E .T98 THE .9^: A ( HEA^IEA^ REVOLUTIONARY ELEMENTS OP THE REBELLION, AND OF THE ASPECT OF RECONSTRUCTION; WITH A PLAN TO RESTORE HARMONY BETWEEN THE TWO RACES IN THE SOUTHERN STATES. BY A. COJ-iOREr> 'M.A.N. BROOKLYN, L. I. OCTOBEK 1868. Class t ^ -- •: Bnnk_ \ THE HE^IE OF THE REVOLUTIONARY ELEMENTS OP THE REBELLION, AND OP THE ASPECT OF RECONSTRUCTION ; WITH A PLAN TO RESTOEE HARMONY BETWEEN THE TWO RACES IN THE SOUTHERN STATES. BY A. COLORED IVIAN. Le.w\'?-. H, w^inifTi, BROOKLYN, L. I. October 1868. E U^ To the People of the United States. The design of the Review, as indicated bj its title, is to note with care the new birth of the Republic and to bring the colored people into the foreground where they may be seen as the advocates of the union between the two races, and upon the basis that will secure freedom and elevation on one hand and peace and good-will on the other. But while it may be right that the colored people should stand back until the position for them is established through the genius and the magnanimity of the dominant race, yet the sublimity of the work, to build up the 'Republic with the new materials at hand, and the necessity of testing their skill and usefulness in the new field where the destiny of the nation has placed them, will fully justify the attempt to create such ideas in the history of the times as will make a profound impression in their favor in the minds of the American people. As the time has arrived to redeem the " solemn pledge" of fidelity made to the friends who first led the author into the mission, and the fact that the purpose of the declar- ation as written contained the principles which aimed at the eleva- tion of the colored people of the United States, it will be sufficient to strip it of all assumption and at the same time show the grandeur of the subject, and the overwhelming effect that will follow from the development of the plan for the accomplishment of that object. Viewing it at that time as the initiative to the reformation in the institutions that were organized for the management of the philan- thropy of the nation, and make the result redound to the glory of the American people by the elevation of the proscribed race of the country, it will present a feature sufficiently grand to command the approbation it will aim to secure by the publication of this work. If the philanthropists and the statesmen were guided by the spirit of justice in the attempts to represent the colored man at any time in the history of the country previous to the war, or if they had a clear conception of the requirements of the nation, there would have been no necessity for the efforts made by me to overturn the policy by which they were governed until the solution of the g^'veral f my race. In rising to the surface from the dei)th where the author was burieil by tlu^se who were struggling to occupy the position they were umjualitied to till, the first tluty is to proclaim the solemn fact that tlie time has come to assume the duty and secure a general ruo«»gnition of the mission in the name of his race and country. It will Ix* sustained by the magnitude of the work that has been accomplished for that purpose, and to make up a record sufiiciently brilliant to maintain the integrity of the projector of the revolution that was designed to sweep out of existence the powerful but useless benevolent institutions that stood in the way to control the sympathy of the public in behalf of the colored people, without confemng ujMjn thetii any corresj»onding benefit, AVhile the ulterior object of tliis grand movement was hid from the ])ul)lic, yet it was fully kiiown to the leaire prominent men of the two sections is the bright side, with nothing to sustain the hopes that reconstruction will be successfully carried out without infusing into tlie resources of the Southern States the vitality contemplated ])y the people under the teaching of their leading men and by whom tliey were driven into the rebellion. The chief stone of the corner of the Confederate Government was Shavery ; and the edifice erected upon it, adorned as it was with all the glitteriTig liopes of the l)uilders, now lies buried beneath the niiiis ! The grand idea now is, to aid in hewing out another through the genius <»f freemen and })lace it under the Federal Government, that its Rtrengtli may be increased to the extent necessary to support freedoui in the entire country with the concurrence of the people. The force by which the first link of the chain of the Unio-n was broken by secession, and by which the power of the general govern- ment was destroyed for the time, is a subject that cannot be lost sight of without committing a fatal mistake, when it is considered that the feelings of the people were fired with a degree of hostility that may still excite them to the extent that their opposition may paralyze the power of the civil authority. How to deal with them, is the question that every colored man must feel with sufiicient weio-ht to justify the attention the subject will demand from the standpoint it will be considered in their behalf. For while univer- sal emancipation has come upon the country "from its military necessity," and has opened the avenues to all the rights and immu- nities necessary for the elevation of the fi-eemen, yet, to incorporate these principles in the organic laws and efiectually change the autonomy of the non-reconstructed States by virtue of the power of the Federal Government, is the result that could oxAj follmo from the guidance of an tmseen hand. This is the political avalanche that has buried the traditional policy of one section, and it will recoil upon the other and create a common level for every State of the Union. But whatever may be the policy of the Loyal States in reference to the equalization of the suffrage as a national measure, yet every- thing that is sacred to freedom and would promote the