^^■H E 433 V/9 i'^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^l .VZ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS D0DDSDE374^ %■ .'^ ^ /j> A ^5'"^*" ^>' SPEECH OF C. L VALLANDICtHAM, WITH THE PROCEEDINGS AND RESOLUTIONS OF THE DEMOCRATIC MEETING, HELD IN THB CITY HALL, DAYTON, OHIO, Monday Evening, Oct. 29, 1855, DAYTOX: PRTMTED AT THB KMPIRB BOOK A\D JOB ROOMS. 1855. Fuit hcec sapientia quondam, Puhllea privatis secermre, sacra profanis. — Horace. jlkernas ojyes esse Eomanaa nisi inter seniet iptsi seditionihus saiviant. Id unum ve- ntnum, earn labein civitatihm opulentta repertam, ut mayna imperia movtalia essent. LlVY. Then only both Commonwealth and Religion will at length, if ever, flourish in Christ- endom, when either they who goverm discern between civil and religious (religion and politics ;) or they only wlio so discern, shall be admitted to govern. Till then nothing but troubles, persecutions, commotions, can be expected, the inward decay of true reli- gion among ourselves, and the utter overthrow at last by a common enemy.— Milton, SPEECH. The Present State of the Democratic Party in Ohio ; and its Duty. After some preliminary remarks explanatory of the object of the meeting, and the reasons why it was proper and expedient thus early to discuss before the people the great question which must make up the chief issue in the campaign of 1856, and to organize preparatory thereto — Mr. VALLANDIGHAM said that he proposed as the text, or " rubric, " of what he had to say to-night, the following inquiries : — Why has the Democratic Party suffered defeat in Ohio ? Why IS it so GREATLY DISORGANIZED 1 WhAT WILL RESTORE IT TO SOUND DOC- TRINE AND DISCIPLINE, AND THEREFORE TO POWER AND USEFULNESS ? These, Mr. President, are grave questions. I propose to answer them plainly — boldly — not as a partizan, but as a patriot ; and for the opin- ions which I shall this night avow, I alone am responsible. I speak not to please, but to instruct, to warn, to arouse, and if it be not pre- sumption, to save, while to be saved is yet possible. Tlie time for plain Anglo-Saxon out-speaking is come. Let us hear no more the lullaby of peace, when there is no peace ; but rather the sharp clang of the trumpet stirring to battle ; at least the alarm bell in the night when the house is on fire over our heads. Or, better still, give us warning while the incendiary is yet stealing '' with whispering and most guilty diligence," and flaming torch, toward our dwelling, that we may be ready and armed against his approach. First then : The Democratic party of Ohio suflered defeat because it became disorganized ; and it was disorganized because it held not, in all things, to sound doctrine, vigorous discipline, and to true and good men. It began to tamper with heresy and with unsound men — to look after j>oZ/c3/, falsely so called, and forget sometimes the true and hon- est ; not mindful, with Jackson, that the right is always expedient — at least that the wrong never is ; and that an invigorating defeat is ever better than a triumph which leaves the victor weaker than the con- quered. This is a law of nature, gentlemen, and we may claim no immunity from punishment for its infraction. I speak of the Demo- cratic party of Ohio, because we are our own masters, and have a work of our own to perform. But the evil, in part, lies outside the State. It infects the whole party of the Union, as such. It ascends into high places, and sits down hard by the throne. But I affect the wise caution of Sallust, remembering that concerning Carthage it is better to be ailent, than speak too little. Yet we as members must par- take of the weakness and enervation of other parts of the system ; and atrophy is quite as fatal, though it may not be so speedy, as corrup- tion and gangrene. The inquiries, gentlemen, which I have proposed, assume the truth of the facts which they imply. Are they not true ? That we have been defeated is now become history. But defeat did not disorganize us. Had not discipline first been lost, we could not have been overpowered. I know, indeed, that some have affirmed that we, too, are an effete par- ty, ready to be dissolved and pass away. It is not so. Dissolu- tion and disorganization are wholly different things. The Democratic party is not a thing of shreds and patches, organized for a transient purpose and thrown hap-hazard together in undistinguishable mass, • without form, consistency or proportion, by some sudden and tempora- ry pressure, and passing away with the occasion which gave it being ; or catching for a renewed but yet more ephemeral existence, at each flittincT exigency as it arises in the State ; moulding itself to the form of every popular humor, and seeking to fill its sails with every new wind of doctrine as it passes, either in zephyr or tempest, over the waves of public caprice ; born and dying with the breath which made it. No, sir. The Democratic party is founded upon principles which never die : hence it is itself immortal It may alter its forms ; it must change its measures ; — for as in principle it is essentially conservative, so in pol- icy it is tlie party of true progress ; — its individual members and its lead- ing spirits, its representative men cannot remain the same. But wherev- er there is a people wholly or partially free, there will be a Democratic party more or less developed and organized. But no party, gentlemen, is at all times equally pure and true to principle and its mission. And whenever the Democratic party forgets these, it loses its cementing and power-bestowing element; it waxes weak, is disorganized, is defeated : — till purging itself of its impurities, and falling- back and rallying within its impregnable entrenchments of original and eternal principles, it returns like "eagle lately bathed," with irresistible might and majesty to the conflict, full of hope and confident in victory. Sir, it is this recupera- tive power — this vis mcdicalrix — which distinguishes the Democratic party from every other ; and it owes this wholly to its conservative ele- iiicnl, FIXED POLITICAL i'RiNciPLES. I say political principles — princi- ples dealing peculiarly with government — because it is a roLiTicAL par- ty, and must be judged according to its nature and constitution. Re- cognizing, in their fullest extent, the imperative obligations of personal religion and morality upon its members, and also that in its aggregate being it dare not violate the principles of either, it is yet neither a Church nor a Lyceum. It is no part of its mission to set itself up a.s an e.xpoundcr of ethical or divine truth. Still less is it a mere phi- lanthropic or eleemosynary institution. All these are great and no- ble, each within its peculiar province, but they form no part of the immediate business and end of the Democratic party. And it is be- cause that party sometimes will forget that it is the first and highest du- ty of its mission to be the depositary of immutable political principles ; and steps aside after the dreams and visions of a false and fanatical progress ; sometimes political, commonly philanthropic or moral ; that it ceases to be powerful and victorious ; for God has ordained that truth shall ever in the end be vindicated, and error chastised. Forgetting the true province of a political party, the Democracy of France and Germany has always failed, and ever must fail. It aims at too much. It invokes government to regenerate man, and set him - free from the taint and the evils of sin and suffering. It seeks to control the domestic, social, individual, moral and spiritual relations of man. - It ignores or usurps the place of the iireside, the church and the lyce- um: and emulating thus the folly of Icarus, and spreading its wings for too lofty a flight into upper air, it has melted like wax before the sun. Indirectly, indeed, government will always, sir, aflect more or less all these relations for good or evil. But departing from its appointed or- bit, confusion, not less surely or disastrously, must follow, than from a 6 like departure by the heavenly bodies from their fixed laws of motion. And, indeed, the greater and by far the gravest part of the errors of De- mocracy everywhere, are to be traced directly to neglect or infraction of the funjlamental principle of its constitution ; that man is to be con- sidered and dealt with by government, strictly in reference to his rela- tions as a political being. These reflections, Mr. President, naturally lead me to the first in- quii-y. Personal dissension : — a turning aside after mere temporary and mis- called expediency ; a faith in and following after weak, or uncertain, or selfish, or heretical men ; neglect of party tone and discipline, as essen- tial to the morale, and hence the success of a party, as of an army, and just as legitimate ; these, and the like minor causes of disorganization and defeat, I pass over. They are incident to all parties, and although never to be too lightly estimated, yet rarely occasion lasting or very se- rious detriment. Commonly, indeed, sir, they are but the diagnostic, or visible developement of an evil which lies deeper — just as boils and blotches upon the surface of the body show that the system is tainted and distempered witliin. Neither do I pause, gentlemen, to consider bow far the final inauguration of the grand scheme of domestic policy, which the Democratic party so many years struggled for, and the consequent prostration and dissolution of the Whig party, have contributed to the loss of vigilance and discipline ; since an organization healthy in all other things, must soon recover its wonted tone and soundness. Sir, the Democratic party has principle to fall back upon, and it has, too, a trust to execute not less sacred and almost as difficult as its first work. It is its business to pi-eserve and keep pure and incorrupt that which it has established. And this, along with the new political questions which in the world's progress, from day to day spring up, will give us labor enough and sweat enough, without a wild foray into the province of the benevolent association, the lyceum or the church ; to return thence laden, not with the precious things, tlie incense and the vessels of silver and gold from off the altar, but the rubbish and the oftal, — the big- otries, the intolerance, the hypocrisies, the persecuting spirit, and what- ever else of unmixed evil has crept through corruption, into 'the outer or the inner courts of the sanctuary. I know, indeed, gentlemen, that every political party is more or less directly afiected, as by a sort of magnetism, by all great public move^ ments upon any subject ; and it is one of the peculiar evils of a democ- racy that every question of absorbing, though never so transient inter- est — moral, social, religious, scientific, no matter what — assumes, soon- er or later, a political shape and hue, and enters into the election con- tests and legislation of the country. For many years, nevertheless, sir, questions