in detail the language and, not stopping there,
-had found in its substance that it violated the principles of
-republican government and sanctioned the enormities of those
-laws with which slavery had covered and defiled the statutes
-of every Southern State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With increasing severity Mr. Davis proceeded:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That these discoveries should have been made since the vote of last
-session is quite as remarkable as that they should have been overlooked
-before that vote. But they were neither overlooked before nor discovered
-since. The vote was before a pending election. It is the will of the
-President which has been discovered since.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It is not at all surprising, Mr. Speaker, that the President, having
-failed to sign the bill passed by the whole body of his supporters by both
-Houses at the last session of Congress, and having assigned, under
-pressure of events, but without the authority of law, reasons, good or
-bad, first for refusing to allow the bill to become a law, and therefore
-usurping power to execute parts of it as law, while he discarded other
-parts which interfered with possible electoral votes, those arguments
-should be found satisfactory to some minds prone to act upon the
-winking of authority.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The weight of that species of argument I am not able to estimate. It
-bids defiance to every species of reply. It is that subtle, pervading epidemic
-of the time that penetrates the closest argument as spirit penetrates
-matter that diffuses itself with the atmosphere of authority, relaxing
-the energy of the strong, bending down the upright, diverting just
-men from the path of rectitude, and substituting the will and favor
-of power for the will and interest of the people as the rule of legislative
-action.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>All I desire now to do is to state the case and predict results from
-one course or the other. The course of military events seems to indicate
-that possibly by the 4th of next July, probably by next December,
-organized, armed rebellion will cease to lift its brazen front in the land.
-Disasters may intervene; errors or weaknesses may prolong the conflict;
-the proverbial chances of war may interpose their caprices to
-defer the national triumph; but events now point to the near approach of
-the end. But whether sooner or later, whenever it comes, there is one
-thing that will assuredly accompany it. If this bill do not become a law,
-when Congress again meets, at our doors, clamorous and dictatorial,
-will be sixty-five Representatives from the States now in rebellion, and
-twenty-two Senators, <em>claiming</em> admission, and, upon the theory of the
-honorable gentleman, <em>entitled</em> to admission beyond the power of argument
-to resist it; for peace will have been restored, there will be no armed
-power but that of the United States; there will be quiet, and votes will
-be polled under the existing laws of the State, in the gentleman’s view.
-Are you ready to accept that consequence? For if they come to the
-door of the House they will cross the threshold of the House, and any
-gentleman who does not know that, or who is so weak or so wild as to
-suppose that any declaratory resolution adopted by both Houses as a
-condition precedent can stop that flood, had better put his puny hands
-across the flood of the flowing Mississippi and say that it shall not
-enter the Gulf of Mexico.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There are things, gentlemen, that are possible at one time and not
-possible at another. You can now prevent the rise of the flood, but
-when it is up you can not stop it. If gentlemen are in favor of meeting
-that state of things, then do as has been already so distinctly intimated
-in the course of this debate, vote against this bill in all its aspects;
-leave the door wide open; let “our brethren of the South,” whose
-bayonets are now pointed at our brothers’ hearts, drop their arms, put on
-the seemly garb of peace, go through the forms of an election, and
-assert the triumph of their beaten faction under the forms of political
-authority after the sword has decided against them. I am no prophet,
-but that is the history of next December if this bill be defeated; and I
-expect it not to become a law.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But suppose the other course to be pursued; suppose the President
-sees fit to do what there is not the least reason to suppose that he
-desires to do; suppose that after he has destroyed the armies in the
-field he should go further, and do, as I think he ought to do, what the
-judgment of this country dictates, treat those who hold power in the
-South as rebels and not as governors or legislators; disperse them from
-the halls of legislation; expel them from executive mansions, strip them
-of the emblems of authority, and set to work to hunt out the pliant and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>supple “Union men,” so-called, who have cringed before the storm,
-but who will be willing to govern their fellow-citizens under the protection
-of United States bayonets; suppose that the fruitful example
-of Louisiana shall spread like a mist over all the rest of the southern
-country, and that Representatives like what Louisiana has sent here,
-with such a backing of votes as she has given, shall appear here at the
-doors of this Hall; whose representatives are they? I do not mean to
-speak of the gentlemen now here from Louisiana in their individual
-character, but in their political relations to their constituency. Whose
-representatives are they? In Louisiana they are the representatives of
-the bayonets of General Banks and the will of the President, as expressed
-in his secret letter to General Banks. If you admit such representatives,
-you must admit, on the same basis and under the same
-influences, Representatives from every State from Texas to Virginia;
-the common council at Alexandria—which has just sent two Senators
-to the other House and has ratified the amendment to the Constitution
-abolishing slavery in all the rest of Virginia, where none of them dare
-put his portly person—would be entitled to send ten Representatives
-here and two Senators to speak for the indomitable “Old Dominion.”
-If the rebel Representatives are not here in December next you will
-have here servile tools of the Executive who will embarrass your legislation,
-humble your Congress, degrade the name of republican government
-for two years, and then the natural majority of the South, rising
-indignantly against that humiliating insult, will swamp you here with
-rebel Representatives and be your masters. These are their alternatives
-and there is no middle ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To Mr. Eliot’s objection the Maryland member replied that
-provisional governors “are appointed <em>now without law</em>, and
-all we propose is that they shall be <em>under the responsibility
-of law and subject to the control and confirmation of the
-Senate</em>.” Having in mind this condition and the Executive
-appointments to judicial places in Louisiana, Mr. Davis
-added:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sir, when I came into Congress ten years ago, this was a Government
-of law. I have lived to see it a Government of personal will.
-Congress has dwindled from a power to dictate law and the policy of
-the Government to a commission to audit accounts and to appropriate
-moneys to enable the Executive to execute his will and not ours. I
-would stop at the boundaries of law. When I look around for them I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>seem to be in a waste; they are as clean gone as the division fences of
-Virginia estates from here to the Rapidan.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After explaining the efforts of Mr. Ashley and himself to
-remove the objectionable features of the bill as pointed out
-by the two members from Massachusetts [Messrs. Dawes and
-Eliot] he again criticised both with some severity, and continued:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sir, my successor may vote as he pleases. But when I leave this Hall
-there shall be no vote from the third congressional district of Maryland
-that recognizes anything but the body and mass of the people of any
-State as entitled to govern them, and to govern the people that I represent.
-And they who may wish to substitute one tenth, or any other
-fractional minority, for that great power of the people to govern, may
-take, and shall take, the odium. Ay! I shall brand it upon them that in
-the middle of the nineteenth century, in the only free Republic that the
-world knows, where alone the principles of popular government are the
-rules of authority, they have gone to the dark ages for their models,
-reviving the wretched examples of the most odious governments that
-the world has ever seen, and propose to stain the national triumph by
-creating a wretched, low, vulgar, corrupt, and cowardly oligarchy to govern
-the freemen of the United States—the national arms to guaranty
-and enforce their oppressions. Not by my vote, sir; not by my vote!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>If the majority of the people will not recognize the authority of the
-Constitution of the United States, what does the gentleman say who
-proposes these declaratory resolutions? That they shall come here
-without it? No, sir; but I would govern them for a thousand years first
-by the supreme authority of the Constitution which they have defied and
-will not acknowledge. And govern them how? Not by the uncontrolled
-will of this or any other President that ever lived, George Washington
-included. I would govern them by the laws that in the hours of their
-sanity they enacted, unaltered excepting so far as the progress of events
-require that they should be altered; to the extent that we have proposed
-to alter them in our bill, and no further. I leave their own rules for
-their government, make the President appoint, under his official and
-public responsibility, the officers who are to execute them; and if they
-do not like to be governed in that way, let us trust that the prodigal will
-come one day to his senses, and humbly kneeling before the Constitution
-that he has vainly defied, swear before Almighty God that he will again
-be true to it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That is my remedy for the grievance. That is what we propose....<a id='r361' /><a href='#f361' class='c010'><sup>[361]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>Though not his last word on the subject of reconstruction,
-this was the last great speech of Mr. Davis in Congress on the
-question of restoring political power to the rebellious States.
-His alliance with Stevens, a somewhat unnatural union, had
-brought him only disaster. As noticed in the preceding
-chapter, he had been defeated for renomination in his district.
-It is thought that disappointment hastened somewhat his
-early death, which occurred toward the close of the year,
-December 30, 1865. Though a touch of pathos may be discerned
-in his concluding remarks, his was not the craven
-spirit that was ready, in the words of Edgerton, to kiss the
-hand that smote him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Representative Mallory, of Kentucky, on his motion to lay
-the bill and amendments on the table, called for the yeas and
-nays. The question being taken was decided in the affirmative;
-91 voting to lay the bill and amendments on the table;
-64 were opposed, and 27 did not vote.<a id='r362' /><a href='#f362' class='c010'><sup>[362]</sup></a> The Democratic
-members were a unit against the measure, and in a body voted
-to lay it on the table.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The defeat of Davis now appeared complete, but the struggle
-was not to be abandoned without another effort. On
-the following day, February 22, 1865, Mr. Wilson from the
-Committee on the Judiciary reported House Bill No. 740, to
-establish the supremacy of the Constitution in the insurrectionary
-States, with a substitute which provided that neither
-the people nor the legislature of any rebellious State should
-elect Representatives or Senators to Congress until the President
-had proclaimed that armed hostility to the United
-States within such State had ceased; nor until the people of
-such State had adopted a constitution not repugnant to the
-Constitution and laws of the United States; nor until by law
-of Congress such State had been declared entitled to representation
-in the Congress of the United States.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>The authority for this bill he professed to find in the fourth
-section of Article I. of the Constitution, which reads as
-follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Times, Places and Manner of holding elections for Senators and
-Representatives shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature
-thereof; but the Congress may, at any time, by law, make or alter such
-regulations, except as to the Places of choosing Senators.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Wilson was somewhat embarrassed in defending his
-bill. Dawes and Mallory exposed its weakness, and Representative
-Kernan, of New York, believed it would put it in
-the power of the Executive to say whether States should be
-represented in Congress. Fernando Wood observed that
-neither by that bill nor any other could either House of Congress
-be deprived of the right to pass upon the election, returns
-and qualifications of members.<a id='r363' /><a href='#f363' class='c010'><sup>[363]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Ashley at this point moved to amend the substitute
-offered by the Committee on the Judiciary by striking out all
-after the enacting clause and inserting the reconstruction bill
-that was tabled the day before. When a point of order was
-raised against its introduction the Speaker said that there was
-an important amendment; the word “white” having been inserted
-before the expression “male citizen,” thus restricting
-the class to be enrolled by the United States marshal. Mr.
-Kelley would amend it by striking out the word “white.” To
-this the Ohio member had no personal objection; indeed, he
-was abreast of Mr. Kelley in the matter of the suffrage: the
-only restriction he would impose being that of intelligence.
-Ashley appears, however, to have regarded himself as but the
-mouthpiece of his committee by whose authority he had only
-a few months before inserted a provision in his reconstruction
-bill to recognize the Louisiana and Arkansas governments,
-though he expressly declared on a subsequent occasion that he
-was opposed to such recognition.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>By a vote of 80 to 65 the bill and its amendments was again
-laid on the table. Thirty-seven members abstained from
-voting; fourteen Republicans voted with the Democrats.<a id='r364' /><a href='#f364' class='c010'><sup>[364]</sup></a>
-This action was taken on the 22d of February, 1865; the
-session closed on the 4th of March following without any
-further attempt to pass the bill. Before the vote was taken
-Ashley stated his sentiments candidly. He wanted a record
-made on the question. “I do not expect,” said he, “to pass
-this bill now. At the next session, when a new Congress
-fresh from the people shall have assembled, with the nation
-and its Representatives far in advance of the present Congress,
-I hope to pass even a better bill. Sir, I know that our
-loyal people will never be guilty of the infamy of inviting
-the blacks to unite with them in fighting our battles, and after
-our triumph—a triumph which we never could have achieved
-but for their generous coöperation and aid—deny those
-loyal blacks political rights while consenting that pardoned
-but unrepentant white rebels shall again be clothed with the
-entire political power of these States.”<a id='r365' /><a href='#f365' class='c010'><sup>[365]</sup></a> The desire to obtain
-negro suffrage explains the inconsistent course of Representative
-Ashley throughout these debates.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By a singular method of abridging history Mr. Blaine in
-his <cite>Twenty Years of Congress</cite> passes without observation the
-attempt to revive the “pocketed” bill, though it was during
-its discussion that there was for the first time unmistakably
-revealed the existence of a schism in the Republican party.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>IX<br /> <span class='large'>THE ELECTORAL VOTE OF LOUISIANA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>A preceding chapter has noticed the result of the
-Presidential election of 1864. It was thought
-proper, however, to reserve for separate treatment
-the various questions presented by the participation in that
-contest of Louisiana and Tennessee, two States reorganized
-under Executive auspices. On the introduction by Mr. Wilson
-of a joint resolution declaring certain named States not
-entitled to representation in the Electoral College, the entire
-subject came before the House soon after the meeting of
-Congress in December.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The proposed resolution was read twice and referred to the
-Committee on the Judiciary. On the following day, December
-20, 1864, it was reported, ordered to be printed and recommitted.
-Under the operation of the previous question it passed
-the House on January 30 succeeding. Its preamble, which was
-favorably considered at the same time, declared that “the
-inhabitants and local authorities of the States of Virginia,
-North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama,
-Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, and Tennessee rebelled
-against the Government of the United States, and have
-continued in a state of armed rebellion for more than three
-years, and were in a state of armed rebellion on the 8th of
-November, 1864.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The joint resolution provided that these States were not
-entitled to representation in the Electoral College for the
-choice of President and Vice-President for the term of office
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>beginning March 4, 1865, and that no electoral votes from
-them, relative to the choice of said officers for that term,
-should be received or counted.<a id='r366' /><a href='#f366' class='c010'><sup>[366]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In a modified form the measure subsequently passed the
-Senate, which proposed that there be stricken from the preamble
-the words “and were in such condition of armed rebellion
-for more than three years,” and that there be inserted in
-lieu thereof, “and were in such condition on the 8th day of
-November, 1864, that no valid election for electors of President
-and Vice-President, according to the Constitution and
-laws thereof, was held therein on said day.” In this amendment
-the House promptly concurred, February 6, 1865.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the Senate, February 1, Mr. Trumbull asked consideration
-of the measure inasmuch as the electoral votes were to be
-counted a week later. When the amendment was under discussion,
-Senator Ten Eyck, of New Jersey, moved to strike
-out the word “Louisiana” in the preamble, and added that
-it was a matter of history that the State had reorganized, or
-at least attempted to do so, and in the opinion of many, and
-perhaps most, of her loyal citizens had reorganized as a State.
-It was matter of history that they had elected State officers
-and a State Legislature; that they had elected members to a
-constitutional convention and framed a new constitution for
-that State; that the Legislature passed a law authorizing the
-choice of electors for President and Vice-President of the
-United States in the last Presidential election, and that such
-electors had met and cast their votes. “Under these circumstances,”
-said Mr. Ten Eyck, “I think there is a striking distinction
-between the State of Virginia and the State of Louisiana.”
-The object of his amendment, he stated, was to
-afford opportunity to a loyal people who had suffered all the
-horrors of the rebellion, who had got the better of it, and put
-it under foot, of coming back and resuming their place in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>councils of the nation. He did not then desire to make any
-further remarks.<a id='r367' /><a href='#f367' class='c010'><sup>[367]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Trumbull then took up the discussion of Ten Eyck’s
-amendment to the amendment. The electoral votes, he said,
-were to be opened and canvassed a week later, and it was
-known to all that no rules for action had ever been adopted
-in that joint convention. He recalled the fact that in 1856
-there arose a question over the counting of the electoral
-vote of Wisconsin. A severe snow storm had prevented the
-electors from meeting at their State capital on the day fixed
-by law, and it was not until the day following that they were
-able to cast their votes for President and Vice-President.
-The question was not then decided, for Buchanan and Breckenridge
-were the successful candidates in either event, and
-were so declared.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He believed a similar question was likely to arise when the
-electoral votes would be counted on February 8. It was a
-matter of public notoriety, he continued, that several of the
-States included in the President’s proclamation of 1861, Arkansas,
-Tennessee and Louisiana, had cast electoral votes.
-There was a question as to their authority to do so in consequence
-of the insurrection which prevailed there on the 8th
-of November, when the election took place, and the House of
-Representatives had passed the joint resolution declaring that
-the votes of certain named States should not be counted. The
-motion of the Senator from New Jersey would have the effect
-of counting the vote of Louisiana. “If we decide to receive
-the vote from Louisiana,” declared Mr. Trumbull, “it will be
-a decision by the Congress of the United States that the State
-of Louisiana was in such a condition as to vote for President
-and Vice-President on the 8th of November last.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The alteration proposed by the Committee on the Judiciary,
-said he, was for the purpose of avoiding any such committal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>on the subject as the motion of the Senator from New Jersey
-brought up. If the preamble “is adopted and the resolution
-passed, Congress will not have decided whether Louisiana is
-in the Union or out of the Union, whether she is a State or
-not a State.” It would be time enough, he believed, to decide
-that question when it was presented to the Senate. No
-statement of facts, he asserted in reply to Senator Howe,
-accompanied the joint resolution from the Committee on the
-Judiciary; it was a House resolution, and no report accompanied
-it from the House Committee.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A large part of Louisiana, he added, was on the 8th of November
-preceding in the possession of a hostile force. In a
-very considerable portion of the State there was no opportunity
-to vote for President or Vice-President, and it might be a very
-serious question whether, when half a State or the third
-of a State was overrun by an enemy, an election held under
-such circumstances and under the auspices of Federal guns
-would be an election which would authorize the Congress of
-the United States, when in joint convention it came to canvass
-the votes for President and Vice-President, to count
-ballots cast under such circumstances.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In acting upon the resolution he did not mean to commit
-the Senate one way or another relative to the organization
-which had been formed in Louisiana. A decision to strike
-out Louisiana would be to decide that her electoral vote would
-be received and that on November 8th there was a State government
-there. That he did not believe. No evidence, he
-asserted, had been submitted to show how many votes were
-cast.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Pursuant to an act of Congress the President had declared
-the inhabitants of Louisiana in insurrection against the
-United States. That proclamation had not been recalled.
-“Sir,” concluded Mr. Trumbull, “until there shall be some
-action by Congress recognizing the organization which has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>been set up in Louisiana, we ought not in my judgment to
-count electoral votes from the State.” Whether Congress
-would recognize it, he could not say; that had not yet been
-done, and, until it had been, the electoral vote ought not to be
-counted. He hoped, therefore, that Ten Eyck’s amendment
-would not prevail.<a id='r368' /><a href='#f368' class='c010'><sup>[368]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Ten Eyck said it was with great diffidence that he
-undertook to propose an amendment to the resolution; but
-he held the doctrine that these commonwealths having taken
-up their lot and part with their sister States when admitted
-into the Union were not legally out of it; their governments
-had been in abeyance; they had been overrun by the
-feet of hostile armies, and many of their citizens, by usurpation
-and in violation of their duty to their fellow-men and to
-their God, had attempted to carry these States out of the
-Union.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That being his opinion, whenever these States, by the aid
-of the General Government, or by the efforts of their own
-people, or by the act of both combined, reëstablished themselves,
-or set their State governments in action anew, and
-had commenced again to revolve in their old orbits, he should
-feel it his duty, so far as he was concerned, to extend to
-them all the privileges and all the rights to which the loyal
-people of a loyal State were entitled at the hands of their sister
-States, whether upon the floor of the Senate or anywhere else.
-It was to exclude Louisiana from the operation of the resolution
-that he made his motion. As to those States manifestly
-in the condition described in the preamble there was propriety
-in passing the resolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In reply to an observation of the chairman of the Judiciary
-Committee, that the majority desired to avoid a committal on
-this subject, Mr. Ten Eyck suggested that it would not, perhaps,
-be amiss to insist that a committal should not be had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>against the interest of the State any more than in its favor,
-and if his amendment involved the question whether Louisiana
-was in a condition to perform all the functions of a
-State government and to appoint State officers and Senators
-and members of the national House of Representatives, the
-same question was involved in the resolution and it would
-be determined against her if the joint resolution passed as it
-stood; for that would decide that Louisiana was in a state of
-rebellion such as to deprive her of all the powers, rights and
-privileges of a member of the Union. He was not prepared
-to go to that extent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From various memorials, papers and documents that had
-come into possession of the Senate, he continued, and were
-published by its order, as well as from information derived
-from other sources, it appeared that nearly, if not quite, a year
-before an election for State officers was held in Louisiana and
-a very large number of votes cast, about two thirds or approximating
-two thirds of the largest number that had been cast
-at any former election for State officers. Trumbull interrupted
-to remark that no such statements had been received
-by the committee. In those localities which voted, perhaps
-two thirds of the former vote had been cast, but not two
-thirds of that cast in the entire State. Ten Eyck replied that
-the vote was 11,414; it was alleged that a large number of
-former voters had entered the rebel army and a great many
-had been killed. He might be in error concerning the whole
-vote of the State. All these elections were free and uninterrupted
-and without the interference of any military power
-whatever. A person on the ground had declared that “no
-effort whatever was made on the part of the military authorities
-to influence the citizens of the State, either in the selection
-of candidates or in the election of officers, and that the
-direct influence of the Government of the United States was
-less in Louisiana than in the elections probably of any State of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>the Union; that the officers representing the Government,
-both civil and military, were divided, so far as they entertained
-or expressed opinions, on the question of candidates and upon
-the policy pursued in the organization of the government.”
-If any military interference was exerted it was in aid of the
-loyal people, and the civil authority was not at all in subordination
-to the military.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In view of the invitation that had been held out by the
-Government to all the loyal people of those States to come
-back and to endeavor to organize themselves anew and, when
-they had gained sufficient strength, to present themselves
-civilly and quietly at the ballot-box to choose their own State
-officers and to choose delegates to form a new State constitution,
-and when they claim the rights of other States, are
-they to be met by the plea that upon certain out-bounds of
-the State there may still be heard the tread of rebel feet? It
-appeared by all the testimony that the population, the business
-and the property of Louisiana were confined to the
-cities and regions of country immediately bordering upon the
-river, and that the residue of the State was very sparsely
-settled indeed. That portion not submerged was used
-for planting purposes. The wealth and population of the
-State were confined within a small space and this contracted
-area was chiefly under control of the United States. The
-Presidential electors were chosen by the State Legislature,
-and he did not think that method legal. That is why the vote
-cast in the election did not appear in the testimony submitted
-to the Committee on the Judiciary.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As to the withdrawal by the President of his proclamation
-declaring the inhabitants of Louisiana in a state of insurrection,
-if that were the test either the present incumbent or
-his successor could keep the loyal people of those States from
-returning to the Union during the remainder of his administration,
-and, if reëlected, for the following term. This
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>even if every soul within the State were loyal and anxious to
-return.<a id='r369' /><a href='#f369' class='c010'><sup>[369]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Howe announced his intention of voting for the amendment
-of Ten Eyck, though for reasons very different from
-those which influenced the New Jersey Senator. His support
-would not be controlled by the number of citizens who participated
-in the choice of electors. “I am governed,” said he,
-“by the single fact that a statute of your own, existing at the
-time of that election, declared that the people of that State
-had the right to choose electors, and that certain of them
-did participate in making that choice. The Senator from
-Illinois [Trumbull] says but a small portion of the people
-of the State participated in that choice. Your statute said
-that all might. Does the refusal of a large portion or a small
-portion of the people of a State to participate in an election
-deprive the minority, if you please, no matter how small,
-of their right under your statute?” Besides Louisiana he
-understood that two other States had made choice of electors.
-He would vote for an amendment to strike them out of the
-resolution also.<a id='r370' /><a href='#f370' class='c010'><sup>[370]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Trumbull argued that a mere refusal to count the electoral
-vote of Louisiana did not settle the question against the existing
-organization. Wisconsin had a right to vote in 1856,
-and nobody supposed otherwise; but many opposed the counting
-of that vote. The State organization may be perfect and
-yet its electoral vote rejected. If the Senate had refused to
-count Wisconsin’s vote, it would not therefore have decided
-that there was no such State. Ten Eyck promptly indicated
-the weakness of this reasoning by pointing out that the preamble
-of the pending resolution declared Louisiana in such
-a condition of rebellion that no election could be had. Senator
-Trumbull then put the case of a foreign enemy having such
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>possession of Louisiana that no election could be held
-throughout the State, and asked whether the Senator from
-New Jersey would count the electoral vote of Louisiana when
-not twenty men could have assembled in the State and voted
-for President and Vice-President. If the Senate refused to
-count her vote under such circumstances, would it decide that
-the organization of the State of Louisiana was not to be recognized,
-and was repudiated? Whether the organization established
-in Louisiana was a valid one was a question which
-would come before the Senate when they inquired into the
-right to seats of those gentlemen who had presented themselves
-as Senators.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Replying to an assertion of Senator Howe, who was not in
-his seat, Mr. Trumbull said he would like to see the statute
-which gave Louisiana a right to vote in the Presidential election
-of 1864. If any such existed it would be repealed by the
-act of Congress which empowered the President to declare
-the people of certain commonwealths in a state of insurrection.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In referring to the objection of Mr. Ten Eyck that the
-President, if he desired, could keep a State out during his
-entire administration, Senator Trumbull observed that it
-was only necessary for Congress to repeal the act upon which
-the proclamation was based and then the proclamation itself
-would fall.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The refusal of a State to vote when she had an opportunity
-to do so, said Mr. Trumbull, would be no reason for excluding
-her electoral vote; but the people of Louisiana did not
-have an opportunity unawed by hostile armies and unrestrained
-by military authority to vote for President and Vice-President.
-This, he said, was not the real point at issue; the
-question for the Senate to consider and determine was whether
-the Legislature of Louisiana was a lawful assembly, for it was
-by that body that electors of President and Vice-President
-were chosen in the election of 1864.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>Mr. Trumbull believed that on November 8 about three
-fourths of the area of Louisiana was in possession of the Confederates.
-No person could have voted within that jurisdiction.
-Eleven or twelve thousand was the largest vote ever
-cast under these organizations; while the vote of the State,
-when all her legal voters had the privilege of going to the
-polls, was more than 60,000.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Ten Eyck stated that 51,000 was the highest vote
-ever cast, and that the average was but 34,000. Trumbull
-believed the Senate should concur in the House resolution
-and that it need not commit itself one way or the other on
-the Louisiana organization. The counting of the electoral
-vote, which pressed for settlement, should soon be determined.<a id='r371' /><a href='#f371' class='c010'><sup>[371]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Harris thought the question of counting the votes
-could be disposed of without committing the Senate or deciding
-the matter of admitting Senators, as was done in the
-case of Wisconsin in 1856. “If we count the votes of these
-States,” said he, “the number of votes for Mr. Lincoln and
-Mr. Johnson will be so many; if we reject these votes the
-number of votes will be so many; and in either case these candidates
-are elected.” By this or a similar declaration, the
-phraseology of which was suggested by the precedent of 1856,
-the question could be passed over. He asked the chairman
-of the Committee on the Judiciary why Congress had not the
-power to declare that New York should not vote. He opposed
-the preamble because he did not believe it true, and he
-denied that the local authorities in Louisiana, Arkansas and
-Tennessee were in rebellion on the 8th of November preceding.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When, on February 2, Senator Harris resumed his remarks
-he observed that the question as to the power of Congress to
-legislate in relation to the counting of votes for President
-and Vice-President was not considered by the committee.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>Reflection had led him to doubt the competence of Congress
-to legislate on the subject. That body could fix the time for
-choosing electors and specify the time when they should perform
-the functions of their office. That, he contended, was
-the extent of the power of Congress over the subject. He
-could find no authority in the Constitution, however, which
-empowered Congress to pass a law, for the resolution
-amounted to that, excluding any votes returned to the Vice-President.
-Even if Congress had the authority it was inexpedient
-to exercise it. Why should such extreme power
-be exercised when the necessity did not exist? The result, it
-was conceded, would be the same whether Congress counted
-the votes of Louisiana, Tennessee and Arkansas or not. The
-power was not contained in the Constitution. Those States
-specified in the preamble did certainly rebel, but that Louisiana,
-Arkansas and Tennessee were in that condition on
-November 8 was at least open to question.<a id='r372' /><a href='#f372' class='c010'><sup>[372]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Doolittle believed that Congress by legislation
-could provide in advance for the manner of counting electoral
-votes; but that, he insisted, was very different from passing a
-law which declared certain votes null and void after they
-had been cast. That would be retroactive legislation. He
-doubted the power of Congress over the subject of counting
-the electoral votes, beyond that contained in the Constitution.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Congress,” he continued, quoting the fourth clause
-of section one of the second article, “may determine the time
-of choosing the electors, and the day on which they shall give
-their votes; which day shall be the same throughout the
-United States.” Pursuant to this provision Congress passed
-the act of January 23, 1845. It was not for the president
-of the Senate to open such as Congress told him to open, but
-he should “open all the certificates” which were sent to him,
-“and the votes shall then be counted.” Here, said the Senator,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>arose the grave question whether the president of the
-joint convention was made the sole judge as to what votes
-should be counted. The question practically came up in 1856,
-but it was not then necessary to decide it, and it was waived
-as not being essential to the result. On the present occasion,
-1865, it was the same, the result of the election would not
-be affected by the matter of counting or not counting the
-votes of Tennessee and Louisiana; but it was not necessary
-for Congress to assert a doctrine which in some future
-time might be the very destruction of the Government, namely,
-“That a political party in Congress can decide that certain
-votes of certain States shall be canceled and others shall be
-received. It will never do to set that precedent.” It would
-be time enough, he said in conclusion, to meet the question
-when it came up in the joint convention.<a id='r373' /><a href='#f373' class='c010'><sup>[373]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Hale said that he had foreseen the difficulty and at the
-preceding session had introduced a joint resolution directing
-in advance what should be done; but the pressure of other
-business, certainly not more important, prevented action
-thereon. If the result of the Presidential election had depended
-upon the votes of Louisiana, Tennessee and Arkansas
-would the party have submitted against which their votes
-had been cast? The rebellion then existing was caused, he
-believed, by nothing at all in comparison with such a question.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He denied the assertion of Senator Doolittle that Congress
-had no power over the counting of the electoral votes. Suppose,
-he argued, that, contrary to the constitutional provision,
-a member of Congress or any officer of the Federal Government
-holding an office of profit or trust happened to be an
-elector, would not Congress have power to say that such vote
-of Federal officer should not be counted?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The framers of the Constitution, he declared, made the
-most ample provision for just such a case. That instrument
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>confers on Congress the power “to make all laws which shall
-be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing
-powers, and all other powers vested by this Constitution
-in the Government of the United States.” Was not the
-power to choose a President one vested in the Government
-of the United States?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Hale contended that then, when action by Congress
-would not affect the result of the election, was the time to
-settle the principle, and the precedent could be pointed to
-showing the action and sentiment of Congress at a time when
-there was no inducement to anything but an honest and
-straightforward decision of the case.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Suppose, he went on, that Nevada while in the territorial
-condition had grown restless under her provincial state and
-had sent certificates signed by her electors, would Congress
-have no authority to say whether they should be counted?
-In Washington’s first election the vote of New York State
-was not counted. Now her Senator, Mr. Harris, doubted the
-competence of Congress either to exclude, or refuse to count,
-the votes of a State.<a id='r374' /><a href='#f374' class='c010'><sup>[374]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Doolittle objected to being quoted quite so strongly as
-to say that Congress had no power over this subject. Congress
-had power over the subject, but that power was limited.
-When the Constitution says that the States shall do certain
-things, such as directing the appointment of electors, that is a
-limitation on the power of Congress over the matter. What
-he maintained was that after the ballots had been cast there
-was no power in Congress as a legislative body to declare
-certain votes valid or invalid. The tribunal to which the
-question was referred was the president of the Senate presiding
-over the joint convention of both Houses. The power
-in the first instance was with that officer to count or not to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>count the votes. He was to decide whether they were from
-States or from Territories.<a id='r375' /><a href='#f375' class='c010'><sup>[375]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Trumbull maintained that so far from being empowered
-to decide disputes, the president of the joint convention
-was not authorized to even count the votes. In the
-practice of the Government the Vice-President had never
-since the days of Washington counted the votes. The Constitution
-says that he shall “open all the certificates and the
-votes shall then be counted.” It does not state by whom,
-but it does state that Congress has power to pass all laws
-necessary to carry the instrument into effect. Congress, he
-said, had exercised such power from the beginning.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There was no legal difference, he asserted, between South
-Carolina and Louisiana. An individual trading in the latter
-State, except under a particular license, could be taken up
-and tried as a felon, and yet “we are told that we cannot
-determine by act of Congress that they cannot elect a President
-for us!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Trumbull contended that if a question arose upon the
-counting of the vote of any State, the joint convention could
-not decide upon it. The bodies would have to separate and,
-by passing a concurrent resolution, each act independently.
-There was no popular election, he said, in the State of Louisiana,
-but a body assuming to be its Legislature had appointed
-electors of President and Vice-President. He did
-not know whether the new constitution of Louisiana authorized
-that method.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The purpose of the Senate, he continued, in amending the
-joint resolution of the House was to avoid declaring that the
-people of Louisiana were on the 8th of November in a state
-of armed insurrection. The preamble, even as it was
-amended, did not wholly satisfy him; he believed that he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>would be better pleased if it was altogether omitted. He was
-informed that Tennessee had sent a vote as well as Louisiana.
-The object of the committee was to settle the question before
-the meeting of the joint convention.<a id='r376' /><a href='#f376' class='c010'><sup>[376]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Collamer thought that any law honestly intended
-to carry into effect the provisions of the Constitution could
-not be objected to. It could if it opposed or was inconsistent
-with that instrument. There had been legislation on the
-subject and additional action by Congress might be necessary.
-For the resolution he offered the following substitute:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That the people of no State, the inhabitants whereof have been
-declared in a state of insurrection by virtue of the fifth section of the
-act entitled “An act further to provide for the collection of duties on
-imports, and for other purposes,” approved July 13, 1861, shall be regarded
-as empowered to elect electors of President and Vice-President
-of the United States until said condition of insurrection shall cease and
-be so declared by virtue of a law of the United States.<a id='r377' /><a href='#f377' class='c010'><sup>[377]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By Mr. Howard the question was regarded as of very great
-importance not only as a precedent for the future, but “as
-indicating the opinion of Congress on the subject, to use a
-familiar term, of ‘reconstruction,’ or rather the rights of the
-States in rebellion.” He believed it clear that the Vice-President
-was to open the certificates and that the duty of counting
-devolved upon the two Houses thus assembled. The act of
-1792 seemed so to construe the Constitution.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The power of counting the votes,” he asserted, “and of
-rejecting votes which are void for fraud or illegality, is, under
-the Constitution, in the joint convention thus assembled.”
-There was no doubt about it, he declared, because the Houses
-convened for a great and protective purpose; they were exercising
-the tutelary authority of the people, in protecting the
-nation from the imposition of false and fraudulent ballots and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>certificates. The inhabitants of the States mentioned in the
-proclamation of the President were public enemies; therefore
-they had no political rights under the United States.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I look upon this measure as necessary,” continued Mr.
-Howard, “as one form in which the sense of Congress ought
-to be expressed against any hasty attempt to readmit these
-rebellious States into the Union.” For one, he would require
-the loyalty and friendliness of a majority of the people of the
-rebellious States to be proved before readmitting any of them.
-“The theory of our Government,” he went on, “is different
-from that of almost every other government on earth. It is
-that the will of the majority shall govern; in common phrase,
-the majority of the people, but practically the majority of the
-voting population.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In conclusion he declared that it was “the bounden duty of
-Congress, in every case, to keep out of the Union every one
-of these eleven seceded States until, in pursuance of our laws,
-passed or to be passed, it has become perfectly evident to us
-that there is in such a State a clear, absolute majority of its
-voting population friendly to the Government of the United
-States, and willing to proceed in the discharge of their functions
-as a State; and, until that is done, you may be perfectly
-sure, so long as I hold a seat in this body, my vote will be
-given against any such proposal. I never will consent to admit
-into this Union a State a majority of whose people are
-hostile and unfriendly to the Government of my country. I
-prefer to hold them in tutelage (for that is really the word)
-one year, five years, ten years, even twenty years, rather than
-run the risk of a repetition of this rebellion, which has cost
-us so much blood and treasure.”<a id='r378' /><a href='#f378' class='c010'><sup>[378]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Ten Eyck, considering Louisiana as the strongest case, mentioned
-it in preference to Arkansas or Tennessee, and, from a
-paper furnished by a gentleman who was familiar with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>situation there, was able to state that “eleven thousand four
-hundred and fourteen votes were polled at this election. The
-average vote for ten years prior to the rebellion in these
-parishes was fifteen to sixteen thousand.” The same parishes
-cast their highest vote, 21,000, in 1860. He expressed
-a wish to save Tennessee also from the effect of the resolution,
-and declared that he did not see how the Vice-President-elect,
-an alien, could preside over the Senate. Further, a vote in
-favor of the resolution prejudged the case of the Senators and
-the legality of the Legislature which sent them.<a id='r379' /><a href='#f379' class='c010'><sup>[379]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Pomeroy did not suppose that States unrepresented
-in either House could be represented in the Electoral College.
-He criticised the correctness of the preamble so far as it related
-to Arkansas. The rebel governor as well as the rebel
-legislature, he said, was driven out long ago.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Arkansas,” he continued, “has not voted at all in the
-Presidential election.... Under the instructions and
-impressions that the members from Arkansas received here
-last session, they distinctly understood that States not represented
-in either branch of Congress would have no right to
-vote at the Presidential election. They returned to Arkansas
-and so reported, and they never had any election; there are no
-votes here from that State. They have been in suspense
-awaiting the action of Congress.” The resolution itself did
-not, of course, affect Arkansas, for there were no votes from
-that State to be counted.<a id='r380' /><a href='#f380' class='c010'><sup>[380]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Cowan, probably adopting a hint dropped by Senator
-Ten Eyck, noticed the fact that the proclamation of January
-1, 1863, exempted from its operations thirteen named parishes
-of Louisiana because no rebellion existed in them. The
-validity of that decree had been recognized, while the proclamation
-of December 8 following invited the people of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>Louisiana and other States to resume their rights. The question
-was whether the arrangements of the President were to
-be executed in good faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was the duty of the Executive, he continued, “to put
-down this rebellion, to relieve the people from its oppression,
-and to restore them precisely to where they were when the
-rebellion found them. If that is done, in ten days after his
-proclamation, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">eo instanti</span></i>, the people resume their rights and
-functions; and in this case I understand they are not only in
-possession of the right, but are actually in the enjoyment of
-it, having a regularly organized government with all the machinery
-necessary and proper to a government.” He believed
-that men and money were furnished the President to
-sustain State governments and make them supreme within
-their own limits.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Concluding this portion of his remarks he said: “Mr.
-President, this involves a direct conflict between the Legislative
-and Executive bodies of this Government, and at this
-time I am of opinion that we cannot afford to enter into that
-conflict.”<a id='r381' /><a href='#f381' class='c010'><sup>[381]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Powell, of Kentucky, said that when it was asserted
-that General Banks did not interfere in the Louisiana election
-the statement was not true, for there could be no greater interference
-in the elections of a State than to alter the qualifications
-of voters. He declared himself “opposed to admitting
-on this floor persons who are elected under the bayonet influence
-in any way whatever. I very well know that there
-was no free expression of the people of Louisiana in these
-elections. I know that they but obeyed the behests of the
-military, whatever commanders may say about it....
-But for its tragical results upon republican liberty it [the
-election] would be the greatest of farces.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Kentucky member believed that the rebellious States
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>were still in the Union, and when a majority of the people
-in any of them returned to loyalty, when their governments
-were organized, their Senators and Representatives should be
-received.<a id='r382' /><a href='#f382' class='c010'><sup>[382]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Cowan, entering again into the discussion, said: “We are
-bound by the Constitution to preserve the Union and to preserve
-the rights of the people under the Union; not merely
-the rights of a majority, but the rights of the people, of all
-the people, and of any number of the people however small.
-What are we to do? A minority of the people come forward
-and say, ‘If you aid us for a while we can preserve this State
-and keep her in the Union.’ ‘But no,’ according to the doctrine
-advanced here, ‘there must be a majority of you
-before we can recognize you as in the Union.’...
-That will be very poor encouragement for the loyal men of the
-rebel States to try and bring back their people to reason.”
-The Pennsylvania Senator was one of the few who adhered
-to the opinion that the masses of men at the South
-were not disloyal; that it was a leaders’ rebellion.<a id='r383' /><a href='#f383' class='c010'><sup>[383]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sherman, of Ohio, described the scene in the joint convention
-of 1856 when Humphrey Marshall wanted to speak
-and Mr. Mason, president of the Senate, refused to recognize
-him. Speaker Banks, however, did recognize him; upon this,
-Mason and others left the convention, and confusion ensued;
-that, Mr. Sherman believed, was a reason why the resolution
-should be disposed of.<a id='r384' /><a href='#f384' class='c010'><sup>[384]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Wade said: “About a year ago Congress, anticipating
-that such questions as this might arise, in my judgment very
-wisely framed a law and passed it through both branches with
-the hope of settling this matter in advance. That law was
-made upon great deliberation in both bodies of Congress:
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>it received a very large vote in each House. It was very
-proper in my judgment that Congress should fix the matter
-then, because everybody could anticipate that a question of
-the most serious danger to the Republic might arise in the
-then approaching Presidential election, which might endanger
-the stability of our Union, and which might under certain circumstances
-precipitate these Northern States into a civil war.
-Apprehending that such a question might arise, Congress
-wisely, in my judgment, provided against it; but the President
-did not agree with them, and he vetoed their bill, leaving
-the question open with all its dangers, which, thank God,
-have not arisen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The President, added Mr. Wade, chose to pocket the bill,
-“and, as I suppose, he did it in defence of the proclamation
-which he had put forth, declaring that whenever a tenth part
-of the people of a State would come back, he would recognize
-them as the State and as part and parcel of this Government—a
-proposition which, with all my respect for the Chief
-Magistrate, I am bound to say is the most absurd and impracticable
-that ever haunted the imagination of a statesman....
-And I must say of that proclamation of the
-President that it was the most contentious, the most anarchical,
-the most dangerous proposition that was ever put
-forth for the government of a free people.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“... I had a conversation with the now Vice-President-elect
-of the United States on that subject, and with
-other gentlemen on the Union side in the Southern States,
-and I do not know of one of them who was not filled with the
-deepest apprehension that if this principle should prevail they
-would be annihilated by the nine tenths.”<a id='r385' /><a href='#f385' class='c010'><sup>[385]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As to permitting citizens of Louisiana who were serving
-in the army and navy to vote in the election of February 22,
-1864, Mr. Doolittle observed: “We have done the same thing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>in Wisconsin, in Ohio, in Pennsylvania, in New York, all
-growing out of exigencies which have occurred since this
-rebellion began, passing laws, authorizing men, although in
-the Army of the United States, still to take part in the elections,
-providing that they should not be deprived of their
-rights of citizenship because they had enlisted in the Army to
-bear all the sacrifices which are necessary to defend their
-country in this struggle. And, sir, I maintain that there
-was nothing wrong in this.”<a id='r386' /><a href='#f386' class='c010'><sup>[386]</sup></a> Even if it were wrong, only
-808 soldiers, he asserted, participated in the election. A
-separate registry of this vote had been kept by General Banks.
-So far, therefore, from being a military usurpation it was an
-attempt of the President to lay down the military power.
-This he was endeavoring in good faith to do.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After a somewhat excited defence of the Administration
-by Senator Doolittle, and severe attacks on both President
-Lincoln and General Banks by Mr. Powell and others, Ten
-Eyck’s motion to strike out Louisiana from the joint resolution
-was defeated, February 3, 1865, by a vote of 22 to 16.<a id='r387' /><a href='#f387' class='c010'><sup>[387]</sup></a>
-Lane’s motion immediately after to strike out the preamble,
-which would leave only an unmeaning resolution, was lost by
-a vote of 30 nays to 12 yeas.<a id='r388' /><a href='#f388' class='c010'><sup>[388]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Harris proposed to amend Mr. Collamer’s substitute
-by resolving, “That it is inexpedient to determine the
-question as to the validity of the election of electors in the
-said States of Tennessee and Louisiana, and that in counting
-the votes for President and Vice-President the result be declared
-as it would stand if the votes of the said States were
-counted, and also as it would stand if the votes of the said
-States were excluded, such result being the same in either
-case.” By nearly the same majority this proposition also was
-voted down without much discussion.<a id='r389' /><a href='#f389' class='c010'><sup>[389]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>Reverdy Johnson, who favored the House resolution as
-amended by the Committee on the Judiciary, did not think
-the rebellious States were out of the Union, and asserted that
-there was no power in any branch of Government to declare
-war against a State. Referring to the Whiskey Insurrection
-in Washington’s administration, he said that Congress passed
-no act declaring it at an end. The President declared it. It
-ended itself. The insurrectionists laid down their arms, and
-expressed willingness to yield obedience to the United States;
-that ended the insurrection and disbanded the Federal forces,
-“and that happening, the State of Pennsylvania, every part
-of it, stood exactly in the relation, for all purposes, in which
-the State and every part of it stood before the insurrection
-was commenced.”<a id='r390' /><a href='#f390' class='c010'><sup>[390]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Collamer said that the real point in Senator Johnson’s
-argument was whether Congress had anything to do in the
-reorganization or reëstablishment of those States. Mr.
-Johnson, continued the Senator from Vermont, seemed to
-think not. On resuming his speech, February 4, 1865, he
-inquired: “When will, and when ought, Congress to admit
-these States as being in their normal condition? When they
-see that they furnish evidence of it. It is not enough that
-they stop their hostility and are repentant. They should
-present fruits meet for repentance. They should furnish to
-us by their actions some evidence that the condition of
-loyalty and obedience is their true condition again, and
-Congress must pass upon it; otherwise we have no
-securities. It is not enough that they lay down their
-arms. Our courts should be established, our taxes
-should be gathered, our duties should be collected in those
-States; and before they come here to perform their duties
-or privileges again as members of this Union, they should
-place themselves in an attitude showing to us that they have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>truly taken that position, and we should pass upon it; and I
-insist that the President, making peace with them, if you
-please, by surceasing military operations, does not alter their
-status until Congress passes upon it.... I believe that
-when reëstablishing the condition of peace with that people,
-Congress, representing the United States, has power, in ending
-this war as any other war, to get some security for the
-future.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The guaranty clause, Mr. Collamer asserted, implied that
-States were to be kept in the Union; it was inserted for the
-security of the minority in a State, though there might be
-but one man there to redeem Sodom. No one State could
-discharge the United States from a performance of that obligation.
-To keep it Congress, if it was essential to maintaining
-a republican form of government, could abolish
-slavery if that institution stood in the way of performing the
-guaranty. Before restoring the States, he added in conclusion,
-the President would need the assistance of Congress,
-else how could he get rid of the confiscation act.<a id='r391' /><a href='#f391' class='c010'><sup>[391]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Collamer’s substitute, which shared the fate of the amendment
-offered by Ten Eyck, could be construed only by an examination
-of the President’s proclamation to ascertain what
-States were in insurrection.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To the preamble, which stated that four years earlier certain
-designated States had rebelled, and on the 8th of November
-preceding were in such condition of rebellion that no
-valid election for the choice of electors of President and
-Vice-President could be held there, Senator Pomeroy objected
-that the rebel governor of Arkansas had been killed,
-and the entire disloyal government destroyed. When the
-election was held the real local authorities in that State were
-Union men. It would not be true, as the preamble declared,
-that these authorities were in rebellion on November 8. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>terms of the disloyal officials in Arkansas had expired by
-limitation; the chief men in that government were not alive
-to exert any influence if they were disposed to do so. It
-was not true to say that they made war on the United States
-on the 8th of November, 1864, or that they were then in
-condition to do so. Since the rebellion began they never had
-but one election.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Pomeroy’s amendment to substitute for “state of rebellion”
-the word “condition” was carried by a vote of 26 to
-13. The preamble, as thus perfected, declared that certain
-States had rebelled four years before, and on November 8
-were in such “condition” that no valid election was held.<a id='r392' /><a href='#f392' class='c010'><sup>[392]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Lane believed that for the protection of Union men
-in those States a loyal government was indispensable, and
-that it did more to demoralize the insurgents and to close out
-the rebellion than any other act that could be accomplished.
-It would be worth more than all the victories that could be
-gained in the field.<a id='r393' /><a href='#f393' class='c010'><sup>[393]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Howe in closing the debate observed that four days
-had been spent in discussing not the passage of the joint
-resolution, but the reason to be assigned in its preamble for
-excluding the vote of certain States. It belonged to the
-legislatures of those commonwealths, he maintained, to declare
-whether valid elections had been held there. He distrusted
-that sort of legislation, and in conclusion said: “If you will
-take hold of the question of the political relations of these
-communities, and if you will tell what is the truth, and has
-been the truth since 1861, that there are no State organizations
-there, no State governments, I am with you. When you establish
-that, you know what they may and what they may not
-do.”<a id='r394' /><a href='#f394' class='c010'><sup>[394]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>By a vote of 29 to 10 the joint resolution was passed on
-February 4. In the record the names of Cowan, Doolittle,
-Harris, Howe, Lane of Kansas, Nesmith, Saulsbury, Ten
-Eyck, Van Winkle and Willey appear in opposition.<a id='r395' /><a href='#f395' class='c010'><sup>[395]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For the purpose of canvassing the electoral votes, both
-Houses assembled in joint convention four days later, February
-8, 1865. The Vice-President in discharge of his duty
-proceeded to open and hand to the tellers the votes of the
-several States, beginning with Maine. No one dissenting
-it was agreed on a suggestion by Senator Wade to dispense
-with the reading of everything in the certificate except the
-result of the vote.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When all the votes had been recorded, Cowan said: “Mr.
-President, I inquire whether there are any further returns to
-be counted.” The Vice-President replied in the negative.
-To his former question Mr. Cowan then added, “And if
-there be, I would inquire why they are not submitted to this
-body in joint convention, which is alone capable of determining
-whether they should be counted or not.” The Vice-President
-acknowledged that he had in his possession returns
-from the States of Louisiana and Tennessee, but in obedience
-to the law of the land “the Chair holds it to be his
-duty not to present them to the convention.” The Pennsylvania
-Senator thereupon inquired whether the joint resolution
-had been signed by the President, and was informed that
-while the official communication of its approval had not been
-received by either House, the Chair had been apprised that
-the resolution had received the Executive approval.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Cowan then suggested that, as a motion was not in order,
-the votes of Louisiana and Tennessee be counted, and that
-the convention determine the fact. Representative Cox immediately
-recommended the reading of the joint rule under
-which both Houses were then acting. On being directed by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>the Vice-President the secretary complied with this suggestion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thaddeus Stevens did not think any question had arisen
-which required the two Houses to separate, for that, according
-to the language of the joint resolution, could only occur
-upon the reading of those returns which had been opened
-by the president of the convention.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Cowan did what he could to bring the question before
-the two Houses, and failing, withdrew it. The result, after
-some further effort to call up the returns from Louisiana and
-Tennessee, was then announced. The tellers reported that for
-President of the United States Abraham Lincoln had received
-212, and George B. McClellan 21 votes; that for
-Vice-President Andrew Johnson had received 212, and George
-H. Pendleton 21 votes.<a id='r396' /><a href='#f396' class='c010'><sup>[396]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On February 10 the president <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">pro tempore</span></i> laid before the
-Senate the following communication from Mr. Lincoln:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>To the honorable the Senate and House of Representatives</em>:</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The joint resolution entitled “Joint resolution declaring certain States
-not entitled to representation in the Electoral College” has been signed
-by the Executive, in deference to the view of Congress implied in its
-passage and presentation to him. In his own view, however, the two
-Houses of Congress, convened under the twelfth article of the Constitution,
-have complete power to exclude from counting all electoral votes
-deemed by them to be illegal; and it is not competent for the Executive
-to defeat or obstruct that power by a veto, as would be the case if his
-action were at all essential in the matter. He disclaims all right of the
-Executive to interfere in any way in the matter of canvassing or
-counting electoral votes, and he also disclaims that, by signing said
-resolution, he has expressed any opinion on the recitals of the preamble,
-or any judgment of his own upon the subject of the resolution.<a id='r397' /><a href='#f397' class='c010'><sup>[397]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Except for a brief speech by Reverdy Johnson this message
-was received in silence by the Senate. Mr. Johnson commented
-upon the extraordinary course of the President, whose
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>duty, he said, was clearly to approve or to disapprove, not
-virtually to read a lecture to the Senate as he had done. The
-Maryland member did not doubt that the motives of the
-President were perfectly correct and patriotic, but it was
-not the first time, he asserted, that that had been done. The
-bill for the reconstruction of the seceded States passed both
-Houses by an overwhelming majority; but it was defeated
-by the President’s failure to approve, and the adjournment
-of Congress before ten days elapsed. In his manifesto or
-proclamation he approved portions and disapproved others.<a id='r398' /><a href='#f398' class='c010'><sup>[398]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Short as this paper was, however, it was entirely characteristic
-of the President. This little lesson in constitutional
-law is only another proof that Mr. Lincoln possessed in an
-eminent degree the faculty of seeing clearly through the
-most intricate question. His disposal of this difficulty as well
-as his reflections on Congress remind one of the facility with
-which he straightened out for General Butler the liquor problem
-at Norfolk. The succeeding chapter will describe another
-phase of the controversy between the political departments
-of the Government.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>X<br /> <span class='large'>SENATE DEBATE ON LOUISIANA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>At the opening of its second session, December 5,
-1864, the Speaker of the Thirty-eighth Congress
-laid before the House the credentials of W. D.
-Mann, T. M. Wells, Robert W. Taliaferro, A. P. Field and
-M. F. Bonzano, who claimed seats as Representatives from
-the State of Louisiana. A petition, signed by numerous
-citizens of that commonwealth, protesting against the admission
-of these claimants, was referred at the same time on
-motion of Henry Winter Davis to the Committee of Elections
-in connection with their credentials, which had already received
-the same direction. On the 13th this remonstrance
-was ordered to be printed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Dawes on February 11 following reported that “M.
-F. Bonzano is entitled to a seat in this House as a Representative
-from the First Congressional District of Louisiana.”
-Six days later he presented a report and resolutions from his
-committee to the effect that Messrs. Field and Mann from the
-Second and Third Districts, respectively, were also entitled
-to seats. These reports with the accompanying resolutions
-were laid on the table and ordered to be printed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>No further action was taken on the question of their admission,
-but on March 3, 1865, Chairman Dawes by unanimous
-consent reported from the Committee of Elections a
-resolution that there be paid to each of the Louisiana claimants
-for compensation, expenses and mileage the sum of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>$2,000 and a like amount to T. M. Jacks, J. M. Johnson and
-A. A. C. Rogers, claimants from Arkansas.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The House, however, was not nearly so unanimous as its
-committee. Mr. Washburne remarked that Congress, by
-allowing at the last session the sum of $1,500 to one gentleman
-who claimed a seat, had fixed a sort of rule in such
-cases. That amount he would, probably, not object to paying
-to the present applicants; but if large payments, such as the
-compensation proposed by the resolution, were made to men
-coming to the Capitol it was feared they might not soon stop.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Representative Johnson, of Pennsylvania, believed that regardless
-of their right to seats they should be compensated
-because they had been encouraged to come; they appeared at
-the Capitol, he asserted, with an honest expectation of getting
-seats, and in an honest effort to restore popular government
-to their States.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Dawes declared that they came not as adventurers but
-under what they supposed was the policy of the General
-Government; hence the favorable recommendation of the
-committee. When he demanded the previous question,
-Representative Brandegee moved to lay the resolution on
-the table. Thaddeus Stevens asked to strike out the words
-“claimants for seats.” To this the Massachusetts member
-offered no objection. “I do not want to recognize the idea,”
-added Stevens, “that anybody on earth thinks that these men
-are entitled to seats.”<a id='r399' /><a href='#f399' class='c010'><sup>[399]</sup></a> This request, however, was denied,
-and the resolution was then adopted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was during their three months’ sojourn in Washington
-that one of the claimants, A. P. Field, committed an assault
-upon Representative William D. Kelley, of Pennsylvania,
-whom he regarded as the chief obstacle to their admission.
-This occurrence, which took place on February 20 at the
-Willard Hotel, was due, no doubt, to the artificial excitement
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>of the Louisiana claimant, but was without influence upon
-the action of the House.<a id='r400' /><a href='#f400' class='c010'><sup>[400]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The General Assembly of Louisiana, as previously related,
-had chosen Charles Smith and R. King Cutler as United
-States Senators. With the Representatives-elect these gentlemen
-also appeared in Washington as claimants for seats.
-On December 7, two days after Congress assembled, the
-president <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">pro tempore</span></i> presented certain proceedings of the
-Louisiana Legislature declaratory of the election of Smith
-and Cutler. The papers, it was announced, would lie on the
-table unless otherwise ordered. Just as Henry Winter Davis
-had done in the House, Senator Wade offered a memorial
-from Louisiana citizens remonstrating against their admission,
-and also against the reception of any electoral vote from
-that State. On his motion it was agreed that all documents
-pertaining to the subject be printed. On the following day,
-December 8, the credentials as well as the remonstrance were
-referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Trumbull on February 17 succeeding made a report
-from his committee, and offered a joint resolution relative
-to the credentials of Smith and Cutler. At the request of
-Charles Sumner the resolution was read at length and was
-as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That the United States do hereby recognize the government of the
-State of Louisiana, inaugurated under and by the convention which
-assembled on the 6th day of April, A. D., 1864, at the city of New
-Orleans, as the legitimate government of the said State, and entitled to
-the guarantees and all other rights of a State government under the
-Constitution of the United States.<a id='r401' /><a href='#f401' class='c010'><sup>[401]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This resolution was limited to Louisiana because the facts,
-while in many respects similar, were not identical with those
-in the case of Arkansas. Besides, when the subject first came
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>up in committee the Arkansas case had not been presented,
-though it arose before Louisiana had been disposed of.
