'^bv* ^' ^ov^ %^^-/ \/^^\/ %^^'.o^ vv * ' .c." *V *•"*• '-^^0^ ,^q ♦' ^^ ^J^ C^- ^p-^^. '^o ^' : ^^■^^. c^ mt/)h^ "^^.A Vv>. •^<^ -^^0^ .(y o « o ^ • <;. iz^''-^,^ "•^0 aOv-. ^ "' \V ^.^ *•-" A^ O- ** --..^' .V -"7^: ^^- 4\ ^^^0^ ^^r'lT?^".. "^ vP^b- *^- A^^ :f b' SIX SPEECHES ■wrrn a SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF HON. ELI THAYER. B O S T O iSr : BROWN AND T A G G A R D . 1 8 G 0. Kntcml according to Act of Congress, in the yenr l%0, by Brown & Taggara.iu the District Court of Massachusetts. z^c SIX SPEECHES OF HON. ELI THAY [" Welcome evermore to gods and men," says Emerson, " is the self-helping man. For Lim all doors are ilung wide ; him all tongues greet, all honors crown, all eyes follow with desire." lie who shows that he can do without our help, is exactly the man whose help we can- not do without. The self-helper helps all the rest, because he shows them of what they are capable. When the virgin soil of Kansas was given over to the foul embrace of slavery, and they who might have saved it desponded when they should have done nothing but labor, one man, with no public record hither- to, ai)plied his quick brain to the problem, and his stout heart to tiie work, — and straight- way the thing despaired of was done ! That man was Kli Tiiayku, of Massachusetts. The struggle between free and slave labor was protracted far beyond the necessary limit, and was likely, at last, to be decided in favor of slavery. Kot that the latter really posses- sed larger power, but it happened that it was already on the ground, wiis fiuniliar with the field, could cope successfully with frontier ob- stacles, and enjoyeil the strong prestige of never yet having been beaten in such an en- counter. It bade fair, at that time, to worry Freedom out, and the field had already been virtually abandoned by the friends of the lat- ter, who were retiring in a sullen and angry mood from the confliet. All that was needed, at that particular crisis, was organization. The Free-State men were secretly conscious of their superior strength, yet knew not how to wii'lil it. Tlie right elements were to be had, but the master spirit was wanting, who should skilfully combine them. And, just at the right moment, that spirit stepped forth, — a new man to the masses, but himself thoroughly conscious of the power he held in his hand. That man was Eli Thayer, of Massachu- setts, and his secret was Organized Emi- OR.\TiON. Nobody, apparently, had thought of it, — the simplest thing in the world. And yet it was like a new discovery in the social development of the century, whose influence is to work until the whole earth is colonized, and the dreams of universal brotherhood are finally made real. For by this single agency all uninhabited (quarters of the globe are capable of smiling with the presence of a dense population. The work of the lonely pioneer has come to an end. We shall call on no more solitary hunters, like Daniel Boone, to wander forth from the extreme verge of civilized life and lose himself in the yellow sunset, for a whole town, county, and State may be transported as by magic ; the surplus of a dense population, by this simple ma- chinery, being planted in the heart of wilder- nesses almost by the sheer force and play of the single will that sets the machinery in operation. It is conceded that Eli Thayer, whatever else he may receive credit for, has earned the name of the originator of Organized Emi- gration : a system whose wonderful effects will be felt years after he is dead, and for which future generations will bless his name. It was Eli Whitney, another New England man, whose fertile brain invented the wonder called the Cotton Gin; but, for ourselves, great as cotton is, and is yet to be, we would far rather enjoy the honor of having invented the machine by which free labor may go and eolonizc wherever it will, with the assurance of its enjoying its honest reward. Tlic bene- fits of association, in one form and another, had ah-eady been advertised to the world, as in the case of banking, building, and insuring, but wc had yet to see the same principle ap- plied to colonization, and work out its magic results with such marvellous certainty and rapidity. Now, we may remove from the Atlazitic to the Pacific coast an entire town at a time, carrying out with us our favorite schools, chui'chcs, trades, and callings, none of which need part with their precious asso- ciations by the removal. This makes the no- madic a civilized life, tents being exchanged for houses. And nothing is more certain, than that where a people feels such rapid transmigration possible, all hopes of subduing their spirit or alienating their love for freedom are vain indeed. As a fit Introduction to the public speeches in Congress of the man who first taught us how to apply the system of Emigration to the spread of free labor over the continent, a brief sketch of his personal cai-eer may not be without interest to readers everywhere. The public would know all they can about a man of mai-k, nor ought he to expect to con- ceal himself Fortunately, however, no one can impute to Eli Thayer a necessity for be- ing at all fastidious about the most public showing of his entire career. It is of charac- teristic Interest enough to be sought out for publication in an European journal like the London Times, which thus helps to send his name, with a clear and true ring, quite around the world. That powerful journal, no doubt, regards him, to borrow the expression of one of our own leading presses, "as the chief in- terpreter of the great agencies which science and invention have placed within the grasp of man, and with which not only is the physi- cal world to be subdued to its uses, but false systems and oppressive institutions, founded in fraud, are to be crushed out of existence." Mr. Thayer is a native of Mendon, Mass., where he was born In the year 1819. His father was a laborious farmer, and subse- quently kept a country store In that part of the town now known as Blackstone. He was unable to do any thing for his sou Ell, more than other men in similarly cramped situa- tions, and the lad was therefore kept at work on the farm till he was well grown, obtalnlufr such meagre instruction as the district school of that day afforded him. But he was of an active turn of mind, and had learned enough to become eager to know more. About the time he had exhausted the rudiments in the district school, his father failed In business; but that hindered the lad none In his plans. lie resolved to acquire a liberal education, and one day informed his father of his dctei'- mlnation. IIoio he was going to accomplish his end was not much more clear to the mind of the one than the other. It was in the year 1835 when he packed his few clothes and placed his trunk on board a boat on the Blackstone Canal, bound for Worcester, and himself walked the entire distance. Such was his first entry into the city whose best interests he was so soon afterwards to sub- serve. In Worcester, he entered the " Manual Labor School," an institution that furnished Indigent young men, who might be so inclined, with a chance to pay for their schooling In work, as they went along. In this school young Thayer fitted himself for College, never having known a syllable either of Latin or Greek previous to coming here. After a year's hard labor and study, pursued night and day with restless energy, he pre- sented himself for admission into Brown Uni- vei'slty, at Providence. In mathematical at- tainments he was found deficient, not coming up to the standard ; but on his solemn pro- mise, that, by persevering labor, he would "catch up" and hold his place, under the circumstances of the case, he was admitted ; and the promise was remembered with pride by his Instructor when he came to leave the walls of his honored alma mater, for Thayer was the best In mathematics of his class. Eli Thayer entered college with nothing, and graduated with distinguished honors, and a few hundred dollars in his pocket. That is more than many of our college graduates can say. While In the University, he de- frayed his expenses by teaching district schools during the intervals of vacations, and by similar labors, from time to time, to those which sustained him at the scliool In Worces- ter. He played the carpenter, the wood- sawyer, and the landscape gardener; and there is a piece of embankment before one of the Professors' residences to-day, the green sods of which he placed with his own hands ; and they were well placed, too. Such a young man cannot fail to make his mark in the world of men in time, the supply being yet too scanty not to quicken the demand, Avhen tliey -enerators, the gentleman from ^Mississippi l Court, and at Congress ; for all these powers with such large, wide, and noble views upon j of the Government, great and mighty as they tliis (luestion. I do not here endorse his \ are, can do nothing, in accordance with the wliole speech. I did not hear the whole of it. I do not know what he said about Mr. AValher. whether he defends him, or whether he does not. For myself, I do not say that I defend him, or that I do not, at this time. I wait for the report of our committee, to know what are the facts in this case, and whether he is fit to be defended or not. Constitution of this land, which can in any way interfere with our progress, or prevent our making cities, and states, and nations, wherever and whenever we please. Then, sir, there can be no doubt about the power of this agency, which, I tell you, is the right one for us to make use of in getting Central America if we want it, or in Americanizing Now, sir, I am rejoiced that I have found Central America, as we are sure to do. aid and comfort in a great political missionary movement from a quarter where I least c.v jS'ow, Mr. Chairman, I have said nothing about annexino; Central America to the Unit- pectcd it. This argument of [)hilanthropy ed States. For myself, I care nothing about is sulUciently potent with the South ; while I , it, and I do not know whether the jjeople of will not deny that it is always more or less j this country are ready for that proposition potent with the North, perhaps not so potent ! yet. I think, however, they would rather with the North as with tlie South — very like- j annex a thousand square leagues of territory h- we are more material and less spiritual — ; than to lose a single sciuare foot. To be sure, but still, I say, it has some power at the ! sir, we have a few men in the North who North. We do not live so near the sun as | honestly hate this Union. I will not criticise do those gentlemen who border on the Gulf; i their views. I will not condemn them for but we live near enough to the sun to have j their views. ' They have a right to cherish some warmth in our hearts, and the appeals just what views they please in relation to this of [)hilaiithropy to us are not made in vain, [question. Sir, there are still a larger nuin- 15ut,iii addition to that, just look at it, sir! j ber of sour and disappointed politicians, who, hi addition to that great argument of phi Ian- though they do not profess hatred to this thropy, we have not only the argument of Union, do, to a certain extent, profess indif- necessity, but the argument of making money ; i ference as to its continuance. But the great and when you take those three arguments, \ and overwhelming majority of the i)eople of and combine them, you make a great motive j the North, sir, as! a unit, are determined that power, which is suflicient, in ordinary cases, i no force, internal or external, shall ever Avrest to move Northern men, though they are not from the jurisdiction of the United States a very mobile nor very fickle. single square foot of our territory, unless it So much, ^Ir. Chairman, for the compar- first be baptized in blood and fire. That is ison of interests between the Northern and the sentiment of the great majority of the Southern people of these United States in people of the North, — that no portion of the relation to the Americanizing of Central territory of this Government shall ever be re- America. I come now to discuss, briefly, the power and benefits of this new mode of emigration. leased i'rom our possession. We understand that this Union is a partnership for life, and that the bonds that hold us together cannot And, sir, what is its power ? I tell you its by any fiituity be sundered until this great power is greater than that which is wielded , Government is first extinguished and its by any potentate or emperor upon the face \ power annihilated. That, sir, is our senti- 12 ment about the Union, and such may be the jircriont sentiment about annexation. But I have no doubt Avhat the future sentiment of the country -vvill be about annexation. I have no doubt we will have Central America in this Government, and all between this and Central America also. Well, sir, we have now come to the grand missionary age of the world, in which we do not send our preachers alone, perplexing people who are in ignorance and barbarism with abstract theological dogmas; but with the i)reachers we send the church, we send the school, we send the