not strictly political, exerted but small influence upon parties in the United States. The memorable controversies -tyhiclx preceded the American Revolution, and which developed and disciplined the great abilities of the giants of those days — founded, indeed, as all must be, upon abstract principles drawn from the nature of man considered in his relation to government — were yet strictly legal and political. The men of that day were not cold metaphysicians, nor wicked or mischiev- ous enthusiasts — else we had been subjects of Great Britain to this day. Practical men, they dealt with the subject as a practical question; and deducing the right of Revolution ; the right to institute, alter or abolish government, from " the inalienable rights of man," the American Con- gress summed up a long catalogue of injuries and usurpations wholly political, as impelling to the separation, and struck out of the original draught of the Declaration of Independence, the eloquent, but then mis- timed declamation of Jefferson against tlie African Slave Trade. Sir, it did not occur to even the Hancocks and the Adamses of the New England of that day, that the national sins and immoralities of Great Britain, could form the appropriate theme of a great state paper, and supply to a legislative assembly the most potent arguments where-with to justify and defend before the world, a momentous political revolution. Discoveries such as these are, belong to the patriots and wise men — the Sewards, the Sumners, the Ilalcs, and the Chases of a later and more enlightened age. Our ancestors Avent to war, indeed, about a preamble and a princi- ple: but these were political — the right of the British Parliament to tax America. And they did not stop to inquli-e whether war was humane and consistent with man's notion of the gospel of peace. Their po- litical rights were invaded, and they took up arms to repel the aggres- sion. Nor did tliey, sir, in the temper and spirit of the pharisaic rab- bins and sophisters of '55, ask of each other whether morally or piously, the citizens of the several colonies were worthy of fellowship. They were resolved to form a political union, so as to establish justice and to 8 secure domestic tranquility, tiie common defence, tlie general welfare, and the blessings of liberty to themselves and posterity : and the Catho- lic of Maryland and the Huguenot of Carolina ; the Puritan Roundhead of New England and the Cavalier of Virginia ; the slavery-hating, though sometimes slave-trading, saint of Boston and the slave-holding sinner of Savannah ; Washington and Adams, Rutledge and Sherman, Madi- son and Franklin, Pinckney and Ellsworth, all joined hands in holy brotherhood, to ordain a Constitution which, silent about temperance, forbade religious tests and establisJwienls, and provided for the extra- dition of Jugitive slaves* The questions which engaged the great minds of Washington and the men who composed his cabinets, were also purely political. — " Whiskey,'^ indeed, sir, played once an important part in the drama, threatening even civil war ; but it was as the creature of the tax-gath- erer, not the theme of the philanthropist or the ecclesiastic. Even the Alieji and Sedition Laws of the succeeding administration — renascent now by a sort of Pythagorean meternpsycliosis, in the form of a secret oath-bound conspiracy — were defended then solely on political grounds. " The principles of '98," which at that time convulsed the country in the struggle for their predominance, were, indeed, abstractions, though of \xAn\iQ practical value — but they were constitutional and political ab- stractions. Equally is it true tliat all the capital measures in every Administration from '98 to 1828, were of a kindred character — except, only, the Missouri Question; that " fire bell in the night," which filled Jefi'erson with alarm and despair. But this was transient in itself; though it left its slumbering and treacherous ashes to kindle a flame not many years later, whicii tlireatens to consume this Union with fire un- quenchable. But within no period of our history, gentlemen, Avere so many and such grave political questions the subject of vehement and sometimes exasperated discussion, as during the administrations of Jackson and his successor, continuing down, many of them, to 1847. Among these f name Internal Improvements, the Protective System, the Public Lands, Nullification, the Removal of the Indians, the United States Bank, the Removal of the Deposites, Removals from Ofi^ice, the French Indemnity, the Expunging Resolutions, the Specie Circular, Executive *NoTB. — Botli these provisions were carried unanimously, without debate and with- out vote.— 3 Mad. Pap. 1366, 1447, 1456, 1468. Patronage, the Independent Treasury, Distribution, the Veto Power, and their cognate subjects. Never were greater questions presented. Never was greater intellect or more abundant learning and ingenuity brought into the discussion of any subjects. And never, be it remem- bered, was the Democratic party so powerful. It was the power and majesty of principle and truth, working out their developement through machinery obedient to its constitution and nature. True, Andrew Jack- son was then at the head of the party, and his name and his will, mov- ing all things with a nod, were a tower of strength. But an hundred Jacksons could not have upheld a party one day which had been false to its mission. Within this period, indeed. Anti-masonry rose, flourished and died ; the first in the United States, of a long line oi third parties — the terlium quid of political sophisters — based upon but one tenet, and devoted to a single purpose. But even in this, the professed principle was solely political. Following the great questions of the Jackson era, came the Annexa- tion of Texas, the Oregon question, and the Mexican War; during or succeeding which, that pestilent and execrable sectional controversy, ReipubliccB porleritum ac poene funus, was developed and nurtured to its present perilous magnitude. Here, gentlemen, a new epoch begins in our political history. A new order of issues and new party mechanism are introduced. At this point, therefore, let us turn back and trace briefly the origin and histo- ry of those grievous departures from the ancient landmarks, which, fill- ing the whole country with confusion and perplexity, have impaired, more or less seriously, the strength and discipline of the Democratic party. In the State of Massachusetts — not barren of inventions — in the year 1811, at a meeting of an ecclesiastical council, a committee was ap- pointed, whereof a reverend doctor o^ Salem was chairman, to draught a constitution for the first " Temperance Society" in the United States. The committee reported in 1813, and the society was established. It languished till 1826, and "languishing did live." Nathan Dane was among its first presidents. In that year of grace, sir, at Boston, died this association ; and from its ashes sprang the " American Society for the promotion of Temperance ;" the parent of a numerous offspring. This association was in its turn, supplanted by the Washingtonian So- 2 10 cietiea of 1841 ; and they again by the Sons of Temperance. The el- dest of these organizations taught only temperance in the use of ardent spirits ; their successors forbade wholly all spirituous, but allowed vin- ous and fermented liquors. The Washingtonians enjoined total absti- nence from every beverage which by possibility might intoxicate : and so also did the Sons of Temperance. But all these organizations, gen- tlemen, in the out-set at least, professed reliance solely upon " moral suasion," and denied all political purpose or design in their action.— They were voluntary associations, formed to ■persuade men to be tem- perate. This was right ; was reasonable ; was great and noble; and immense results for good, rewarded their labors. The public was in- terested evei*y where. The cause became popular — became powerful. Designing men, not honest, were not slow to discover that it might be turned into a potent political engine for the advancement of personal or party interests. Weak men, very honest, were dazzled and deluded by the bright dream of intemperance expelled and man restored to his original purity, by the power of human legislation. And lo, in 1855, in this the freest country upon the globe, fourteen States, by statute brist- ling all over with fines, the jail and the penitentiary, have prescribed that neither strong drink nor the fruit of the vine, shall be the subject of contract, traffic or use within their limits. Temperance, which Paul preached and the Bible teaches as a religious duty, and leaves to the church or the voluntary association, is now become a controlling ele- ment at the polls and in legislation. Political parties are perverted in- to great temperance societies ; and the fitness of the citizen for office, o-uaged now by his capacity to remain dry. His palm may itch ; his whole head may be weak, and his whole heart corrupt ; but if his tongue be but parched, he is competent. And now, sir, along with good came evil ; and when the good turned to evil, the plague abounded exceedingly. 1 pass by that numerous host of lesser isms of the day, full all of them, of folly or fanaticism, and fit only to " uproar the universal peace, confound all unity on earth ;" which, nevertheless, have excited much public interest, numbered many followers, and flowing speedily into the stream of party politics, aid- ed largely to pollute its already turbid and frothy waters. I come to that most recent fungous devclopement of those departures from orig- inal and wholesome political principle : Know-Nothingism ; as barbar- ous in name, as, in my judgment, it is dangerous in essence. 