-Trumbull believed it the intention of the committee to act
-immediately upon Arkansas when the case of Louisiana had
-been considered.<a id='r402' /><a href='#f402' class='c010'><sup>[402]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sumner moved, February 23, to strike out all of the joint
-resolution except the enacting clause, and to substitute the
-following:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That neither the people nor the Legislature of any State, the people
-of which were declared to be in insurrection against the United States
-by the proclamation of the President, dated August 16, 1861, shall hereafter
-elect Representatives or Senators to the Congress of the United
-States until the President, by proclamation, shall have declared that
-armed hostility to the Government of the United States within such
-State has ceased; nor until the people of such State shall have adopted
-a constitution of government not repugnant to the Constitution and
-laws of the United States; nor until, by a law of Congress, such State
-shall have been declared to be entitled to representation in the Congress
-of the United States of America.<a id='r403' /><a href='#f403' class='c010'><sup>[403]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To this amendment Senator Trumbull objected that it
-would put it in the power of the President, by refusing to issue
-his proclamation, to keep a State out forever. Sumner’s substitute
-was promptly defeated by a vote of 29 to 8.<a id='r404' /><a href='#f404' class='c010'><sup>[404]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of the members of the committee Powell alone opposed
-the resolution offered by Mr. Trumbull. The chief object in
-recognizing the government of Louisiana at that time, said
-the Kentucky Senator, was to allow that State to vote for the
-proposed amendment of the Constitution; to do that effectually
-those favorable to the resolution desired first to admit
-her Senators and Representatives; their admission would be
-the immediate effect of its passage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A just conclusion on that subject could be reached only
-by information concerning the action of the President, of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>military, and of the people of Louisiana in connection with
-the election. He opposed the loyal government because it
-was not formed by the people of that State; however, he did
-not want to be classed with those who thought Louisiana out
-of the Union. He believed that something approximating a
-majority of her people should indicate a willingness to return
-to the Union, and should participate in the movement
-for reorganization. The formation of the existing government,
-he asserted, was controlled and influenced by persons
-who were not citizens of Louisiana, and, he added, “It is
-a government formed really and virtually by the military
-power of the United States, using as instruments delegates
-who were elected under and by force of the bayonet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Before Senators could vote for the resolution, he continued,
-they must maintain the doctrine announced in the
-President’s proclamation of December 8, 1863, when he proposed
-that one tenth of the loyal voters in a State who would
-comply with the conditions therein prescribed, could form a
-State government; they must further maintain that the President,
-of his own volition, had power by decretal order to alter
-the constitution of a State; that the President had power to
-prescribe the qualifications both of voters and candidates for
-office in the States; finally they must believe that not only did
-the President possess these powers, but that Major-General
-Banks, in virtue of his office, possessed them in Louisiana.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Powell proposed to show that not only did Louisiana
-people not act of their own volition, but that “they were coerced
-to do what they did.” The constitution of that State,
-he asserted, was not made by the free suffrage of the people.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The creation of a State government is a purely civil act; the
-people must act without restraint. He had never heard any
-Senator say that the President could legitimately exercise the
-power assumed in his proclamation of December 8, 1863.
-Mr. Powell objected to the oath which was to be taken as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>a condition precedent to becoming a qualified elector in one
-of the revolted States, especially to that portion which promised
-support of all future proclamations of the President on
-the question of slavery. “Why, sir,” he exclaimed, “the
-President may proclaim that the negro shall be the master
-and the white man the slave; that the negro shall be the voter
-and the white man deprived of the right of suffrage; and yet
-this oath requires the man taking it to swear in advance
-that he would support even such a measure as that....</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“At the very threshold, then,” he continued, “you repudiate
-the great principle of republican government that majorities
-shall rule. Here you propose to say not that majorities, but
-that less than one tenth shall rule.” It was intimated by the
-President that when they made a constitution it must not recognize
-African slavery. General Banks, carrying out the
-suggestion of the President, as well as what had been distinctly
-stated to General Steele in relation to Arkansas, took it
-upon himself to alter the constitution of Louisiana in that
-respect.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Whence does the President, it was asked, derive the power
-to prescribe qualifications for either electors or candidates?
-The proclamation, the Kentucky Senator asserted, was the
-basis of the whole proceeding, and those who voted for the
-resolution endorsed the proclamation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Powell then reviewed the acts and read the proclamation
-of General Banks, whose conduct he denounced for presuming
-to declare certain parts of the Louisiana constitution
-no longer applicable to any class of persons in that State, and,
-therefore, inoperative and void.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He further objected that Banks had no authority to call
-the convention, for the constitution of Louisiana could be
-lawfully amended in only the mode pointed out by itself.
-The President’s proclamation, he added, would allow only
-those to vote who were qualified electors under the fundamental
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>law of the State; those in the army and navy were
-not, but General Banks in his ukase of February 13, 1864,
-allowed them to participate in the election.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He also invited attention to the action of the Department
-Commander in designating provost marshals to take care that
-the polls were properly opened, in the absence of the sheriffs,
-and that suitable persons were appointed judges of election
-and so forth. Of the 11,414 votes he asserted that 808 were
-cast by soldiers who under the President’s proclamation
-were not legal voters. The fact, added Mr. Powell, that
-General Banks after the inauguration of Hahn as governor
-continued to issue proclamations shows that the civil was controlled
-by the military authority.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Passing on to a discussion of the statement of Banks before
-the Committee on the Judiciary that the military did not
-interfere in the election of February 22, Senator Powell
-quoted the following passages from a proclamation of the
-Department Commander:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Those who have exercised or are entitled to the rights of citizens of
-the United States will be required to participate in the measures necessary
-for the reëstablishment of civil government.... It is therefore
-a solemn duty resting upon all persons to assist in the earliest
-possible restoration of civil government. Let them participate in the
-measures suggested for this purpose. Opinion is free and candidates are
-numerous. Open hostility cannot be permitted. Indifference will be
-treated as a crime, and faction as treason.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Talk to me,” exclaimed Mr. Powell, “of freedom of
-election under such military orders! Why, sir, there was
-but one free man, in my opinion, in all Louisiana at that time,
-and that was Major-General Banks; and I do not know that
-he was free, for he was serving his master at the White
-House.” The fundamental law there was martial law, which
-is but the will of the commander-in-chief, and under that law
-he could have beheaded them if they did not vote.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From beginning to end, he continued, the coercive finger
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>of the military was engaged in the establishment of that
-government. Under the various proclamations even Unionists,
-men who had always been loyal, could not vote unless
-they took the oath required in the President’s proclamation.
-There was a large class of loyal men in Louisiana, he said,
-who refused to take that oath, for there had been presented
-to the Judiciary Committee an earnest protest signed by
-Thomas J. Durant and thirty-one others, influential Union
-men of that State, against the admission of Senators and
-Representatives and against counting its electoral vote.
-Those Senators, he added toward the conclusion of his remarks,
-who only a few days before opposed the counting of
-Louisiana’s electoral vote should now vote against the resolution
-acknowledging the government which appointed the
-Senators that are claiming seats.<a id='r405' /><a href='#f405' class='c010'><sup>[405]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sumner and Davis referred to the resolution as a shadow.
-To this Mr. Doolittle replied that the vote of Louisiana
-might be necessary to secure the constitutional amendment,
-and that the new constitution of that State had struck the
-shackles from 90,000 slaves not reached by the Emancipation
-Proclamation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Henderson, who favored the resolution, secured the
-floor, and observed, among other things, that Louisiana and
-Arkansas did not claim that they were yet strong enough to
-maintain their governments without the military aid of the
-nation; but neither was Maryland, West Virginia, Kentucky
-or Missouri; even Ohio, Indiana or Illinois, he said, could
-not without national assistance maintain their State organizations
-for sixty days against the Confederate armies.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If we would have State governments,” said Mr. Henderson,
-“we must begin somewhere and at some time.” It was
-nonsensical, he argued to talk of restoring the Union, while
-keeping the loyal people in those States for all time to come
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>under military domination. “We must declare the right in
-Congress,” he added, “to make and establish these governments
-for the States, or permit the President, under military
-law, to set them up, or we must recognize such as the loyal
-people may set up for themselves.” If, as Madison thought,
-Congress cannot make them, but can only guarantee such as
-already exist and are found to be republican in form, it must
-be left with the President, under his power as the head of the
-army, or to the people of the respective States. If left entirely
-with the President he might by military force impose upon the
-State a constitution against the wishes of both the loyal and
-disloyal. The Senator frankly admitted that neither House
-would be under any obligation to receive members sent from a
-State so constituted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But,” he went on to say, “if the people—the loyal
-masses, whether a majority or a minority of the whole voting
-population as formerly known—participated in its creation
-and acquiesce in the revival of the State government, the case
-though inaugurated by the President in my judgment would
-be very different. According to the theory of our Government,
-and its practice in all its past time in analogous cases,
-it would seem that whether Congress or the President inaugurated
-the proceeding, the constitution can only receive its
-validity and authority from the approval or acquiescence of
-the people to be affected; and that brings me to consider
-how the people in the seceded States shall revive their governments,
-and who are the legally qualified voters for that
-purpose in these States.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“At the threshold of the inquiry we are met with the objection
-that the States are now without officers of any kind
-legally elected, and that of themselves they are powerless to
-inaugurate any movement to set up a loyal government. It
-is said they have no officials to superintend the election, to
-count the votes, and grant certificates of election. However
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>desirable these formalities may be, it has not been the uniform
-practice of Congress to require them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the case of California, continued Mr. Henderson, the
-first election was called by the military order of a subordinate
-officer of the army, a delegate convention was chosen, a constitution
-was framed by that assembly and submitted to Congress.
-It was accepted as republican in form, and under it a
-State government was inaugurated that for fifteen years
-had been administered with the greatest success. The territory,
-he said, was wholly without civil authorities recognized
-by the United States. Congress had passed no enabling
-act, had prescribed no forms of proceeding, had failed to
-fix the qualifications of voters, had appointed no judges of
-election or other officers to count and certify the votes; yet
-the act, however informal, was ratified because the constitution
-on its face was unobjectionable in form, and it was
-believed that the people interested acquiesced in the government
-it established.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If the people of Rhode Island, added Mr. Henderson, had
-acquiesced in the government set up under Dorr, Congress
-and the Executive would have recognized it as legitimate.
-The Senator from Kentucky contended that although a majority
-of the legal and qualified voters of Louisiana should acquiesce
-in the new constitution Congress could not admit the
-State. In support of his view Mr. Henderson pointed to the
-State government of Missouri, which was the offspring of a
-movement purely revolutionary.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the States whose representatives were seeking admission
-to Congress but one government asked recognition, and what
-if these organizations were of revolutionary origin?—the
-revolution was on the side of loyalty. Revolutionary governments
-had been accepted in time of peace—governments
-springing up in the midst of anarchy, without the sanctions
-of regularity; why, he asked, should they be rejected now
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>when they were needed to protect the loyal inhabitants of
-the respective States and to aid the nation in vindicating its
-lost authority?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The assertion that on the face of these constitutions they
-were republican in form Senator Sumner denied. They did
-not follow out the principles of the Federal Constitution. This
-general answer was unsatisfactory, and Mr. Henderson said
-that the only question with him was how could he best get
-these States performing their legitimate functions in the Union
-again. If, as the Massachusetts Senator maintained, the act
-of secession took the States out, why could not the act of loyal
-men bring them back? If secession, he argued, was potent
-enough to take a State out, and that was mere revolution, why
-could not the loyal men perfect a revolution on the side of
-Government as well as rebels perfect a revolution on the side
-of secession, outrage and wrong?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The doctrine that secession took the States out of the
-Union, Sumner objected to have imputed to him. A subsequent
-remark indicated one ground of his opposition to the
-government of Louisiana. “If the loyal men, white and
-black, recognize it, then,” he declared, “it will be republican
-in form. Unless that is done, it will not be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When asked whether Congress could interfere with the
-right of suffrage in one of the States, Sumner evaded a candid
-reply, and concealed his meaning under these words:
-“It is the bounden duty of the United States by act of Congress
-to guarantee complete freedom to every citizen, and
-immunity from all oppression, and absolute equality before
-the law.” No government that does not guarantee these
-things, he added, can be recognized as republican in form
-according to the theory of the Federal Constitution, if the
-United States are called upon to enforce the constitutional
-guaranty.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Henderson, interpreting this answer in the affirmative,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>observed that if under the guaranty clause the national
-Legislature could regulate the suffrage in the States, there
-was no limitation except the mere discretion of Congress. In
-support of this position he cited Madison in No. 43 of <cite>The
-Federalist</cite>, and of course had this part of the argument his
-own way, for the test of a republican form satisfactory to
-the Massachusetts Senator would leave few representatives
-in Congress.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Henderson denied that the admission of Senators and
-Representatives from these commonwealths would be a precedent
-for other States to demand recognition, even with the
-institution of slavery, thus bringing back the germs of a new
-rebellion against the Government; because in the constitutions
-presented involuntary servitude was abolished. With slavery
-remaining any restoration would be utterly useless. It was
-against union with the free States that the Southern people
-had taken up arms, and against restoration that they continued
-to use them. In that struggle they would employ every moral
-and material force, including the slave himself, stimulated by
-the boon of freedom, to resist the return of their States.
-Whatever the future might bring, it would fail to bring to the
-doors of Congress seeking admission a State constitution
-without a positive interdict of slavery.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To the objection that a majority of the people of these States
-were in rebellion and that to recognize the loyal minority
-would be to subvert the whole republican system Senator Henderson
-replied that if it were strictly true that a majority in
-a particular community “not only shall but must govern,”
-then a majority of legal voters in a State desiring to secede
-would have the undoubted right to do so. As no principle of
-the General Government authorized such action, it was not
-true, he said, that a majority of citizens in a State can govern
-themselves except in strict obedience to the Constitution of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>the United States. If a majority proved derelict and undertook
-to destroy the very Government of which the State is
-a part, it is right that the minority, who sustain the Government
-in its entirety, State and national, should institute government
-for their protection. He admitted that General
-Banks did a great many things for which there was no legal
-authority; but the question was whether this constitution was
-the will of the loyal men of Louisiana. If it was, their representatives
-had a right to seats on the floor of Congress.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In reply to Sumner, Senator Henderson said he favored
-the idea that the loyal men should govern a State, and he
-added, if that be the government of the few it results from
-the voluntary disloyalty of the many. They, of their own
-will, had relinquished the right to govern themselves under
-the Constitution, and as they had no right to govern themselves
-otherwise they could not govern at all. As to the
-oligarchy of skin, to which Sumner had referred, Henderson
-believed that the regulation of the suffrage was a question for
-the consideration of the States; if they conferred the franchise
-on the negro, he did not object.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As to the Louisiana constitution the question was whether
-it embodied the will of those legally entitled to exercise the
-functions of the State government. If the casting of illegal
-votes vitiated elections, but few elections, he asserted, would
-be valid.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If those States were admitted, they could immediately
-settle all questions of suffrage, and Congress would be relieved
-of the difficulty in future. He put clearly the difference
-of opinion prevailing among Senators on this subject
-when he stated that Mr. Powell objected to the new constitution
-of Louisiana because negro soldiers were permitted to
-vote, while Mr. Sumner opposed it because negroes at home
-did not vote. Concluding this part of his speech, he declared
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>that the Federal Government by recognizing the old organization
-in Rhode Island against Dorr expressed its preference
-for a constitution of restricted suffrage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Without naming his authority Henderson then read from
-a private letter the opinion of a gentleman whom he regarded
-as one of the ablest jurists in the United States.<a id='r406' /><a href='#f406' class='c010'><sup>[406]</sup></a> The correspondent
-said in part:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It must be observed that the civil society, and the political society so
-to speak, of a State need not necessarily do [be] the same. In other
-words the basis of <em>representation</em> may be the whole population, but the
-basis of <em>suffrage</em> be property, adult years, &amp;c. The power to choose
-rulers is lodged in the voters, and they may not exceed one tenth of
-the population.... That portion of the population in which political
-power is lodged, determines who shall fill the respective offices, make
-laws, etc. Although the members of that society may have possessed
-every requisite therefor, yet the moment they ceased to be citizens of the
-United States they ceased to belong thereto.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That rule holds good with respect to every member, and the political
-society may, by death, disqualification of members, &amp;c., be reduced to a
-very few persons. To state an extreme case, for illustration of the principle,
-Massachusetts formerly had a property qualification, and although
-her population entitled her to, say, thirteen Representatives in the
-United States House, her voters may not have exceeded fifty thousand.
-Suppose while that qualification remained, by some financial or other
-disaster, only one thousand or one hundred citizens retained the necessary
-income or property, would not the persons chosen to Congress by
-the few and only remaining voters be duly elected? So with regard to
-any other element of suffrage, as United States citizenship, if by its
-loss the voters are reduced to very few in number, do not those few
-constitute the political or voting power? As to the policy or impolicy
-of restricted suffrage, we are not now concerned, but are endeavoring to
-reach a constitutional and legal analysis of our governmental system.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But here is encountered the startling and practical difficulty, “Shall a
-few persons be permitted to govern a State, despite the wishes of its
-inhabitants, and without giving them all a voice? Is that republican?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But it must be remembered that the few voters, say one seventh, or
-one tenth of the whole population, have always been intrusted with that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>power. Wisdom has fixed the basis of suffrage, without regard to relative
-numbers; that is, it has endeavored, under our popular system, to
-give the right or privilege to as many citizens as were supposed competent
-to exercise it intelligently. The rules prescribed as to age, sex, citizenship,
-&amp;c., were deemed essential, right, and proper. Whether many or
-few come within the rules does not affect their validity.... If
-persons heretofore entitled to a vote chose to commit a felony, and incur
-thereby, as a penalty, the deprivation of their former right of suffrage,
-it is not supposed that the loss of such votes is anti-republican. If, then,
-a majority choose to perpetrate treason, or to expatriate themselves, or
-in any other way become disqualified, how does that action vitiate the
-rule? If they, after becoming disqualified, remain in the State, are they
-not bound to submit to its rulers and laws? If their rulers are chosen
-without their voice, is it not in consequence of their own voluntary action?
-Indeed, it often happens that the persons elected to office receive only a
-meager minority of the votes which could have been lawfully polled, yet
-that fact has no influence upon the legal result. So a person is often
-chosen by a minority of the votes actually cast, and is not the majority
-bound to submit?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The author of this letter appears to have been more familiar
-with the Constitution, as it was understood by its framers,
-than almost any member of either House, notwithstanding the
-presence in Congress of many distinguished statesmen. In
-the following eight propositions Mr. Henderson then gave a
-masterly summary of the Presidential plan of reconstruction:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>1. I hold that the seceded States are still in the Union and cannot get
-out of it except through amendment of the Constitution permitting it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>2. The seceded States being still in the Union are entitled to claim all
-the rights accorded to other States.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>3. That each State now in the Union has the right to stand upon the
-form of its constitution as it existed at the time of its admission. The
-people of such State may change its constitution, provided they retain a
-republican form of government; but neither the President nor Congress
-can reform, alter, or amend such constitution, nor prescribe any
-alteration or amendment as a condition of association with the other
-States of the Union. The General Government may properly lend its
-aid to enable the people to express their will; but any attempt to exercise
-power constitutionally reserved to the State, beyond what may be
-demanded by the immediate exigencies of war, will not tend to restore
-the Union, but rather to destroy our whole system of government.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>4. When citizens of a State rebel and take up arms against the General
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>Government they lose their rights as citizens of the United States, and
-they necessarily forfeit those rights and franchises in their respective
-States which depend on United States citizenship.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>5. If a seceded State be still in the Union, entitled to recognition as a
-State, and a majority of the people have voluntarily withdrawn their
-allegiance, the loyal minority constitute the State and should govern it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>6. Congress should not reject the governments presented because of
-mere irregularity in the proceedings leading to their reorganization.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>7. If Congress has no right to make and impose a constitution upon
-the people of any State; if its power extends no further than to guaranty
-preëxisting republican forms of government; if the State still
-exists, and the loyal men are entitled to exercise the functions of its
-government, it follows that the only questions to be examined here are,
-first, is the constitution the will of the loyal men qualified to act? and,
-second, is it republican in form?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>8. The constitutions of Louisiana and Arkansas are thought to be
-republican in form, and it is admitted that the loyal men of those
-States respectively acquiesce in them. Hence the duty of Congress to
-recognize them, and the duty of each House to admit their representatives.<a id='r407' /><a href='#f407' class='c010'><sup>[407]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On February 25 debate on Trumbull’s resolution was resumed.
-At this point Mr. Sumner offered an amendment in
-substance as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That it is the duty of the United States at the earliest practicable
-moment, consistent with the common defence and general welfare, to
-reëstablish by act of Congress republican governments in those States
-where loyal governments have been vacated by the existing rebellion,
-and thus, to the full extent of their power, fulfil the requirement of the
-Constitution, that “the United States shall guaranty to every State in
-this Union a republican form of government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 2. <em>And be it further resolved</em>, That this important duty is imposed
-by the Constitution in express terms on “the United States,” and not
-on individuals or classes of individuals, or on any military commander
-or executive officer, and cannot be intrusted to any such persons, acting,
-it may be, for an oligarchical class, and in disregard of large numbers of
-loyal people; but it must be performed by the United States, represented
-by the President and both Houses of Congress, acting for the whole
-people thereof.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 3. <em>And be it further resolved</em>, That, in determining the extent of
-this duty, and in the absence of any precise definition of the term
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>“republican form of government,” we cannot err, if, when called to
-perform this guaranty under the Constitution, we adopt the self-evident
-truths of the Declaration of Independence as an authoritative rule,
-and insist that in every reëstablished State the consent of the governed
-shall be the only just foundation of government, and all men shall be
-equal before the law.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not less important is the declaration in the fourth section
-that “in the performance of this guaranty, there can be
-no power under the Constitution to disfranchise loyal people,
-or to recognize any such disfranchisement, especially
-when it may hand over the loyal majority to the government
-of the disloyal minority; nor can there be any power under
-the Constitution to discriminate in favor of the rebellion
-by admitting to the electoral franchise rebels who have forfeited
-all rights and by excluding loyal persons who have
-never forfeited any right.” To allow the reëstablishment of
-any State without proper safeguards for the rights of all the
-citizens, and especially without making it impossible for rebels
-to trample upon the rights of those who are now fighting
-the battles of the Union, would be, said the succeeding section,
-for the United States to fail in duty under the Constitution.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>More directly in opposition to the resolution reported by
-the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, however, was the
-seventh section, which declared “That a government founded
-on military power, or having its origin in military orders,
-cannot be a ‘republican form of government’ according to
-the requirement of the Constitution; and that its recognition
-will be contrary not only to the Constitution, but also to
-that essential principle of our Government which, in the
-language of Jefferson, establishes ‘the supremacy of the civil
-over the military authority.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The resolutions further asserted that a government
-founded on an oligarchical class, even if erroneously recognized
-as a “republican form of government,” could not sustain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>itself without national support; that such an organization
-was not at that moment competent to discharge the duties and
-execute the powers of a State, and that its recognition would
-tend to enfeeble the Union, to postpone the day of reconciliation
-and to endanger the national tranquillity. The ninth
-section renders clear one ground of Sumner’s hostility to the
-recognition of Louisiana. It asserts that</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Considerations of expediency are in harmony with the requirements
-of the Constitution, and the dictates of justice and reason, especially
-now, when colored soldiers have shown their military value; that as their
-muskets are needed for the national defence against rebels in the field,
-so are their ballots yet more needed against the subtle enemies of the
-Union at home; and that without their support at the ballot-box the
-cause of human rights and of the Union itself will be in constant
-peril.<a id='r408' /><a href='#f408' class='c010'><sup>[408]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was agreed on motion of Mr. Sumner to have his amendment
-printed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Howard, of Michigan, entered at this point into
-the debate. Much of what he said has already been related
-in the preceding narration of events leading up to the reinauguration
-of a loyal government in Louisiana. While admitting
-that the President’s plan had been undertaken for
-patriotic ends, he could not, he said, recognize in the Executive,
-without the subsidiary aid of an act of Congress, any
-right to assure a community, composed of voters numbering
-one tenth of the electors who participated in the Presidential
-contest of 1860, that it would be recognized as a legitimate
-government and entitled to the constitutional guaranty. This,
-he said, was a stretch of authority beyond any previous attempt,
-and he thought it time that Congress, in whom,
-he believed, rested solely the authority of readmitting
-and reconstructing the rebellious States, “should lay hold
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>of this subject, assert their power, and provide by some statute
-of uniform application for the reconstruction, as it is called,
-and readmission of the insurrectionary States. That is their
-right and their duty; that is not the right, it is not the duty of
-the President.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A State he defined negatively as not “the geographical
-superficies,” the land, on which population resides, and positively
-as “a moral person, a political community, possessing
-the faculty of political government.” The land, he said, is
-the theatre on which the political community moves and acts,
-but is endowed with no thought, no right, no duty. The
-thinking beings residing upon it constitute the State.<a id='r409' /><a href='#f409' class='c010'><sup>[409]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A State of the Union or a State in the Union is, therefore,
-a people yielding obedience to the laws of the Union,
-that is, the acts of Congress and the national treaties....
-A people who have a State government which is
-republican in form; a people who were one of the original
-thirteen States which formed the United States, or a people
-who have, since the adoption of the Constitution, been, in
-the language of that Constitution, ‘admitted by the Congress
-into this Union’ as States upon an equal footing with the
-original States; for this equality of rights and powers as
-States is plainly implied by the language and the manifest
-intention of the instrument; and no other people except such
-original State or admitted State; none but a State which permits
-the laws of the Union to have full scope and force within
-its limits; none but a State which sends Senators and Representatives
-to Congress friendly to the Government itself, willing
-to vote men and money to support and uphold it, who believe
-that a person forcibly resisting its authority is a traitor
-and deserving of death; none but a State which is willing to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>bring to trial, to convict such a traitor, and to punish him for
-his treason; none but a State whose population is capable of
-furnishing both the grand jury to indict and the traverse jury
-to convict such a traitor; none but a State whose population
-and whose authorities are in favor not only of permitting the
-laws of the United States relating to civil rights to be executed,
-but who are willing that the punitive code of the
-nation, the code of vengeance against its enemies, shall be
-carried out; none but such are States of the Union....</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“To be in fact a State of the Union and in the Union, this
-will or consent of the people must be in harmony with the
-Constitution, and its movements subsidiary to it. It must
-regard the Constitution as its highest political good; its injunctions
-as the highest human law, its commands as the
-infallible and final measure of civil duty. In short, to be in
-the Union is to be actively and willingly coöperating with
-other States in the performance of all those acts and things
-without which the Federal Government cannot act or move,
-cannot perform the functions required of it by the Constitution;
-it is to elect Senators and Representatives to the Congress
-of the United States; to permit the courts of the United
-States to be held within their limits, and its citizens to act as
-jurors and officers of the court; to permit the judgments and
-sentences of the court to be executed against its citizens; to
-permit the United States mail to be carried through the State
-and its contents distributed according to law; to permit the
-officers of the United States to collect the Federal revenue
-whether derived from foreign or domestic products; to permit
-the United States to manage and control their own property,
-whether consisting of forts, dockyards, arsenals, mints,
-or public lands; to make such elections of Senators and Representatives
-freely and as the means of maintaining itself as
-a State in the Union; and to permit all these things willingly
-and freely as rights belonging to the Federal Government
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>with which neither the State government nor the people of
-the State have any right whatever to interfere. In short, to
-be a State in the Union is to use all those powers of the
-State which have a relation to the Federal Government in a
-manner friendly to that Government, friendly to its existence
-and continuance, in a manner promotive of the objects of that
-Government; and to permit without hindrance the exercise
-within the State of all the powers of the Federal Government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though he declined to discuss the question whether a State
-by omitting to send Representatives and Senators to Congress
-would on that account cease to be a member of the Union, he
-gave it as his opinion that mere failure to be represented in
-Congress would not be followed by such consequences; but if
-a State not only refused to participate in Federal legislation
-but went farther, and as a political community made war
-upon the General Government, he declared that “it would be
-folly, madness, to say that the State was not our enemy in
-every sense in which that term can be employed to describe
-hostile relations between independent communities....
-No one will pretend that such a community is in the Union
-in fact, for that would be to make an admission and in the
-same breath to contradict it. <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">De facto</span></i>, such a community,
-and, if it be bounded by State lines, such a State, is as completely
-out of the Union as is Canada or Mexico, from the
-moment it assumes the attitude of hostility until it is subdued
-and conquered by our arms, or until it voluntarily lays down
-its arms, ejects its hostile government and returns <em>in fact</em> to
-its once friendly sentiments and friendly relations to the
-Federal Government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Loyalty,” continued Senator Howard, “thus becomes the
-final test in solving the question, what is a State in the Union?
-If a State by its overt acts has shown a want of this friendship,
-it is no longer in the Union <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">de facto</span></i>, and cannot be treated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>as if it were. The Supreme Court, acting upon the soundest
-principles of public law, have decided the waging of war by
-a State, although acting under an illegitimate and revolutionary
-government, renders her territory enemy’s territory, and
-the people there resident enemies of the United States, in the
-sense of the laws of war. And their decision could not have
-been different.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The State, he argued further, was in fact, though wrongfully,
-out of the Union because its actual government was
-disloyal and treasonable. Out of it because unsubdued rebellion
-made it for the time being an independent though
-unrecognized nation on the earth’s surface, throwing off its
-allegiance to its paramount Government, and assuming by
-the sword to assert its separate nationality.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But we are at war with the rebel States, and are told
-... that the Government, so far at least as the rebel
-States are concerned, is under some peculiar constitutional
-restraint by which its hands are tied; that we are prohibited
-from ‘subjugating’ those States; that all we can do, under
-the Constitution, is to break up the military array of the
-rebels, disperse their armed bands, take away their arms, and
-do that very indefinite duty, <em>restore order</em>; that thereupon
-our task is ended and the rebel States have a constitutional
-right to come back into the Union and participate in the
-enactment of Federal laws and the conduct of the Federal
-Government. And we are menaced both in Congress and out
-with terrible retributions if we conquer or attempt to conquer,
-if we subjugate or attempt to subjugate, the rebel States. It
-is admitted by these our critics that in an international war
-... we should have all the rights and powers of other
-independent nations, and might rightfully conquer our adversary,
-... that we might make a complete conquest
-of his people and his territory....</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now, it is lawful to wage such a foreign war, for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>the purpose of effectuating such a complete conquest, and
-of course lawful to attain it; ... lawful to substitute
-the political authority of the United States for that of a
-hostile foreign nation;” otherwise, he argued, the war could
-not be a successful one; hence in a war with a member of the
-Union the United States could substitute for the authority of
-such hostile commonwealth its own authority. There was no
-difference between the two cases. The former actual hostile
-government should be supplanted by the Federal Government.
-No other government had a right to give the law.
-Had the conquered rebel people that right? No; for that
-would be to allow them at once to expel their conquerors by
-a popular decree, and to deny the supremacy of the Federal
-Government which had subdued them. Had the old State
-government, he asked, the once loyal government, the right
-to govern the conquered people? No; there was no such
-government. It had long since ceased to exist. “In fact,
-there is no government there, none at all, which can for a
-moment be recognized or permitted by the United States, as
-the party now holding the actual mastery of the country;
-and like every other case where the possession of a country
-has arisen from the use of superior force, the will of the
-conqueror is the law—that is, the will of the United States
-expressed, in the absence of acts of Congress, by the Commander-in-Chief
-of the Army, but by the acts of Congress
-after Congress has spoken.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“... No one will deny that we have a right to subdue
-by arms and to reduce to quietude and submission a rebel
-State, that is, the people of a State in insurrection. But how
-absurd to make this concession, and at the same time to
-deny to us the constitutional power to occupy and hold the
-territory and its people in our military grasp—an occupation
-just as necessary to the end in view as the firing of cannon,
-the charging of cavalry, or any other operation in the field.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>“... The true objects of the war ... are
-the suppression of the rebellion, the reëstablishment of the
-original Federal authority within the State, and the revival
-of the loyalty of the people of the State as the sole foundation
-and condition of all its civil rights as a State of the
-Union and of the right of its people to be treated as friends
-and not as enemies. Although the United States have the
-full and complete right which conquest gives, for the purpose
-of subjecting these domestic enemies to the exercise of the
-powers granted by the Constitution to Congress, and for the
-purpose of restoring to the body-politic its vital blood,
-loyalty to the Government, yet those purposes, those distinct
-ends, are without doubt limits beyond which we cannot go.
-We are restrained by the manifest objects for which the
-national Government was formed; but restrained by no particular
-clause of the Constitution. The instrument contains
-no such clause, and the limitation and restraint are of precisely
-the same nature as those which any other government
-is under in subduing an insurrection of its own subjects or
-citizens; the plain object of the war in both cases being the
-restoration of legitimate authority and the revival of allegiance.
-And until this revival of allegiance there must be
-the same need of military occupation and repression in both
-cases.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After showing that the existence of the States is indispensable
-to that of the Federal Government, he proceeded, “it
-is not permissible by mere interpretation to clothe that Government
-with a power permanently to abolish the State government
-by way of punishing or suppressing the rebellion;
-or to convert the States into mere Territories of the United
-States, that is, public domain, to be divided up afterward by
-lines different from those of the States, and again admitted
-into the Union like matured Territories, with such new
-geographical limits as Congress may see fit to establish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>Article IV., Section 3, Clause 1 of the Constitution the Senator
-regarded as an express prohibition to change the boundaries
-of any State once in the Union without its consent;
-“its consent in its capacity as a State, freely given by its own
-Legislature.” He believed that the Amnesty Proclamation of
-President Lincoln indicated that its author held a different
-opinion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He rejected the idea that the rebellious States could be converted
-into Territories. This term, under our system, he
-added, “implies land never lying in any State, land ceded to
-the United States either by the old States, or purchased or
-conquered from foreign nations. The term never has been
-used to describe a State or any part of a State; and it implies
-not only the ownership of the soil and right of disposition,
-but full and complete political jurisdiction in the Federal Government
-over the people resident there....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The objects of the conquest being as stated above, such
-forcible occupation was, he continued, in its very nature temporary
-and ought to cease the moment those objects were attained.
-This could not be done without establishing a government
-to preserve order, life and property—a provisional
-government, for that is the true historic name to be applied
-in all cases where an old government has been overthrown;
-a provisional government instituted by the conqueror, and to
-be continued just so long as Congress deemed it necessary to
-continue it for the attainment, and while attaining, those
-high objects. The occupancy, that is, the possession of all
-the reins of local government by the Federal authorities
-would be but temporary, provisional, fiduciary. It should necessarily
-last until the Federal Government had done its duty in
-the reëstablishment of order and the revival of loyalty. Until
-then it was, and should continue, the omnipotent sovereign of
-the State, holding actually by right of conquest, though for a
-particular purpose, and being itself necessarily the final judge
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>to determine when its tutelary mission had been accomplished.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He avoided, he said, a discussion of the question whether a
-State can commit suicide, that is, extinguish its own being by
-waging a rebellious war against the Federal Government;
-instead of presenting any such abstract question of political
-dialectics, the case, he declared, merely presented the usual
-question which arose whenever and wherever there had been
-a forcible revolution. What, he inquired, was the duty of the
-paramount and lawful government in its treatment of insurgent
-communities? And was not the Government doing its
-whole duty in punishing the ringleaders in the revolt and
-restoring the old and constitutional Government over those
-districts?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Government, Mr. Howard proceeded, must be the final
-judge of the duration of this military occupation. It was
-bound by the plain terms of the Constitution not only to suppress
-the insurrection, which was done the moment it had obtained
-firm possession of the whole of the hostile territory, but
-to guarantee to the conquered State a republican form of government.
-To perform this high and sacred trust, time of
-course was necessary; likewise a great variety of means and
-instrumentalities, “of all which the Government of the United
-States must, because it has no superior, no equal in the
-matter, be the sole and final judge. These means may embrace
-acts of provisional legislation, creating private rights
-and duties not previously in existence, but existing by law
-and of a permanent nature, paramount to all subsequent State
-legislation because arising under the supreme authority of the
-nation, as, for instance, the giving freedom to slaves; or they
-may undoubtedly embrace conditions to be performed by the
-subdued States on taking their places again in the Union,
-such as would be an ordinance forever abolishing slavery
-in the State....</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>“Yet while thus in our military power, awaiting our action,
-looking to their restoration, nothing is clearer than that the
-citizens of the rebel States, though owing obedience to all
-the laws of the United States, possess no political rights under
-the Constitution except protection. They are not free to act,
-because their freedom to act would, if indulged, lead them
-again to draw the sword against the United States....
-They have no right to send members to this body or to the
-House of Representatives, much less to participate in the
-election of President and Vice-President. They are the ward-provinces
-of the United States, progressing toward the
-maturity of revived loyalty, but not yet entitled to exercise the
-elective franchise or to participate in the enactment of laws.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If I am asked what I mean by the Government of the
-United States, and whether I mean that the President as
-Commander-in-Chief has the exclusive power to establish
-these provisional governments, I answer, I do not. He has
-the right to regulate military occupation until Congress has
-acted upon the subject; ... but the establishment of
-provisional governments, the quieting of the rebellious province
-and the reëstablishment of legitimate authority over it,
-pertains to the sovereign power, that is, the law-giving power
-of the nation. With us that power is lodged in Congress and
-not in the President; and in my opinion it is the business of
-Congress, and Congress alone, to establish and uphold these
-provisional governments.... We need not doubt that
-whatever we see fit to enact will be approved and carried out
-by the President. We cannot be more truly anxious than he
-to fix upon a stable, firm policy for restoring peace and union;
-but we ought not to shut our eyes to the necessities he will continually
-be under, to the almost irresistible importunities he
-will encounter, to provide some sort of civil government for
-the subdued States or districts; or to the consequences of leaving
-such mighty questions for him to decide. It is our plain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>duty to establish a uniform rule on the subject, so that all
-may be treated alike and the same remedy be applied with a
-paternal but firm and resolute hand to each delinquent State.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He opposed for two reasons the “scheme” of allowing
-one tenth or any other minor part of the male citizens of
-a commonwealth to organize a government and assume to
-act as a State: first, “because as against the will of an
-actual majority the government of such a minority must necessarily
-come to a speedy end and thus invite a renewal of the
-civil war, in that locality at least; and second, because government
-by a minority is of evil example and inconsistent
-with the genius of American liberty.... As a Republican
-I would sooner hazard ten slaveholders’ rebellions than
-risk liberty in a government by a minority.” In this connection
-he assigned an additional motive for his attitude toward
-the resolution. The will of the friendly element, he said, could
-prevail only by military support, and such an organization,
-if intended as a civil government, was not republican in the
-sense of the Constitution. When such aid was withdrawn the
-majority, he asserted, would wreak vengeance on the
-weakened minority.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Concluding this part of his argument, he added: “The
-measure now before you proposes to acknowledge eight thousand
-citizens of Louisiana as a State, and to give them the
-rights and privileges exercised by a voting population of more
-than fifty thousand in 1860. Eight thousand are thus to
-give the law or assume to give it to forty-two thousand—to
-more than five times their number. This they may do so
-long as their decrees are sustained by the presence and consent
-of a competent military force; but we all know, both
-parties there know, the world knows, and, sir, posterity will
-know, that it is not the eight thousand who govern the State,
-but the fear of the bayonet, and the fear is inspired solely by
-the President of the United States, as Commander-in-Chief
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>of the Army and Navy! Disguise it, or attempt to disguise
-it, as we may, to this complexion doth it come at last. Yes,
-sir, both the eight thousand and the forty-two thousand voters
-are governed not by themselves, but by the bayonet! And this
-is at present the only government in Louisiana. The object
-of the present measure is to continue this hybrid, unnatural
-government there. It allows the meager and almost contemptible
-proportion of less than one sixth of the voting
-population to govern the whole State, and to have the influence
-of the whole State in our legislation here, while we
-know that if the military forces were withdrawn that privileged
-one sixth part would be swept away like chaff before
-the hurricane breath of the enraged majority. Sir, such a
-government is the merest bubble, especially if unsustained by
-military power. This is too obvious to need further comment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“All this we might possibly endure,” continued Senator
-Howard, “were it not that the measure before us clothes
-this mockery of a government, this king of shreds and patches,
-this mistletoe State <em>régime</em> that falls to the earth the moment
-it ceases to cling around the flag-staff of the national forces,
-with the high attribute of voting upon and determining questions
-of legislation, questions of war or peace, questions of
-prosecuting or ceasing to prosecute the present war, in this
-Hall and in the Hall of the House of Representatives. This
-measure introduces here Senators and Representatives whose
-immediate friends and relatives at home have deliberately
-aided and assisted to put to death myriads of Union soldiers
-from the North, and in swelling up that vast debt of more
-than two thousand million dollars which now rests upon the
-country. Think you that such Senators and Representatives,
-whose constituents have already been stripped of their property
-by the rebel government, and brought down to the depths
-of poverty; a community without the habits of labor among
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>the intelligent classes; naked, hungry, despondent and sullen;
-think you that their Representatives would at the present time
-be safe depositories of the power to tax their constituents to
-pay this debt? Is it not, on the other hand, the part of prudence
-to guard against the contingency of having that debt repudiated
-by such legislators and the still more disgraceful
-contingency of being, by their votes, aided by a Northern
-party, finally compelled to pay the rebel debt of $4,000,000,000?
-And tell me, what right has Louisiana, the majority
-of whose population is to-day, wherever they are, hostile to
-this Government and anxious for its overthrow; what right
-has she, upon any recognized principle of public law or justice,
-to be represented in Congress?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The treatment accorded Louisiana would, he feared, be a
-precedent for the ten remaining States. There would be the
-expense of holding each for a time in military occupation to
-bolster up their State governments. He preferred for Louisiana
-and the other insurgent States a provisional establishment
-for regulating domestic affairs, but without representation in
-Congress until the mass of their people plainly perceived their
-error in attempting to overthrow the General Government.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Congress should, he thought, take the subject of readmission
-into their own hands. It was for them and not for the
-President to execute the important guaranty to each State
-of a republican form of government, and that duty became
-more and more urgent as the Federal armies swept on from
-victory to victory. In making good that guaranty the great
-indispensable necessity, he declared, was loyalty.<a id='r410' /><a href='#f410' class='c010'><sup>[410]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Howard was followed immediately by Reverdy Johnson,
-of Maryland, who to the great surprise of his fellow-Democrats
-argued in favor of the resolution. His remarks
-were introduced by a concise statement of the chief political
-events occurring in Louisiana between the capture of New
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>Orleans and the ratification, in September, 1864, of the new
-constitution. Concluding this part of his speech he said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“These, sir, are the facts. The Committee on the Judiciary—and
-in the conclusion to which they came I concurred—were
-of opinion that under the circumstances in which the
-State was at the period when these proceedings were had, she
-could not be recognized as a State of the United States under
-that constitution adopted in 1864, except by an act of Congress.
-The committee were of opinion that it was not in the
-power of the Executive under the circumstances to bring the
-State back under that constitution. They were of opinion,
-however, that it was competent for Congress to do so, and
-the only question before the Committee was, whether, under
-the circumstances under which the State was at the time, it
-was not the duty of Congress to bring the State back so as
-to have her represented in the Union.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His objection to the conclusion of the committee was that
-the proceedings which led to the adoption of the constitution
-were instituted at the instance and under the power of the
-Federal military authorities. The precedent, he admitted,
-was really a bad one, and the proposition upon which the
-committee were called to decide was whether, if they were
-satisfied that the number of votes said to have been cast were
-in fact cast, and the persons voting were loyal citizens, they
-should be denied the privilege of being represented in the
-councils of the nation and subjected to a continuance of military
-power. Mr. Johnson added: “My impression is that,
-no matter how the proceedings were instituted, whether it was
-by the military authority, or by the coming together of the
-people of the State, if in point of fact the people of the State
-did act voluntarily and were competent to act under the original
-constitution, and were authorized to act by being loyal at
-the time they did act, it is the duty of the government of the
-United States to receive them back.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>“Another objection was that, however true it might be that
-it would be in the power of all the voters of the State to adopt
-a constitution for themselves, or to claim the right of coming
-back to the Union under the constitution existing at the time
-of the rebellion, it was not true that it was in the power of
-fourteen [eleven] thousand, four hundred and fourteen
-voters, when the entire voting population of the State was
-fifty-one thousand, to take that course. As it seemed to me
-then, and seems now, there is no evidence to show that a
-single citizen of Louisiana was excluded from the right of
-voting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was not so certain, he argued further, that the eleven
-thousand voters who participated were not a large majority
-of the actual electors in Louisiana, for the war engaged the
-greater part of the voting population, and nine tenths of those
-who entered the Confederate service had forfeited their lives
-upon the battlefield; of those above or below the military
-age many had gone elsewhere, or if they remained in the
-State it was as disloyal citizens.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was not pretended, he said, in discussing the relation of
-the loyal minority to the General Government, that by the act
-of secession they ceased to be citizens of the United States.
-Their fidelity to the Union entitled them to Federal protection.
-If loyal, they had forfeited no rights belonging to them
-before the commencement of the rebellion. No Federal law
-had been violated, no constitutional obligation evaded by
-them. They could not ask admission into the Union, because
-to speak such a desire was to subject themselves to
-punishment; when the protection of the United States was
-afforded them and they could once more declare their sentiments
-without hazard they met at their several election polls,
-organized their government under existing law, and then,
-wishing to change it, met in convention and adopted the
-constitution which had been submitted to the Senate.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>“Why,” inquired Mr. Johnson, “should we not receive it?”
-The right of eleven thousand citizens to change their constitution
-was not denied, but their action was questioned because
-there were others, then in arms against the Government
-of the United States, who did not join them in asserting it.
-In examining the question who were to exercise the authority
-of the State, he argued: “Now, if it be true that the secession
-ordinance had no operation to carry the State out, and that I
-understand even the Senator from Massachusetts [Mr. Sumner]
-admitted last night; if it be true that the State is in the
-Union notwithstanding the ordinance, then the only question
-to be considered is, who are the people of Louisiana that are
-to exercise the sovereign authority belonging to the State of
-Louisiana? Are they the loyal or the disloyal? There can
-be but one answer to that inquiry. It must only be the loyal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senator Howard admitted, continued Mr. Johnson, that it
-is not in the power of the United States to change the territorial
-limits of the States that had gone out, because the
-Constitution prohibits it. If he had thought for a moment he
-would have seen that the Constitution equally prohibits any
-interference on the part of the General Government with the
-exercise of the right of suffrage in a State. He then combated
-at some length the intimation of Senators Howard and Sumner
-that any power without a State had a right to prescribe
-qualifications for the exercise of the suffrage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Powell, too, concurred in this view and asked by what
-authority General Banks and the President undertook to prescribe
-the qualifications of voters in Louisiana. The Maryland
-Senator replied that this question had been anticipated.
-The eleven thousand four hundred and fourteen
-voters, according to the proof before the Senate, were all loyal
-men and entitled to vote by the original constitution of
-Louisiana, no matter how they were brought together. If,
-coming together, they did an act which they would have been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>authorized to do if they had come together voluntarily they
-ought to be received.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Powell then inquired, what right had the Senate to presume
-that there may not have been twelve thousand loyal voters
-in Louisiana who were deprived of the right of suffrage because
-of this order of General Banks? As the Kentucky Senator
-understood it, no man could vote “unless he would go
-forward and take the oath prescribed by the President and
-swear to support and sustain all proclamations in regard to
-African slavery already issued and all that might afterward
-be issued.” Mr. Johnson acknowledged this difficulty and
-admitted that he had always felt it; but they had the same
-difficulty, he asserted, in his own State, and a much greater
-one; he would be sorry to think Maryland was not in the
-Union. “Maryland is in the Union,” said Senator Powell.
-“The constitution,” observed Johnson in reply, “which now
-makes her a State in the Union was adopted the other day.
-I mean the one which governs her. She has manumitted her
-slaves by force of that constitution. No man in Maryland
-seriously contests the obligation of that constitution in that
-particular or in any other. But it was adopted, in fact, by
-the exclusion of a good many men who were entitled to
-vote.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Johnson at this point became engaged in an argument,
-not wholly relevant, with Sumner in which he gained some
-advantage over the Massachusetts Senator. As a specimen of
-the latter’s parliamentary tactics at this time it may not be
-irrelevant to reproduce a passage from the <cite>Congressional
-Globe</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='sc'>Mr. Sumner.</span> Allow me to ask the Senator [Johnson] whether, in his
-opinion, the Ordinance governing the Northwest Territory, prohibiting
-slavery everywhere throughout that Territory, and which was declared
-to be a perpetual compact, could be set aside by any one of the States in
-the Territory now.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span><span class='sc'>Mr. Johnson.</span> I certainly think they can, except so far as rights are
-vested.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='sc'>Mr. Sumner.</span> The Senator, then, thinks Ohio can enslave a fellow-man?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='sc'>Mr. Johnson.</span> Just as much as Massachusetts can.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='sc'>Mr. Sumner.</span> Massachusetts cannot.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='sc'>Mr. Johnson.</span> Why not?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='sc'>Mr. Sumner.</span> Massachusetts cannot do an act of injustice.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='sc'>Mr. Johnson.</span> Oh, indeed! I did not know that. [Laughter.]<a id='r411' /><a href='#f411' class='c010'><sup>[411]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Notwithstanding this claim for his native State Sumner
-admitted a moment later that Massachusetts had united in the
-Convention of 1787 with South Carolina to deny to Congress
-authority to prohibit the slave trade for twenty years, and
-he confessed that such action was unjust. His inconsistency
-was still further exposed by Senator Henderson, who called
-attention to the fact that the educational qualification imposed
-by the Massachusetts constitution would exclude from the
-franchise almost every negro in Louisiana if the provisions
-were applicable in the latter State.<a id='r412' /><a href='#f412' class='c010'><sup>[412]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After this colloquy, not uninteresting to the student of
-constitutional history, the Maryland Senator resumed his
-remarks:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“One word more, sir, and I have done. If Congress passes
-this resolution, and the State is admitted, no court will hereafter
-be able to decide that she is not a State in the Union,
-and no court therefore can call in question the validity or
-effect of any provision to be found in her constitution. One
-of the provisions of this constitution is that all the slaves of
-Louisiana are emancipated. Pass this resolution, admit the
-State, and that provision is effectual at once.”<a id='r413' /><a href='#f413' class='c010'><sup>[413]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Sumner, having in mind the fundamental condition
-imposed by Congress upon the admission of Missouri, offered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>the following amendment of the resolution from the Committee
-on the Judiciary:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><em>Provided</em>, That this shall not take effect except upon the fundamental
-condition that within the State there shall be no denial of the electoral
-franchise, or of any other rights on account of color or race, but all persons
-shall be equal before the law. And the Legislature of the State,
-by a solemn public act, shall declare the assent of the State to this
-fundamental condition, and shall transmit to the President of the United
-States an authentic copy of such assent whenever the same shall be
-adopted, upon the receipt whereof he shall, by proclamation, announce the
-fact; whereupon, without any further proceedings on the part of Congress,
-this joint resolution shall take effect.<a id='r414' /><a href='#f414' class='c010'><sup>[414]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though Senator Clark favored the principle of Sumner’s
-amendment, he opposed it, as it stood, because it affected a
-resolution which proposed “to recognize the government in
-the State of Louisiana,” which in his judgment was still a
-State in the Union, “having its constitution overthrown, but
-desiring and attempting to establish a new” one; and he
-added, “I hold that we have no power to amend that constitution;
-and that is the reason why I shall be obliged to
-vote against it here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He spoke for the adoption of Trumbull’s resolution and,
-in doing so, traveled some of the ground gone over by Henderson.
-The government of Louisiana, Mr. Clark believed,
-belonged to the Union people. He was not aware that any
-definite number of persons was required to constitute a State,
-nor did he understand how the majority by going into rebellion
-could take away the rights of the loyal minority.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The guaranty of a republican form of government was
-made, he asserted, to meet precisely such a case as had arisen
-in Louisiana. In this view it became the duty of Congress to
-protect the government established by the minority.<a id='r415' /><a href='#f415' class='c010'><sup>[415]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Pomeroy, speaking to the principle of Sumner’s amendment,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>declared that he would vote against all measures that
-looked like Congressional interference with the right to vote
-in the States. Saulsbury interrupted him to inquire what he
-would have done had the President, or his Secretary of War,
-sent armed soldiers to the polls and imposed a test upon
-voters as was done in Delaware, where Democrats were chased
-into swamps and compelled in the night time to lie out in
-the snow. Pomeroy’s only reply to this was to relate his
-own experience under Democratic supremacy in the early days
-of Kansas. He resumed his remarks on Louisiana, but these
-had been anticipated by the speakers who preceded him.
-In conclusion he asserted that there were two reasons for
-recognizing Arkansas where there was but one in favor of
-Louisiana.<a id='r416' /><a href='#f416' class='c010'><sup>[416]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Delaware Senator did not fail to call attention to Pomeroy’s
-evasion, and said he was glad to observe a change in the
-spirit of some of his Republican friends. “I think,” he said,
-“they begin to scent the danger in the distance; that they
-begin to see that if a Government of law is to be destroyed,
-and power is to be concentrated in Executive hands, or in the
-hands of Executive agents, there is an end of liberty in this
-country. I hail the dawn, therefore, of a better day.”<a id='r417' /><a href='#f417' class='c010'><sup>[417]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Henderson again entered into the discussion, and in the
-course of his remarks drew from Senator Sumner this remarkable
-statement concerning Louisiana: “It is in and it is not.
-[Laughter.] The territory is in; but as yet there is no State
-government that is in.” In this discussion Sumner asserted
-also that when the bill of his friend Senator Wade was before
-Congress no one questioned its constitutionality though
-it proposed to interfere in the suffrage and to impose a condition
-upon States at the time of their reconstruction. Pomeroy
-dissented from the doctrine that Congress could reconstruct
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>the insurgent States, and maintained that the only question
-then was whether they would recognize what the people of
-Louisiana had done.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Reverdy Johnson pointed out to Sumner the great increase
-of representation in Congress which the South would acquire
-by an extension of the suffrage to negroes. The three fifths
-provision, he said, would be done away with, and he made
-the further observation that for years to come the entire colored
-vote of that section would be in the hands of a few
-white men. He urged recognition of both Louisiana and
-Arkansas, so that the constitutional amendment would become
-binding, for unless ratified by three fourths of all the
-States it would be open to doubt.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The session was drawing rapidly toward its close; it was
-late in the evening of February 25, and the resolution under
-discussion was too important to be passed without due consideration.
-These circumstances offered Mr. Wade, who
-vehemently opposed the measure, a decent pretext for demanding
-the “yeas” and “nays” on his motion to postpone
-the subject till the first Monday of December following, 1865.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Before a vote was reached on this motion, however, Powell
-spoke again at considerable length. In addition to his former
-arguments, many of which were repeated, he said that “all
-the loyal Union men in the State of Louisiana who refused,
-like supple menials and slaves, to crouch beneath the iron
-military power of General Banks, and take that oath were
-excluded from voting,” and he added, “I believe to-day there
-are more men of that description in Louisiana than voted to
-ratify this constitution.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When asked by Mr. Henderson whether he had heard of
-any objection to it on the part of the loyal men of Louisiana,
-Powell answered that Thomas J. Durant and thirty-one others,
-distinguished, leading, loyal men of that State, had made
-earnest and powerful protest against it, and remonstrated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>against the admission to Congress of Senators and Representatives
-from Louisiana. They were also opposed to counting
-her electoral vote. Mr. Durant, he believed, was the first
-district-attorney appointed in Louisiana by the present Executive.
-Henderson insinuated by an inquiry that Durant
-was himself a candidate for office at that election and took the
-oath prescribed. Powell not being informed on these points,
-the matter was left in doubt.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Kentucky Senator took this opportunity to characterize
-the manner of General Banks in his statement before the
-Judiciary Committee as that of a “swift witness, to make a
-case that he thought would cause Louisiana to be admitted.”
-He also called upon some advocate of the resolution to explain
-a support of the present measure after voting a few days
-before for the resolution declaring that the electoral vote of
-Louisiana should not be counted. If Louisiana was then a
-legitimate government, why, he asked, was she not entitled
-to cast her electoral vote? He did not then believe it a
-legitimate government and so opposed the counting of her
-electoral vote; but the Senator from Maryland [Mr. Johnson]
-and the Senator from Missouri [Mr. Henderson], who then
-voted with him, now supported the resolution.<a id='r418' /><a href='#f418' class='c010'><sup>[418]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Wade’s motion to postpone further consideration of the
-joint resolution till the first Monday of December was defeated
-by a vote of 17 to 12.<a id='r419' /><a href='#f419' class='c010'><sup>[419]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the course of the discussions to postpone Sumner said
-that he would regard its passage as a national calamity. It
-would be the political Bull Run of that Administration, sacrificing,
-as it would, a great cause and the great destinies of
-this Republic. When Trumbull taxed him with intent to
-postpone discussion by dilatory motions the Massachusetts
-Senator admitted his opposition and declared that to defeat
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>the measure he would employ any weapon in the arsenal of
-parliamentary warfare.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The friends of the Administration endeavored to press their
-adversaries to take final action on the resolution. The earnestness
-of the two factions provoked rather sharp censure of
-Sumner and the few Republicans who acted with him
-and were attempting by dilatory motions to fatigue the Senate
-into a postponement. Doolittle was especially severe on them,
-and particularly on Sumner, who replied with much asperity.