mechanic and the farmer ; Ave send all that makes up great and flourishing communities ; we send the powers that build cities ; we send steam-engines, sir, which are the greatest apostles of liberty that this country has ever seen. That is the modern kind of missionary emigration, and it has wonderful power on this continent, and is destined to have on the woi-ld, too, for it is just as good against one kind of evil as another ; and it can just as well be exerted against idol worship in Hindostan and China, as against oppression and desjiotlsm in Cen- tral America. But we take the countries that are nearest first ; and now we propose to use this mighty power in originating a nation in tpiick time for Central America. We read of a time when " a nation shall be born in a da}'." I think it may be done in some such way as this. By tliis method of emigration the j^io- neer does not go into the wilderness "Alone, unfriended, melanclioly, slow, Dragging at each remove a length'ning cliain," stealing away from the institutions of religion and education, himself and family ; but Chris- tianity herself goes hand in hand with the pioneer ; and not Christianity alone, but the offspring of Christianity, an awakened intel- ligence, and all the inventions of which she is the mother ; creating all the differences be- tween an advanced and enlightened commu- nity and one in degradation and ignorance. Sir, in years gone by, our emigration has ever tended toward barbarism ; but now, by this method, it is tending to a higher civiliza- tion than we have ever witnessed. Why, sir, by this plan, a new community starts on as high a plane as the old one had ever arrived at; and leaving behind the dead and decayed branches which encumbered the old, with the vigorous energies of youth it presses on and ascends. Sir, such a State will be the State of Kansas, eclipsing in its progress all the other States of this nation, because it Avas colonized in this way. The people, in this way, have not to serve half a century of i:)ro- bation in semi-barbarism. They begin with schools and churches, and you Avill see what the effect is upon communities that are so established. But I will speak now of that which consti- tutes the peculiar strength of emigration of this kind ; and that is (he projit of the thinr/. I have shown you how efficient it is, and I Avill now show you how the method works, to some extent. It is profitable for every one con- nected with it ; it is profitable to the people Avhcre the colonies go ; it is profitable to the jieojjle of the colonics ; and it is profitable to the company, which is the guiding star and the protecting power of the colonies. It does good eveiy where. It does evil nowhere. Sir, you cannot resist a power like this. A good man often feels regret when he knows that by promoting a good cause he is at the same time sacrificing his own means of doing good, and is becoming weaker and Aveaker every day. It is a great draAvback upon beneficent enterprises, even upon philan- thropic and Christian enterprises, that the men Avho sustain them are lessening their own means of doing good by it. Sir, it is a great mistake to suppose that a good cause can only be sustained by the life-blood of itj friends. But Avhen a man can do a magnanimous act, when he can do a decidedly good thing, and at the same time make money by it, all his faculties are in harmony. [Laughter.] You do not need any great argument to induce men to take such a position, if you can only induce them to believe that such is the effect. Well, sir, such is the effect ; and now let us apply it to the people of Central America. What reason will they have to complain, if Ave send among them our colonies, organized in this Avay Avith their sub-soil ploAvs, their ci'ow-bars, their hoes, their shovels, and their garden-seeds ? What reason aa'IU they have to complain ? Why, the fact is, that, unless our civilization is superior to theirs, the effort Avould, in the beginning, be afiiilure; it never can make one inch of jirogress. Then, sir, if we succeed at all, Ave succeed in planting a civilization there which is superior to theirs ; Avc plant that or none. It is impossible for au inferior civilization to supplant a superior civilization except by violence; and it is al- most impossible to do it in that way. AVell, sii", if we give them a better civiliza- tion, the tendency of that better civiHza- ; tion is to increase the value of real estate ; j for the value of property, the value of real \ estate, depends ujwn the character of the \ men who live ufjon the land, as well as upon j the number of men who live upon it. Xow, sir, we either make an absolute failure in this | thing, and do not trouble them at all, or we give them a better civilization, and, in addi- tion to that, we give them wealth. Thus, sir, with bands of steel we bind the people of Central America to us and to our interests, by going among them in this way ; and they cannot have reason to complain, nor will they complain. If we had approached them in tliis way two years ago, without this miserable meddlesome method, induced and wan-anted, or supposed to be warranted, by the neutrality laws, we would have filled Cen- tral America to overflowing by this time, and would have had with us the blessings of every native citizen in that portion of country. Xow, sir, if such is the way, if such is tnc [)Ower, if such is the effect of this method, to tiie emigrants, and to the people among whom they settle, wliy should we not now adopt it in refererK.e to Central America V And what is the metlioil ? Why, it is as plain and sim- ple as it can be. It is just t6 form a moneyed corporation which sliall have two hundred thousand dollars capital; which shall then obtain and spread information through the country, by publications, indicating what are the natural resources of Central America, and the inducements to emigrate thither ; show- ing how it is situated in relation to commerce, and how, of necessity, there uuist speedily be built upon that soil a flourishing Common- wt'alth. Tfien you have to apply a portion of these means to buying land and to sending out steam engines, and to building some hotels to accoumiodate the people Avho go there, and also some receiving houses for the emi- grants. Establish there, and encourage there the establishment of the mechanic arts, and I tell you that every steam engine you send there will be the scat of a flourishing town : every one will be an argument for people to go there ; for they talk louder than individu- ■ als a thousand times, and they are more con- vincing a thousand times, especially to an ig- | z^y norant and degraded people, than any thing men can say, because the argument is ad- dressed to the senses ; it makes them feel comfortable; it gives them good clothes; it gives them money. These are the arguments to address to an ignorant and degraded people, and not cannon balls, or rifle balls, nor yet mere absh'act dogmas about liberty or theology. Then let this company be or- ganized so soon as you fi.x these neutralit}- laws so that we can get ofT without these vexatious executive interferences. [Laugh- ter.] Then we shall sec how the thing will work in Centi-al America. But, sir, I expect, when the people of the North shall hear that I am taking this view of the question, that the timid will be in- tensely terrified, and say that we are to have more slave States annexed to the Union. I have not the slightest apprehension of that result. It may be said that Yankees, when they get down into Central America, will, if the climate is suited for it, make use of slave labor. I have heard that argument before ; and it has been asserted that the Yankees who go into slave States oftentimes turn slaAC- holders, and outdo the Southern men them- selves. I have no doubt that they outdo them, if they do any thing in that line at all. [Laughter.] The Yankee has never become a slaveholder unless he has been forced to it by the social relations of the slave State where he lived ; and the Yankee who has be- come a slaveholder, has, every day of his life thereafter, felt in his very bones the bad economy of the sj'stem. It could not be otherwise. Tiilk about our Yankees, who go to Central America, becoming slaveholders ! Why, sir, we can buy a negro power, in a steam engine, for ten dollars [laughter], and we can clothe and feed that j^ower for one year for five dollai"s [renewed laughtei*] ; and are we the men to give $1000 for an African slave, and SI 50 a year to feed and clothe him ? 'No, sir. Setting aside the arguments about sentimentality and about philanthropy on this question, setting aside all poetry and fiction, he comes right down to the practical (juestion — is it profitable V The Yankee re- plies, " not at all." Then there is no danger of men wlio go from Boston to Central America ever owning slaves, unless they are compelled to by their social relations there. If a man goes from Boston into Louisiana, and nobodv 14 ■will speak to him unloss he has a slave , no- body will invite him to a social entertainment | unless he owns a negro ; and if he cannot | get a wife unless he has a negro ; then, sir, vei-y likely he may make up his mind to own a negro. [Laughter.] But I tell you that he will repent of it every day while he has him. He cannot whistle " Yankee Doodle " with the same relish as before. He cannot whittle in the same free and easy manner. He used to cut with the grain, with the knife- edgi! from him ; 7iow, he cuts across the grain with the knife-edge towards him. The doleful fact that he owns a negro, is a tax upon every pulsation of his heart. Poor man ! There is no inducement for the Yankees to spread slavery in Central America, and there is no power in any other part of the country to do it. Therefore, most fearlessly do I advocate the Americanizing of Centi'al America. We must have some outlet tor our overwhelming population. Necessity knows no law ; and if we cannot have Central America, we must have the Indian Territory ; we must have something ; we are not exhausted in our power of emigration ; we are worse olf than we were before the opening of Kanzas. Not one-half of our natural Increase has been exhausted in colonizing that Territory, and furnishing ])eople for Oregon and Washing- ton. We might, as I told you, make eight States a year, if we only used our forces eco- r»>mically ; and we will use them economi- cally by establishing, not for the present time only, but for all coming time, this system of organized emigration. Just as fiist as this has become understood in the country — just as iar as it is known to the pcoi)le — not a single man who has any sense will emigrate in any other way than by colonies. Just look at the difference between men going in a colony and going alone. Suppose a man goes to Central America, and settles there alone; what is his inlluence upon real estate by settling there alone ? Tliei-e is no appre- ciable difference from what it was before; but if he goes there with five hundred men from the city of Boston to establish a town, by that very act he has made himself wealthy. I can point to numerous examples of the kind. Hence this making money by organ- ized emigration is not going to be speedily rellnipilshed. Depend upon it that we have only begun to use it, and that we have not used it with the efficiency with which it will be used in a year to come. Now, sir, for these reasons I hope that the committee to which this question shall be referred, will so modify and elucidate the neutrality laws, that we shall not hereafter be subjected to this executive interference. And, in accordance with the views I have expressed, I now offer the following amend- ment : "And, also, that said committee report, so far as they may be able, the present social and political condition of the people of Nicaragua, and Avhether they invite colonies from the United States to settle among them ; and, also, whether the soil, climate, and other nat- ural advantages of that country are such as to encourage emigration thither from the Northern States of this Confederacy." Now, ]\Ir. Chairman, I will state briefly my reasons for submitting that amendment. The gentleman from Mississippi (^Ir. Quitman), referred to the social and political condition of the people of Central America, ,as a pro- per basis, I think he said, for our action. Therefore, with open arms, do we welcome that gentleman and his associates to our no- ble brotherhood of missionary political regen- erators. For myself, I am Avilling to take the gentleman's words about the necessity of something being done to aid these people ; but in grave matters of legislation like this, the connnittee having the subject in charge should first fully investigate in reference to the matter suggested by my amendment. I do not intend any oU'ensive sectionalism by using the word Northern ; that the com- mittee should inquire whether the natural advantages of soil and climate of Central America were such as to invite emigration thither from the Northern States. I so phrased the amendment because, as I have shown you, the Northern Statics are the only ones which can furnish emigration that would be of any consequence to Central America. \ We would be glad to receive Avhatever help the States on the Gulf could give us, but it is impossible for them to give much help in this work. And because the Northern States 1 have tiie power in this matter, and because I the Southern States have not the power, I have used the words, that the committee shall in(juire specially whether the climate and the soil are such as to encouraire cniiuration 15 X6 to Central America from tbe Northern States. If, however, there be objection to it, I will strike out the word '' Northern," and leave the inquiry to be general. A more withering reply was never made to the fillbusteros of the country. This speech met them on their own ground, where they never expected to be reached. They thought of the populous North, pouring forth its surplus population after an organized sys- tem, and tliey trembled for their chances. Where numbers conquer, they knew they must go down before them. Mr. Thayer's peculiar manner, too, told as effectively as his mailer. The llcprcsentatives' Hall was alive all the while with laughter. But llie hand-writing which this single speech served to bring out upon tiie wall read thus: Emi- Gi{.