11 The extraordinary success, gentlemen, which had attended political temperance and abolition, revealed a mine of wealth, richer than Cali- fornia placer, to the office-hunting demagogue. Ordinary political top- ics were become stale — certainly unprofitable. But he, it now appear- ed, who could call in the aid of moral or religious truths, touched an answering chord in the heart of this very pious and upright people ; a people so keenly sensitive, too, each one to the moral or religious sta- tus of his neighbor. Not ignorant, sir, of the corroding bitterness of religious strife ; and mindful of the desolating persecutions for conscience sake, of which governments in times past had been the willing instruments, the founders of our federal Constitution forbade, in clear and positive language, all religious tests and establishments : and every state, in terms more or less emphatic, has ordained a similar prohibition. The Constitution of Ohio, declaring that all men have a natural and indefeasible right to worship Almighty God according to the dictates of their own conscience, provides that " no preference shall be given by law to any religious so- ciety, nor shall any interference with the rights of conscience, be per- mitted ; and no religious test shall be required as a qualification for officer By prohibitions, positive and stringent as these are, gentlemen, our fathers in their weakness, thought to stay the flood of religious intole- rance. Vain hope ! The high road to honor and emolument, lay through the " higher law " reforms of the day. Moral and religious issues alone were found available. The roll of the *' drum ecclesiastic" could stir a fever in the public blood, when the thunders of the rostrum fell dull and droning upon the ears of the people. It needed but small sagacity, therefore, to foresee that the prejudices of race and sect, must prove a still more powerful and wieldy engine. The Pope of Pilgrim's Progress grinned still at the mouth of the cave full of dead men's bones, and Fox's Book of Martyrs lay shuddering yet with its hideous engrav- ings, under every protestant roof. How easy, then, to revive, or rath- er, to fan into a flame, this secret but worse than goblin dread of Papa- cy and the Inquisition. Add to this that a majority of Catholics are foreigners, obnoxious, therefore, to the bigotry of race and birth also ; add further, that silence, secresy and circumspection are weapons po- tent in any hands : add still, that to be over-curious is a controlling ele- ment in the American character. Compound, now, all these with a 12 travesty upon the signs, grips and macliinery of already existing or- ganizations, and you have the elements and mechanism of a great and powerful, but assuredly not enduring party. In the month of January, 1854, the telegraph on lightning wing, speeds through its magic meshes, the astounding intelligence that at the municipal election of the town of Salem, (not unknown in history,) in the commonwealth of Massachusetts, men not known to be candi- dates were, by an invisible and unknown agency, said to be a secret oath-bound society without even so much as a name, elected by heavy majorities over candidates openly proclaimed. In March and in April, similar announcements appear from other quarters. The mys- tery is perplexing : the country is on fire : and lo, in October, nine months after this Salem epiphany, from Maine to California, the myth- ic " Sam " has established his secret conclaves in every city, village, county and state in the Union. And here again, sir, the protestant clergy forgetting, many of them; their divine warrant and holy mission — I speak it with profoundest sor- row and humiliation — have run headlong into this dangerous and de- moralizing organization. They have even sought, in many places, to control it, and through it, the political affairs of the country : and, sad spectacle, are found but too often, foremost and loudest and most clam- orous among political brawlers and hunters of place. I rejoice, sir, that there are many noble and holy exceptions — ministers mindful of their true province, and preaching only the pure precepts and doctrines of that Sacred Volume without which there is no rehgion, and no sta- bility or virtue worth the name, in either church or state. Neverthe- less, covertly or openly, the protestant clergy and church have but too much, lent countenance and encouragement to the order. And the truth must and shall be spoken both of church and of party. In seizing upon the Temperance and other moral and religious move- ments. Party invaded the territory of the Church. The church has now avenged the aggression, and gone into party ; not with the might and majesty of holinesss ; not to purify and elevate : but with distorted feature, breath polluted and wing dripping and droiling in mire and stench and rottenness, to destroy and pollute in the foul embrace, whatever of purity remained yet to either church or the hustings. The church has disorganized and perverted party ; and in its turn, parly has become to the church as '« dead flies in the ointment of the apoth- 13 ecary.'* Church and State each abandoning its peculiar province, and meeting upon the common ground of fanaticism and proscription, have joined hands in polluting and incestuous wedlock. The constitution remains indeed unchanged in letter ; but this unholy union has render- ed nugatory one among its wisest and most salutary enactments. But, gentlemen, all these are in their nature and from circumstances essentially ephemeral. No powerful and controlling interests exist to cement and harden them into strength and durability. They are among the epidemic diseases which for a season, infect every body politic, leaving it, if sound in constitution and not distempered other- wise, purified and strengthened. In all these, too, the Democracy as a party, has stood firm and uncontaminate : although, indeed, individual members have in every state and county, been beguiled and led astray ; and thereby the aggregate power and influence of the party, greatly im- paired. Especially, sir, is the present order of " Know-Nothings " evanes- cent. Even now it totters to the earth. In the beginning, indeed, it was perhaps the purpose of its founders to hold it aloof from the great sectional controversy between the North and the South ; and to mould it into a permanent national party. But circumstances are stronger than men ; and already throughout the north, it has become thoroughly abolitionized. Hence it must speedily dissolve and pass away ; or re- main but a yet more hateful adjunct of that one stronger and more du- rable organization in which every element of opposition to the Demo- cratic party, must sooner or later, inevitably terminate — the Abolition HORDE OF THE NoRTH. For howcver tortuous may be its channel or re- mote its fountain, into this turbid and devouring flood, will every brook and rivulet find its way at last. The consideration of this great question, Mr. President, I have natu- rally and appropriately reserved to the last. It is the gravest and most momentous, full of embarrassment and of danger to the country • and in cowering before or tampering with it, the Democratic party of Ohio has given itself a disabling, though I tnist not yet mortal wound. I propose, then, sir, to trace fully the origin, developement and pro- gress of this movement: and to explore and lay open at length, its re- lations, present and prospective, to the Democratic party and to the Union, 14 Slavery, gentlemen, older in other countries also, than the records of human society, existed in America at the date of its discovery. The first slaves of the European, were natives of the soil: and a Puritan governor of Massachusetts, founder of the family of Winthrop, be- queathed his soul to God, and his Indian slaves to the lawful heirs of his body. Negro slavery was introduced into Hispaniola in 1501: more than a century before the colonization of America by the English. Massachusetts by express enactment in 1641, punishing "manstealing" with death : — and it is so punished to this day under the laws of the United States — legalized yet the enslaving of captives taken in war, and of such "strangers," foreigners, as should be acquired by purchase : while confederate New England two years later, providing for the equitable division of lands, goods and '-persons " as equally a part of the "spoils" of war, enacted also the first fugitive slave law in Ameri- ca. White slaves — convicts and paupers some of them ; others at a later day, prisoners taken at the battles of Dunbar and Worcester, and of Sedgemoor — were at the first, employed in Virginia and the British West Indies. Bought in England by English dealers, among whom was the queen of James II, with many of his nobles and courtiers, some of them perhaps of the house of Sutherland ; they were imported and sold at auction to the highest bidder. In 1620, a Dutch man of war first landed a cargo of slaves upon the banks of James River. But the earliest slave ship belonging to English colonists, was fitted out in 1645, by a member of the Puritan church of Boston. Fostered still by English princes and nobles : confirmed and cherished by British legis- lation and judicial decisions, even against the wishes and in spite of the remonstrances of the Colonies, the traffic increased ; slaves multi- plied, and on the Fourth of July, 1776, every colony was now become a slave state ; and the sun went down that day upon four hundred and fifty thousand of those who in the cant of eighty years later, are styled "human chattels," but who were not by the act of that day emancipated. Eleven years afterwards, delegates assembling at Philadelphia, from every state except Rhode Island^ ignoring the question of the sinful- ness and immorality of slavery, as a subject with which they as the re- presentatives of separate and independent states, had no concern, foun- ded a union and framed a constitution, which leaving with each state the exclusive control and regulation of its own domestic institutions, 15 and providing for the taxation and representation of slaves, gave no right to Congress to debate or to legislate concerning slavery in the states or territories, except for the interdiction of the slave trade and the extradition of fugitive slaves. The Plan of Union proposed by Franklin in 1754, had contained no allusion even to slavery ; and the Articles of Confederation of 1778, but a simple recognition of its exist- ence — so wholly was it regarded then, a domestic and local concern. In 1787 every State, except perhaps Massachusetts, tolerated slavery either absolutely or conditionally. But the number of slaves north of Maryland, never great, was even yet comparatively small ; not ex- ceeding forty thousand in a total slave population of six hundred thou- sand. In the North, chief carrier of slaves to others even as late as 1807, slavery never took firm root. Nature warred against it in that latitude ; otherwise every state in the Union, would have been a slave- holding state to this day. It was not profitable there ; and it died out — lingering indeed in New York till July 1827. It died out: but not so much by the manumission of slaves, as by their transportation and sale in the South : and thus New England, sir, turned an honest pen- ny with her left liand, and with her right, modestly wrote herself down in history, as both generous and just. In the South, gentlemen, all this was precisely reversed. The earli- est and most resolute enemies to slavery, were southern men. But cli- mate had fastened the institution upon them ; and they found no way to strike it down. From the beginning indeed, the Southern colonies especially had resisted the introduction of African slaves ; and at the very outset of the revolution, Virginia and North Carolina interdicted the slave trade. The Continental Congress soon after, on the sixth of April, 177G, three months earlier than the Declaration of Independence, resolved that no more slaves ought be imported into the thirteen colo- nies. Jefl:erson in his draught of the Declaration, had denounced the king of England alike for encouraging the slave trade, and for foment- ing