-He was supported by Howard and Chandler, while Trumbull,
-Foster and Doolittle undertook a defence of the resolution
-and its advocates. This wrangling appears to have delighted
-the Democratic members. Mr. Hendricks, indeed, made no
-attempt to conceal his satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The discordant elements of the Republican party are
-exhibiting themselves here,” said the Indiana Senator, “and
-I venture the prophecy that a like exhibition will be witnessed
-over the country within a very few years. But four years
-ago, at the Chicago Convention, when Mr. Lincoln was
-nominated for the Presidency a solemn pledge was made to
-the people of this country that that party, when it came into
-power, would not undertake to interfere with the institutions
-of the States. As soon as the disturbed condition of the
-country gave the pretext for it, the undertaking was commenced;
-and now, when, in the judgment of some, it has been
-accomplished, there comes up the grave question, what is to
-be done, and what is to be the political condition of the four
-million negroes when they are set free? And upon that question
-the real strife of to-night has been witnessed. That is
-the subject and it need not be disguised. It is growing out
-of the discordant elements of the party that now governs the
-country.”<a id='r420' /><a href='#f420' class='c010'><sup>[420]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Trumbull, in reply to an inquiry of Senator Wade, said that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>he had voted against receiving the electoral vote of Louisiana
-because it had not been recognized. Now he proposed to put
-it in a condition where it could cast electoral votes, and do all
-other acts belonging to a State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To this Wade replied that “If the President of the United
-States, operating through his major-generals, can initiate a
-State government, and can bring it here and force us, compel
-us, to receive as associates on this floor these mere mockeries,
-these men of straw who represent nobody, your Republic is
-at an end.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir, I have heard a great deal about this pretended election
-in Louisiana that did not come from Major-General
-Banks, and I pronounce the proceeding a mockery. It is not
-pretended that there could be drummed up from the riffraff
-of New Orleans and sent into the vicinity under the mandate
-of a Major-General more than about six thousand votes, where
-over fifty thousand were formerly polled.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c000'>“Talk not to me of your ten per cent. principle. A more
-absurd, monarchical, and anti-American principle was never
-announced on God’s earth——“<a id='r421' /><a href='#f421' class='c010'><sup>[421]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At this point Senator Sherman, of Ohio, interposed to
-obtain consideration for a revenue measure which he had in
-charge, whereupon his colleague changed somewhat the declamation
-against the resolution to a denunciation of its advocates,
-especially Trumbull, upon whom he retorted the charge
-of retarding legitimate business. Howard resented the charge
-of radical factiousness and denounced Trumbull with considerable
-warmth. Sherman suggested that enough had been
-said on both sides, and in the lighter skirmishing of the
-breathing-spell which followed, Mr. Sprague, of Rhode Island,
-hitherto a silent spectator of these exciting scenes, declared
-that he held in his possession a paper indicating the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>names of the members of the Louisiana Legislature, and it
-showed that twenty-five, or twenty-seven or thirty of those
-gentlemen who constituted that assembly were officeholders
-of the Federal Government, or the government of the State,
-which, he said, was the same thing.<a id='r422' /><a href='#f422' class='c010'><sup>[422]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While Sherman’s measure and Trumbull’s resolution were
-competing for priority of consideration Sumner remarked
-that during the preceding summer, 1864, he had met a distinguished
-gentleman just returned from Louisiana; he had
-been present at some of the sittings of the convention, having
-been in New Orleans in discharge of important public duties.
-This gentleman, added Sumner, said compendiously that the
-convention was “nothing but a stupendous hoax.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When Reverdy Johnson inquired the name of Sumner’s
-informant, Senator Grimes replied that he could furnish a
-large number of names of persons present in New Orleans
-when the convention was held, and added: “If the Senate will
-give a committee I will undertake to prove and I will prove
-that the voters whose votes were polled in the outlying parishes
-at Thibodeaux and Placquemines, and other places, were carried
-in army transports to those places where they polled the
-votes, being discharged soldiers and persons belonging in
-New Orleans, and were brought back to New Orleans, and
-were not residents of the places where they purported to
-vote.”<a id='r423' /><a href='#f423' class='c010'><sup>[423]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sumner, immediately after the uncontroverted statement
-of Mr. Grimes, added, with more energy than elegance:
-“The pretended State government in Louisiana is utterly indefensible
-whether you look at its origin or its character. To
-describe it, I must use plain language. It is a mere seven-months’
-abortion, begotten by the bayonet in criminal conjunction
-with the spirit of caste, and born before its time,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>rickety, unformed, unfinished—whose continued existence
-will be a burden, a reproach, and a wrong. That is the whole
-case; and yet the Senator from Illinois now presses it upon
-the Senate at this moment to the exclusion of the important
-public business of the country.”<a id='r424' /><a href='#f424' class='c010'><sup>[424]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The urgency of the army and navy appropriation bills prevented
-for the time further consideration of the Louisiana
-question. The subject, however, was again brought before
-the Senate on March 2, 1865, by Mr. Doolittle, who had received
-and had been requested to file with the secretary of the
-Senate a certificate, under seal of the State of Louisiana, of the
-election of Michael Hahn as a Senator of the United States
-from the State of Louisiana for six years from March 4, 1865.
-Mr. Davis, of Kentucky, opposed its reception. Doolittle’s
-motion to have it laid on the table and filed was, however,
-agreed to.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Only two days of the session remained; in the temper of
-the Senate it was impossible that the resolution could pass at
-that time, and the House had not yet taken it up for discussion.
-In these circumstances the measure was abandoned,
-though very reluctantly, by its champions.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>XI<br /> <span class='large'>INCIDENTS OF RECONSTRUCTION</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>The Emancipation Proclamation did not affect, as is
-well known, the status of slaves in the loyal border
-States or in the excepted parts of Virginia and Louisiana.
-The State of Tennessee, too, as we have seen, was not
-named in the edict of freedom; that was published by the President
-simply as a measure of military necessity, and was not
-regarded by him or by others as operative to prevent, when
-war had ceased, a revival of servitude in the insurgent States,
-for negroes could easily be imported from those loyal commonwealths
-still tolerating that institution. It was uncertain,
-too, how the proclamation would affect the status of slaves in
-those districts not yet overrun by the Union armies. In the
-border States, in Tennessee and in the excepted parts of
-Louisiana and Virginia there were probably 2,000,000 men in
-bondage. In order, then, to abolish universally as well as
-permanently to prohibit involuntary servitude an amendment
-of the Constitution was proposed in the familiar language of
-the sixth section of the ordinance of 1787. Though it passed
-the Senate, April 8, 1864, it failed at that time to receive in
-the House the requisite two thirds vote. It has been seen
-how upon the recommendation of Mr. Lincoln it was reconsidered
-and passed by the Representatives at a succeeding session,
-January 31, 1865, and submitted to the States for their
-action. It was adopted by his own State, Illinois, on the following
-day. By the close of February sixteen others had followed
-its example, and before the President’s death twenty in
-all had ratified the Amendment. To Mr. Lincoln, who had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>long held anti-slavery opinions, this expression of public sentiment
-was extremely grateful; indeed, less than two months
-before his assassination he declared his satisfaction at the
-popular verdict, and his confidence that the States would
-consummate what Congress had so nobly begun. The Thirteenth
-Amendment, however, was not announced as part of
-the organic law until after the Presidential plan of reconstruction
-had been ignored by the Thirty-ninth Congress. This
-subject, therefore, need not be further discussed in these
-pages.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The extraordinary amount of work actually completed by
-the national Legislature can be comprehended only by considering
-the degree of perfection to which the committee system
-has been carried under congressional government. Measures
-that conduct the reader over vast stretches of the records
-of Congress occupy but a day or two in the calendar.
-The discussions described in the two preceding chapters did
-not, as might be supposed, engage the entire attention of Federal
-legislators. It was desirable, if, indeed, it was not essential,
-that the sentiments of the lawmaking body of the nation
-be authoritatively declared on the question of admitting members
-to Congress from those States reconstituted under the
-Executive plan; definitive action in the matter of the electoral
-votes which they presented was also awaited with not a little
-interest. Scarcely inferior in importance and more instructive
-than these measures was the passage of an act, approved
-March 3, 1865, which created in the War Department a “Bureau
-of Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands.” As
-the system of relief then inaugurated was destined to become
-an important agency in the work of reconstruction a brief
-account of its origin and institution may not be deemed superfluous.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A former chapter has related how great numbers of “contrabands,”
-by assembling early in the war at Fortress Monroe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>and Newport News, taxed the ingenuity of even General Butler
-to provide for their maintenance; it also noticed an attempt
-under Mr. E. L. Pierce to improve the condition of abandoned
-slaves in South Carolina, and the friendly interest of
-Secretary Chase in that experiment. But the hundreds of
-fugitives within Federal lines in May, 1861, had grown to
-be millions by the beginning of 1865. Of this army of homeless
-freedmen the policy of enlisting colored troops provided
-directly for nearly 200,000 able-bodied males. The
-women, the children and the large class unsuitable for military
-service left a multitude still unprovided for. Some
-relief, it is true, was afforded by the Treasury Department,
-which undertook to establish on abandoned and confiscated
-lands colonies of self-supporting negroes, but the ignorance
-and rapacity of many persons entrusted with the supervision
-of this work led to its general failure. Here and there, indeed,
-more satisfactory results were obtained, though these
-isolated successes seldom reached the point of actual encouragement.
-The South Carolina experiment may, therefore,
-be properly regarded as the germ of the Freedmen’s Bureau.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The progress of these communities had been watched anxiously
-by the abolition and the kindred associations which
-sprang up to continue the work that anti-slavery men had
-begun. On this subject a committee representing the Freedmen’s
-Aid Societies of Boston, New York, Philadelphia and
-Cincinnati addressed, December 1, 1863, an able memorial to
-the President. Without expressing a favorable opinion of
-the plan suggested by the petitioners, Mr. Lincoln referred
-the question, as one of great magnitude and importance, to
-the consideration of Congress. The Freedmen’s Aid Societies,
-however, had been anticipated by Representative Eliot,
-of Massachusetts, who had offered, January 12, 1863, a bill
-to establish a Bureau of Emancipation, which was referred to
-a select committee; but other business, regarded as more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>urgent, prevented them from reporting at that time a measure
-which had been prepared. At the succeeding session the
-proposition was offered again. After numerous efforts to
-secure favorable action, efforts extending over a period of
-two years, Congress took the subject into consideration.
-The House proposed one, the Senate a different measure; a
-committee of conference suggested something unlike either,
-though embodying important features of both. This, like
-every proposition affecting the negro, encountered considerable
-opposition. The creation of such a bureau, said its adversaries,
-conceded the very point that pro-slavery men had
-always maintained; namely, that the negro was incapable of
-taking care of himself. The extent of its powers, its duration
-and the cost of its maintenance were successively made
-grounds of opposition by those hostile to its establishment.
-Nor did its enemies fail to point out the great temptation to
-abuse which was offered by the system.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The act established in the War Department, to continue
-during the rebellion and for one year thereafter, a bureau
-to which should be committed the management of all confiscated
-or abandoned lands, and the control of all subjects
-relating to refugees and freedmen from any district within
-the territory embraced in the operations of the army, under
-such regulations as might be adopted by the head of the
-bureau and approved by the President.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The conduct of the bureau was entrusted to a commissioner
-appointed by the President with the concurrence of the
-Senate. In the exercise of his functions he was to be assisted
-by such clerks as the Secretary of War might assign him;
-their number, of course, was limited by law. For his compensation
-the head of the new bureau was to receive a sum
-fixed at $3,000 per annum. To aid in executing the provisions
-of the act the President was authorized to select, by and with
-the advice and consent of the Senate, one assistant commissioner
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>for each of the States declared to be in insurrection, not,
-however, to exceed ten in number, each to receive an annual
-salary of $2,500.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Secretary of War, besides assigning clerks of the several
-grades mentioned in the law, was authorized to issue,
-under regulations which he might himself prescribe, such provisions,
-clothing and fuel as might be deemed needful for the
-immediate and temporary shelter and supply of destitute and
-suffering refugees and freedmen as well as their wives and
-children. Any military officer could be detailed to duty under
-the act, but without increase of pay or allowances.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was further provided that the commissioner, “under the
-direction of the President, shall have authority to set apart,
-for the use of loyal refugees and freedmen, such tracts of
-land within the insurrectionary States as shall have been
-abandoned, or to which the United States shall have acquired
-title by confiscation or sale, or otherwise, and to every
-male citizen, whether refugee or freedman, as aforesaid, there
-shall be assigned not more than forty acres of such land,
-and the person to whom it was so assigned shall be protected
-in the use and enjoyment of the land for the term of three
-years at an annual rent not exceeding six per centum upon
-the value of said land, as it was appraised by the State authorities
-in the year 1860, for the purpose of taxation, and
-in case no such appraisal can be found, then the rental shall
-be based upon the estimated value of the land in said year,
-to be ascertained in such manner as the commissioner may
-by regulation prescribe. At the end of said term, or at any
-time during said term, the occupants of any parcels so assigned
-may purchase the land, and receive such title thereto
-as the United States can convey, upon paying therefor the
-value of the land, as ascertained and fixed for the purpose of
-determining the annual rent aforesaid.”<a id='r425' /><a href='#f425' class='c010'><sup>[425]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>It was made the duty of the assistant commissioners to
-submit a quarterly report of their proceedings to the commissioner,
-who in turn was required to report annually to the
-President before the commencement of each regular session
-of Congress. Special reports might from time to time be
-requested of either the head of the bureau or his subordinates.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The bureau thus established was organized principally by
-officers of the regular army under direction of General
-Oliver O. Howard, who had been selected by President Johnson
-as commissioner. It soon grew to vast proportions.
-At first it was economically managed and beneficent in its
-influence; subsequently, however, it degenerated into an
-abuse. Interesting and instructive as would be an inquiry
-into its operations, the history of this politico-philanthropic
-experiment does not fall within the limits of this work.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Since the adjournment, February 27, 1861, of the Peace
-Convention, which had been in session at Washington endeavoring
-to discover, if possible, a means of avoiding the
-irrepressible conflict, there was a large class who believed that
-if only they had been directing the policy of Government the
-outbreak could have been averted; even when war was flagrant
-and passions were highest this class, though diminished greatly
-in numbers, did not altogether despair of effecting a settlement
-between the sections. Besides these well-meaning
-patriots there were not a few who were ambitious of notoriety
-or possessed of an undue opinion of their own importance.
-Persons of both classes attempted from time to time to bring
-about an armistice which would facilitate negotiations between
-the two governments. The efforts of these men have no further
-bearing on the subject of reconstruction than as they
-serve to show Mr. Lincoln’s views in successive stages of the
-conflict.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Prominent among these attempts was the Jacquess-Gilmore
-mission, which has been described in an interesting volume
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>of Rebellion reminiscences by one of the participants.<a id='r426' /><a href='#f426' class='c010'><sup>[426]</sup></a>
-Horace Greeley’s career as a diplomat is also a familiar story,
-which at once illustrates the guilelessness of the editor and
-the sagacity of the President. Mr. Greeley’s failure at Niagara
-Falls, however, did not discourage a similar undertaking
-by Hon. Jeremiah S. Black, who, with no greater success,
-had an interview in Canada with his former friend Jacob
-Thompson.<a id='r427' /><a href='#f427' class='c010'><sup>[427]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>More important, because of its consequences, than the
-work of any of these volunteer commissioners was the visit
-of Francis P. Blair, Sr., to Richmond. This distinguished
-politician and editor had in the days of Nullification assisted
-in shaping the policy of the Government. The bosom friend
-and confidential adviser of Andrew Jackson, Mr. Blair
-thoroughly understood Southern feeling, and from long
-residence in Washington was intimately acquainted with
-Southern leaders. His political victories in the past encouraged,
-no doubt, the hope of some notable achievement
-to crown his maturer years. For some time he had been
-meditating a plan of reunion which would not only end the
-strife but contribute to heal the wounds of war. Though
-anxious to communicate his project to the President, he received
-no encouragement to do so. By requesting Blair to
-call upon him after the fall of Savannah Mr. Lincoln evaded
-a discussion of the subject. That contingency, however, was
-not remote, and late in December the veteran political leader
-received from the President a card bearing these words:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Allow the bearer, F. P. Blair, Sr., to pass our lines, go South, and
-return.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>A. Lincoln.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>December 28, 1864.</em></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>With this credential Mr. Blair went at once to the camp
-of General Grant, whence under flags of truce he sent two
-communications to Jefferson Davis requesting, among other
-things, permission for an interview. This, after some delay,
-was granted, and on the 12th of January, 1865, he found
-himself in Richmond face to face with the Confederate President.
-What transpired is accurately known from accounts
-of the meeting by both Blair and Davis. The former admitted
-frankly that Mr. Lincoln afforded him no opportunity
-to explain the object of his mission, and, indeed, appeared
-anxious to avoid an interview on that subject. When he had
-been assured that the Confederate authorities were under no
-engagements to European powers that would prevent their
-entering into arrangements with the Government of the
-United States Mr. Blair unfolded his plan by reading to
-Mr. Davis a carefully prepared paper embodying the following
-suggestions:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Slavery, he said, was doomed, for even the South itself had
-proposed to employ the slave in winning its independence.
-That institution, therefore, no longer remained as an obstacle
-to peace. Louis Napoleon, he continued, had declared publicly
-that his object was to make the Latin race supreme in
-the southern part of North America. This, indeed, had been
-an idea of the Emperor’s uncle, who desired at one time to
-make conquests of territory in the States bordering the Gulf,
-and the foothold already effected in Mexico was one step in
-the accomplishment of this grand design. After developing
-these points Mr. Blair added, “Jefferson Davis is the fortunate
-man who now holds the commanding position to encounter
-this formidable scheme of conquest, and whose fiat
-can at the same time deliver his country from the bloody
-agony now covering it in mourning. He can drive Maximilian
-from his American throne, and baffle the designs of
-Napoleon to subject our Southern people to the ‘Latin race.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>How this was to be accomplished Mr. Blair’s paper outlined.
-President Lincoln’s amnesty proclamation looked to
-an armistice, which could be enlarged to embrace all engaged
-in the war; then by secret preliminaries to a cessation of
-hostilities Mr. Davis could transfer to Texas such a portion
-of the Confederate army as was deemed adequate to his
-purpose. With a Southern force on the Rio Grande and
-Juarez conciliated it could enter Mexico and expel her invaders.
-If these combined forces were insufficient, multitudes
-from the Federal army, officers and men, would be
-found ready to engage in the enterprise. Both Republicans
-and Democrats of the North had declared their adherence to
-the Monroe Doctrine.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After thus indicating for Mr. Davis a means of escape
-from his dilemma the adroit politician next appealed powerfully
-to his desire of fame. “He who expels the Bonaparte-Hapsburg
-dynasty from our Southern flank,” proceeded Mr.
-Blair, “which General Jackson in one of his letters warned
-me was the vulnerable point through which foreign invasion
-would come, will ally his name with those of Washington
-and Jackson as a defender of the liberty of the country. If
-in delivering Mexico he should model its States in form and
-principle to adapt them to our Union and add a new Southern
-constellation to its benignant sky while rounding off our
-possessions on the continent at the Isthmus, and opening the
-way to blending the waters of the Atlantic and Pacific, thus
-embracing our Republic in the arms of the ocean, he would
-complete the work of Jefferson, who first set one foot of our
-colossal Government on the Pacific by a stride from the Gulf
-of Mexico.”<a id='r428' /><a href='#f428' class='c010'><sup>[428]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Blair remarked in conclusion, “There is my problem, Mr.
-Davis; do you think it possible to be solved?” After a little
-consideration came the reply, “I think so.” Touching the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>question of bringing the sections together again Mr. Davis
-observed that though a spirit of vindictiveness had been engendered
-by the war, time and events would do something
-toward its removal. The circumstance of Northern and
-Southern armies united in a common cause would, he believed,
-assist greatly in restoring the old feeling. He also
-acknowledged to his visitor that European powers were
-pleased to see the sections exhausting their resources in
-mutual war.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thus was the Confederate leader persuaded to entertain
-the bold project of conquering Mexico under pretence of
-relieving the Monroe Doctrine from its peril. The explanation
-of this easy conversion, however, lies mainly in the fact
-that Mr. Davis, however he might endeavor to conceal his
-convictions, was convinced that the resources of the South
-were scarcely equal to another campaign. Like other leaders
-of the Confederacy he was anxious to seize any means of
-escape from an embarrassing situation. He proposed to Mr.
-Blair, therefore, the appointment of commissioners, and mentioned
-Judge Campbell, formerly of the United States Supreme
-Court, as one qualified by his talents and integrity
-to undertake such a mission.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>During his short sojourn in Richmond Mr. Blair learned
-from other prominent secessionists the hopelessness of the
-rebellion, and this, perhaps, was the only tangible result of
-his celebrated intrigue. To initiate the project Mr. Davis
-handed him a letter to be shown President Lincoln. That
-interesting communication was as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='c011'><span class='sc'>Richmond, Virginia</span>, <em>12 Jany., ’65</em>.</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>F. P. Blair</span>, Esq.:</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='sc'>Sir</span>: I have deemed it proper, and probably desirable to you, to give
-you, in this form, the substance of remarks made by me, to be repeated
-by you to President Lincoln, etc., etc. I have no disposition to find
-obstacles in forms, and am willing now, as heretofore, to enter into
-negotiations for the restoration of peace; and am ready to send a commission
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>whenever I have reason to suppose it will be received, or to
-receive a commission, if the United States Government shall choose to
-send one. That, notwithstanding the rejection of our former offers, I
-would, if you could promise that a commissioner, minister, or other agent,
-would be received, appoint one immediately, and renew the effort to enter
-into conference, with a view to secure peace to the two countries.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Yours, etc.,</div>
- <div class='line in6'><span class='sc'>Jefferson Davis</span>.<a id='r429' /><a href='#f429' class='c010'><sup>[429]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Lincoln’s only response to the communication thus
-brought to his attention was to open a little wider the door
-for negotiation by sending to Mr. Blair the following letter:</p>
-
-<div class='c011'><span class='sc'>Washington</span>, <em>January 18, 1865</em>.</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>F. P. Blair</span>, Esq.:</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='sc'>Sir</span>: You having shown me Mr. Davis’s letter to you of the 12th instant,
-you may say to him that I have constantly been, am now, and
-shall continue ready to receive any agent whom he, or any other influential
-person now resisting the National authority, may informally send to
-me, with the view of securing peace to the people of our one common
-country.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Yours, etc.,</div>
- <div class='line in4'><span class='sc'>A. Lincoln</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>With this note Mr. Blair returned to Richmond framing
-as best he could excuses why President Lincoln rejected the
-overtures of Jefferson Davis for a joint invasion of Mexico.
-With the nature of these explanations this essay is not concerned.
-To cover his retreat from an unsuccessful intrigue
-the disappointed commissioner then suggested that, perhaps,
-Grant and Lee could enter into negotiations for peace with
-more assurance of success than politicians could hope to do.
-Though Mr. Davis offered no objection to this proposal,
-Blair was forced soon after to report that military negotiations
-were out of the question.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Confederate leader was then compelled to choose
-between obstinate perseverance in his policy of a war for
-Southern independence or to accept frankly Mr. Lincoln’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>offer of reunion. Blair’s first visit to Richmond did not
-escape observation, and, when his second conference was
-known, interest in the purpose of his mission became intense.
-Without some effort at negotiation Mr. Davis could not afterward
-satisfy the peace party in the South without subjecting
-himself to the injurious imputation of preferring war. In
-these circumstances, and after consultation with his cabinet,
-he authorized Alexander H. Stephens, John A. Campbell and
-R. M. T. Hunter to proceed to Washington as a commission
-for the purpose of informally conferring with Mr. Lincoln
-“upon the issues involved in the existing war, and for the
-purpose of securing peace to the two countries.” They were
-burdened with no instructions, and only one condition was
-insisted upon, that is, an acknowledgment of Southern independence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Toward the end of January they presented themselves at
-the Federal military lines near Richmond, and, after an
-exchange of telegrams with the authorities in Washington,
-were permitted to pass on to Fortress Monroe. It was the
-original intention of President Lincoln to intrust the work
-of the conference wholly to Secretary Seward, and for this
-purpose he gave him the following written instructions:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'><span class='sc'>Executive Mansion,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Washington</span>, <em>January 31, 1865</em>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Hon. <span class='sc'>William H. Seward</span>, <em>Secretary of State</em>:</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>You will proceed to Fortress Monroe, Virginia, there to meet and informally
-confer with Messrs. Stephens, Hunter, and Campbell, on the
-basis of my letter to F. P. Blair, Esq., of January 18, 1865, a copy of
-which you have. You will make known to them that three things are indispensable,
-to wit: <em>First</em>. The restoration of the national authority
-throughout all the States. <em>Second.</em> No receding by the executive of
-the United States on the slavery question from the position assumed
-thereon in the late annual message to Congress, and in preceding documents.
-<em>Third.</em> No cessation of hostilities short of an end of the war
-and the disbanding of all forces hostile to the Government. You will
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span>inform them that all propositions of theirs, not inconsistent with the
-above, will be considered and passed upon in a spirit of sincere
-liberality. You will hear all they may choose to say and report it to
-me. You will not assume to definitely consummate anything.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Yours, etc.,</div>
- <div class='line in6'><span class='sc'>Abraham Lincoln</span>.<a id='r430' /><a href='#f430' class='c010'><sup>[430]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The different if not conflicting statements as to the object
-of their mission nearly led to a return of the Confederate
-representatives without any interview whatever. General
-Grant, fearing the unfavorable influence on the Union cause
-of such a result, sent to Secretary Stanton a confidential dispatch
-in which he referred to the evident sincerity of Stephens
-and Hunter. He also expressed his regret that they
-were about to return without an expression on the subject
-of their mission from any person in authority. President
-Lincoln, who was about to recall Mr. Seward by telegraph,
-decided, on reading Grant’s message, to join his Secretary at
-Fortress Monroe, for which place he set out at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The famous conference, which took place February 3,
-1865, on board a steamer at Hampton Roads, has been
-treated in detail by nearly every historian of the Rebellion,
-and, therefore, need only be briefly noticed in these pages.
-An informal discussion of four hours occurred on the <em>River
-Queen</em>. By a previous agreement no writings or memoranda
-were made; hence our principal knowledge of what transpired
-at that celebrated interview is derived from accounts subsequently
-written out from memory by the Confederate commissioners,
-and from Secretary Seward’s letter to Charles
-Francis Adams, United States Minister to England.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Stephens, who began the discussion, asked whether
-there was no way of restoring former relations; to this Mr.
-Lincoln replied, “There was but one way that he knew of,
-and that was, for those who were resisting the laws of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>Union to cease that resistance.” Stephens observed that they
-had been led to believe that both sections might for a time
-cease their present strife and unite on some continental question
-until passion had somewhat subsided and accommodation
-become possible.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To this suggestion Mr. Lincoln replied promptly: “I suppose
-you refer to something that Mr. Blair has said. Now
-it is proper to state at the beginning that whatever he said
-was of his own accord, and without the least authority from
-me.” The President then stated that before the visit to
-Richmond he had flatly refused to hear Mr. Blair’s propositions;
-he was willing, however, to hear proposals for peace
-on the conditions expressed in his reply to the letter of Mr.
-Davis. The restoration of the Union was a <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">sine qua non</span></i> with
-him, therefore his instructions that no conference be held
-except on that basis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though the Confederate statesmen had resolved not to
-enter into any agreement that would require their forces to
-unite in an invasion of Mexico, Mr. Stephens continued to
-press the subject, and this after Mr. Lincoln had refused
-even to discuss the question. The President then brought
-the conversation back to the original object of the meeting,
-and declared that he could not entertain a proposition looking
-to an armistice until the paramount question of reunion
-was first determined.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The terms of reunion were then discussed. On this subject
-Mr. Lincoln is reported by the commissioners to have said
-that the shortest way to effect this was to disband the insurgent
-armies and permit “the National authorities to resume
-their functions.” As to the admission of members to
-Congress from the seceding States the President believed
-they ought to be received, and also that they would be; however,
-he could enter into no stipulations on that subject. By the
-cessation of resistance, he is alleged to have declared, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_398'>398</span>States would be immediately restored to their practical relations
-to the Union. This sentiment was probably ascribed
-to him for party purposes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As the enforcement of the confiscation and other penal laws
-was left entirely with him he assured them that the Executive
-power would be exercised with the utmost liberality.
-The courts could determine all questions involving rights of
-property, and Congress, after passion had been somewhat composed,
-would, no doubt, be liberal in making restitution of
-forfeited property, or would indemnify those who had
-suffered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The President refused to promise any modification whatever
-of the terms of his Emancipation Proclamation. He
-regarded it as a judicial question. How the courts would
-decide it he did not know. His own opinion was that as the
-proclamation was only a war measure, as soon as the war
-ceased it would be inoperative for the future. It would be
-held to apply only to such slaves as had come under its
-operation while it was in active exercise. The courts, however,
-might hold that it effectually emancipated all the slaves
-in the States to which it applied at the time. He is reported
-further to have said that he interfered with slavery to maintain
-the Union, and then only with hesitation and under pressure of
-a public necessity. He had always favored emancipation, but
-not immediate emancipation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the same occasion he is said to have stated as his
-belief that the people of the North were not less responsible
-for slavery than those of the South; if the war should then
-cease, with the voluntary abolition of slavery by the States,
-he would favor, individually, payment by the Government
-of a fair indemnity for the loss to owners. That feeling, he
-believed, had an extensive existence in the loyal States. He
-knew some who were in favor of an appropriation as high
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_399'>399</span>as $400,000,000 for that purpose. However, he could enter
-into no stipulation. He merely expressed his own views
-and what he believed to be the views of others upon the
-subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Relative to the division of Virginia Mr. Lincoln said he
-could give only “an individual opinion, which was, that
-Western Virginia would continue to be recognized as a separate
-State in the Union.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Seward brought to the notice of the commissioners one
-topic which to them was new, that is, the passage by Congress
-three days earlier of the proposed amendment to the
-Federal Constitution. He is reported to have said that it
-was passed in deference to the war spirit, and that if the
-South would agree to immediate restoration its ratification
-might be defeated. This, however, is doubtful, for the Cabinet
-as well as the President approved the action of Congress
-in submitting the Thirteenth Amendment to the consideration
-of the States; besides, it is not in harmony with Mr.
-Seward’s anti-slavery record.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In urging on Mr. Stephens separate State action to effect
-a cessation of hostilities, the President said: “If I resided
-in Georgia, with my present sentiments, I’ll tell you what I
-would do if I were in your place. I would go home and get
-the Governor of the State to call the Legislature together,
-and get them to recall all the State troops from the war;
-elect Senators and Members to Congress, and ratify this
-constitutional amendment prospectively, so as to take effect—say
-in five years. Such a ratification would be valid, in my
-opinion. I have looked into the subject, and think such
-a prospective ratification would be valid. Whatever may
-have been the views of your people before the war, they must
-be convinced now that slavery is doomed. It cannot last long
-in any event, and the best course, it seems to me, for your
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_400'>400</span>public men to pursue would be to adopt such a policy as will
-avoid, as far as possible, the evils of immediate emancipation.
-This would be my course, if I were in your place.”<a id='r431' /><a href='#f431' class='c010'><sup>[431]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The advice was wasted. When the party was on the
-point of separating, Mr. Stephens again asked the President
-to reconsider the plan of an armistice on the basis of a
-Mexican expedition. “Well, Stephens,” replied Mr. Lincoln,
-“I will reconsider it; but I do not think my mind will
-change.” Thus ended the famous Hampton Roads conference.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On their return to Richmond the commissioners made a
-formal report to Mr. Davis of the failure of negotiations;
-this he transmitted to the Confederate Congress with an
-artful letter designed to strengthen the war party in the
-South, and to silence effectually the adversaries of his administration.
-To improve this advantage a day was appointed
-for the purpose of getting a popular expression on
-the result of the conference. Business was generally suspended,
-and the people crowded every building in the city
-suitable for holding large assemblies. Churches, theatres and
-halls of legislation were engaged for the occasion. Twenty
-orators, among the ablest in the South, told their hearers of
-the Northern “ultimatum,” not omitting to describe eloquently
-all the consequences of subjugation. The old war
-spirit appeared to have been kindled once more; “But,” says
-Mr. Pollard, “it was only the sickly glare of an expiring
-flame; there was no steadiness in the excitement; there was
-no virtue in huzzas; the inspiration ended with the voices
-and ceremonies that invoked it; and it was found that the
-spirit of the people of the Confederacy was too weak, too
-much broken to act with effect, or assume the position of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_401'>401</span>erect and desperate defiance.”<a id='r432' /><a href='#f432' class='c010'><sup>[432]</sup></a> In March General Lee revealed
-the weakness of his army at Fort Steadman; Grant’s
-movements around Petersburg followed in April; the rest is a
-familiar story.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From this brief discussion of topics only allied to the Presidential
-method of reunion it is time to resume our examination
-of the main theme.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is almost a trite observation to remark that President
-Lincoln’s opinions on public questions were formed only after
-mature deliberation, and that to the conclusions thus reached
-he adhered with inflexible tenacity. Notwithstanding the sentiments
-of Congress on the question of reconstruction he
-evinced a decided preference for his own. This is proved
-by a number of letters and speeches from which two may be
-selected both because of the time of their appearance and
-the station of the persons to whom they were addressed. To
-General Hurlbut, who had temporarily succeeded Banks in
-command at New Orleans, the President wrote, November
-14, 1864, the following admonitory letter:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Few things, since I have been here, have impressed me more painfully
-than what, for four or five months past, has appeared a bitter military
-opposition to the new State government of Louisiana. I still indulged
-some hope that I was mistaken in the fact; but copies of a correspondence
-on the subject between General Canby and yourself, and shown
-me to-day, dispel that hope. A very fair proportion of the people of
-Louisiana have inaugurated a new State government, making an excellent
-new constitution—better for the poor black man than we have in
-Illinois. This was done under military protection, directed by me, in
-the belief, still sincerely entertained, that with such a nucleus around
-which to build we could get the State into position again sooner than
-otherwise. In this belief a general promise of protection and support,
-applicable alike to Louisiana and other States, was given in the last
-annual message. During the formation of the new government and constitution
-they were supported by nearly every loyal person, and opposed
-by every secessionist. And this support and this opposition, from the
-respective standpoints of the parties, was perfectly consistent and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_402'>402</span>logical. Every Unionist ought to wish the new government to succeed;
-and every disunionist must desire it to fail. Its failure would gladden
-the heart of Slidell in Europe, and of every enemy of the old flag in the
-world. Every advocate of slavery naturally desires to see blasted and
-crushed the liberty promised the black man by the new constitution. But
-why General Canby and General Hurlbut should join on the same side
-is to me incomprehensible.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Of course, in the condition of things at New Orleans, the military
-must not be thwarted by the civil authority; but when the constitutional
-Convention, for what it deems a breach of privilege, arrests an editor in
-no way connected with the military, the military necessity for insulting the
-Convention and forcibly discharging the editor is difficult to perceive.
-Neither is the military necessity for protecting the people against paying
-large salaries fixed by a legislature of their own choosing very apparent.
-Equally difficult to perceive is the military necessity for forcibly interposing
-to prevent a bank from loaning its own money to the State. These
-things, if they have occurred, are, at the best, no better than gratuitous
-hostility. I wish I could hope that they may be shown to not have
-occurred. To make assurance against misunderstanding, I repeat that
-in the existing condition of things in Louisiana, the military must not be
-thwarted by the civil authority; and I add that on points of difference
-the commanding general must be judge and master. But I also add that
-in the exercise of this judgment and control, a purpose, obvious and
-scarcely unavowed, to transcend all military necessity, in order to crush
-out the civil government, will not be overlooked.<a id='r433' /><a href='#f433' class='c010'><sup>[433]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A similar communication, though less peremptory in tone,
-he felt constrained to send to General E. R. S. Canby, who
-had been assigned to command in the military division of
-West Mississippi. Under date of December 12, 1864, he
-wrote that officer:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I think it is probable that you are laboring under some misapprehension
-as to the purpose, or rather the motive, of the Government on two
-points—cotton and the new Louisiana State government.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It is conceded that military operations are the first in importance; and
-as to what is indispensable to these operations, the department commander
-must be judge and master.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the other matters mentioned I suppose to be of public importance
-also; and what I have attempted in regard to them is not merely a
-concession to private interest and pecuniary greed.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_403'>403</span>As to the new State government of Louisiana. Most certainly there
-is no worthy object in getting up a piece of machinery merely to pay
-salaries and give political consideration to certain men. But it is a
-worthy object to again get Louisiana into proper practical relations with
-the nation, and we can never finish this if we never begin it. Much
-good work is already done, and surely nothing can be gained by
-throwing it away.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I do not wish either cotton or the new State government to take
-precedence of the military while the necessity for the military remains;
-but there is a strong public reason for treating each with so much favor
-as may not be substantially detrimental to the military.<a id='r434' /><a href='#f434' class='c010'><sup>[434]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That Mr. Lincoln never modified these opinions is conclusively
-proved by the last public utterance of his life. In
-addressing the citizens of Washington, who were holding a
-demonstration in consequence of Lee’s surrender, the President
-on the evening of April 11 said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>By these recent successes the reinauguration of the national authority—reconstruction—which
-has had a large share of thought from the
-first, is pressed much more closely upon our attention. It is fraught with
-great difficulty. Unlike a case of war between independent nations,
-there is no authorized organ for us to treat with—no one man has
-authority to give up the rebellion for any other man. We simply must
-begin with and mold from disorganized and discordant elements. Nor
-is it a small additional embarrassment that we, the loyal people, differ
-among ourselves as to the mode, manner, and measure of reconstruction.
-As a general rule, I abstain from reading the reports of attacks upon
-myself, wishing not to be provoked by that to which I cannot properly
-offer an answer. In spite of this precaution, however, it comes to my
-knowledge that I am much censured for some supposed agency in setting
-up and seeking to sustain the new State government of Louisiana.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In this I have done just so much as, and no more than, the public
-knows. In the annual message of December, 1863, and in the accompanying
-proclamation, I presented a plan of reconstruction, as the
-phrase goes, which I promised, if adopted by any State, should be acceptable
-to and sustained by the executive Government of the nation.
-I distinctly stated that this was not the only plan which might possibly
-be acceptable, and I also distinctly protested that the executive claimed
-no right to say when or whether members should be admitted to seats
-in Congress from such States. This plan was in advance submitted to
-the then Cabinet, and distinctly approved by every member of it. One
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_404'>404</span>of them suggested that I should then and in that connection apply the
-Emancipation Proclamation to the theretofore excepted parts of Virginia
-and Louisiana; that I should drop the suggestion about apprenticeship for
-freed people, and that I should omit the protest against my own power
-in regard to the admission of members of Congress. But even he approved
-every part and parcel of the plan which has since been employed
-or touched by the action of Louisiana.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The new constitution of Louisiana, declaring emancipation for the
-whole State, practically applies the proclamation to the part previously
-excepted. It does not adopt apprenticeship for freed people, and it is
-silent, as it could not well be otherwise, about the admission of members
-to Congress. So that, as it applies to Louisiana, every member of the
-Cabinet fully approved the plan. The message went to Congress, and I
-received many commendations of the plan, written and verbal, and not a
-single objection to it from any professed emancipationist came to my
-knowledge until after the news reached Washington that the people of
-Louisiana had begun to move in accordance with it. From about July
-1862, I had corresponded with different persons supposed to be interested
-[in] seeking a reconstruction of a State government for Louisiana.
-When the message of 1863, with the plan before mentioned, reached
-New Orleans, General Banks wrote me that he was confident that the
-people, with his military coöperation, would reconstruct substantially
-on that plan. I wrote to him and some of them to try it. They tried
-it, and the result is known. Such has been my only agency in getting
-up the Louisiana government.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As to sustaining it, my promise is out, as before stated. But as bad
-promises are better broken than kept, I shall treat this as a bad promise,
-and break it whenever I shall be convinced that keeping it is adverse
-to the public interest; but I have not yet been so convinced. I have
-been shown a letter on this subject, supposed to be an able one, in
-which the writer expresses regret that my mind has not seemed to be
-definitely fixed on the question whether the seceded States, so called,
-are in the Union or out of it. It would perhaps add astonishment to
-his regret were he to learn that since I have found professed Union men
-endeavoring to make that question, I have purposely forborne any public
-expression upon it. As appears to me, that question has not been, nor
-yet is, a practically material one, and that any discussion of it, while
-it thus remains practically immaterial, could have no effect other than
-the mischievous one of dividing our friends. As yet, whatever it may
-hereafter become, that question is bad as the basis of a controversy,
-and good for nothing at all—a merely pernicious abstraction.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We all agree that the seceded States, so called, are out of their proper
-practical relation with the Union, and that the sole object of the Government,
-civil and military, in regard to those States is to again get them
-into that proper practical relation. I believe that it is not only possible,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_405'>405</span>but in fact easier, to do this without deciding or even considering
-whether these States have ever been out of the Union, than with it.
-Finding themselves safely at home, it would be utterly immaterial
-whether they had ever been abroad. Let us all join in doing the acts
-necessary to restoring the proper practical relations between these
-States and the Union, and each forever after innocently indulge his
-own opinion whether in doing the acts he brought the States from
-without into the Union, or only gave them proper assistance, they never
-having been out of it. The amount of constituency, so to speak, on
-which the new Louisiana government rests, would be more satisfactory to
-all if it contained 50,000, or 30,000, or even 20,000, instead of only about
-12,000, as it does. It is also unsatisfactory to some that the elective
-franchise is not given to the colored man. I would myself prefer that
-it were now conferred on the very intelligent, and on those who serve our
-cause as soldiers.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Still, the question is not whether the Louisiana government, as it
-stands, is quite all that is desirable. The question is, will it be wiser
-to take it as it is and help to improve it, or to reject and disperse it?
-Can Louisiana be brought into proper practical relation with the Union
-sooner by sustaining or by discarding her new State government? Some
-twelve thousand voters in the heretofore slave State of Louisiana have
-sworn allegiance to the Union, assumed to be the rightful political
-power of the State, held elections, organized a State government,
-adopted a free State constitution, giving the benefit of public schools
-equally to black and white, and empowering the legislature to confer the
-elective franchise upon the colored man. Their legislature has already
-voted to ratify the constitutional amendment recently passed by Congress,
-abolishing slavery throughout the nation. These twelve thousand
-persons are thus fully committed to the Union and to perpetual
-freedom in the State—committed to the very things, and nearly all the
-things, the nation wants—and they ask the nation’s recognition and its
-assistance to make good their committal.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Now, if we reject and spurn them, we do our utmost to disorganize
-and disperse them. We, in effect, say to the white man: You
-are worthless or worse; we will neither help you, nor be helped by you.
-To the blacks we say: This cup of liberty which these, your old
-masters, hold to your lips we will dash from you, and leave you to the
-chances of gathering the spilled and scattered contents in some vague
-and undefined when, where, and how. If this course, discouraging and
-paralyzing both white and black, has any tendency to bring Louisiana
-into proper practical relations with the Union, I have so far been unable
-to perceive it. If, on the contrary, we recognize and sustain the new
-government of Louisiana, the converse of all this is made true. We
-encourage the hearts and nerve the arms of the twelve thousand to
-adhere to their work, and argue for it, and proselyte for it, and fight
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_406'>406</span>for it, and feed it, and grow it, and ripen it to a complete success. The
-colored man, too, in seeing all united for him, is inspired with vigilance,
-and energy, and daring, to the same end. Grant that he desires the
-elective franchise, will he not attain it sooner by saving the already
-advanced steps toward it than by running backward over them? Concede
-that the new government of Louisiana is only to what it should
-be as the egg is to the fowl, we shall sooner have the fowl by hatching
-the egg than by smashing it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Again, if we reject Louisiana we also reject one vote in favor of the
-proposed amendment to the national Constitution. To meet this proposition
-it has been argued that no more than three fourths of those States
-which have not attempted secession are necessary to validly ratify the
-amendment. I do not commit myself against this further than to say
-that such a ratification would be questionable, and sure to be persistently
-questioned, while a ratification by three fourths of all the States would
-be unquestioned and unquestionable. I repeat the question: Can
-Louisiana be brought into proper practical relation with the Union
-sooner by sustaining or by discarding her new State government?
-What has been said of Louisiana will apply generally to other States.
-And yet so great peculiarities pertain to each State, and such important
-and sudden changes occur in the same State, and withal so new and unprecedented
-is the whole case that no exclusive and inflexible plan can
-safely be prescribed as to details and collaterals. Such exclusive and
-inflexible plan would surely become a new entanglement. Important
-principles may and must be inflexible. In the present situation, as the
-phrase goes, it may be my duty to make some new announcement to the
-people of the South. I am considering, and shall not fail to act when
-satisfied that action will be proper.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The promised announcement was never made; for within
-three days the great career of Abraham Lincoln was brought
-to a close. The inherent difficulties of reconstruction, as
-well as the mischievous consequences of faction among Union
-men, he perceived and acknowledged at the outset. Precisely
-how he would have removed the one and, without
-breaking with his party, have avoided the other we can never
-know. His uniform success in dealing with other embarrassing
-questions appears to justify the opinion that he would
-not have failed altogether in solving the greater problem presented
-by the return of peace. This subject will be further
-discussed in the succeeding chapter.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_407'>407</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>XII<br /> <span class='large'>CULMINATION OF THE PRESIDENTIAL PLAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>Able and candid exponents of public opinion in the
-South, even those who were a part of the “Lost
-Cause,” are almost unanimous in regarding the
-assassination of President Lincoln as one of the greatest
-calamities that befell their section of the Union.<a id='r435' /><a href='#f435' class='c010'><sup>[435]</sup></a> Indeed,
-the writer has heard a distinguished editor ascribe to Jefferson
-Davis himself the opinion that next to the failure of the Confederacy
-the untimely death of Mr. Lincoln was the severest
-blow inflicted on Southern interests.<a id='r436' /><a href='#f436' class='c010'><sup>[436]</sup></a> Many of the evils experienced
-by their States during the early years of Congressional
-reconstruction would have been avoided, they believe,
-under a continuance of the wise and considerate policy of the
-martyr President. While it is true that the confidence which
-he enjoyed among the masses in the loyal States, his unquestionable
-integrity and his splendid intellectual powers would
-have made him a formidable adversary even in a controversy
-with Congress, yet we have no assurance that these undoubted
-elements of strength would have enabled him, in the confused
-times following the Rebellion, to do more than postpone a contest
-with the Legislative branch in which a desire to discipline
-the South was even then winning adherents. The passions
-of the hour would have discovered a weakness in his clemency
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_408'>408</span>to the vanquished, while his very breadth of soul and sense
-would have been regarded by radical members of his party as
-only an evidence of his desire to facilitate the restoration to
-power of red-handed rebels. But it is idle to speculate on
-what might have been the result of his endeavors to heal the
-wounds of war, for, by the assassin’s bullet, the execution of
-his policy passed into other hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While the terrible tragedy of April 14 was still unknown to
-a great majority of American citizens, Andrew Johnson was
-quietly installed in the office of President. As every detail
-of the simple ceremony in the Kirkwood Hotel is familiar to
-this generation of readers, that event requires only a passing
-allusion. In the presence of the constitutional advisers of
-his predecessor, except Secretary Seward, who had been dangerously
-wounded by one of Booth’s accomplices, the oath of
-office was administered by Chief Justice Chase, who, with the
-Attorney-General, had examined the precedents and the law.
-Besides these officials a few members of Congress, who still
-lingered at the capital, were in attendance as witnesses.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Something of Andrew Johnson’s political career has been
-related in the chapter on Tennessee. As military governor
-of that State his high courage, his acknowledged patriotism,
-his honesty of purpose and principle were evident to all.
-Traits of character suspected, but not then fully disclosed,
-were developed by more complex conditions. The problem
-that confronted him may be briefly stated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When Mr. Johnson succeeded to the Presidential office
-Confederate armies somewhat broken, indeed, but still capable
-of mischief were retarding the victorious march of Sherman’s
-legions. Measures for disbanding the former became necessary
-when Southern leaders, recognizing the hopelessness
-of further resistance, made overtures looking to an armistice
-which took place and to the surrender that subsequently
-followed. It became necessary to discontinue at once the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_409'>409</span>enlistment of men in the loyal States, and, to economize
-expense, to muster out of service as expeditiously as possible
-the grand army of Union volunteers. The energy and promptness
-with which this task was accomplished were not the least
-of Secretary Stanton’s services to the nation. The perfection
-to which years of experience had brought the machinery
-of the War Department enabled the bulk of the Union armies
-to return without delay to their homes, where, discarding the
-character of soldiers, they melted insensibly into the civil
-population and speedily resumed the pursuits of peace. Relations
-with France were somewhat strained, and, owing to a
-succession of unfriendly acts, a war with Great Britain was
-not improbable. The public finances, too, required attention.
-To provide a revenue adequate to the extraordinary demands
-of the time was beginning to tax the resources of Government.
-A satisfactory settlement of even the least of these might well
-have appeared a serious question. The cessation of hostilities,
-however, presented a problem far transcending the greatest
-of them in importance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Many of the late Confederate States were threatened with
-anarchy, for in those commonwealths the recent authority had
-been extinguished and no organizations existed which the
-Administration could recognize as State governments. The
-political reconstruction of four of them, it is true, had been
-commenced under encouragement and direction of the national
-Executive, but even in those much remained to be done. Before
-examining the condition of the insurgent States as a
-whole it may be well, therefore, to summarize the most important
-events that occurred in Arkansas, Tennessee, Louisiana
-and Virginia between the institution of loyal governments
-in those commonwealths and the meeting of the Thirty-ninth
-Congress in December, 1865.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The General Assembly of Arkansas, though lacking its full
-membership, convened in March, 1865, and unanimously
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_410'>410</span>adopted on April 14 succeeding the proposed amendment to the
-Federal Constitution. The action of Congress, however, in
-submitting that proposition to the States had been anticipated
-by the Union men of that commonwealth, for their organic
-law had already abolished involuntary servitude; by the same
-instrument they had repudiated all debts created in the conduct
-of the war, thereby complying with three of the principal
-conditions required for restoring their State to the Union.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>During the same session an act passed the Legislature disfranchising
-all citizens who had aided the Confederate cause
-after the organization, April 18, 1864, of a loyal government.
-By the adversaries of this measure it was claimed that the
-lawmaking body exceeded its powers, because the act in
-effect prescribed qualifications for the suffrage different from
-those required by the State constitution, and, so far as it
-attempted to deprive citizens of their privileges without
-judicial conviction of crime, was contrary to the law of the
-land. This statute awakened the indifferent, and, as the time
-approached for holding Congressional elections, excited considerable
-discussion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the mean time the new government silently extended its
-authority over those parts of the State occupied by Southern
-soldiers until the cessation of hostilities. Governor Flanigan
-on retiring suggested that Confederate county officers be continued
-under his successor. This proposal, however, was
-promptly rejected and the secession establishment in all its
-parts completely ignored. Governor Murphy then published
-a proclamation urging the people in those regions hitherto
-dominated by the enemy, which comprised nearly half the
-counties in the State, to assemble and renew their local organizations.
-His address was favorably received, and his administration
-soon acquiesced in throughout the commonwealth.
-Outrages ceased with the disappearance of Confederate
-soldiers, and by the beginning of July judicial tribunals had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_411'>411</span>been revived in nearly every county. Some of the courts had
-been in session, and most of them were prepared to meet
-regularly for the transaction of business. Taxes were collected
-as quietly as before the war, and civil process could be
-executed in every part of the State. Hundreds had returned
-from the South to their former homes and resumed the pursuits
-of peace. Discontent, so far as any existed in the
-State, was confined to some ex-Confederate officers and to
-a few non-combatants who had sympathized with the rebellion.
-Both classes advised disregard of the disfranchising
-law, but as a rule the returned soldiers on both sides were
-quiet and orderly. All accounts concur in representing the
-pacification of Arkansas as complete toward the end of summer,
-and by October 13, 1865, the Secretary of State was able
-to report officially that the new government was in successful
-operation, the civil organization of every county having
-been effected. Governor Murphy in approving a circular published
-near the close of the same month by Brigadier General
-Sprague, an assistant commissioner of the Freedmen’s Bureau,
-enjoined both civil officers and citizens to give all possible
-encouragement to the officers and appointees of the bureau.<a id='r437' /><a href='#f437' class='c010'><sup>[437]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The President on receiving intelligence of this satisfactory
-condition of affairs sent to Governor Murphy the following
-dispatch:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There will be no interference with your present organization of State
-government. I have learned from E. W. Gantt, Esq., and other sources,
-that all is working well, and you will proceed and resume the former
-relations with the Federal Government, and all the aid in the power of the
-Government will be given in restoring the State to its former relations.<a id='r438' /><a href='#f438' class='c010'><sup>[438]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As the time approached for an election of national Representatives,
-the Governor issued another address in which he
-advised the choice of persons who could take the oath required
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_412'>412</span>by Congress. Three members were elected, namely: William
-Ryers, G. H. Kyle and James M. Johnson, who subsequently
-appeared at Washington and presented their credentials.<a id='r439' /><a href='#f439' class='c010'><sup>[439]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The foregoing account of the situation in Arkansas is confirmed
-by the testimony of General Reynolds, military commander
-of the department, who had sent officers into all the
-counties. These reported civil government as everywhere
-reëstablished. The State, they asserted, had never enjoyed
-greater tranquillity. There was not a shadow of conflict between
-the civil and the military authority, for the latter in
-sustaining the former was careful not to encroach on any of
-its functions. In short, the restoration of civil law in that
-State was universally admitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In two thirds of the counties, however, great destitution
-prevailed. Early in the summer the General Government felt
-compelled to distribute among indigent freedmen and refugees
-vast quantities of food, and Northern generosity alone, the
-Governor declared, could prevent great distress during the
-ensuing winter. Nor was his expectation disappointed. It
-is a splendid tribute to the character of Americans that one of
-the most destructive conflicts in history, with all the animosities
-which protracted civil wars engender, did not perceptibly
-impair in them the feelings of humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The organization of a Union government in Tennessee has
-elsewhere been described. The Assembly chosen under its
-authority met at Nashville on the 2d of April, 1865, and
-three days later ratified the Thirteenth Amendment. On the
-21st the President was requested to proclaim the insurrection
-at an end in that commonwealth, though a few weeks later he
-was called upon for troops to guarantee a republican form of
-government and to protect the State against invasion and
-domestic violence. Besides appointing executive officers the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_413'>413</span>Legislature elected to the United States Senate David T. Patterson
-and Joseph S. Fowler.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The most important measure of the session, however, was
-the enactment on June 5 of a severe law affecting the elective
-franchise. By it the right to vote was restricted, as formerly,
-to white males who had attained their twenty-first year. To
-the classes excepted by the Proclamation of December 8, 1863,
-were added all those who had left seats in the General Assembly,
-all who were absentees from the United States for the
-purpose of aiding the rebellion and all who had fled within
-the Confederate lines with the same intention. These were
-disfranchised for the period of fifteen years from the passage
-of the act.<a id='r440' /><a href='#f440' class='c010'><sup>[440]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>During this session there was presented by the freedmen
-of the State a petition for the elective franchise. The “colored
-citizens of Tennessee,” as they styled themselves, received
-no response to their prayer beyond the approval of
-an order for printing 500 copies of their memorial. The motion
-for this trifling concession was carried by a vote of 41
-to 10.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On June 12 the Legislature adjourned until the first Monday
-in October. On the same day Governor Brownlow ordered
-an election to be held on August 2 for Representatives
-to Congress in each of the eight districts into which the
-State had just been divided. Vacancies in the General Assembly
-were directed to be filled at the same time.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The disfranchising act, with the oath required thereunder,
-had the effect of excluding a large number, probably three
-fourths, of the citizens from voting. Its adversaries declared
-the law unconstitutional, and it encountered much opposition,
-especially in Middle and West Tennessee. Its constitutionality,
-however, was sustained by one of the State courts in a
-decision rendered June 29, and the Governor, in a proclamation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_414'>414</span>of July 10 succeeding, argued in favor of the statute.
-Those who should unite to defeat its execution would be “declared
-in rebellion against the State of Tennessee, and dealt
-with as rebels.” It was further signified that votes cast in
-violation of the law would not be taken into account by the
-Secretary of State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nor were these idle threats, for the civil officers were
-instructed “to arrest and bring to justice all persons who,
-under pretence of being candidates for Congress or other
-office, are traveling over the State denouncing and nullifying
-the Constitution and laws of the land, and spreading sedition
-and a spirit of rebellion.”<a id='r441' /><a href='#f441' class='c010'><sup>[441]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was relative to these measures that President Johnson
-on July 20, 1865, sent the following despatch to Governor
-Brownlow:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I hope and have no doubt you will see that the recent amendments
-to the constitution of the State as adopted by the people, and all the
-laws passed by the last Legislature in pursuance thereof, are fairly
-executed, and that all illegal votes in the approaching election be
-excluded from the polls, and the election for members of Congress be
-legally and fairly conducted. When and wherever it becomes necessary
-to employ force for the execution of the laws and the protection of
-the ballot-box from violence and fraud, you are authorized to call
-upon Maj.-Gen. Thomas for sufficient military force to sustain the
-civil authorities of the State. I have received your recent address to
-the people, and think it well timed, and hope it will do much good in
-reconciling the opposition to the amendment to the constitution and the
-laws passed by the last Legislature. The law must be executed and the
-civil authority sustained. In your efforts to do this, if necessary, Gen.