\Tiox. The speaker stood forth the ac- knowledged apostle of " Manifest Destiny.'' He preached only the Civilization of Labor. On the 2Jth of :March, 1858, Mr. Thayer delivered another speech on the floor, en- titled, " The Suicide of Slavery; " full of the same characteristics as his previous speech, but more compact and solid, more thorough!}' considered, and requiring, from the nature of the theme, a strain of j)hi]osO[)hic reflection in its treatment, yet it flashed with bright streaks of sarcasui, was alive with humor, and challengi'd serious attention on all sides. It was a caj)ital cflbrt, and developed the Emi- gration theory in a way likely to make a per- manent im])ression. But the passage rela- tive to the South as a Churcii, and what it had been doing for the Africans, is one of the finest pieces of satire we ever met with in our reading of oratory. Theodore Parker on this floor, within the last two weeks. But I shall make no defence. There are some things which I never attempt to defend. Among these are the Falls of Niagara, the "White Mountains of New Hampshire, the Atlantic Ocean, Plymouth Rock, Bunker Hill, and the history of Massachusetts. Any man may assail either or all of them with perfect impunity, so far as I am concerned. And words of disparagement or vituperation directed against either of these objects, by any assailant, excite in me feelings very dif- ferent from those of indignation — whether the assailant comes with a bow as long as that of the bold Robin Hood, or with a bow of shorter range, like that of the gentleman from Alabama []Mr. Shorter] [Laughter.] But I de2)recate the disposition that impels these shafts against the sister States of this confederacy. I deprecate this sectional animosity whenever and wherever I see it evinced. I have heard too much of the ag- gression of the North and of the aggressions of the South, in the past, to be very much in love with either of these ideas. I have never been accustomed to speak of the aggressions of the slave power, and I have no purpose of doing it now or hereafter. If the one-hun- dreth part of the people of this country can make dangerous aggressions on the rights and interests of the other ninety-nine hundredth parts of the people, either by the force of stri-ngth or by the arts of diplomacy, I assure you that I will be the last man to complain of it. I think that this slavery question Is al- together too small a question to disturb so "reat a people as inhabit the L'nited States of America. For myself, I was always In favor of popu- lar sovereignty, rightly so called. I am ready, for one, to agree to-day that the Territories said of it, — " John Quincy Adams used sa- tire in his way, and that, too. quite powerful- 1 belon^in'T to this Government shall be open ly ; but his satire was quantitatively great, — i ^o settlement at any time, when Congress Mr. Thayer's is qualitatively nice and fine, j thinks fit so to oi)en them, and that the peo- There is no reply to such things. The ac- pj^ of ^11 parts of the country shall go into count of the trials, dangers, and sufferings of them, with the assurance oi" ah.'^olule and com- the South to convert the heathen, is masterly; i ^/^,/g nnn-inlervenlion ; with the assurance it is worthy of Dean Swifl, but it is finer and that whenever any chief executive, official, subtler tlian any thing I remember from him." j Qj. non-resident, shall interfere, by fraud or The following is the sjjeech itself : — j violence, in their affairs, he sliall either be i impeached or hanged ; with the assurance It may be expected, ]\Ir. Chairman, that at that when the people shall have the ratio of this time I should say something in defence ' representation required by law, and shall of the Pilgrims, and of the State of .Massachu- come to Congress with a Constitution, repub- setts; for'they have been repeatedly assailed' lican in form, they shall be admitted into the IG Union ad a State. This, sir, is popular sov- , crei'^nty, and it is what was practised in this country two centuries ago. The people of the Plymouth colony had the privilege of choosing their own Governor, ;;nd of making their own laws. The same was true of t!ie New Haven colony, and of the colony of the Providence Plantations. They alway did it. I believe the Crown of England never appointed a Governor for these colonies ; certainly not for the last two. But were those people, without ever having exercised the right of self-government, bet- ter prepared to govern themselves than arc our people, educated under our State Gov- ernments, who go into our territoi'ies ? Why, then, should Ave continue to have an " Ahab to trouble Israel," while he lays the blame of his own misconduct upon the emigrant aid societies ? Why not cut off these Territories from all connection with the General Govern- ment, legislative or executive ? Then we shall have no more agitation in Congress, and no more contention in the Territories. But so long as this connection continues, so long as we have a President trying to bias by his appointments, and, perhaps, by the United States troops, the will of the people so long shall we have agitation, and we shall have enough of it. Well, sir, I have nothing to find fault about. I am very v/ell pleased with the present ten- dency of events. But, sir, there are those who are dissatisfied, and who are inclined to invoke a certain deity — I think a false deity — which presides over a portion of this Union; a deitv which has been invoked by great men on great OL'casioas, and by little men on little occasions, for a long time past — a deity in whose expected presence both the people and the polltielans have sometimes stood aghast — "when he," in prospect only, " from his hor- rid hair shook pestilence and war." This sulphurous god is Disunion. This Capitol Hill has been a veritable INIount Carmel for the last quarter of a century, upon which ex- periments have been tried with this bogus deity. One dcnj upon ]Mount Carmel was suf- ficient to determine the destiny of Baal and his prophets. But here, we, the most patient people in the world, witness these invocations year after year, with exemplary endurance, expecting that the great Is-to-be will some time come. And you and I, Mr. Chairman, even during the present session of Congress, have witnessed attempts to kindle here the fires upon the altar of Southern rights. But the sacrifice, the altar, and the spectators, were as cold as alabaster. The prophets only were warm ; but they were warm, not from the presence of the god, but from his absence. He does not make his appearance. The great Is-to-be docs not come. He has either gone on a very long journey, or else he is in a very deep sleep. Well, sir, shall we have this deity of Dis- union invoked forever ? Who is to blame ? If the North has given cause, what have we done ? What cause of disunion has ever ])ro- ceeded from us ? Have you not had every thing your own way ? Have we not let you have the Democratic party to use as you please V [Laughter.] Have you not had the Government for a long time ? And have we not let you use it just as you had a mind to ? We, sir, were busy about our commerce, extending it around the world ; about our rail- roads ; our Internal improvements; our col- leges, and all those things which Interest our people. We knew that you had a taste for governing, and that by the indulgence you might be gratified without serious Injury to us. For many years j'ou have had your own way, but now you come here and ci'y out " disunion." Why, what more can we do ? Well, It may be that we have encouraged a mistake on your part. It may be that we have given }ou some reason to suppose that this temjxirary courtesy of governing, which we have extended, was a permanent right. However, if you have fallen into that error, we will, perhaps, at some future time disabuse and correct jou. But ■whatever blame there is anywhere, whatever cause there Is for dis- union, must attach to the action of the slave power, commanding and controlling the De- mocratic party, and to no one else in the country. Therefore, at this time, I come with exultation— not, to be sure, with malig- nant exultation — to speak for a few moments upon the decline and fall of Slavery — nay, sir, further, upon the suicide of Slavery in this land. I will show you by what acts the two most important pillars of its support have been removed, and that the whole system of Slavery must therefore fall. And these two events have been accomplished, if not by its direct efforts, at least by the connivance of this same part}', impelled by this same con- trolling agency. xra 17 I will first sliow yon how the moral power of this institution has been destro}X'd, by what act, and then I will show you how and by what act its political power is forever doomed. But, sir, how did an institution like tJiis ever have a moral power ? is a ques- tion for us to examine. In the first place, we arc told by Southern men that we have a nation of heathen in our land ; and we are told by the same authority tliat we have an institution here for their regeneration. Now, 5ir, if we have, from necessity, a nation of heathen in our land, and if Slaverj- is an in- stitution for their regeneration, it is very clear that Slavery has a moral powt'r. But, savs the gentleman from (Jleorgia [Mr. Gartrelfj, I speaking of negroes, " They are idle, disso- ' lute, improvident, lazy, uiuhrifty, who think not of to-morrow, who i)rovide but scantily ; iijr to-day." | I will also give you other proof Here it is : — I " Who would credit it, that in these years ' of benevolent and successful missionary effort III this Christian liepublic, there are over two millions of human Uings in the condition of heathen, and, in some respects, in a woi-se condition V From long-continued and close observation, we Ix-lievc their moral and re- ligious condition is such that they may justly be regarded as the heathen of this Christian country." — Committee of Synod of South Car- ! olina anil Georgia, in 1833. [ " After making all reasonable allowances, I our colored iwpulation can be considered,' at the best, but semi-healhens." — Kentuchj Union's Circular to the Minusters of the Gospel in Kentucky, 1834. " There seems to be an almost entire al> senee of moral principle among the mass of our colored population." — C. W. Gooch, Esq., Prize Essay on Agriculture in Yiryinia. " There needs no stronger illustration of the doctrine of depravity than the state of human nature on plantations in general. * * * Their a«()w, m addition to these moral and intel- j understand your motives, and, worst of all, lectual sacrifices which our Southern breth- 1 sometimes abused at home by the ungrateful rcn admit, there are pecuniary sacrifices | objects of your Christian charity, yo'^u have which^ you know to be very great; indeed, still pressed on towards the mark of your had Virginia been free fifty years airo, had she been exempt from this great tendency to christianize the African race, she would have been worth more this day than all the Atlan- tic States south of New Jersey. And should she by any chance become free, you will see lier wealth and her population increase in pro- liortlon as this missionary spirit is diminished. [Laughter.] It is true, our Southern breth- or for the good of other men, as I do rcn, impressed with this great idea of chris- the history of these slave States. I have tianizing the African race, having for their | seen Fox's Book of Martyrs, but there is only ambition to present the souls of their | nothing in that to compare at all with the negroes, without spot or blemish, before the j martyrs of the South. The census of the throne of the Eternal, have sacrificed almost United States is the greatest book of martyrs every thing. I could (piote from Southern ever printed. [Laughter.] Other books men upon this subject. The sagacious states- | treat of martyrs as individuals; the census high calling. Now, sir, when was tliere ever a class of men so devoted and so self-sacri- ficing? I have read the history of the Apos- tles; I have read the history of tlic Ri'formers, of the Scotch Covenanters, of the Huguenots, and of the Crusaders; and, I tell you, not in. one or all of these have I seen any such he- roic self-sacrifice for the good of anotlier race, see In 20 of the United States treats of them by coun- ties and by States. I can see how a man, impressed 'vvith a grand and noble sentiment, should perhaps, in excitement or in an emer- gency, give up his life in support of it; but cannot see how a man can sacrifice his friends, his fiimily, and his country, for a religious idea or an abstraction. Here, then, sir, is the position of our South- ern brethren upon this subject. But the worst is yet to be told — the doleful conclusion of the wliole mattei-. They have made sacri- fices, and it seems to me that they were en- titled to the rewards for them ; and I doubt not that they have often consoled themselves in contemplating the rewards in the future which must await them for such good services in the present. I have no doubt, sir, that oftentimes, seeing they have not treasures laid up on earth, they suppo.