servile insurrection in the provinces. Ten years later, he boldly attacked slavery in his "Notes on Virginia :" and in the Congress of the Confederation, j^rior to the adoption of the Constitution, with its solemn compacts and compromises upon tfie suhject of slavery, proposed to exclude it from the territory northwest the river Ohio. Col. Mason of Virginia, vehemently condemned it, in the Convention of 1787. Nevertheless it had already become manifest that slavery must soon die 16 away in the North, but in the South continue and harden into perhaps a permanent, uneradicable system. Hostile interests and jealousies sprang up, therefore, in bitterness even in the Convention. But the blood of the patriot brothers of Carolina and Massachussetts, smoked yet upon the battle fields of the Revolution. The recollection of their kindred language and common dangers and sufferings, burned still fresh in their hearts. Patriotism proved more powerful than jealousy, and good sense stronger than fanaticism. There were no Sewards, no Hales, no Sumners, no Greeleys, no Parkers, no Chase, in that Convention. There was a Wilson ; but he rejoiced not in the name of Henry; and he was a Scotchman. There was a clergyman — no, not in the Convention of '87, but in the Congress of '76 : but it was the devout, the learned, the pious, the patriotic Witherspoon ; of foreign birth also, a native of Scotland, too. The men of that day and generation, sir, were content to leave the question of slavery just where it belonged. It did not occur to them, that each one among them was accountable for "the sin of slaveholding" in his fel- low ; and that to ease his tender conscience of the burden, all the fruits of revolutionary privation and blood and treasure ; all the recol. lections of the past ; all the hopes of the future : nay the Union, and with it, domestic tranquility and national independence, ought to be ofT- ered up as a sacrifice. They were content to deal with political ques- tions ; and to leave cases of conscience to the church and the schools, or to the individual man. And accordingly to this Union and Constitu- tion, based upon these compromises — execrated now as "covenants with death and leagues with hell" — every state acceded : and upon these foundations, thus broad, and deep and stable, a political super- structure has, as if by magic arisen, which in symmetry and proportion > and, if we would but be true to our trust, in strength and durability, finds no parallel in the world's history. Patriotic sentiments, sir, such as marked the era of '89, continued to guide the statesmen and people of the country, for more than thirty years, full of prosperity : till in a dead political calm, consequent upon temporary extinguishment of the ancient party lines and issues, the Missouri Question, resounding through the land with the hollow moan of the earthquake, shook the pillars of the Republic even to their deep foundations. Within these thirty years, gentlemen, slavery as a system, had been 17 abolished by law or disuse, quietly and without agitation, in every slate north of Mason and Dixon's line — in many of them, lingering, indeed, in individual cases, so late as the census of 1840. But except in half a score of instances, the question had not been obtruded upon Con- gress. The Fugitive Slave Act of 1793, had been passed without oppo- sition and without a division, in the Senate ; and by a vote of forty- eight to seven, in the House. The slave trade had been declared pira- cy punishable with death. Respectful petitions from the Quakers of Pennsylvania, and others, upon the slavery question, were referred to a committee, and a report made thereon, which laid the matter at rest. Other petitions afterwards were quietly rejected, and in one instance, returned to the petitioner. Louisiana and Florida, both slave holding countries, had without agitation, been added to our territory. Ken- tucky, Tennessee, Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, slave states each one of them, had been admitted into the Union, without a mur- mur. No Missouri Restriction, no Wilmot Proviso had as yet reared its discoi'dant front to terrify and confound. Non intervention was then both the practice and the doctrine of the statesmen and people of that period : though as yet, no hollow platform enunciated it as an arti- cle of faith, from which, nevertheless, obedience might be withheld, and the platform "spit upon," provided the tender conscience of the recusant did not forbid him to support the candidate and help to se- cure the " spoils." Once only, sir, was there a deliberate purpose shown, by a formal assault upon the compromises of the Constitution, to array the prejudi- ces of geographical sections upon the question of slavery. But origin- ating within the secret counsels of the Hartford Convention, it partook of the odium which touched everything connected with that treasonable assembly ; till set on fire by a live coal from the altar of jealousy and fanaticism, it burst into a conflagration six years later. And now, sir, for the first time in our history under the Constitution, a strenuous and most imbittered struggle ensued, on part of the North — the Federalists of the North — to prevent the admission of a State into the Union ; re- ally because the North — the Federalists of the North — strove for the mas- tery and to secure the balance of power in her own hands ; but ostensi- bly because slave-holding, which the Missouri constitution sanctioned, was affirmed to be immoral and irreligious. In this first fearful strife, this earliest departure from the Constitution and the ancient sound pol- 3 18 icy of the country, ihe NoHh — for the truth of history shall be vindica. ted THE North was the aggressor : and that, too, without the slightest provocation. Vermont in New England ; Ohio, Indiana and Illinois out of territory, once the property of slave-holding Virginia, had been admitted into the Union ; and Michigan organized into a territorial gov- ernment, without one hostile vote from the South, given upon the ground that slavery was interdicted within their limits. Even Maine had been permitted by vote of Congress, to slougli ofi'from Massachusetts, and be- come a separate state. But now Missouri knocked for admission, with a constitution not introducing, but continuing slavery which had exist- ed in her midst from the beginning ; and four several times at the first, she was rejected by the North. The South resisted ; and the storm raged. .Jefferson, professing to hate slavery, but living and dying him- self a slave-holder, or in the delicate slang of to-day, a " slave breeder," loving yet his country with all the fervid patriotism of his early man- hood five and forty years before, heard in it " the knell of the Union ;" and mourned that he must *• die now in the belief that the useless sac- rifice of themselves by the generation of 1776, to acquire self-govern- ment and happiness to their country, was to be thrown away by the unwise and unworthy passions of their sons :" consoling himself, the only solace of the patriot of fourscore years, that he should not live to weep over the blessings thrown thus recklessly away for " an abstract principle ;" and the folly and madness of this " act of suicide and of treason against the hopes of the world." But the incantations of hate and fanaticism had evoked the hideous spectre ; and it ought to have been quelled never to re-appear. The ap- palling question was now stirred ; and it should have been met and re- settled forever, by the men of that day, on the original basis of the Con- stitution : — not left as a legacy of discord, a Pandora's box full of all evil, of mischief and pestilence, to the next generation. They were not true to themselves : they were not true to us. They cowered be- fore the goblin ; and laid before it peace offerings and a wave offering, and sent us their children to pass through the fire in the valley of Hin- nom. Setting aside the compromises of the Constitution, and usurp- ing power not granted to Congress, they undertook to compromise about that which had already been definitely and perman'ently settled by that instrument. This was the beginning, sir, of that line of paltry and halting compromises ; of fat-brained, mole-eyed, unmanlike expe- 19 pedients which put the evil day off, only to return laden with aggrava- ted mischief. They hushed the terrible question for a moment ; and the election machinery moved on, and the spoils of the Presidency were divided as before. But it was " a reprieve only, not a fmal sentence." The "geographical line " thus once conceived for the first time, and held up to the angry passions of men, was as Jefferson had foretold, never obliterated, but rather by every irritation, marked deeper and deeper. And after fifteen years truce, it re-appeared in a new and far more dangerous form : and enduring already for more than half the average life-time of man, has attained a position and magnitude which neither demands nor will hearken to any further compromise. Nevertheless, sir, but for the insolent intermeddling of the British gov- ernment and British emissaries — continued to this day, with the super- addition now of Napoleon the Third — it might have slumbered for many years longer. In England, gentlemen, the form of personal bondage disappeared even to its last traces, from her own soil, about the beginning of the seventeenth century : its legal existence continued till 1661: its worst realities remain to this day ; for although in that very humane and most enlightened Island, there be no involuntary servitude except as a punishment for crime, yet in England, poverty is a crime, punishable with the worst form of slavery or by starvation and death. Three hundred years ago she began the traffic in negro slaves. Queen Elizabeth was a sharer in its gains. A hundred and fifty years later, at the peace of Utrecht, England undertook by compact with Spain, to import into the West Indies, within the space of thirty years, one hun- dred and forty-four thousand negroes, demanding, and with exactest care securing, a monopoly of the traffic. Queen Anne reserved one quarter of the stock of the slave trading company to herself, and one half to her subjects : to the king of Spain, the other quarter being con- ceded. Even so late as 1750, Parliament busied itself in devising plans to make the slave trade still more effectual : while in 1775, the very year of the Revolution, a noble earl wrote to a coloftial agent, these memorable words : " We cannot allow the colonies to check or discourage in any degree, a traffic so beneficial to the nation." Between that date and the period of first importation, England had stolen from the coast of Africa, and imported into the new world, or buried in the aea on the passage thither, not less than three and a quarter millions 20 of negroes — more by half a million than the entire population of the Colonies. In April 1776, the American Congress resolved against