•' up CO/v, '^^^5s 'l/iii^ oo // ^98 3oi^'''m HOLLINGER pH 8.5 MILL RUN F3-1543 THE ELECTION AND THE CANDIDATES. GOVERNOR REEDER IN FAVOR OF FREMONT. REASONS FOR ELECTING FREMONT AND DAYTON. ''THE POOR WHITES OP THE SOUTH." LETTER FROM GOV. REEDER ON THE APPROACHING ELECTION. Nbw York City, September 18, 1866. To the Editors of the Evening Post : Gentlemen : — The letter of your correspond- ent H., and your editorial comments upon it of the 16th inst., seem, in common courtesy, to de- mand a reply. Your correspondent does not err in saying that I desire the success of the Repub- lican party and the election of their candidate, and that I am ready to contribute any honorable effort to bring it about. This is not the result of any preference as to men, but in spite of it. With Colonel Fremont I am unacquainted. I have never seen him, nor had any communication with him, direct or indirect, verbal or written. On the other hand, my feelings of friendship and admira- tion for Mr. Buchanan, as a man, are of no ordi- nary character, and are strengthened by years of friendly intimacy and reciprocal acts of kindness, uninterrupted to this time by a single misunder- standing or unpleasant feeling ; and I would at any time defend him promptly and indignantly against personal attacks upon his reputation. I believe him to be a man of distinguished ability, of high integrity and valuable experience. He is surrounded, too, in Pennsylvania by many politi- cal friends, whom personally I love and esteem, and to whom I am united by ties of long-cherished political and social intimacy, and the loss of whose friendship I should regard as a great calam- ity. For more than a quarter of a century, I have steadily labored with the Democratic party, and never doubted that I should do so during my life. For years, I have exerted myself to bring about Mr. Buchanan's nomination. In 1848 and 1852, I was one of those who carried for him the dele- gates of our district, and was his zealous and ar- dent supporter. On each occasion, I was in the National Convention as one of his delegates. These ties are exceedingly strong and hard to sever, especially with one who is naturally of a conservative cast, and slow to change old habits of thought and action ; and I have resisted for months the convictions that were urging me to my present declaration. I have diligently sought reasons and arguments to save myself the pain of breaking up old associations and alienating my- self from my old friends, but all in vain. My lore of country and hatred of oppression would not allow my feelings and inclinations either to delude my judgment or still my conscience, and I am compelled to forfeit my self-respect by committing what I believe to be palpably wrong, or else enroll myself in opposition to the Democratic party. I see no reasonable hope of justice and sympa- thy for the people of Kansas in the success of the Democracy. In its ranks, and with the power to control its action, are found the Border Ruffians of Missouri and their accomplices of the South, who have trampled upon the Constitution, and all the essential principles of our government, robbed Kansas of its civil liberty and right of suffrage, laid waste its territory with fire and sword, and repudiated even civilization itself. In its platform I find the enunciation of prin- ciples which would put the rope about the necks of men for exercising the constitutional right of petitioning Congress for a State Government, or a redress of grievances far worse than those which led to the war of the Revolution, and a declara- tion stigmatizing as " armed resistance to law ' the moderate and justifiable self-defence of men shamefully and infamously oppressed by ruffian violence and outrage, beyond all human endurance. I find the whole party of the nation assembled in National Convention, with but one individual dissent, expressing its " unqualified admiration " of an Administration which has lent itself as the tool and accomplice of all the wrongs inflicted upon Kansas, and by its venality and imbecility brought the country to an intestine war. I find all its representatives in Congress, with three individual exceptions, laboring with earnest zeal, by speech and vote to cover up the iniqui- ties of this Administration and the Border Ruf- fians of Missouri, and to suppress a fair investiga- tion of outrages which shock both humanity and republicanism, and defy the Constitution and the Price of this Document, PER Thousand. t435 . find tbcse pnme representatives, after the .ruth was elicited in spite of their efforts, still re- fusing to relieve the people from a code of laws imposed upon them by a foreign army, and still refusing to admit them into the Union, only for reasons, which, in the case of nine existing States, had been declared untenable and of no account. I find them disregarding a Free Constitution adopted in a legal, constitutional and time-sanc- tioned manner, (and which no man can doubt to have retlected the will of the people,) and sup- porting a law to produce a substitute, which it is easy to show would have perpetuated in the State Government, the usurpation which had by force already seized upon the Government of the Ter- ritory. I find them refusing to make appropriations for the army, unless that army i.s to be used to en- force a code of laws violative on their face, of the Constitution, enacted by a Legislature in violation of the laws of the United States, and imposed by foreign force upon conquered and subjugated American citizens. I find them, in a word, steadily aiding/ by all their Congressional action to make a Slave State in northern latitudes, and that, too, against the will of its inliabitants. I find that one Member, who more than any other stood out against the enslavement of his white fellow-citizens, is refused a re-nomination by the Democratic party of his district. I find in the canvass now going on that the whole tone of their party press is in the same di- rection. When the first startling intelligence of the outrages in Kansas reached the States, their editors denounced the foul wrong in terms of tit- ting indignation. It was but a spasmodic effort, however, and in deference to the South and the prevailing sentiment of the party, they have dropped off, one after the other, until now, so far as I have been able to ascertain, there is not a De- mocratic paper which dares boldly to justify and defend the Free-State party, and denounce their invaders. In place of encouragement and sym- pathy for their outraged fellow-citizens from the Korth, there is little else than jeers and ridicule for their oppressed and suffering condition — mis- representation of their motives and conduct, and a pretended incredulity of the statements and ap- peals which they send theirbrethren of the States. I find their speakers exhibiting the snme spirit — some of them ignoring the question entirely ; others ol'thcm tn-atingit with perversions, misrepresenta- tions and false issues; and olhiTs t,il.ing openly the side of the oppressors ; but no one of them ad- vocating the cau.'