-^ed they had treasures laid up in heaven. [Laughter.] But just at that time, when they seemed to be almost in the fruition of their labors, when the gentle- man from Missouri [Mr. Anderson], in great exultation of spirit, was speaking of the insti- tution that had raised the negro from barbar- ism to Christianity and civilization, and when the gentleman from Indiana [I\Ir. Hughes] had caught the inspiration, and said, that al- though the body of the African might be toil- ing under the lash, " his soul was free, and could converse on the sublimest principles of science and philosophy" — when faith had al- most become sight — just then, sir, out comes the Supreme Court with the decision that A NEGRO HAS NO SOUL ! [Laughter.] "Angels and ministers of grace defend us!" All these treasures that were supposed to have been laid up " where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt, and where thieves do not break through nor steal," have been invaded by the decision of the Supreme Coiu-t, and scattered to the four winds of heaven. INIore than two centuries of prayers and tears, of lieroic self-sacrifice and Christian devotion, of foith and hope, of temporal and spiritual agony, have come to this " lame and impo- tent conclusion." [Laughter.] The moral dignity of the grandest missionary enterprise of this age is annihilated. As a Northern man, I stand here a disin- terested spectator of these events. If I do not like the decision of the court, I have a higher law. The negro himself can appeal to the court of heaven ; but what refuse has the Southern church ? [Renewed laughter.] None whatever. This decision is a blow, direct and terrible, falling with crushing vio- lence upon our Southern brethren. This Supreme Court, with cruel and relentless hostility, has persecuted the Southern church as the dragon of the Apocalypse pursued the woman into the wilderness, seeking to devour her oiTspring. [Much laughter.] What motives could have impelled the court to this act ? I have no doubt a patri- otic motive. I am not liere to impugn the motives of any man, or of any set of men, much less of the highest judicial tribunal in this land. No doubt, sir, their motives were patriotic, for they had witnessed the devasta- tion of this terrible religious fanaticism through the South. They had seen the ravages of this disastrous missionary monomania, and they determined that there must be an end of it ; and how could they so effectually end it as by annihilating at once the object of its aims and aspirations. That, sir, they have done. Here, then, endeth the moral power of the institution of Slavery. I come now to the consideration of the event which just as surely has doomed to de- struction the political power of that institution — Imean the repeal of the Missouri Compro- mise measure in the passage of the Kansas- Nebraska bill. That act, sir, I will show to you — if it ever was committed by the slave power — to have been a suicidal act. What need was there for repealing that Compro- mise, or of admitting Slavery into Kansas b>j law ? Was not the South sure enough of the Territory as it was before? I think — and this is my honest conviction — that had it not been for that act, Kansas would have been inevitably a slave State. We of the North had no particular interest in that Territory. It was put down in our geographies as the great American desert. We had not consid- ered it of much importance; but we relied on the law to keep Slavery out of it, and to pre- serve it to Freedom. W^e of the North have had too high an idea of the power of the General Government and of law, cither for Freedom or agaim^t Freedom. Sir, this Gen- eral Government has but little power over this question. It is not a motive power. It is only a regiMrij, an exponent of power. It is the log-book of the ship of State, and not the steam engine that propels - the ship, or the 21 wind that fills the canvas. We -would like to , have the log-book kept right, to show us our ; true position ; but we do not now consider j the Govornmcnt as the motive power. The ; motive power of this nation, as of all nations, I is the people in their homes ; and as the peo- i l)le in their homes are, so is your character '. and so is your progress. If the people in I their homes in Kansas had been Pro-Slavery, ; what could the North have opposed to it V It was emigration, and emigration only, that ; could have made Kansas a Stale, either slave I or free. The great law that governs cmigra- , tiou is this ; that emigration follows the paral- ! Icls of latitude westward. Under that law, \ Kansas would have been settled entirely by a j I'ro-Slavery people, as was the southern part of Indiana, and as was tiie southern part of Illinois. AVe in the North, trusting in the protection of the law, would have had no j remedy. People in favor of Slavery would have gone there, and if they were compelled at first to adopt a free Constitution in order to shape their institutions according to any law concerning the Territory, they might have soon ri'versed that position. In fact, the de- cision of the Supreme Court has now made any sueh thing unnecessary. They might have Ibrmed just such a Constitution as they pleased. Well, then, we would thus, in all probability have had Kansas a slave State without tlie Kansas-Nebraska bill. But the jiassage of that bill, if Slavery had been certain before, accmed to the majority of the people in the North to make it almost inevit- able. History warranted this fear. Judging from the case of Iiuliana, there seemed to be no chance whatever for Freedom in Kansas, after the opportunity for Slavery to enter there had been given. There was Missouri on the confines of the Territory — and the most densely peojtled portion of ilissouri, too. Freedum-loving men, desiring to go to that Territory, would have ha the hist number of De Buics Jieciew, evei-y where acknowledged to be good Southern autiiority. In an article defending the New England Emigrant Aid Company, the writer says : " We of the South have been practising ' Organized Emigration ' for a century, and hence have outstripped the North in the ac- quisition of land. The owner of a hundred slaves, who, with his overseer, moves to the West, carries out a self-supporting, self-insur- ing, well-organized community. This is the sort of ' Organized Emigration' which expe- rience shows suits the South and the negro race, whilst Mr. Thayer's is euually well adapted to the whites." Then, what fault can be found with our ef- forts to organize Freedom by means of our emigrant aid societies, that enable our citi- zens to go to the Territories in companies of twenty, fifty, one hundred, or two hundred, to take possession of the West, and to locate there the institutions under which they choose to live ? 22 And here I come to the defence of tliis ns- sociation. It lias been assailed, time and again, on this floor, and I have never been allowed even the privilege of putting ques- tions to its assailants. The gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Anderson) called it " illegal and unconstitutional." It has been so as- sailed by the successor of Millard Fillmore. But where is the proof V "Which of its acts has been shown to be illegal or unconstitutional ? If it was illegal and unconstitutional, why lias not the organization been crushed by the courts V "We contend that any organization which is allowed to continue its existence from year to year, and to carry on its busi- ness, has the presumption, at least, of a legal riglit to do so. We claim that for the Em- igrant Aid Company. But the gentleman from Missouri professes to have authority in regard to this matter. He has said that we may employ this emi- gi-ant aid society in ])romoting emigration to Central America and to foreign countries, but that we must " heicare " how we do so in colonizing the Territories of this Govern- ment. Mr. Chairman, if the gentleman from Missouri has any authority in these premises, I hope he will exercise it. I ask him to jiub- lish a hand-book for emigrants, telling us how we may go into a Territory ; whether we 7nay ride or must go on foot ; whether we may take our wives and children with us, or must leave them at home ; whether we may take some of our neighbors with us, with their a<^- ricultural implements and steam engines, or whether we must go into the Territories with- out any neighbors whatever; whether we may get horses or oxen from the free States, or whether we must content ourselves to take mules from the State of Missouri. '"Laugh- ter.] Now, sir, let us have not only the book, but the reasons for it. Let us know how far we may go, according to the law, in this mat- ter of emigration. I recommend the gentle- man from Missouri to take some lessons from the gentleman from ]\Iississij)pi, (Mr. Quit- man), on the rights of emigration. I think he can get broader views upon this subject, if he will consult that gentleman, and I think he will allow northern men to go to the places which they have a right to go to by the law of this land, in such society, if it be laAv-abiding, as they may choose to select for themselves. I have said that the great general law of emigration is, that the emigrants shall follow the parallels of latitude in this country. There are some exceptions to this. The gold in California led our emigrants from the ex- treme North across many parallels of latitude. That Avas a sufhcient disturbing cause. The existence of Slavery in the slave States of this country has driven thirty-five out of every hundred emigrants across northern parallels to the free States of the Union. That was another great and powerful cause. But there is another cause sufficient to carry emigration southward over parallels of lati- tude. That is, the argument of cheap lands, with the additional advantage of organized emigration. The objections that have here- tofore existed among Northern men to set- tling in Southern States are, by this mode of emigrating, entirely obviated. The North- ern man, with his family of children, would not heretofore go into a Southern State, in the absence of schools and churches. But when combined Avith one or two hundred, or one or two thousand, of his friends and neigh- bors, he goes into a slave State, he carries with him schools and churches, and the me- chanic arts, all these difliculties are obviated ; and, besides, he has the inducement of going where the land can be bought at slave State prices, in the expectation of finding it come up probably in a few years to free-State prices, which are five or six times greater than slave-State prices. Here is the great inducement of increasing wealth. Let a col- ony start from Massachusetts, and settle on almost any land in tlie State of Virginia— in Greenville, Southampton, Dinwiddle, or Ac- comac, where the lands do not average so high as three dollars an acre, by the census of 1850 — and the very day they settle there, the value of the land is more than doubled. There is better land for sale to- day in Tennessee and North Carolina, for fifty cents per acre, than can be bought for ten times that sum in any free State. How can such an appeal to the imigrating population of the North, in favor of organ- ized emigration to the slave States, be re- sisted ? I know of no means of resisting it. Certainly you can have no reason for resist- ing it, but every reason to encourage it. "We do not come as your enemies ; we come as your friends. "We do not come to violate your laws, but to imj)rove our own condition. This movement southward is destined to eou- 23 tiniic and to increase. Sir. if Slavery were Union — in fact, if there is any weak spotin as sacred as the Ark of the Covenant, and the Union, I think it would be a good tliin"- if it were defended by angels, I doubt [ to patch it over with an additional layer of whether it could withstand the progress of : population. [Applause.] There never would tliis age