the importation of any more slaves. But England continued the traffic, with all its accumulated horrors, till 1808 ; for so deeply had it struck its roots into the commercial interests of that country, that not all the efforts of an organized and powerful society ; not the influence of her ministers ; not the eloquence of all her most renowned orators, availed to strike it down for more than forty years after this its earliest interdic- tion in any country, by a rebel congress. Nevertheless, sir, slavery in the English West Indies, continued twenty-seven years longer. But the loss of her American colonies and the prohibition of the slave trade, had left small interest to Great Britain in negro slavery. Her philan- thropy found room now to develope and expand in all its wonderful proportions. And accordingly, in 1834, England — England, drunk with the blood of the martyrs, stoning the prophets and rejecting the apostles of political liberty in her own midst — robbed by act of Parlia- ment, one hundred millions of dollars from the wronged and beggared peasantry of Ireland ; from the enslaved and oppressed millions of In- dia, from the starving, overwroiight, mendicant carcasses of the white slaves of her own soil, to pay to her impoverished colonists plundered without voice and without vote in her legislature, the stipulated price of human rights ; and with these the wages of iniquity, in the outraged name of God and humanity, mocked the handful of her black bonds- men in the West Indies, with the false and deluding shadow of liberty. Exeter Hall resounded with acclamation : bonfires and illuminations proclaimed the exultant joy of an aristocracy fat with the pride and lust of domination. But in that self same hour — in that self same hour, from the furnaces of Sheffield and the manufactories of Birming- ham : from the wretched hovels of Ireland, full of famishing and pesti- lence : from ten thousand work-houses crowded with leperous and per- ishing paupers, the abodes of abominable cruelties, which not even the pen of a Dickens has availed to portray in the full measure of their enormity ^Snd from the mouths of a thousand pits and mines, deep under earth, horrid in darkness, and reeking with noisome vapor, the stupendous charnel houses of the living dead men of England, there went up, and ascends yet up to heaven, the piercing wail o£ desolation and despair. But England became now the great apostle of African liberty. Ignor- 21 ing, sir, or putting under at the point of the bayonet, the political rights of millions of her own white subjects, she yet prepared to con- vict the world of the sinfulness of negro slavery. Exeter Hall sent out its emissaries, full of zeal and greedy for martyrdom. The Brit- ish government took up the crusade ; — not from motives of religion or philanthropy. Let no man be deceived. No, sir. Since the days of Peter the Hermit and Richard the Lion-hearted, England, forgetting the Holy Sepulchre, had learned many lessons : and none know better now their true province and mission, than Elnglish statesmen. But the American experiment of free government had not failed. America had grown great — had grown populous and powerful. Her proud example towering up every day higher and illuminating every land, was pene- trating the hearts of the people and threatening to shake the thrones of every monarchy in Europe, Force against such a nation, would be the wildest of follies. But to be odious is to be weak ; and internal dissension had wasted Greece and opened even Thermopylae to the Bar- barian of Macedon. The Missoui'i Question had revealed the weak point of the American Confederacy. Achilles was found vulnerable in the heel. In spent venlum erat, intestina discordia dlsnolvi rem Ro- manam posse. The machinery which had etlccted emancipation in the British West India Islands, of use no longer in England, was transferred to Ameri- ca. Aided by British gold ; encouraged by British sympathy, the agi- tation began herein 1835 : and so complete was it in all its appoint- ments, so thorough the organization and discipline, so perfect the elec- tric current, that within six months, the whole Union was convulsed. Affiliated societies were established in every Northern State, and in al- most every county : lecturers were paid and sent forth into every city and village : a powerful and well supported press, fed from the treasu- ries and working up the cast ofi* rags of the British societies, poured forth a multitude of incendiary prints and publications, which were distributed by mail throughout the Union : but chiefly in the Southern States and among the slaves. Fierce excitement in the SonA followed. And so great became the public feeling and interest, that President Jackson, so early as the annual message of 1835, pressed earnestly upon Congress, the duty of prohibiting the use of the mail for transmit- ting incendiary publications to the South. But prior to the sitting of Congress, the Abolition Societies, treading again in the footsteps of the 22 emancipationists in England, had prepared, and now poured in a flood of petitions, praying Congress to take action upon the subject of slave- ry. The purpose was to obtain a foothold, a fulcrum, in the Capitol ; for without this, the South could not be effectually embroiled, and little could be accomplished even in the North. But no appliances were left untried. Agitators, tlieir breath was agitation : quiescence would have been a sentence of obscurity and dissolution. And accordingly, in May 1835, the American Anti-slavery Society was established in New York ; its object being the immediate and unconditional abolition of negro slavery in the United States. It was a permanent organiza- tion, to be dissolved only upon the consummation of its purpose. The object of attack was the South : the seat of war the North. Public sentiment was to be stirred up here against slavery because it was a moral evil, and a sin in the sight of the Most High, for the continuance of which one day, the men of the North were accountable before heav- en. Slaveholders were to be made odious in the eyes of northern men and foreign nations, as cruel tyrants and taskmasters ; as kidnappers, murderers and pirates, whose existence was a reproach to the North, and whom it were just to hunt down and exterminate as so many beasts of prey to whom even the laws of the chase extended no indulgence. To hold fellowship and union with slaveholders, was to partake of all their sins and enormities : it was to be " in league with death and cov- enant with hell." The Constitution and Union were themselves sinful ; and as such they ought forthwith to be abrogated and dissolved. And thus, sir, the earlier abolitionists, who were zealots, began just where their successors of to-day who are traitors, have ended. A separate political organization was not, at the first, proposed ; and each man was left to his ancient party allegiance. The revolution was to be a moral and religious revolution ; and its principles, propagated by petitions, lectures, societies and the press, in the North, were through these instrumentalities, to penetrate Congress and the legisla- tures of tl^ South • and if not hearkened to there, then to efl"ect a dis- memberment of the Union, by secession of the North, or secession forced upon the South. Slavery, gentlemen, had before this, been the subject of earnest and: sometimes angry controversy in Congress and elsewhere. But a pow- erful and permanent organization, founded for such a purpose and working by such appliances, had never yet existed. Coming thus in 23 such a questionable shape, even the Nortli started back aghast as at *' a goblin damned :" and it was denounced as treason and madness from the first. Its presses were destroyed, its assemblies broken up, its publications burned, and its lecturers mobbed everywhere, and more than one among them murdered in tlie midst of popular tumult and in- dignation. Tlie churches, tlic school houses, the court houses and tlie public halls, were alike closed against them. Misguided men, fanat- ics, emissaries of England, traitors; tliese were among the mildest of epithets which in every place and almost from every tongue, saluted their ears. The very name of" Abolitionist " became a bye-word and a hissing. Not an advocate, and scarce even an apologist for the men or their course, was found in either hall of Congress. Members presented their petitions with great reluctance ; and as late as the twenty-eighth of December, 1837, Mr. Calhoun rejoiced that " every senator without ex- ception," had confessed himself opposed to the agitation. A bill to punish by severe penalties, any post-master who .should knowingly put into the mail, any incendiary publication directed to the South, had by the casting vote of Vice President Van Biiren, been ordered to a third reading. The Senate dechned to refer or in any way act upon the nu- merous petitions presented, while the House refusing to read, print or refer, laid them forthwith upon the table. In January, 1838, the Seu' ate by a majority of four to one, adopted a series of resolutions de- nouncing the Abolition movement " on whatever ground or pretext urged forward, political, moral or religious," as insulting to the South and dangerous to her domestic peace and tranqiiility : and further, con- demning all efforts toward the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia and the Territories, as a breach of good faith ; a just cause of serious alarm to the states in which .slavery exists ; and of most mis- chievous tendency. At the following session, the House of Representa- tives by a majority of more than one hundred and fifty, passed resolu- tions stronger if possible than these ; and some time later, censured and almost expelled John Quincy Adams, for presenting an ab^tion peti- tion looking to a dissolution of the Union. ^B Outside of Congress also, sir, Abolition received up to this period, just as little countenance or support. By both of the great political parties it was utterly and indignantly repudiated ; while from none of the political and scarce any of even the religious journals and periodicals of the day, did it find either aid or comfort. Especially, sir, was the De- 24 tnocratic party then sound on this question. General Jackson had al- ready denounced in strong language officially, the " wicked and un- constitutional attempts of the misguided men, and especially the emis- saries from foreign parts " who had originated the Abolition movement. President Van Buren in his inaugural address, had volunteered a pledge to veto any bill looking to the abolition of slavery in the District of Co- lumbia. Benton, Buchanan, Wright, Allen, all concurred; and voted also for the resolutions which passed the Senate. In Ohio, the Demo- cratic State Convention of January 8, 1840, planted itself firmly upon the rock of the Constitution, and taking high and patriotic ground, con- demned the efforts then being made for