-c of Kansas, or favoring her ad- mission under the Free-State t'onstitution adopted by her people. In the puljlic demonstrations and pioccssions of the party, I find banners and depicts containing brutal insults, in response to the ap] eals of tha'. people for protection against unpuralhlcd wrongs, calculated, as no doubt they must be 'ntended, to prepare the masses for a continued refusal of justice and protection, and a relentless persistence ill outrage and oppression. I find all the Democrats South, and a portion of the Democracy of the N'ortii, boldly repudiating the Kansfts-Nebra-ska Bill, by insisting that Slaverj has a right to go into the Territories, in spite of ' Congress or the people ; and that the inhabitants of the Territory have no right to pass Territorial laws to forbid it or exclude it. Democratic re- presentatives from Pennsylvania even, in the Senate and the House, hold and proclaim these opinions ; while other representatives from Penn- sylvaina with Democratic leaders from other States, declare themselves publicly to be non- committal upon this heresy ; the inevitable ten- dency of which, it is easy to show, will be to prevent almost entirely the formation of any more Free States. Having originated a movement myself, to aid our people by sending them men and money, and having prosecuted it with the strictest avoidance of party character and a studied neutrality as to the political canvass, and having earnestly asked the cooperation of men of all parties, I huve failed to enlist in it, to my knowledge, a single Democrat. In the Conventions of Cleveland and Buffalo, called without distinction of party, in furtherance of this enterprise, there was no Demo- crat present but myself. This cannot have been from any want of generosity or of means, but only in deference to the prevailing tone and sen- timent of the party which is enlisted upon the- other side of the question. And not only have they abstained from aiding the movement, but in their presses and by their private influence they have endeavored to cripple and retard it by sneer- ing at it, warning the community against it as trea- sonable, and declaring that the money would be nnsapplied, thus endeavoring to prevent contribu- tions even from friends of the measure. I might go on with this catalogue and enumer- ate other indications, if necessary, showing that the prevailing tone of the party is hostile to Kan- sas; but I consider it only necessary to add that what I have said relates but to the North. The South, where the great mass of the party is to b« found, makes no pretension, as a whole, to the ad- vocacy of anything but pure Border Rutliauism. What, then, have the Free-State men of Kansas to expect from a Democratic Administration, even if presided over by .Mr. Buchanan ? If he could be left to act upon his own impulses, unaffected by external influences, and free from all pledges and oljligations, express and implied, the case would be very ditforent. But, unfortunatelv, this is not so. His election would rightfully be con- sidered a decision against us, whatever may be his own jjrivate feelings. His oflices at Washington, in Kansas and elsewhere, would necessarily, to a large extent, be tilled with our enemies. His in- formation would come through a distorted me- dium ; and lastly, he could not aid us without having first made up his mind to be abandoned and warred upon by his own party. The South would charge him with violating his pledges, and turn upon liim, with the bitter.-st hostility, and at least a portion of the Xuithern Democracy would follow their example. He would thus be left with- out a party to support his Administration, unless he should cast himself into the arms of the Repub- licans. We cannot, it seems to me, either ask or expect him to do this upon aquestiou where party lines are so plainly drawn before his election. Like all other men in the same situation, he must obey the party sentiment on which he is elected. That there are Democrats inPennsylvania who are full of indignation against the conduct of the South in regard to Kansas I am well aware, and that they would use their influence to redress her wrongs I am well satisfied ; but they are too few in propor- tion to the whole party of the Union to sustain his Administration in a war with his party. They have as yet been unable to make their opinions appear and be felt in the party, and, of course, cannot do so hereafter. I honor their good intentions, but I cannot believe in their power. I repeat that I have been forced to these con- clusions after no slight struggle with my feelings and inclinations. Should Mr. Buchanan be elected, and his administration be difiercnt from what my judgment compels me to believe, I shall giveitmy cordial approbation, and my feeble though willing support. As I believe now, I must regard the De- mocratic party as fully committed to Southern Sectionalism, toward which for some time past, it has been rapidly tending, and I quit it, well assured that my duty to my country demands at my hands this sacrifice of personal feeling. Very truly yours, A. II. REEDER. SPEECH OF GOVERNOR REEDER AT NEW HAVEN. This vast collection of eager and intelligent auditors is but one of the many evidences that constantly throng the land and address the senses of us all, proving the deep and increasing solici- tude with which the people regard the events of which I am come to speak. This eager, anxious interest gives me hope for our country and its institutions, where I should otherwise despair of the destiny of the one, and the wisdom of the other; for it is plain that nothing can so etfec- tually test the patriotism and self-governing power of our people as the issue which now comes from the bloody plains of Kansas. Since the War of Independence, I do not hesitate to say that no event has taken place in our history of so much importance, and requiring so much the anxious attention of every citizen, as the history of that unfortunate Territory. Our two last wars with foreign powers, our most exciting political con- tests, our acquisitions of territory, all pale into in- significance with the for-seeing and the right-judg- ing man, when compared with this question and its portentous bearings upon the destiny of our coun- try. Were not the evidence spread before us all, as if written in gigantic, vivid letters upon the heavens, it would be incredible that this model Re- public is the only government in the civilized world which refuses protection to its citizens in return for the allegiance it demands of them. No tyro in law or politics is ignorant of the principle that the obligation to protect follows the authority to govern, as the shadow follows the substance, whe- ther in the relation of parent and child, master and servant, or government and subject. Travel, if you will, over the civilized world, visit its king- doms, its empires, and its most absolute despot- isms, and then acknowledge in shame and bitter humiliation, that the government which we boast as an example to the world, as a monument of wisdom and popular hberty, is the single, solitary delinquent which faithlessly refuses protection for life and property in return for the obedience which it exacts. It is a spectacle which must make the cheek of every American burn with mortification; and until we have efiaced the foul stain from our escutcheon by the most signal redress and retri- bution, we must cease to boast of our superiority over the monarchies of the earth, and spare our misplaced pity for the serfs of the despot. If the problem of self-government is only to be solved in the result of anarchy and bloodshed, in the lawless rule of the strong over the weak, and the devastation of the social structure and the domestic hearth at the pleasure of the lawless ruffian, while the government looks idly and smil- ingly on, and the residue of the people (so long as their own localities are exempt from the curse) in heartless selfishness refuse to recognize their obligation to interfere, then, indeed, had the prob- lem better have remained forever unsolved in the brain of visionary philanthropy, and the blood of the Revolution have been better unshed. But in the midst of our vaunting over the past achievements of our country in the cause of civil- liberty and human rights, and while we are chal- lenging the admiration of the world for having at- tained the perfection of human government, let uff recur to the events and developments of a few years- past, and we will find in them enough to convince us that much of our work remains unfinished; that a false security is fraught with fatal dangers, and that it becomes every patriot to address him- self with deep solicitude to the signs of the times. One of the States of this Union, with a Consti- tution modelled upon these of her sister States, and a frame of government such as yours, after a struggle of a few years to secure to her people civil liberty, popular sovereignty, and a safe admin- istration of justice, is at length driven to a revo- lution to throw off her institutions and officers, and to save for her people civil liberty and social protection. God grant that the self-elected oli- garchy, to which the people have willingly sub- mitted as a lesser evil than the government of their own making, may result in final good ! In the Southern States, where labor, the source\ of all national wealth and power, is held to be \ dishonorable and degrading, we find freedom of speech and opinion systematically denied and re- pudiated, and resident citizens charged not with violation of any law, but with holding political opinions different from their neighbors, tried, not b> a recognized Court, but by a public meeting, and sentenced to leave their business, their homes,. and their property, on pain of lawless violence, while the or^iuiized courts of justice arc incompe- tent to give them redress ; and in the Nortli we find men for personal advantage to themselves willing to extend this state of society over the re- sidue of the Union. On the western slope of the Rocky Moun- tains the people in one of our Territories have demonstrated their incompetency at least, for good self-government, by founding their social structure upon principles which poison and demo- ralize every fountain of civilization and good order, and having united Church and State in their government, their si'iritual leader and civil governor claims to rule " by divine right." Hav- ing thus placed himself upon the exploded autho- rity claimed by emperors and kings, he repudiates allegiance to our common Constitution, and auda- ciously refuses to surrender his place at the call of the Federal (Jovcrnment. A pusillanimous Presi- dent, busied only with selfish aggrandizement, succumbs to the rebellioD, and this Church and State potentate by divine right is left in power •vor a portion of our people. Turn, then, to the plains of Kansas, and see how these evils, small and unnoticed at first, are fearfully accelerating their speed and widening the breach which they make over the loved and idolized institutions of our country, defying and repudiating national Constitution, national laws, free speech, free press, free suffrage, self-govern- ment, civil liberty, social order, domestic security, judicial remedies, moral restraint'^, and all hnnian rights except such rights as may be found in phy- sical strength. Horrible and stunning as this announcement is, who will d.ire to deny its truth? The details of this terrible outline and its effects and conse- quences upon men, women, and children, accus- tomeil, Hke yourselves, to the securities, the pro- tections, the restraints and the refinements of so- ciety here, plunged all unprepared into this cald- ron of barbarism, with the solemn pledges of this great nation in their hands, for the enjoyment of institutions such as they left behind them, I cannot ■ndcrlake to depict with the most remote hope of doing them justice. It is a task far beyond my feeble powers, and I leave the picture to your im- ftginalion, with no hope, however, that you will ap- proach the reality ; asno man can have arealizing 8cn.se of the fearful scenes that rage around a pc0[)!e wlio, under the shadow of the stripes and stars and the nominal protection of tlie Constitu- tion, arc in a worse condition than the subjects of Austria, France or Russia. I need scarcely tell you, however, that they have no part or lot in their own goveiiiment — no laws of their own making — no officers of their own choosing — no taxes of their own levying. They arc politically slaves, with no semblance of self- govirnment left — the complete subjects of the Ijorder counties of Missouri, who dictate their laws, their institutions and their ofRcers. In all this is there not food for ih.ep thought, for di.strossing anxiety as to the future destiny of our country V Can the true patriot or the reflecting man n-st in cold ajjathy while the very foundations of our structure thus crumble before his eyes? Would to God that with burning eloquence and all- potent intellect I could send a warning voice to every voter in the land, arousing him to the ne- cessity of holding public servants to strict account- ability, and of hurling from the high places of governmental power and party influence, the men who, in the blind pm-suit of party prejudices or little honors for themselves, would dare to trifle with the great principles without which our Go- vernment is not worth preserving ! But to return to the people of Kansas. I have said that their condition is less tolerable than that of the serfs of Russia ; and who will deny it ? Both arealike without a vestige of political liberty, but the latter at least have their judicial tribunals, to which they may appeal for redress of their w-rongs ; while lawlessness, outrage, rapine and crime run riot over the beautiful plains of Kansas, and there is no arm of law to stay their course. On the contrary, the robbers, the house- burners, the highwaymen, the ravishers, and the murderers of Kansas, are the very men who, in horrible mockery, have made themselves the ministers of the law ; and the midnight raid of a murderous banditti or a proceeding in a court of justice (God save the mark!) is, each, only a different road to reach the same result. But let us advert to the cause of this state of things. It is not to be found in the character of the people of the Territory, for they are, as a class, far above the average of a frontier population in good conduct, refinement, and general intelligence. It is not in any preference for this anarchy, for it threatens them with almost certain pecuniary ruin, starvation, and slaughter, and is at war with all their life-long education, prejudices, and habits of life. The cause is external and has its origin in a scheme to make Kansas a Slave State by violence and force of arms, or, in other words, to force the institution of Slavery upon an unwilling people ; and the machinery by which it is sought to be effected is a system of secret societies in Missouri and other Southern States. That scheme has been progressing, step by step, towards its con- summation before the eyes of the government, allowed to go on unchecked and unrebuked, and each step so far attended with complete snccess. The citizens of Missouri in large numbers came into our Territory, and participated in our elec- tion for the purpose of choosing a delegate to Congress. In March, IHiif}, they came again, some four or five thousand in number, and voted at our polls by overpowering our people. They came in military array, with leaders, banners, arms, and music, and by violence and intimidation accomplislied their purpose, and elected for ufi a Legislature, against our will. All this you know, and you also know that this Legislature pi'oceeded to enact laws for the Territory only fit for slaves, and which the whole power of the Government has been aiding them to rivet upon us. The start- ling array of facts attending the election of this body I shall not detail, as the sworn evidence of them is before the public. This was their first successful step. In i)reparing the infamous legis- lation which was to close our ballot-boxes, sh\it us out from republican government, and perpetuate their ill-gotten power, these robbers of the right of suffrage, worse than the robbers of tlie purse or the dwelling, did not hesitate to declare, on the floor of their false and iniquitous Legislature, the shameless object of their action. They proceeded themselves to elect prosecuting officers, sheriffs, probate judges, county commissioners, and other officers, for each county. Unable, by reason of the newness of the population and their own igno- rance of it, to elect justices and constables, and yet resolved that they should not be chosen by the people, they carefully provide that all county and township officers required by law shall be ap- pointed by the county commissioners, who are elected by themselves. In attempted justification of this crime against the liberties of a whole peo- ple, these foreign masters opcidy declared in their legislative halls, that if they allowed our people to elect their own officers, they would be of wrong political opinions, and all the labor, money, and effort they had expended in seizing upon the go- Ternment of the Territory would be lost ; thus admitting that the numerical power was against them, and boldly avowing their intention to force upon this numerical majority, by foreign power, institutions and laws which were obnoxious to them. The elections provided by Congress for Legisla- ture and Congressional Delegates they could not entirely abolish, but they could arrange