and the money-making tendencies i be any disunion, if we could only attend to of the Yankee. But it is not as sacred as , it, and see where the weak places are. and the Ark of the Covenant, and nobody be- \ mend them in time. lieves that it is defended by angels. ! But there is another exception to the rule But, sir, there begins to be an enligntened j I have laid down. Central America will idea in these border slave States upon this i prove abundantly sufficient to carry cmi^ra- subject. A year ago, when I proposed to ■ tion southward, even across many parallels jilant a few colonies in Virginia, several jour- : of latitude. She offers the grand induLC- nals in the Old Dominion threatened me j ments of commerce, of a climate unsurpass- with hemp and grape-vine if I should ever i ed in salubrity (in the central and Pacific set fo tion of the Constitution containing this pro- vision. Mr. Logan, who received every Re- publican vote for United States Senator, advocated, on the stump, the adoption of the Constitution with this clause. "What was the vote ? Why, sir, this clause of the Constitution had a majority of seven thousand five hundred and fifty-nine votes; while the Constitution itself had a majority of only four thousand votes. The Democratic majority in the Territory, as shown in the election of a Representative to this House, was only one thousand six hundred and thir- teen votes. Then it Is proved, by the official record, that tlie Republican party combined with the Free State Democratic party to sanc- tion and ratify this provision of the Constitution which is here called In question. There is also abundant evidence, outside of the record, to satisfy any one that such is the fact. This, then. Is the apology for the action of the peo- ple of Oregon on this question. What Re- publican, or what friend of free States, is justified, under these circumstances, in voting to exclude the people of Oregon from this Confederacy on account of this provision, which is only an expedient, and not a thing for practical use ? It is very easy, at this distance, to censure the people of Oregon, and to [)ronounce judgment against them ; but such judgment may be neither wise nor just. " Then at tlie balance let's be mute. Wo. never can adjust it ; Wliat's (lone we partly may compute, But know nut what's resisted." But, sir, there Is another objection urged from certain quarters, with great pertinacity. I mean the oljection to the sufi"rage of aliens. The Constitution of Oregon, in respect to alien suffrage, is certainly more stringent than the law of some of the States of the Union, and less stringent than that of others. It Is the same as the Territorial law has been during the last ten years. It requires a residence of twelve months In the United States, and of six months In Oregon. It re- quires that the sworn declaration of an Inten- tion to become a citizen of the United States shall have been on file at least one year. What was the inducement for that encourage- ment of ahens? The wages of labor are now, 28 and liave boon, in Oregon, douLlc Avliat they are on the Atlantic coast; and I ask, would it be exj)edient or wise for Oregon to drive awa}' from her borders the emigration from Europe, on which she has to rely for develop- ing the resources of the country ? Certainly not. Such a policy would have been disas- trous in the extreme to the young State. It was wise and prudent, therefore, for Oregon to invite and encourage that emigration which she so much needs, to develop her great re- sources, and to secure for her the products of her natural Avealth. These, sir, are among the plausible and ostensible objections that have been urged on this side of the House against the admission of Oregon. There is yet another argument: that Kansas has been excluded from the Union by the a,ction of the Democratic party ; and that, therefore. Republicans ought to ex- clude Oregon. The argument amounts to this: that we should abuse Oregon because the Democratic party have abused Kansas- Now I, for one, am quite content that the record of the Kepublicans, in respect to Ore- gon, should be better than the record of the Democratic party in respect to Kansas. I am quite content that the record of the Dem- ocratic party, in respect to Kansas, should be just what it is; and I do not think it is possible very much to improve the Repub- lican record, or to impair the Democratic record. Are we to sacrifice our own politi- cal principles and advantages, for the sake of compelling the Democratic party to consis- tency of action V Are we bound, as a party, to sacrifice our own consistency in doing so? Certainly not. I think the Republican party has another, and, to my mind, a less diihcult mission to perform ; and that is, to preserve its own consistency. These are some of the palpable objections that have been urged on this tloor. I come now to some for which I thank the gentleman from Indiana [Mr. Hughes]. He lias pre- sented to the House some secret objections which the Republicans are said to have to the admission of Oregon. The first is, that the Republicans are opposed to the admis- sion of Oregon, because it is a Democratic State. Now, sir, does not the gentleman from Indiana understand that the Republi- can party is not so devoid of sagacity as to fail to see that to reject a young State for the reason that it is Democratic would make it Democratic forever? Does the gentleman from Indiana find any thing in the history of the Republican party which justifies such conviction of its stupidity, as would lead him to say that the Republican party, as a party, is opposed to the admission of a free State be- cause her people had chosen such politics as seem to them best? Does he not^see that sagacious Republicans, finding that the Re- publican party in Oi-egon is now in a minor- ity of only a few hundred votes, understand that if Oregon be admitted by their action, and were thus set free from the influence of Executive patronage, she would very soon become a Republican State ? But further than that: the sentleman brings up another secret reason why the Re- publicans would oppose the admission of Or- egon. That secret reason is, that, in case of the failure of the people to elect a President, and in case of that election coming to this House, there will be a vote from Oregon against the Republican candidate, which may procure his defeat. Now, does not the gentleman from Indiana understand that any such position of the Republican party would secure its defeat ? that if it were stupid" enough to take a position against the admission of free States, because their Constitutions were not universally approved, it would require more than the vote of one State, either in Congress or out of Congress, to help or harm the prospects of the party ? I thank the gen- tleman from Indiana for the secret reasons which he has given, which I have thus far been enabled to prove too absurd and impol- itic to influence the action of the Republican party. There are certain principles which, in my opinion, should govern the House on a question of the admission of a State. Eirst, tlie Con- stitution must be republican in form. Second, there must be sufilcient pojnilation ; what number may be sufficient, must be left to the discretion of Congres. Third, the ])roposed admission nuist be shown to be for the bene- fit of the contracting parties ; to be best for the State applying, to be best for the Con- federacy. Let us look at these principles, and see how they should affect the vote on the admission of Oregon. Eirst, then, is the Constitution presented by Oregon republican in form ? I will here send to the Clerk's desk a quotation from an authority which is justly 29 ^/y and generally respected by Republicans — j Maine (Mr. "Washburn) the other day deemed an extract from a speech of Senator Seward, , it expedient to call the pioneers of our na- made in the Senate of the United States j tional progress, "interlopers, ]-unaways, and last ^lay, upon this very question Tin:- Clerk read as follows outlaws." I affirm, concerning American citi- I zens in any Territory of the United States, "I think there is nobody who doubts that ' and in any new State of this Confederacy, the people of Oregon are to-tlay ready, de- j that they are above the average of the popu- sirous, willing, to come in. They have made .lation of the old States, in all that makes up a Constitution which is acceptable to them- manly and virtuous character. They have selves, and a Constitution which, however ; my sympathy ; and never will I oppress them it may be criticised here, after all, complies .'-ubstantially with every requirement which the Congress of the United States, or any considerable portion of either House of Con- gress, has ever insisted on in regard to any State. " It seems to me, therefore, to be trifling with the State of Oregon, trifling with the people of that community, and to be unnec- essary, and calculated to ])roduce an unfavor- able impression on the public mind, in regard to the consistency of the policy which we pursue in ailmitting States into the Union, to delay or deny this application. For one, sir, I think that the sooner a Territory emerges from its pi-ovincial condition, the better; the sooner the peoj)le are lelt to manage their by my vote or my voice. But, sir, what if the people of Oregon were really as bad as the most unfavorable construction of their Constitution, and the speech of my colleague (Mr. Dawes) would represent them to be, then what should we gain by refusing them admission into the Union ? If the objectionable features in their Constitution arc their true sentiments, and are placed in the organic law for use, and not for expediency, then surely the evil is deeper than the ink and parchment of their Constitution. It is in the hearts of the peo- ple and will not be eradicated by any harsh treatment that gentlemen on this floor may recommend. I doubt whether you will ef- fect the salvation of the people of Oregon own allairs, and are admitted to participa- i by heaping curses on their heads, or by ex- tlon in the responsibilities of the Government, I eluding them for unworthincss. You may the stronger and the more vigorous the i send them away from the door of the Capi- States which those people form will be. I J tol, but they will go thinking less of you, trust, therefore, that the question will be | and less subject thereafter to your influence, taken, and that the State may be admitted j They may come again with a hypocritical without further delav." Constitution, trusting to eflect by statute law Mr. Thayer. So much, then, in relation ! what you would not allow in organic law. to the first jirinciple which should govern our \ They may not come at all, or they may come action in the admission of States. And what, ! with a Constitution tolerating Slavery. Dis- sir, concerning the other ? How will it aflect j couragcd and repulsed by Northern votes — this present Confederacy of States, to admit the Territory of Oregon ? Why, gentlemen talk here asif we were discussing the question of admitting some new and unheard-of race of monsters and cannibals into the Union ! Sir, is not this injustice to the jieople of Or- egon V AVill they contaminate this Confed- eracy ? Just as much as their mountain streams will contaminate the Pacific ocean. I tell you, they may be inferior to us in edu- cation, in refinement, and in etiquette ; they | Frek Statk ? may not appear as well in the drawing-room But, sir, there is another argument which as some of our Eastern exquisites; but in | may influence some members who doubt the the sturdy virtues of honesty, of fidelity, of [security of this Union of States. By this act industr\-, and of endurance, they are above ^ which I now advocate, we shall bind firmly the average of tlie people of this Confeder- j to the old States, by indissoluble bonds, the acy. I regret that the gentleman from remotest portions of our possessions. This finding no sympathy where they had most right to expect it, they might not be able longer to resist the Slave-State party in the Territory, acting under the Dred Scott de- cision. Is it not right, therefore, for the lovers of Freedom to advocate the immediate transition of Oregon from the condition of a Territory in which Slavery is lawful, to the condition of a State in which it is forbidden ? "Which do we choose, a slave Tcrrritonj or a 30 Avill make pccurc all intermediate parts of the tl.e duties of this government to a position national doma.n. j where they will be, as was well said last scs- rhis, then, may be grateful assurance to sion by the gentleman from Alabama [Mr. such as want assurance about the permanency | Curi-y], " few and simple," as they should be. of the Union. For myself, I have not much \ It is in accordance with this view that I resix'ct for any such assurance, but I do have : shall oppose any thing that leads to compli- an utter contempt for any doubts on the sub- I cations — that siiall multiplv or extend our jvct. This Union, Mr. Speaker, is not a : provincial dependencies. thing to be argued for and advocated ; it is I shall oppose all protectorates over