-Thomas will afford a sufficient military force. You are at liberty to
-make what use you think proper of this despatch.<a id='r442' /><a href='#f442' class='c010'><sup>[442]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though no violence marked the election, considerable
-irregularities, notwithstanding the Governor’s precautions, appear
-to have crept into modes of registration, and he felt compelled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_415'>415</span>in consequence to reject the ballots of twenty-nine
-counties. In this contest 61,783 citizens participated, but
-when those illegally enrolled were disregarded the number
-was reduced to 39,509. The defective vote, which applied to
-all the candidates, was thrown out in every county, though it
-changed the result in only one district. Of the eight Representatives
-chosen all were Union men; four, however, were
-conservatives, opposed both to test oaths and measures of
-disfranchisement.<a id='r443' /><a href='#f443' class='c010'><sup>[443]</sup></a> Governor Brownlow because of his action
-was severely censured, but was supported by a majority of
-the General Assembly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In October, when the Legislature reassembled, a bill to
-render persons of African and of Indian descent competent
-witnesses in the State courts passed the Senate by the close
-vote of 10 to 9, but failed altogether to receive the approval
-of the House. The Representatives of his State declined at
-that time, by a vote of 35 to 25, to pass a simple resolution
-endorsing the Administration of President Johnson, but almost
-unanimously adopted in place of that proposition the
-following:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><em>Resolved</em>, That we endorse the administration of his Excellency the
-President of the United States, and especially his declaration that treason
-shall be made odious, and traitors punished.<a id='r444' /><a href='#f444' class='c010'><sup>[444]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A colored convention representing the freedmen of the
-State was held at the capital during the week succeeding the
-election. If the Legislature did not grant before December 1,
-1865, their petition for the elective franchise, this body resolved
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_416'>416</span>to protest against the admission of the Tennessee delegation
-to Congress. On the question of negro suffrage the
-Governor in his October message said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I think it would be bad policy, as well as wrong in principle, to open
-the ballot-box to the uninformed and exceedingly stupid slaves of the
-Southern cotton, rice, and sugar fields. If allowed to vote, the great
-majority of them would be influenced by leading secessionists to vote
-against the Government, as they would be largely under the influence o£
-this class of men for years to come, having to reside on and cultivate
-their lands. When the people of Tennessee become satisfied that the
-negro is worthy of suffrage, they will extend it, and not before; and I
-repeat that this question must be regulated by the State authorities and by
-the loyal voters of the State, not by the General Government.<a id='r445' /><a href='#f445' class='c010'><sup>[445]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Apprehending trouble from the antagonism of races Mr.
-Brownlow advocated the old idea of colonization for the
-black man. He believed, however, that negroes should be admitted
-to testify in the courts and argued in favor of conferring
-such a privilege. Repugnance to their testimony, he
-declared, was due principally to education and habit.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If the following account from <cite>The Knoxville Whig</cite> of
-September 27 is trustworthy the freedmen of Tennessee had
-but a slender claim to the right to vote. That journal said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Thousands of free colored persons are congregating in and around the
-large towns in Tennessee, and thousands are coming in from other
-States, one third of whom cannot get employment. Indeed, less than
-one third of them want employment, or feel willing to stoop to work.
-They entertain the erroneous idea that the Government is bound to
-supply all their wants, and even to furnish them with houses, if, in
-order to do that, the white occupants must be turned out. There is a
-large demand for labor in every section of the State, but the colored
-people, with here and there a noble exception, scorn the idea of work.
-They fiddle and dance at night, and lie around the stores and street
-corners in the day time.<a id='r446' /><a href='#f446' class='c010'><sup>[446]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Governor’s message, sent in at this session, was hopeful
-in tone. He favored some amendment but not a repeal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_417'>417</span>of the franchise law. He advised also a “full pardon to the
-masses—the young and the deluded, who followed blindly
-the standard of revolt, provided they act as becomes their circumstances.”
-The unrepentant, however, should suffer the
-period of disfranchisement; while the active leaders, he believed,
-were entitled “neither to mercy nor forbearance.” To
-some negroes he would give the right of suffrage, but, believing
-it unsafe, he was opposed to conferring it on them all.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Tennessee, over which advancing and retreating armies had
-repeatedly passed, suffered even more severely than Arkansas,
-for besides having been the principal theatre of operations for
-the contending hosts in the West, her territory had also been
-in the early rule of Governor Johnson the scene of local
-strife. Old family feuds that for various reasons had been
-allowed to slumber were in many instances revived, and the
-most lawless outrages perpetrated in the face of day. These
-disorders, however, had practically ceased toward the conclusion
-of his governorship, and peace reigned once more
-within the borders of that community. The existence there
-of a considerable demand for labor assisted greatly in diminishing
-the burden of the authorities.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The closing months of the war found the loyal government
-of Louisiana endeavoring with the influence of the Union
-army to extend its jurisdiction over all the territory that had
-been brought under Federal control. Notwithstanding its
-contracted area this commonwealth for certain purposes was
-treated as a restored member of the Union. Like the Northern
-States it was affected by the draft which, on February 15, took
-place in some districts included in the Department of the
-Gulf. But the great struggle that for four years had employed
-the attention and tested the resources of the Government
-soon reached its close, thus rendering unnecessary any
-field service from the recruits then obtained.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though the attitude of Congress toward the Banks government
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_418'>418</span>has been described in the preceding pages, that was
-not believed the proper place to examine the nature of the
-election which was held on September 5, or the <em>personnel</em>
-of the Legislature chosen on that occasion. In connection
-with the appointment by that assembly of Messrs. Smith and
-Cutler as United States Senators the subject was noticed incidentally.
-The action of Congress on the question of admitting
-members from Louisiana was, however, fully entered
-into in that relation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Some additional information affecting the validity of that
-election is afforded by a proclamation published May 13, 1865,
-by the acting Governor, J. Madison Wells.<a id='r447' /><a href='#f447' class='c010'><sup>[447]</sup></a> This document asserts
-that the Register of Voters for the city of New Orleans
-declared officially that there had been enrolled 5,000 persons
-who did not possess the legal qualifications for electors. To
-ascertain the political people, therefore, a new registration was
-thought desirable. Mr. Wells accordingly declared the old
-records closed from the date of his proclamation. The certificates
-granted thereon, as well as the enrollment, were pronounced
-null and void. He then authorized the opening on
-June 1, 1865, of a new set of books, the enrollment to be made
-in accordance with the qualifications prescribed by the constitution
-and laws of Louisiana. The old registration having
-been made under an order of General Banks this announcement
-led at once to a difference between the Department Commander
-and the acting Governor. Many names recorded on
-the old books were alleged to have been those of colored men,
-and a circumstance presently to be related tends to support
-the assertion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>About that time the Confederate Governor, Allen, transferred
-to Federal officials all the important military records
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_419'>419</span>in his possession, and from his capital at Shreveport published
-a communication in which he announced his administration
-closed on that day. He said in part: “The war is over,
-the contest is ended, the soldiers are disbanded and gone
-home, and now there is in Louisiana no opposition whatever
-to the Constitution and laws of the United States.”<a id='r448' /><a href='#f448' class='c010'><sup>[448]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On June 10 an address to the people of thirty-five parishes
-was issued by the new Governor, who congratulated them on
-their return to the protection of the national flag. It was
-not with the past, he reminded them, but with the present and
-the future that their welfare was bound up. They were exhorted
-to go manfully to work and reëstablish civil government.
-The submission to law and the prompt acquiescence
-of those recently hostile to the United States he regarded
-as a hopeful sign. Even the soldiers, he said, returned to
-their homes better and wiser men, promising by a cheerful
-obedience to law to atone for past errors. All citizens were
-urged to imitate their example. Provisional appointments
-to county offices would be made until they could be filled by
-election. In naming persons for such places the Governor
-promised to be guided by the recommendation of the people
-if they selected men of good reputation who had taken the
-amnesty oath, which would be a prerequisite in every case. If
-the people did not act promptly he would feel compelled to
-make appointments upon the best information obtainable. If
-errors were made, then citizens would be themselves to blame
-for neglecting promptly to suggest the proper persons. A
-provisional judiciary would also be constituted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Important elections, he announced, would take place in
-the autumn, when Representatives to Congress and members
-of a Legislature would be chosen. If each parish was provided
-with the proper officers to open the polls an election
-for governor and other State officers would take place at the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_420'>420</span>same time. The people addressed were informed that in
-making the new constitution its framers did not intend to
-deprive them of their rights. The response to this appeal
-was a local reorganization in nearly all the parishes affected.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Governor Wells, on September 21, in a second order appointed
-the 6th of November succeeding as the day for holding
-the election, and also defined the qualifications of voters.
-White male citizens of the United States who had attained the
-age of twenty-one years and had resided twelve months in
-the commonwealth were declared entitled to exercise the
-suffrage. Evidence was also required of every elector that
-he had taken the oath of amnesty contained in the proclamation
-of December 8, 1863, or that prescribed, May 29, 1865,
-by Mr. Johnson. The excepted classes could vote only upon
-receiving a special pardon from the President. In other
-respects the election would be conducted in accordance with
-the constitution of 1852.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By a Democratic convention, held October 2 in New Orleans,
-at which twenty-one parishes were unrepresented, Mr.
-Wells was unanimously nominated for Governor. The preamble
-to a body of resolutions adopted on that occasion asserts
-that the issue which for four years had tried the strength of
-the Government had been made openly and manfully; that
-the decision having been adverse they now came forward in
-the same spirit of frankness and honor to support the Federal
-Government under the Constitution.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The “National Democratic” party they believed to be the
-only agency by which radicalism, to which they imputed a
-tendency toward consolidation, could be successfully encountered,
-and through which the General Government could be
-restored to its pristine purity. On the subject of reorganization
-they endorsed President Johnson’s policy, which, it was
-alleged, preserved unimpaired the rights of the States and
-maintained their equality in the Union.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_421'>421</span>Noticing a question already assuming importance, they
-declared that, in accordance with the constant adjudication
-of the Federal Supreme Court, persons of African descent
-could not be regarded as citizens of the United States; that
-under no circumstances could there exist any equality between
-the white and other races; that as the national Government
-was instituted by, so it was designed to be perpetuated for
-the exclusive benefit of, white men. For the time they were
-content with this oblique reference to the subject of negro
-suffrage. Another resolution advised the calling of a convention
-to frame a constitution for the State, that of 1864
-being characterized as the creation of fraud, violence and corruption.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This convention, which admitted the effectual abolition of
-slavery in the South, assumed that those who had sustained
-loss by the policy of emancipation could rightfully petition
-Congress for compensation. The repeal was also advocated
-of those statutes and ordinances not in harmony with the
-Federal Constitution. Believing it consonant with “the chivalrous
-magnanimity” of President Johnson the convention
-earnestly appealed for an early general amnesty and a prompt
-restitution of property.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Almost a month preceding the meeting of this convention
-an address was circulated by the “National Conservative
-Union” party, whose representatives assembled one week
-later than the Democratic delegates. Its members opposed
-both an extension of suffrage to negroes and the calling of
-a new constitutional convention. Like the Democratic delegates
-they endorsed the reconstruction policy of the President.
-They approved the attitude of their conservative Northern
-friends who opposed radicalism and an elevation of the
-freedmen to political equality with whites. The doctrine of
-secession was repudiated, and to the payment of all obligations
-created in carrying on the war they declared themselves
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_422'>422</span>inflexibly opposed. They, too, favored the speedy passage
-of an act of general amnesty as well as a repeal of the confiscation
-law.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Governor Wells was also the choice of this convention. He
-accepted both nominations and perceived no inconsistency in
-doing so, never, he asserted, having been a strict party man.
-Mr. Wells, who had formerly been a Red River planter,
-proved his loyalty to the Federal Government by coming
-within the Union lines as soon as they were established, and
-bringing with him his slaves, thereby endangering somewhat
-his ownership.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though he had not yet returned to his home, the friends
-of Henry Watkins Allen, the late Confederate executive,
-named him as their candidate for governor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the election, which was held at the appointed time, the
-entire vote polled was 27,808, of which Governor Wells received
-23,312, and ex-Governor Allen, 5,497. In every county
-except one the Democratic ticket for members of the Legislature
-was successful.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Perhaps the most instructive incident of this contest was
-the part played by those known as “Radical” Republicans.
-These held a mass-meeting in the city of New Orleans on
-November 13 at which were adopted resolutions claiming the
-election to Congress of Henry C. Warmoth as territorial
-Delegate. When he subsequently appeared in Washington
-his case was brought to the attention of the House by Thaddeus
-Stevens, who offered, December 20, 1865, what purported
-to be a certificate of Warmoth’s election as Delegate
-from the “Territory of Louisiana.” On request of the
-Pennsylvania leader this document was referred to the Joint
-Committee on Reconstruction.<a id='r449' /><a href='#f449' class='c010'><sup>[449]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This extreme element, which assumed to regard Louisiana
-as a Territory, polled 19,000 votes, most of which were alleged
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_423'>423</span>to have been cast by colored men. It declared the State organization
-repugnant to the Federal Constitution both in law
-and effect. The President, it was asserted, could not restore
-Louisiana by proclamation, for reinstatement could be accomplished
-in a constitutional manner only by petitioning
-Congress for admission whenever a majority of the people
-deemed such a course expedient, and the temper of the whites,
-nine tenths of whom were disloyal, rendered it inadvisable
-at that time to take such a step. The meeting rejoiced that
-the Republican party in the North had triumphed in the
-recent elections, for these victories pointed to ultimate success.
-The premature admission of Louisiana Congressmen,
-by placing the Union people under rebel rule, would be disastrous.
-However, as loyal citizens they would confine themselves
-to peaceable means of redress.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Warmoth appears shortly before the end of the war to have
-gone into Louisiana with the Union army, in which he is
-said by one authority to have acquired the reputation of a
-brave soldier and by another to have merited dismissal from
-its ranks.<a id='r450' /><a href='#f450' class='c010'><sup>[450]</sup></a> By organizing the freedmen and insisting upon
-their political rights he won their confidence; his shrewdness
-and engaging address retained their gratitude. In this election
-his adherents not only sought to determine the Federal relations
-of Louisiana, but also conferred upon negroes the privilege
-of voting, for there was then no law of either the General
-or State government investing them with any such right.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Legislature, which was convoked in special session,
-assembled at New Orleans on the 23d of November. The
-Governor’s message on that occasion related chiefly to such
-local objects as required the attention of the lawmaking body.
-By recommending an election of United States Senators Mr.
-Wells repudiated the action of the General Assembly, which,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_424'>424</span>at the preceding session, had appointed Messrs. Smith and
-Cutler to represent the State. Acting upon the Governor’s
-suggestion, the latter was again chosen, with Hahn for his
-colleague. These appointments were intended to fill vacancies
-caused by the withdrawal, February 5, 1861, of John Slidell
-and Judah P. Benjamin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the first acts of the lower House was the selection
-of a committee to consider a resolution which provided for
-assembling a convention to draft a State constitution. For
-reasons already assigned the majority report of this committee
-recommended the calling of a convention and counselled
-the Governor to order an election in which the question
-could be voted on by the people. The minority recognized the
-constitution of 1864 as binding, and on the ground of public
-economy preferred its amendment, especially as it had already
-acted favorably on the abolition of slavery. The adoption of
-the Thirteenth Amendment and the repeal of the ordinance
-of secession were mentioned by them as conditions essential
-to the recognition of Louisiana as a State and as indispensable
-to a restoration of all the privileges which that condition
-implied.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As early as February 17 preceding the Legislature established
-under the constitution of 1864 had ratified the Thirteenth
-Article amending the Constitution. By a vote of two
-to one the Assembly again approved that action. The session
-came to an end on the 22d of December.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This commonwealth, a veritable Eden when the strife
-began, had been sadly changed in its progress. A generous
-Government, indeed, by repairing the levees protected her
-fairest parishes from inundation. The same beneficent authority
-maintained many public institutions of charity that
-must else have ceased their noble work. Distress and want
-had already invaded that once prosperous community, and in
-the city of New Orleans alone 16,000 persons were dependent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_425'>425</span>upon and maintained by Federal bounty. Silence reigned in
-the great cotton market of the world. The wreck of her
-public finances has elsewhere been described. Her opulent
-commerce had been destroyed, agriculture everywhere languished.
-Plantations that but lately teemed with rich harvests
-showed the effects of interrupted cultivation, and the
-mighty river that had annually poured into her metropolis
-the productions of a dozen States now flowed untroubled to
-the Gulf.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To show the attitude of Congress toward the Alexandria
-government events in Virginia have in part been anticipated.
-The Legislature of the loyal portion of that Commonwealth
-was composed of members from only ten counties and parts
-of other counties. It was by delegates from this restricted
-area that the constitution of 1864 was framed and adopted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By this instrument the elective franchise was confined to
-male whites that had attained the age of twenty-one years,
-who had resided twelve months in the State and were willing
-to swear support of the Federal Constitution and the restored
-government; but officials and voters were required in addition
-to make oath, or affirmation, that they had not, since
-January 1, 1864, voluntarily given aid or assistance to those
-in rebellion against the General Government. The Assembly,
-however, was empowered, when it was deemed safe to do
-so, to restore to citizenship all who would be disfranchised
-by this provision of the organic law.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Involuntary servitude was also abolished. While great
-numbers of negroes were thus set at liberty, nothing was
-then done to elevate them to the dignity of citizens. The
-question of making them voters was, of course, still more remote.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The General Assembly was prohibited from making provision
-for the payment of any debt or obligation created in
-the name of the Commonwealth by the pretended State authorities
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_426'>426</span>at Richmond; and it was also forbidden to permit any
-county, city or corporation to levy or collect taxes for the
-discharge of any debt incurred for the purpose of aiding any
-rebellion against the State or the United States, or to provide
-for the payment of any bonds held by rebels in arms.<a id='r451' /><a href='#f451' class='c010'><sup>[451]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Confederate capital, long deemed impregnable, fell
-on the 2d of April. Within a week came tidings of the
-surrender of Lee’s entire army, greatly reduced in numbers,
-it is true, but hitherto the main reliance of the Confederacy.
-Mr. Lincoln, apparently, was not altogether without expectation
-of some such fortunate outcome of the extensive preparations
-that had been made for ensuring the success of the final
-campaign, and on the following day, April 10, 1865, he sent
-from Washington to the executive head of the restored State
-this telegram:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Governor Pierpont</span>, <em>Alexandria, Virginia</em>:</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Please come up and see me at once.<a id='r452' /><a href='#f452' class='c010'><sup>[452]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>A. Lincoln.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Pierpont, as the writer has been credibly informed,
-called by request on President Lincoln during the week of
-his assassination, evidently in response to this telegram, when
-they spent three hours together in conversation. No third
-party appears to have been present at their consultation. The
-topic discussed it is not difficult to imagine. Shortly before
-his death, which occurred in March, 1899, Governor Pierpont
-informed his daughter that he never believed Andrew
-Johnson carried out Mr. Lincoln’s idea in the reconstruction
-of Virginia.<a id='r453' /><a href='#f453' class='c010'><sup>[453]</sup></a> That policy, however, had not then, April 10,
-assumed definitive form in the mind of the President himself,
-for he expressly stated to Mr. Pierpont that he had no
-plan for reorganization, but must be guided by events. His
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_427'>427</span>last public utterance establishes the correctness of this statement.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Four weeks later President Johnson by executive order
-recognized the Alexandria establishment, and toward the
-close of the same month, May 26, 1865, Mr. Pierpont, with
-other members of his government, arrived in Richmond.
-The sneer of Thaddeus Stevens that the archives and property
-of loyal Virginia were conveyed to the new capital in
-an ambulance affords at least an adequate idea of the feeble
-condition of the restored State. But notwithstanding the
-absence of all pomp and his lack of the usual emblems of
-authority the Governor, we are told, was received in a very
-flattering manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Virginia, which emerged from the struggle crippled by the
-loss of an important part of her domain, suffered more in
-the destruction of the elements of wealth than any of her
-errant sisters, and though entering somewhat reluctantly on
-a career of rebellion, she was the only member of the Confederacy
-that was permanently weakened. Industry could
-never repair the alienation of her territory. While it may
-appear that the General Government acted harshly toward
-a State to which the Union owed so much, the preceding
-pages show clearly that the loss of her trans-Alleghany counties
-was due chiefly to an unwise administration of her internal
-affairs. Notwithstanding the statement of Mr. Blaine,
-the writer does not think that Virginia was singled out for
-punishment. But even apart from her dismemberment the
-ravages of war fell most heavily on the Old Dominion.
-There it was that the Army of the Potomac and the Army
-of Northern Virginia contended longest for supremacy.
-Troops in their marches and countermarches foraged liberally
-on her people, sometimes without distinction of friend
-or foe. Concrete illustrations will occur to every reader acquainted
-with the military history of the great conflict.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_428'>428</span>The devastation of the Shenandoah valley was only a striking
-example of what was constantly occurring within more
-restricted areas of the State. Barns and dwelling houses,
-fences and crops perished in the universal destruction. Cattle
-were either killed or carried off, and even the implements of
-husbandry were frequently devoted to the flames. The injury
-thus sustained by agricultural interests was followed in
-many districts by an alarming scarcity of food during the
-ensuing years, and to escape starvation numbers of her citizens
-fled from once happy homes. Newspaper correspondents in
-their progress through the State describe scenes of wretchedness
-and distress. In exploring for their journals wide regions
-that had recently been the theatre of war they witnessed
-spectacles of want, hunger and despair. Uncultivated tracts
-in the wake of the armies contributed to heighten the picture
-of desolation. Richmond, the centre of so many interesting
-historical associations, though long exempt from pillage,
-perished ultimately in a conflagration. In short, nearly every
-landmark of prosperity was effaced by the calamities of war.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To repair these ravages, to repeople these solitudes, to
-revive commerce and agriculture, to restore tranquillity and
-maintain order was the stupendous task before Governor Pierpont,
-in whose public career it may be regarded as the second
-stage. After the formation of West Virginia, in which he
-had acted a conspicuous and honorable part, and one that
-can scarcely be overrated, his exertions barely sufficed to preserve
-the continuity of a loyal government in his native State.
-In the former undertaking he had the coöperation of nearly
-every person of consideration beyond the Alleghanies. His
-efforts in Richmond, however, received but indifferent support.
-Whites of little influence and negroes who were still
-but prospective citizens made up the greater number of his
-adherents. A handful of secessionists, it is true, set the example
-of obedience to the laws, though they found among
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_429'>429</span>their late associates but few imitators. It was from such material
-and in such circumstances that Mr. Pierpont was to
-reconstruct the grand old Commonwealth. The Governor,
-however, applied himself at once to the duties imposed by his
-office. He appointed persons to reorganize the various counties
-by holding elections for local officers, though in numerous
-instances he merely authorized to act for the preservation of
-peace those citizens whom the military officers might select.
-The difficulties of the situation were such that he summoned
-the Legislature to meet in special session at Richmond on the
-20th of June.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In response to this request the lawmaking body assembled
-at the appointed time. The Executive message on that occasion
-related concisely what had been done by the restored
-government subsequent to June, 1861. It also stated that
-since his arrival at the capital the Governor had conversed
-with intelligent men of every shade of political opinion and
-representing every part of Virginia. He was convinced, he
-said, that if the test of loyalty prescribed by their constitution
-was enforced in the election and qualification of officers,
-it would render organization impracticable in most of the
-counties. It was folly to suppose that a State could be administered
-“under a republican form of government where in
-a large portion of the State, nineteen twentieths of the people
-are disfranchised and cannot hold office. But, fortunately,
-by the terms of the constitution, the General Assembly has
-control of this subject. The restricting clauses of the constitution
-were devised in time of war.... Men accept
-the facts developed by the logic of the past four years, declare
-that they have taken the oath of allegiance to the Government
-of the United States without mental reservation, and
-intend to be, and remain, loyal to the Government of their
-fathers. It would not be in accordance with the spirit of that
-noble Anglo-Saxon race, from which we boast our common
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_430'>430</span>origin, to strike a fallen brother, or impose upon him humiliating
-terms after a fair surrender.”<a id='r454' /><a href='#f454' class='c010'><sup>[454]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For the oath required by the State constitution he suggested
-the substitution of that prescribed by the President, or
-one of similar character; he also recommended the passage
-of an act to legalize marriage between persons of color, and
-the appointment of a day for holding elections of Representatives
-to Congress and for members of the Legislature in those
-counties where none had been chosen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The subject of disfranchisement was immediately taken up
-in both Houses, and the result of their action was to allow
-the suffrage to those who, upon taking the amnesty oath, had
-not held office under the Confederacy or its State governments.
-Those who had done so could neither vote nor hold
-office. The Legislature submitted to the people, to be determined
-at the election in October succeeding, the question
-of removing this restriction upon officeholders.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This action of the Assembly was followed by the appearance
-of a large number of competitors for office, and considerable
-interest was awakened. Finding, however, that
-they would be unable to take the oath required by Congress
-many of the candidates for the national Legislature withdrew.
-The President was asked by some citizens of Albemarle
-County whether, in his opinion, Congress would probably
-insist upon the oath. The following reply to their inquiry
-was made by Attorney-General Speed:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The President has referred to me your letter, dated Charlottesville,
-Virginia, September, 1865, and I am instructed by him to say that he
-has no more means of knowing what Congress may do in regard to the
-oath about which you inquire than any other citizen. It is his earnest
-wish that loyal and true men, to whom no objections can be made, should
-be elected to Congress.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This is not an official letter, but a simple expression of individual
-opinion and wish.<a id='r455' /><a href='#f455' class='c010'><sup>[455]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_431'>431</span>The election was held on October 12, the vote polled being
-the smallest ever given in the history of the State. In the
-first eight Congressional districts, however, it exceeded
-40,000. The constitutional amendment met with very little
-opposition, many counties voting unanimously to remove the
-restriction upon the suffrage.<a id='r456' /><a href='#f456' class='c010'><sup>[456]</sup></a> The Assembly then chosen
-convened at Richmond on December 4, 1865, the time fixed
-for the meeting of Congress.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While it is true that there were grounds for apprehension
-regarding the stability of the new governments instituted in
-these four States, the principal cause of anxiety to the Administration
-was the disorganized political and social condition
-of the remaining members of the late Confederacy. It
-was universally agreed that with the destruction of its military
-power the authority of that government was completely
-extinguished. From that moment until the revival within
-them of Federal laws these commonwealths were destitute of
-all legislation of a general character. Under our dual principle
-of government, however, this could be endured temporarily.
-But the absence of a central organism would soon be
-evident in the reappearance of those alarming symptoms which
-marked American political and industrial life in the critical
-period between the Treaty of Paris, in 1783, and the inauguration,
-nearly six years later, of the present national system.
-In that unhappy interval, however, the authority of the
-various States was ample for the regulation of domestic affairs,
-while in the deranged and confused times succeeding the Rebellion
-seven entire commonwealths were left without any
-general or any particular government. Their territory, indeed,
-had passed under control of the Union forces, for when
-the Administration of Jefferson Davis was overthrown the
-disloyal State establishments, of which it was only an emanation,
-fell likewise. Though internal progress was not seriously
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_432'>432</span>to be expected in this situation, tolerable order was preserved
-by Federal soldiers, who occupied the entire region
-between the Potomac and the Rio Grande, for even in those
-States reorganized under Executive auspices civil authority
-was not yet established on a foundation sufficiently secure to
-maintain itself without assistance from the military power
-of the nation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Besides the absence of all civil government there were other
-elements of discord that tended to increase the confusion in
-these States. Their population, it need scarcely be observed,
-was not homogeneous. The decree of emancipation together
-with the incidents of war had brought freedom to almost
-the entire slave population of the South. This was soon to be
-confirmed by the proposed constitutional amendment, which
-was designed both to place beyond question the status of freedmen
-and to strike the shackles from the limbs of the last
-bondman in the loyal as well as in the disloyal States. About
-the middle of December nearly 4,000,000 negroes bereft of
-the hand that bestowed their daily sustenance found themselves
-suddenly dependent for support upon their own exertions.
-The General Government, it is true, by creating the
-Bureau of Freedmen and Refugees, diminished considerably
-the danger from this source, though this relief by no means
-solved the problem of transforming the recent slave into a
-useful member of society; besides, the bureau itself subsequently
-degenerated into a fruitful source of abuse.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nor were Southern whites by any means unanimous as to
-the best policy to adopt in the circumstances in which an unsuccessful
-rebellion had placed them. Between Union men
-and secessionists there existed a feeling of extreme bitterness.
-Even among members of the latter class there was considerable
-difference of opinion, as in North Carolina, where the
-former Whigs, by the moderation of their views as much as
-by constantly agitating the question of reconstruction, had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_433'>433</span>somewhat embarrassed the Richmond authorities while war
-was still flagrant. Add to these causes of disorder the discontent
-of thousands of disbanded soldiers who returned in the
-gloom of defeat not infrequently to ruined homes and wasted
-fields. Then, too, there was the disappointment and humiliation
-naturally felt by a brave and impulsive people who had
-fought gallantly in support of a cause condemned, indeed, by
-the civilized world, but believed by them to be not only just
-but indispensable to their prosperity and happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though a volume could be profitably employed in describing,
-town by town and county by county, the extent of destruction
-inflicted on the South, a few brief paragraphs must suffice
-to suggest an imperfect idea of the enormous loss of wealth
-sustained by that section. The wreck of four members of
-the Confederacy has been noticed in the preceding pages. That
-rapid sketch, however, took no account of the damage to individuals
-by the liberation of their slaves, for, except in those
-instances where negroes left the commonwealth, that was
-not in any sense a loss to the State. If it were, a community,
-by reducing to servitude a part of its inhabitants, could at
-any time increase the amount of its capital. It is only from
-the slaveholder’s point of view, therefore, that emancipation
-can be regarded as a pecuniary loss. Immense damage was
-sustained by both North and South in the withdrawal of millions
-of men from the various fields of production. The energy
-of these multitudes, which was rapidly making the United
-States the most opulent and powerful nation on the globe,
-had exerted itself for four years in the destruction of former
-accumulations.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Almost at the moment that the star of the Confederacy had
-begun to decline the imperial State of Georgia, hitherto exempt
-from punishment, was wasted by fire and sword. Sometimes
-the Southern, sometimes the Northern army stripped the
-country of everything capable of supporting life. Crops had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_434'>434</span>been harvested, indeed, but this served only to facilitate their
-destruction. In the retreat of Johnston and the advance of
-Sherman toward Atlanta highways had been injured, bridges
-burned and many lines of railroad completely destroyed.
-Dwellings, when they interfered with military operations,
-were levelled by even the Confederate army, and the Union
-forces could not be expected to show greater consideration
-for the property of public enemies. General Hood not only
-wasted the vast stores accumulated in Atlanta but burned
-habitations when they stood in the way of his fortifications.
-Though winter was rapidly approaching, the Federal commander
-deemed it necessary after the capture of that stronghold
-to expel from their abodes a considerable part of its
-population. A brief truce, it is true, enabled the miserable
-inhabitants to remove a part of their effects farther south;
-thousands, outcasts from their ruined homes, were thus driven
-to wander among strangers whose bounty had already been
-taxed by earlier fugitives; both classes were dependent for
-their maintenance on the precarious charity of an impoverished
-people. Crowded dwellings forced great numbers in the
-inclement weather to seek shelter in the neighboring forests,
-where they found a safe refuge, indeed, but a scanty subsistence.
-Over the region traversed by Sherman and Johnston
-the forces of Hood soon after traced a devastating march
-northward to Dalton. The mischiefs of the great march to
-Savannah have frequently been described. Its beginning was
-announced by the blaze of burning buildings, and when the
-last of the Federal soldiers had set their faces toward the
-sea the city of Atlanta was little more than a mass of smoking
-ruins. Though the region traversed was probably the
-richest in the State, extensive misery accompanied the progress
-of the army. The meat and the vegetables needed for
-his command were taken by the Union General. Horses,
-mules and wagons were freely appropriated; slaves also were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_435'>435</span>assisted to escape from their masters. Mills and cotton-gins
-were frequently devoted to the flames. In Milledgeville
-factories, storehouses and public buildings were destroyed.
-The principal edifices of Macon perished about the same time.
-Indeed, Augusta was the only considerable place in the State
-that escaped serious harm. The people in northwestern
-Georgia were in the utmost destitution, large families being
-frequently for whole days without food; venerable persons of
-both sexes, sinking under the weight of years and infirmities,
-often walked fifteen and even twenty miles to procure food
-enough to prevent starvation. The injury to all the usual
-means of transportation greatly increased the difficulty of
-bringing relief. When the conflict had ended, however,
-Federal officers did what they could to alleviate the almost
-universal distress, and their magnanimity was not without
-influence on the future conduct of many an ex-Confederate
-veteran.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>South Carolina, the fatal State that woke the sword of
-war, did not suffer greatly in the earlier stages of the conflict,
-though even then her foreign commerce was extinguished
-and her agriculture interrupted along the coast. Before its
-close, however, she was destined to experience most of its
-horrors. A restless generation of agitators had assiduously
-inculcated the notion that the South was ruthlessly oppressed
-by Yankee avarice. This teaching bore fruit, and the people
-of South Carolina, coming to regard themselves as little
-better than tributary slaves, were easily persuaded to resort
-to the wager of battle. With the progress of the contest
-this proud State was growing weaker within, hostile pressure
-was constantly increasing from without. Time at length and
-the fortunes of war had brought round their revenge, and
-when the veterans of Sherman turned northward from Savannah
-the Palmetto State was powerless to prevent, or seriously
-to retard, their advance. Transportation was greatly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_436'>436</span>embarrassed by the destruction of the bridges as well as the
-tracks of almost every important railway within the State.
-Immense quantities of cotton and numbers of cotton warehouses,
-uncounted dwellings and depots, machine shops and
-foundries, as well as several sailing vessels and steamboats
-were consumed by flames. Besides these blackened memorial’s
-of disaster and defeat, the stately cities of Charleston and
-Columbia were almost simultaneously laid in ruins by great
-conflagrations. The inability of the civil authorities to furnish
-food for his army constrained General Sherman to forage
-for supplies. In this manner all the cattle, hogs, sheep and
-poultry, even the little stores of meal, treasured as the last
-barrier against want, were consumed, and the people left entirely
-without subsistence. To prevent general starvation the
-Confederate commander was compelled to distribute the
-rations of his soldiers among the wretched inhabitants. From
-various causes many ancient and wealthy families found themselves
-suddenly reduced to a condition of beggary, and so
-low was the condition of the public treasury that the Legislature
-as early as the mid-summer of 1865 had already begun
-seriously to discuss the question of repudiation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With some slight alterations this picture of South Carolina’s
-ills will serve for that of her northern and more deserving
-sister, so far at least as concerns those parts overrun
-by the contending hosts. The cessation of hostilities stopped
-the carnival of death and silenced the engines of destruction
-before half of North Carolina’s territory had been crossed.
-From the first years of the war there were numerous instances
-of privation among the loyalists of that State. Toward its
-close the more favored classes also began to feel the pressure
-of want. The negroes required and received assistance from
-the Freedmen’s Bureau. The whites, refugees as well as secessionists,
-were aided by the commanders of the rival forces.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Florida, fortunately for her people, was so remote from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_437'>437</span>the principal scenes of war that she felt few of its evils.
-Battles, it is true, occurred within the State, but they were as
-skirmishes compared to the bloody engagements which took
-place elsewhere. The same observations are substantially true
-of Texas. A fringe of Mississippi’s territory, too, had been
-swept by the furnace-blast of war. The extensive movements
-around Corinth, Iuka, Vicksburg, Jackson and Port Hudson
-will suggest the extent of destruction that visited the northern
-half of that State. There existed considerable privation in
-that section, though no general distress as in other members
-of the Confederacy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All the Gulf States, however, were not equally fortunate.
-Though long impending, the fate of Alabama came swiftly.
-Almost in the same hour she was invaded from the north and
-menaced from the south. A large portion of her material
-resources was already exhausted when the cavalry raids of
-General Wilson spread terror and devastation through the
-interior counties. The city of Selma was laid in ashes; smaller
-towns and villages were likewise consumed by flames; schools
-and colleges, private buildings and public edifices perished in
-the universal wreck. Monuments of ruin were everywhere
-conspicuous throughout a region the most productive, probably,
-in all the South. Silence and desolation reigned where
-but lately stood proud and hospitable mansions. Nor was
-the destruction of wealth or its elements the only injury
-sustained, for industry would soon repair the losses of capital.
-Labor itself had been severely crippled. Of the army
-of 122,000 soldiers which Alabama furnished to the cause
-of secession 35,000, it was estimated, had been left on the
-field of battle, and at least an equal number had been disabled
-for life. Mobile, enriched by the cotton trade, was silent as
-some ancient necropolis. Her splendid commerce was ruined;
-her stately ships were gone, and the wave broke unheeded on
-the shores of her deserted harbor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_438'>438</span>This hurried summary conveys only a very inadequate
-notion of the complex problem which Mr. Johnson was forced
-to consider. His arduous duty was to repair the ravages of
-military violence, to evoke order from the discord of civil
-strife, to heal the wounds which the imperious power of slavery
-had inflicted upon industries and institutions; in a word,
-to restore the harmony of that Republic founded by the wisdom
-of Washington and preserved by the policy of Lincoln.
-The sentiments of the Chief Magistrate who was about to
-attempt this difficult but indispensable task it is now time to
-consider. His deliberate conclusions and his spontaneous utterances
-are best examined, it is believed, in something like
-chronological order.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On June 9, 1864, almost a year before his accession to
-the Presidency, he had said in addressing the people of
-Nashville:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But in calling a convention to restore the State, who shall restore and
-reëstablish it?... Shall he who brought this misery upon the State
-be permitted to control its destinies? If this be so, then all this precious
-blood of our brave soldiers and officers so freely poured out will have
-been wantonly spilled....</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Why all this carnage and devastation? It was that treason might be
-put down and traitors punished. Therefore I say that traitors should
-take a back seat in the work of restoration. If there be but five thousand
-men in Tennessee loyal to the Constitution, loyal to freedom, loyal to
-justice, these true and faithful men should control the work of reorganization
-and reformation absolutely. I say that the traitor has ceased to
-be a citizen, and in joining the rebellion has become a public enemy. He
-forfeited his right to vote with loyal men when he renounced his citizenship
-and sought to destroy our Government.... If we are so cautious
-about foreigners who voluntarily renounce their homes to live with
-us what should we say to the traitor, who, although born and reared
-among us, has raised a parricidal hand against the Government which
-always protected him? My judgment is that he should be subjected to
-a severe ordeal before he is restored to citizenship.... Before these
-repenting rebels can be trusted, let them bring forth the fruits of repentance....
-Treason must be made odious, and traitors must be punished
-and impoverished. Their great plantations must be seized, and
-divided into small farms, and sold to honest, industrious men. The day
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_439'>439</span>for protecting the lands and negroes of these authors of the rebellion is
-past. It is high time it was.<a id='r457' /><a href='#f457' class='c010'><sup>[457]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though he had never been accustomed to conceal his
-opinions on questions of public interest, and though there was
-no reason for supposing that his views on reorganization had
-changed in the months intervening between the Nashville
-speech and his inauguration, there was considerable curiosity,
-if not indeed impatience, to learn his sentiments on the paramount
-issue before the nation. Even the unparalleled excitement
-and profound regret occasioned by the assassination of
-Mr. Lincoln could not make men forget the grave questions
-which the changed conditions of the Union presented for the
-consideration of statesmen. Therefore the brief remarks addressed
-by the new Executive to those who were present at his
-inauguration were eagerly scrutinized for some indication of
-the principles which he was likely to adopt in the conduct
-of his Administration. The absence, however, of even a hint
-on that interesting subject gave universal disappointment, and
-anxious patriots were not reassured by his failure to announce
-any expression of a purpose to continue the policy of his predecessor.
-By his intimate friends this omission was construed
-as an intention to pursue in dealing with the South a less
-generous course than, it was believed, Mr. Lincoln had
-marked out.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Among the more extreme “Radicals” this surmise occasioned
-little regret, for they did not object to the accession of
-an Executive made, as they believed, of sterner stuff than the
-late incumbent. From his fierce denunciation of secessionists
-both while military governor of Tennessee and subsequently,
-it was generally understood that more stringent methods
-would be adopted by Mr. Johnson than had hitherto been employed.
-Among other things he said in his inaugural: “As
-to an indication of any policy which may be pursued by me
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_440'>440</span>in the administration of the Government, I have to say that
-that must be left for development, as the administration progresses.
-The message or declaration must be made by the
-acts as they transpire. The only assurance that I can now
-give of the future, is by reference to the past.”<a id='r458' /><a href='#f458' class='c010'><sup>[458]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Delegations of citizens who waited upon him to tender
-their cordial support were assured in the most explicit terms
-that his past course was an indication of what his future policy
-would be. Three days after entering upon the duties of his
-office a deputation of distinguished persons called on Mr. Johnson
-under circumstances at once unusual and touching. The
-remains of the late President still lay in the White House.
-Before the sad procession of the dead left the national Capital
-for Springfield, Governor Oglesby, with other gentlemen from
-Illinois, called to assure the new Executive of their respect
-and confidence. His record, they declared, gave assurance to
-their State that in his hands they could safely trust the destinies
-of the Republic. The President responded in a speech
-discussing a far wider range of topics than he had treated in
-his inaugural. Appropriate reference to his predecessor, the
-tragical close of whose career was scarcely alluded to in his
-first address, was made in this more extended discourse. He
-spoke with unaffected and profound emotion. “The beloved
-of all hearts has been assassinated,” said he, “and when we
-trace this crime to its cause, when we remember the source
-whence the assassin drew his inspiration, and then look at
-the result, we stand yet more astounded at this most barbarous,
-most diabolical act.... We can trace its cause
-through successive steps back to that source which is the
-spring of all our woes. No one can say that if the perpetrator
-of this fiendish deed be arrested, he should not undergo the
-extremest penalty of the law known for crime: none will say
-that mercy should interpose. But is he alone guilty? Here,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_441'>441</span>gentlemen, you perhaps expect me to present some indication
-of my future policy. One thing I will say: every era teaches
-its lesson. The times we live in are not without instruction.
-The American people must be taught—if they do not already
-feel—that treason is a crime and must be punished....
-When we turn to the criminal code we find arson laid down
-as a crime with its appropriate penalty. We find theft and
-murder denounced as crimes, and their appropriate penalty
-prescribed; and there, too, we find the last and highest of
-crimes,—treason.... Let it be engraven on every
-mind that treason is a crime, and traitors shall suffer its penalty....
-I do not harbor bitter or resentful feelings
-towards any.... When the question of exercising
-mercy comes before me it will be considered calmly, judicially—remembering
-that I am the Executive of the Nation. I
-know men love to have their names spoken of in connection
-with acts of mercy, and how easy it is to yield to that impulse.
-But we must never forget that what may be mercy
-to the individual is cruelty to the State.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Commenting on this speech Mr. Blaine, from whom it is
-quoted, says that it “was reported by an accomplished stenographer,
-and was submitted to Mr. Johnson’s inspection before
-publication. It contained a declaration intimating to its
-hearers, if not explicitly assuring them, that ‘the policy of Mr.
-Lincoln in the past shall be my policy in the future.’ When
-in reading the report he came to this passage, Mr. Johnson
-queried whether his words had not been in some degree misapprehended;
-and while he was engaged with the stenographer
-in modifying the form of expression, Mr. Preston King, of
-New York, who was constantly by his side as adviser, interposed
-the suggestion that all reference to the subject be
-stricken out. To this Mr. Johnson promptly assented. He
-had undoubtedly gone farther than he intended in speaking
-to Mr. Lincoln’s immediate friends, and the correction—inspired
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_442'>442</span>by one holding the radical views of Mr. King—was
-equivalent to a declaration that the policy of Mr. Lincoln had
-been more conservative than that which he intended to pursue.”<a id='r459' /><a href='#f459' class='c010'><sup>[459]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To a deputation of New Hampshire citizens he said in part:
-“This Government is now passing through a fiery, and, let
-us hope, its last ordeal—one that will test its powers of endurance,
-and will determine whether it can do what its enemies
-have denied—suppress and punish treason.” Though he had
-been urged, he asserted, by friends whose good opinion he
-valued, he refrained from foreshadowing in a public manifesto
-the policy which would guide him. He further observed
-on this occasion: “I know it is easy, gentlemen, for any one
-who is so disposed, to acquire a reputation for clemency and
-mercy. But the public good imperatively requires a just discrimination
-in the exercise of these qualities.... To
-relieve one from the penalty of crime may be productive of
-national disaster. The American people must be taught to
-know and understand that treason is a crime....
-Treason is a crime, and must be punished as a crime. It
-must not be regarded as a mere difference of political opinion.
-It must not be excused as an unsuccessful rebellion, to be
-overlooked and forgiven. It is a crime before which all
-others sink into insignificance; and in saying this it must
-not be considered that I am influenced by angry or revengeful
-feelings.” He added, that to those who had been deluded
-and deceived by designing men, to those who had been only
-technically guilty of treason, he would accord amnesty, leniency
-and mercy. On the instigators of rebellion, however,
-should be visited “the full penalty of their crimes.”<a id='r460' /><a href='#f460' class='c010'><sup>[460]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Replying, April 21, to an address of Governor Morton, who
-introduced a delegation from Indiana, he said: “Mine has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_443'>443</span>been but one straightforward and unswerving course, and I
-see no reason why I should depart from it....</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I hold it as a solemn obligation in any one of these
-States where the rebel armies have been driven back or expelled—I
-care not how small the number of Union men, if
-enough to man the ship of State—I hold it, I say, a high
-duty to protect and secure to them a republican form of
-government. This is no new opinion.... In adjusting
-and putting the government upon its legs again, I think
-the progress of this work must pass into the hands of its
-friends. If a State is to be nursed until it again gets strength,
-it must be nursed by its friends, and not smothered by its
-enemies.”<a id='r461' /><a href='#f461' class='c010'><sup>[461]</sup></a> To this delegation he declared himself not less
-opposed to consolidation than to dissolution and disintegration.
-In a brief reply on the same day to a deputation from
-Ohio he added nothing of value to these observations, and on
-the 24th of April he addressed in a similar strain a body of
-exiles from the South.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The colored American asks but two things,” said the
-spokesman of a negro delegation about the same time,
-“that he have, first, complete emancipation, and secondly,
-full equality before American law.” To this the President
-replied, among other things, that he feared leading
-colored men did not “understand and appreciate the fact that
-they have friends on the south side of the line. They have,
-and they are as faithful and staunch as any north of the line.
-It may be a very easy thing, indeed popular, to be an emancipationist
-north of the line, but a very different thing to be
-such south of it. South of it, it costs a man effort, property,
-and perhaps life.”<a id='r462' /><a href='#f462' class='c010'><sup>[462]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Two months later, June 24, in replying to an address of
-a South Carolina committee, he said in part: “The friction
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_444'>444</span>of the rebellion has rubbed out the nature and character of
-slavery. The loyal men who were compelled to bow and submit
-to the rebellion should, now that the rebellion is ended, stand
-equal to loyal men everywhere. Hence the wish of reconstruction,
-and the trying to get back the States to the point
-at which they formerly moved in perfect harmony.” He reminded
-them that as an institution slavery was gone, and said
-there was no hope that the people of South Carolina would
-be admitted into either the Senate or the House of Representatives
-until by their conduct they had afforded evidence of
-this truth. In their circumstances the true policy was to restore
-the State government, not through military rule, but by
-the action of the people.<a id='r463' /><a href='#f463' class='c010'><sup>[463]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Desiring to relieve all loyal citizens and well-disposed persons
-from unnecessary trade restrictions, and to encourage
-a return to peaceful pursuits, the President removed, April
-29, 1865, the interdict on all domestic and coastwise intercourse
-in that portion of the late Confederate States east of
-the Mississippi and within the lines of national military occupation.
-From this order, however, certain named articles
-contraband of war were excepted. Military and naval regulations
-in conflict with his proclamation were revoked. On
-May 22 following he announced that ports in the same district
-would be reopened to foreign commerce after July 1,
-1865, though certain places in Texas were still denied this
-privilege.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The insurrection hitherto existing in Tennessee was declared
-at an end on June 13, 1865. The authority of the
-United States, this Proclamation asserted, was unquestioned
-within the limits of that commonwealth, and duly commissioned
-Federal officials were in undisturbed exercise of their
-functions. All disabilities attaching to the State and its inhabitants
-were therefore removed; but nothing contained in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_445'>445</span>the order was to be construed as affecting any of the penalties
-and forfeitures for treason which had previously been
-incurred.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Ten days later, June 23, the blockade of Galveston and
-other ports beyond the Mississippi was rescinded. These were
-to be opened to foreign trade on the 1st of July succeeding.
-It was ordered, August 29, 1865, that after September 1 all
-restrictions upon internal, domestic and coastwise commerce
-be removed, so that even articles contraband of war might be
-imported into and sold in the late insurgent States, the necessity
-for prohibiting intercourse in those articles having in
-great measure ceased.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In an order dated May 9, 1865, the President declared null
-and void all acts and proceedings of the military and civil
-organizations of Virginia which had been in rebellion against
-the General Government; also that all persons who should
-exercise or attempt to exercise any authority, jurisdiction or
-right under Jefferson Davis, and his confederates, or under
-John Letcher or William Smith,<a id='r464' /><a href='#f464' class='c010'><sup>[464]</sup></a> and their confederates, or
-any pretended commission or authority issued by them, or
-any of them, since April 17, 1861, would be deemed and taken
-as in rebellion against the United States, and dealt with accordingly.
-By the same order the authority of the United
-States was revived within the geographical limits known as
-Virginia, and the heads of the several Executive Departments
-were instructed to enforce therein all Federal laws the administration
-of which belonged to their respective offices.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To carry into effect the constitutional guaranty of a republican
-form of government and “afford the advantage and
-security of domestic laws, as well as to complete the reëstablishment
-of the authority of the laws of the United States, and
-the full and complete restoration of peace within the limits
-aforesaid, Francis H. Pierpont, Governor of the State of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_446'>446</span>Virginia,” was assured of such assistance from the Federal
-authorities as was believed necessary in any lawful measures
-that he might adopt for extending the State government
-throughout that Commonwealth.<a id='r465' /><a href='#f465' class='c010'><sup>[465]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Secretary of the Treasury was directed to nominate
-without delay assessors of taxes and collectors of customs and
-internal revenue, and such other officers of his Department as
-were authorized by law, to execute the revenue laws of the
-United States. Preference in making appointments was to
-be given to qualified loyal residents of the districts in which
-their respective duties were to be performed; but if suitable
-persons could not be found residing there, then citizens of
-other States or districts should be named.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the matter of appointments similar instructions were
-given to the Postmaster-General, who was empowered to establish
-post offices and post routes, and to enforce the postal
-laws of the United States in the State of Virginia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The heads of the remaining Executive Departments, State,
-War, Navy and Interior, were likewise ordered to enforce the
-acts of Congress pertaining to their respective offices. The
-judge of the United States District Court for Virginia was
-directed to hold courts in that Commonwealth, while it was
-made the duty of the Attorney-General to instruct the proper
-officers to libel and bring to judgment, confiscation and sale,
-property subject to confiscation, and to provide for the administration
-of justice within the said State in all matters of
-which the Federal courts had cognizance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was this recognition of his government, and this assurance
-of support, that induced Mr. Pierpont less than three
-weeks afterward to remove his capital from Alexandria. An
-account of this event as well as of the nature of the Governor’s
-duties in his enlarged jurisdiction, has been anticipated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In recognizing Mr. Pierpont as Governor of Virginia,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_447'>447</span>President Johnson merely concluded to retain for reconstruction
-what had already been accomplished by the loyal minority
-of that Commonwealth. Nor is it easy to perceive why,
-by rejecting what had been done, he should have increased
-the difficulties of a situation even then sufficiently complicated.
-While military governor of Tennessee he had executed, and,
-so far as appears, without remonstrance, all the measures
-recommended by Mr. Lincoln, so that when he succeeded to
-the Presidency he was to some extent committed to the policy
-of his predecessor. He preserved his consistency by endeavoring
-to maintain that system in which he had formerly
-acquiesced, and in sustaining the reconstructed governments
-of Louisiana, Arkansas, Tennessee and Virginia it is somewhat
-hazardous to affirm that he acted unwisely. More than
-this the adherents of President Lincoln could not reasonably
-have expected. Mr. Johnson was not, however, required by
-any consideration of moment to apply that mode of restoration
-to the seven remaining States; nor is it by any means certain
-that he had a legal right to do so. With President Lincoln the
-problem was to preserve the Union. To effect that object he
-believed it necessary to institute loyal governments, and his
-action in so doing appears to have been clearly within his
-powers as Commander-in-Chief. Had his course been unwise
-or even prejudicial to national interests, the reorganization
-of those States was still a legitimate war measure to which
-his discretion undoubtedly extended. When Andrew Johnson
-became President, however, the nature of the problem had
-greatly changed, for even though no proclamation had yet
-announced the termination of the Rebellion, hostilities had
-entirely ceased before he issued the first of his orders on reconstruction.
-It was only by something like a legal fiction,
-therefore, that the war powers could longer be exercised. It is
-believed that his failure to recognize the different circumstances
-was an error of judgment. The danger of a renewal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_448'>448</span>of the conflict was not sufficiently real to justify a continuance
-of the unlimited authority that might be deemed necessary in
-time of war. He was aware that Congress had refused to admit
-representatives or to count electoral votes from those
-States reorganized during the Rebellion, when the action of
-the Executive rested on the firm, if somewhat undefined, foundation
-of the war powers. After a majority, even in these
-circumstances, had pronounced against that system, on what
-ground could the new President base his expectation of success?
-Without first assuring himself of the coöperation of
-the Legislative branch he should not have undertaken the arduous
-task of reviving Union governments in those commonwealths
-where even the very image of civil authority had been
-effaced. Perhaps he had been convinced that the method of
-restoration was analogous to the process of terminating war
-with a foreign power in which the initiative is to be taken
-by the Executive Department of Government. On this subject
-Mr. Blaine acutely remarks, that, “There is nothing of
-which a public officer can be so easily persuaded as of the enlarged
-jurisdiction that pertains to his station.”<a id='r466' /><a href='#f466' class='c010'><sup>[466]</sup></a> It was
-while executing his measures of reconstruction that Mr. Lincoln
-discovered the real sentiments and, to his surprise, no
-doubt, encountered the determined opposition of Congress.
-In the case of his successor the same excuse cannot be urged,
-for he was aware of the temper of the Republican majority,
-and appears to have consulted only his courage in espousing
-a cause already condemned by many of the most influential
-leaders of the party to which he principally owed his election.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As the order recognizing the Alexandria government
-marked no distinct Executive policy, speculation could still
-amuse or employ itself on the expected announcement by the
-new President. The first step in that momentous undertaking
-was the appointment, May 29, 1865, of William W. Holden
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_449'>449</span>as Provisional Governor of North Carolina. The order promulgating
-that measure was as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Whereas the fourth section of the fourth article of the Constitution of
-the United States declares that the United States shall guarantee to every
-State in the Union a republican form of government, and shall protect
-each of them against invasion and domestic violence; and whereas the
-President of the United States is, by the Constitution, made commander-in-chief
-of the army and navy, as well as chief civil executive officer of
-the United States, and is bound by solemn oath faithfully to execute the
-office of President of the United States, and to take care that the laws
-be faithfully executed; and whereas the rebellion, which has been waged
-by a portion of the people of the United States against the properly constituted
-authorities of the Government thereof, in the most violent and
-revolting form, but whose organized and armed forces have now been
-almost entirely overcome, has, in its revolutionary progress, deprived the
-people of the State of North Carolina of all civil government; and
-whereas it becomes necessary and proper to carry out and enforce the
-obligations of the United States to the people of North Carolina, in securing
-them in the enjoyment of a republican form of government:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Now, therefore, in obedience to the high and solemn duties imposed
-upon me by the Constitution of the United States, and for the purpose of
-enabling the loyal people of said State to organize a State government,
-whereby justice may be established, domestic tranquillity insured, and
-loyal citizens protected in all their rights of life, liberty, and property, I,
-Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, and Commander-in-Chief
-of the army and navy of the United States, do hereby appoint William
-W. Holden, Provisional Governor of the State of North Carolina,
-whose duty it shall be, at the earliest practicable period, to prescribe such
-rules and regulations as may be necessary and proper for convening a
-convention, composed of delegates to be chosen by that portion of the
-people of said State who are loyal to the United States, and no others,
-for the purpose of altering or amending the constitution thereof; and
-with authority to exercise, within the limits of said State, all the powers
-necessary and proper to enable such loyal people of the State of North
-Carolina to restore said State to its constitutional relations to the Federal
-Government, and to present such a republican form of State government
-as will entitle the State to the guarantee of the United States
-therefor, and its people to protection by the United States against invasion,
-insurrection, and domestic violence; <em>Provided</em>, that in any election
-that may be hereafter held for choosing delegates to any State convention,
-as aforesaid, no person shall be qualified as an elector, or shall
-be eligible as a member of such convention, unless he shall have previously
-taken the oath of amnesty, as set forth in the President’s proclamation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_450'>450</span>of May 29, A. D. 1865, and is a voter qualified as prescribed by
-the Constitution and laws of the State of North Carolina, in force immediately
-before the 20th day of May, 1861, the date of the so-called
-ordinance of secession; and the said convention when convened, or the
-Legislature that may be thereafter assembled, will prescribe the qualifications
-of electors, and the eligibility of persons to hold office under the
-Constitution and laws of the State, a power the people of the several
-States composing the Federal Union have rightfully exercised from the
-origin of the Government to the present time.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And I do hereby direct:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><em>First.</em> That the military commander of the Department, and all officers
-and persons in the military and naval service aid and assist the said
-Provisional Governor in carrying into effect this proclamation, and they
-are enjoined to abstain from, in any way, hindering, impeding or discouraging
-the loyal people from the organization of a State Government,
-as herein authorized.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Then followed instructions, similar to those contained in
-the order of May 9, relative to Virginia, directing the heads
-of the several Executive Departments to enforce those Federal
-laws in North Carolina of which the administration belonged
-to their respective offices.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Somewhat earlier on the same day was published an
-Amnesty Proclamation, renewing in effect the provisions of
-that issued by Mr. Lincoln on the 8th of December, 1863. It
-increased, however, the number of classes excepted from the
-benefits of the original offer by adding the following:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>All persons who have been or are absentees from the United States
-for the purpose of aiding the rebellion.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>All military and naval officers in the rebel service, who were educated
-by the Government in the Military Academy at West Point or the United
-States Naval Academy.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>All persons who held the pretended offices of governors of States in
-insurrection against the United States.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>All persons who left their homes within the jurisdiction and protection
-of the United States, and passed beyond the Federal military lines into the
-pretended confederate States for the purpose of aiding the rebellion.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>All persons who have been engaged in the destruction of the commerce
-of the United States upon the high seas, and all persons who have made
-raids into the United States from Canada, or been engaged in destroying
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_451'>451</span>the commerce of the United States upon the lakes and rivers that separate
-the British Provinces from the United States.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>All persons who, at the time when they seek to obtain the benefits
-hereof by taking the oath herein prescribed, are in military, naval, or
-civil confinement, or custody, or under bonds of the civil, military, or
-naval authorities, or agents of the United States, as prisoners of war,
-or persons detained for offences of any kind, either before or after conviction.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>All persons who have voluntarily participated in said rebellion, and the
-estimated value of whose taxable property is over twenty thousand dollars.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>All persons who have taken the oath of amnesty as prescribed in the
-President’s proclamation of December 8, A. D. 1863, or an oath of
-allegiance to the Government of the United States since the date of said
-proclamation, and who have not thenceforward kept and maintained the
-same inviolate.<a id='r467' /><a href='#f467' class='c010'><sup>[467]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The proclamation provided, however, that persons belonging
-to the excluded classes could make special application for
-pardon, when such liberal clemency would be exercised by the
-President as was deemed consistent with the facts in each
-case, and with the peace and dignity of the United States.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Secretary Seward, who attested the proclamation, approved
-its general tenor as well as its details. At first he appears to
-have opposed the “Twenty-thousand-dollar exclusion,” but
-finally yielded to the arguments of the President, who by
-this description had hoped to include a numerous class that
-did not come under any of those specified. In this respect
-it possessed the comprehensive as well as the convenient
-character of a general warrant. All attempts to fix responsibility
-for secession have proved futile, and it is difficult
-to explain the President’s attitude toward Southern men of
-property unless, indeed, he meant to humiliate a class that
-he personally disliked, or, perhaps, he intended to act upon the
-principle that to be mild it is necessary first to appear cruel.