prosperity of the country, demands that there should be but one destiny and that it should be fixed by the united efforts of the people. The breaking up of the relations between the two races, resulting in the general disorganization of society, without any landmarks to guide to harmony ; and superinduced as it may have been by causes over which the country had no control, yet it is a revolution in the Kepublic that all good men must deplore, in spite of the re- generating features it has brought with it. And why ? because the rancor that has been engendered and the humiliation inflicted upon the people upon whom the weight of the calamity has fallen, will require the most earnest labor of the statesman to obliterate it. For the Appomattox surrender was in itself more than an ordi- nary incident in the fortune of war from the political consequences it involved, and yet, in point of importance it will weigh next to nothinc in comparison with the disaster that has overwhelmed the people by the extinction of the dogma of secession, and in the elevation of the freedmen as the counterpoise to the principles that governed the statesmen of Secessia. If they had gone into that great stt'uggU with the aid of the colored mem and with the emblem of Freedom emUazoned upon the hanners that waited upon the hattUfelds, the impression is, that his suj)port would heme led to a remdmi of the map of the United States. If, then, the fatal results attending the want of affinity between the leaders in the rebellion and the emancipation of the colored people, is fully established in the minds of all intelligent men, then nothing can be fixed with more clearness than the landmarks that will warn the country of the dangers that would attend any reactionary measures against equal liberty in the Southern States. CHAP. II. The Last Houks of the Confederate Congress and the Question of Emancipation. The key note which was sounded in the last hours of the sitting of the Confederate Congress, when the question of emancipation and the enrolment of colored men as soldiers to fight their battles, was submitted for consideration by the statesmen who saw in that mea:=ure their only salvation, must be taken as the true guide, and will enable them to i)oint out the future policy of the country with an unerring hand. It is universally admitted that the " Institution," which led to the war for its preservation, was the source of weakness that was fatal to the Confederate Goveriniient, and paved tlie way for the humilia- tion tliat followed the terrible catastrophe as the sequel of the rebellion. If the ])eople can study anything from it, they will learn that the first rcfpiircment of free government in the Southern States is the extinction of caste, and is the sentiment that shonld Ikj diffused in that section of the country to enable them to work with the earnestness l)y whicli they may rise again and lead in the rev(»lution inaugurated by the emancipation of the colored people, and which undcrliea the measures for the reconstruction of the Itcpublic. While it is true that the work of freedom and eleva- tion (lion the wisdom and the forbearance of the people who must sacrifice principles which cannot be sustained without expos- ing them to an extremity that may lead to the gravest consequences. The n(^cessity for guarding against creating any suspicion in the mind of Southern men, led me to suppress the subject of my mis- sion until the exigencies of the times would enable me to make the effort to submit it to the legislatures of the several States with the approval of the people of this country. The impression that I could make it useful to the nation and promote the interest of my own people, was too deeply fixed in my mind to permit me to look with indifference upon the efforts of the statesmen in the develop- ment of principles against the peace of the country and its internal relations, if not revolutionary in their tendency, without carrying with them any benefit to the colored people. " That your Excellency and the honorable members of the legislature may fully comprehend the magnitude and the gravity of the subject and the necessity of submitting it at this juncture, I will reveal the policy I have followed in my ai)peals to the legisla- tures of some of the Southern States to make agriculture the basis of emi'Tation to Africa. If it was' the intention to remove the free colored people from 'motives of philanthropy, the elaborate plan devised for that pur})Ose by me is sutficient to carry it out to the fullest extent without exposing them to the penalty of confiscating the freedom of any. i>ut if the object was the re-enslavement of my peo])le I considered it my duty to stand between them and the State ].cgislaturcs as far as I could to shield them against any legislation without the real object being fully revealed. Three ai>j»cals were marec'lude the necessity of any legislation upon the subject, yet as I consider it a duty to humanity to urge a policy that will protect the iinutcent and lead to mutual efforts by the people of the United States to accomplish that object, I will submit it and trust to their wisdom for success. It would be a fatal mistake to suppose that tlie future of the colored j)eople in tliis country can be knoM'n from their past history, for in spite of the degrading position the}^ occupy tlicy would not fail to seize up on any opportunity that would ena- l»lc them to j>rove tlicir devotion to the cause of Freedom. The fact that the Union with the means to develop the resources, would be far more advantageous to the Southern States than could possibly ]>e derived out of it, is a grave subject and cannot be ignored under any contingency that may occur, if the welfare of the people should govern the statesmen. AVithout reviewing the difficulties that would arise from, the necessity of a foreign policy, I will leave the subject, believing