E 390 .M63 Copy 1 Class Book. C_ "J \j W(,3 SPEECH R. J l>^- ■^ k (OF KENTUCKY,) DELIVERED IN THE NATIONAL C ON V E N T [ O N Wliig Yoiiiig Men of the United iStates, ASSE3IBLED AT BALTIMORE, MAY 4th & .5th, 1840. Observkr <5c Rkporikr Prist, Lexi.vgton, Kt. 1811. u ■W^. IV CKCKAlirfSE JOlN^ 1915 fi SPEECH, Mr. WicKLiFPE, having been selected by the Delegation from Ken- tucky, to address the Convention on behalf of that Commonwealth, spoke substantially as follows: .¥r. President: — An epoch has arrisen in the history of the Whig party. For the first time within the last eight years, we present an undivided front. Hitherto, our strength has been wasted, and our num- bers divided between rival candidates, from various quarters of the Union. In a party that was bound together by principle, and not by the strong tie of public plunder, it was natural to expect that men would entertain and indulge personal preferences, and be incapable of that rigid discipline and implicit obedience by which the adiierents of power have ever been distinguished. The day of disunion and of de- feat is past. Our party is now not only rallied around the same stan- dard, but led on by the same commander. If the bravery of the troops be equal to the skill and gallantry of our veteran leader; if the war- worn soldier, covered with laurels in many a hard-fought battle, and decked with bays from many a civic field, be an object worthy of the gratitude and admiration of a generous people; if the genius of Amer- ican liberty and the spirit of republican institutions be most fully era- bodied in him who is equally prepared to wield ihe sword or the plough; if this republic be not yet sunk in corruption and lost to all sense of trutli and justice — victory, sure and lasting, awaits us and the great principles which we have so long struggled to uphold. For the brilliant prospect that lies befoi'C us; for the new life and zeal that cheer us and our constituents, we are indebted to the deliberations of the Ilarrisburg Convention. Called into existence by the unanimous voice of the whig party, and composed of some of the most gifted and venerable men of whom the republic could boast, its decree wont forth and was received with applauding shouts by Whig America. To carry into ef- fect the deliberations of that Convention; to secure the election of the candidates whom it has nominated, and to enlist, in their cause, the youth, the genius and the chivalry of the land, are the objects for which this vast assemblage of the whig youKg men of the United States has been convened. The conscript fathers have declared that the republic is in danger, and have called upon us for assistance and relief. Let our zeal and alacrity in repairing hither; let our sleepless and unfailing ef- forts at home, proclaim that we have not been indifferent to the call. The American soil is a field upon which good seed was sown by our fathers; but the lares have appeared among the blades, and choked the grain. But the time of harvest is nigh at hand, and the people will bind the tares in bundles, to burn them, and gather the wheat into a barn. Mr. President, the struggle in November next will be the mightiest that has taken place in this country since the civil and political revolu- tion of 1801. They who hold the reins of government will not tame- ly surrender their ill-gotten and long abused pov.er. It must be wrench- ed from their death-like grasp by the strong hands and stout hearts of an insulted and betrayed, but generous and patriotic people. The odds against which we contend, are truly fearful. On the one side, is the Chief Magistrate of the Union, with all the pov.er and patronage be- longing to the executive department of the Government. By means of the National Treasury and the countless officers in the service of the Administration, a standing army is raised and quartered in every cor- ner of the country, and the watch-word conveyed with the utmost se- crecy and despatch from the highest chieftain to the lowest vassal. To break down this formidable array, the people have brought forward a citizen soldier, unaided by the public purse, and unsustained by the public patronage. He holds not in his hands the national purse strings, to bribe and corrupt the peoj)le u-ith their own money. He has not a hundred thousand office holders to drill and discipline his party. He appeals to his civil and military careir, to the purity of his private life, grafted upo.n the principles of his public conduct. He relies upon his past history and his present poverty, as the best evidence of his honesty. He recalls to the memory of his countrymen, the long line of illustricus services whicli he has rendored the republic. He throws himself, for support, upon the firmness and patriotism of the nation; upon the great principles of constitutional freedom, and upon the integrity and intelli- gence of the mass C'f the