-Precisely why the other classes were excepted from the offer
-of indemnity the reader of Rebellion literature need not be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_452'>452</span>informed. The amnesty proclamation applied to all the insurgent
-States.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Like the “Louisiana plan,” the order appointing Mr. Holden
-was based on that clause of the Federal Constitution
-which guarantees “to every State in this Union a republican
-form of government.” It was in his character of Commander-in-Chief
-of the Army and Navy, as well as Executive, that he
-assumed to appoint a provisional governor. The Rebellion,
-which in its progress had “deprived the people of the State
-of North Carolina of all civil government,” he described as
-having been “almost entirely overcome.” This condition
-rendered it necessary to fulfill the Federal obligation to secure
-to the people of that State a republican form of government.
-The order being self-explanatory, it only remains to observe
-that none but “loyal people” were to participate in electing
-delegates to the convention, which it was made the duty of the
-Governor to convoke. The term “loyal people” included all
-who would take the oath and receive the pardon provided for
-in the proclamation. These were required to be qualified
-voters under the laws in force immediately before the act of
-secession. By this provision the negroes of the State were
-excluded from the electoral people, and the work of reconstruction
-left entirely in the hands of the whites. The convention
-chosen by these citizens, or the Legislature that might
-be thereafter assembled, was authorized to “prescribe the
-qualifications of electors, and the eligibility of persons to hold
-office under the constitution and laws of the State, a power,”
-added the order, which “the people of the several States composing
-the Federal Union have rightfully exercised from the
-origin of the Government to the present time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Governor Holden in a proclamation of June 12, 1865,
-announced his appointment and declared his purpose to order
-an election of delegates to a State convention, the object of
-calling which was briefly noticed. He also made known his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_453'>453</span>intention to commission justices of the peace for the purpose
-of administering the oath of allegiance and opening the
-polls. He urged the people to resume their accustomed pursuits;
-refugees were encouraged by an offer of protection to
-return to the State, and freedmen were instructed in the duties
-peculiar to their altered circumstances.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By a second proclamation, dated August 8, the choice of
-delegates to the proposed convention was fixed for September
-21 succeeding. Some delay in appointing a date for holding
-the election was occasioned by a desire to afford the people an
-opportunity of enrolling their names and obtaining the required
-certificates.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By such voters as were not included in any of the excepted
-classes, together with the few who had been able to procure the
-Presidential pardon, full delegations were chosen in all but
-three counties. The details of this election accessible to the
-writer are exceedingly meagre. Owing much to the timely
-publication and the admirable character of the orders of General
-Schofield, who had exercised the functions of military
-governor until superseded by Mr. Holden, the contest appears
-to have been free from unusual violence, though newspaper
-correspondents, it is true, reported disturbances at several
-polling places and mention rumors of rioting.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The convention, which assembled at Raleigh on October 2,
-was composed for the most part of members who had either
-openly opposed or reluctantly joined the secession movement.
-There were few, however, who had not given aid and comfort
-to the enemy. In other words, they were Whigs and conservative
-Democrats. Every representative readily took the
-oath to support the Constitution of the United States. The
-convention organized by electing Edwin G. Reade, an ex-member
-of the Thirty-fifth Congress, as president. On taking
-his seat Mr. Reade made an appropriate and conciliatory address.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_454'>454</span>The Provisional Governor also submitted to the members
-of the convention a brief message in which he observed that
-their duties were too plain to require any suggestions from
-him. North Carolina, he said, attempted in May, 1861, to
-separate herself from the Union. That attempt involved her
-in protracted and disastrous war. She entered the rebellion
-a slaveholding and emerged from it a non-slaveholding State.
-“In other respects,” he declared, “so far as her existence as a
-State and her rights as a State are concerned, she has undergone
-no change.”<a id='r468' /><a href='#f468' class='c010'><sup>[468]</sup></a> He assumed that the convention would
-insert in the organic law a provision forever prohibiting involuntary
-servitude in North Carolina. The language abolishing
-that institution, the form of the resolution abrogating the
-ordinance of secession and the nature of the action to be taken
-on the war debt were the most important questions before the
-convention.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On October 7 the repealing ordinance was passed unanimously
-in the following terms:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The ordinance of the convention of the State of North Carolina, ratified
-on the 21st day of November, 1789, which adopted and ratified the
-Constitution of the United States, and also all acts and parts of acts of
-the General Assembly ratifying and adopting amendments to the said
-Constitution, are now, and at all times since the adoption and ratification
-thereof, have been, in full force and effect, notwithstanding the supposed
-ordinance of the 20th of May, 1861, declaring the same to be repealed,
-rescinded, and abrogated; and the said supposed ordinance is now, and
-at all times hath been, null and void.<a id='r469' /><a href='#f469' class='c010'><sup>[469]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The resolution abolishing slavery, reported on the following
-day, was adopted on the 9th of October, and is as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><em>Be it declared and ordained by the delegates of the people of the State
-of North Carolina in convention assembled, and it is hereby declared and
-ordained</em>, That slavery and involuntary servitude, otherwise than for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_455'>455</span>crimes, whereof the parties shall have been duly convicted, shall be, and
-is hereby, forever prohibited within the State.<a id='r470' /><a href='#f470' class='c010'><sup>[470]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not without some reluctance there was also adopted a resolution
-prohibiting any future Legislature from assuming or
-paying any State debt created directly or indirectly for the
-purpose of aiding the Rebellion. There seems to have been
-in the convention a strong element opposed to the passage of
-such a measure, or at all events who preferred to refer it to a
-popular vote. The decision of the convention on this subject
-appears to have been influenced by a telegram from the President
-to Governor Holden, in which the former says:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Every dollar of the debt created to aid the rebellion against the United
-States should be repudiated finally and forever. The great mass of the
-people should not be taxed to pay a debt to aid in carrying on a rebellion
-which they in fact, if left to themselves, were opposed to. Let
-those who have given their means for the obligations of the State look
-to that power they tried to establish in violation of law, Constitution,
-and will of the people. They must meet their fate. It is their misfortune,
-and cannot be recognized by the people of any State professing
-themselves loyal to the Government of the United States and in the
-Union....<a id='r471' /><a href='#f471' class='c010'><sup>[471]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The convention adjourned October 19 to reassemble on the
-fourth Thursday of May, 1866. Judge Reade, its president,
-previously delivered a farewell address, in which he said:
-“Our work is finished. The breach in the Government, as
-far as the same was by force, has been overcome by force;
-and so far as the same has had the sanction of legislation, the
-legislation has been declared to be null and void. So that
-there remains nothing to be done except the withdrawal of
-military power when all our governmental relations will be
-restored, without further asking, on the part of the United
-States. The element of slavery, which so long distracted and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_456'>456</span>divided the sections, has by an unanimous vote been abolished.
-Every man in the State is free. The reluctance which for a
-while was felt to the sudden and radical change in our domestic
-relations—a reluctance which was made oppressive to us
-by our kind feelings for the slave, and by our apprehensions
-of the evils which were to follow him—has yielded to the determination
-to be to him, as we always have been, his best
-friends; to advise, protect, educate and elevate him; to seek
-his confidence, and to give him ours, each occupying appropriate
-positions to the other.... It remains for us to return
-to our constituents and engage with them in the great
-work of restoring our beloved State to order and prosperity.”<a id='r472' /><a href='#f472' class='c010'><sup>[472]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>An election, fixed for November 9, was ordered by Mr.
-Holden for the choice of Governor, members of a General Assembly,
-county officers and Representatives in Congress. On
-the same occasion the people were to vote on the ordinance
-abolishing and prohibiting slavery. The action of the convention
-on the Confederate debt being final, that subject was
-not referred to the popular judgment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On behalf of the convention the president and other delegates
-soon after adjournment proceeded to Washington to
-acquaint Mr. Johnson with the result of their deliberations.
-They related to him what has already been placed before the
-reader. As the convention had yielded what was involved in
-the war, President Johnson was requested to declare on the
-part of the Federal authorities that the governmental relations
-of North Carolina had been reconciled. Notwithstanding
-what had been done they feared that their State delegation
-would be excluded from Congress by the imposition of a
-test oath which few men in that commonwealth could take.
-The convention, therefore, petitioned Congress, through Mr.
-Johnson, to repeal the requirement. The President, after expressing
-his satisfaction with what North Carolina had done,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_457'>457</span>reminded the delegates that to make restoration practicable
-one thing still remained to be accomplished, namely, their acceptance
-of the amendment abolishing slavery throughout the
-United States.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The ordinances submitted to the people were ratified at the
-November election, when Jonathan Worth was chosen Governor
-over Mr. Holden by a majority of 6,730, in a total of
-58,554 votes. The repeal of the secession ordinance was
-ratified by a vote of 20,506 to 2,002, and that prohibiting
-slavery by 19,039 against 3,970.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In a dispatch of November 27, President Johnson, thanking
-the Provisional Governor for the efficient manner in which he
-had executed his duties, said that the result of the election was
-greatly to damage the prospects of the State in the restoration
-of its government, that if the action and spirit of the Legislature
-were in the same direction it would greatly increase
-the harm already done, and might prove fatal. He hoped the
-mischief would be repaired.<a id='r473' /><a href='#f473' class='c010'><sup>[473]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Meanwhile the Legislature during a brief session ratified,
-with only six dissenting votes, the Thirteenth Amendment,
-and elected John Pool and William A. Graham United States
-Senators. Seven Representatives in Congress had been previously
-chosen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Holden, who continued to perform the functions of his
-office until the inauguration of his successor on the 15th of
-December, probably owed his appointment to his reputation
-as a Democratic editor. Though his rise to political prominence
-was similar to that of the President, he had not the
-latter’s inflexibility of principle. A secessionist in 1856, when
-the success of Fremont appeared probable, he soon began to
-recede from that position, and in 1859 was opposed to disunion;
-subsequently he drifted with the popular current and
-even went so far in an advanced stage of the Rebellion as to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_458'>458</span>advocate a “last-dollar-and-last-man” resolution. But even
-this, together with the expression of extreme opinions, did not
-restore him to public confidence, and before the end of the
-war the <cite>Standard</cite>, which he edited, became the organ of the
-disaffected. Notwithstanding this wavering and inconsistent
-career the fact that he was generally regarded as an enemy of
-secession singled him out as the proper person to reorganize
-the government of North Carolina.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though the President was not indifferent to the demoralized
-condition of his native State, that consideration alone does not
-appear to have induced him to begin the process of reconstruction
-with that commonwealth. There is strong testimony to
-prove that Mr. Lincoln had prepared a similar proclamation
-for restoring the former relations of North Carolina, and on
-July 8, 1867, General Grant testified before the Joint Committee
-on Reconstruction that he had twice heard read at
-meetings of Mr. Lincoln’s Cabinet a paper embodying the
-same provisions as that published by President Johnson.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Before taking the second step a brief interval elapsed; perhaps
-the President was hesitating; however this may be, he
-informed Hon. George S. Boutwell that “the measure was
-tentative.” The fears of the Massachusetts statesman and his
-concern for harmony in the Republican party, of which he was
-an able and honored leader, induced him, in company with
-Senator Morrill, of Vermont, to call on the President. During
-their conversation Mr. Johnson, when the dangers
-of his policy were indicated, assured his visitors “that nothing
-further would be done until the experiment had been
-tested.”<a id='r474' /><a href='#f474' class='c010'><sup>[474]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Notwithstanding this deliberate assurance, the President
-at that time appears to have almost determined on the system
-that he intended to adopt, for scarcely two weeks had passed
-when he appointed, by a proclamation similar to that for North
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_459'>459</span>Carolina, William L. Sharkey, Provisional Governor of Mississippi.
-Within a month from the date of Mr. Holden’s appointment
-others were made for all the remaining States except
-Florida, the order for reorganizing which was delayed
-till July 13.<a id='r475' /><a href='#f475' class='c010'><sup>[475]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The origin and development of the Executive plan having
-now been traced with some degree of minuteness, it is not the
-design of this essay to pursue circumstantially the institution
-of that system in the six remaining States. By proclamations
-almost identical with that issued in the case of North Carolina,
-provisional governors were appointed in all of those commonwealths
-before the middle of July. Though the method of
-reorganization in these States presented similar features, several
-were distinguished in some respects from the others.
-Observations on those differences will employ nearly all that
-remains to be said on Reconstruction under President Johnson.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The appointment of Mr. Holden alarmed Republican leaders;
-the successive proclamations for restoring the other
-States directed public attention to the questions involved in
-reconstruction. Seeing that Congress was not in session, that
-the President had assumed an expectant attitude, and that
-every plan of reunion proposed was liable to serious objection,
-it is not a matter of wonder that the recent Confederate authorities
-attempted of themselves to restore Federal relations.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>These were among the considerations that induced Governor
-Clarke, of Mississippi, to summon the Legislature of that
-State to meet on May 18. In his address convoking the disloyal
-assembly he urged the people, in order to remove the
-necessity for sending Federal troops among them, to restore
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_460'>460</span>and preserve peace. The Legislature came together accordingly,
-and, among other measures, provided for the election,
-on June 19, of delegates to a State convention. Before that
-date, however, the President had appointed William L. Sharkey,
-an eminent jurist, Provisional Governor, thus ignoring
-both the measures of Mr. Clarke and the insurgent assembly.
-The latter was dispersed by a military order, while the Governor
-was carried off to a fortress in Boston harbor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Sharkey, in a dutiful and able address, appointed
-August 7 as the day for holding an election of delegates to a
-State convention which was to meet at the city of Jackson one
-week later. In this proclamation, he said: “The negroes
-are now free—free by the fortunes of war—free by proclamation—free
-by common consent—free practically, as well
-as theoretically, and it is too late to raise questions as to the
-means by which they became so.”<a id='r476' /><a href='#f476' class='c010'><sup>[476]</sup></a> Though the Governor,
-to avoid the delay of separate county organization, had appointed
-many local officials who had held their posts during
-the Rebellion, he required all of them to take the oath of
-allegiance prescribed by the President.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The convention, which assembled at the appointed time,
-declared the ordinance of secession null and void, prohibited
-slavery and made it the duty of the next Legislature to provide
-for the protection of the person and the property of freedmen.
-The lawmaking body was also to take measures for guarding
-both the negroes and the commonwealth against any evils
-that might arise from sudden emancipation. The first Monday
-in October was appointed for the election of State officers
-and members of Congress. A memorial was also adopted
-urging the President to remove the colored troops from the
-State. The members, acting apparently in their individual
-capacity, united in a petition for the pardon of Jefferson Davis
-and of Governor Clarke. The amendment of the State constitution
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_461'>461</span>abolishing slavery was adopted by the decisive vote
-of 86 to 11. After South Carolina, Mississippi contained
-the greatest proportion of slaves, and was thus very deeply
-involved in the system.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While the convention was in session the President sent to
-Governor Sharkey a telegram in which he made the following
-remarkable suggestion:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I am gratified to see that you have organized your convention without
-difficulty.... If you could extend the elective franchise to all
-persons of color who can read the Constitution of the United States in
-English and write their names, and to all persons of color who own real
-estate valued at not less than two hundred and fifty dollars and pay
-taxes thereon, you would completely disarm the adversary and set an
-example the other States will follow. This you can do with perfect
-safety, and you would thus place Southern States in reference to free
-persons of color upon the same basis with the free States. I hope and
-trust your convention will do this, and as a consequence the radicals, who
-are wild upon negro franchise, will be completely foiled in their attempts
-to keep the Southern States from renewing their relations to the Union
-by not accepting their Senators and Representatives.<a id='r477' /><a href='#f477' class='c010'><sup>[477]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the view point of practical politics this recommendation
-was undoubtedly a wise one, but it will scarcely be contended
-that it was the suggestion of enlightened statesmanship.
-The South, distrusting the President’s sincerity, refused
-to adopt his suggestion. The communication is reproduced,
-not to show that the President was not always impelled
-by the highest motives so much as to show that even before
-Congress had assembled he had already come to regard as
-“the adversary” those whose exertions secured his election.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In his proclamation appointing a date for the election of
-delegates Governor Sharkey advised the people, when it might
-be necessary in consequence of the remoteness of a military
-force, to form a county patrol for the apprehension of offenders.
-Information having reached him that in many parts of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_462'>462</span>the State organized bands had been robbing and plundering,
-and that the Federal troops were insufficient to suppress
-these disorders, he urged citizens, especially the young
-men who had “so distinguished themselves for gallantry,”
-to organize promptly in each county volunteer companies, one
-of cavalry and one of infantry if practicable, to assist in detecting,
-punishing and preventing crime.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From his headquarters at Vicksburg, General Slocum, the
-Federal commander, immediately published an order to prevent
-the proposed reorganization of the militia. The contemplated
-force, he said, would be numerically superior to his
-own, and, as many of the Union troops on duty in Mississippi
-were freedmen, collisions would be unavoidable. The crimes
-referred to by Mr. Sharkey were, the General asserted, committed
-against Northern men, Government couriers and negroes.
-Southerners, it was true, had been halted by these
-marauders, but were promptly released and informed that
-they had been stopped by mistake. Citizens who recognized
-the persons were unwilling to disclose the names of these
-lawless members of the community. The State, too, he
-declared, had not yet been relieved from the attitude of
-hostility which she assumed against the General Government.
-Those engaged in attempts to organize the militia would be
-arrested.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Fearing that the President would not support General Slocum,
-Carl Schurz, who had been sent South on a mission to
-assist in carrying out the Administration policy, expressed in
-a communication to the President some doubt as to the wisdom
-of the Governor’s action. To this the President, in a reply of
-August 30, said he presumed that General Slocum, without
-first consulting the Government, would issue no order interfering
-with Mr. Sharkey in his effort to restore the functions of
-the State government. In the matter of organizing patrols
-Mr. Johnson took the same view as the Governor, and in that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_463'>463</span>connection said, “The people must be trusted with their government,
-and, if trusted, my opinion is that they will act in
-good faith and restore their former constitutional relations
-with all the States composing the Union.”<a id='r478' /><a href='#f478' class='c010'><sup>[478]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The lapse of fifteen months had worked a revolution in the
-opinions of the President. Circumstances, it is true, had
-changed since the delivery of his Nashville speech; the main
-question, however, had not greatly altered, for it was still
-important to determine the political people of the late insurgent
-States. From declaring that “rebels” must take a back
-seat in the work of restoration, the President had come to believe
-that “the people must be trusted with their government.”
-It is not to convict Mr. Johnson of inconsistency that his opinions
-are here brought into juxtaposition, but rather to inquire
-whether every important consideration for ignoring secessionists
-in 1864 had disappeared by 1865.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On representation from the Provisional Governor that the
-Federal commander interfered to prevent the execution of
-his proclamation for reorganizing the militia, the President
-on September 2 required General Slocum to revoke his military
-order. Under instructions somewhat peremptory in tone,
-that officer two days later rescinded his proclamation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The condition of the freedmen, as well as their exact legal
-status, became about this time the subject of much discussion
-in Mississippi. While many continued in the service of their
-old masters, numbers roamed about the country in idleness,
-and nearly all of them had very extravagant notions of their
-newly acquired rights and privileges. Though the whites
-admitted of necessity the complete freedom, they were for the
-most part unprepared to grant equal rights to negroes. Between
-them and their employers, however, there occurred but
-little serious trouble. All labor was contracted for, and owners
-of plantations, apprehensive that labor would be difficult
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_464'>464</span>to secure at the beginning of the season, were anxious to make
-contracts for the year 1866. Toward the close of September
-the assistant commissioner of the Freedmen’s Bureau turned
-over to the civil authorities all the business of his court.
-To get rid of military tribunals, Governor Sharkey promised
-that in all cases involving the rights of negroes their testimony
-would be accepted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the election, which was held on October 9, General Benjamin
-G. Humphreys, late of the Confederate army, was
-chosen Governor; immediately thereafter he was pardoned by
-the President. Five Representatives in Congress were also
-elected. By the Legislature, which convened and organized
-one week later, Governor Sharkey was appointed United
-States Senator to fill the unexpired term of Jefferson Davis.
-For the long term, Mr. J. L. Alcorn was elected. The legislation
-relative to freedmen will be subsequently considered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Besides his complaint to the President relative to the interference
-of General Slocum with the proposed reorganization
-of the militia, Governor Sharkey expressed dissatisfaction
-with the military authorities who refused to obey writs of
-<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">habeas corpus</span></i> issued by local judges. To this Secretary
-Stanton replied that the grant of a provisional government did
-not affect the proper jurisdiction of military courts, and that
-this jurisdiction was still called for in cases of wrong done to
-soldiers, whether white or colored, and in cases of wrong done
-to colored citizens, and where the local authorities were unable
-or unwilling to do justice, either from defective machinery,
-or because some State law declared colored persons incompetent
-as witnesses. Mississippi was to a considerable extent
-still under military law, and the suspension of the writ of
-<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">habeas corpus</span></i> had not been revoked. To a similar remonstrance
-the Secretary of State replied that, the commonwealth
-being still under martial law, the military power was supreme.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On receiving tidings of General Johnston’s surrender, Governor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_465'>465</span>Brown, of Georgia, called a session of the Confederate
-Legislature, but General Gilmore, who commanded the department
-including that commonwealth, issued a counter-proclamation
-annulling the late Executive’s order. General
-Wilson, in writing the ex-Governor, used expressions that
-were needlessly harsh, and whether the language was his own
-or that of the President, to whom the commander ascribed it,
-the style was neither dignified nor magnanimous. Whoever
-may have been responsible for the phraseology, the Union
-General appears to have believed in a rigorous exercise of the
-rights of conquest. With the defeat of this attempt of the
-recent authorities to restore their commonwealth to its old
-status, Georgia remained in military hands till the appointment,
-June 17, of James Johnson as Provisional Governor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the work of reconciling the people of that State the Provisional
-Executive was assisted by a sensible address of ex-Governor
-Brown, and by the support of many leading secessionists.
-Now that the “irrepressible conflict” had been settled,
-the people appeared anxious for the reorganization of
-their State. The 4th of October was early fixed as the date
-for holding an election of delegates. The suffrage of citizens
-was solicited and received by candidates of ability and character.
-These were pledged to advocate the necessary measures
-for restoring their commonwealth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The convention assembled at Milledgeville on October 25,
-was called to order by the Provisional Governor, and elected
-Herschel V. Johnson as its president. Instead of declaring
-the nullity of the secession and kindred ordinances the convention
-“repealed” them. On the question of repudiating the
-war debt the vote stood 133 to 117 in favor of the proposition.
-This resolution, however, was not carried until November 7,
-and appears even then to have been passed only after considerable
-pressure from Washington, whence the President directed
-or assisted by telegraph the proceedings in all the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_466'>466</span>reconstruction conventions. The war debt thus declared void
-amounted to $18,135,775. The necessity for this action is
-evident; the hardships occasioned thereby can be easily imagined.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The State constitution, which was thoroughly revised, recognized
-the changes that had occurred in civil and social
-affairs. In that instrument the freedom of slaves was expressly
-declared, and the Legislature was required to make
-regulations respecting the altered relations of this class of
-persons. The constitution as thus amended was unanimously
-adopted by the convention.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though Georgia was not the most loyal supporter of Jefferson
-Davis in the time of his prosperity, now that adversity
-had overtaken him, the convention, in a memorial to President
-Johnson, invoked the Executive clemency in behalf of their
-late chief. The convention assumed for the people their share
-in the crime for which Mr. Davis and a few others were undergoing
-punishment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As in the case of Mississippi, the President approved the
-organization of “a police force” in the several counties, for
-the purpose of arresting marauders, suppressing crime and
-enforcing authority.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Legislature, which was elected November 15, assembled
-at Milledgeville on the 4th of December following. With
-its proceedings we are not now concerned more than to observe
-that the Thirteenth Amendment was adopted by that
-body five days subsequently.<a id='r479' /><a href='#f479' class='c010'><sup>[479]</sup></a> The measures of the Georgia
-Assembly were not before Congress when it convened.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Like the chief magistrates in several other Southern States,
-the Confederate Governor of Texas, when convinced after the
-surrender of General Kirby Smith that the war had ceased,
-took steps toward bringing his commonwealth into its old
-practical relations with the Union. He accordingly ordered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_467'>467</span>an election of delegates to a convention to be held on June
-19, but was anticipated by President Johnson, who two days
-earlier had appointed Andrew J. Hamilton Provisional Governor.
-Though the latter did not promptly appoint a day for
-holding the election, he announced his intention of doing so
-at an early date. There was probably in the minds of the less
-intelligent Texans a notion that emancipation was to be gradual,
-or that it was not yet an accomplished fact. To dispel
-any such idea the new Executive circulated an address which
-informed the public that if, “in the action of the proposed convention,
-the negro is characterized or treated as less than a
-freeman,” Senators and Representatives from Texas would
-vainly seek admission to the halls of Congress. The choice of
-delegates having been fixed for January 8, 1866, an account
-of the convention or of the proceedings in the Assembly subsequently
-organized in that State does not fall within the scope
-of this work. In the interval justice was administered by
-officers temporarily commissioned for that purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The negro population, which, because of the influx from
-other Southern States, had doubled since 1860, presented a
-difficult problem in the reorganization of Texas. They knew
-little of the uses of freedom and were kept systematically at
-work only by the candid admonitions of General Granger and
-the Governor. Toward the close of December, however, a
-better feeling prevailed among them; but it appears to have
-been a serious problem to have kept the freedmen of Texas
-steadily at work. Planters throughout the State lost heavily
-by their inability to engage or to retain in their service laborers
-enough to gather the standing cotton crop. The full consideration
-of this subject is inseparable from an analysis of
-Texan legislation relative to freedmen. Though well advanced,
-the reconstruction of Texas under the Executive plan
-was not completed before the meeting of the Thirty-ninth
-Congress.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_468'>468</span>Nothing in the reorganization of Alabama or of South
-Carolina calls for especial mention. The same is true of
-Florida. Both the spirit and tendency of Southern legislation,
-however, require to be noticed, and with that examination
-a brief recapitulation will complete this investigation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Before concluding this inquiry two related topics require
-briefly to be noticed, namely, the character of the reconstruction
-conventions, and the <em>personnel</em> as well as the spirit of the
-legislatures organized under their authority. As to the former
-it may be observed that there were several modes in which
-constitutional conventions could have been assembled; all,
-however, were objectionable because of an element of irregularity.
-Considering them chronologically, rather than logically,
-the first was the method employed by the Union men of
-western Virginia. The Wheeling convention of June, 1861,
-was composed of delegates chosen at elections called, not by
-the constituted authorities, for they were already committed
-to a policy of rebellion, but by a spontaneous popular movement
-inaugurated by loyal and influential leaders. The work
-of this body, even though revolutionary, or at least irregular
-in its origin, was acquiesced in by the people affected and subsequently
-approved by the General Government. So few, however,
-were the loyalists of the insurgent States generally, that
-it was not practicable elsewhere in the South to reorganize
-governments in a similar manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A second mode was that adopted by Mr. Lincoln. Under
-this method, the President, as Commander-in-Chief, protected
-Union minorities in their efforts to reëstablish local governments
-in harmony with the Federal Constitution. This plan,
-it is evident, could be justified merely as a military measure,
-and, therefore, was lawful only during the continuance of the
-Rebellion. On the return of peace all such provisional schemes
-would disappear unless tolerated by the neglect or confirmed
-by the legislation of Congress. The conventions held under
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_469'>469</span>this theory rested on the authority of the commanding officer,
-who was himself acting by Executive direction. In reorganizing
-the government of Louisiana, General Banks, it will be
-remembered, declared that the fundamental law of that commonwealth
-was martial law, which was no more than his arbitrary
-will. In purging the electoral people and amending the
-constitution of that State he acted in strict conformity with
-that assumption. If in the preceding pages the reconstruction
-measures of Mr. Lincoln have been characterized as legitimate,
-it must not be supposed that it was intended to assert that they
-would have been lawful in time of peace, for under the American
-system it has never been deemed competent for the national
-Executive to call a convention. Though the establishments
-instituted under his authority, except in the case of
-Tennessee, never received the permanent sanction of Congress,
-the conventions which organized these governments stand on
-a foundation somewhat different from those assembled by the
-appointees of President Johnson, for in the summer of 1865
-the plea of military necessity could no longer be urged. If,
-therefore, the conventions held in Louisiana, Arkansas and
-Tennessee were tainted with irregularity, those assembled in
-the remaining States were undoubtedly revolutionary. Technically,
-however, the conventions of both classes stand on the
-same footing. Governor Perry, of South Carolina, regarded
-as revolutionary the body which he convoked to reorganize
-his commonwealth, and for that reason, as he alleged, dissolved
-the convention before it had taken final action on the
-important question of the Southern debt.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The course of the Confederate governors of Mississippi,
-Georgia and Texas, who summoned the insurgent legislatures
-of their respective States for the purpose of calling conventions,
-suggests a third mode in which the machinery of government
-could have been set in motion. This plan, however,
-presented an evident difficulty, inasmuch as these assemblies
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_470'>470</span>could not have been recognized without admitting in some
-sort the validity of the secession and kindred ordinances. Mr.
-Lincoln, it is true, intended, before hostilities had ceased, to
-permit the members of the Virginia Legislature to meet as influential
-individuals for the purpose of recalling their State
-troops from the Confederate army. The surrender of Lee occurring
-soon after, and the President’s action having been misunderstood,
-he withdrew this permission, and did it the more
-readily as the necessity which suggested it had passed completely
-away. The department commanders prevented any
-response to the proclamations of the Executives in the three
-States named above, and President Johnson by his prompt appointment
-of provisional governors ignored or anticipated
-their action. To say nothing of the revolutionary course contemplated
-by the ex-Confederate governors, the success of
-their plan required the approval or at least the connivance of
-Federal authorities.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Still another manner of proceeding was for Congress, by
-calling or authorizing conventions, to inaugurate the movement
-for reconstruction; but the power of the national Legislature
-extends only to the passage of enabling acts for Territories,
-and these commonwealths appear to have been neither
-constitutional Territories nor constitutional States. However,
-as some irregularity was inseparable from any system of
-reorganization, the Legislative branch of Government was the
-authority least objectionable for controlling informal changes
-in the nature of the Union. If powers not conferred by the
-Constitution must be assumed, it is better in the interests of
-civil liberty for the representatives of the people to transcend
-the organic law.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The second mode, it need scarcely be observed, was that embodied
-in the Executive plan. The conventions which assembled
-under encouragement and direction of President Johnson
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_471'>471</span>had an opportunity unequaled since the formation of the Constitution
-of winning the gratitude of the nation. By adopting
-an enlightened and humane policy they could have furnished
-an example of patriotism that would serve to influence
-the deliberations not only of the first assemblies to meet under
-the new order, but of all future legislatures in those States.
-It is well known that they did not prove equal to this emergency;
-the concessions to Northern opinion were not gracefully
-yielded, and lost much of their merit by having been
-extorted from the fears of the delegates. In some instances
-the conventions, by assuming functions of the ordinary legislative
-character, transcended their powers, and many of
-them “repealed” the ordinances without condemning the
-principle of secession. They amended and even adopted
-constitutions that were never submitted to the people.
-The civil rights of the negro were abandoned to the
-mercy of those who had fought to perpetuate human servitude.
-No provision was made for freedmen in the fundamental
-law, it having been assumed that the new legislatures
-could be trusted to extend justice equally to all classes in the
-community. In a word, those were disappointed who had
-expected from the conventions a display of civic virtues commensurate
-to the occasion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The remaining topic, that is, the character of the reconstructed
-governments as well as the spirit and tendency of
-their legislation, may in this place be briefly dismissed. Not,
-indeed, that the subject is unimportant, for it was mainly upon
-this question that the Thirty-ninth Congress justified its refusal
-to admit members from the South, and vindicated its
-rigorous treatment of the subjugated States. While an investigation
-of public opinion in that section is essential to a
-correct understanding of legislative action, the full consideration
-of the subject belongs properly to a treatise on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_472'>472</span>Congressional reconstruction, a theme to which this essay is
-only introductory. For the present purpose, therefore, a
-brief outline must suffice.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though the reconstruction conventions were correctly regarded
-as revolutionary, that character would not affect the
-legislatures instituted by their authority if the people concerned
-acquiesced in their proceedings. Americans of that
-day were not altogether indifferent to the sacred right of
-revolution, even if the principle was not so highly esteemed
-as formerly. An objection far more serious than the irregular
-origin of these conventions was the spirit which animated
-Southern legislators.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When the Thirty-ninth Congress convened at its first session
-members had before them only the merest fragments of
-the mass of testimony subsequently reported by the Joint
-Committee on Reconstruction, though even then they possessed
-evidence of the temper of the Southern mind sufficient, they
-believed, to recommend the most deliberate procedure. It
-would not be difficult to collect from contemporary literature
-proofs of hostility to the General Government sufficient to justify
-the attitude of Congress when it assembled on the 4th of
-December, 1865. From various sources the Northern people
-had caught glimpses of the actual condition of affairs within
-the late Confederacy. These manifestations of unfriendliness
-to the Union were enough to excite suspicion, and, in a
-matter affecting the future welfare of a great and powerful
-nation, suspicion is a just ground for inquiry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The alacrity with which the Southern people rushed to
-battle, as well as the vigor with which they prosecuted the
-war, was a phenomenon not more remarkable than the unanimity
-and promptness with which they apparently acquiesced
-in the result. It was long before the people of the North could
-believe that the rebellion was anything more than a leaders’
-insurrection, and they could not easily be persuaded after its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_473'>473</span>close that those who had fought so desperately to destroy, were
-sincere in their professions of loyalty to, the Union. It was not
-unnatural, therefore, that the late adversaries of the South
-would look with suspicion on her instant submission. With
-few exceptions Southern statesmen seemed desirous of effecting
-an early reunion. While various reasons might be assigned
-to explain this dutiful and almost unlimited obedience,
-it is certain that the argument chiefly relied upon by the provisional
-governors was that it was only by such a course that
-they could hope soon to be relieved of the presence among
-them of Yankee soldiers. Apprehension that more burdensome
-conditions might be imposed by Stevens and other
-radical leaders in Congress was, perhaps, not altogether without
-influence in producing this general acquiescence in the
-policy of the President.<a id='r480' /><a href='#f480' class='c010'><sup>[480]</sup></a> As every citizen who engaged in
-rebellion had forfeited both his life and his estate, it would
-be prudent temporarily to conceal any feeling of resentment,
-or any desire of revenge. These considerations were not
-without influence on the conduct of both the leaders and the
-people. With the quick upgrowth, however, of a feeling of
-personal safety, encouraged, no doubt, by a lavish distribution
-of pardons, and with an expectation, not unfounded, that
-reconciliation would speedily be followed by either a restoration
-of, or indemnity for, confiscated property, this policy of
-conformity would vanish. Thus under exterior tranquillity
-rankled bitter memories of disaster and defeat nourishing a
-state of unrest which even the unquestioned influence of their
-late commanders could not always keep from expressing itself
-in acts of violence. However, as Henry Winter Davis had
-foretold, the Southern population generally put on the seemly
-garb of peace and observed the form of holding elections.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_474'>474</span>Notwithstanding that many of their most enlightened citizens
-recommended, and that their most trusted leaders enjoined,
-submission to the new order, the transition from a
-state of hostility was marked even at the outset by acts of
-the highest indiscretion. Nor were these confined to irresponsible
-individuals whose utterances might have been justly
-regarded as the momentary inspiration of passion. Some of
-the acts referred to were the deliberate convictions of legislative
-bodies, and, as these measures appear to have escaped
-criticism, they may fairly be supposed to reflect the sentiments
-of the South. In the circumstances this was especially unfortunate,
-postponing as it did the day of peace and reconciliation;
-it afforded also a decent pretext to the “Radicals,”
-if they desired one, for excluding the Southern delegations
-from Congress. It justified inquiry, and investigation was
-fatal to Southern claims of universal submission.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though the exclusion of representatives undoubtedly intensified,
-it did not occasion the change in Southern feeling,
-for the Mississippi measures, presently to be noticed, were
-passed before the meeting of Congress. Acts of frequent
-occurrence tended to confirm the worst fears of that
-body, and long before the Joint Committee had completed
-their labors they were supplied with new species of violence
-if any description of outrage was lacking to crown
-their indictment. With due allowance for the fact that
-during many years preceding the war outrages were much
-more numerous in the slave than in the free States, it soon
-became apparent that it was unsafe to leave to the justice
-of Southern courts either the few Unionists who had
-remained faithful in that section or the recently enfranchised
-slaves. The estimation in which the former were held appears
-in the fact that in competition for office they were uniformly
-defeated by ex-Confederate candidates, sometimes by
-unpardoned, and even unrepentant ones. The feeling toward
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_475'>475</span>freedmen was one of extreme bitterness. Overlooking
-scattered acts of violence and outrage of which negroes were
-generally, though not always, the victims, Southern hostility
-toward them found unmistakable expression in the November
-legislation of Mississippi. On the 22d of that month was
-enacted a law regulating the relation of <em>master</em> and <em>apprentice</em>
-in the case of “freedmen, free negroes and mulattoes.”
-Among other things this statute provided:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That it shall be the duty of all ... civil officers ... in this
-State to report to the probate courts of their respective counties, semiannually,
-... all freedmen, free negroes, and mulattoes, under the age
-of eighteen, within their respective counties, beats or districts, who are
-orphans, or whose parent or parents have not the means, or who refuse
-to provide for and support said minors, and thereupon it shall be
-the duty of said probate court to order the clerk of said court to apprentice
-said minors to some competent and suitable person, on such
-terms as the court may direct, having a particular care to the interest of
-said minors: Provided, That the former owner of said minors shall have
-the preference, when in the opinion of the court, he or she shall be a
-suitable person for that purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 2.... That the said court shall be fully satisfied that the
-person or persons to whom said minor shall be apprenticed shall be a
-suitable person to have the charge and care of said minor, and fully to
-protect the interest of said minor. The said court shall require the said
-master or mistress to execute bond and security, payable to the State of
-Mississippi, conditioned that he or she shall furnish said minor with sufficient
-food and clothing, to treat said minor humanely, furnish medical
-attention in case of sickness, teach or cause to be taught him or her to
-read and write, if under fifteen years old, and will conform to any law
-that may be hereafter passed for the regulation of the duties and relation
-of master and apprentice: Provided, that said apprentice shall be bound
-by indenture, in case of males until they are twenty-one years old, and
-in case of females until they are eighteen years old.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 3.... That in the management and control of said apprentices,
-said master or mistress shall have power to inflict such moderate
-corporeal chastisement as a father or guardian is allowed to inflict on his
-or her child or ward at common law: Provided, That in no case shall
-cruel or inhuman punishment be inflicted.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 4.... That if any apprentice shall leave the employment of
-his or her master or mistress, without his or her consent, said master or
-mistress may pursue and recapture said apprentice, and bring him or her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_476'>476</span>before any justice of the peace of the county, whose duty it shall be to
-remand said apprentice to the service of his or her master or mistress;
-and in the event of a refusal on the part of said apprentice so to return,
-then said justice shall commit said apprentice to the jail of said county,
-on failure to give bond, until the next term of the county court; and it
-shall be the duty of said court, at the first term thereafter, to investigate
-said case, and if the court shall be of opinion that said apprentice left
-the employment of his or her master or mistress without good cause, to
-order him or her to be punished, as provided for the punishment of
-hired freedmen, as may be from time to time provided for by law, for
-desertion, until he or she shall agree to return to his or her master or
-mistress: Provided, that the court may grant continuances, as in other
-cases; and provided further, that if the court shall believe that said apprentice
-had good cause to quit his said master or mistress, the court
-shall discharge said apprentice from said indenture, and also enter a
-judgment against the master or mistress, for not more than one hundred
-dollars, for the use and benefit of said apprentice, to be collected on
-execution, as in other cases.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 5.... That if any person entice away any apprentice from
-his or her master or mistress, or shall knowingly employ an apprentice,
-or furnish him or her food or clothing, without the written consent of his
-or her master or mistress, or shall sell or give said apprentice ardent
-spirits, without such consent, said person so offending shall be deemed
-guilty of a high misdemeanor, and shall, on conviction thereof before
-the county court, be punished as provided for the punishment of persons
-enticing from their employer hired freedmen, free negroes or mulattoes.<a id='r481' /><a href='#f481' class='c010'><sup>[481]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the matter of apprenticing minors it will be observed
-that the former owner, when a person satisfactory to the
-court, was to have the preference; in the event of his death
-his widow or other member of his family was, if deemed
-suitable, to have the preference in re-apprenticing the minor.
-When there was no record testimony of the date of birth,
-judges of county courts were empowered to fix the age of
-the minor. The act was to go into force immediately after
-its passage.<a id='r482' /><a href='#f482' class='c010'><sup>[482]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The act of November 25, conferring civil rights on
-emancipated slaves, provided:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_477'>477</span>That all freedmen, free negroes and mulattoes may sue and be sued,
-implead and be impleaded in all the courts of law and equity of this
-State, and may acquire personal property and chooses in action, by descent
-or purchase, and may dispose of the same, in the same manner, and
-to the same extent that white persons may; Provided, that the provisions
-of this section [1] shall not be so construed as to allow any freedman,
-free negro or mulatto, to rent or lease any lands or tenements, except
-in incorporated towns or cities in which places the corporate authorities
-shall control the same.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 5.... That every freedman, free negro and mulatto, shall,
-on the second Monday of January, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-six,
-and annually thereafter, have a lawful home or employment, and
-shall have written evidence thereof, as follows, to wit: if living in any incorporated
-city, town or village, a license from the mayor thereof, and if
-living outside of any incorporated city, town or village, from the member
-of the board of police of his beat, authorizing him or her to do
-irregular and job work, or a written contract, as provided in section six
-of this act, which licenses may be revoked for cause, at any time, by the
-authority granting the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 6.... That all contracts for labor made with freedmen, free
-negroes and mulattoes, for a longer period than one month shall be in
-writing and in duplicate, attested and read to said freedman, free negro
-or mulatto, by a beat, city or county officer, or two disinterested white
-persons of the county in which the labor is to be performed, of which
-each party shall have one; and said contracts shall be taken and held as
-entire contracts, and if the laborer shall quit the service of the employer,
-before the expiration of his term of service, without good cause he shall
-forfeit his wages for that year, up to the time of quitting.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 7.... That every civil officer shall, and every person may
-arrest and carry back to his or her legal employer any freedman, free
-negro or mulatto, who shall have quit the service of his or her employer
-before the expiration of his or her term of service without good
-cause, and said officer and person shall be entitled to receive for arresting
-and carrying back every deserting employee aforesaid, the sum of five
-dollars, and ten cents per mile from the place of arrest to the place of delivery,
-and the same shall be paid by the employer, and held as a set-off
-for so much against the wages of said deserting employee: Provided,
-that said arrested party after being so returned may appeal to a justice
-of the peace or member of the board of the police of the county, who on
-notice to the alleged employer, shall try summarily whether said appellant
-is legally employed by the alleged employer and has good cause
-to quit said employer; either party shall have the right of appeal to the
-county court, pending which the alleged deserter shall be remanded to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_478'>478</span>alleged employer, or otherwise disposed of as shall be right and just, and
-the decision of the county court shall be final.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 8.... That upon affidavit made by the employer of any freedman,
-free negro or mulatto, or other credible person, before any justice
-of the peace or member of the board of police, that any freedman, free
-negro or mulatto, legally employed by said employer, has illegally deserted
-said employment, such justice of the peace or member of the
-board of police, shall issue his warrant or warrants, returnable before
-himself, or other such officer, directed to any sheriff, constable or special
-deputy, commanding him to arrest said deserter and return him or her to
-said employer, and the like proceedings shall be had as provided in the preceding
-section; and it shall be lawful for any officer to whom such warrant
-shall be directed to execute said warrant in any county of this State,
-and that said warrant may be transmitted without indorsement to any like
-officer of another county, to be executed and returned as aforesaid, and
-the said employer shall pay the cost of said warrants and arrest and return,
-which shall be set off for so much against the wages of said deserter.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 9.... That if any person shall persuade or attempt to persuade,
-entice or cause any freedman, free negro or mulatto, to desert
-from the legal employment of any person, before the expiration of his or
-her term of service, or shall knowingly employ any such deserting freedman,
-free negro or mulatto, or shall knowingly give or sell to any such
-deserting freedman, free negro or mulatto, any food, raiment or other
-thing, he or she shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction
-shall be fined not less than twenty-five dollars and not more than two
-hundred dollars and the costs, and if said fine and costs shall not be immediately
-paid, the court shall sentence said convict to not exceeding two
-months’ imprisonment in the county jail, and he or she shall moreover
-be liable to the party injured in damages: Provided, if any person shall,
-or shall attempt to persuade, entice, or cause any freedman, free negro
-or mulatto, to desert from any legal employment of any person with the
-view to employ said freedman, free negro or mulatto, without the limits
-of this State, such person, on conviction, shall be fined not less than fifty
-dollars and not more than five hundred dollars and costs, and if said
-fine and costs shall not be immediately paid, the court shall sentence said
-convict to not exceeding six months’ imprisonment in the county jail.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This arbitrary and cruel act, wholly inconsistent with a
-state of personal freedom, by forbidding the lease to freedmen,
-free negroes and mulattoes of either lands or tenements
-outside of cities, not only made of the emancipated slaves a
-landless and homeless class, but deprived them of all hope of
-rising out of that condition. On the second Monday of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_479'>479</span>January, 1866, less than two months after the passage of this
-act, and annually thereafter, they were required to have a
-lawful home or employment, and to possess written evidence
-thereof. This requirement extended to the doing of even
-irregular and job work, and a written contract for all labor
-for a longer period than one month. If the laborer, without
-good cause, left the service of his employer before the expiration
-of his term, he forfeited all wages for that year up to
-the time of quitting. As the freedmen were wholly without
-representation in the State judiciary, the master class could
-in every instance determine the sufficiency of the cause. The
-intermarriage of the races was made a felony, and the white
-or the black person convicted of that crime was to be confined
-in the State penitentiary for life.<a id='r483' /><a href='#f483' class='c010'><sup>[483]</sup></a> Southern whites had
-no objection to the personal attendance, even in first-class
-railway coaches, of colored servants, but as other than a servant,
-the freedman was considered exceedingly obnoxious,
-and this sentiment was enacted immediately before either of
-the statutes mentioned, into a law which excluded negroes
-from riding in cars of the first class.<a id='r484' /><a href='#f484' class='c010'><sup>[484]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There was some apprehension lest this and similar legislation
-would lead to bloody outbreaks. The colored race generally
-was growing distrustful and discontented. The fear
-of violence was probably not unconnected with the passage
-of a law approved November 29, which provided:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 1.... That no freedman, free negro or mulatto, not in the
-military service of the United States Government, and not licensed so
-to do by the board of police of his or her county, shall keep or carry
-fire-arms of any kind, or any ammunition, dirk, or bowie-knife, and on
-conviction thereof, in the county court, shall be punished by fine, not exceeding
-ten dollars, and pay the costs of such proceedings, and all such
-arms or ammunition shall be forfeited to the informer, and it shall be
-the duty of every civil and military officer to arrest any freedman, free
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_480'>480</span>negro or mulatto, found with any such arms or ammunition, and cause
-him or her to be committed for trial in default of bail.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 2.... That any freedman, free negro or mulatto, committing
-riots, routs, affrays, trespasses, malicious mischief and cruel treatment to
-animals, seditious speeches, insulting gestures, language or acts, or assaults
-on any person, disturbance of peace, exercising the function of a
-minister of the Gospel without a license from some regularly organized
-church, vending spirituous or intoxicating liquors, or committing any
-other misdemeanor, the punishment of which is not specifically provided
-for by law, shall, upon conviction thereof, in the county court, be fined
-not less than ten dollars and not more than one hundred dollars, and
-may be imprisoned, at the discretion of the court, not exceeding thirty
-days.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 3.... That if any white person shall sell, lend or give to any
-freedman, free negro or mulatto, any fire-arms, dirk or bowie-knife, or
-ammunition, or any spirituous or intoxicating liquors, such person or
-persons so offending, upon conviction thereof, in the county court of his
-or her county, shall be fined, not exceeding fifty dollars, and may be imprisoned
-at the discretion of the court, not exceeding thirty days....</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 4.... That all the penal and criminal laws now in force in
-this State, defining offences, and prescribing the mode of punishment for
-crimes and misdemeanors committed by slaves, free negroes or mulattoes,
-be and the same are hereby re-enacted, and declared to be in full force
-and effect, against freedmen, free negroes and mulattoes, except so far as
-the mode and manner of trial and punishment have been changed or
-altered by law.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 5.... That if any freedman, free negro or mulatto, convicted
-of any of the misdemeanors provided against in this act, shall fail or
-refuse, for the space of five days after conviction, to pay the fine and
-costs imposed, such person shall be hired out by the sheriff or other
-officer, at public outcry, to any white person who will pay said fine and
-all costs, and take such convict for the shortest time.<a id='r485' /><a href='#f485' class='c010'><sup>[485]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though the General Government was solemnly pledged to
-guarantee the entire freedom of the negro, he was completely
-disarmed by these statutes, which were to be administered by
-men who had been but recently serving the Confederate cause.
-The purpose of the last measure is rendered clear by Section 4,
-which reënacted against freedmen all the penal and criminal
-laws that had applied to slaves. It revived, in short, the black
-code of <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante bellum</span></i> times.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_481'>481</span>Persons convicted of vagrancy, under an amendatory act,
-approved November 24, 1865, were subject to a fine not exceeding
-one hundred dollars and costs, besides a maximum
-imprisonment of ten days. The first section, which defined
-who were vagrants, was general in its application. The provisions
-especially affecting freedmen were the following:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 2.... That all freedmen, free negroes and mulattoes in this
-State, over the age of eighteen years, found on the second Monday in
-January, 1866, or thereafter, with no lawful employment or business, or
-found unlawfully assembling themselves together either in the day or
-night time, and all white persons so assembling with freedmen, free
-negroes or mulattoes, or usually associating with freedmen, free negroes
-or mulattoes on terms of equality, or living in adultery or fornication
-with a freedwoman, free negro or mulatto, shall be deemed vagrants,
-and on conviction thereof shall be fined in the sum of not exceeding, in
-the case of a freedman, free negro or mulatto, fifty dollars, and a white
-man two hundred dollars, and imprisoned at the discretion of the court,
-the free negro not exceeding ten days, and the white man not exceeding
-six months.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c013'>Sec. 5.... That all fines and forfeitures collected under the provisions
-of this act shall be paid into the county treasury for general
-county purposes, and in case any freedman, free negro or mulatto, shall
-fail for five days after the imposition of any fine or forfeiture upon him
-or her for violation of any of the provisions of this act, to pay the same,
-that it shall be, and is hereby made the duty of the sheriff of the proper
-county to hire out said freedman, free negro or mulatto, to any persons
-who will, for the shortest period of service, pay said fine or forfeiture and
-all costs: Provided, a preference shall be given to the employer, if there
-be one, in which case the employer shall be entitled to deduct and retain
-the amount so paid from the wages of such freedman, free negro or
-mulatto, then due or to become due; and in case such freedman, free
-negro or mulatto cannot be hired out, he or she may be dealt with as a
-pauper.<a id='r486' /><a href='#f486' class='c010'><sup>[486]</sup></a></p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c000'>No extended knowledge of human affairs is necessary to
-perceive that, by a rigorous enforcement of these laws, the
-great mass of freedmen could be easily restored to a state of
-practical servitude during the season when their labor was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_482'>482</span>desirable, and that for the remainder of the year their condition
-would be little better than that of the pauper. That the
-two races were regarded as equal before the law will scarcely
-be contended. An act approved December 1 made it a misdemeanor
-in certain cases for either a white or a black man
-to hunt hogs or other stock upon any lands other than his
-own; the white man was liable, on conviction, to a fine of
-from $100 to $500, or imprisonment from one to three
-months in the county jail, or both, at the discretion of the
-court. For the same offence no imprisonment was provided
-in the case of freedmen, and the fine was fixed between $10
-and $20. The latter, however, could be hired at public outcry
-to the lowest bidder who would pay the fine and cost.
-The employer, it was provided, was to have the preference
-in hiring.<a id='r487' /><a href='#f487' class='c010'><sup>[487]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Legislature first to meet under the reformed government
-not only expressed for the people of Mississippi no
-profound regret for resisting the Federal authority, but left
-no doubt in what estimation it held those who fought for
-Southern independence by releasing ex-Confederate soldiers
-from indictments for misdemeanors committed before the
-war.<a id='r488' /><a href='#f488' class='c010'><sup>[488]</sup></a> In perfect harmony with the spirit of this act of oblivion
-was one which changed the name of Jones County to that of
-Davis, and the name of Ellisville in the same county to Leesburg.<a id='r489' /><a href='#f489' class='c010'><sup>[489]</sup></a>
-This, it should be observed, was only three days
-before the meeting of Congress.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This legislation, by no means the most severe enacted
-under the new governments, marks in Southern sentiment a
-reaction no less unexpected than the complete and almost instantaneous
-submission following the surrender of Johnston.
-The sudden change in opinion has been ingeniously and even
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_483'>483</span>absurdly accounted for. In the latter class of explanations
-may be included the notion that the people of the South were
-exasperated by the interference of Congress, that body, as
-already mentioned, not having convened till after the passage
-of the obnoxious laws. On the other hand, it was not generally
-known, even in Mississippi, that the President in the
-work of reorganization had resolved to ignore the coördinate
-political branch of Government; he had, indeed, fairly signified
-to Governor Sharkey the position that he intended to
-assume, but his communication to that official, which was
-never designed for publication, was not immediately circulated
-through the State; the knowledge, therefore, that the
-Executive had concluded to oppose the policy of Congress
-could not have been a factor in disturbing the brief repose of
-the seceding States, and we must seek elsewhere for the cause.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In many of the insurgent commonwealths rebellion had involved
-almost every citizen in the guilt of treason, almost
-every estate in the liability to confiscation. The President and
-his advisers hoped by a generous distribution of pardons to
-win the esteem and confidence of this numerous and influential
-class, and to leave to “Radical” members of Congress
-the ungrateful office of punishment. This policy contributed
-to awaken the undaunted spirit of the South, and was, no
-doubt, an element in unsettling the conditions that prevailed
-after the surrender. Northern magnanimity, which was content
-to regard the defeat of secession as sufficient discipline
-for the rebellious States, and the attitude of the Democratic
-party were also important influences in misleading the South.
-More responsible for the reaction, however, than any of these
-was the unsatisfactory administration of the Freedmen’s
-Bureau. The testimony of General Grant can be cited to
-prove that, while accomplishing much that was desirable, this
-institution was retarding somewhat the progress of reconstruction.
-In a hurried tour of the late Confederate States
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_484'>484</span>he had observed that it was not conducted with good judgment
-or economy, and remarked in his report to the President
-that “the belief widely spread among the freedmen of the
-Southern States, that the lands of their former owners will,
-at least in part, be divided among them, has come from the
-agents of this bureau. This belief is seriously interfering
-with the willingness of the freedmen to make contracts for
-the coming year.... Many, perhaps the majority, of
-the agents of the Freedmen’s Bureau advise the freedmen
-that by their own industry they must expect to live. To this
-end they endeavor to secure employment for them, and to
-see that both contracting parties comply with their engagements.