tliat the people Mill not be driven from their loy- alty l»y mere ap]trehension. By a reference to the speech made at •• Sleepy Hollow" by a distinguished Senator in South Carolina some two years since, the statement was ixiade to the effect, " That the symj>athy for" the free colored people "in the free States is not sufficient to cause any ajiprehension to the South." That is true, and while that address was condemned and repudiated in the South, yet its safety depends upon the policy embodied in it. For while the Senate and the House of Representatives, and the Executive of the United States Avill at no distant day be under the control of those who will be oj)])osed to the slave trade, and to the extension »»f slavery, and will aim to place the government where it stood at the ••ommencement of its existence, yet from the very nature of things, it will l)e harmless to the South. If the purity of ^the government i- necessary to its existence to secure it by removing the cause of legislative conspiracy to sustain sectional issues, is an object that will commend itself to every considerate statesman of the country. In coimcction with this letter, 1 Mill send a copy of my pamphlet which contains the text of the subject in all its ramiiications, and I will su}»j.ly copies lor the mcinbers of the legislature as soon as I <;in. It is not my intention to submit to the legislature the plan of emigration to create a neutral position upon this subject which 37 may be very impor^nt to the people, until the new order of things are fully developed in favor of emancipation. • " Hoping that this will be considered as an object worthy of the attention of your Excellency and the people, it is respectfully sub- mitted by your obedient servant." " L. II. PUT^^AM." Looking to the objects to be obtained from the success of this as a national work, will preclude the necessity of seeking from any higher source the right to speak as by authority, and taking as the text, the subject by which the way to the legislature of South Carolina was fully prepared previous to the war. For as the sequel has brought with it all the consequences referred to in the appeal submitted as a warning by one of that proscribed class, it is impor- tant to confront the people at the point where the first shock to the Union was felt, that the remedy for the calamity that has fallen with equal force upon the other States of the rebellion may be applied. For what they failed to learn with the aid of their superior intelligence in the first place, they will fully comprehend from the reflex of the light which the minds of hlack men may emit in the struggle to maintain the ideas promulgated hy the framers of the Declaration of Independence. The first point of any importance that will present itself to the reflecting mind, will be seen in the want of appreciation and in the condemnation of the speech made at " Sleepy Hollow" by an ardent supporter of State sovereignty, and which will go very far to fix the impression that nothing but the stern results that have followed the catastrophe of the battle-field, could in the slighest degree arrest the designs of those who were guiding the destiny of the south with- out any reference to the power, and the higher laws that governs the universe. 38 For it was too true, as stated by the distiiiguished Senator of South Carolina, that there Avas nothing to sliow that any sympathy cnstidfor the colored people in the free States^ sufficient to alarm the Soidh, and it was from a ainiiLar conviction created in the mind of the writer of tlie documont that prompted him to take part in the elibrts to arrive at a sohition of the questions by which the country was ajritated, and aiming at results directly opposite to the policy l)v which pul)lie men were governed. Tlie second point is the value of the document as an indication of the disposition to shield from danger those who were aiming to peri)etuate the oppression of the colored people, and the secret his- torv and the magnitude of the work written for that purpose will fix for all time to come its grandeur and the design to guide the efforts for emancipation and elevation in this country. r>ut while the developments that will be made upon this subject will l)e more than sufficient to indicate the inflexible devotion of the author to the cause of universal liberty, yet it is proper that some reference should be made in this connection to other branches of the subject extending to the Eussian Empire, and to Dahomey in Africa, and will form part of the great work that must be performed for the benefit of the human family. The first is the efibrts to devise a plan to fix the relations of the emancipated in Eussia to the soil, and to show the fact that it was accomplished at the time when it could not fail to be useful, as an object that would merit some attention in that country. The means em])loyed to have the plan submitted to the Emperor, would have been ample in either of the two channels fixed upon for the purpose, as the civility of the Baron, as a member of the Legation at Washing- ton, was only equal to the attention given to the subject by the Ameri- can Minister previous to his return to St. Petersburgh. At the interview with the latter at the St. Nicholas Hotel in tlie (,'ity of New York, a full exposition was made to show the feasi- l)ility of elevating the emancipated above' the condition of tenants at will, wliich is slavery in the second degree, by secin-ing for every family the right in fee to homesteads on the estates of the nobles. 