forei-n a tlnng settled, fixed, and determined. Far ; countries ; all military occupations and mili- transccnarty, and to learn wisdom from their oppo- nents." Advised by such high authority, and scorning no source of knowledge, however humble, I have for a few days made a study of (he discipline and policy of the Democratic party ; and what do I find V A wonderful toler- ation of hostile and conflicting principles and measures, prom[)ted by adverse and contend- ing interests. I believe tliat the plain of Shinar never witnessed about the base of the tower of Babel any such confusion of lan- guages as we see here of princij)lcs and meas- ures in the Democratic party. How do they stand upon the tarifl"? Some are for specific duties, some for ad i-alorem duties, and some for no duties at all. How concerning the Dred Siott decision, and the protection of slavery in the Territories ? Some are for the non-intervention of the federal government with slavery in the Territories, and some are for the direct establishment of slavery in the Territories by the federal power, as the jour- nal of this House will show, by the notice which has been given of a bill to be intro- duced for the protection of slavery in the Territories, and as the debate in the Senate yesterday will show ; while others are in favor of making all such schemes of protection null and void by the unfriendly legislation, or by the masterly inactivity of the settlers. And how about the acquisition of territory ? Some arc for acquiring it by fillibustering and the force of private crusades; some by the more digni- fied method of protectorates, military occupa- tions, and military usurpation ; some by pur- chase, and some by war. And how is it about the slave trade V Some are for re\ i^ iniij it, and some are utterly hostile to its revival. And so in reference to the Pacific Piaih-oad, and every other measure of public policy. I have said enough to show that there is a tol- eration in that party of the widest diversity of principles, opinions, and measures. Xow, sir, if I am to learn a lesson from this party, I think I may learn this lesson, — that while I would not tolerate any such latitude of opinion as would breed confusion in the llepublican party, I would tolerate such lib- erality of sentiment as shall not compel men who agree in practice to quarrel about niat- tei-s of faith. I do not advocate that proscrip- tive policy which would drive away from me men who do not agree with me about tlie im- portance or necessity or expediency of legis- lating against slavery, or for freedom in the Territories. AVhile I will not denounce the gentleman from Maine, for his favorite meas- ure, I shall expect the same toleration for my own. He may bow down in his chamber three times a day before the Wilniot proviso, with his windows open toward Jeiusalem, and I will not trouble him for that. But when he attempts to fit other Rejiublicans to his bed- stead, we shall very likely jirotest against any such act, especially if it involves the necessity of cutting us off at both ends. I maintain my right to think well of Wilmot proviso men, and to think well if I choose of those who are not "Wilmot proviso men. The Wilmot pro- viso is only a measure, not a principle. Now, sir, there are some • classes of men who profess to belong to the Republican party, to whom I do not pro^wse to address any re- marks upon this occasion, because I believe that, politically, they will not be made better and that they cannot be made worse. I shall first speak of a class which I will denominate the kigidly eightkous, who 32 claim that it is not cnoTigli that a State shall exclude salvcry from its limits, but that this act must proceed from most exemplary and Christian motives. The State must exclude slavery because it is a sin. It might as well be a slave State as a free State if it is not made free, upon the purest Chris- tian principles. These pinks of piety depre- cate any appeal to national or personal in- terest; they deprecate any argument which is based upon economical or pecuniary con- sideration as an attempt to contaminate the l)ui-ity of exalted anti-slavery sentiment, and to soil by earthly contact the pure and spotless anti-slavery standard of the North. "\"\ ith this class lean never agree, for I would rather see a State free for the Avorst reasons, than see it slave for the best reasons. Another class consists of the prk-emi- XKXTLY coxsisTKNT. Some years ago they pointed their guns at the enemy ; and they intend to fire where they first aimed, whether the enemy be there or not. [Laughter.] To-day jou find them jwuring their hot shot into the cold ashes of the enemy's extinct camp-fires. [Laughter.] And they say, " is it any reason because the enemy has changed his position, because he is unstable and incon- sistent, that ice should be wavering and in- consistent also?' [Laughter.] With this cla.ss I do not agree. I am for j^ointing our guns Avhere the enemy now is — for pointing them wlicre the enemy stands at the instant when we aj^ply the torch. There is anotJicr class, sir, composed of the political Cassandras of the Republican party, who are alwajs prophesying, in the middle of one great disaster, that another still greater is about to come — who are continually say- ing that slavery lias always had its own way, ahd always will have it — that slavery, under the Dred Scott decision, will yet be estab- lished in ]\Lassachusetts and New Hampshire — that secret intrigues are going on for estab- lishing it in Canada, as well as for putting j the White Mountains and Cape Cod under ' the lash. [Laughter.] I have an account to settle with these men. I have met them, ' and found them a great impediment to the ' progress of freedom in this country. In the ' contest for free men and free labor in Kan- ; sas, I affirm here tliat they were a gi-eater obstacle to our progress than the border ruf- \ fians, the cabinet and power of President I Pierce, or the bad travelling in the State of ' IMissouri ; for they were filling the country with the cry tliat Kansas was lost. \\\\h. c]uivcring lips and moist eyes they went about crying that all urns lost. The effect Avas to send hundreds and thousands of men, who would have joined our good colonists in Kan- sas, shivering away to the cold regions of Minnesota. I have no sympathy with these men. Of this class was Uzza in the days of David, who thought that because the oxen stumbled, the ark of the Lord would surely fall ; and he stretched out his trem- bling hand in support of Onniipotcnce. Smit- ten by the Power which his doubts had in- sulted, faithless Uzza died upon the spot. Why he died I ask no commentary to tell me. Why any such are left is not so clear. Without faitli, either in the power of God or the destiny of man, they libel freedom and slander freemen. The}- have no joy in the present and no hope in the future. They , seem predestined to disaster and defeat; and , woe to the party or project in which they as- j sume authority or exercise influence. I To a man of this class the present life is one perpetual nightmare ; and what the fu- j ture will be, who can say ? Can he be saved V ! Can a man be saved without faith, or hope, I or works, with only repentance — and even : that consisting not in sorrow for his own sins, ! but for other people's virtues ? [Laughter.] Why, what if by some chance he were once in the Holy City? — he would be no more I saved than he was before. He never would see the tree of life or the river of life, never : would have a harp in his hand — but a spy- ; glass, and skulking about the battlements, I and peering off into illimitable space [laush- I ter] ; if he should chance to see Dred Sc^ott or the Supreme Court, even though they might be beyond the great gulf, he would think they were coming to establish slavery on the golden pavements of the New Jerusa- lem. [Laughter.] Now, sir, I do not address myself to these men. They bear the same relation to the Republican party that Cape Fear and Cape Lookout do to this continent. They scr\e only to keep people away from it. ' [Much laughter.] I address the continent of the Republican party, and not these insignificant though conspicuous capes and promontories. And, in doing it, I shall refer to first principles. It is an axiom in physics that one body must sustain to another, one of three rcla- oo tions. Tt must be cither loss, equal, or greater : and it is in accordance Avith the law ot" growth that ifone organized body is less than another, and, by natural and gradual accretions, shall at some time become greater, it must first be- come equal. Xow, sir, in politics it is also an axiom that it' one cause is inferior to another in position or in importance, it can never be- come superior except by first attaining to a position of equality. Now, sir, freedom and slavery are two causes in our politics, and it is claimed by gentlemen that the cause of freed(jm is in an inferior position politically (and this I assert too), and has been so for years. The question then is how it shall at- tain to an ecjual position, and. perhaps, here- after to a superior position. It can only attain | to tliat superior position in the legislation j of this Government, and in the executive power of this (Government, by first attaining to a position of ecjuality. And it is this policy of striving for this position of equality that I ' have advocated lor years ; and I am rejoiced that at the present time I am sustained in | tiiis argument by very liigh authority. I find that one of the distinguished Senators fi-om the State of New York [^Ir. Seward] made a speech last November, in which he took tliis position. Part of that speech was made in Kociiester, the other part of it was ' made a few days later in Home. ' The speech altogether contains two main propositions. The first proposition is this : that the Democratic party ought to be put | out of power. The second proposition is the nietliod by which this can be accomplished. ' Under the first head the speaker, not having much to prove, and tliereforo being free from the necessity of laboiious concentration (because a Northern audience was willing to assent witiioul argument) very naturally di- gressed from tlie strict line of logic, and dis- coursed freely upon a collateral philosophical question. He entered into a harmless phil- os()j)iiical speculation about the comparative \ itality of fi'ce labor, and of slave lal)or, and T think he came to the conclusion that free labor has the greater vitality. Tiiis I con- sider a very harmless speculation ; and had a similar one been indulged in, as it has often been, by a Southern statesman, and a contra- ry conclusion arrived at, no Northern man would have thought of taking exception to it. lie might iiave concluded, as Mr. Fitziiugh has done in his Sociology, as Southern ora- 3 tors have often aonc on the stump, and as Southern' editors have often done in their papers, that slave labor had the greater vital- ity, and would hereafter override free labor in the Northern States. Well, sir, so much for the very harmless speculation which has been very much misrepresented. But the sum total of the Senator's argument — the conclusion, which was for immediate and practical use — was what may be considered a sound national platform for the party 0}> posed to the Administration. It is broad enough for all the elements of the opposition to combine upon, and to occupy saPely. Now, sir, what is that platform ? What are the words of wisdom which give promise of vic- tory ? Here they are : " The work of to-day is to obtain securities for fair play in this great contest. Fair play was all tliat was left to James Buchanan and his administration to afibrd us. He promised us that miserable right — the remnant of all other valuable rights. Even that promise was broken, and that right has been treach- erously wrested from us the first year of the administration of James Buchanan. The President, without rebuke fi-om Congi-ess, and with the acquiescence of the Senate, suc- cessively removed Gov. Walker and Gov. Stanton, for yielding to the people of Kansas free, fair, and impartial elections. When the people of the State of Kansas by such elections repudiated the slavery Lecompton constitution, and avowed their unalterable determination to remain a community of free men, tlie Congress of the United States re- manded them to remain indefinitely a slave- holding Territory. Elections for slavery are held valid and lawful ; elections for freedom are deemed invalid, idle, and futile. Have I not said truly, then, that our first conquest must be tlic recovery of fairness and equality between freedom and slavery in the conduct of the administration, and of legislation at ^\'ashiugton." '• Fairness and equality between freedom . and slavery in the conduct of the administi'a- tion and in the legislation at Washington I " ' What, sir, is this but non-intervention l)y the • federal government, either for freedom or ■ slavery in the Territories ? What is tliis but a national platform upon which all the ele-- ments of opposition to the present admin- istration can fairly stand ? I subscribe to that