all their machinery and prescribe the qualifications of voters ; and to men so void of every sense of justice and honor, so recklessly bent upon a hellish purpose, so unscrupulous as to means and so devoid of shame, this chance to abuse and prostitute power was all sufficient. The County Commissioners are vested with almost unlimited control over the elections. They fix the places where the elections are to be held, with large discretion as to the public notice, and they appoint the men to hold them, taking care to select them with special reference to the unscrupulous manner in which they are expected to perform their duties. The provisions as to fixing the places of polls shortly before the election, and as to the mode of giving notice, are so ingeniously drawn that the people can, to a large extent, be kept ignorant of places where large illegal votes may be polled. Discretion of an unheard of character is vested in the judges, test oaths arc enacted to shut out Northern men, and facilities are afforded to let in foreign votes. I cannot now go into all the details of this infamous election law, but I have already shown in former speeches how admirably it was calculated to disfranchise our people, and perpetuate the usurpation that en- slaved us. The well-laid scheme goes on. With the Judi- ciary as their accomplice, by means of the Judges, the Marshal and the Sheriffs, they proceed, through the action of these officials, aided by the laws passed for the purpose, to proscribe all Free- State men from the jury-box, and then the Judi- ciary becomes their most terrible engine of tyranny. The scheme to force Slavery upon us is then seated upon our necks, beyond all remedy but revolution. The next of these horrible developments con- sists of a scries of atrocities, judicial, semi-judi- cial and lawless, but all under the protection of the authorities, and intended to provoke resist- ance even in the most abject, so that pretext might be had for open war between the little band of Free-State men on the one side, and the hordes of Missouri and the army of the United States on the other ; and calculated, if not resisted, to destroy, disorganize and enslave us beyond all redreas. One of these means was to deprive the party of its leaders — men whose influence in the State gave efficiency and strength to the cause, and whose calm and prudent coun- sels restrained the mass of their friends from any rash exhibition of defense or retaliation, for which our enemies were but too impatiently wait- ing. Ridiculous indictments for treason, founded upon the infamous perversion of law and no eri- dence, foreshadowed, if not instigated by the special Kansas Message of the President, are found by packed grand juries, selected for the purpose, and the leaders of the party are thus arrested and confined, helpless and inactive, op driven from the Territory. Eight of our best and most efficient men, whose assistance there or here would be invaluable, were for months and until lately prisoners, upon a ridiculous charge, in the hands of our oppressors, with the army of the United States sunk to the vile and degrading task of being their jailers. Thus you will see that every successive step has been conceived in diabolical malignity — invented with ingenuity worthy of a better cause, and being backed by the superior power of our inva- ders and the army of the United States, has been crowned with success. Follow them out to the end, and you will find the result always the same. The next movement was to deprive the Free State party of their presses. Four of these are destroyed — one at Leavenworth, two at Lawrence, and one at Osawatomie — some through the agency of judicial officers, after indicting them as nui- sances for proclaiming conservative Northern opi- nions, and allowing not even the poor privilege of a trial before a corrupt court and a packed jury ; and others by foreign mobs, avowedly com- ing direct from the State of Missouri for the pur- pose. This step, too, was successful. Having thus robbed us of all our political rights, shut ua out from the ballot-box, deprived us of access to all judicial remedies, stripped us of our leaders, destroyed our presses, the next step was to de- stroy all facilities for Northern emigration, and isolate us from our friends in the States. The hotel in Kansas City, the main landing-place of emigrants, was kept by a Northern man, and our friends on their arrival found there a hospitable roof, beneath which they could have shelter and aid while preparing to go into the Territory. Here they could daily see citizens of the Terri- tory, and procure all the information they needed. Here they could purchase their outfit, and even leave their families free from annoyance while they selected their residence and prepared their cabins. Our oppressors saw the value of this haven to Northern emigration, and how indispen- sable it was in a hostile country. That it was con- ducted with great prudence and strict avoidance of all cause of offense could not save it. Its de- itruction was decreed as a part of the great scheme. On several occasions, mobs assembled to destroy it, and finally its proprietor. Col. S. W. Bldridge, was called upon by a committee of citi- zens appointed at a public meeting, and informed that he must either sell out to a Pro-Slavery man, or have his house torn down over his head. To save himself from ruin, he was obliged to sell and leave. For the same reason, the hotel at Law- rence — equally indispensable to the town and the party — was destroyed by a lawless mob, assembled principally from Missouri, by a U. S. Marshal, under judicial authority, after an illegal and ridi- culous indictment of it as a public nuisance, found before it had been opened for guests, and while DO one yet lived in it. The order for its destruc- tion was issued without trial or notice to any one, and its walls were battered with cannon, its floor exploded by kegs of powder, and its splendid fur- niture cut into piles of kindling, by which it was finally burned to the ground. As the by-play to this outrage, the posse of the Marshal and Sheriff were meanwhile engaged in breaking into every house in the place, except two, robbing the stores, the wardrobes, the desks, the cupboards, and the trunks of the citizens, stealing money, provisions, watches, clothing, arm.'?, horse-s, cattle — everything, indeed, that this hoard of thieves could lay their hands upon, even down to the last quarter-eagle of a poor mechan- ic taken from his pocket on the street. Private dwellings were set on fire, and one, with all its fur- niture, books and papers, was burned to the ground, while property which thoy did not need, was wantonly cast into tlie street, and diligently destroyed. But I must forbear details, or my task is endless. One other step in the enterprise, after having reduced our people to a disorganiz"d mass of sub- jects, with no liberties, no protection for life or property, no loaders and no presses, was to de- prive thorn of the arms which might make them dangerous even in a last desperate struggle ; and accordingly the arms of our people were seized on the Mis«ouri River — at Kansas City — on the roads in the Territory — at the sacking of Law- rence, and in the cabins of the settlers. And, finally, the only route to the Territory, by the Miiwouri liiver, is absolutely clo.'sed against Nor- thern emigration, while parlies of men from the South, and a military organization witli arms and ammunition, are freely passed and aided on their way. A large portion of tiie letters mailed to and from the sclth-rs of the Territory never reach their dcBtinaticn, and thus are they denied even the mail facilities of the country, snlij''ctcd to the most odious espionage into their private affairs, and cmbarriuwed by the loss of their coci-espond- cncc. One leading feature in the pro.secutlon of this grand echerae of infamy to force Slavery upon an unwilling people I have yet to mention. Jn the Spring of 1H5G some 40O or 500 men came to the Territory from the Southern cities. Tiiey had been gatliered, as I am informed l)y credible men perKonaily cognizant of the facts, in the true fili- buBlering style with drum and fife and whisky. and witli large promises of free