39 The reference tliat may be made to the plan as an agency to emancipation in the Brazillian Empire, and also in the Colonies of Spain, seems to be snfficient in its magnitude to make a serious im- pression in the minds of the people, and upon the two governments, from the necessity by which they will be led by the force of circum- stances, sooner or later to maintain the relations of the emancipated with the soil by a freehold interest the same as will be demanded by the agricultural interests in the Southern States. To those who are in need of information, let them seek it in the result of the transition of twenty millions, (20,000,000) of persons in the Eussian Empire, from the condition of serfs to the elevation of freemen. But while the plan was not published as contemplated, yet the adoption of the principles by the command of the Emperor will afford all the con- solation that could be derived from the eflect of the measures that will lead to a complete revolution in the social relations of the peasantry of that country as the agricultural class, and upon the unborn millions who will enjoy the blessings it will confer upon them. The communication written to the Mhiister of Foreign Affairs for the purpose of submitting to the government of her Majesty the Queen of England, the plan for the suppression of the slave trade, and the annual custom of the King of Dahomey, with an elaborate exposition of the views, and indicating the means by which the en- tire people could be led to conform to the principles of civilization, and at the same time avoid the system of absorption that would tend to make the country an English Colony, will fully repay for the labor it cost. The declaration made in the British Parliament by Lord John Hussell the Minister of Foreign Affairs, to the effect, that the in- fluence of England was ample to control the King, opened the way for the attempt to show the necessity of employing it in behalf of civilization in the section of the continent of Africa, which was known to be the great mart of the slave trade. In looking at the subject of the labor to promote the happiness of mankind, let us pause here and contemplate upon the grandeur and the effect of tlie change upon the social condition of society from the adoption of the homestead system in other countries, where 42 APPENDIX. The intention is to revise and enlarge the review by adding to it a document on the tinancial policy of the nation as a criticism on the subject of specie payment. The want of a comprehensive plan for the management of the question cannot fail to create the impression that it has completely overwhelmed the ideas of those who are struirirlins to reach a solution that will settle the basis for the currency of the country. This is a grave subject, inasmucb as it involves the integrity of the government of the United States through the measures of the statesmen who must show that they are equal to the requirements as managers. They are hound to hrlng to an end the policy hy which gold and itUver were transformed from a currency into a commodity for ftpeculation, loith the Treasury Department as the centre. It must be shown that the exigency that forced the greenbacks into use has ceased and the system fixed upon for the withdrawal of these pro- mises and if not, then a fiscal agency should be established to sus- tain it upon a specie basis. While the theory of the Ohio statesman in favor of the exten- sion of the issue of this circulating medium is sustained by the news advanced in the same direction by the members of the House from Massaclnisetts and other leading minds of the country, and is not without its plausible features, and yet the fatal mistake they have made In' not making a distinction between the provisional use of the greenbacks and the want of a permanent system by which the iiiitioii may separate its financial management from the com- mercial interest as involved in its connection Avith the JSTational Banks, by the organization of the necessary fiscal agency to sustain it. therefore, tliey must tail. Thr innocenry and the earnesi/ness imth lohich the sidjject has hcen suhiiittrd to the 2>uhlic seems to he wholly inade members, to sustain emig-ration to Ah ca ,,ith the support of Congress. This was the plan to establish thirtv-one districts through the agency ot the government o I iberia to rei-resent for six hundred families in each ot the several States, and to cost six million dollars ($(;,» '00,000). The plan was not only submitted to the managers of the New York State Colonization Society, an.l was the subject of debate during an entire sitting; but it wa. transmitted to the annual meeting o± the board of directors of the American Colonization Society m Wa^hincrton, with an elaborate exposition of the commercial policy. These documents in effect were regular bomb-shells, and especially to the new delegation, and was the occasion of the most exciting session ever held bv that body. As the adoption of the plan would have been the end of the New York board ..f managers, the cause of its resistance will be worthy of the most serious attention. The most important resuh was the abandonment of the commercial oiKiration, as it was carried on in the name of the Colonization Swcietv. which shows the disposition of the Board to shield its honor. and the reputation of its members against the doings of its agents. This reference to the secret history is to show that the society in this State wai^'v/z-mn oti h,/ the laic of , self -j> reservation to struggle for /^ txUtmrer It enables me to assume the position to defy the "members of the IJoard of Managers individually and collectively, to make the attempt to occupy any other ground than that. For- titied as I an. behind the three hundred pages of documents with twelve circulars hid away in the archives of the Board of Managers and of the hoard of Directors of the American Colonization Society it is the point to which they must look. The conlis and the blessings bestowed up(jn me, good men were duly clierihlicd, and by which I was sustained in the darkest hours of the Htrnggle to (»vereome all op])ositi()n and stand before the coun- try afi a worthy rei)re-entative of the colored people, and an honor- able citizen of the liepublic.