doctrine, and advocate a fair play par- - 34 ty, and a fair play President, upon a fair | the intervention of Congress for the estab- play platform; I am for foir play between , lishment of slavery in Kansas; and, sir, I section and section, between State and State; for fair play for our foreign poli- cy, and for fair play for our domestic poli- cy ; for fair play with England, France and Spain ; fair play with China and Africa ; for the acquisition of Cuba, Central America, and Mexico, by fair play, and by that only. Here, then, is the position which the opposition can fairly assume, and the platform has the high- est Republican authority. Sensible and prac- tical men will harmoniously endorse It, and be proud to stand upon it and defend it In the next national campaign. In relation to slavery in the Territories, and the connection of the fedei'al government therewith, there are three political positions, and only three. First, there is Intervention for slavei-y ; second, there Is Intervention for freedom ; and third, there is no Intervention whatever. What Is the present policy of the Democratic, party In relation to this ques- tion y and what has been its past position ? I say that ]);vrty has been, as It Is now, in fa- vor of Intervention for slavery. I say that while that party has advocated popular sov- ereignty, and has elected one President by that advocacy. It has always persistently voted against popular sovereignty. It voted against It In the spring of 1854, upon Sena- tor Chase's amendment to the Kansas bill, giving to the people of Kansas and Nebraska the right to choose ther own officers. It was voted against when the Toombs bill w'as voted for by the Democratic party. Imposing a constitution upon the people of Kansas without their approbation. It was voted against by the Democratic party when they voted for the Lecompton bill, which sought to Impose upon the people of Kansas a con- stitution, not only without their approbation, but In defiance of their solemn protest. It think they had a tool at that time which was well adapted to the uses for which It was de- signed. It was supple, pliant, and fitted for many uses. Iludibras had such an instru- ment — his dagger. " 'Twoulil scrape trenches or cliip bread, Tu;l^^t choose or bacou th()U!j,li it wcro To bait a mouse-trap would not care, 'Twould make siiocs clean, and in the earth Set looks and onions and so furtli." So much for the past position of the Demo- cratic party In relation to intervention in the Territories. Now, what is Its present posi- tion ? Is that party now upon the popular sovereignty platform ? Did the debate In the Senate yesterday show that ? Are they not In favor of Intervention, and that of the fiercest kind, against freedom and for slavery in the Territories V And what does that no- tice mean upon your journal of a bill to be introduced which shall provide for the pro- tection of slavery In the Territories ? What mean those Southern journals when they de- mand that a federal law shall be made by Congress for the protection of slavery In the Territories ? I refer, first, to the Charles- ton (S. C.) News, which says : " If the constitution confers upon slavery the right to goto the Territories, as accord- ing to the Kansas Nebraska bill and the Dred Scott decision, it does, then it also im- poses the duty of protecting that right, and this cannot be done without positive Pro- Slavery legislation and a Federal Slave Code for the Territories." Again : The Richmond Enquirer says : " The right of property In slaves in the States Is now placed, practically as well as legally, beyond the reach of Federal legisla- tive encroachment. But in the Territories , the case Is different. It Is not sufhcient that j the decision of the Suj)reme Court prevents was again voted against in rejecting the | (jon„,.^,ss ^nd all its delegates from the pro- (Crltteiulen-Montgomery amendment, which i l,ibition of slavery In a Territory. There gave to the people of Kansas the opportu- ! niust be positive legislative enactment; a .nity of framinir their own constitution — of j civil and criminal code for the protection of choosing under what organic law they would .live. But, sir, while the Democratic party ex- 'cluded Congress from intervention with slave- ry in Kansas and Nebraska, they did not ex- clude the President from Interfering by the use of his patronage and power. The Inter- veution of despotic unity was preferred to slave property in the Territories ought to be provided." In the same spirit is the following extract from the New York Daj'-Book : "Of course, the people of a Territory, when they frame their State constitution, may adopt or exclude slavery ; but wdille they are a Territory, if they fail to protect 35 property invested in the person or indus- trial capacity of a negro, they grossly violate eijual rights, and therefore are not author- ized to consider themselves Democrats. The ■whole (jue.stion is resolved into this simple rigiit or no right to protection to slave prop- erty in the Federal Territories, and, as the Charleston News suggests, it must constitute the issue of 18C0." We find snrh opinions becoming prevalent in the Democratic party, and it is demanded that they shall be made the test of party fealty. Then we must come to the conclu- sion that the Democratic party is to-day against popular sovereignty; that it is in fa- vor of Federal intervention, of Executive in- tei'veiilion, legislative intervention, as well as a judicial intervention, for slavery in the Ter- ritories of the Union. AVell, sir, what is it proposed now lo op- pose to this jiro-slavery intervention in the Territories? Is it saitl that we will oppose to it the Wihnot proviso ? I respe(;t the sincerity of those who reeonnnend this as a ])anacea for all the evils that tin-eaten our Territories, but I cannot highly esteem tiieir intelligence if they believe it can be applied. For how many years is it since any j)arty in Congress had the power to pass the AVilmot proviso in reference to the Ter- ritories? Quite a number. And how do the people of this country stand upon that (juestion ? In the last two Presidential con- tests they have repudiated tiiat measure, and t(j-day we find the people against it. Congress against it, and we have it intimated to us that the Snpri'mc Court would declare it un- constitutional. Then, under these embarrass- ments, shall we nnavailingly strive to apph' it until all the territory of the United States shall have been settled and its destiny sealed for- ever, either as .slave or frca. Then it is an im- ]>ractlcable and an antitjuated issue, and sensi- ble and practical men will now cea.se to urge it as a ])arty policy. Such men now see that they could not apply any such prohibition if they would, and I hope they will not repudiate tho.«e who Avould not apply it if they could. If then, as I have shown, there can be no Federal intervention for freedom in the Ter- ritories, Ave can oidy choose between inter- vention Ibr slavery, and no intervention at all. Tiien, sir, without hesitation, while I deny no principle of the llepublican j)arty, I ad\ocate the adoption of the policy of no more Federal intervention with respect to slavery in the Territories. But what rcalhj is the position of the T^e- publlcan party upon this (question ? Can you show an instance in our history in which we have gone against honest popular sovereignty in the Territories? What act in this House, or in the Senate, will show that the Republican party has been against popular sovereignty? During the contest in Kansas all we asked was that the people should be let alone, and that they should have the right to do as they pleased. AVe voted for the Chase amendment in 18j4. And how did we vote last session upon the Crlttenden-^Iontgomery bill ? Every man upon this side of the House sustained it. Are we not then the party not only in favor, but also in possession of popular sovereignty? We have captured that gun before the enemy had even us#l it, and now we propose to test its range and accuracy by some experiments on the Democratic party. But does any man say that he voted for the Crittenden-^Iontgomery bill in an emergency, and that he sacrificetl his principles in doing it ? I doubt whether this will be said. I did not sacrifice my principles by that vote ; on the contrary, I voted in accordance with my principles. And, sir, I have but a poor re- spect for princ-iples that will not do in an emergency, — that will not do in a storm. Such principles are not fit to keep in fair weather. Well, sir, that is the policy of the Rejiublican party, — at least. It is the pi-actlce of the llepublican party, and non-intervention is perfectly consistent, therefore, with Its pres- ent principles. It is not only perfectly con- sistent for the party, but it is perfectly safe, as I win show you, for the cause of freedom. I can refer you to the liistory of Kansas. Kansas, without any protection for freedom, has become a free State, or at least she is this day prepared to be a free State, and will never be any thing less. In defiance of nu- merous obstacles in the way of obtaining her freedom, she has. bravely secured It. In the immediate vicinity of the Platte purchase, the most intensely pro-slavery portion of ]\IIs- souri, there, almost in the bosom of slave States, there, far removed from the States of the North, which furnish emigrants to the A\'est, and with all the force of the General Govermnent against freedom, and for slavery in the Territory, the free State heroes have 36 triumphed ; and not only that, but they have put forth many times tlie power Avhich -vvas requisite to accomplish the grand result. If it liad not been for Executive intervention, and for the cowardly predictions of faint- hearted anti-slavery men in the North, that Kansas Avould be lost, I think, sir, that the contest might have been ended before the year 185G. But as it was, notwithstanding all the ob- stacles in her way, the contest began to grow insipid during that year for want of opposition from the pro-slavery side, and I left it, as Atchison and Stringfcllow had already done. Since that time we know very well what has been the history of Kansas. It is now ap- parent that there are at least eight or nine free State men in that Territory to one slave State man. "Whatever may have been in- tended, such, sir, has been the effect of adopt- ing this principle, which has compelled North- ern men to rely upon themselves, and act upon their own responsibility in this matter of making free States. This is safer than to leave this question to Congress and to law. I have a thousand times more confidence in the people than I have in Congress on this sub- ject. Now, Mr. Chairman, compare the resources of these two causes that contend for pre-emi- nence in the Territories, — free labor and slave labor. How do we find the wealth and num- bers of the North when contrasted with those of the South ? I shall not dwell upon this point, for on a former occasion I ojiened that greatest book of martyrs, — the Census of the United States, — and showed hoAV these facts were. But how do the North and South compare in the power of combination ? Why, we men of the North, called the Northern hive, live in towns and villages. Even our agricultural districts are quite densely peopled. We have, in Massachusetts, one hundred and thirty men to the square mile. If there is any difficulty abroad or at home, — if there is any need for immediate action or remote action, it is easy for us to assemble, and consult, and determine what action is needed, and Avhat shall be most effective. And, sir, when it was necessary to put some colonies into Kansas, I found' no difficulty in having meetings in these towns and villages at very short notice. Plans were ^formed for making colonies, and for taking possession of the country in dispute, and thus the result contemplated was accomplished. But how can any such concert of action exist in that part of our country where there is only eighty-nine one-hundredths of a man to a square mile ! What chance of holding meetings, of kindling enthusiasm, of taking council, and of laying plans for accomplishing grand results ? None whatever. Then, sir, added to this ready combination, we also have great facilities of locomotion. Our people can migrate with but little diffi- culty. If there were a meeting to-night to put a colony into Kansas, all the arrangement might be perfected, and conqilete preparation made for starting in two weeks. The next day after the meeting you would see flaming hand-bills on the streets headed, " IIo for Kansas ! " " Property for Sale ! " Daguerreo- types of some " familiar faces," and perhaps the old homestead, would be taken, and in two weeks the colony, on the lightning train, following a pillar of cloud by day, and a pillar of fire by night, would be going on its way to their prairie home. How can a Southern planter hope to rival this speed and readiness of transition ? After he has determined to emigrate, his plantation is to be sold, and the purchaser is to be hunted up, and much time is required. And after a purchaser is found, credit must be given of from