pcoplo, with whoFO feelings and interests he is BO thoroughly familiar and iileiuified. His talents, indeed, have been underrated, and his services depreciated. Impartial history, however, proclaims that he has not received, from his country, the rewards which he so richly deserves. Even in Athens, ungrateful as she was, it was not an unusual honor paid lo those who had grown grey in the pub- lic service, to be feasted at the public expense. If skill and conduct in the cabinet; if valor and patriotism in the field, still meet with an echo from the hearts of the American people, the day is not far distant when a place in the Prytaneum Vv'ill be awarded to the farmer of North Bend, and the hero of Tippecanoe. Is it right, Mr. President, that one half of the intellect and virtue of this land shall be forever excluded from the councils of the country] Is it right that the Chief Ivlagistrate of the Union shall continue to be the President of a party, and not the President of the people] How long shall we be whirled rcund this circle of miserable shifts and tem- porary expedients] What change can be a change for the worse] Did not the dominant party destroy the National Bank and force the country into the State Bank system] Did they not break down internal im- provements of a national character, and impose that burden upon the States] And do they not now attempt to retreat from their own policy, and saddle the whigs with all the odium v>'hich its adoption h.as in- curred] The Executive has continued to wage an unconstitutional war upon the credit, the commerce, and the currency of the country. His adherents have not only deprived single members of their seats, but sovereign States of their representaticn, upon the floor of Congress. His whole administration is marked by imbecility and corruption, in the Cabinet; by disasters and defeat, in the field; by a keen regard for the interests of the Government, and an entire neglect of those of the peo- ple. A new pilot is needed to guide our w-ar-worn and tempest-tossed vessel through the shoals and storms that now threaten a political ship- wreck, and that pilot is to be found on the banks of the Ohio. 'J'he farmer of North Bend has often steered the ship of State, but never did the stars of midnight find him, like Palinurus, asleep at the helm. The whigs are charged with inconsistency, in having heretofore warn- ed the country against military chieftains, and in now bringing forward for the Presidency, a veteran soldier, whose palmiest days have been spent in the camp, and some of uhose brightest laurels have been pluck- ed in the tented field. The ground, however, which they then took. 6 and which they now occupy, is precisely the same. A mere military chieftain is unfit to be the Chief Magistrate of this republic. His views of government are founded on the rigid discipline of the camp; he is too apt to regard the citizen as inferior to the soldier; and an un- holy ambition too often leads him to rear his own greatness upon the ruins of his country. I will not, sir, disturb the retirement of him who reposes at the Hermitage. I will not pluck a single bay from that never-dying wreath which his victorious arms gained on the plains of New Orleans. I will not dwell upon the spots that stained his cam- paigns against the Indians in the South. Impartial history proclaims that he was a brave commander, but a poor civilian— a mere military chieftain, and elevated to the Presidency by his military fame alone. The miseries which his administration has brought upon this unhappy country, are so deep rooted and so wide spread, that after ages will scarcely believe that we could have endured or passed through them. Posterity will be incredulous that our people could have been so out- raged and oppressed, and yet did not rise in rebellion; that our currency could have been so often stabbed to the heart, and yet was able to reel beneath the strong thrusts of the executive arm; that our commerce could have been so entirely prostrated, and yet was able to survive an almost universal bankruptcy and ruin. They will wonder that the spir- it of our gallant army could have been so thoroughly broken, and yet struggled to outlive the disasters and disgrace by which its enemies hoped" it would be overwhelmed; that the strides of executive power and national corruption could have been so vast, and yet that some sparks of independence still shone in the halls of Congress, and some rays of liberty still warmed the nation at large. They will thank Heaven that although the temple of the Constitution -..-as sacrilegiously entered; its noble symmetry destroyed, and its fair proportions distorted; yet, that a few pillars and fragments remained, around which the friends of free- dom rallied, and, recovering the remnants of the sacred structure, again reared it in all its ancient beauty and gorgeous grandeur. ^Vho, how- ever, is so well