living and unre- strained license upon the plains of Kansas. They landed at Kan,safi City under military organiza- tion, with military leaders, and were marched in military order, fully armed, from the boat to the shore and into the Territory. The articles under which they came were publicly read to them in the hearing of a crowd of men, among whom were many of our friends. By these articles they were bound to a military organization — to voto the Pro-Slavery ticket, and fight the battles of the Pro-Slavery cause. They marched into the Territory and went at once to living in camp, making no attempt at bona fide settlement. The first band, under Ma- jor Buford, numbered about 300, and were fol- lowed by several detachments of the same cha- racter. They had been, doubtless, sent to order, to aid in furthering the great scheme of subjuga- tion, and they were gladly welcomed as super- seding the necessity of frequent invading parties, and preventing the lull of repose and recupera- tion which our people enjoyed when the Missou- rians would return home. The few Pro-Slavery men of the Territory could not be relied on to indorse and keep up the wholesale system of out- rage calculated to destroy the prosperity of the entire community. The new comers, however, were exactly fitted to their work. They had no stake in the country ; they came, as they avowed, only to fight, and cared only to indulge their un- bridled ferocity. Some of them were at once made Deputy Marshals. The mass of them remained in camps upon the great thoroughfares, living the life of a band of highwaymen, and supported by plunder of our citizens and contributions from Missouri. No man was allowed to travel on the most ordinary business without a written pass from a Pro Slavery leader ; and the United States officials, including the Governor and the Mar.^hal, reci:v|;nized this band of freebooters and murderers by granting passes to such persons as they chose to allow the privilege of travelling upon our pub- lic highways. Murders, robberies and outrages of all kinds were their daily employment, varied by an occasional enrollment into a Marshal's or a Sheritf's posse when some act of judicial tyranny was to be performed upon the people. The bodies of murdered men upon the prairie near tlieir camps were a common spectacle, and many a man started with his team, for provisions to feed his family, never to return. These are facts which I do not hesitate to assert on my own responsi- bility, and an investigation would find abundance of sworn testimony to establish tliem. These outrages, imparalleled and incredible as they are, were kept up throughout the whole Spring and Summer, and our peojile, fearful of bringing upon themselves the irresistible num- bers of° an invading horde from Missouri, and the troops of the United States, with the conse- quent less of supplies, and starvation for them- selves and their families, submitted beyond all the expectation of friends and foes, until they saw these bloody banditti erecting in various places block-houses for the accommodation of large parties, in whioh they stored their plunder, and would be able to conduct tlieir operations through the Winter. Upon one of these, com manding the main highway of the Territory, they made aa attack, and having driven out its gar- rison, they satisfied themselves by destroying the fort and taking the arms, many of them stolen property. Against another of these forts they asked protection from the troops of the United States, but the commander refused to believe that such a place existed, or to send a party to examine it. The people then sent an unarmed citizen peacefully to inquire the design of its occupants. The bearer of this flag of truce was basely murdered, and our people rushed to the blockhouse and destroyed it. One of the leaders of this banditti, and a former participator in the Lopez invasion of Cuba, having taken a fancy to the farm of a Free-State man, assembled a party of his men, drove out the owner, severely beaten and wounded, burnt his cabin, and erected a building to accommodate himself and his gang. The neighbors apply to the civil authorities for redress, and the consequence is that Gov. Shan- non sends a party of United States Dragoons to protect the marauder in his possession. Waiting till circumstances called the troops away, a small party of Free-State men attacked the building and destroyed it, a"nd captured the leader. With the moderation that always cliaracterized 'them, they carried him to Lawrence, where he was nursed and his wounds dressed. And yet these moderate acts of self-defence and retaliation, justified and made necessary a thousand times over by the fiendish outrages and systematic per- secution which preceded and caused them, are howled over by our oppressors and their depraved accomplices in the States as a reason why tlie whole scheme of subjugation, and despotism, and murder, and robbery, and extension of slavery l)y violence, should be allowed to go on without mo- lestation or censure. The border swarms with Missouri invaders ; a peaceful town is attacked by a large force and every building burned to the ground ; the roads are all blockaded by armed parties to cut off succor and provisions ; while the President issues his orders to the new Governor to use the army of the United States, and if need be, two regiments of militia from Kentucky and Illinois, to put down the Free State men as rebels and insurgents, with not one word of condemna- tion for their assailants. The South are bent on the dedication of this fair country to Slavery. The first struggle for it took place in 1820, vvhen they hoped that by the Slave Oonstitution of Missouri, they had secured the key to the whole. In the compromise which ended that struggle it became ours, and the South solemnly agreed to surrender it. In 1854 thev progressed step by step, and always auccessfally ; how each and every outrage perpetrated upon our people tends directly and inevitably to its accomplishment, being deliberately adopted for the purpose. No close observer can fail to see that they are all harmonious p.irts of one great whole, separate and progressive moves toward one preconceived end, and the man who regards them as isolated occurrences, due to the surround- ing circumstances, labors under gross delusion. Let me assure you, too, that the work is almost done — so nearly done that we can easily specify the few details that will be necessary to finish it. On the first Monday of October next they are to hold an election for Legislators, and vote '• Convention" or " no Convention," and this elec- tion they have determined to carry by the same system of fraud and force. Bodies of armed men from the State of Missouri will be at the election polls. The restrictions and inventions of their Territorial election law will be in full operation — corrupt and perjured election officers will be carefully selected by the County Commissioners — the polls will be fixed in the most obnoxious places, perhaps in the camps of the Georgia and South Carolina banditti. Their armi'd men from Missouri at the polls, will be there according to law. Preparation to this end was made a year ago, by a law of their Territorial Legislature, which provides that on the election day there shall be a militia training throughout the whole Territory ; and this will be the shallow justifica- tion with which they will meet the complaints of our people — one, it is true, which would call the blush of shame to the cheek of an honest man, but which is all-su93cieut for Border-Ruffians or their apologists. Having carried a convention vote, there will be one more election for delegates to frame a Constitution, and the work is done. lu the mean time the gates of the Territory will be kept shut against Northern immigrants, more bands of guerrillas, from Southern cities, will be forvVarded and protected if they are needed, and the work of robbery, murder and starvation will go on in the cooped-up settlements. The Slave Constitution thus formed will come before Congress about December, 18.57, and will, of course, receive the unanimous Southern vote, notifithstanding it is stained with Northern blood, and written with the pen of tyranny, fraud and outrage. The