the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia, " by organizing societies in the free states, as hos- tile lo the spirit of the Constitution and destructive of the harmony oj the Union ;" and resolving that " we as citizens of a free state, had no right to interfere " with slavery elsewhere, denounced the Abolition movement and Abolition societies, declaring that while they " ought to be discountenanced by every lover of peace and concord, no sound democrat would have any part or lot with them." It was also further resolved, as if in the very spirit of prophecy, that " political abolition- ism was but ancient Federalism under a new guise, and only a new devise for the overthrow of Democracy." These resolutions, sir, were adopted with but three dissenting voices, in a more numerous assemblage of delegates than ever before had met in the State. GEORGE W. ELLS, Esq., one of the old Liberty (abolition) guard, here in- terrupting, said that historical statements ought to be correct : that he had been a member from Licking county, of the convention referred to ; and that he knew that the resolutions quoted had never passed ; but were smuggled into the pro ■ ceedings, iu order to be circulated through the South, to aid Mr. Van Buren. Mr. VALLANDIGHAM. Sir, I have before me the official record of the proceedings of that convention, signed by the late lamented Thomas L. IIamkr, president of the convention ; a man too candid, too brave an^|p true to lend himself to so base and detestable a fraud for any such^UPpose. Vou libel the gallant dead : and it is quite too late in the day after the lapse of fifteen years, for you, sir, by your own pa- rol testimony, to seek to impeach the absolute verity of the record. And I repeat now again, and desire you to liear and understand it, that these resolutions did pass that convention, and pass, too, with but three dissenting voices in that the largest State Convention ever before as- 25 sembled in Ohio. And if you, sir, happened to be one of the three who voted against these resolutions, I can only say that you had the misfortune to find yourself in a very small and most inglorious minority, I assert further, that three weeks after that convention, Benjamin Tappan, then a senator in Congress from Ohio, quoting these same resolutions and affirming the statement which I have just made, concluded a speech of remarkable precision and clearness, by declining even to present a peti- tion from citizens of the state, praying for the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia. A few months later — mark you, Mr. President, Ohio then took the lead in denouncing the treason and fanaticisms of Abolition — the Democ- racy of the Union, assembled in general convention at Baltimore, pass- ed without a dissenting vote, that memorable resolution, penned by that pure and incorruptible patriot, Silas Wright ; and which penetrated then the heart also and not the ear only, of every democrat, to the full and utmost significancy of every word and letter, rephdiating •' incipient steps " even, by Congress in relation to " questions of slavery " of every sort, as calculated to lead to the most alarming and dangerous conse- quences ; and such as ought not to be countenanced by any friend of our political institutions. Such, Mr. President, was Abolition in the North, fifteen years ago. — Such it is not now. To the philosophic historian who in a future age, shall sit amid the ruins of my country, to write her decline and fall, I leave the sad but instructive office of tracing its progress and exploring the causes which step by step, have lead to its present por- tentous developement. I propose but a brief and hasty summary. Slowly emerging from obscurity and odium, Abolition began to fix attention, not as hitherto, by its sound and fury, but, losing none of these, rather now by its increasing numbers and influence. Design- ing men soon foresaw that of all ihe movements of the day, none prom- ised so abundant and perhaps durable a harvest to him who should organize and discipline its wild crusading forces into a regular political party. Fanaticism and a false religious zeal, conjoined with that pes- tilent but ever potent spirit which is so sorely oftended at the mote that is in our brother's eye, and which makes each man jealous over his neighbor's conscience, could easily be arrayed under the banner of sectional hate and bigotry : and thus a distinct political faction be com- pounded out of these elements. Such a party, sir, united by these the 4 2G strongest though not most durable ties, was soon shuffled together ; and not long after, supplanted the system of affiliated societies. It formed separate tickets, and in 1844, supported a candidate for the presidency. But prior to 1848, it attained as a party, comparatively small weight in elections. The vehement contests and grave political questions which convulsed the two great parties of the country, over- shadowed all interest in the feeble but still earnest and active Aboli- tion band. But that band meantime, was steadily increasing by ac- cessions now and then from the Democrats, but chiefly from the Whigs ; some honest men and the discontented and rejected spirits of each, nat- urally dropping off and falling into its ranks. Abolitionists — many of them styling themselves at this period in their history, the " Liberty Party" — gained now in some counties, the balance of power; and hence became there an object of courtship to the other parties. In New England yet earlier, but all over the North in 1844, the Whig party began to trim and falter upon the question. The defeat of Clay and the Annexation of Texas gave a new impetus to Abolition, and many more, upon these pretexts, fell into its ranks. Meantime the steady, persistent, never wearying labors of its orators and press, full of grossly false and exaggerated portraitures of slavery, and libels upon southern society, working by day and by night, in the church, the schools and the lecture room ; at the public meeting, the fire-side and the sick bed, fomenting thus hate and jealousy of the South everywhere, and that, too, for the most part, without counteracting influence from any quarter, had poured the leperous distilment deep into every vein and artery of the northern body politic. Just at this point, sir, in the history of the Abolition movement, came the Oregon controversy, and after that tlie Mexican war, embroiled by the now terrible question of the acquisition of a very large tract of Mexican territory. Pride or vanity wounded by the settlement of the the Oregon boundary at Forty-Nine : ambition disappointed of ofiice : the nomu^tion of Generals Cass and Taylor in 1848 ; and the manifest- ly approt^ing dissolution of the Whig party, all contributed to throw a large portion of that party in the North, and not a few from the Dem- ocratic host, into the ranks of the Abolitionists ; who swelled now by such great ascessions, threw off wholly the odious name bf Abolition, and organizing into one body under a new title, at Buffalo, announced Martin Van Buren as their candidate for the Presidency. In the midst 27 of all this chaos in the pohlical elements, arose that pernicious bubble, the " Wilmot Proviso," which convulsing the country for more than four years, in its various forms, had well nigh precipitated us head- long into the bottomless gulf of Disunion. Assuming now the specious name of" Free Soil,'' and disguising its odious principles and its true purposes, under the false pretence of No Extension of Slavery, tlie Abolition party addressed itself to minds full now of hate towards the South and her institutions, and ready alike to for- get the true mission of a political party, and the limitations of the Consti- tution. But the united patriotism, talent and worth of the North and South, rallied to the rescue of this the last grand experiment of free gov- ernment, from the thick darkness of failure and of ruin by the parricidal hands of its own children. The Compromise of 1850 followed ; intended and believed to be a final adjustment of this appalling controversy. It was designed to be a covenant of peace forever : — sealed and attested by the self-sacrifice of Webster, Clay and Calhoun, the most illustrious triumvirate of great men and patriots, in any age or any country. But to no purpose : the yawning gulf did not close over them. The origin of the evil lay deeper ; and it was not reached. No gr-eat question of a like nature and magnitude, was ever adjusted by a legislative compro- mise, in a popular government. The evil lay in that great and most pernicious error which pervaded and penetrated so large a portion of the Northern mind, that the men of the North, if not under the Consti- tution, yet by some " higher law " of conscience had a right, and as thev would escape that fire which is not quenched, were bound to in- termeddle and in some way to legislate for the abolition of the " ac- cursed system." No act of Congress, no number of acts, could heal a malady like this, rooted in presumptuous self-righteous, and aggrava- ted by the corroding poison of sectional jealousy and hate. For such, sir, there is no sweet oblivious antidote in legislation. Set on fire by these passions, applied now to that case which coming nighest home, appealed most plausibly and most strongly to their impulses and their prejudices, a large part of the North resolved to render nugatory the chief slavery compromise of the Constitution, by trampling under foot and resisting or obstructing the execution of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. And three years later, reinforced now by many recruits from the Democratic ranks, and by almost the entire Whig force of the North, disbanded finally by the overthrow of 1852, but reorganized in 28 part under the banner of Know-Nothingism, the Abolition handful of 1835, swelled now to a mighty host, rallied in defence of the Missouri Restriction, and shook the whole land with a rocking tempest of popu- lar commotion, more dangerous than even the storm of 1850. Here then, gentlemen, let me pause to survey the true nature and full extent of the perils which thus encompass us : and to enquire, What remains to be done, that they may be averted. In January, 1838, Mr. Calhoun spoke with alarm, then derided as visionary, of the danger which to him seemed already as certain as it would be disastrous, from the continued, persevering, uncounteracted efforts of the Abolitionists, imbuing the rising generation at the North, with the belief that the institutions of the So,uth were sinful and im- moral ; and that it would be doing God's service to abolish them, even should it involve the destruction of half her inhabitants as murderers and pirates at best. Sir, what was then prophecy, is now history. More than half the present generation in the North, have ceased to look upon Southern men as brethren. Taught to hate first the institu- tions ot the South, they have very many of them, by easy gradations, transferred