-In some instances, I am sorry to say, the freedman’s
-mind does not seem to be disabused of the idea that a freedman
-has the right to live without care or provision for the
-future. The effect of the belief in division of lands is idleness
-and accumulation in camps, towns, and cities.”<a id='r490' /><a href='#f490' class='c010'><sup>[490]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though its management was open to criticism, the necessity
-for the existence of the bureau, to afford at least temporary
-protection to the newly enfranchised, was perceived and
-acknowledged by the General. It probably accorded well
-with the political aspirations of bureau agents to create in
-the minds of freedmen a belief that the Government would
-give to each of them “forty acres of land and a mule”; for
-this expectation would be a pledge of allegiance to the Federal
-representative, without the approval of whom no negro could
-seriously hope to secure so enviable a start in his career of
-freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That confusion would follow the violent overthrow of a
-long-established industrial system was to be expected, and it
-was not unnatural for the South to ascribe to the influence
-of bureau agents much of the mischief inseparable from immediate
-emancipation. While the complaints of the late insurgents
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_485'>485</span>were commonly considered with deference, it was
-scarcely to be expected that they would not sometimes be
-despised, and it would be easy to impute to their discontent
-every outrage reported to the officers of the bureau or the
-commanders of the posts. Though Federal representatives
-as a rule labored faithfully to restore and preserve order, it
-would be singular if some of them, assuming the arrogant
-manner of conquerors, did not occasionally depart from that
-system of conciliation which the generous nature of Mr. Lincoln
-had adopted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>These were among the causes of the Southern reaction.
-It is no justification of these severe and even cruel enactments
-to show, as Mr. Herbert has done, that similar laws disgraced
-the statute books of many Northern States. In the
-settlement then in progress the Southern people conceded
-nothing of importance that was not won in the war, and if
-they were as sincere in their desire for reunion as some writers
-contend, they should not have feared the paradox of improving
-by their example the ancient legislation of the free States,
-or have been alarmed at the innovation of reducing to practice
-the principles of the Declaration of Independence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is not to be denied that there was considerable ground
-for complaint because of the influence of many employees of
-the bureau in demoralizing the Southern system of labor, but
-the further punishment of a race that had been trodden down
-by oppressive generations does not commend itself as either
-a humane or an enlightened remedy; besides, the South was
-greatly indebted to the fidelity of the negro, who during the
-war possessed, without abusing, the opportunity as well as the
-capacity for mischief. On the other hand, there was some
-obligation to Northern men for their magnanimity, and under
-wiser counsels their wishes, and even their prejudices, would
-have been respected. In the victorious section public opinion,
-then in the formative stage, was watching anxiously the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_486'>486</span>progress and the proceedings of the new governments. Except
-a few extremists, the voters of the loyal States did not
-dream at that time, as was persistently asserted at the South,
-of forcing negro suffrage on the rebellious States. They
-did, however, desire to see embodied in the new State constitutions
-such provisions as would establish before the law
-the equality of all classes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While the policy of President Johnson did not altogether
-escape criticism at the South, so general and so prompt
-was the acquiescence in his plan, that when Congress convened
-nearly all the States recently in rebellion had remodeled
-their governments and elected members of Congress who
-were at the national capital waiting to be admitted to seats.
-Without separately considering the new establishments, they
-may be described concisely and with sufficient accuracy as
-governments differing but little from those extinguished by
-the fall of the Confederacy. The members of the former, it
-is true, had taken an oath of allegiance, and the influence of
-that act upon their conduct will presently be noticed. Though
-it certainly was not the original intention, and appears never
-to have become the fixed purpose of Mr. Johnson to entrust
-to enemies of the Government the work of restoring the insurgent
-States, the result of his endeavors was that reconstruction
-was left almost exclusively in the hands of those
-who had attempted to destroy the Union. It was precisely
-such a contingency that Mr. Lincoln had in mind when he
-declared in his message of December 8, 1863, that, “An
-attempt to guarantee and protect a revived State government,
-constructed in whole or in preponderating part from the very
-element against whose hostility and violence it is to be protected,
-is simply absurd.”<a id='r491' /><a href='#f491' class='c010'><sup>[491]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This deliberate statement, as well as the subsequent administrative
-acts of Mr. Lincoln, sufficiently disposes of the notion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_487'>487</span>that he favored a rather loose system of reconstruction.
-Without attempting to distinguish between theories really
-identical, there was still a considerable difference in the reorganization
-effected under the two Executives. The conditions
-which confronted the President and Congress in December,
-1865, could have arisen only from disregarding the
-principle laid down by Mr. Lincoln. From his solemn and
-reiterated declarations there can be little doubt that he would
-have rejected without hesitation any system of which the
-first fruits were little more than a nullification of his decree
-of emancipation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Notwithstanding his tireless threats of severity, we can
-easily perceive in the reorganization directed by Mr. Johnson,
-a noticeable falling back from the Executive plan of December,
-1863, as announced and enforced by his predecessor. Nor did
-this retrogression proceed from the greater humanity, but
-rather from the greater weakness of the new President. Even
-in the matter of fealty there was a difference; for while the
-conflict was still doubtful, the taking of an oath of allegiance to
-the General Government was a serious step for the Southern
-Unionist, because the record thereafter singled him out, if not
-for destruction, at least for annoyance, or for punishment by
-the friends of secession, and, perhaps, the oath then effected
-some such object as it was designed to accomplish. When
-war had ceased, however, there was no longer a choice of
-sides, and thenceforth universal swearing as an instrument
-of government became practically worthless. It was not regarded,
-at all events, as an efficient security for the future.
-Mr. Johnson probably continued to exact oaths of allegiance
-because they were formerly of value in distinguishing the
-friends from the enemies of the Government. Though professing
-the same general opinion on the subject of amnesty,
-the principles on which the two Presidents granted pardons
-were sufficiently distinct.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_488'>488</span>We have seen that President Johnson, who had once declared
-that “rebels” should take a back seat in the work of
-reconstruction, so far changed his opinion that he subsequently
-said the people must be trusted in the restoration of
-their governments; he likewise modified his early impressions
-as to the permanence of the establishments instituted under
-his predecessor, for it was his original opinion that those
-governments were merely provisional in their nature, and
-would require the confirmation or the approval of Congress.
-Ultimately, however, he came to regard himself as the judge
-of their sufficiency. The evidence of this is conclusive. In a
-telegram of July 14, 1865, to Governor Sharkey, Secretary
-Seward said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The government of the State [Mississippi] will be provisional
-only until the civil authorities shall be restored, with
-the approval of Congress. Meanwhile military authority
-cannot be withdrawn.”<a id='r492' /><a href='#f492' class='c010'><sup>[492]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If it be contended that Mr. Seward made this important
-declaration upon his personal responsibility the argument
-fails, because in a dispatch to Governor Marvin, of Florida,
-dated September 12, 1865, nearly two months later, the Secretary
-of State repeated the substance of the message in language
-even more explicit. On that occasion he said: “It
-must, however, be distinctly understood that the restoration
-to which your proclamation refers will be subject to the decision
-of Congress.”<a id='r493' /><a href='#f493' class='c010'><sup>[493]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The determination of President Johnson to retain the members
-of Mr. Lincoln’s Cabinet would indicate his original intention
-of applying to the subjugated States the system
-adopted by his predecessor. The influence which led to the
-modification of the method of enforcing without abandoning
-the principles underlying that plan it is not easy to discover.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_489'>489</span>His change of attitude toward the South has been variously
-explained. By Mr. Blaine it has been ascribed to the flattery
-of Southern leaders, as well as to the personal influence of
-Secretary Seward, whose wide culture, and consequent humanity,
-would favor a policy of conciliation. Without intending
-to underestimate the insinuating address of the New
-York statesman it may be observed that his powers of persuasion
-appear to have exerted themselves with most success in
-the direction of the President’s inclination. The attention of
-Southern leaders, a class of men by whom the President had
-hitherto been ignored, deserves, however, to be noticed in any
-enumeration of even the probable cause of the change. Another
-theory has it that Mr. Johnson both feared and hated
-several of the leading Republicans, because of their connection
-with a movement to procure his resignation from the Vice-Presidency,
-a station which, they believed, he had disgraced by
-appearing in an intoxicated state to take the oath of office.
-His desire to punish those who had constituted themselves
-custodians of the national dignity, it is asserted, was a principal
-motive in his surrender to the South. A more reasonable
-explanation of the change which occurred in the President’s
-attitude toward his own section is that offered by Dr.
-Chadsey, who regards Mr. Johnson as an inconsistent advocate
-of State Sovereignty.<a id='r494' /><a href='#f494' class='c010'><sup>[494]</sup></a> In this principle he believed as
-firmly as Jefferson Davis himself, though unlike the Confederate
-chieftain he refused, by stopping short of secession, to
-accept its logical results. Nearly all his administrative acts
-are those which might have been expected from a Democrat
-of the strict construction school, and Andrew Johnson never
-professed allegiance to any other political party.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The governments of which the reorganization has been
-described in the preceding pages continued in operation until
-suspended by the Reconstruction Act of March 2, 1867.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_490'>490</span>Except Texas all these establishments, as previously observed,
-had sent members to the Thirty-ninth Congress. Their claims
-to seats, it is well known, were completely ignored, and a
-select body, consisting of nine members from the lower and
-six from the upper House, was appointed to investigate the
-condition of the late Confederate States, and to report whether
-any of them were entitled to representation in either branch
-of Congress. With the conclusions of the celebrated Joint
-Committee this essay is not concerned further than to observe
-that on the recommendation of the majority the Tennessee
-delegation was admitted on the 24th of July, 1866. Long
-before that event, however, the task of restoring the Union
-had been taken altogether out of Executive hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If we reflect how much swifter in a political organism is the
-progress of ruin than that of repair, and consider that four
-years had been abandoned to the destruction and disorders of
-civil war, we cannot but be surprised at the attempt of the
-President, single-handed, to adapt and execute in less than
-three months a series of measures designed to restore tranquillity
-and revive prosperity among the impoverished inhabitants
-of a wasted country. In this view his failure in the
-work of reconstruction can excite little astonishment. One
-reason for this precipitate action was a desire to reunite the
-sections before the meeting of Congress, and it was so far
-a praiseworthy if not a prudent course to adopt. But had
-he proceeded ever so leisurely there would still have existed
-undoubted obstacles to success. To say that he was lacking
-in the tact of his predecessor, that he was naturally of an
-obstinate and even of a combative disposition, and that he
-possessed defects, both of temper and judgment, would
-be merely to repeat a few trite observations.<a id='r495' /><a href='#f495' class='c010'><sup>[495]</sup></a> Conditions
-were rapidly changing, but with Mr. Johnson, conditions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_491'>491</span>passed for almost nothing, though in reality circumstances
-make legislative acts beneficial or otherwise. Like the measures
-of the Thirty-eighth Congress for restoring the Union,
-those of Mr. Johnson may be carefully examined without discovering
-any considerable traces of originality. Indeed,
-if we except President Lincoln, this entire period seems to
-have been somewhat lacking in constructive statesmanship,
-though no branch of the public service was without officials of
-integrity, judgment and ability.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the course of the preceding pages the inaugurals, the
-messages, the letters and other communications of Mr. Lincoln
-have been freely quoted to show his opinions on all of
-the principal and most of the subordinate phases of reconstruction.
-To complete the design of this inquiry, there
-remains to be considered but a single topic related to the
-main theme, namely, the limitations of the Presidential plan
-for restoring the Union. Many of these defects having been
-incidentally noticed, a general recapitulation does not appear
-to be required, and the subject, it is believed, may be appropriately
-concluded by an examination of those features of
-the Executive system which the narrative has not hitherto
-sufficiently emphasized.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This summary disclaims, however, any intention of attempting
-the absurdity of testing the statesmanship of Abraham
-Lincoln by contrasting a method of reconstruction proposed
-in 1863 with that deemed adequate by Congress to meet
-the changed conditions of 1867. We may, indeed, fairly and
-even profitably compare the sentiments of the two political
-departments in the summer of 1864, when, for the first time
-during the war, they were arrayed in opposition on a fundamental
-policy of civil administration. Because of its variance
-with received notions of representative government, the so-called
-“ten <em>per cent.</em> principle” will be first considered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The proportion of the political people that Mr. Lincoln
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_492'>492</span>offered to recognize as constituting a State encountered, probably,
-more opposition than any single feature of his plan.
-While its merits and its defects were equally evident, the latter,
-as might be expected, were given by its adversaries the
-place of prominence in all their criticisms. Exception was
-taken as well to the legality as to the expediency of the principle.
-The former has been fully discussed, and on that subject
-all that need be observed is that President Lincoln believed
-it constitutional to preserve the Union, and every measure
-conducive to that end he regarded as lawful.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the question of expediency, however, several considerations
-suggest themselves. Apart from its repugnance to the
-American idea of majority rule, its palpable weakness was
-that governments founded on the consent of a minimum proportion
-of the electors would require the support of Federal
-power. Here occurs the question, did the forces thus engaged
-so greatly impair the efficiency of the main armies as
-sensibly to retard the work of destroying the enemy? It
-cannot be denied that there were occasions when a few additional
-regiments could have been employed to advantage;
-but neither the reverses nor the disasters of the Union armies
-were caused by lack of numbers so much as by the need early
-in the war of commanders of military genius. On the other
-hand, the troops who sustained the new governments, besides
-weakening the Confederacy, were affording protection to organizations
-that otherwise could not have been recruited.
-There is record of not less than sixty-five regiments furnished
-by the States restored during the Presidency of Mr. Lincoln.<a id='r496' /><a href='#f496' class='c010'><sup>[496]</sup></a>
-But even more important than this gratifying result was
-the influence which the reinstatement of four seceding commonwealths
-exerted on the attitude of those European powers
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_493'>493</span>which had proved early in the conflict their hostility to the
-United States. The “Johnson governments,” so-called, were
-never required to furnish any such unquestioned evidence of
-reviving loyalty, and that fact should not be overlooked in
-any comparison of the results accomplished by the two
-Executives.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Notwithstanding the general existence of a strong opposition
-to minority rule, the revolutionary proceedings in western
-Virginia were sanctioned by every department of Government.
-Members from the loyal eastern counties were at
-first admitted to seats in both branches of Congress; their
-successors, however, were in turn refused this indulgence
-until there was presented the novel spectacle of a single Senator
-representing the diminished glory of the Old Dominion.
-Louisiana, too, which for a few days was heard in the lower
-House, was subsequently excluded altogether by the changing
-views of Congress. The revived bill of Wade and Davis
-provided in one of its many forms for recognizing that State
-as well as Arkansas, and even when the extremists obtained
-control of Congress the loyal government organized in Tennessee
-was approved by avowed opponents of the Executive
-plan. Mr. Lincoln, indeed, clearly perceived the inherent
-weakness of his system, and no one could have been more
-anxious than he to secure a wider constituency. These facts
-seem to indicate that between him and Congress there was
-not then so wide a gulf as, for partisan purposes, is sometimes
-represented. It is true that there was a difference of principle
-between the two departments; that there was a powerful
-party in Congress who believed that reconstruction was essentially
-a work of peace and, therefore, pertained exclusively to
-the national Legislature. The holders of this view were,
-doubtless, confirmed in their opinion by a conviction that the
-Executive was encroaching on a coördinate branch of government.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_494'>494</span>The Presidential system as well as the contemporary theory
-of Congress restricted the suffrage of whites, by whom it was
-almost universally engrossed at the foundation of the Republic.
-On the ground of justice and to encourage the cultivation
-of civic virtues among the negroes, Mr. Lincoln would admit
-those qualified to exercise this important privilege. His successor
-acknowledged in a private communication that for
-party purposes he favored some extension of the elective franchise
-to freedmen. Though Congress advanced rapidly toward
-negro suffrage, the first essay of that body in the work
-of reconstruction included no provision for conferring on the
-colored race a right to participate in government. By
-Wade and Davis it was not then deemed necessary
-even as a defensive power. Only a few bold innovators,
-considered almost fanatic on the question, were in favor of
-bestowing the right to vote on the multitudes maintained by
-the Freedmen’s Bureau; it was not then deemed within the
-commission of the general Government, the teachings of political
-science were still respected by the majority in Congress,
-and the fruits of victory, it was hoped, could be secured without
-a resort to radical measures.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The form of an oath to support the proclamations and laws
-respecting slavery appeared in the Presidential plan as a condition
-indispensable to reinstatement. On this subject the
-difference between the Executive and Congress was merely
-one of degree; for the Wade-Davis bill, doubtless in imitation
-of the Presidential system, imposed terms precedent, and the
-new constitutions were to repudiate the rebel debt, abolish
-slavery and prohibit the higher insurgent officials, civil as
-well as military, from holding the office of governor, from
-serving in the State legislatures and even from voting.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By its adversaries the plan of Mr. Lincoln was condemned
-for its failure to exact any security for the future beyond the
-oath of allegiance, the telegraphic supervision by the President
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_495'>495</span>and the power of Congress over the admission of members.
-This defect the legislative theory endeavored to supply,
-but even the guardianship proposed by Wade and Davis could
-give no assurance that the rebellious communities would not,
-after reinstatement, eliminate by constitutional amendment
-the conditions imposed on their readmission.<a id='r497' /><a href='#f497' class='c010'><sup>[497]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_496'>496</span>However crude we may now consider Mr. Lincoln’s system
-it should not be forgotten that with him the paramount
-consideration was the overthrow of the Confederacy. With
-that purpose all his measures harmonized, and it is scarcely
-critical to examine them from any other point of view. How
-far necessity, which had originally suggested, would subsequently
-have modified his plan it is now impossible to state.
-Without detracting a particle from his well-won fame it may
-be admitted that his method, which could not have foreseen
-the rapid succession of changes following his death, was but
-indifferently adapted to solve the problem with which Congress
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_497'>497</span>was compelled to deal in 1867; but the measure of permanent
-success which attended the deliberate legislation of that body
-by no means justifies the conclusion that some other system
-would have proved a total failure. With all its immaturity
-the plan of the President was not without its advantages. It
-aimed to restore with as little innovation as possible the Union
-of the Fathers; with some exceptions the natural leaders of
-Southern society were to participate in the work of reorganization,
-and the author of this simple plan approached his
-difficult task in a generous and enlightened spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the life and character of Abraham Lincoln an admiring
-generation has exhausted the language of panegyric; the
-terms of censure have been reserved almost exclusively for his
-method of restoring the Union; but neither the critic’s ken,
-nor the ambitious phrase of eulogy, nor all the thoughts that
-since his death have dropped from poets’ pens affords that clear
-insight into his nature which is unconsciously revealed in the
-simple and beautiful exhortation that concludes his last inaugural.
-The sentiments which immortalize that celebrated
-state paper could have proceeded only from the depths of a
-noble soul—a soul that would have imposed silence on the
-voice of vengeance and would never have consented to the
-revenge of section upon section. In this book an endeavor
-has been made fully to discuss his plan of reconstruction; the
-spirit in which he approached that difficult task is best stated
-in his own generous and patriotic words, with which may be
-fittingly closed this long though interesting inquiry: “With
-malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in
-the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to
-finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation’s wounds;
-to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his
-widow, and his orphan—to do all which may achieve and
-cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves, and with
-all nations.”<a id='r498' /><a href='#f498' class='c010'><sup>[498]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>THE END.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_499'>499</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>APPENDIX A<br /> <span class='large'>THIRTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c017'>SENATE</h3>
-
-<p class='c018'>First session, July 4, 1861, to August 6, 1861. Republicans (31) in
-Roman, Democrats (10) in <em>Italics</em>, Unionists (7) in <span class='fss'>SMALL CAPITALS</span>,
-vacancies 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Second session, Dec. 1, 1862, to Mar. 4, 1864.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>CALIFORNIA.—<em>Milton S. Latham</em> and <em>James A. McDougall</em> (<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">vice</span></i>
-E. D. Baker, who died).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>CONNECTICUT.—James Dixon and Lafayette S. Foster.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>DELAWARE.—<em>James A. Bayard</em> and <em>Willard Saulsbury</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>ILLINOIS.—Lyman Trumbull and Orville H. Browning.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>INDIANA.—Henry S. Lane and <em>Jesse D. Bright</em> (expelled Feb. 5, 1862,
-and was succeeded by <em>David Turpie</em>).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>IOWA.—James W. Grimes and James Harlan.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>KANSAS.—James H. Lane and Samuel C. Pomeroy.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>KENTUCKY.—<em>Lazarus W. Powell</em> and <span class='sc'>Garrett Davis</span> (<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">vice</span></i> <em>John
-C. Breckenridge</em>, expelled).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MAINE.—Lot M. Morrill and William Pitt Fessenden.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MASSACHUSETTS.—Charles Sumner and Henry Wilson.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MARYLAND.—<span class='sc'>Anthony Kennedy</span> and <em>James A. Pearce</em> (died Dec.
-20, 1862, and was succeeded by <span class='sc'>Thomas H. Hicks</span>).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MICHIGAN.—Zachariah Chandler and Jacob M. Howard.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MINNESOTA.—<em>Henry M. Rice</em> and Morton S. Wilkinson.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MISSOURI.—<span class='sc'>John B. Henderson</span> (<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">vice</span></i> Trusten Polk, expelled) and
-<span class='sc'>Robert Wilson</span> (<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">vice</span></i> Waldo Porter Johnson, expelled).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEW HAMPSHIRE.—John P. Hale and Daniel Clark.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEW YORK.—Preston King and Ira Harris.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEW JERSEY.—John C. Ten Eyck and <em>John R. Thomson</em> (died Sept.
-12, 1862, Richard S. Field was temporarily appointed to fill the
-vacancy, and James W. Wall was subsequently elected for the unexpired
-term).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>OHIO.—Benjamin F. Wade and John Sherman (<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">vice</span></i> Salmon P. Chase,
-who resigned Mar. 6, 1861).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>OREGON.—Edward D. Baker (died Oct. 21, 1861, and was succeeded
-by <span class='sc'>Benjamin F. Harding</span>) and <em>James W. Nesmith</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>PENNSYLVANIA.—Edgar Cowan and David Wilmot (<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">vice</span></i> Simon
-Cameron, who resigned in March, 1861).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>RHODE ISLAND.—Henry B. Anthony and James F. Simmons (resigned,
-<span class='sc'>Samuel G. Arnold</span> elected to fill the unexpired term).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_500'>500</span>VERMONT.—Solomon Foot and Jacob Collamer.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>VIRGINIA.—<span class='sc'>Waitman T. Willey</span> and <span class='sc'>John S. Carlile</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>WISCONSIN.—James R. Doolittle and Timothy O. Howe.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c017'>HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES</h3>
-
-<p class='c020'>CALIFORNIA.—Aaron A. Sargent, Timothy G. Phelps, Frederick F.
-Low.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>CONNECTICUT.—Dwight Loomis, <em>James E. English</em>, Alfred A.
-Burnham, <em>George C. Woodruff</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>DELAWARE.—<span class='sc'>George P. Fisher.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c019'>ILLINOIS.—Elihu B. Washburne, Isaac N. Arnold, Owen Lovejoy,
-William Kellogg, <em>William A. Richardson</em>, <em>James C. Robinson</em>,
-<em>Philip B. Fouke</em>, <em>John A. Logan</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>INDIANA.—<em>John Law</em>, <em>James A. Cravens</em>, William McKee Dunn,
-<em>William S. Holman</em>, George W. Julian, Albert G. Porter, <em>Daniel
-W. Voorhees</em>, Albert S. White, Schuyler Colfax, William Mitchell,
-John P. C. Shanks.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>IOWA.—James F. Wilson, William Vandever.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>KANSAS.—Martin F. Conway.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>KENTUCKY.—<span class='sc'>James S. Jackson</span> (died in 1862 and was succeeded by
-<span class='sc'>George H. Yeaman</span>), <span class='sc'>Henry Grider</span>, <span class='sc'>Aaron Harding</span>,
-<span class='sc'>Charles A. Wickliffe</span>, <span class='sc'>George W. Dunlap</span>, <span class='sc'>Robert Mallory</span>,
-<span class='sc'>John J. Crittenden</span>, <span class='sc'>William H. Wadsworth</span>, <span class='sc'>John
-W. Menzies</span>, <span class='sc'>Samuel L. Casey</span> (<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">vice</span></i> Mr. Burnett, expelled).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MAINE.—John N. Goodwin, Charles W. Walton (resigned, Thos. A.
-D. Fessenden elected to fill vacancy), Samuel C. Fessenden,
-Anson P. Morrill, John H. Rice, Frederick A. Pike.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MARYLAND.—<span class='sc'>John W. Crisfield</span>, <span class='sc'>Edwin H. Webster</span>, <span class='sc'>Cornelius
-L. L. Leary</span>, <em>Henry May</em>, <span class='sc'>Francis Thomas</span>, <span class='sc'>Charles B.
-Calvert</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MASSACHUSETTS.—Thomas D. Eliot, James Buffinton, Benjamin
-F. Thomas (sometimes classed as a Unionist), Alexander H. Rice,
-Samuel Hooper, John B. Alley, Daniel W. Gooch, Charles R. Train,
-Goldsmith F. Bailey (died May 8, 1862, and was succeeded by
-Amasa Walker), Charles Delano, Henry L. Dawes.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MICHIGAN.—Bradley F. Granger, Fernando C. Beaman, Francis W.
-Kellogg, Rowland E. Trowbridge.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MINNESOTA.—Cyrus Aldrich and William Windom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MISSOURI.—Francis P. Blair, jr. (resigned in 1862), <span class='sc'>James S. Rollins</span>,
-<span class='sc'>William A. Hall</span>, <em>Elijah H. Norton</em>, <span class='sc'>Thomas L. Price</span>, <em>John
-S. Phelps</em>, <em>John W. Noell</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEW HAMPSHIRE.—Gilman Marston, Edward H. Rollins, Thomas
-M. Edwards.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEW JERSEY.—John T. Nixon, John L. N. Stratton, <em>William G.
-Steele</em>, <em>George T. Cobb</em>, <em>Nehemiah Perry</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEW YORK.—<em>Edward H. Smith</em>, <em>Moses F. Odell</em>, <em>Benjamin Wood</em>,
-<em>James E. Kerrigan</em>, William Wall, Frederick A. Conkling, <em>Elijah
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_501'>501</span>Ward</em>, <em>Isaac C. Delaplaine</em>, <em>Edward Haight</em>, Charles H. Van Wyck,
-<em>John B. Steele</em>, Stephen Baker, Abraham B. Olin, <em>Erastus Corning</em>,
-James B. McKean, William A. Wheeler, Socrates N. Sherman,
-<em>Chauncey Vibbard</em>, Richard Franchot, Roscoe Conkling, R. Holland
-Duell, William E. Lansing, Ambrose W. Clark, Charles B.
-Sedgwick, Theodore M. Pomeroy, Jacob P. Chamberlain, Alexander
-S. Diven, Robert B. Van Valkenburg, Alfred Ely, Augustus Frank,
-Burt Van Horn, Elbridge G. Spaulding, Reuben E. Fenton.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>OHIO.—<em>George H. Pendleton</em>, John A. Gurley, <em>Clement L. Vallandigham</em>,
-<em>William Allen</em>, James M. Ashley, <em>Chilton A. White</em>, <span class='sc'>Richard
-A. Harrison</span>, Samuel Shellabarger, <em>Warren P. Noble</em>, Carey A.
-Trimble, Valentine B. Horton, <em>Samuel S. Cox</em>, Samuel T. Worcester,
-Harrison G. Blake, <em>Robert H. Nugen</em>, William P. Cutler, <em>James
-R. Morris</em>, Sidney Edgerton, Albert G. Riddle, John Hutchins,
-John A. Bingham.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>OREGON.—George K. Shiel.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>PENNSYLVANIA.—<em>William E. Lehman</em>, <em>Charles J. Biddle</em>, John P.
-Verree, William D. Kelley, William Morris Davis, John Hickman,
-<em>Thomas B. Cooper</em> (died April 4, 1862, and was succeeded by John
-D. Stiles), <em>Sydenham E. Ancona</em>, Thaddeus Stevens, John W.
-Killinger, James H. Campbell, <span class='sc'>Hendrick B. Wright</span>, <em>Philip
-Johnson</em>, Galusha A. Grow, James T. Hale, <em>Joseph Baily</em>, Edward
-McPherson, Samuel S. Blair, John Covode, <em>Jesse Lazear</em>, James K.
-Moorhead, Robert McKnight, John W. Wallace, John Patton,
-Elijah Babbitt.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>RHODE ISLAND.—<span class='sc'>George H. Browne</span>, <span class='sc'>William P. Sheffield</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>TENNESSEE.—<span class='sc'>Horace Maynard.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c019'>VERMONT.—Ezekiel P. Walton, Justin S. Morrill, Portus Baxter.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>VIRGINIA.—<span class='sc'>Charles H. Upton</span>, <span class='sc'>Edmund Pendleton</span>, <span class='sc'>William
-G. Brown</span>, <span class='sc'>Jacob B. Blair</span>, <span class='sc'>Killian V. Whaley</span>, <span class='sc'>Joseph E.
-Segar</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>WISCONSIN.—John F. Potter, Luther Hanchett (died Nov. 24, 1862,
-and was succeeded by Walter McIndoe), A. Scott Sloan.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c017'>DELEGATES FROM TERRITORIES</h3>
-
-<p class='c020'>COLORADO.—Hiram P. Bennett.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>DAKOTA.—John B. S. Todd.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEBRASKA.—Samuel G. Daily.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEVADA.—<em>John C. Cradlebaugh.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEW MEXICO.—John S. Watts.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>UTAH.—<em>John M. Bernhisel.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c019'>WASHINGTON.—James H. Wallace.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_502'>502</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>APPENDIX B<br /> THIRTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c017'>SENATE</h3>
-
-<p class='c018'>First regular session, Dec. 7, 1863, to July 4, 1864.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Second session from Dec. 5, 1864, to March 3, 1865.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>CALIFORNIA.—John Conness and <em>James A. McDougall</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>CONNECTICUT.—James Dixon and Lafayette S. Foster.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>DELAWARE.—<em>Willard Saulsbury</em> and <em>George Read Riddle</em> (<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">vice</span></i>
-Senator <em>Bayard</em>, who resigned).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>ILLINOIS.—<em>William A. Richardson</em> and Lyman Trumbull.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>INDIANA.—<em>Thomas A. Hendricks</em> and Henry S. Lane.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>IOWA.—James Harlan and James W. Grimes.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>KANSAS.—Samuel C. Pomeroy and James H. Lane.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>KENTUCKY.—<span class='sc'>Garrett Davis</span> (Senator <span class='sc'>Davis</span> is sometimes mentioned
-as a Democrat) and <em>Lazarus W. Powell</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MAINE.—Lot M. Morrill and William Pitt Fessenden (resigned in
-1864, and was succeeded by Nathan A. Farwell).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MASSACHUSETTS.—Charles Sumner and Henry Wilson.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MARYLAND.—<span class='sc'>Reverdy Johnson</span> and <span class='sc'>Thomas H. Hicks</span> (died
-Feb. 13, 1865).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MICHIGAN.—Zachariah Chandler and Jacob M. Howard.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MINNESOTA.—Alexander Ramsey and Morton S. Wilkinson.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MISSOURI.—John B. Henderson (sometimes mentioned as a Unionist)
-and B. Gratz Brown (<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">vice</span></i> Waldo Porter Johnson, expelled, Robert
-Wilson having been appointed <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">pro tem.</span></i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEW HAMPSHIRE.—Daniel Clark and John P. Hale.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEW JERSEY.—<em>William Wright</em> and John C. Ten Eyck.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEW YORK.—Edwin D. Morgan and Ira Harris.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>OHIO.—Benjamin F. Wade and John Sherman.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>OREGON.—Benjamin F. Harding and <em>James W. Nesmith</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>PENNSYLVANIA.—<em>Charles R. Buckalew</em> and Edgar Cowan.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>RHODE ISLAND.—William Sprague and Henry B. Anthony.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>VERMONT.—Solomon Foot and Jacob Collamer.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>VIRGINIA.—<span class='sc'>Lemuel J. Bowden</span> and <span class='sc'>John S. Carlile</span> (sometimes
-mentioned as a Democrat).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>WEST VIRGINIA.—Waitman T. Willey and Peter G. Van Winkle.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>WISCONSIN.—James R. Doolittle and Timothy O. Howe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEVADA.—James W. Nye and William M. Stewart.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_503'>503</span>
- <h3 class='c017'>HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c020'>CALIFORNIA.—Thomas B. Shannon, William Higby, Cornelius Cole.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>CONNECTICUT.—Henry C. Deming, <em>James E. English</em>, Augustus
-Brandegee, John H. Hubbard.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>DELAWARE.—Nathaniel B. Smithers.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>ILLINOIS.—Isaac N. Arnold, John F. Farnsworth, Elihu B. Washburne,
-<em>Charles M. Harris</em>, Owen Lovejoy (died Mar. 25, 1864, and
-was succeeded by Ebon C. Ingersoll), Jesse O. Norton, <em>John R.
-Eden</em>, <em>John T. Stuart</em>, <em>Lewis W. Ross</em>, <em>Anthony L. Knapp</em>, <em>James
-C. Robinson</em>, <em>William R. Morrison</em>, <em>William J. Allen</em>, <em>James C.
-Allen</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>INDIANA.—<em>John Law</em>, <em>James A. Cravens</em>, <em>Henry W. Harrington</em>,
-<em>William S. Holman</em>, George W. Julian, Ebenezer Dumont, <em>Daniel
-W. Voorhees</em>, Godlove S. Orth, Schuyler Colfax, <em>Joseph K. Edgerton</em>,
-<em>James F. McDowell</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>IOWA.—James F. Wilson, Hiram Price, William B. Allison, J. B.
-Grinnell, John A. Kasson, A. W. Hubbard.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>KANSAS.—A. Carter Wilder.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>KENTUCKY.—Lucien Anderson, <span class='sc'>George H. Yeaman</span>, <span class='sc'>Henry
-Grider</span>, <span class='sc'>Aaron Harding</span>, <span class='sc'>Robert Mallory</span>, Green Clay Smith,
-Brutus J. Clay, William H. Randall, <span class='sc'>William H. Wadsworth</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MAINE.—<em>Lorenzo D. M. Sweat</em>, Sidney Perham, James G. Blaine,
-John H. Rice, Frederick A. Pike.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MARYLAND.—John A. J. Cresswell, Edwin H. Webster, Henry Winter
-Davis, Francis Thomas, <em>Benjamin G. Harris</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MASSACHUSETTS.—Thomas D. Eliot, Oakes Ames, Alexander H.
-Rice, Samuel Hooper, John B. Alley, Daniel W. Gooch, George S.
-Boutwell, John D. Baldwin, William B. Washburn, Henry L. Dawes.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MICHIGAN.—Fernando C. Beaman, Charles Upson, John W. Longyear,
-Francis W. Kellogg, <em>Augustus C. Baldwin</em>, John F. Driggs.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MINNESOTA.—William Windom, Ignatius Donnelly.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MISSOURI.—<span class='sc'>Francis P. Blair</span>, jr. (seat successfully contested by
-Samuel Knox of St. Louis), Henry T. Blow, <em>John G. Scott</em>, Joseph
-W. McClurg, Sempronius H. Boyd, <em>Austin A. King</em>, Benjamin
-F. Loan, <em>William A. Hall</em>, <em>James S. Rollins</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEW HAMPSHIRE.—<em>Daniel Marcy</em>, Edward H. Rollins, James W.
-Patterson.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEW JERSEY.—John F. Starr, <em>George Middleton</em>, <em>William G. Steele</em>,
-<em>Andrew J. Rogers</em>, <em>Nehemiah Perry</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEW YORK.—<em>Henry G. Stebbins</em> (resigned in 1864 and was succeeded
-by <em>Dwight Townsend</em>), <em>Martin Kalbfleisch</em>, <em>Moses F. Odell</em>, <em>Benjamin
-Wood</em>, <em>Fernando Wood</em>, <em>Elijah Ward</em>, <em>John W. Chanler</em>, <em>James
-Brooks</em>, <em>Anson Herrick</em>, <em>William Radford</em>, <em>Charles H. Winfield</em>,
-<em>Homer A. Nelson</em>, <em>John B. Steele</em>, <em>John V. L. Pruyn</em>, <em>John A.
-Griswold</em>, Orlando Kellogg, Calvin T. Hulburd, James M. Marvin,
-Samuel F. Miller, Ambrose W. Clark, <em>Francis Kernan</em>, DeWitt C.
-Littlejohn, Thomas T. Davis, Theodore M. Pomeroy, Daniel Morris,
-Giles W. Hotchkiss, Robert Van Valkenburg, Freeman Clark,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_504'>504</span>Augustus Frank, <em>John B. Ganson</em>, Reuben E. Fenton (resigned
-Dec. 10, 1864).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>OHIO.—<em>George H. Pendleton</em>, <em>Alexander Long</em>, Robert C. Schenck,
-<em>J. F. McKinney</em>, <em>Frank C. Le Blond</em>, <em>Chilton A. White</em>, <em>Samuel S.
-Cox</em>, <em>William Johnson</em>, <em>Warren P. Noble</em>, James M. Ashley, <em>Wells
-A. Hutchins</em>, <em>William E. Fink</em>, <em>John O’Neill</em>, <em>George Bliss</em>, <em>James
-R. Morris</em>, <em>Joseph W. White</em>, Ephraim R. Eckley, Rufus P.
-Spaulding, James A. Garfield.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>OREGON.—John R. McBride.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>PENNSYLVANIA.—<em>Samuel J. Randall</em>, Charles O’Neill, Leonard
-Myers, William D. Kelley, M. Russell Thayer, <em>John D. Stiles</em>,
-John M. Broomall, <em>Sydenham E. Ancona</em>, Thaddeus Stevens,
-<em>Myer Strouse</em>, <em>Philip Johnson</em>, <em>Charles Dennison</em>, Henry W. Tracy,
-<em>William H. Miller</em>, <em>Joseph Bailey</em>, <em>Alexander H. Coffroth</em>, <em>Archibald
-McAllister</em>, James T. Hale, Glenni W. Scofield, Amos Myers,
-<em>John L. Dawson</em>, James K. Moorhead, Thomas Williams, <em>Jesse
-Lazear</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>RHODE ISLAND.—Thomas A. Jenckes, Nathan F. Dixon.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>VERMONT.—Frederick E. Woodbridge, Justin S. Morrill, Portus
-Baxter.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>VIRGINIA.—Had Senators but no Representatives. <span class='sc'>Joseph Segar</span>,
-<span class='sc'>Lucius H. Chandler</span> and <span class='sc'>Benjamin M. Kitchen</span>, claimants for
-seats, were not admitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>WEST VIRGINIA.—Jacob B. Blair, William G. Brown, Killian V.
-Whaley.<a id='r499' /><a href='#f499' class='c010'><sup>[499]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c019'>WISCONSIN.—<em>James S. Brown</em>, Ithamar C. Sloan, Amasa Cobb,
-<em>Charles A. Eldridge</em>, <em>Ezra Wheeler</em>, Walter D. McIndoe.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c017'>DELEGATES FROM TERRITORIES</h3>
-
-<p class='c020'>ARIZONA.—Charles D. Poston.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>COLORADO.—Hiram P. Bennett.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>DAKOTA.—William Jayne (seat successfully contested by John B. S.
-Todd).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>IDAHO.—William H. Wallace.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>MONTANA.—Samuel McLean.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEBRASKA.—Samuel G. Daily.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEVADA (admitted as a State).—Gordon N. Mott (Henry G. Worthington
-was elected Representative when Nevada became a State).</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>NEW MEXICO.—Francisco Perea.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>UTAH.—<em>John F. Kenney.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c019'>WASHINGTON.—<em>George E. Cole.</em></p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_507'>507</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<ul class='index c002'>
- <li class='c021 center'><em>A</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Abolition societies, Southern, ended by new industrial era, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Adams, Charles Francis, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Alabama, in Federal control, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Arkansas Legislature addressed by commissioner from, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>;</li>
- <li>insurrection in, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;</li>
- <li>injury sustained by, <a href='#Page_437'>437</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Alabama, The, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Albemarle, The, destruction of, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Alexandria, capital of loyal Virginia, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>convention meets at, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>;</li>
- <li>blockade of, rescinded, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>;</li>
- <li>Legislature assembles at, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>;</li>
- <li>ceases to be capital, <a href='#Page_446'>446</a>;</li>
- <li>recognition of government of, marks no distinct Executive policy, <a href='#Page_448'>448</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Alleghany Mountains, Virginia divided by, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Allegiance, oath of, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Governor Johnson’s modification of, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</li>
- <li>registration of, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>;</li>
- <li>required of Louisiana voters, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;</li>
- <li>value of, <a href='#Page_487'>487</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Allen, Henry Watkins, end of administration of, <a href='#Page_418'>418</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>mentioned for governor of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_422'>422</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Amendment, Thirteenth, Hampton Roads conference refers to, <a href='#Page_399'>399</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>adoption of, by Georgia Legislature, <a href='#Page_466'>466</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Amnesty and Reconstruction, Lincoln’s proclamation of, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>authority for, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>;</li>
- <li>classes excepted from benefits of, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>;</li>
- <li>explanation of, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>;</li>
- <li>applied in Louisiana, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>;</li>
- <li>Howard’s reference to, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>;</li>
- <li>Johnson’s proclamation of, <a href='#Page_450'>450</a>;</li>
- <li>Seward’s approval of, <a href='#Page_451'>451</a>;</li>
- <li>all insurgent States affected by, <a href='#Page_452'>452</a>.</li>
- <li>See Reconstruction</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Anthony, Lieutenant-Colonel, arrest of, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Antietam, Md., Lee defeated at, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Arkansas, effect of Union victories in, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>enrolling agent sent to, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</li>
- <li>loyal part of, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>;</li>
- <li>Alabama commissioner addresses Legislature of, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>;</li>
- <li>position of, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>;</li>
- <li>interests of, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>;</li>
- <li>opposition to separate State action in, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>;</li>
- <li>convention bill passed by, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>;</li>
- <li>conditional secession defeated in, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>influence of President’s inaugural in, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>secession of, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>secession favored by Governor of, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>military preparations in, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>confiscation ordinance of, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>Confederate Congress admit delegates from, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>;</li>
- <li>convention conflicts with government of, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>;</li>
- <li>military division of, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>;</li>
- <li>dissatisfaction among soldiers of, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</li>
- <li>troops of, in Confederate army, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</li>
- <li>indifference of Germans and Irish, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</li>
- <li>bonds of, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;</li>
- <li>Union sentiment in, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;</li>
- <li>menaced by Federal troops, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;</li>
- <li>flight of Governor, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>;</li>
- <li>troops sent to Corinth from, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>;</li>
- <li>John S. Phelps, military governor of, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>;</li>
- <li>regiments furnished Union army by, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>;</li>
- <li>return of leading secessionists, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>;</li>
- <li>Federal reverses in, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction of, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>;</li>
- <li>amended constitution of, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</li>
- <li>Confederate debt repudiated by, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</li>
- <li>division among Union men of, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter on reconstruction in, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;</li>
- <li>Gen. Steele’s address to people of, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>;</li>
- <li>election in, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>;</li>
- <li>adoption of amended constitution for, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_508'>508</span>Congressman elected in, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;</li>
- <li>Congress excludes Representatives from, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;</li>
- <li>no Presidential election in, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;</li>
- <li>legality of government of, maintained by Lincoln, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;</li>
- <li>loyal government in, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>;</li>
- <li>insurrection in, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;</li>
- <li>Reverdy Johnson favors recognition of, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a>;</li>
- <li>Thirteenth Amendment ratified by, <a href='#Page_409'>409</a>;</li>
- <li>slavery abolished by constitution of, <a href='#Page_410'>410</a>;</li>
- <li>disfranchising act of, <a href='#Page_410'>410</a>;</li>
- <li>loyal government acquiesced in, <a href='#Page_410'>410</a>;</li>
- <li>pacification of, <a href='#Page_411'>411</a>;</li>
- <li>destitution in parts of, <a href='#Page_412'>412</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Arnell, Daniel W., election of, <a href='#Page_415'>415</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Arnold, Isaac N., resolution introduced by, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Army of the United States, Provost Court of, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>discontinuance of enlistments for, <a href='#Page_408'>408</a>;</li>
- <li>mustering out of volunteers in the, <a href='#Page_409'>409</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Ascension, parish of, vote in, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Ashley, James M., reconstruction bill reported by, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>proposal to confer suffrage on negro soldiers and sailors, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>;</li>
- <li>no provision for education of negroes in bill of, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>;</li>
- <li>effects of reconstruction bill of, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>;</li>
- <li>substitute introduced by, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on reconstruction by, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>;</li>
- <li>motives for compromise offered by, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction bill of, tabled, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>;</li>
- <li>revived bill of, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>;</li>
- <li>explanation of inconsistency of, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction bill of, tabled, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on reconstruction by, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Atlantic Monthly, The, Sumner’s article in, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>B</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Baker, Joshua, member-elect from Louisiana, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Baldwin, Augustus C., reconstruction bill opposed by, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Baltimore convention, Lincoln renominated by, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Lincoln did not openly influence, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</li>
- <li>adjournment of, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Bancroft, George, relief meeting presided over by, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>address of, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>letter of, to Lincoln, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Banks, N. P., expedition of, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>at Port Hudson, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>;</li>
- <li>plans for invasion of Texas, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;</li>
- <li>petition of New Orleans convention to, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>;</li>
- <li>intention of ordering an election, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>;</li>
- <li>Free State General Committee’s attack of, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>;</li>
- <li>decides against Free State Committee, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>;</li>
- <li>Gen. Shepley’s disagreement with, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction letter of, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln appreciates services of, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>;</li>
- <li>urged by President to reconstruct Louisiana, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>;</li>
- <li>date for election fixed by, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>;</li>
- <li>Shepley’s registration approved by, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>;</li>
- <li>proclamation by, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</li>
- <li>order of, relative to election, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to Lincoln, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</li>
- <li>date of delegate election fixed by, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>;</li>
- <li>before Congressional committee, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>;</li>
- <li>Boutwell’s defence of, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>;</li>
- <li>Powell’s criticism of, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a>;</li>
- <li>Governor Wells not in harmony with, <a href='#Page_418'>418</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Bates, Edward, Attorney-General, letter to A. F. Ritchie, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;</li>
- <li>on Norfolk affairs, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to Marshal McDowell, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Batesville, Gen. Curtis’s occupation of, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Baton Rouge, secession convention in, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Baxter, Elisha, election of, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bayard, James F., <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>admission of West Virginia Senators opposed by, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Bell, Joseph M., <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bell and Everett, vote for in Louisiana, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Belmont, August, Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Benjamin, Judah P., resignation of, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_424'>424</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bent, Charles, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Berkeley County, provision for annexing to West Virginia, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>annexation of, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Bingham, John A., debate on West Virginia closed by, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_509'>509</span>Black, Jeremiah S., diplomatic mission of, <a href='#Page_390'>390</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Blaine, James G., <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>existence of schism in Republican party ignored by, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>;</li>
- <li>quotation from, <a href='#Page_441'>441</a>;</li>
- <li>Johnson’s change of policy explained by, <a href='#Page_489'>489</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Blair, Francis P., Sr., Lincoln interviewed by, <a href='#Page_390'>390</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>camp of Gen. Grant visited by, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a>;</li>
- <li>Jefferson Davis interviewed by, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a>;</li>
- <li>plan of reunion proposed by, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Davis’s letter to, <a href='#Page_393'>393</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_394'>394</a>;</li>
- <li>mission a failure, <a href='#Page_394'>394</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Blair, Montgomery, on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>time of emancipation deemed inopportune by, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;</li>
- <li>reply to Sumner by, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Bliss, C. C., <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Blockade of Louisiana ports, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Blow, Henry T., remarks on reconstruction by, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bonzano, M. F., election of, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>seat in Congress claimed by, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>;</li>
- <li>report by Committee of Elections on, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Bordeaux, visit of Confederate naval agent to, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Border States, Lincoln supported by delegates from, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Cotton States expected aid from, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln interviewed by Congressmen from, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>;</li>
- <li>interests of South bound up with, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>;</li>
- <li>majority reply of Congressmen from, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>;</li>
- <li>emancipation proclamation did not affect status of slaves in, <a href='#Page_383'>383</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Boreman, Arthur I., <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bouligny, John E., <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Boutwell, George S., reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>President Johnson visited by, <a href='#Page_458'>458</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Bowden, Lemuel J., <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Boyers, J. E., <a href='#Page_128'>128</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bradley, General, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bragg, General, raid of, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Brandegee, Augustus, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Brazos, battle of, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Breckenridge, John C., election of, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bright, Hon. John, Sumner’s letters to, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Brooks, James, inquiry of, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Brown, B. Gratz, substitute of, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>amendment of, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Brown John, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Brown, William G., bill of, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>remarks on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Brownlow, William G., <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>unites in call for convention, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;</li>
- <li>nomination of, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>;</li>
- <li>election of, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Johnson’s dispatch to, <a href='#Page_414'>414</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on negro suffrage, <a href='#Page_416'>416</a>;</li>
- <li>policy recommended by, <a href='#Page_417'>417</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Brownson, Orestes, theory of State suicide summarized by, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bryant, William Cullen, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Buchanan, James, election of, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Buell, General Don Carlos, army of, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>treatment of fugitive slaves by, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Bullett, Cuthbert, Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands. See Freedmen’s Bureau</li>
- <li class='c021'>Burke, Edmund, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Burnside, General Ambrose E., <a href='#Page_150'>150</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Butler, General Benjamin F., <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>investigation of, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>;</li>
- <li>relieved from command, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>;</li>
- <li>new department assigned to, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>;</li>
- <li>Pierpont criticised by, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>;</li>
- <li>Attorney-General criticised by, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li>department of Virginia commanded by, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>;</li>
- <li>fugitive slaves arrive at camp of, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;</li>
- <li>legal defence of attitude toward slaves, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>C</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Caldwell, A. B., <a href='#Page_128'>128</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>California, Upper, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>admission of, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>;</li>
- <li>first election in, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Cameron, Simon, Butler’s treatment of slaves approved by, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Campbell, John A., commissioner to Hampton Roads conference, <a href='#Page_393'>393</a>, <a href='#Page_395'>395</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Campbell, William B., election of, <a href='#Page_415'>415</a></li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_510'>510</span>Canby, General E. R. S., Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_402'>402</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Carey, John B., fugitive slave law pleaded by, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Carlile, John S., <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>election of, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>;</li>
- <li>admission of, to United States Senate, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>;</li>
- <li>speech on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>;</li>
- <li>term expires, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Chadsey, Charles E., President Johnson’s surrender to the South explained by, <a href='#Page_489'>489</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Chandler, Lucius H., Representative-elect from Virginia, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>remarks of, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;</li>
- <li>exclusion of, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Chandler, Zachariah, interest in reconstruction bill, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Sumner’s opposition to Trumbull’s resolution supported by, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Chase, Salmon P., on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>authorized to organize labor of abandoned slaves, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a>;</li>
- <li>emancipation favored by, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>quotation from diary of, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>;</li>
- <li>conservatism of Lincoln observed by, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>;</li>
- <li>Andrew Johnson takes oath of office before, <a href='#Page_408'>408</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Chattanooga, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>taken by Federal forces, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Clark, Daniel, remarks on reconstruction by, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Clarke, Governor Charles, insurgent legislature convoked by, <a href='#Page_459'>459</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>imprisonment of, <a href='#Page_460'>460</a>;</li>
- <li>petition for pardon of, <a href='#Page_460'>460</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Clarke, Isaac E., <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Cleveland, Tennessee, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Colfax, Schuyler, on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Collamer, Jacob, on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>substitute of, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a>;</li>
- <li>amendment of substitute, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>;</li>
- <li>defeat of amendment of, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>;</li>
- <li>defeat of substitute of, <a href='#Page_336'>336</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on electoral vote of Louisiana by, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a>, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Colonization, suggested by Lincoln, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>resolutions of Baltimore Union Convention on, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;</li>
- <li>message of Governor Brownlow on, <a href='#Page_416'>416</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Colored troops, Lincoln urges raising of, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>General Hunter recommends raising of, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>policy of enlistment of, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Committee, Central Executive of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Committee, Free State General of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>controversy of, with General Banks, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>;</li>
- <li>confers with General Shepley, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>friends of, protest against election, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Confederate army, Louisiana troops in, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Arkansas troops in, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</li>
- <li>driven from western Virginia, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Confederate Government, offer of Arkansas to, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Arkansas not aided by, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>;</li>
- <li>hold of, weakened in Arkansas, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>;</li>
- <li>aid from border States expected by, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Confederate officers, disfranchisement of, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Confederate States, theory that disunionists were in a minority in, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>functionaries in, not bound by oaths, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>;</li>
- <li>governments of, vacated, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>;</li>
- <li>governments could be organized by Congress in, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>;</li>
- <li>Constitution the only law in, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>;</li>
- <li>power of Congress over, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>people of, unable to plead Constitution, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>;</li>
- <li>original idea relative to reorganization of, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>;</li>
- <li>Stevens’s idea of status of, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;</li>
- <li>status of, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>;</li>
- <li>approaching disruption of, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>;</li>
- <li>rights of citizens in, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a>;</li>
- <li>political rights of people in, <a href='#Page_367'>367</a>;</li>
- <li>no foreign engagements entered into by, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a>;</li>
- <li>anarchy threatens many of, <a href='#Page_409'>409</a>, <a href='#Page_431'>431</a>;</li>
- <li>Federal troops preserve order in, <a href='#Page_432'>432</a>;</li>
- <li>obstacles to restoration in, <a href='#Page_432'>432</a>;</li>
- <li>blockade of, <a href='#Page_444'>444</a>;</li>
- <li>importance of understanding public opinion in, <a href='#Page_471'>471</a>;</li>
- <li>legislation of, <a href='#Page_472'>472</a>;</li>
- <li>prompt acquiescence of, <a href='#Page_472'>472</a>;</li>
- <li>sentiments of citizens of, <a href='#Page_474'>474</a>;</li>
- <li>Congress excludes delegations from, <a href='#Page_474'>474</a>;</li>
- <li>reaction in, <a href='#Page_482'>482</a>;</li>
- <li>Northern example no defence of legislation in, <a href='#Page_485'>485</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstructed not very different from disloyal governments of, <a href='#Page_486'>486</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_511'>511</span>States represented at opening of 39th Congress, <a href='#Page_489'>489</a>;</li>
- <li>Congress ignores claims of members from, <a href='#Page_490'>490</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Confiscation, in Arkansas, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Congress, amnesty authorized by, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>President disclaims authority to admit members to, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>;</li>
- <li>electoral vote of Tennessee excluded by, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>;</li>
- <li>Representatives from Louisiana admitted to, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>;</li>
- <li>Louisiana elects members to, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;</li>
- <li>organization of, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;</li>
- <li>Louisiana not redistricted by, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;</li>
- <li>A. P. Field denied admission to, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>;</li>
- <li>Louisiana elects members to, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>government of Louisiana not recognized by, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>electoral vote of Louisiana excluded by, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>Arkansas elects members to, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;</li>
- <li>consents to transfer of Virginia counties, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>;</li>
- <li>resolution on compensated emancipation passed by, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;</li>
- <li>slavery in Territories abolished by, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>;</li>
- <li>confiscation act of, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>;</li>
- <li>restored Virginia recognized by, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;</li>
- <li>President in agreement with, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;</li>
- <li>slavery in rebellious States should be ended by, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li>power possessed over seceding States by, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>;</li>
- <li>doctrines of Stevens abhorrent to members of, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;</li>
- <li>unanimity of, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction discussed by, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>;</li>
- <li>form of State government should be determined by, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction bill passed by, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s contest with, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>;</li>
- <li>President disclaims right to admit members to, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>;</li>
- <li>constitutional amendment passed by, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>;</li>
- <li>exclusion of electoral votes by resolution of, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>;</li>
- <li>protest against admission of members to, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>;</li>
- <li>power to readmit States resides in, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>;</li>
- <li>authority over rebellious States possessed by, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>;</li>
- <li>desire to discipline South winning adherents in, <a href='#Page_407'>407</a>;</li>
- <li>Johnson’s distrust of, <a href='#Page_461'>461</a>;</li>
- <li>why reconstruction conventions should have been called by, <a href='#Page_470'>470</a>;</li>
- <li>Southern States reorganized at meeting of, <a href='#Page_486'>486</a>;</li>
- <li>Johnson intended to be guided by, <a href='#Page_488'>488</a>;</li>
- <li>Presidential system suspended by legislation of, <a href='#Page_489'>489</a>;</li>
- <li>Southern members not admitted to, <a href='#Page_490'>490</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction assumed by, <a href='#Page_490'>490</a>;</li>
- <li>suffrage in the first reconstruction measure, <a href='#Page_494'>494</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Confederate Congress, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>admission of Arkansas delegates to, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Contrabands, multitudes of, in camp of General Butler, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Constitution, The, those who repudiate cannot plead provisions of, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ceases to be a restraint on Government, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>;</li>
- <li>State in rebellion not embraced by, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;</li>
- <li>scope of not contracted by secession ordinances, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>;</li>
- <li>necessity as an interpreter of, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>;</li>
- <li>number of States necessary to ratify amendment of, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>;</li>
- <li>Georgia adopts Thirteenth Amendment of, <a href='#Page_466'>466</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Constitutional Union men, attitude of, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Convention bill, defeated by popular vote in Tennessee, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Convention, Lincoln nominated by the Chicago, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Southern commercial held at Knoxville, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>;</li>
- <li>the Greeneville, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>;</li>
- <li>the Nashville, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;</li>
- <li>meeting of the Louisiana constitutional, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>;</li>
- <li>the Arkansas constitutional, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</li>
- <li>the Richmond secession, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>;</li>
- <li>the Wheeling, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>;</li>
- <li>ordinances of the Wheeling, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>;</li>
- <li>the Wheeling votes on dismemberment, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>;</li>
- <li>the Wheeling adjourns, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</li>
- <li>the Wheeling authorizes formation of new State, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>;</li>
- <li>slavery in the Wheeling, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</li>
- <li>meeting of the Baltimore Union, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;</li>
- <li>revolutionary character of the Wheeling, <a href='#Page_468'>468</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Conventions, the reconstruction, character of, <a href='#Page_468'>468</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>irregularity of those called under Presidential plan, <a href='#Page_469'>469</a>;</li>
- <li>why Congress should have called, <a href='#Page_470'>470</a>;</li>
- <li>character and work of those called by President Johnson, <a href='#Page_470'>470</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_512'>512</span>origin would not affect work of, if acquiesced in, <a href='#Page_472'>472</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Conway, Martin, speech on West Virginia by, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Cooper, Edmund, election of, <a href='#Page_415'>415</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Cooper Union, Lincoln’s address in, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>relief meeting in, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Cottman, Thomas, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>election of, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Cotton States, aid from border States expected by, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Cowan, Edgar, on admission of Mr. Segar, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>remarks on electoral vote of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a>;</li>
- <li>inquiry of, concerning electoral votes, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Cox, Samuel S., reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Crane, Samuel, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Cravens, James A., reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Creole, The, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Crisfield, John W., interview with Lincoln reported by, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Crittenden, John J., speech on West Virginia by, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Crittenden Resolution, introduction of, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mr. Strouse refers to, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Cruisers, Confederate, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Curtin, Governor Andrew G., <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Cutler, R. King, Senator-elect from Louisiana, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>, <a href='#Page_424'>424</a></li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>D</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Davis, Garrett, admission of West Virginia Senators opposed by, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>resolutions of, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Davis, Henry Winter, remarks on Louisiana election, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>amendment of, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>chairman of Committee on Rebellious States, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction address of, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>;</li>
- <li>on Southern loyalists, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>;</li>
- <li>on modes of establishing republican governments, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>;</li>
- <li>Thirteenth Amendment approved by, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>;</li>
- <li>policy of Lincoln criticised by, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>;</li>
- <li>protest of against policy of Lincoln, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>;</li>
- <li>character of, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>;</li>
- <li>defeat of, for renomination, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>;</li>
- <li>postponement of Ashley’s bill opposed by, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>;</li>
- <li>last reconstruction speech in Congress, <a href='#Page_310'>310</a>;</li>
- <li>alliance with Stevens, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>;</li>
- <li>motion relative to Louisiana, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Davis, Jefferson, Blair’s interview with, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>proposal for joint invasion of Mexico entertained by, <a href='#Page_392'>392</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to Mr. Blair, <a href='#Page_393'>393</a>;</li>
- <li>on Lincoln’s assassination, <a href='#Page_407'>407</a>;</li>
- <li>members of Mississippi convention intercede for, <a href='#Page_460'>460</a>;</li>
- <li>Georgia convention invokes Executive clemency in behalf of, <a href='#Page_466'>466</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Davis-Wade Bill, passed by House, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>passed by Senate, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s action on, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>proclamation concerning, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>;</li>
- <li>no provision for negro suffrage in, <a href='#Page_494'>494</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Dawes, Henry L., on Louisiana Representatives, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>;</li>
- <li>report on Mr. Segar’s election, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>on election of Mr. Chandler, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Davis’s criticism of, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>;</li>
- <li>bill of Representative Wilson criticised by, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>;</li>
- <li>report on election of Mr. Bonzano, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks of, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Delaware, slave interest in, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Lincoln’s bill for compensated emancipation in, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>Federalist party in, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li>Federal interference in, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Democratic party, defeat of, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>vote of, in West Virginia, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction theory of, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>;</li>
- <li>attitude on reconstruction, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>negro suffrage opposed by New Orleans convention of, <a href='#Page_421'>421</a>;</li>
- <li>South misled by attitude of, <a href='#Page_483'>483</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Dennison, Charles, reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Dennison, William, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Dickinson, Daniel S., <a href='#Page_33'>33</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>District of Columbia, slaves not allowed to depart from, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>colored persons liable to arrest if found in, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_513'>513</span>compensation to owners of slaves in, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Dix, General John A., <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>treatment of fugitive slaves by, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Donnelly, Ignatius, reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Doolittle, James R., credentials of Mr. Underwood offered by, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>reconstruction bill opposed by, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>on electoral vote of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on Louisiana, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a>;</li>
- <li>policy of Administration supported by, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a>;</li>
- <li>credentials of Mr. Hahn offered by, <a href='#Page_383'>383</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Doubleday, General Abner, treatment of fugitive slaves by, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Douglas-Lincoln debates, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Dorr, Thomas W., government under, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Dunlap, George W., admission of West Virginia opposed by, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Durant, Thomas J., <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Attorney-General of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>;</li>
- <li>registry conducted by, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;</li>
- <li>spokesman of planters, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>;</li>
- <li>enrollment by, satisfactory to Lincoln, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>disagreement with General Banks, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>protest of, against election, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a>;</li>
- <li>recognition of Louisiana opposed by, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Durell, E. H., <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>E</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>East, E. H., <a href='#Page_28'>28</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Edgerton, Joseph K., reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Election, Presidential, loss of a pretext for secession, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Tennessee, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;</li>
- <li>in Arkansas, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>;</li>
- <li>in West Virginia, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>electoral votes in, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>;</li>
- <li>result of, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Elections, Committee of, report on Louisiana Representative, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Electoral College, bill on representation in, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Eliot, Thomas W., amendment to reconstruction bill offered by, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>;</li>
- <li>Stevens’s interruption of, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>;</li>
- <li>Davis’s criticism of, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>;</li>
- <li>bill for bureau of emancipation introduced by, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Emancipation, in Tennessee, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>East Tennessee convention favors immediate, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s proclamation of, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>;</li>
- <li>proclamation of not to be revoked, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>;</li>
- <li>vote on, in West Virginia, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>in West Virginia constitution, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln suggests compensated, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln considering, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;</li>
- <li>discussion in Cabinet, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>draft of proclamation of, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>;</li>
- <li>urged by Chicago clergymen, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>;</li>
- <li>not hastened by deputations, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln reads proclamation of, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>;</li>
- <li>Sumner proposes to convert proclamation of, into law, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>;</li>
- <li>effect of proclamation on status of slaves, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a>;</li>
- <li>discussed at Hampton Roads Conference, <a href='#Page_398'>398</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln favored gradual, <a href='#Page_398'>398</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Emancipation, compensated, Lincoln prepares bill on, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>message refers to, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</li>
- <li>New York Tribune favors, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;</li>
- <li>resolution of Congress on, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;</li>
- <li>Baltimore Union convention’s resolution on, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;</li>
- <li>House of Representatives appoints committee on, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Emancipator, The, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>England, Cromwell’s division of, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Europe, the civil war pleasing to powers of, <a href='#Page_393'>393</a></li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>F</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Federalist, The, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Fellows, John Q. A., nomination of, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>defeat of, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Fishback, William M., Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>election of, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Fisher, George P., interest in compensated emancipation, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Flanders, Benjamin F., election of, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>;</li>
- <li>vote received by, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>;</li>
- <li>interview with Lincoln, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>nomination of, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</li>
- <li>defeat of, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</li>
- <li>hostility of Congress toward Louisiana said to have been promoted by, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Florida, martial law proclaimed over, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>unworthy of a place in the Union, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_514'>514</span>insurrection in, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;</li>
- <li>damage sustained by, <a href='#Page_436'>436</a>;</li>
- <li>nature of reorganized government of, <a href='#Page_488'>488</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Florida, The, capture of, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Forfeiture, State, idea of, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Forrest, General, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Fort Donelson, General Grant in possession of, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Fort Henry, Federal occupation of, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Fortress Monroe, fugitive slaves at, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Foster, Lafayette S., reconstruction policy of Lincoln supported by, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Fowler, Joseph S., election of, <a href='#Page_413'>413</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>France, relations with, <a href='#Page_409'>409</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Franchise, elective, in Tennessee to be fixed by Legislature, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>free negroes of Louisiana petition for, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;</li>
- <li>States have always exercised right to confer, <a href='#Page_452'>452</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Franchise, negro, Lincoln’s opinion concerning, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>See Negroes</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Frederick City, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Frederic County, provision for annexing to West Virginia, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Freedmen, no provision for education of, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Brownlow would admit testimony of, <a href='#Page_416'>416</a>;</li>
- <li>character of, <a href='#Page_416'>416</a>;</li>
- <li>Southern feeling toward, <a href='#Page_475'>475</a>;</li>
- <li>Mississippi legislation relative to, <a href='#Page_475'>475</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Freedmen’s Aid Societies, Lincoln memorialized by, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Freedmen’s Bureau, act of Congress relative to, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a>, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>germ of, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a>;</li>
- <li>duties of commissioner of, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a>;</li>
- <li>Governor of Arkansas coöperates with, <a href='#Page_411'>411</a>;</li>
- <li>influence in producing Southern reaction, <a href='#Page_483'>483</a>;</li>
- <li>political aspirations of agents of, <a href='#Page_484'>484</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Fremont, General John C., proclamation concerning slaves, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>reply to Lincoln, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Fugitive slaves, repeal of acts for rendition of, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>exclusion from Department of Washington, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>G</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Gantt, General E. W., secession abjured by, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Garrison, William Lloyd, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Georgia, martial law proclaimed over, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Boutwell would exclude from restored Union, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>;</li>
- <li>insurrection in, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;</li>
- <li>injuries sustained by, <a href='#Page_433'>433</a>;</li>
- <li>Governor Brown’s efforts at restoration of, <a href='#Page_465'>465</a>;</li>
- <li>appointment of provisional governor for, <a href='#Page_465'>465</a>;</li>
- <li>leading ex-Confederates aid governor, <a href='#Page_465'>465</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction convention of, <a href='#Page_465'>465</a>;</li>
- <li>convention repeals secession ordinance, <a href='#Page_465'>465</a>;</li>
- <li>war debt repudiated by, <a href='#Page_465'>465</a>;</li>
- <li>slaves freed by constitution of, <a href='#Page_466'>466</a>;</li>
- <li>Executive clemency in behalf of Jefferson Davis invoked by convention, <a href='#Page_466'>466</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Germans, The, indifferent to secession, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Gilmore-Jacquess mission, <a href='#Page_389'>389</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Gooch, Daniel W., reconstruction address of, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Government, a republican form guaranteed by reconstruction proclamation, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>perfection of Congressional system, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Grant, General Ulysses S., in possession of Forts Henry and Donelson, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>martial law proclaimed by, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>;</li>
- <li>at Mission Ridge and Lookout Mountain, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;</li>
- <li>Lee driven back by, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>;</li>
- <li>Blair visits camp of, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a>;</li>
- <li>influence in bringing about Hampton Roads Conference, <a href='#Page_396'>396</a>;</li>
- <li>movements by army of, <a href='#Page_401'>401</a>;</li>
- <li>management of Freedmen’s Bureau criticised by, <a href='#Page_484'>484</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Great Britain, relations with, <a href='#Page_409'>409</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Greeley, Horace, <a href='#Page_390'>390</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Greeneville, Tennessee, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Grimes, James W., remarks on Louisiana election, <a href='#Page_382'>382</a></li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_515'>515</span>Gulf, Department of, Butler relieved from command in, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>General Banks in command of, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>H</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hahn, Michael, election of, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>;</li>
- <li>vote of, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>;</li>
- <li>nomination of, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</li>
- <li>election of, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</li>
- <li>oath of, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>;</li>
- <li>election of delegates authorized by, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>;</li>
- <li>election called by, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>;</li>
- <li>credentials filed in U. S. Senate, <a href='#Page_383'>383</a>, <a href='#Page_418'>418</a>, <a href='#Page_424'>424</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Hall, Ellery R., <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hall, John, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hale, John P., on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>on electoral vote of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Halleck, General H. W., Tennessee included in department of, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>General Buell instructed by, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;</li>
- <li>General Banks instructed by, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;</li>
- <li>order on surrender of fugitive slaves, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Hamilton, Andrew J., appointment of, <a href='#Page_467'>467</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hampton Roads Conference, <a href='#Page_396'>396</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Confederate commissioners to, report failure, <a href='#Page_400'>400</a>;</li>
- <li>results of, <a href='#Page_400'>400</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Harris, Ira, remarks on Crittenden resolution by, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>remarks on electoral vote of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>;</li>
- <li>amendment offered by, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Harris, Isham G., authorized to appoint commissioners, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Legislature convoked at Memphis by, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Harlan, James, bill of, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hawkins, Isaac R., election of, <a href='#Page_415'>415</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hay and Nicolay, account of Lincoln’s message by, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>quotation from history of, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Helena, Arkansas, Union occupation of, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Henderson, John B., reply to Lincoln’s appeal, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>reconstruction bill opposed by, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>recognition of Louisiana favored by, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a>;</li>
- <li>inconsistency of Sumner exposed by, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a>;</li>
- <li>inquiry concerning Louisiana loyalists, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a>;</li>
- <li>letter on reconstruction, <a href='#Page_495'>495</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Hendricks, Thomas A., Republican factiousness agreeable to, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hiestand, Judge J., appointment of, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Holden, William W., appointment of, <a href='#Page_448'>448</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>proclamation of, <a href='#Page_450'>450</a>;</li>
- <li>message of, <a href='#Page_454'>454</a>;</li>
- <li>President Johnson’s telegram to, <a href='#Page_455'>455</a>;</li>
- <li>public career of, <a href='#Page_457'>457</a>;</li>
- <li>Republican leaders alarmed at appointment of, <a href='#Page_459'>459</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Holman, William S., resolution introduced by, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hood, General J. B., <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hooker, General Joseph, treatment of fugitive slaves, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Howard, Jacob M., on electoral vote of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>on recognition of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>;</li>
- <li>Sumner’s opposition to Trumbull’s resolution supported by, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Howard, Oliver O., General, Freedmen’s Bureau organized by, <a href='#Page_389'>389</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Howe, Timothy O., speech on Ten Eyck’s amendment, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Howell, Rufus K., <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hughes, Augustus de B., <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Humphreys, Benjamin G., election and pardon of, <a href='#Page_464'>464</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hungary, similarity of ideas lacking in, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hunter, General David, freedom of slaves proclaimed by, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>authority to arm negroes requested by, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Hunter, Robert M. T., authorized to act as commissioner, <a href='#Page_395'>395</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hurlbut, General S. A., on reorganization of Tennessee, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Lincoln’s letters to, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_401'>401</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>I</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Illinois, amendment abolishing slavery adopted by, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Indiana, troops from, assist western Virginians, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Intelligencer, The National, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Ireland, unsuccessful campaign of James II in, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>similarity of ideas lacking in, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_516'>516</span>Irish, The, indifference to secession, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a></li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>J</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Jacks, T. M., Congressman-elect, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>proposed compensation to, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Jackson, General Andrew, new industrial era marked by inauguration of, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>invasion by way of Mexico expected by, <a href='#Page_392'>392</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Jacquess-Gilmore mission, <a href='#Page_389'>389</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>James II, King, abdication of, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Jefferson County, provision for annexation of, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>annexation of, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Jefferson, Thomas, declaration of, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Johnson, Andrew, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Thirtieth Congress, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>;</li>