additional votes necessary to carry it they will ask from Northern traitors, from whom they expect to purchase the base betrayal of their constituents, by the bribe of office or per- sonal aggrandisement. The members of Congress whom you will choose at the next election will be the men who must stand this test, and I beg you desired to play the game over once more, and have now to look to it that you elect no man who yet another chance for its possession, and again j when the issue comes between the two Constitu- solemnly covenanted, under the Kansas-Neb.saska tjous, will not stand firmly and truly by that bill, that if that chance was given them, they | which reflects the true sentiments of the people of would abide the test of numbers at the polls, and j the Territory. When we know that Northern acquiesce in the result. Finding themselves de- members of the present House voted, during last feated in this by a majority of Northern men on \ winter, against every form of investigation To ex- the soil, they dishonorably cast aside their second pose these outrages, and even after the truth was compact, and, regardless of every dictate of hoii- laid bare, in spite of their attempts to cover it up, esty and justice, determine to possess it by voted in favor of the legality of a Legislature .force. rproveu to have been elected by an armed invasioa I have already shown you how this plot his; of more than four thousand Missourians — in favor of giving a seat in tbe House to a man whom they knew to have been forced upon the people by the same foreign vote ; who, in a word, made them- selves the willing tools of the Missourians and a corrupt Executive to aid in furthering the infa- mous scheme of forcing Slavery upon an unwill- ing people, it buhoves you to watch well who fill those seats in the next Congress, Many of the most startling and iniquitous fea- tures in this plot, I have been compelled lo omit for want of time to detail them, and among them. the destruction of a Free-State town by a detach- ment of soldiers, and the consequent dispersion and ruin of the settlers, under the authority of the Secretary of War. by an illegal and wrongful ex- tension over it of a military reservation ; the re- duction of another military reservation by the same authority, to make a town for the Pro- Slavery interest ; the prostitution of olHcial power by Indian Agents for jolitical purposes; the making of Indian Treaties before the settlement of the Territory, calculat'd to embarrass settlers and prevent preemption ; the scheme to secure to the Pro Slavery speculators of Missouri, to the exclusion of Northern settlers, all the choice lands of the Siiawnee Reserve, and the cold-blooded murder of Gay, the Agent of the tribe, because, being a citizen of Michigan, he could not be made the tool to carry out this corrupt design ; the ad- vertisement for sale next month, by the President, of all the lands of the Delaware Reserve, when the Free-State men, impoverished, ruined and driven out, can neither pay for their claims, nor can their friends from tlie States go to their as- sistance ; the following up of this advertisement, by driving out from Loavenwoith men who had claims on those lands, and had the means to buy, upon the ostensible pretext that they were diso- beying the laws by refusing to take arms with the invaders against their fellow-ciiizens, but really to enable the moneyed men of Mi.ssouri to pos- sess their property. All the.- masses that toe Juive to fear, so far as our institutions are concerned. * * * " The employment of the white labor which is now to a great e.xtent contending with absolute want, will enablo this part of our population to surround themselves with comforts which poverty now places beyond their reach. The active industry of a father, the careful housewifery of the mother, and the daily cash earnings of foi'r or five children, will Very soon enable each family to own a servant; thus in- creasing the demand for this species of property to an Im- mense extent. ********* " The question has often been asked, Will Southern ope- ratives equal Northern in their ability to accomplish factory work ? Asa general answer, I should reply in the affirma- tive ; but at tlie same time it may with justice be said they cannot at present, even in our best factories, accomplish as much as is usual in Northern mills. The habitude of our people has been to anything but close application to manual labor, and it requires time to bring the whole habits of a person into a new train." The Italicizing in these extracts is Mr. Taylor's, and not mine. Mr. Taylor expresses himself in a very con- fused and inartificial way, but it is not difficult to understand what he means. He is addressing himself to the Slaveholding aristocracy, and he de- scribes these poor whites, very much as a French philosopher would describe the blouses of the Faubourg St. Antoine to polite ears in the Fau- bourg St. Germain. The collection into towns of the poor and unemployed white popuhition of South Carolina, had evidently given rise to some visions of social outbreak and anarchy, which Mr. Taylor feels called upon to dispel. These poor people, who were willing to be industrious if they had the opportunity to be so, but to whom no labor was offered except in degrading connection with plantation negroe.s, had been content to struggle on, enduring life in its most discouraging forms, contending with absolute want, and often faring worse than the negro, but yet solaced by the satisfaction that they were above the negro in some respects. But at length light was beginning to penetrate even into South Carolina, and these unhappy beings were catching a glimpse of the truth, that even they, in their depths of poverty and humiliation, had some rights and were en- titled to some of the sympathy which falls upon the suffering. They were fast learning that there existed, in happier communities, modes of indus- try, which, if opened to them, would elevate them and their families from wretchedness and igno- rance to competence and intelligence. This knowledge might occasion an upheaving of the masses, seriously threatening the social and do- 12 meetic institutions of South Carolina unless pro- perly directed. If, on the contrary, these poor whites could be furnished with reniuneratintj labor, they would place themselves in a position of comfort, and even become slave-holders them- selves, thus increasing the demand for that sort of property and enhancing its security. From an address upon the subject of manufac- tures in South Carolina, delivered in 1851, beibre the South Carolina Institute, by Wm. Gregg, Esq., I make the following extracts ; " In all other countries, and particularly manufacturing States, labor and capital are assuming an antaponistical position. Here it cannot be the case ; capital will be able to control labor, even in raanufaetures with whites, for blacks can always be resorted lo in case of need. * * ♦ From the best estimates that I have been able to make, I put down llic white people who ought to work and who do not, or who are so employed as to be wholly unproductive to the State, at one hundred and twenty-five thousand. * ♦ • Ry this it appears that but one-fifth of the present poor whites of our ijtates wo ild be necessary to operate 1,000,000 gpindle*. * * Tlie appropriation annually made by our Legislature for our School Fund, every one must be aware, so far as the coun;ry is concerned, has been little better than a waste of raonty. * « ♦ While we are aware that the Northern and "the Eastern States find no dlfBculiy in educating their poor, we are ready to des- pair of success in the matter, for even penal laws against the neglect of education would fail to bring many of our country people to send their children to school. * * * I have long been under the impression, and every day's ex- perience has strengthened my convictions, that the evils exist in the wholly neglected condition of this class of per- sons. Any man who is an observer of things could hardly pass through our country without being struck by the fact that all the capital, enterprise and intelligence is employed In directing slave labor; and that the consequence is, that a large portion of our poor white people are wholly neglected, and are Buffered to while away an exis- tence in a slate but one step in adviince of the Indian of the forest. It is an evil of vast ma^'nitude, and nothing but a change in public sentiment will effect its cure. These people must be brought into daily contact with the rich and intelligent — ihey must be stimulated to mental action, and taught 10 uppreciate education and the comforts of civilized life; and tlils, we believe, may be effected only by the in- troduction of manufactures. * * * My experience at Gran- ItevUle has satl.