that hatred to her citizens. Learning to abhor what they are told is murder, they have found no principle either in nature or in morals, which impels them to love the murderer with fraternal affec- tion. Organized bands exist in every northern State, with branches in Canada, which make slave stealing a business and a boast : and that outrage which if any foreign state, or any state of this Union even, in any thing else, were to encourage or permit in any of her citizens, would by the whole country with one voice, be regarded as a just cause of instant war or reprisals, is every day consummated without rebuke, or by connivance, or the direct sanction of many of the members of this Confederacy. By school books and in school houses ; in the acade- mies, colleges and universities ; in the schools of divinity, medicine and law, these same sad lessons of hate and jealousy, are every day inculcated. Even the name and the fame of a slaveholding Washington have ceased to cause a throb in many a northern heart. The entire press of the North, in journals, newspapers, periodicals, prints and books, with not many manly and patriotic exceptions, has either been silent or lent countenance and support knowingly or carelessly, to the systematic and treasonable efforts of those who are resolved to pull down the fabric of this Union. Literature and the arts are put under 20 conscription for the same wicked purpose. Not a northern poet Ironi Longfellow and Bryant down to Lowel, but has sought inspiration from the black Helicon of Abolition : and the poison from a hundred thousand copies of false and canting libels in the form of works of fie* tion, is licked up from every hearthstone. While the " Tribune " of Greeley, one among ten thousand " sold to do evil," at once the tool and the compeer of Seward in his traitorous purpose to make him- self a name in history — the antithesis of Washington — bj'- the subvers- ion of this Republic ; gathering up with persevering and most devilish diligence, every murder, every crime, every outrage, every act of cruel- ty, rapine or lust, upon white or upon black, real or forged, throughout the South, sends it forth wijiged with venom and malice, as a faithful wit- ness of the true and general state of southern society, and the legiti- mate fruit of slaveholding. In the public lecture and anniversary ad- dress ; at the concert hall and upon the boards of the theatre ; nay even at the festivals of our ancient charitable orders, this same dark spirit of mischief is ever present dropping pestilence from his wings. Even history is corrupted and figures marshalled into a huge lie, to compass the same treacherous end. Here, again, too, the clergy and the church, gentlemen, mindful less than ever of their true province and vocation, have one by one joined in the crusade ; till nineteen-twentieths of northern pulpits, resound ^ every sabbath, in sermon or prayer, with imprecation upon slavehold- ers. Already has disunion and consequent strife, ensued in all the chief religious sects, three only excepted. Outside of these, and some- times within them too, the religion of the Bible is but too often super- seded by the gospel of Abolition ; and the way of salvation taught to lie through sympathy with that distant portion of the African race which is held in bondage south of Mason's and Dixon's line. Thus the spirit of persecution is superadded to the jealousies of sectional posi- tion, and the furnace of hate heated seven times hotter than is wont. They who would not turn a deaf ear to the express requirements of the Constitution, are beguiled and drawn astray by the hollow pretence of Opposition to the Extension of Slavery — a pretence alike false and unmanly, and opposed to the spirit of the constitutional compact, and the principle which forbids to intermeddle with slavery in ihe states. Others, sir, who may care nothing for the sinfulness or immorality of slaveholding, are wrought to jealousy by the false and impudent outcry 30 against the " aggressions of the slave power ; " " the grasping spirit of the South," " southern bluster and bravado : " and many an arrant coward hires himself to be written down a hero, for his wondrous cour- age in lending the eye a terrible aspect on his own hustings, at the men- tion of a "fire eater" from the Carolinas, or repelling indignantly six weeks after the oflfence, on the floor of Congress, the insolence of some '' slave dealing " member from Virginia who is perhaps at the moment, a hundred miles from the Capitol. Thus the claim of the South to participation in the common territory purchased by the common blood and treasure of the Union : nay even her demand that the solemn com- pact of the constitution be fulfilled and her fugitives restored to her, are denounced alike as arrogant " slave driving " assaults and aggres- sions upon the rights of the North. Others again are persuaded that the South is weak, is unwilling and dare not resist : is afraid of insurrection, and dependent for safety and bread and existence, upon the proverbial fertility and magnanimity of New England. As if no Henry, no Lee, no Jefferson, no Pinckney, no Sumpter, no Hayne, no Laurens, no Carroll, no George Washington had ever lived : as if the spirit of Marion's men lingered not yet upon the banks of Santee ; and the fierce courage of the Butler who rose pale and corpse-like from the bed of death, to lead the Palmetto regi- ment to battle at Cherubusco, foremost in the ranks and "nearest the flashing of the guns," was already become extinct. The political parties also, at the North, gentlemen, have faltered and some of them fallen before Abolition. The Whig party, bargaining with, courting and seeking to absorb it into its own ranks, has itself at last been swallowed up and lost. Political Temperance and Know- nothin^ism are rapidly drifting into the same vortex. The spirit of Anti-masonry transmigrated some years ago, into the opaque body of Abolitionism. Fourierism, Anti-rentism, the party devoted to Women's Rights, and all the other is7ns of the day, born of the same generating principle, are already fully assimilated to their common parent : for all these isms, sir, like the nerves of sense, run in pairs. Even the Dem- ocratic party, never losing its identity, never ceasing to be national, and even now the sole hope of the country, if it will but return to its ancient mission and discipline ; the only organized body round which all true conservatives and friends of the Constitution and Union may rally, lias nevertheless in whole or in part, at some period or another, in every state, cowered before or tampered with this dark spectre. Just such, too, as public feeling in the North is, so is its legislation . Vermont has passed a law repealing in effect, within her limits, the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, and abrogating so much of the Consti- tution as requires the rendition of fugitives from service. Connecticut, enacting a similar statute, has gone a step farther, and outraged every dictate of justice, in the effort to make it effectual. Massachusetts, tlie " model commonwealth " of the times, improving yet upon the work of her sister states, provides also that whatsoever member of her bar shall dare appear in behalf of the claimant of a fugitive slave, shall ignominiously be stricken from her court rolls, and forbidden to practice within her limits. Legislation of a kindred character, exists, sir, in other states also ; and New England will doubtless yet find hum- ble imitators even in the West. Already, indeed, the Supreme Court of Wisconsin, has deliberately released from her penitentiary upon ha- beas corpus, a prisoner convicted on indictment before a United States court, of resisting the laws and ofFicers of the United States, in a slave case. Judges elsewhere have held that no citizen of the United States living south, may dare set his foot with a slave, upon the north- west shore of the Ohio at low water mark even, without by that act, though but for a moment and from necessity, working instant emancipation of the slave. Not many months ago, a mingled mob of negroes white and black, at Salem in Ohio, entered a railroad train, and by violence tore from the ftimily of a slaveholder passing through the state from neces- sity and at forty miles an liour, the nurse of his infant child. A Mas- sachusetts legislature has demanded of her Executive, the removal of an able, meritorious and upright judge, for the conscientious discharge within her limits, of the duties of an oflice which he held under author- ity of the United States : and a Massachusetts ecclesiastical conclave, three hundred in number, rose as one man on the announcement of the outrage, and shouted till the house rang again with their plaudits. And a Massachusetts University rejected also the same judge for the same cause, when proposed for a professorship in the institution. Thus, sir, within little more than two years from the death of her noblest son, whose whole life and whose dying labors were exhausted in defending the Union and holding the commonwealth of his adoption, up to the full measure of her revolutionary patriotism and greatness, 32 has the star of Massachusetts been seen to fall from heaven and begin to plunge into the utter blackness of disunion. In vain now, sir, from the grave of the statesman of Marshfield, there comes up the warning cry : " Let her shrink back ; let her hold others back, if she can ; at any rate let her keep herself back from this gulf full at once of fire and of blackness : full, as far as human foresight can scan, or human imag- ination fathom, of the fire and the blood of civil war, and of the thick darkness of general political disgrace, ignominy and ruin," No : she is fallen. Sumner has supplanted Winthrop ; and a Wilson crawled up into the seat which Webster once adorned. And add now to all this, gentlemen, that already that portentous and most perilous evil, against which the Father of his country so solemnly and earnestly warned his countrymen, a party bounded by geographic- al lines — a Northern Party, standing upon a northern platform, doing battle for northern issues, and relying solely for success, upon appeals to northern prejudices and northern jealousies, is novif for the first time in our history, fully organized and consolidated in our midst. Add further, that to the Thirty-Fourth Congress, fourteen Senators and a majority of Representatives have been chosen, who in name or in fact, are Abolitionists ; Ohio contributing to this dark host, her entire delega- tion in House and Senate, one only excepted : and thus for the first time also, since the organization of our government, the House of Rep- resentatives been converted into a vast Abolition conventicle, full of men picked out for their hatred of the South, and who cannot be true to the Constitution and the Union, without treachery to the expecta- tions and the purposes of those who elected them. And then reflect yet further, that this