- <li>people of Nashville addressed by, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>;</li>
- <li>activity of, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>;</li>
- <li>Nashville saved by, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s opinion of, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>;</li>
- <li>addresses of, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>;</li>
- <li>urged to raise negro troops, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>;</li>
- <li>enlarged authority of, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;</li>
- <li>Nashville meeting called by, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</li>
- <li>election of county officers authorized by, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</li>
- <li>proclamation of, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>;</li>
- <li>nomination of, for Vice-Presidency, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>;</li>
- <li>Nashville address of, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>;</li>
- <li>letter of, to Mr. Dennison, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>;</li>
- <li>popularity in the North, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>;</li>
- <li>credentials of West Virginia Senators presented by, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>;</li>
- <li>resolution offered by, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;</li>
- <li>election of, as Vice-President, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a>;</li>
- <li>installation of, as President, <a href='#Page_408'>408</a>;</li>
- <li>problem confronting, <a href='#Page_408'>408</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to Governor Murphy, <a href='#Page_411'>411</a>;</li>
- <li>despatch to Governor Brownlow, <a href='#Page_414'>414</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction policy endorsed by National Democratic party, <a href='#Page_420'>420</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s policy alleged to have been changed by, <a href='#Page_426'>426</a>;</li>
- <li>Pierpont’s government recognized by, <a href='#Page_427'>427</a>;</li>
- <li>Nashville speech of, <a href='#Page_438'>438</a>;</li>
- <li>forecast of policy of, <a href='#Page_439'>439</a>;</li>
- <li>addresses of, <a href='#Page_440'>440</a>;</li>
- <li>visit of Illinois delegation to, <a href='#Page_440'>440</a>;</li>
- <li>visit of Indiana delegation to, <a href='#Page_442'>442</a>;</li>
- <li>visit of negro delegation, <a href='#Page_443'>443</a>;</li>
- <li>South Carolina delegation addressed by, <a href='#Page_443'>443</a>;</li>
- <li>blockade partly raised by, <a href='#Page_444'>444</a>;</li>
- <li>blockade of trans-Mississippi ports rescinded by, <a href='#Page_445'>445</a>;</li>
- <li>work done for reconstruction retained by, <a href='#Page_447'>447</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s policy need not have been adopted by, <a href='#Page_447'>447</a>;</li>
- <li>at inauguration sentiments of Congress already known to, <a href='#Page_448'>448</a>;</li>
- <li>results of attempting reunion without coöperation of Congress, <a href='#Page_448'>448</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction of North Carolina begun by, <a href='#Page_448'>448</a>;</li>
- <li>amnesty proclamation of, <a href='#Page_450'>450</a>;</li>
- <li>cases excluded from benefits of amnesty, <a href='#Page_450'>450</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction plan of, based on guaranty clause of Constitution, <a href='#Page_452'>452</a>;</li>
- <li>telegram to Governor Holden, <a href='#Page_455'>455</a>;</li>
- <li>visit of North Carolina delegation to, <a href='#Page_456'>456</a>;</li>
- <li>North Carolina election unsatisfactory to, <a href='#Page_457'>457</a>;</li>
- <li>interview of Boutwell and Morrill with, <a href='#Page_458'>458</a>;</li>
- <li>William L. Sharkey appointed Provisional Governor by, <a href='#Page_459'>459</a>;</li>
- <li>appointment of provisional governors by, <a href='#Page_459'>459</a>;</li>
- <li>telegram to Governor Sharkey, <a href='#Page_461'>461</a>;</li>
- <li>attitude of Congress characterized by, <a href='#Page_461'>461</a>;</li>
- <li>Governor Sharkey’s reorganization of militia approved by, <a href='#Page_462'>462</a>;</li>
- <li>Mississippi people trusted by, <a href='#Page_463'>463</a>;</li>
- <li>change in sentiments of, <a href='#Page_463'>463</a>, <a href='#Page_488'>488</a>;</li>
- <li>General Slocum directed to revoke order by, <a href='#Page_463'>463</a>;</li>
- <li>proceedings in reconstruction conventions directed by, <a href='#Page_465'>465</a>;</li>
- <li>organization of a police force for Georgia approved by, <a href='#Page_466'>466</a>;</li>
- <li>policy toward Congress unknown in the South, <a href='#Page_483'>483</a>;</li>
- <li>prompt acquiescence of South in policy of, <a href='#Page_486'>486</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction theory similar to Lincoln’s, <a href='#Page_487'>487</a>;</li>
- <li>falling back from Lincoln’s plan, <a href='#Page_487'>487</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s Cabinet retained by, <a href='#Page_488'>488</a>;</li>
- <li>change of attitude of, <a href='#Page_489'>489</a>;</li>
- <li>influence of Seward upon, <a href='#Page_489'>489</a>;</li>
- <li>movement to procure resignation from Vice-Presidency, <a href='#Page_489'>489</a>;</li>
- <li>limitations of, <a href='#Page_490'>490</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction work of, not marked by originality, <a href='#Page_491'>491</a>;</li>
- <li>negro suffrage, <a href='#Page_494'>494</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Johnson, Bradish, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a></li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_517'>517</span>Johnson, Herschel V., election of, <a href='#Page_465'>465</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Johnson, James, appointment of, <a href='#Page_459'>459</a>, <a href='#Page_465'>465</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Johnson, James M., election of, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>proposed compensation to, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a>;</li>
- <li>election of, <a href='#Page_412'>412</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Johnson, Reverdy, in New Orleans, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>on electoral vote of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a>;</li>
- <li>on President’s message, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on recognition of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_370'>370</a>;</li>
- <li>Sumner’s argument with, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on negro suffrage, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a>;</li>
- <li>recognition of Arkansas and Louisiana favored by, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Johnson, R. W., secession of, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Johnston, General Joseph E., retires to Murfreesboro, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Jones, Hon. Ira P., <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Jordan, Warren, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a></li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>K</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Kanawha, proposed State of, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>change in name of, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Kearney, General Stephen W., <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Kelley, William D., reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>proposes amendment of Ashley’s bill, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>;</li>
- <li>Field’s assault of, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Kernan, Francis, bill of Mr. Wilson criticised by, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Kimball, General, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>King, Preston, Mr. Johnson influenced by, <a href='#Page_441'>441</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Kingwood, Va., Union meeting at, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Kitchen, Benjamin M., Representative-elect, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>denied admission to Congress, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Knoxville, early capital of Tennessee, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Southern Commercial Convention held at, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>;</li>
- <li>taken by Federal forces, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Kyle, G. H., election of, <a href='#Page_412'>412</a></li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>L</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Lamont, George D., <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Lane, James H., on electoral vote of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>LeBlond, Frank C., reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Lee, General Robert E., Maryland invaded by, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>repulse of, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>;</li>
- <li>driven back by Grant, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>;</li>
- <li>weakness of, <a href='#Page_401'>401</a>;</li>
- <li>surrender of, <a href='#Page_426'>426</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Leftwich, John W., election of, <a href='#Page_415'>415</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Letcher, Governor John, United States could not recognize, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>, <a href='#Page_445'>445</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Lieber, Dr. Francis, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Sumner’s letters to, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Lincoln, Abraham, Cooper Union address of, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>conservatism of, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;</li>
- <li>nomination of, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;</li>
- <li>border State delegations support of, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;</li>
- <li>popular vote received by, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;</li>
- <li>peer of tried Republican leaders, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;</li>
- <li>policy of, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>;</li>
- <li>sympathy for Tennessee loyalists, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;</li>
- <li>Andrew Johnson appointed by, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>;</li>
- <li>in Thirtieth Congress, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>;</li>
- <li>authority for appointing military governors, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>;</li>
- <li>view of their utility, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to Governor Johnson, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>;</li>
- <li>authority of Johnson enlarged by, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;</li>
- <li>reply to General Rosecrans, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;</li>
- <li>proclamation issued by, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;</li>
- <li>authority to admit members to Congress disclaimed by, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>;</li>
- <li>enrolling agents sent to Tennessee, Arkansas, and Louisiana by, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</li>
- <li>renomination of, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>;</li>
- <li>declined to interfere in nominating convention, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</li>
- <li>reply to protest of McClellan electors, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to Cuthbert Bullett, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to August Belmont, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>;</li>
- <li>Court of Record for Louisiana constituted by, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to General Butler and others, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>;</li>
- <li>restoration of Louisiana urged by, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to General Shepley, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>;</li>
- <li>Emancipation Proclamation published by, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>;</li>
- <li>requested to order an election, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>;</li>
- <li>reply to Louisiana committee, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>;</li>
- <li>more advanced ground taken by, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to General Banks and others, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;</li>
- <li>urges restoration, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;</li>
- <li>enrollment of Durant approved by, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>willingness to recognize part of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to Thomas Cottman, 64;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_518'>518</span>letter to General Banks, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>General Banks’s letter to, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>;</li>
- <li>Banks’s services appreciated by, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>;</li>
- <li>authority conferred on General Banks by, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>;</li>
- <li>Banks on Louisiana election, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to Governor Hahn, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>;</li>
- <li>authority of Mr. Hahn enlarged by, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to General Hurlbut, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to General Steele, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to William M. Fishback, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;</li>
- <li>result of Arkansas election gratifying to, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;</li>
- <li>requests opinion of Cabinet on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>;</li>
- <li>approves bill for admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li>proclamation concerning West Virginia, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to General Butler, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li>slavery in first inaugural of, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to General Fremont, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>General Fremont instructed by, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>;</li>
- <li>Bancroft’s letter to, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to Mr. Bancroft, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>;</li>
- <li>emancipation and colonization suggested by, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>advance in position of, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>arming of slaves opposed by, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>bill for compensated emancipation drafted by, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Pierce’s interview with, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>;</li>
- <li>compensated emancipation proposed by, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</li>
- <li>further advance in position of, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to Henry J. Raymond, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</li>
- <li>border State Congressmen interview, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to James A. McDougall, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>;</li>
- <li>proclamation of General Hunter rescinded by, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;</li>
- <li>Sumner’s letter concerning, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>;</li>
- <li>border State Congressmen appealed to, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>;</li>
- <li>emancipation proposed by, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;</li>
- <li>confiscation act approved by, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>;</li>
- <li>draft of emancipation proclamation read by, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>;</li>
- <li>rebellious citizens warned by, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;</li>
- <li>Chicago clergymen interview, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>;</li>
- <li>resolves to issue postponed proclamation, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>;</li>
- <li>meeting of Cabinet, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>;</li>
- <li>emancipation proclamation read by, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>;</li>
- <li>first inaugural of, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>central idea of reconstruction plan of, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>confidence in ultimate success, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;</li>
- <li>Congress substantially agrees with, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;</li>
- <li>change in policy of, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>;</li>
- <li>only one plan of reconstruction proposed by, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on Blair-Sumner controversy, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction plan of, criticised by Henry Winter Davis, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Donnelly’s character of, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Boutwell defends reconstruction policy, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>;</li>
- <li>treatment of reconstruction bill by, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>Sumner’s opinion of, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>;</li>
- <li>proclamation on reconstruction bill, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>;</li>
- <li>Wade-Davis manifesto concerning action of, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>;</li>
- <li>result of contest with Congress, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>;</li>
- <li>reëlection of, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>;</li>
- <li>silence as to controversy with Congress, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>;</li>
- <li>no right over admission of Congressmen claimed by, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>;</li>
- <li>adoption of more vigorous measures hinted at, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>;</li>
- <li>resolution relative to electoral votes approved by, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a>;</li>
- <li>electoral votes received by, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a>;</li>
- <li>popular approval of Thirteenth Amendment pleasing to, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a>;</li>
- <li>Freedmen’s Aid Societies appeal to, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Blair’s visit to, <a href='#Page_390'>390</a>;</li>
- <li>Blair’s mission not officially sanctioned by, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to Mr. Blair, <a href='#Page_394'>394</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to Secretary Seward, <a href='#Page_395'>395</a>;</li>
- <li>conference opposed by, except on basis of reunion, <a href='#Page_397'>397</a>;</li>
- <li>last speech on reconstruction, <a href='#Page_403'>403</a>;</li>
- <li>assassination of, a calamity to the South, <a href='#Page_407'>407</a>;</li>
- <li>policy would have saved South from many evils, <a href='#Page_407'>407</a>;</li>
- <li>telegram to Governor Pierpont, <a href='#Page_426'>426</a>;</li>
- <li>Pierpont’s interview with, <a href='#Page_426'>426</a>;</li>
- <li>attitude toward Confederate legislatures, <a href='#Page_470'>470</a>;</li>
- <li>a loose system of reconstruction opposed by, <a href='#Page_487'>487</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction theory of, similar to Johnson’s, <a href='#Page_487'>487</a>;</li>
- <li>President Johnson retains Cabinet of, <a href='#Page_488'>488</a>;</li>
- <li>constructive statesmanship of, <a href='#Page_491'>491</a>;</li>
- <li>a wide constituency favored by, <a href='#Page_493'>493</a>;</li>
- <li>conditions on returning States imposed by, <a href='#Page_494'>494</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Henderson’s views on, <a href='#Page_495'>495</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_519'>519</span>Lincoln-Douglas debates, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Little Rock, seized by Confederate troops, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>threatened by Federal forces, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>;</li>
- <li>capture of, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>;</li>
- <li>loyal newspaper published in,83;</li>
- <li>Union convention at, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Liverpool, abandoned by Confederate naval agent, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Longyear, John W., reconstruction address of, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Lookout Mountain, battle of, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Louisiana, effect of Union victories in, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>enrolling agent sent to, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</li>
- <li>secession spirit in, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>;</li>
- <li>secession of, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>;</li>
- <li>prosperity at the beginning of the war, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>;</li>
- <li>treasury of, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;</li>
- <li>citizens of, in Confederate army, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;</li>
- <li>blockade of ports in, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;</li>
- <li>attitude toward Richmond government, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;</li>
- <li>loyalists of, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;</li>
- <li>secessionists of, intimidated, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>;</li>
- <li>activity of Unionists in, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>;</li>
- <li>necessity of courts in, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>;</li>
- <li>courts established in, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>;</li>
- <li>court of record for, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</li>
- <li>Supreme Court of, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln urges restoration of, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>;</li>
- <li>Union associations request an election, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;</li>
- <li>proclamation for an election in, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;</li>
- <li>members of Congress elected in, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>;</li>
- <li>vote cast in, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>;</li>
- <li>admission of Representatives to Congress, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>;</li>
- <li>named as one of the rebellious States, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>;</li>
- <li>parishes excepted from emancipation proclamation, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>;</li>
- <li>disagreement among Unionists of, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>;</li>
- <li>enrollment of citizens in, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln visited by committee from, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>;</li>
- <li>reorganization interrupted, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>;</li>
- <li>portion covered by Union arms, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln urges reconstruction of, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>;</li>
- <li>condition of, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>;</li>
- <li>amended constitution of 1852 destroyed by rebellion, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>;</li>
- <li>voting in, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;</li>
- <li>franchise asked by free negroes, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;</li>
- <li>credentials of Representatives from, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>;</li>
- <li>suppression of election in, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>;</li>
- <li>constitution altered by General Shepley, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>;</li>
- <li>citizens from, in Union army, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>;</li>
- <li>General Banks to order an election in, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>;</li>
- <li>Banks on reconstruction in, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>;</li>
- <li>Banks fixes date of election for, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>;</li>
- <li>constitution modified by proclamation of General Banks, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>;</li>
- <li>provision for voting of loyalists in, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</li>
- <li>election in, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</li>
- <li>protest against election in, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</li>
- <li>Hahn inaugurated Governor, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>;</li>
- <li>civil subordinate to military power, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>;</li>
- <li>Free State leaders unite with Radicals in Congress, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>;</li>
- <li>election in, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>;</li>
- <li>vote on constitution, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>;</li>
- <li>Legislature chosen in, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>Presidential electors appointed for, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;</li>
- <li>Senators elected by, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>government of, not recognized by Congress, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;</li>
- <li>radicals propose to recognize government of, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>;</li>
- <li>insurrection in, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;</li>
- <li>amendment to except from joint resolution, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a>;</li>
- <li>Ten Eyck’s speech on electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>;</li>
- <li>Howe’s speech on electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a>;</li>
- <li>Trumbull’s speech on electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a>;</li>
- <li>highest vote cast in, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks of Harris on electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>;</li>
- <li>speech of Doolittle on electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks of Hale on electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks of Collamer on electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a>;</li>
- <li>Howard’s speech on electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a>;</li>
- <li>Cowan’s remarks on electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>;</li>
- <li>Powell on electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a>;</li>
- <li>Wade’s remarks on electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a>;</li>
- <li>loss of Ten Eyck’s amendment concerning, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>;</li>
- <li>Johnson’s remarks on electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a>;</li>
- <li>Pomeroy’s amendment, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>;</li>
- <li>passage of joint resolution, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>;</li>
- <li>Cowan’s inquiry, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>;</li>
- <li>Senate debate on recognition of, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>;</li>
- <li>Representatives-elect from, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>;</li>
- <li>protest against admission of members from, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>;</li>
- <li>compensation to claimants from, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>;</li>
- <li>United States Senators chosen in, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>;</li>
- <li>Trumbull’s resolution relative to, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>;</li>
- <li>Powell opposes recognition of, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>;</li>
- <li>Henderson favors recognition of, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_520'>520</span>recognition of, would enfeeble Union, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>;</li>
- <li>Howard’s speech on recognition of, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>;</li>
- <li>governed by bayonet, <a href='#Page_367'>367</a>;</li>
- <li>Howard characterizes government of, <a href='#Page_369'>369</a>;</li>
- <li>Reverdy Johnson’s argument on recognition of, <a href='#Page_370'>370</a>, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a>;</li>
- <li>Sprague’s remarks on election in, <a href='#Page_381'>381</a>;</li>
- <li>Grimes’s remarks on election in, <a href='#Page_382'>382</a>;</li>
- <li>slavery in parts of, not affected by emancipation proclamation, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a>;</li>
- <li>draft in, <a href='#Page_417'>417</a>;</li>
- <li>election in, <a href='#Page_418'>418</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Wells chosen Governor, <a href='#Page_422'>422</a>;</li>
- <li>Warmoth elected as Territorial Delegate, <a href='#Page_422'>422</a>;</li>
- <li>United States Senators chosen, <a href='#Page_424'>424</a>;</li>
- <li>Thirteenth Amendment ratified by, <a href='#Page_424'>424</a>;</li>
- <li>injuries which rebellion inflicted on, <a href='#Page_424'>424</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Lovejoy, Owen, resolution offered by, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>resolution of, relative to emancipation, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>;</li>
- <li>doctrines of Thaddeus Stevens repudiated by, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Lundy, Benjamin, Genius of Universal Emancipation published by, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Lyon, General Nathaniel, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>M</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Madison, parish of, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Malhiot, E. E., <a href='#Page_48'>48</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Mallory, Robert, yeas and nays on Ashley’s bill demanded by, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>bill of Mr. Wilson criticised by, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Manassas, battle of, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Mann, W. D., Representative-elect from Louisiana, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>seat in Congress claimed by, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Manumission Intelligencer, The, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Marcy, William, Secretary, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Marvin, Governor, Seward’s message to, <a href='#Page_488'>488</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Maryland, attitude on emancipation, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Mason, James M., <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Mason, Richard B., <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Massachusetts, sentiments on slavery, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Maynard, Horace, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>; joins in call for convention, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>emancipation policy of Lincoln approved by, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>;</li>
- <li>election of, <a href='#Page_415'>415</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Memphis, Legislature convenes in, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Mexico, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>French interests in, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>;</li>
- <li>invasion of, a part of Napoleon’s policy, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a>;</li>
- <li>proposal for joint invasion of, <a href='#Page_392'>392</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Mileage, allowed to Arkansas claimants, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Military commissions, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Military Governor, office of, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Minority, loyal, rule by, inconsistent with American principles, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>should institute government for their own protection, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>;</li>
- <li>further examination of, <a href='#Page_491'>491</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Mission Ridge, battle of, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Missouri, provisional government appointed in, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>origin of government of, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Mississippi, State of, in Federal control, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>insurrection in, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;</li>
- <li>injury sustained by, <a href='#Page_437'>437</a>;</li>
- <li>Provisional Governor for, <a href='#Page_459'>459</a>;</li>
- <li>Governor Clarke summons insurgent Legislature of, <a href='#Page_459'>459</a>;</li>
- <li>secession ordinance declared null and void, <a href='#Page_460'>460</a>;</li>
- <li>slavery abolished in, <a href='#Page_460'>460</a>;</li>
- <li>people advised to form a patrol, <a href='#Page_461'>461</a>;</li>
- <li>disorder in, <a href='#Page_462'>462</a>;</li>
- <li>General Slocum prevents organization of militia in, <a href='#Page_462'>462</a>;</li>
- <li>freedmen of, <a href='#Page_463'>463</a>;</li>
- <li>election in, <a href='#Page_464'>464</a>;</li>
- <li>conflict of civil and military authorities, <a href='#Page_464'>464</a>;</li>
- <li>supremacy of military in, <a href='#Page_464'>464</a>;</li>
- <li>November legislation of, <a href='#Page_475'>475</a>;</li>
- <li>practical revival of black code in, <a href='#Page_480'>480</a>;</li>
- <li>spirit of reconstructed Legislature, <a href='#Page_482'>482</a>;</li>
- <li>character of reorganized government, <a href='#Page_488'>488</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Monroe Doctrine, Northern Democrats and Republicans adhere to, <a href='#Page_392'>392</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mexico to be conquered under pretence of defending, <a href='#Page_393'>393</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Morrill, Justin S., President Johnson visited by, <a href='#Page_458'>458</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Morton, Oliver P., Governor, President Johnson interviewed by, <a href='#Page_442'>442</a></li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_521'>521</span>McClellan, electors, protest of, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ticket in Tennessee withdrawn, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>McClellan, George B., General, proclamation concerning slaves, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>instructions to, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>;</li>
- <li>collapse of Richmond campaign of, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;</li>
- <li>Union army again commanded by, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>;</li>
- <li>Lee defeated by, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>;</li>
- <li>vote for Presidency received by, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>McCulloch, General, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>McDougall, James A., on admission of Mr. Segar, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>–166</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>McDowell, General Irwin, treatment of fugitive slaves by, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>McDowell, J. L., inquiry concerning fugitive slaves, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a></li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>N</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Napoleon III, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>policy of, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Nashville, occupation of, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>panic in, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>;</li>
- <li>occupied by General Nelson, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>;</li>
- <li>Governor Johnson arrives in, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>;</li>
- <li>Governor Johnson addresses people of, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>;</li>
- <li>mayor and council imprisoned, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>;</li>
- <li>press under restraint, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>;</li>
- <li>treatment of clergymen in, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>;</li>
- <li>Union convention at, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;</li>
- <li>action of convention, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;</li>
- <li>public meeting at, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</li>
- <li>convention at, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;</li>
- <li>convention of January, 1865, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;</li>
- <li>Legislature meets at, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>National Conservative Union party, negro suffrage opposed by, <a href='#Page_421'>421</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>reconstruction policy of Mr. Johnson endorsed by, <a href='#Page_421'>421</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Wells nominated for governor by, <a href='#Page_422'>422</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Navy, proportions of, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Negroes, free, elective franchise asked by, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>North Carolina denies franchise to, <a href='#Page_452'>452</a>;</li>
- <li>condition of, in Mississippi, <a href='#Page_463'>463</a>;</li>
- <li>testimony of, <a href='#Page_464'>464</a>;</li>
- <li>numbers in Texas, <a href='#Page_467'>467</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Nelson, General, enters Nashville, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Nelson, Thomas A. R., <a href='#Page_9'>9</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>New Hampshire, President Johnson addresses citizens of, <a href='#Page_442'>442</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>New Mexico, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>New Orleans, State troops from, seize Federal property, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>enthusiasm in, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;</li>
- <li>bankruptcy of, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;</li>
- <li>importance to Confederacy, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>;</li>
- <li>capture of, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>;</li>
- <li>results of Federal occupation of, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>;</li>
- <li>members of court of record arrive in, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>;</li>
- <li>excepted from emancipation proclamation, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>;</li>
- <li>menaced by General Taylor, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>;</li>
- <li>General Shepley forbids election in, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>;</li>
- <li>amount of taxes paid by, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>;</li>
- <li>without civil government, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>;</li>
- <li>extent of the State of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>;</li>
- <li>constitutional convention in, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>;</li>
- <li>unqualified voters enrolled in, <a href='#Page_418'>418</a>;</li>
- <li>new registration in, <a href='#Page_418'>418</a>;</li>
- <li>J. Madison Wells nominated by convention held in, <a href='#Page_420'>420</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Newport News, fugitive slaves arrive at, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>New York, electoral vote not counted in Washington’s election, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Nicolay and Hay. See Hay and Nicolay</li>
- <li class='c021'>Noell, John W., on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>inquiry of, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Norfolk, Va., destitution in, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>North Carolina, Union victories in, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>secession spirit in, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;</li>
- <li>insurrection in, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;</li>
- <li>injuries sustained by, <a href='#Page_436'>436</a>;</li>
- <li>Provisional Governor appointed for, <a href='#Page_448'>448</a>;</li>
- <li>“loyal people” of, <a href='#Page_452'>452</a>;</li>
- <li>suffrage withheld from negroes of, <a href='#Page_452'>452</a>;</li>
- <li>nearly all counties choose delegates, <a href='#Page_453'>453</a>;</li>
- <li>ordinance of secession repealed by, <a href='#Page_454'>454</a>;</li>
- <li>abolition of slavery in, <a href='#Page_454'>454</a>;</li>
- <li>payment of rebel debt prohibited by, <a href='#Page_455'>455</a>;</li>
- <li>adjournment of convention, <a href='#Page_455'>455</a>;</li>
- <li>convention ordinances ratified, <a href='#Page_457'>457</a>;</li>
- <li>election unsatisfactory to President Johnson, <a href='#Page_457'>457</a>;</li>
- <li>Thirteenth Amendment ratified by, <a href='#Page_457'>457</a>;</li>
- <li>Congressmen chosen by, <a href='#Page_457'>457</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_522'>522</span>why President began reconstruction policy with, <a href='#Page_458'>458</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>O</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Oglesby, Governor, President Johnson visited by, <a href='#Page_440'>440</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Ohio, western Virginians assisted by troops of, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Olin, Abraham B., on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Olustee, battle of, a result of administration policy, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Orange, William, Prince of, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Orleans, courts established in, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>P</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Paine, Colonel, arrest of, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Parker, Granville, anti-slavery work of, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Parliament, absolute power vested in, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Patterson, David T., election of, <a href='#Page_413'>413</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Patterson, General, proclamation relative to slaves, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Peabody, Charles A., appointment of, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Peace and Constitutional Society, in Arkansas, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Pea Ridge, battle of, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Pendleton, George H., reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>votes received by, for Vice-Presidency, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Pensacola, Florida, Louisiana soldiers vote at, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Perry, Nehemiah, reconstruction address of, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Phelps, General John S., alleged opposition to rule of, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>military governor, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Pierce, E. L., labor of abandoned slaves organized by, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Lincoln interviewed by, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Pierpont, Francis Harrison, chosen Governor of restored Virginia, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>inauguration of, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>;</li>
- <li>views of the Constitution, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>;</li>
- <li>message of, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;</li>
- <li>address of, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>elected Governor, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>duties of, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>;</li>
- <li>protests against military interference, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>;</li>
- <li>application for assistance, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s telegram to, <a href='#Page_426'>426</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln visited by, <a href='#Page_426'>426</a>;</li>
- <li>reception at Richmond, <a href='#Page_427'>427</a>;</li>
- <li>the problem confronting, <a href='#Page_428'>428</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Placquemines, voting in parish of, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>vote of, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Poland, similarity of ideas lacking in, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Polk, President James K., message of, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Pollard, E. A., quotation from “Lost Cause” of, <a href='#Page_400'>400</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Pool, John, election of, <a href='#Page_457'>457</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Pomeroy, Samuel C., on electoral vote of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>amendment offered by, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on reconstruction by, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>;</li>
- <li>extent of Congressional power over reconstruction stated by, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Port Hudson, General Banks at, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>fall of, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Portsmouth, Va., Union vote in, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>destitution in, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Powell, Lazarus W., remarks on Louisiana, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>recognition of Louisiana opposed by, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>;</li>
- <li>General Banks denounced by, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a>;</li>
- <li>proclamation of Banks quoted by, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on Trumbull’s resolution by, <a href='#Page_373'>373</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Property, Federal, seizure of, in Baton Rouge, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>R</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Raleigh, convention assembles at, <a href='#Page_453'>453</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Raymond, Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Reade, Edwin G., North Carolina convention presided over by, <a href='#Page_453'>453</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>farewell address of, <a href='#Page_455'>455</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Reconstruction, in Tennessee, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Lincoln’s proclamation of, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;</li>
- <li>in Louisiana, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>;</li>
- <li>loyal minority authorized to restore States, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s plan not indispensable to, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>;</li>
- <li>interrupted in Louisiana, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter relative to, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;</li>
- <li>President urges in Louisiana, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>;</li>
- <li>Banks’s plan of, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>;</li>
- <li>proposed for Arkansas, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letters on, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;</li>
- <li>in Louisiana connected with war powers of President, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>;</li>
- <li>emancipation introduced into, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_523'>523</span>theories and plans of, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>central idea of Lincoln’s plan, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>both parties agree on Presidential plan, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>;</li>
- <li>great number of theories and plans of, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>;</li>
- <li>difficulties of, increased by abolition, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln propounded only one plan of, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li>“Louisiana plan” and negro suffrage, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;</li>
- <li>sensation caused by Sumner’s scheme of, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>;</li>
- <li>final work of, influenced by Sumner’s resolutions, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>Stevens’s theory of, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>first act of, a modification of Stevens’s theory, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>;</li>
- <li>theory held at commencement of rebellion, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>;</li>
- <li>Democratic theory of, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>;</li>
- <li>Edgerton’s speech on, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>;</li>
- <li>attitude of Democratic party toward, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>conservative views of Senators on, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>House of Representatives on, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>resolution of Thaddeus Stevens concerning, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>;</li>
- <li>resolution of Henry Winter Davis, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>address of Mr. Davis, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>;</li>
- <li>of Southern States premature, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>;</li>
- <li>President’s plan criticised by Mr. Davis, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>;</li>
- <li>address of Representative Scofield on, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>;</li>
- <li>address of Representative Williams on, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>;</li>
- <li>indemnity, security and punishment, elements of, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>;</li>
- <li>bill opposed by Mr. Baldwin, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>;</li>
- <li>address of Representative Thayer on, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks of Representative Yeaman on, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>;</li>
- <li>address of Representative Longyear on, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>;</li>
- <li>speech of Ignatius Donnelly on, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>;</li>
- <li>speech of Representative Dennison, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks of Thaddeus Stevens on, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>bill opposed by Representative Strouse, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>opposition of Mr. Cravens, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>Representative Gooch on, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;</li>
- <li>Representative Perry’s remarks on, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;</li>
- <li>Fernando Wood’s opposition to bill for, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks of William D. Kelley on, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>;</li>
- <li>speech of S. S. Cox on, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Boutwell’s speech on, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>;</li>
- <li>speech of George H. Pendleton, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;</li>
- <li>bill for, unconstitutional, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>;</li>
- <li>Representatives pass bill on, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>;</li>
- <li>provisions of bill on, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>;</li>
- <li>Senator Wade on, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>;</li>
- <li>Senator Carlile’s speech on, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>;</li>
- <li>Congress passes bill on, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s treatment of bill on, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>interest of Mr. Chandler in bill on, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s proclamation concerning bill on, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>;</li>
- <li>notice of in annual message, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>;</li>
- <li>progress of, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>;</li>
- <li>forced upon attention of Congress by Union victories, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Ashley reports bill on, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>;</li>
- <li>Representative Eliot offers amendment to bill on, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>;</li>
- <li>provisions of Ashley’s bill, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>;</li>
- <li>revived bill recognizes Louisiana and Arkansas, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>;</li>
- <li>new bill a substitute for Wade-Davis bill, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>;</li>
- <li>Kelley’s speech on, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>;</li>
- <li>Eliot’s speech on, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>;</li>
- <li>consideration of bill postponed, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Dawes resumes debate on, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>;</li>
- <li>power conferred on President by bill, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks of Fernando Wood on, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>;</li>
- <li>speech of Mr. LeBlond on, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks of Representative Blow, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>;</li>
- <li>speech of J. K. Edgerton, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>;</li>
- <li>Edgerton’s summary of bill, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>;</li>
- <li>substitute for Ashley’s bill, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>;</li>
- <li>further remarks of Ashley on, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>;</li>
- <li>Ashley explains compromise, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>;</li>
- <li>Henry Winter Davis speaks on, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Davis’s last words in Congress on, <a href='#Page_310'>310</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Wilson’s bill, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>;</li>
- <li>revival of Ashley’s bill on, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>;</li>
- <li>defects of Presidential plan of, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>;</li>
- <li>Howard’s speech on, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>;</li>
- <li>Reverdy Johnson’s remarks on, <a href='#Page_370'>370</a>;</li>
- <li>Sumner proposes conditions of, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks of Senator Clark, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks of Senator Pomeroy, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a>, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a>;</li>
- <li>Presidential plan of, ignored by Congress, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s conditions for effecting, <a href='#Page_395'>395</a>, <a href='#Page_397'>397</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to General Hurlbut on, <a href='#Page_401'>401</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to General Canby, <a href='#Page_402'>402</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s last words on, <a href='#Page_403'>403</a>;</li>
- <li>culmination of Presidential plan of, <a href='#Page_407'>407</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_524'>524</span>President Johnson’s policy of, endorsed by Democratic convention, <a href='#Page_420'>420</a>;</li>
- <li>views of Louisiana Republicans on, <a href='#Page_422'>422</a>;</li>
- <li>Andrew Johnson’s views of, in 1864, <a href='#Page_438'>438</a>;</li>
- <li>Johnson under no obligation to accept Lincoln’s plan of, <a href='#Page_447'>447</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Johnson’s policy of, <a href='#Page_449'>449</a>;</li>
- <li>steps to, in Mississippi, <a href='#Page_458'>458</a>;</li>
- <li>obstacles to, in Texas, <a href='#Page_467'>467</a>;</li>
- <li>conventions called under Presidential plan, <a href='#Page_468'>468</a>;</li>
- <li>course of Confederate governors relative to, <a href='#Page_469'>469</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s intention to employ Confederate legislatures in work of, <a href='#Page_470'>470</a>;</li>
- <li>expected results of, <a href='#Page_473'>473</a>;</li>
- <li>prediction of Henry Winter Davis relative to, <a href='#Page_473'>473</a>;</li>
- <li>enemies of Union entrusted with, <a href='#Page_486'>486</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln opposed a loose system of, <a href='#Page_486'>486</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s and Johnson’s theories identical, <a href='#Page_487'>487</a>;</li>
- <li>organizations effected under Lincoln different from “Johnson governments,” 487;</li>
- <li>Johnson’s original policy of, <a href='#Page_488'>488</a>;</li>
- <li>acts of Congress suspend governments established under Presidential plan, <a href='#Page_489'>489</a>;</li>
- <li>Joint Committee on, <a href='#Page_490'>490</a>;</li>
- <li>Presidential plan examined, <a href='#Page_491'>491</a>;</li>
- <li>the suffrage in the Presidential system of, <a href='#Page_494'>494</a>;</li>
- <li>precedent conditions for returning States, <a href='#Page_494'>494</a>;</li>
- <li>Senator Henderson’s letter on Lincoln’s plan, <a href='#Page_495'>495</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Rector, Governor, call for troops, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>threat of seceding from Confederacy, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>;</li>
- <li>flight of, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Red River, General Taylor retires to, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Republican electoral ticket, none offered for suffrage of Tennesseeans in 1860, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Republican form of government, Sumner’s resolutions relative to, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>position that war was fought to fulfil guaranty of, untenable, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;</li>
- <li>Henry Winter Davis on, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>;</li>
- <li>duty of Congress to guarantee, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Davis on modes of establishing, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>;</li>
- <li>Fernando Wood on, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>Pendleton on, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;</li>
- <li>Carlile on, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>;</li>
- <li>cannot originate in military orders, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a>;</li>
- <li>military government not republican under the Constitution, <a href='#Page_368'>368</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Republican party, radical members of, unite with Free State leaders, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Sumner’s resolutions disavowed by leaders of, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>relations of Stevens to, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;</li>
- <li>change in attitude of, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>revolutionary policy of, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;</li>
- <li>beginning of division in, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>some radical members of, opposed controversy with President, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>;</li>
- <li>schism in, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>;</li>
- <li>change in sentiments of, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a>;</li>
- <li>Hendricks on factiousness of, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a>;</li>
- <li>mass-meeting in New Orleans held by radical members of, <a href='#Page_422'>422</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Representation, basis of, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Representatives, House of, committee on compensated emancipation appointed by, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>reconstruction views of, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction bill passed by, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>;</li>
- <li>Ashley’s reconstruction bill tabled by, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>;</li>
- <li>resolution of Mr. Wilson introduced into, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;</li>
- <li>measure excluding electoral votes of certain States passed by, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;</li>
- <li>constitutional amendment abolishing slavery passed by, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Revenue, surplus of 1837, distribution of, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Revolution, American, legal forms not ignored in effecting, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Revolution, English, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Reynolds, General, report on government of Arkansas, <a href='#Page_412'>412</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Rhode Island cases, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Richmond, Arkansas messenger sent to, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>secession convention meets in, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>;</li>
- <li>work of convention denounced, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>;</li>
- <li>fall of, <a href='#Page_426'>426</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Richmond government, offers concessions to western Virginia, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>resistance to, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Riddell, John Leonard, certificate from, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Riley, General Bennett, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_525'>525</span>Ritchie, A. F., letter to Attorney-General Bates, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Rogers, A. A. C., Congressman-elect, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>proposed compensation of, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Rosecrans, General W. S., inactivity of, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>suggestion to Lincoln, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;</li>
- <li>removed from command, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Ryers, William, election of, <a href='#Page_412'>412</a></li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>S</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Saulsbury, Willard, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>on admission of Mr. Segar, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>;</li>
- <li>admission of West Virginia Senators opposed by, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>;</li>
- <li>Administration criticised by, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Schenck, General, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Schofield, General, Governor Holden assisted by, <a href='#Page_453'>453</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Schurz, General Carl, Governor Sharkey criticised by, <a href='#Page_462'>462</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Scofield, Glenni W., address of, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Sebastian, William K., resignation from United States Senate, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>return to loyalty, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Secession, in Tennessee, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Tennessee abrogates act of, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;</li>
- <li>spirit of, in Louisiana, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>;</li>
- <li>ordinance of, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>;</li>
- <li>in Arkansas, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>Germans and Irish of Arkansas indifferent to, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</li>
- <li>in Virginia, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>;</li>
- <li>western Virginia refuses to acquiesce in, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>;</li>
- <li>war powers unlocked by, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>;</li>
- <li>attitude of Democratic party toward, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>;</li>
- <li>Henry Winter Davis on, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>;</li>
- <li>Pendleton on acts of, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>;</li>
- <li>Henderson on potency of, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>;</li>
- <li>Sumner denies that States were taken out of Union by, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Secessionists, in Arkansas, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Segar, Joseph E., on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>remarks of, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>Committee of Elections reports concerning, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>denied admission to Congress, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>;</li>
- <li>election to United States Senate, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Senate, The United States, reconstruction bill in, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>exclusion of States from Electoral College, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a>;</li>
- <li>Trumbull’s resolution abandoned by, <a href='#Page_383'>383</a>;</li>
- <li>amendment abolishing slavery passed by, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Seward, William H., on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>General McClellan instructed by, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln broaches emancipation to, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;</li>
- <li>postponement of emancipation recommended by, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_395'>395</a>;</li>
- <li>injuries prevented attendance at inauguration of Mr. Johnson, <a href='#Page_408'>408</a>;</li>
- <li>message to Governor Marvin, <a href='#Page_488'>488</a>;</li>
- <li>President Johnson influenced by, <a href='#Page_489'>489</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Sharkey, William L., appointment of, <a href='#Page_459'>459</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>address of, <a href='#Page_460'>460</a>;</li>
- <li>Johnson’s telegram to, <a href='#Page_461'>461</a>;</li>
- <li>conduct of, criticised by Carl Schurz, <a href='#Page_462'>462</a>;</li>
- <li>negro testimony to be considered by, <a href='#Page_464'>464</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Shelbyville, Tenn., Andrew Johnson’s address at, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Shenandoah Valley, discontent of, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>proposed annexation to West Virginia, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Shepley, General George F., appointment of, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>system of courts established by, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s letter to, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>;</li>
- <li>requested to hold an election, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;</li>
- <li>proclamation for an election issued by, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;</li>
- <li>plan of Louisiana Free State Committee approved by, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>;</li>
- <li>Attorney-General for Louisiana appointed by, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>;</li>
- <li>orders an enrollment of loyal citizens, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>;</li>
- <li>election prohibited by, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>;</li>
- <li>conference of Free State Committee with, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>disagreement with General Banks, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>General Banks approves registration of, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>;</li>
- <li>Norfolk proclamation of, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Sheridan, General Philip H., at Mission Ridge and Lookout Mountain, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>a Confederate army destroyed by, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Sherman, John, on election of Mr. Segar, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>on electoral vote of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_526'>526</span>Sherman, General Thomas W., instructions of War Department to, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Sherman, General William Tecumseh, projected march of, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>safety of, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Shreveport, movement toward, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ceases to be capital of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_419'>419</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Slavery, abolition of, in British colonies, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>to be ignored in reconstruction, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</li>
- <li>Nashville convention urges abolition of, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;</li>
- <li>amended Tennessee constitution abolishes, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;</li>
- <li>constitution of Arkansas abolishes, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</li>
- <li>introduction into Virginia, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Wheeling convention, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s views of, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>;</li>
- <li>Congress claims no right to interfere with, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;</li>
- <li>advance of Northern opinion on, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;</li>
- <li>abolished in District of Columbia, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;</li>
- <li>not possible for negroes freed by war, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction rendered more difficult by abolition of, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li>ceases to exist when State ceases to exist, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li>duty of Congress to put an end to, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li>recognition of, by a Federal officer analogous to treason, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li>government should protect persons in a state of, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>;</li>
- <li>Chicago platform on, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>;</li>
- <li>Emancipation Proclamation not necessary to abolish in seceding States, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>;</li>
- <li>destruction of, not an end of the war, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>;</li>
- <li>the one subject of estrangement in the Union, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>;</li>
- <li>theory of the Fathers concerning, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>;</li>
- <li>anti-slavery amendment recommended to consideration of Congress, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>;</li>
- <li>Congress passes joint resolution relative to, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>;</li>
- <li>restoration useless with, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a>;</li>
- <li>sentiments of Massachusetts and South Carolina on, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>;</li>
- <li>not affected by emancipation proclamation in certain States, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a>;</li>
- <li>Congress passes anti-slavery amendment, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a>;</li>
- <li>amendment ratified by 20 States, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a>;</li>
- <li>Arkansas abolishes, <a href='#Page_410'>410</a>;</li>
- <li>Virginia abolishes, 425;</li>
- <li>abolition an injury to slave owners, <a href='#Page_433'>433</a>;</li>
- <li>North Carolina abolishes, <a href='#Page_454'>454</a>;</li>
- <li>Mississippi abolishes, <a href='#Page_460'>460</a>;</li>
- <li>Georgia abolishes, <a href='#Page_466'>466</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Slaves, bred in Virginia, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>number in Virginia, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;</li>
- <li>in western Virginia, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>;</li>
- <li>policy of commanders relative to fugitive, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>;</li>
- <li>declared contraband of war, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;</li>
- <li>compensated emancipation of, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>colonization of, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>abandoned by masters, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>;</li>
- <li>to organize labor of abandoned, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>;</li>
- <li>General Hunter proclaims freedom of, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln asserts right to emancipate, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;</li>
- <li>employment of, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>;</li>
- <li>confiscation of property in, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>;</li>
- <li>proposed emancipation of, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>;</li>
- <li>Stevens on employment of, against United States, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>;</li>
- <li>abandoned lands to be colonized by, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Slidell, John, resignation from United States Senate, <a href='#Page_423'>423</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Slocum, General, organization of Mississippi retarded by, <a href='#Page_462'>462</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>orders of, revoked by President, <a href='#Page_463'>463</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Smith, Caleb B., resignation of, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Smith, Charles, Senator-elect from Louisiana, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Smith, General E. Kirby, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Smith, Governor William, nullity of acts of, <a href='#Page_445'>445</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Snow, William D., election of, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Society, civil not necessarily identical with political, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>political liable to reduction, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a>;</li>
- <li>political may be reduced by loss of citizenship, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>South Carolina, martial law proclaimed over, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Stevens on secession ordinance of, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>;</li>
- <li>Boutwell would exclude from restored Union, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>;</li>
- <li>insurrection in, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;</li>
- <li>sentiments on slavery, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>;</li>
- <li>damage sustained by, <a href='#Page_435'>435</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Johnson receives citizens of, <a href='#Page_443'>443</a>;</li>
- <li>revolutionary character of convention, <a href='#Page_469'>469</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Southern States, reorganization of, premature, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>black code of, 293;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_527'>527</span>an asylum for broken-down politicians, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>;</li>
- <li>proposed taxation of, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>;</li>
- <li>power of Congress over, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a>;</li>
- <li>not convertible into Territories, <a href='#Page_364'>364</a>.</li>
- <li>See Confederate States</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Speed, Attorney-General, reply to Albemarle County voters, <a href='#Page_430'>430</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Sprague, William, remarks on Louisiana election, <a href='#Page_381'>381</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Stanton, Edwin M., aids western Virginians, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>;</li>
- <li>disbanding of army by, <a href='#Page_409'>409</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>State, indestructibility of, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>suicide of a, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;</li>
- <li>effect of termination of, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li>slavery terminated by termination of, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li>Federal restraints upon action of a, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>;</li>
- <li>difficulty of defining, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>basis of suicide theory, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>;</li>
- <li>levying war changes status of, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>;</li>
- <li>the people of, constitute the, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>;</li>
- <li>constitutions must be formed by people of, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>;</li>
- <li>only successful revolution can unmake, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>;</li>
- <li>attitude of Democratic party on suicide of, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>St. Bernard, parish of, voting in, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Steele, General Frederick, Lincoln’s letters to, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Stephens, A. H., peace commissioner, <a href='#Page_395'>395</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Lincoln’s advice to, <a href='#Page_399'>399</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Stevens, Thaddeus, on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>reconstruction theory of, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>characteristics of, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>consistency of, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on slaves employed in hostility to Government, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>;</li>
- <li>taxation of seceding States proposed by, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>;</li>
- <li>secession discussed by, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>;</li>
- <li>relations to his party defined by, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;</li>
- <li>conquered province theory of, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on minority government, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>;</li>
- <li>resolution relative to President’s message, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>;</li>
- <li>on constitutional amendments, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>distributing President’s message, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Eliot interrupted by, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks of, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a>;</li>
- <li>credentials of Warmoth offered by, <a href='#Page_422'>422</a>;</li>
- <li>sneer at Pierpont’s government, <a href='#Page_427'>427</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Stokes, William B., election of, <a href='#Page_415'>415</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Strouse, Myer, reconstruction speech of, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Suffrage, Representative Kelley on, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>provisions of Ashley’s bill on, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>;</li>
- <li>a restricted electorate favored by Government, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a>;</li>
- <li>basis of, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a>;</li>
- <li>qualifications for, in Massachusetts, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a>;</li>
- <li>proposal to confer on negroes, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>;</li>
- <li>Reverdy Johnson on, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a>;</li>
- <li>negroes petition for, <a href='#Page_413'>413</a>;</li>
- <li>Brownlow opposes conferring on negroes, <a href='#Page_416'>416</a>;</li>
- <li>National Conservative party on, <a href='#Page_421'>421</a>;</li>
- <li>provision of Virginia constitution on, <a href='#Page_425'>425</a>;</li>
- <li>North did not intend to force on South, <a href='#Page_486'>486</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Sumner, Charles, on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>letter on policy of Lincoln, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>;</li>
- <li>faith of, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;</li>
- <li>resolutions of, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>;</li>
- <li>sensation produced by restoration scheme of, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>;</li>
- <li>letters to Francis Lieber, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>;</li>
- <li>public character of, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>letters to John Bright, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>;</li>
- <li>article in Atlantic Monthly, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Blair replies to, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>;</li>
- <li>preamble to resolutions of, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>proposal relative to emancipation proclamation, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>;</li>
- <li>estimate of Lincoln, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>;</li>
- <li>substitute offered by, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>;</li>
- <li>amendment offered by, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a>;</li>
- <li>Reverdy Johnson’s argument with, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a>;</li>
- <li>inconsistency of, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>;</li>
- <li>conditions of reunion proposed by, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on Trumbull’s resolution, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a>, <a href='#Page_382'>382</a>;</li>
- <li>Howard and Chandler support position of, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on Louisiana election, <a href='#Page_382'>382</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Sumter, influence of fall, on Arkansas, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a></li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_528'>528</span>Supreme Court, The United States, opinion in Cross <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">vs.</span></i> Harrison, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>decision relative to rebellious States, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>T</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Taliaferro, Robert W., seat in Congress claimed by, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Taney, Roger B., Chief Justice, quoted by Mr. Davis, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Tarr, Campbell, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Taylor, Nathaniel, attitude of loyal Tennesseeans defined by, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>election of, <a href='#Page_415'>415</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Taylor, General Richard, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Ten Eyck, John C., reconstruction bill opposed by, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>amendment offered by, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks in support of amendment, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>;</li>
- <li>defeat of amendment offered by, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Tennessee, Presidential reconstruction in, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>no Republican electoral ticket in, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;</li>
- <li>league with Confederacy authorized by, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>;</li>
- <li>turns military force over to the Confederacy, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>;</li>
- <li>secession of, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>;</li>
- <li>activity of loyalists in, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>;</li>
- <li>proposed dismemberment of, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>;</li>
- <li>Confederates losing hold of, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;</li>
- <li>derangement of government in, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;</li>
- <li>Legislature assembles at Memphis, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>;</li>
- <li>Andrew Johnson appointed military governor of, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>;</li>
- <li>condition in the Union, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>;</li>
- <li>judges imprisoned, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>;</li>
- <li>reprisals on secessionists, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>;</li>
- <li>lawlessness of, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>;</li>
- <li>citizens in Union army, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>;</li>
- <li>included in department of General Halleck, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>;</li>
- <li>ready for restoration, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;</li>
- <li>free from armed insurrectionists, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>;</li>
- <li>emancipation in, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>;</li>
- <li>excluded from effects of emancipation proclamation, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a>;</li>
- <li>enrolling agent sent to, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</li>
- <li>county elections in, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</li>
- <li>returns, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction in, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;</li>
- <li>Presidential election in, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;</li>
- <li>amended constitution of, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;</li>
- <li>abrogates act of secession, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;</li>
- <li>bonds of disloyal government, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;</li>
- <li>constitution ratified by, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>;</li>
- <li>slaves emancipated in, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>;</li>
- <li>meeting of loyal Legislature, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>;</li>
- <li>McClellan electors, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>;</li>
- <li>electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln maintains legality of government in, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;</li>
- <li>Mr. Davis on Unionists of, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>;</li>
- <li>insurrection in, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;</li>
- <li>electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>;</li>
- <li>exclusion of electoral votes, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>;</li>
- <li>Cowan’s inquiry concerning vote of, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>;</li>
- <li>Thirteenth Amendment ratified by, <a href='#Page_412'>412</a>;</li>
- <li>United States Senators chosen by, <a href='#Page_413'>413</a>;</li>
- <li>disfranchising act of, <a href='#Page_413'>413</a>;</li>
- <li>irregularities in election, <a href='#Page_414'>414</a>;</li>
- <li>negroes and Indians made witnesses, <a href='#Page_415'>415</a>;</li>
- <li>harshness to traitors favored by, <a href='#Page_414'>414</a>;</li>
- <li>franchise demanded by freedmen of, <a href='#Page_415'>415</a>;</li>
- <li>ravages of war in, <a href='#Page_417'>417</a>;</li>
- <li>insurrection ended in, <a href='#Page_444'>444</a>;</li>
- <li>Joint Committee recommend admission of, <a href='#Page_490'>490</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Tennessee, Bank of, notes of, irredeemable, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Tennessee, East, slavery in, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>loyalty of, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>;</li>
- <li>services in Revolution, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;</li>
- <li>resources of, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;</li>
- <li>anti-slavery journals in, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>;</li>
- <li>abolition movement in, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>;</li>
- <li>a thoroughfare to the south-west, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>;</li>
- <li>Yancey agitates in, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;</li>
- <li>treatment of loyalists in, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>;</li>
- <li>importance of, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;</li>
- <li>convention of, revived, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Tennessee, West, politics influenced by industries of, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>martial law in, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Texas, expedition into, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>insurrection in, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;</li>
- <li>damages sustained by, <a href='#Page_437'>437</a>;</li>
- <li>blockade of, <a href='#Page_444'>444</a>;</li>
- <li>appointment of Provisional Governor for, <a href='#Page_467'>467</a>;</li>
- <li>obstacles to restoration in, <a href='#Page_467'>467</a>;</li>
- <li>negro population of, <a href='#Page_467'>467</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction incomplete, <a href='#Page_467'>467</a>;</li>
- <li>not represented at opening of Thirty-ninth Congress, <a href='#Page_490'>490</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Thayer, General, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Thayer, M. Russell, reconstruction address of, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Thomas, Dorsey B., counted out, <a href='#Page_415'>415</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Thomas, General George, at Mission Ridge and Lookout Mountain, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>a Confederate army crippled by, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Thompson, Jacob, Mr. Black’s visit to, <a href='#Page_390'>390</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Thompson, General Jefferson, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a></li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_529'>529</span>Treat, Hon. Samuel, excerpt from letter of, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Tribune, The New York, emancipation favored by, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>protest of Wade and Davis printed in, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Trumbull, Lyman, on admission of Mr. Segar, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>remarks on Crittenden resolution, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction bill opposed by, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>speech on Ten Eyck’s amendment, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a>;</li>
- <li>on electoral vote of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a>, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a>;</li>
- <li>resolution offered by, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>;</li>
- <li>Sumner’s offer to amend resolution of, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a>;</li>
- <li>Howard’s speech on resolution of, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>;</li>
- <li>Wade moves postponement of resolution, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a>;</li>
- <li>Powell’s speech on resolution of, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a>;</li>
- <li>consistency of, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a>;</li>
- <li>resolution recognizing Louisiana abandoned, <a href='#Page_383'>383</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Tyng, Rev. Doctor, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a></li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>U</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Underwood, John C., Senator-elect from Virginia, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Union, dismemberment of, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>admission of new States into, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Union army, Arkansas troops in, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>troops of restored Virginia in, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Union associations, demand an election in Louisiana, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>delegates appointed by, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Unionists, importance of Southern, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Louisiana, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln’s advice to, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>;</li>
- <li>numbers in Arkansas, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>;</li>
- <li>loyalty in Arkansas, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</li>
- <li>conflicting views of, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</li>
- <li>difficulty of enlisting in Virginia, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>;</li>
- <li>oath of allegiance taken by, in North Carolina, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;</li>
- <li>Henry Winter Davis on Southern, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Union party, vote of, in West Virginia, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>United States, The, policy toward conquered provinces, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Tennessee promised republican form of government by, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>;</li>
- <li>oath of allegiance required of Louisiana voters, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;</li>
- <li>policy toward loyal minorities, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_349'>349</a>;</li>
- <li>policy toward South after rebellion, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>number of States not diminished by secession, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>republican governments obligatory on members of, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>;</li>
- <li>duty of each to be represented in Congress, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>;</li>
- <li>union of, perpetual, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>;</li>
- <li>Chase’s dictum concerning nature of, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>;</li>
- <li>Government not to interfere in affairs of States, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>authorized to impose conditions on returning States, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a>;</li>
- <li>demand for revenue felt by, <a href='#Page_409'>409</a>;</li>
- <li>disloyal governments not recognized by, <a href='#Page_409'>409</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Universal Emancipation, The Genius of, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Upshur County, emancipation favored by citizens of, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a></li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>V</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Van Winkle, P. G., election of, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Vicksburg, surrender of, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Virginia, rebel government abrogated in, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>loyalists without civil government, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>;</li>
- <li>secession of, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>;</li>
- <li>opposition to secession in, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;</li>
- <li>physical features of, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;</li>
- <li>slavery introduced into, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;</li>
- <li>slaves in, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;</li>
- <li>historical part of, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;</li>
- <li>birthplace of many illustrious Americans, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;</li>
- <li>settlement of trans-Alleghany region, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>;</li>
- <li>population of western, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>;</li>
- <li>sympathy of people in western, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>;</li>
- <li>representation in Legislature, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li>taxation in, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li>power in hands of slaveholders, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li>dismemberment of, discussed, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li>danger of insurrection in, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li>change of representation in, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li>expenditure of revenue, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li>concessions to western, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>;</li>
- <li>western refuses to acquiesce in secession, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>;</li>
- <li>the disloyal in, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>;</li>
- <li>State officials favor secession, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>;</li>
- <li>Federal Government aids western, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>;</li>
- <li>ravages of war in western, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>;</li>
- <li>movement for dismemberment, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>;</li>
- <li>secession denounced by Clarksburgh meeting, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_530'>530</span>State government reconstituted, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>;</li>
- <li>Legislature of restored government, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>;</li>
- <li>election of United States Senators, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>;</li>
- <li>State of Kanawha to be erected in, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>;</li>
- <li>dismemberment ratified, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</li>
- <li>convention of, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</li>
- <li>Legislature meets, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;</li>
- <li>Legislature consents to formation of new State, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>Assembly consents to transfer of Berkeley County, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li>act annexing counties to West Virginia, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>;</li>
- <li>transfer of Berkeley and Jefferson counties, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>;</li>
- <li>opposition to transfer, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>;</li>
- <li>removal of capital, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>Legislature passes convention bill, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>;</li>
- <li>who were voters in, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>;</li>
- <li>amended constitution of, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>;</li>
- <li>civil in conflict with military authorities, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>;</li>
- <li>Legislature meets, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>;</li>
- <li>attitude of Congress and army toward, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>;</li>
- <li>feebleness of restored government, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>;</li>
- <li>admission of Senators from, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>disloyal government discusses emancipation, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>;</li>
- <li>United States should protect loyalists of, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;</li>
- <li>electoral vote from restored government, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;</li>
- <li>slavery in parts of, excepted from emancipation proclamation, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a>;</li>
- <li>division permanent, <a href='#Page_399'>399</a>;</li>
- <li>constitution of 1864, <a href='#Page_425'>425</a>;</li>
- <li>suffrage in, <a href='#Page_425'>425</a>;</li>
- <li>slavery abolished in, <a href='#Page_425'>425</a>;</li>
- <li>prohibitions on Legislature, <a href='#Page_425'>425</a>;</li>
- <li>President Johnson recognizes government of Pierpont, <a href='#Page_427'>427</a>, <a href='#Page_445'>445</a>;</li>
- <li>ravages of war in, <a href='#Page_427'>427</a>;</li>
- <li>steps to restoration of, <a href='#Page_428'>428</a>;</li>
- <li>election in, <a href='#Page_431'>431</a>;</li>
- <li>acts of secession authorities void, <a href='#Page_445'>445</a>;</li>
- <li>acts of Congress to be enforced in, <a href='#Page_446'>446</a>;</li>
- <li>Alexandria ceases to be capital of, <a href='#Page_446'>446</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>W</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Wade, Benjamin F., bill for admission of West Virginia reported by, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>remarks on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>;</li>
- <li>reconstruction bill reported by, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>;</li>
- <li>address of, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>;</li>
- <li>protest of, with Henry Winter Davis, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>;</li>
- <li>character of, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>;</li>
- <li>on electoral vote of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a>;</li>
- <li>remonstrance offered by, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>;</li>
- <li>postponement of Trumbull’s resolution moved by, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a>;</li>
- <li>motion to postpone, defeated, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a>;</li>
- <li>Louisiana election criticised by, <a href='#Page_381'>381</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Wade-Davis bill, House of Representatives passes, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Senate passes, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>President’s action on, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>President’s proclamation concerning, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>;</li>
- <li>revival of, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>;</li>
- <li>no provision for negro suffrage in, <a href='#Page_494'>494</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>War, expenses of, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>condition of cessation of, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>, <a href='#Page_397'>397</a>;</li>
- <li>obligations between States abrogated by, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;</li>
- <li>Crittenden resolution on objects of, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;</li>
- <li>objects of, <a href='#Page_364'>364</a>;</li>
- <li>vindictiveness engendered by, <a href='#Page_393'>393</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Ward, Artemus, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>War Department, application of part of contingent fund of, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Warmoth, Henry C., election of, <a href='#Page_422'>422</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>elements of political strength possessed by, <a href='#Page_423'>423</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Washburne, Elihu B., remarks of, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Webster, Daniel, prediction of, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Welles, Gideon, on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Lincoln broaches emancipation to, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;</li>
- <li>quotation from diary of, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;</li>
- <li>narrative of, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Wells, J. Madison, proclamation of, <a href='#Page_418'>418</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>General Banks not in harmony with, <a href='#Page_418'>418</a>;</li>
- <li>address of, <a href='#Page_419'>419</a>;</li>
- <li>qualifications of voters defined by, <a href='#Page_420'>420</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Wells, T. M., seat in Congress claimed by, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Wellsburgh, meeting at, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>appointment of commissioners by, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>;</li>
- <li>arms and ammunition stored at, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>West Virginia, Congress admits Senators from, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>prosecution of war favored by, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>;</li>
- <li>stay law passed by, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>;</li>
- <li>of revolutionary origin, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>;</li>
- <li>convention for, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</li>
- <li>slavery in, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_531'>531</span>vote on constitution, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;</li>