«fieil me, that unless our poor people can be brought together in villages, and some means of employ- ment alToided them, it will be an utterly hopeless elfort to undertake to educate them. * * * We have colleclcd at that place about 800 peo|)le, and as likely looking a fet of country girU as may be found — Industrious and orderly people, but deplorably ignorant, Ihree-fourihs of the adults not being able to read, or to write their naiiie". * * * With the aid of ministers of the Oo-pel on the spot to preach to them and lecture the :i on the subject, we have obtained but about Co children for our school, of about a hundred which are In the place. We are satisfied that n ithing bu' time and patiince will enable ut to bring them all out. * * • It la very clear to me, thai the only means of educating and Christianizing our poor whites, will be to bilng them into audi vdlages, where they will not only become intrlligent, but a thrif:y and useful cl.iBS in our community. • * * Not- withstanding our rule that no one can be permitted to occupy our houses who doi-s not Sun 1 all his children to ■chool that are between the ages of C ami 12, it was with some dlllloulty, at (Irtl that we could make up even a s'luall school." It is noticeable that Mr. Gregg, like Mr. Taylor, begins by an alli-inpt to allay patrician jealousies excited l)y the idi.-a of collecting the poor white.'^ into mas.xes. Mr. Gregg points out that the cx- isteiicu of Slavery enables capital lo control white labor as well as black, by the power which it re- tains to Rubjititulc the latter, when the former becomes unruly. The whole white population of South Carolina, by the census of 18.'>0, being only 274,608, neatly one half, according to Mr. Gregg's estimate, are substantially idle and unproductive, and would seem to have sunk into a condition Ijut little re- moved from barbarism. All the capital, enter- prise and intelligence of the State being employed in directing slave labor, these poor whites, wholly neglected, whiliiig away an existence but one step in advance of the Iiuliaii of the forest, never taught to appreciate education and the comforts of civil- ized life, deplorably ignorant, and induced with great difliculty, and only by slow degrees, to send their children to schools, do truly constitute " an evil of vcuer annum. It will cost at least twice that sum in New- England. The difference in the cost of female labor, whe- ther free or slave, Is evr-n greater. As we have now a po- pulation of nearly one million, we might advance to a greater extent in manufacturing, before we materially in- creased the wages of labor." A Richmond (Va.) newspaper. The Dispatch, says : " We will only suppose that the ready-made shoes im- ported into the city from the North and sold here were ma- nufactured in Richmond. AVhat a great addition it would be to the means of employment I How many boys and fe- males would find means of earning their bread who are now suffering for a regular supply of the necessaries of life !" The following statistics from the Census of 1850 show the number of whites (excluding foreign- born) in certain States, and the number of white persons, excluding foreign-born, in such States, over twenty years of age, unable to read and write : Unable to rsid States. WhitM. mid vntt, New-England States 2,899,651 6,209 New- York 2,393,101 23,240 Alabama 419,016 83,613 Arkansas 160,721 16,792 Kentucky 780,012 64,349 Missouri 515,434 34,420 Virginia 871,&47 75,86S North Carolina 550,463 78,226 South Carolina ... 266,055 15,680 Georgia 515,120 40,794 Tennessee 751,198 77,017 The evils which afflict the Slave States are va- rious and complicated ; but they all originate with, or are aggravated by, that fatal institution which Washington, Jefferson, Patrick Henry, and all the great men of the South of the Revolu. tionary epoch deplored, but which the madness of modern times hugs as a blessing. The wages of labor are always low in coun- tries exclusively agricultural. Industry begins to be fairly rewarded, when it is united with skill, when employments are properly divided, and when the general average of education and intel- ligence is raised by the facilities afforded by den- sity of population. The grain-growing regions of Eastern Europe are tilled by serfs ; it is only in Western Europe that we find industry enjoying iiny tolerable measure of competence, intelli- gence, and respectability. Agricultural countries are comparatively poor, and manufacturing and commercial countries are comparatively rich ; be- cause rude labor, even upon rich soils, is less pro- ductive than skilled labor, aided by machinery and accumulated capital. That the South is al- most exclusively agricultural, results, especially in the more northerly Slave States, (which have admirable natural facilities for mining and manu- facturing,) from the institution of Slavery, under which there cannot be in the organization of so- ciety that middle clas.«, which, in Free States, is the nursery of intelligent and enterprising in- dustry. The whites at the South not connected with the ownership or management of slaves, constituting not far from three fourths of the whole number of whites, confined at best to the low wages of agri- cultural labor, and partially cut off even from this by the degradation of a companionship with black slaves, retire to the outskirts of civilization, where they lead a semi-savage life, sinking deeper and more hopelessly into barbarism with each suc- ceeding generation. The slaveowner takes at first all the best land, and finally all the best land susceptible of regular cultivation ; and Ik the poor whites, thrown back npon the hills and upon the sterile poils — mere Fquattcrs, without cnorgy enough to acquire title even to the cheap lands they occupy, without roads, without schools, and at length without even a dc- gire for education, become the miseral)ie beings de- scribed to us by the writers whom I have quoted. In Virginia and all the old Slave Slates, immense tracts belonging to private owners, or abandoned for taxes, and in the Southwest, immense tracts belonging to the Government of the United States, are occupied in this way. Southern agriculture. rude and wastL'ful to the last degree, is not fitted to grapple with difficulties. It seizes upon rich soils aud flourishes only while it io e.xhausting them. It knows how to rai.=e cotton and corn, but has no flexibility, no power of adaptation to circumstances, no inventiveness. The poor white, if he cannot find bottoms whereon to raise grain, becomes a hunter upon the hills which might en- rich him with flocks and herds. In the first settlement of the new and rich soils of the Southwest, these evils were less apparent ; but the downward progress is rapid and certain. First the farmer without slaves, and then the small planter, succumbs to the conquering deso- lation. How feelingly it is depicted in the follow- ing extract from an Address delivered a few weeks since by the lion. G. C. Clay, jr., of Ala- l>ama : "I can show you, with sorrow, in the older portions of Alabama, and in my native county of Madison, the sad mumorials of tlie artless and txhaustlng culture of cotton. Our small planterH, after taking the cream off their lands, unable to restore them by rest, manures, or otherwise, are going further Went and Bouth, in search of other virgin lands, which they may and will despoil and impoverish in like manner. Our wealthier planters, with greater means and no more skill, are buying out their poorer neighbors, extending their plantations, and adding totheirslave force. The wealthy few, who are able to live on smaller profits and to glvfi IhelrbWsted fields some rest, are thus pushing