vast and terrible magazine of explosive elements* is gathered together just upon the eve of a presidential election with all its multiplied and convulsing interests ; and that soon Kansas will knock for admission into the Union, thus surely precipitating the crisis : and who, tell me I pray you, may foresee what shall be the history of this Republic at the end of two years from to-day. All this, gentlemen, the spirit of Abolition has accomplished in twen- ty years of continued and exhausting labors of every sort. But in all that time, not one convert has it made in the South : not one slave emancipated, except by larceny and in fraud of the soleJmn compacts of the Constitution. Meantime public opinion has wholly, radically changed in the SoiUh. The South has ceased to denounce, ceased to 33 condemn slavery ; ceased even to palliate and begun now almost as one man, to defend it as a great moral, social and political blessing. The bitter and proscriptive warfare of twenty years, has brought forth its natural and legitimate fruit in the South. Exasperation, hate and re- venge are every day ripening into fullest maturity and strength : and throughout her entire extent, she awaits now but the action of the North, to unite in solemn league and covenant to resist aggression even unto blood. But the South, sir, has forborne a little. I say she has forborne a little. She has not yet associated and formed political parties to put down Masonry and Odd Fellowship in the free states and in the territo- ries, upon the pretext that these institutions are sinful and immoral. She has not yet organized societies, and fostered and protected them by her legislation, to steal that which our law recognizes as property ; and refused restitution on the pretext that by the " higher law " of con- science, no right of property exists in the thing stolen. Neither, sir, has any southern State ; no, not even " fire-eating " South Carolina, sought as yet to compensate herself for the fugitives which we have ab- ducted, by enacting laws to encourage the slave trade, by punishing with fine and imprisonment in her penitentiary for years, any one of her citizens who should aid in enforcing the laws of the United States against the traffic ; striking from ner court rolls, any attorney within her limits, who should appear in behalf of the prosecution, and excluding all who hold the office of United States Commissioner or Judge, from any office or appointment under her authority. How long before all this shall have been done, is known to Him only whose om. nicient eye penetrates and illumines the clouds and thick darkness of the future. Thus, then, Mr. President, by little and little at first, but now as with a flood, fraternal affection is wasted away : hate and jealousy and dis- cord, nourished and educated into maturest developement ; and one by one, the real and strong cords which bind us together as a confederacy, snapped asunder, or stretched to their utmost tension. It needs no spirit of prophecy, not even a human sagacity above the ordinary lev- el, to foretell just how long the habits, forms and paper parchments of a union can last, when its life-giving principle, and nourishing and sus- taining virtue, are wasted and gone. Sir, he is yet but in the swaddling bands of infancy, who does not ah'eady see that there is wanting but 5 34 some strono- convulsion, or even but some sudden jar in the system, to hurl us headlong down into the abyss of disunion. I know, gentlemen, that to many, all this is as " a twice told tale vex- ing the dull car of a drowsy man.." They hearkened not to the voice of Webster, Clay and Calhoun, while yet among the living: neither would they believe, though these three men rose from the dead. Be- ing dead, they yet speak. The dead of all ages speak. All history lifts up its warning voice. Livy and Tacitus are full of saddest and most instructive teachings. But let us not deceive ourselves. It is not in their pages that we are to read the lessons of that danger which threatens us with destruction. There has been to us, no slow and grad- ual progression of five hundred years, to the full growth and stature of a great nation : neither is it in reserve for us to pass through the mel- lowing and softening gradations of luxury, vice, corruption and ener- vation for five hundred years more, to our final fall as an empire. No. The history of Greece, is the true study for the American statesman. There he will find the chiefest lessons of political wisdom adapted to our peculiar exigencies. He will learn there how internal dissension and discord, may prostrate a state in the full vigor of its manhood : and indeed that it is only in the manhood of a confederacy, that there is strength enough and energy enough in the members to rend each other in pieces : and that in the decadence of a state ; in decay and atony, it is a Ca3sar within, or a Macedonian phalanx or Roman le- gion from without, which overwhelms the State. In Thucydides, he may learn how a thirty years civil war exhausted Greece, and pre- pared her first for the haughty domination of the conquering member of the confederacy ; and finally for that yoke of foreign despots, which galls and burns into her neck to this day. Let us improve these lessons. It is not yet too late to be saved. The current may still be turned back, and the Union restored to its former sound and healthy condition ; though many a gaping scar shall attest the wounds she has received from the hands of her own chil- dren. What then remains to be done ? — 1 answer this momentous ques- tion, Mr. President, by declaring first, what will not heal the sick man of America. First then : closing our eyes and our ears to the truth and laughing all danger to scorn, will not do it. The scoffs and derision of the dilu- 36 vian world, did not stay the fountains of tlie great deep, nor seal up the windows of heaven. Professions and resolutions of love for the Union and Constitution, whether hypocritical or sincere, will not do it, while at the same mo- ment we stril either to his master or au)/ other that pursues and brings such certificate or proof." — Ibid. § 8. NoTK 2 : page 15. The North and the Slave Trade. The number of African slaves imported into the port of Charleston, S. C, alone, in the years 1804, 1805, 1806 and 1807 (the last year of the slave trade,) was 39,075. These were consigned to ninrtif-one British subjects, cif/hti/.ci<)ht citizens of New En-^- l&nd, ton French subjects,'and only thirteen citizens of Charleston. — [Compend. of U.S. Census, p. 8?>. Note 3; page 17. Number of Slavi:s in the North. Connecticut. 1790, 2, 759 slaves: in 1840, 17 slaves. New Hampshire, in 1790, 158 slaves: in 1840, 1 slave. Vermont, in 1790, 17 slaves. Rhode Island, in 1790,' 952 slaves : in 1840, 5 slaves. New Jersey, in 1790, 11,42:) slaves : in 1840, 674 slave's: in 1850, 2.^6 slaves. Pennsylvania, in 1790, 3,737 slaves : in 1840, 04 slaves. New York, in 1790, 21,324 slaves: in 1840, 4 slaves. In 1840, Ohio returned 3 slaves, (6 in 1830) ;' 44 Indiana, 3 slaves; Illinoi?, 331; Iowa, 16; AVisconsin, 11. Michig»n returned 24 slaves in 1810, and 32 in 1830. Maine reports two slaves in 1830. No slave schedules were sent to the Northern States in 1850; so that the number of IS slaves still in the North cannot he ascertained. — Compend. U. S. Census, p. 82. Note 4; page 24. The Ohio Resolutions, 1840. Mr. Tappan's Speech. " Ohio will do unto others as she claims that they should do to her : as she will not permit any interl'eronce with her own institutions, so she will not permit her servants to interfere with the institutions of other States. 1 know her will upon this matter; it is clear and unequivocal. Resolutions of her Assembly have repeatedly declared her sen- timents upon the subject-matter of these petitions, and her decided opinion that the at- tempt making by these petitioners, "is hostile to the spirit of the Constitution, and de- structive of the harmony of the Union ;" and a recent more numerous assemblage of Democratic delegates in a State convention than has ever before met in that State, with but three dissenting voices, adopted the following resolutions : " Resolved, That in the opinion of this convention. Congress ought not, without the consent of the people of the District, and of the States of Virginia, and Maryland, to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia; and that the efforts now making for that purpose by organized societies in the free States, are hostile to the spirit of the Consti- tution, and destructive to the harmony of the Union. Resolved, That slavery being a domestic institution recognized by the Constitution of the United States, we, as citizens of a free State, have no right to interfere with it, amd that the organizing of societies and associations in free States, in opposition to the institutions of sister States, while productive of no good, may be the cause of much mis- chief; and while such associatfons, for political purposes, ought to be discountenanced by every lover of peace and concord, no sound Democrat will have part or lot with them. Resolved: That political Abolitionism is but ancient Federalism, under a new guise, and that the political action of anti-slavery societies, is only a device for the overthrow Oi Democracy." I know, sir, that these resolutions express the deliberate judgment of the Democracy of Ohio." — [Senator Tappan's Speech, Fel). 4, 1840: Congressional (ilobe, 1839-40 page 161. Note 5; p.age 28. Slave Stealing. "The object of this Society is not to aid such as are already in Canada, but such as shall arrive at the groat landing, where (Jijorge Harris and Eliza crossed over, and where most of those going into the Province also enter ; to ilo which there should be a house of reception constantly furnished, to lodge and supply such with food, for a few days, until rested, and until work can be found, and they can get homes, and if sick, un- til well, and to do whatsoever tends to remedy the res\ilts of slavery." The above is the second article of the constitution of the Canada Branch of the Ohio, Indiana and Michigan Slave Stealing Society, or •• under-ground railroad." The name which it assumes is "The Uncle Tom's Cabin and Relief Society." The Secre- tary is the "Rev. Isaac .J. Rice," Missionary at Amhcrsburg, Canada. Note C ; page 39. The Buffalo Resolution, 1843. Resolved, That we hereby give it to be distinctly understood, by this nation and the world, that, as Aholitionlvfn, considering that the strength of our cause lies in its right- eousness, and our hopes tor it in our conformity to the laws of God, and our support for the rights of man, we owe to the sovereign Ruler of the Universe, as a proof of our al- legiance to Him, in all our civil relations and offices, whether as friends, . '/a* ^ a w!^f^ S^« o t» . 0<7o '% •^ ^^' 'J^. .^^ .^•^ V fc iff ^ ■ ■*'•' .! ^0 rr^ ^. .^'^'^ °-^^' /\ -.W- -.^'^ *-..^* UERT BOOKBINDING C'an(>.Jle Pa a,i feo 19?9 .>. f ..J '. »c^"; i^^ta