- <li>vote on emancipation, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>Senate bill for admission of, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>allotment of Representatives to, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>Sumner on admission of, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>proposal to prohibit slavery in, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>;</li>
- <li>Senate on admission of, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>Senate passes bill to admit, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>;</li>
- <li>House bill for admission of, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>;</li>
- <li>House on admission of, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>;</li>
- <li>House passes bill for admission, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln approves bill for admission of, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li>constitutional amendment, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li>convention approves constitution, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li>constitution ratified by voters, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li>becomes a State, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li>Berkeley County transferred to, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li>proposal to annex counties to, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>;</li>
- <li>election in, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>inauguration of, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>United States Senators chosen by, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>opposition to admission of Senators from, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>Democrats alienated by President’s recognition of, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>;</li>
- <li>Stevens finds no warrant in constitution for admission of, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;</li>
- <li>strong enough to maintain a loyal government, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Wheeling, delegate convention at, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>resolutions adopted by convention of, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>;</li>
- <li>adjournment of convention, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>;</li>
- <li>convention reassembles at, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Whiskey Insurrection, effects on status of Pennsylvania, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>White, R. T. J., <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Whittaker, John S., <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Wickliffe, Charles A., Lincoln interviewed by, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Willey, Waitman T., election of, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>admitted to seat, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>;</li>
- <li>on admission of West Virginia, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on credentials of Mr. Segar, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Williams, General, treatment of fugitive slaves by, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Williams, Thomas, reconstruction address of, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Wilson, Henry, on recognition of restored Virginia, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Wilson, James F., previous question on Ashley’s bill demanded by, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>reconstruction bill introduced by, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>;</li>
- <li>joint resolution introduced by, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c021'>Wisconsin, electoral vote of, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Wood, Fernando, reconstruction bill opposed by, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>remarks on Ashley’s bill, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>;</li>
- <li>remarks on Wilson’s bill, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002 center'><em>Y</em></li>
- <li class='c021'>Yancey, William L., <a href='#Page_7'>7</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Yeaman, George H., reconstruction address of, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<hr class='c022' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r1'>1</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Political History of the United States, p. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r2'>2</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 389–399; “Parson” Brownlow’s Book,
-pp. 54, 159, 160; Lalor’s Cyclopedia of Political Science, Political Economy
-and United States History, Vol. III. p. 698.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r3'>3</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 112. The
-edition of Nicolay and Hay is used throughout.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r4'>4</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Loyal Mountaineers of Tennessee, p. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r5'>5</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>More correctly, 301,056. Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r6'>6</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Loyal Mountaineers of Tennessee, p. 32.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r7'>7</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r8'>8</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Thirty years before President Lincoln published his Emancipation
-Proclamation Great Britain abolished slavery throughout her colonies.
-Naturally this action was viewed in no friendly spirit by the slave interest
-in America, for it brought the free negro to the very door of the
-Southern States, and though it was regarded as a menace to the “peculiar
-institution,” it was not until a positive loss was sustained that any
-controversy arose with England. In October, 1841, the brig <em>Creole</em>, of
-Richmond, with a cargo of 135 slaves left Hampton Roads for New
-Orleans. The negroes, under Madison Washington, killed one of the
-owners, took possession of the vessel and steered her into the port of
-Nassau. There those slaves not expressly charged with murder were set
-at liberty, and though the administration demanded their surrender
-they were not given up. The experience of the <em>Creole</em> was not singular,
-several cases of a similar nature being recorded. These facts showed
-the danger of navigating the Bahama channel after 1833, and at least
-one reason for preferring the overland route down the Tennessee valley
-was an expectation of avoiding such accidents.—(See Wilson’s Rise and
-Fall of the Slave Power, Vol. I. pp. 443–444; Lalor’s Cyclopedia of Political
-Science, etc., Vol. I. pp. 709–710.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r9'>9</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Brownlow’s Book, p. 52.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r10'>10</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Loyal Mountaineers of Tennessee, pp. 80–81.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r11'>11</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Brownlow’s Book, p. 67.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r12'>12</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Art. I. sec. 10, Constitution of the United States.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r13'>13</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r14'>14</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Misc. Doc. No. 55, H. of R., 1 Sess. 39th Cong., p. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r15'>15</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Why The Solid South? p. 170.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r16'>16</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Cutt’s Conquest of California and New Mexico, p. 246.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r17'>17</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Statesman’s Manual, Vol. IV. p. 1742.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r18'>18</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r19'>19</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Lost Cause, p. 209.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r20'>20</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1862, p. 763.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r21'>21</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Life and Speeches of Andrew Johnson, pp. 451–456. Boston: Little,
-Brown &amp; Co. 1866.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r22'>22</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Life, Speeches, and Services of Andrew Johnson, pp. 101–104. Philadelphia:
-T. B. Peterson &amp; Brothers.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r23'>23</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Memorial Addresses on the Life and Character of Andrew Johnson,
-pp. 76–80; Memoir by Frank Moore, pp. xxvi-xxvii in Life and Speeches
-of Andrew Johnson. Boston: Little, Brown &amp; Co.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r24'>24</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Life of Andrew Johnson, pp. 98–101; Philadelphia: T. B. Peterson
-&amp; Brothers.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r25'>25</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 828.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r26'>26</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 318.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r27'>27</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Abraham Lincoln, A History by Nicolay &amp; Hay, Vol. VIII. p. 440.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r28'>28</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 405.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r29'>29</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>History of Abraham Lincoln, by Isaac N. Arnold, p. 303.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r30'>30</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 408.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r31'>31</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 419.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r32'>32</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 443.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r33'>33</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Art. I. sec. 5, Constitution of the U. S.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r34'>34</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 443–444.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r35'>35</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 486.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r36'>36</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 487.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f37'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r37'>37</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 504–505.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f38'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r38'>38</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Misc. Doc. No. 55, p. 5, H. of R., 1 Sess. 39th Cong.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f39'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r39'>39</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Misc. Doc. No. 55, p. 9, H. of R., 1 Sess. 39th Cong.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f40'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r40'>40</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Life of Andrew Johnson, pp. 159–160.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f41'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r41'>41</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Life of Andrew Johnson, pp. 160–161. New York: D. Appleton &amp;
-Co., 1866.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f42'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r42'>42</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McClure’s Lincoln and Men of War Times, pp. 106–108; Blaine’s
-Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. II. p. 7; Hamlin’s Life and Times of
-Hannibal Hamlin, pp. 449–489 and 591–615.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f43'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r43'>43</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 438–439.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f44'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r44'>44</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 425.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f45'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r45'>45</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 441.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f46'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r46'>46</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>For a discussion of this subject see Chapter IX.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f47'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r47'>47</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 427.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f48'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r48'>48</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 4n.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f49'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r49'>49</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 25; Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 428.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f50'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r50'>50</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 432.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f51'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r51'>51</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f52'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r52'>52</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Taylor’s Destruction and Reconstruction, pp. 102–103.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f53'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r53'>53</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f54'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r54'>54</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 589.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f55'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r55'>55</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II., pp. 214–215; Ann. Cycl.,
-1862, p. 650.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f56'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r56'>56</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II., p. 216.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f57'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r57'>57</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 217–218.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f58'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r58'>58</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 586.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f59'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r59'>59</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 586.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f60'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r60'>60</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f61'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r61'>61</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 586.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f62'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r62'>62</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 587; Ibid., pp. 770–776. Scott’s Reconstruction
-During the Civil War, pp. 325–326, 328–331, 376.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f63'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r63'>63</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 247.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f64'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r64'>64</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f65'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r65'>65</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 255.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f66'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r66'>66</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 835.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f67'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r67'>67</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 831–837, 1030–1036.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f68'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r68'>68</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 228–229.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f69'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r69'>69</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Blaine’s Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. II. p. 39; Nicolay and Hay’s
-Lincoln, Vol. VIII. p. 419.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f70'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r70'>70</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 589.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f71'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r71'>71</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>N. &amp; H., Vol. VIII. p. 420.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f72'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r72'>72</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 590; Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II.
-p. 536.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f73'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r73'>73</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 356.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f74'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r74'>74</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 214–215.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f75'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r75'>75</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 356.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f76'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r76'>76</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Taylor’s Destruction and Reconstruction, ch. x; also the general history
-of military operations in the Red River country.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f77'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r77'>77</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Bulloch’s Secret Service of the Confederate States in Europe, Vol. II.
-chs. i and ii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f78'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r78'>78</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>N. &amp; H., Vol. VIII. pp. 285–286; Conduct of the War, Vol. II. pp.
-1–401 (<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">passim</span></i>).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f79'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r79'>79</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 380.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f80'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r80'>80</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 436.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f81'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r81'>81</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 591.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f82'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r82'>82</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f83'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r83'>83</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, pp. 591–592.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f84'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r84'>84</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 5–6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f85'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r85'>85</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 411–415, 543–547.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f86'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r86'>86</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See pp. <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>–28 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f87'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r87'>87</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, pp. 592–593.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f88'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r88'>88</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 543.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f89'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r89'>89</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 590.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f90'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r90'>90</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 591.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f91'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r91'>91</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 458–459.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f92'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r92'>92</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 465–466.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f93'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r93'>93</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>N. &amp; H., Vol. VIII. pp. 428–430.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f94'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r94'>94</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 469.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f95'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r95'>95</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 592.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f96'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r96'>96</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, pp. 592–593.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f97'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r97'>97</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 476.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f98'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r98'>98</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f99'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r99'>99</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 476.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f100'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r100'>100</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>N. &amp; H., Vol. VIII. pp. 432–433.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f101'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r101'>101</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, pp. 593–594.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f102'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r102'>102</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 477.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f103'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r103'>103</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 496.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f104'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r104'>104</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. II. p. 40.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f105'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r105'>105</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 498.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f106'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r106'>106</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 478.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f107'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r107'>107</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f108'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r108'>108</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1864, pp. 478–479.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f109'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r109'>109</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f110'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r110'>110</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 479.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f111'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r111'>111</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 479.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f112'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r112'>112</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f113'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r113'>113</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f114'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r114'>114</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f115'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r115'>115</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f116'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r116'>116</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f117'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r117'>117</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f118'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r118'>118</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f119'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r119'>119</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 23–24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f120'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r120'>120</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f121'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r121'>121</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f122'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r122'>122</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f123'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r123'>123</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f124'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r124'>124</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f125'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r125'>125</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f126'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r126'>126</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f127'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r127'>127</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f128'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r128'>128</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., 1862, p. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f129'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r129'>129</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1862, p. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f130'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r130'>130</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f131'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r131'>131</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f132'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r132'>132</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>N. &amp; H., Vol. VI. p. 346.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f133'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r133'>133</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f134'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r134'>134</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, p. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f135'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r135'>135</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 379.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f136'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r136'>136</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 247.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f137'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r137'>137</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 467.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f138'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r138'>138</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 472–473.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f139'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r139'>139</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 29; Hough’s American Constitutions, Vol. II. p. 81.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f140'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r140'>140</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Quoted in N. &amp; H., Vol. VIII. p. 414.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f141'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r141'>141</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Hough’s Amer. Cons., Vol. II. p. 81.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f142'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r142'>142</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f143'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r143'>143</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 475.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f144'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r144'>144</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 476.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f145'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r145'>145</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 479.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f146'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r146'>146</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 482.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f147'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r147'>147</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 483–484.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f148'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r148'>148</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1864, pp. 29–30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f149'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r149'>149</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f150'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r150'>150</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 501.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f151'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r151'>151</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 515.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f152'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r152'>152</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f153'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r153'>153</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See remarks of Senator Pomeroy, February 2, 1865, Congressional
-Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 555.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f154'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r154'>154</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f155'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r155'>155</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 7n.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f156'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r156'>156</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Eighth Census, pp. 516–522.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f157'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r157'>157</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Density maps in Tenth Census (Population), pp. xii-xiii, xiv-xv, xvi-xvii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f158'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r158'>158</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Blair in Appendix to Globe, pp. 327–331, 2 Sess. 37th Cong.; Eighth
-Census, pp. 516–522; Seventh Census, pp. 242–261.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f159'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r159'>159</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Parker, The Formation of West Virginia, p. 125.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f160'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r160'>160</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, 2 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 3038.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f161'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r161'>161</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1861, pp. 743–744.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f162'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r162'>162</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Formation of West Virginia, p. 36.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f163'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r163'>163</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Formation of West Virginia, p. 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f164'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r164'>164</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1861, pp. 742–743.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f165'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r165'>165</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Formation of West Virginia, p. 43.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f166'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r166'>166</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f167'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r167'>167</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 743; The Formation of West Virginia, p. 45, gives
-the oath in a form slightly different.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f168'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r168'>168</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 743.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f169'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r169'>169</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1862, p. 801.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f170'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r170'>170</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Mr. A. W. Campbell in The Wheeling Daily Intelligencer, April 14, 1897.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f171'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r171'>171</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, 1 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 103–109.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f172'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r172'>172</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Formation of West Virginia, pp. 47–48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f173'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r173'>173</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Formation of West Virginia, pp. 48–50; also Ann. Cycl., 1861,
-p. 745.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f174'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r174'>174</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Formation of West Virginia, p. 57.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f175'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r175'>175</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Formation of West Virginia, p. 79.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f176'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r176'>176</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 93.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f177'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r177'>177</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Formation of West Virginia, p. 96, says 16,981 for and 441 against
-the constitution. The Annual Cyclopædia for 1862, p. 801, gives the vote
-as 18,862 in favor of, and 514 against, the constitution. Poore’s Charters
-and Constitutions, Vol. II. p. 1977, is the authority for the statement in
-the text.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f178'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r178'>178</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 2 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 864; Part IV., pp. 2941–2942,
-3034–3039, 3134–3135, 3307–3320.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f179'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r179'>179</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, 2 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 2933.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f180'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r180'>180</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 3397.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f181'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r181'>181</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 37–38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f182'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r182'>182</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 38–39, 41–42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f183'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r183'>183</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 43–45.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f184'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r184'>184</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 46.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f185'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r185'>185</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 46–47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f186'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r186'>186</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f187'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r187'>187</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 50–51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f188'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r188'>188</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 35.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f189'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r189'>189</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 54–55.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f190'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r190'>190</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 59.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f191'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r191'>191</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 283.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f192'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r192'>192</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Quoted in N. &amp; H., Vol. VI. pp. 300–301.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f193'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r193'>193</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Quoted in N. &amp; H., Vol. VI. pp. 302–303.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f194'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r194'>194</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 304.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f195'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r195'>195</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Quoted in N. &amp; H., Vol. VI. pp. 304–306.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f196'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r196'>196</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See pp. <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>–106 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f197'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r197'>197</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 285–287.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f198'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r198'>198</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Formation of West Virginia, p. 152.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f199'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r199'>199</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 192–193.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f200'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r200'>200</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 326.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f201'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r201'>201</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Webster’s Works, Vol. II. pp. 607–608.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f202'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r202'>202</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>By a joint resolution, approved March 10, 1866, Congress agreed that
-both counties formed a part of West Virginia. The parent State, however,
-by an act of December 5, 1865, had already repealed both the statutes
-of January 31 and February 4, 1863, as well as section two of the act
-of May 13, 1862; and on December 11, 1866, a bill in equity was filed in
-the Supreme Court of the United States in which it was contended that
-it was not the intention of that State to consent to the annexation of
-Berkeley and Jefferson counties except upon the performance of certain
-conditions; the state of the county on election day was such as not to
-permit the opening of all the polls in Berkeley and Jefferson, nor indeed
-at any considerable part of the usual election places. The voters did not
-have adequate notice. In short, a great majority of them were then and
-now, December, 1866, opposed to annexation. Other irregularities are
-alleged in the complaint of Virginia. A decision, however, has been rendered
-by the Supreme Court of the United States in favor of the new
-Commonwealth. [See Virginia vs. West Virginia, 11 Wall., p. 39; also
-Transcripts of Records, Supreme Court U. S., Vol. 152, December Term,
-1870.]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f203'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r203'>203</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Notwithstanding the new State had been organized by a law which
-passed both Houses of Congress, and was approved by the President, Mr.
-Davis, of Kentucky, when the members-elect presented themselves before
-the Senate, opposed their admission on the ground that there was legally
-and constitutionally no such State in existence as West Virginia. On his
-motion to administer the customary oath thirty-six Senators voted in the
-affirmative, five in the negative. [Globe, 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1–3.]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f204'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r204'>204</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>A History of Presidential Elections, Stanwood, pp. 246–247. Edition
-of 1884.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f205'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r205'>205</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 809.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f206'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r206'>206</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Butler’s Book, p. 618.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f207'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r207'>207</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>N. &amp; H., Abraham Lincoln, A History, Vol. IX. pp. 439–442.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f208'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r208'>208</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 619–621.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f209'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r209'>209</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 623.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f210'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r210'>210</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Why The Solid South? p. 222.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f211'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r211'>211</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1864, p. 810.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f212'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r212'>212</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 845–849.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f213'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r213'>213</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 209.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f214'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r214'>214</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f215'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r215'>215</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Addresses and Papers of Edward L. Pierce, pp. 20–25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f216'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r216'>216</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Addresses and Papers of E. L. Pierce, p. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f217'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r217'>217</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist. p. 244.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f218'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r218'>218</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f219'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r219'>219</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 244.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f220'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r220'>220</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 245.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f221'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r221'>221</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 235n.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f222'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r222'>222</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Addresses and Papers of E. L. Pierce, p. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f223'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r223'>223</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 245.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f224'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r224'>224</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Appendix, Globe, 1 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f225'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r225'>225</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 245.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f226'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r226'>226</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 245–246.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f227'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r227'>227</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>General Anderson had telegraphed President Lincoln that an entire
-company of Kentucky soldiers had laid down their arms upon hearing of
-Fremont’s action.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f228'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r228'>228</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 77.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f229'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r229'>229</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 78–79.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f230'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r230'>230</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 247–248.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f231'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r231'>231</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 248.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f232'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r232'>232</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>N. Y. Tribune, November 8, 1861.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f233'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r233'>233</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 90.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f234'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r234'>234</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f235'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r235'>235</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1861, p. 646.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f236'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r236'>236</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>First Annual Message, December 3, 1861. McPherson’s Pol. Hist.,
-p. 134; Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 102–103.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f237'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r237'>237</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 249.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f238'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r238'>238</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 91.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f239'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r239'>239</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See “Journal of the Senate of the State of Delaware, At a Special
-Session of the General Assembly, Commenced and held at Dover, on
-Monday, the 25th day of November, 1861.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f240'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r240'>240</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 250.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f241'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r241'>241</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 248.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f242'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r242'>242</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 250.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f243'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r243'>243</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f244'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r244'>244</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 251.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f245'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r245'>245</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Addresses and Papers of E. L. Pierce, p. 87; also Letters and State
-Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 126.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f246'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r246'>246</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 129.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f247'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r247'>247</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 129–130.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f248'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r248'>248</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1862, pp. 799–800.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f249'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r249'>249</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 132.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f250'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r250'>250</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 210.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f251'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r251'>251</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 133–135; also McPherson’s
-Pol. Hist., pp. 210–211.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f252'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r252'>252</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 137–138.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f253'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r253'>253</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1862, pp. 346–347.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f254'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r254'>254</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 1496.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f255'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r255'>255</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See p. <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f256'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r256'>256</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 226–227.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f257'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r257'>257</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The question of colonizing free blacks out of the United States engaged
-the attention of Thomas Jefferson and James Monroe, who had
-some correspondence on the subject at the beginning of the nineteenth
-century. Late in the year 1816 there was organized in the city of Washington
-the “National Colonization Society,” of which the expressed
-purpose was to encourage emancipation by procuring a place outside the
-United States, preferably in Africa, to which free negroes could be aided
-in emigrating. This, it was believed, would rid the South of its free
-colored population which had already become a nuisance. Until 1830 it
-was warmly supported everywhere, and branches of the society were
-established in nearly every State. In the South its purposes were furthered
-by James Madison, by Charles Carroll and by Henry Clay.
-Bushrod Washington became president of the association. Rufus King
-and President Harrison were among its friends in the North.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though Texas and Mexico were looked upon as favorable places for
-locating a colony of free blacks, they were sent to the British possession
-of Sierra Leone. In 1821 a permanent location was purchased in Liberia.
-This settlement, with Monrovia as its capital, became independent in 1847.
-The American Colonization Society attracted little notice after the rise,
-about 1829–30, of those known as immediate abolitionists.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f258'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r258'>258</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 155.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f259'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r259'>259</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 251.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f260'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r260'>260</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 252.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f261'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r261'>261</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 2 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 2068.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f262'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r262'>262</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 2618. Ibid., p. 2769.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f263'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r263'>263</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 233.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f264'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r264'>264</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 204–205.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f265'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r265'>265</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 214–217.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f266'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r266'>266</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 217–218.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f267'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r267'>267</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 218.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f268'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r268'>268</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 218–220.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f269'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r269'>269</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Quoted in Nicolay and Hay’s Abraham Lincoln, A History. Vol.
-VI. p. 121 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et seq.</span></i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f270'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r270'>270</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Schuckers’ Life of Salmon Portland Chase, pp. 439–440.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f271'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r271'>271</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 440.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f272'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r272'>272</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Shuckers’ Life of Chase, pp. 440–441.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f273'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r273'>273</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 441.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f274'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r274'>274</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 213.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f275'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r275'>275</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Carpenter’s Six Months at the White House, pp. 21–22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f276'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r276'>276</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 214.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f277'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r277'>277</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 231–232.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f278'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r278'>278</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 233.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f279'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r279'>279</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Quoted in Schuckers’ Life of Chase, pp. 453–455.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f280'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r280'>280</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Galaxy, December, 1872, pp. 846–847.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f281'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r281'>281</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 847.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f282'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r282'>282</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 106.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f283'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r283'>283</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 129.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f284'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r284'>284</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 125.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f285'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r285'>285</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See p. <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f286'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r286'>286</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 322–323.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f287'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r287'>287</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Memoir of Charles Sumner by E. L. Pierce, Vol. IV. pp. 74–75.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f288'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r288'>288</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>General Richard Taylor in Destruction and Reconstruction, p. 245.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f289'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r289'>289</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Blaine, Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. II. p. 114.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f290'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r290'>290</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Memoir of Sumner by E. L. Pierce, Vol. IV. p. 143.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f291'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r291'>291</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Mr. Sumner, notwithstanding this view, proposed to enact the Emancipation
-Proclamation into a law. See pp. <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>–273 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">infra</span></i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f292'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r292'>292</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>N. and H., Vol. IX. pp. 335–336.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f293'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r293'>293</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>In his Theory of our National Existence (<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">passim</span></i>) and in the American
-Law Review for January, 1865, Mr. John C. Hurd has much keen
-criticism of the reconstruction theories of Sumner and others.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f294'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r294'>294</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Colloquy with Senator Doolittle, December 19, 1866, Cong. Globe,
-p. 192.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f295'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r295'>295</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Brownson’s American Republic, p. 308.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f296'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r296'>296</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 323.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f297'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r297'>297</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Mr. Davis is sometimes classed as a Unionist.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f298'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r298'>298</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, 1 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 414.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f299'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r299'>299</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 3 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 238.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f300'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r300'>300</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 239–243.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f301'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r301'>301</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 317.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f302'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r302'>302</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Texas vs. White, 7 Wall., p. 725.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f303'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r303'>303</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See Chapter VII., pp. 257–261, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">infra</span></i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f304'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r304'>304</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 36th Cong., p. 857.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f305'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r305'>305</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, 1 Sess. 37th Cong., pp. 222–223.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f306'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r306'>306</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 258.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f307'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r307'>307</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, 1 Sess. 37th Cong., p. 259.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f308'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r308'>308</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1862, p. 277.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f309'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r309'>309</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See p. <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f310'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r310'>310</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f311'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r311'>311</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f312'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r312'>312</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Appendix, Part IV., Globe, 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 82–85; also Speeches
-and Addresses of Henry Winter Davis. New York: Harper &amp; Brothers,
-1867, pp. 368–383.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f313'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r313'>313</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1970–1972.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f314'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r314'>314</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1974–1981.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f315'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r315'>315</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 1981–1983.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f316'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r316'>316</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 2002–2006.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f317'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r317'>317</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 2008.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f318'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r318'>318</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 2011–2014.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f319'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r319'>319</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 2038.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f320'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r320'>320</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 2039–2041.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f321'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r321'>321</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 2041.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f322'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r322'>322</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 2041–2042.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f323'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r323'>323</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 2043.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f324'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r324'>324</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 2071.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f325'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r325'>325</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 2073.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f326'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r326'>326</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 2074.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f327'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r327'>327</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess 38th Cong., p. 2078.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f328'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r328'>328</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 2095–2102.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f329'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r329'>329</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 2102–2105.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f330'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r330'>330</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 2105–2107.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f331'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r331'>331</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part III., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 2108.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f332'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r332'>332</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part IV., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 3448–3449.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f333'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r333'>333</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 3449.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f334'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r334'>334</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part IV., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp 3448–3450.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f335'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r335'>335</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part IV., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 3451–3453.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f336'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r336'>336</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 3460.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f337'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r337'>337</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part IV., 1 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 3461.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f338'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r338'>338</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 3491.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f339'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r339'>339</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Diary of John Hay, quoted in Abraham Lincoln, A History, Vol. IX.
-pp. 120–122.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f340'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r340'>340</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Pierce’s Memoir of Sumner, Vol. IV. pp. 57, 60, 83, 84, 106, 108, 130, etc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f341'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r341'>341</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Shuckers’ Life of Chase, pp. 440n, 442, 453, 495.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f342'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r342'>342</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 545; McPherson’s
-Pol. Hist., pp. 318–319.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f343'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r343'>343</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1864, pp. 307–310n.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f344'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r344'>344</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. II. p. 44.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f345'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r345'>345</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., p. 557.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f346'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r346'>346</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hist., pp. 555–558.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f347'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r347'>347</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Rise and Fall of the Slave Power in America, Vol. III. p. 452.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f348'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r348'>348</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 12–13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f349'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r349'>349</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 234.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f350'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r350'>350</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Pierce, Memoir of Charles Sumner, Vol. IV. p. 205.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f351'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r351'>351</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 221.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f352'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r352'>352</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 281–291.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f353'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r353'>353</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>An interesting account of the imprisonment of colored seamen in the
-ports of South Carolina is given in The Rise and Fall of the Slave Power
-in America, Vol. I. pp. 576–586.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f354'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r354'>354</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 298–301.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f355'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r355'>355</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f356'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r356'>356</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 934–937.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f357'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r357'>357</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 937–939.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f358'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r358'>358</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Appendix to Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 73–75.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f359'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r359'>359</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Appendix to Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 75–83.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f360'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r360'>360</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 968–969.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f361'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r361'>361</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 969–970.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f362'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r362'>362</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 970–971.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f363'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r363'>363</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 997–1001.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f364'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r364'>364</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1002.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f365'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r365'>365</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f366'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r366'>366</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 505.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f367'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r367'>367</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 533.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f368'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r368'>368</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 534–535.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f369'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r369'>369</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 535–536.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f370'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r370'>370</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 536.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f371'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r371'>371</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 535–537.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f372'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r372'>372</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 537, 548.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f373'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r373'>373</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 548–549.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f374'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r374'>374</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 549–550.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f375'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r375'>375</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 550.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f376'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r376'>376</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 550–551.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f377'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r377'>377</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 551–552.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f378'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r378'>378</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 553–554.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f379'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r379'>379</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 554–555.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f380'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r380'>380</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 555–556.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f381'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r381'>381</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 556.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f382'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r382'>382</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 557–558.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f383'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r383'>383</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 558.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f384'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r384'>384</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f385'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r385'>385</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 576–582.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f386'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r386'>386</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 575.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f387'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r387'>387</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 576–582.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f388'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r388'>388</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 582.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f389'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r389'>389</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 583.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f390'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r390'>390</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 585.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f391'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r391'>391</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 591.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f392'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r392'>392</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 593.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f393'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r393'>393</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 594.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f394'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r394'>394</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 594–595.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f395'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r395'>395</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 595.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f396'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r396'>396</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The subject of the counting of the electoral votes will be found in the
-Congressional Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 668–669.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f397'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r397'>397</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 711.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f398'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r398'>398</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 711.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f399'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r399'>399</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1395.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f400'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r400'>400</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 971–974.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f401'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r401'>401</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 903.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f402'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r402'>402</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1011.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f403'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r403'>403</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f404'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r404'>404</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f405'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r405'>405</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1061–1064.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f406'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r406'>406</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>While this chapter was in press an interesting letter from Senator
-Henderson informed the author that the Hon. Samuel Treat, of St.
-Louis, formerly Judge of the United States Court for the Eastern District
-of Missouri, is the distinguished jurist referred to in the text.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f407'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r407'>407</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1065–1070.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f408'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r408'>408</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1091.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f409'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r409'>409</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>In support of this view the Senator cited Penhallow’s Case, 3 Dallas,
-p. 94.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f410'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r410'>410</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1091–1095.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f411'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r411'>411</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1097.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f412'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r412'>412</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f413'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r413'>413</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 1095–1098.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f414'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r414'>414</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1099.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f415'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r415'>415</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 1101–1102.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f416'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r416'>416</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1101–1102.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f417'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r417'>417</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 1102.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f418'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r418'>418</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., pp. 1106–1107.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f419'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r419'>419</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 1107.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f420'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r420'>420</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1111.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f421'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r421'>421</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1128.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f422'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r422'>422</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1129.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f423'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r423'>423</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f424'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r424'>424</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part II., 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 1129.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f425'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r425'>425</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, 2 Sess. 38th Cong., p. 141 (appendix).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f426'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r426'>426</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Personal Recollections of Abraham Lincoln, by James R. Gilmore.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f427'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r427'>427</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Gorham’s Life and Public Services of Edwin M. Stanton, Vol. II. pp.
-148–153.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f428'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r428'>428</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>N. and H., Vol. X. pp. 101–102.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f429'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r429'>429</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>N. and H., Vol. X. p. 107.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f430'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r430'>430</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 644–645.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f431'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r431'>431</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>An interesting account of this entire subject will be found in Nicolay
-and Hay’s Lincoln, Vol. X. ch. VI.; see also Raymond’s Life of Lincoln,
-pp. 647–662.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f432'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r432'>432</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Lost Cause, pp. 684–685.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f433'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r433'>433</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 597–598.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f434'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r434'>434</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. pp. 616–617.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f435'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r435'>435</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><span class='pageno' id='Page_498'>498</span>Why the Solid South? p. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f436'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r436'>436</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>This recollection has been verified by correspondence with Col. A.
-K. McClure, the gentleman referred to.—<span class='sc'>Author.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f437'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r437'>437</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ex. Doc. No. 70, H. of R., 1 Sess. 39th Cong., p. 78.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f438'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r438'>438</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f439'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r439'>439</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f440'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r440'>440</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Acts of the State of Tennessee, 1865, p. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f441'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r441'>441</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 779.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f442'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r442'>442</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f443'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r443'>443</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>This election resulted in the choice of Nathaniel G. Taylor, Horace
-Maynard, Edmund Cooper, Isaac R. Hawkins, John W. Leftwich, William
-B. Stokes, William B. Campbell and Dorsey B. Thomas. The last named,
-however, was affected by the Governor’s recount, and Daniel W. Arnell,
-who was declared the successful candidate, was admitted to Congress
-with the other Tennessee Representatives on the 24th of July, 1866. See
-Why the Solid South? pp. 182–183.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f444'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r444'>444</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 780.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f445'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r445'>445</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 781.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f446'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r446'>446</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f447'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r447'>447</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Having been elected United States Senator, Mr. Hahn resigned the
-governorship on the 4th of March and was succeeded in office by Lieutenant-Governor
-Wells.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f448'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r448'>448</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 510.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f449'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r449'>449</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Globe, Part I., 1 Sess. 39th Cong., p. 101.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f450'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r450'>450</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Three Decades of Federal Legislation, p. 429; also Why the Solid
-South? p. 397.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f451'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r451'>451</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Poore’s Charters and Constitutions, Vol. II. p. 1938 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et seq.</span></i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f452'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r452'>452</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letters and State Papers of Lincoln, Vol. II. p. 670.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f453'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r453'>453</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letter of Mrs. Anna Pierpont Siviter to the author.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f454'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r454'>454</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 817.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f455'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r455'>455</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f456'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r456'>456</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 817.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f457'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r457'>457</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Hand-Book of Politics, 1868, p. 46.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f458'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r458'>458</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 800.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f459'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r459'>459</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. II. pp. 9–11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f460'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r460'>460</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 800.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f461'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r461'>461</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hand-Book, 1868, pp. 45–46.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f462'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r462'>462</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, pp. 801–802.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f463'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r463'>463</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 802.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f464'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r464'>464</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Letcher and Smith were Governors of Virginia during the war.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f465'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r465'>465</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hand-Book, 1868, p. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f466'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r466'>466</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. II. p. 70.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f467'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r467'>467</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hand-Book, 1868, pp. 10–11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f468'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r468'>468</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 626.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f469'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r469'>469</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>This ordinance was ratified by a vote of 20,506 to 2,002; Poore’s Charters
-and Constitutions, Vol. II. p. 1419n; also Three Decades of Federal
-Legislation, p. 385.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f470'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r470'>470</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ratified by 19,039 to 3,970 votes. Poore’s Charters and Constitutions,
-Vol. II. p. 1419n.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f471'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r471'>471</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hand-Book, 1868, p. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f472'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r472'>472</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, Vol. XXXII., p. 127.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f473'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r473'>473</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 628.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f474'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r474'>474</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McClure’s Magazine, Dec., 1899, p. 174.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f475'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r475'>475</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Provisional appointments were made in the following order:
-June 13, 1865, William L. Sharkey, Mississippi; June 17, James Johnson,
-Georgia, and Andrew J. Hamilton, Texas; June 21, Lewis E. Parsons,
-Alabama; June 30, Benjamin F. Perry, South Carolina; July 13, William
-Marvin, Florida.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f476'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r476'>476</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 580.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f477'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r477'>477</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 581.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f478'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r478'>478</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1865, p. 583.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f479'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r479'>479</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Constitution of the United States, by Francis N. Thorpe, p. 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f480'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r480'>480</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See Why The Solid South? pp. 9–10, for an ingenious explanation of
-the unanimity and promptness with which the Presidential policy of reconstruction
-was accepted by the South.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f481'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r481'>481</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Laws of Mississippi, pp. 86–88.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f482'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r482'>482</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 89–90.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f483'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r483'>483</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Laws of Mississippi, 1865, pp. 82–86.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f484'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r484'>484</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 231.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f485'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r485'>485</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Laws of Mississippi, 1865, pp. 165–167.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f486'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r486'>486</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Laws of Mississippi, 1865, pp. 90–93.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f487'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r487'>487</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Laws of Mississippi, 1865, pp. 199–200.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f488'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r488'>488</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., pp. 210–211.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f489'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r489'>489</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ibid., p. 240.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f490'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r490'>490</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1866, p. 132.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f491'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r491'>491</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ann. Cycl., 1863, pp. 780–781.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f492'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r492'>492</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Gorham’s Life of Stanton, Vol. II. p. 255.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f493'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r493'>493</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McPherson’s Pol. Hand-Book, 1868, p. 25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f494'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r494'>494</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>President Johnson and Reconstruction, pp. 33–34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f495'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r495'>495</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>In this connection his repudiation of the Sherman-Johnston agreement
-will occur to the reader.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f496'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r496'>496</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Strait’s Roster of Regimental Surgeons and Assistant Surgeons, p. 314.
-This estimate includes all the troops furnished by the new State of West
-Virginia.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f497'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r497'>497</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The author believes himself fortunate in being able to place before
-his readers a letter from the pen of Hon. J. B. Henderson, the only surviving
-Senator who participated in the debates summarized in chapter
-X., and, so far as the writer is informed, the only living member who
-served in the United States Senate during that eventful period. Coming,
-as it does, from one who supported many of Mr. Lincoln’s most cherished
-measures, the letter will be welcomed as a valuable historical document.
-It contrasts forcibly the Presidential plan with the theory of Senator
-Sumner, and though written on August 21, 1901, more than a generation
-after the occurrence of the principal events discussed in this book, it is
-characterized by the clearness and the energy of expression which marked
-even the unpremeditated addresses of the Senator’s Congressional career.
-On the subject of reunion he writes as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Time, in my judgment, has stamped its approval on Mr. Lincoln’s
-views touching the questions of reconstruction during the Civil War.
-He was always calm and judicial. He was philosophical in periods of
-the most intense excitement. He never lost his head, but under all circumstances
-preserved his temper and his judgment. He was not the
-buffoon described by his enemies. On the contrary, he was a wise statesman,
-a learned lawyer, and a conscientious patriot; and, better than all,
-an honest man.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The infirmity in Mr. Sumner’s theories of reconstruction came from
-the great exuberance of his learning. He ransacked history, ancient
-and modern, for precedents growing out of civil wars. But these precedents
-all antedated the American Constitution. They grew out of
-monarchical systems of government, and had no relation to the republican
-forms created by our Constitution. Under our system there can
-be no suicide of a State. Individual citizens by rebellion and disloyalty
-may forfeit their political rights, but the State as an entity commits no
-treason and forfeits no rights to existence. Under our Constitution the
-State cannot die. It is the duty of the Federal Government to see that
-it does not die—that it shall never cease to exist. If the State be invaded
-from without, the duty of the General Government is to protect
-and defend it. If domestic violence threatens the subversion of the local
-government, the nation’s duty is to intervene and uphold the hands of
-those who maintain the laws. The trustee of an express trust cannot
-excuse himself to a minority of the beneficiaries because the majority
-repudiate his agency.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“‘The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a
-republican form of government.’ No State government is republican in
-form that does not acknowledge the supremacy of the Federal Constitution.
-This is the essential test of republicanism. No State can enter
-the Union without conforming its Constitution to this supreme organic
-law. And whenever by force or violence, a majority of its citizens undertake
-to withdraw the State from its obedience to Federal law and
-to repudiate the sovereignty of the Federal Government, it at once
-becomes the duty of Congress to act.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This duty of Congress is not to destroy the State or to declare it a
-suicide, and proceed to administer on its effects. On the contrary, the
-duty clearly is to preserve the State, to restore it to its old republican
-forms. Its duty is not to territorialize the State and proceed to govern
-it as a conquered colony. The duty is not one of demolition, but one of
-restoration. It is not to make a Constitution, but to guarantee that the
-old Constitution or one equally republican in form, and made by the
-loyal citizens of the State, shall be upheld and sustained.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If a majority of the people of a State conspire to subvert its republican
-forms, that majority may be, and should be, put down by the Federal
-power, while the minority, however few, sustaining republican forms
-may be constitutionally installed as the political power of the State.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“These, as I understand, were the views of Mr. Lincoln; and they
-were not the views of Mr. Sumner, as enunciated in his resolutions of
-1862 and advocated by him in his subsequent career in the Senate.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A departure from these views gave us the carpet-bag governments
-of the Southern States, and brought upon us divers other evils in our
-ideas and theories of government, whose effects are yet visible.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f498'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r498'>498</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>N. &amp; H., Vol. X., p. 145.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f499'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r499'>499</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><span class='pageno' id='Page_506'>506</span>The West Virginia Representatives took their seats Dec. 7, 1863.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</h2>
-</div>
- <ol class='ol_1 c002'>
- <li>Silently corrected typographical errors.
-
- </li>
- <li>Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
- </li>
- </ol>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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