off the many who are merely iiidepcrndcnt. Of the $21,000 an- nually realized from the sales of the cotton crop of Ala- bama, niarly all, not expended in supporting thi producers, Is reinvested In land and negroes. Thus the white popu- lation has decreased and the slave incn^ased almost pari pas*u in several counties of our State. In 1S25 Madi- son County cast .ibout 8,000 votes ; now she cannot cast exceeding 2,800. In traversing that county, one will dis- co/er numerous farm-houses, once the abode of Industri- ous and Intelligent freemen, anw occupied by slaves, or tenantlcss, deserted and dilapidated : he will observe ficld><, once fertile, now un fenced, abandoned and cover>d with those evil harbin., fox-tail and broomsedge ; he will see the most growing on the mouldering walls of once thrift Tillage^, and will Hod one 'only master grasps the whole do- main ' that once furnished happy homes for a dozen white families. Indeed, a country In its Inlai.cy, where flfly years ago scarce a fiirertt tree had bi-en felled by the ax of the pioneer. Is already exhibiting the piiihful siyns of senility aud deca/, apparent in Virginia and Carolina. " It is undoubtedly true that the condition of the South would be va.stly ameliorated if its jjur- Kuits were more diversified, if its great facilities for mining and manufacturing were improved, and if its wasteful Hystems of agriculture were changed. The profits of capital would be raised, and the productiveness of labor would be en- hanced. To a certain extent, perhaps, the free laborer migiit be benefited by the greater em- ployment and higher wages which would result ; but the same fatal, overthadowing evil which has driven him from the field, would drive him from the workshop and the factory. Hcsret in latere lethalis arundo. Even Mr. Gregg, from whom I have quoted above, says that " All overseers, who have experience in the matter, give the de- cided preference to blacks as operatives." Mr. Montgomery, in his treati.se on the " Cotton Manu- factures of the United States, compared with Great Britain," states that " there are several cotton factories in Tennessee operated entirely by slave labor, there not being a white man in the mill but the superintendent." The employment of slaves is common everywhere at the South, in factories and mining. The author of the " Future of the South." (De Bow's Review, vol. 10, page 146,) says that " the blacks are equally service- able in factories as in fields." A writer in The Mississippian says : " Will not our slaves make tanners? And can they not when supplied with m.iterials, iii.ike peg and other shoes? Cannot our slaves make plow.i and harrows, &c. ? The New England St^ites cannot make and send us brick and framed houses, .tnd therefore w.' have learned that our slaves can make and lay bricks and perform the work of house-joiners and carpenters. — In fact, we know that in me- chanical pursuits and manufacturing cotton and woollen goods they are fine laborers." The statesmanlike Gov. llammond, looking at the matter from a statesman's point of view, may recommend as he does, tlie employment of poor whites in factories, as being upon the whole, al- though immediately less clieap, more for the gen- eral good of the community. Men are not governed in matters of business by any such consideration as this. If slave labor is adapted to factories, as it would seem to be, and is cheaper than white labor, as it would also seem to be ; it will be employed, be the consequence to the com- munity ever so disastrous. And where it is em- ployed at all, it will be cmploved exclusively, as in the Tcnncs<(\t»d to Emigrated te Kmlgrnted from Illinois and Indiaoe. Mietfouri, North Carolina 47.026 17,009 South Carolina 8,231 3,919 Georgia 2,103 1,264 Tennessee 45,087 44,970 Alabama 1,730 2,067 Mississippi 777 688 Louisiana 701 746' Texas 107 24» Florida 44 6T Total 105,755 69,91» Here is an emigration involving considerable journeys, and not controlled by the consideratioa of immediate proximity. It is an emigration to States very similar in local position and physical characteri.«tics. Such differences as do exist, how- ever, in climate and productions, would incline the Southern emigrant to Missouri. Yet we find three fifths of these emigrants placing themselves voluntarily under the operation of the Ordinance of 1787. It is a fair inference and it is true, that the real wishes as well as real interests of a ma- jority of the whites of the South are in oppositioa to the extension of Slavery ; but it is only the minority of slaveholders, which is represented la Congress, or which has otherwise any political weight in the country. It is unquestionable that the immigration from the South has brought into the Free States more ignorance, poverty and thriftlessness than an equal amount of the immigration from Europe. Where it forms a marked feature of the popula- tion, as in Southern Illinois, a long time must elapse before it is brought up to the general standard of intelligence and enterprise in the Free States. This remark is made in no spirit of unkindness. The whites of the South are nearly all of the Revolutionary stock. They are a fine, manly race. Their valor, attested upon a hun- dred battle-fields, shone untarnished and still re- splendent in the last conflict of the Republic. No banner floated more defiantly amid the smoke and fire of the Valley of Mexico, than that up-borne Ijy the inextinguishable gallantry of the sons of South Carolina. I feel for that unhappy people all the tics of kith and kin. God forbid that any avenue should be closed, by v\h'ch ihuy Uiay escape out of the horrible pit of thoir bondage. If the Constitution permits the South to recapture their fugitive blacks, happily it does not permit them to recapture their fugitive whites. It is said that no equal number of negroes were so well off, upon the Nihole, as the slaves of the South, and that in contrast with their native bar- barism, their present lot, hai'd as it is, is one of im- provement and compaiative advancement. Evea if this be true ; even if thri'e millions and a half of people of Africisn blood have becti raised m the scale of civilizntio;i ; llie price paid for it is too costly. An equal number of people qf the 16 LiBRftRV OF CONGRESS Circassian stock have been deprived of all that constitutes civilization, and thrust down into bar- barism, thus reversing the order of Providence, and sacrificing the superior to the inferior race. It is said that an extension of the area of Slave- ry would add to the personal comfort of the slaves, at least for a considerable period of time. Even if this be so, our first and highest duty is to our own race, and it will be a most flagrant and in- excusable folly to permit such a sacrifice of it as we now witness in the Southern States, to be en- acted over again upon the vast areas of the West. Where the two races actually coexist, the relation which may best subsist between them may afford ftiir matter for dispute ; but it is against the clear and manifest dictates of common sense, volun- tarily, willingly and with our eyes open, to sub- ject the white man to a companionship which, under any relation, is an incumbrance and a curse. It is for the intelligent self-interest, the Christian philanthropy of the people of this great country, with a lllilillllllllllllilllllilH blading with SI illlli"^^^ but the judicit "T p,ii 898 301 4 W ermiie wbethe *' "" ..every snail inflict upon regions now fair and virgin from the hands of the Creator, its train of woes, which no man can number, which no eloquence can exaggerate, and of which no invective can heighten the hide- ous reality. It is for the people of tfiis great country to determine whether the further spread of a system, of which the worst fruits are not seen in wasted resources and in impoverished fields, but in a neglected and outcast people, shall be left to the accidents of latitude, of proximity, of border violence, or of the doubtful assent of em- bryo communities ,• or whether, on the other hand, it shall be stayed by an interdiction, as universal as the superiority of Good to Evil, as perpetual as the rightful authority of reason in the aflFairs of men, and as resistless as the embodied will of the nation.