one to twenty years. But suppose ail this accomplished, and the whole train of ser- vants made ready for the journey, how like a funeral procession would they appear loiter- ing along through the swamps of Alabama and Mississippi. No, sir, you cannot compete with us in this game of emigration. We evi- dently have the advantage of you every way. You have not i)Ower to make a contest in this matter interesting. I say this in no sj^irit of malignant exultation. lam laying down facts, and I wish Southern men to understand their bearing and inevitable consequences. But, sir, the Southern planter does not take his force of negroes to a disputed Territory. The case which I was just now supposing never really occurs in practice. It did not once occur during the contest for the Terri- tory of Kansas. I have never heard of a single slaveholder who took there even as many as five negroes. The spirit of devotion and the spirit of Christianity sometimes jirompt to great sacri- fices, but I am compelled to believe that the Southern planters are few in number who 37 ^'o- litical anti-slavery men, who relied on law and nothing else to restrict slavery and ex- tend freedom. But the repeal of that com- promise gave us free State settlers instead of free State sentiments. It made the people rely upon themselves rather than on law and politirians. It has given us a race of workers instead of a race of wishers ; and now, what- ever may come hereafter, we shall always re- member that the surest defence of fi'eedom Is a guard of free men at the point of conllict. The history of that conflict has shown us that the extension of freedom has no necessary connection with the success of party politics ; that the people, independent of political or- ganizations, can- make free States, even when the whole power of this government is exer- cised against them. Who, then, can for a moment doubt concerning the I'esult when the people shall have fair play and non-inter- vention in the Teri'itorles by the Federal Government, instead of perpetual and per- sistent federal intervention for slavery ? These two comprehensive blunders of the South, luuler the Democratic party — -the free trade policy and the emigration contest — in- duced by the repeal of the Missouri Compro- mise, have secured beyond question the free- dom of every foot of the national domain. In commemoration of these transcendent Southei'n illusions, I think the abolitionists ought to erect cue grand enduring monu- ment. 39 IIow, then, can this policy of non-inter- vention in the Territories, which I have ad- vocated, be embodied and made practical ? There are two ways by which that may be accomplished. One way is, by allowing the people of the Territories to elect all their officers. I am utterly opposed to the organ- ization of another Territory without such a provision in the organizing act. Another way is, to allow no more Territorial organ- ization whatever. Sonic men may consider this as unsafe. I do not recommend it now as a policy. I surjr/est it as a policy to be considered, whether it might not be better hereafter, never, in any way, to increase our provincial dependencies. Such dependen- cies do not become this government. They are entirely hostile to the genius of republi- can institutions. There is nothing in the or- igin of this nation which shouhl encourage this provincial system for our Territories. I would feel perfectly safe to allow our emi- grants, with tlic Bible and the common law, with the axe and the plough, to go into the national domain and take care of themselves. How would such a jjolicy affect the Treasury of the United States? It would save us mil- lions of dollars annually. Our people would then go forward in solid phalanx. They would be able to protect themselves. There would be no deterioration in education or morals ; for the settlers, living contiguous to each other, could support schools and church- es. We would then have no difficulty what- ever arising from Indian wars, and no diffi- culty arising from the numerous applications of Territorial office-seekers. Sir, we have history on our side in favor of that policy. The people of Oregon gov- erned themselves for ten years before the Congress of the United States extended their l)rotecting hand over the colony. They had a perfect system of governnuuU — a perfect system for the administration of justice. They had a symmetrical ami well-appointed government in all its branches. They estab- lished post oflices and post roads. According to the testimony of the first (iovernor of that Territory, e^ery thing Avas progressing with as much regularity and order and success as it could have been if it had been all planned by the powers in this city, and put in oper- ation by their agents. But we have a pres- ent example. Dacotah is to-tlay without a Territorial government, and yet we hear of no disturbances there. The people have es- tablished a government for themselves, and I much doubt whether it is in the power of Congress to improve it by establishing, in its stead, a non-resident jurisdiction. But, sir, there are earlier examples of the successful working of this policy than are furnished by either Oregon or Dacotah. I refer to the early colonies of Plymouth, Providence, and New Haven, whose histories are household words. Wherever you look, you find that our peojile, whether they be few or many, are abundantly able to take care of themselves. Therefore, I suggest, as a policy to be con- sidered — whether there shall hereafter be another Territory organized In the national domain — whether Ave have not had sectional quarrels enough and difficulties enough about provincial dependencies, to induce us to create no more, and as speedily as possible to get rid of Avhat Ave noAV have. XoAV, sir, I have advocated an open field for a fiiir conflict betAveen these two opposing systems of labor. If you, sir, ckilm that slave labor is a divine institution, I claim that free labor is a divine institution, and I, for one, am Avilling that hereafter the two institutions shall honestly contend and grapple, and that the stronger shall prevail, and I avIU acknoAvl- edge that the one Avhich shall prove the stronger in a fair contest Is the more divine. Now, sir, in all that I have said upon this subject, I have noAvhere denied the poAver of Congress to exclude slavery from the Terri- tories. On the contrary, I believe that power is clearly established, not only by legal con- struction of the highest authority, but also by the authority of our history and practice. Still, sir, I should deem the exercise of that poAver inexpedient at the present time If It could be applied. Nothing should be at- tempted by law AvhIch can be accomplished Avithout laAA'. The extension and security of free labor cannot be effected by law, but by Avork. It Avould be a hazardous security for the North to rely on law to prohibit slavery in the Territories, when she can so much more safely rely upon herself. But, sir, Ave haA'e no power to prohibit It b}' laAv, and since Ave have not, I do not regret the fact ; I say that I am Avilling that this conflict should go on, and that it should come to a decision Avhich Is based upon the merits of the con- tending systems, and upon nothing else. And 40 the more chcerrully do I assent to this ar- rangement, because it will furnish a sound basis of legislation to ages yet to be. But if to-day slavery is obstructed by law, if to-day slavery is crushed out by the legal enactments of this General Government, and not by the laws of the communities in which it is prac- tised, then Avhat objection could be urged when a future generation, here or elsewhere, shall propose to establish slavery instead of free labor V Why, it would be said that slav- ery did not have a fair trial in the United States of America; that it was crushed by the opposing force of law; that it did not fall from its own inherent weakness and lack of vitality ; and there might be force in that ar- gument. But, now, let the question be determined by the merits of the two contesting s}stems, and let the mighty and majestic power of free labor overthrow and destroy slave labor in a fair fight, as it surely will, then what will be the effect upon the future V Why, if any legislator shall then presume to suggest to this nation, or to any other, that slavery is better than freedom, and shall make an hon- est proposition that it be established, the stu- dent of history will meet him, and, turning back to the records of this contest, will show him the evidence of the invincible power of freedom, and of the inherent imbecility of slavery. He will trace the majestic progress of free labor all the way across this continent, from the granite hills of New England to the rocky ramparts of the Pacific. He will show that it was mightier than Presidents and Princes, Courts and Counsellors, Cabinets and Congresses. "While slavery, nurtured and caressed by the whole power of this confed- eracy, appeared but a dwarfed and impotent cripple, in this contest with the heaven-born giant. Then, sir, ages hence, when the ac- tors in these present scenes shall have been forgotten, should it be proposed again to es- tablish slaveiy, in this or in any other land, the people will ponder upon the progress and the grand result of this last great battle be- tween these hostile powers, and will proclaim with one voice tliat freedom, having foirly conquered, shall evermore remain in posses- sion of the field, and of the well-earned lau- rels of victory. T!ie vexed Utah question was on the car- pet during the next session of Congress, and Mr. Thayer gave expression to his views on roLYGAMY, on the 3d of April, of the pres- ent year. His individuality of thought is plainly stamped on the speech, and his genius for solving knotty problems in politics in a practical way is brought into the foreground more than ever. The army had been tried in Utah, but to no purpose ; tlie topic only returned upon Congress to haunt it with a consciousness of its own inefRciency. In this dilemma, the plan suggested by Mr. Thayer was hailed as an ingenious one, certainly as a peaceable one, and, what is best of all, as a perfectly practical one. Not all legislators can say this of their suggestions. Ilis plan was for a reconstruction of the old territorial boundaries, so as to divide up Utah between the ijopulation at Pike's Peak, and that in Carson Valley ; and thus the people theinxelves, rather than Congress, would dispose of the evil of polygamy on the spot. The simple proposition shows its author to be of a states- manlike turn, and a man to be looked to in any public emergency. Said INIr. Tiiayeii — ]\Ir. Speaker, it has become apparent, in the progress of this de- bate, that there is at least one question on which the representatives of all portions of the country may agree. Every member from every section of the Union is ready to assert the odious criminality of polygamy. It is en- couraging, it is refresliing, to know that there is at least one subject on which there is no sectionalism, in relation to which we have not heard the Representatives of Nor(h Car- olina boasting that their people are much better than those of ]\Iassachusetts, nor the Representatives of the State of New York boasting that their people are better than those of Mississippi. There is really, now, one practical ques- tion before us for our decision ; and, sir, in my remarks upon it, I shall not treat it as an abstraction. I shall not treat it as a figure of speech, nor as a legal technicality. Po- lygamy is an existing fact ; and as an exist- ing fact, while I agree with members from every part of the country in denouncing it, I will so act as to insure its most speedy exter- mination. Is this a fact, sir, which began to- day, or yesterday, or last week ? I should suppose, from the zeal which is manifested here, that it never was heard of till the be- ginning of this session of Congress. zc^r 41 But, sir, some thirteen years ago, one Brigliam Young, a shrewd and selfish and unscrupulous adventurer, led certain ^lor- nions from Illinois, or from Missouri, across ■what was then called the great American desert, by a long and wearisome journey, to tlie basin of the Great Salt Lake. Poor, de- luded, ignorant fanatics were his followers, who, from having no religion at all, had been captivated by the theories of Joe Smith, and had joined the ranks of the Latter Day Saints. From time to time, there have been accessions to their number. Year after year, they have come from Wales and Scotland, from England and Germany, and fron^ the States of this Confederacy. About two years ago, they attained their highest power. They are now declining in strength, harmony, and consolidation, and are diminishing In num- bers. As a separate and peculiar connnunlty, they are doomed to si)eedy extinction. Con- gress has cndiu-cd their huM-easing strength, and the Insolence of their highest power, witliout action. Can we not possibly endure tiieir decline and e.\tcrmInatIon, without this e.xhibitiou of paper authority and of spas- modic morality V In the course of these thirteen years of jMormon history, we have had a Whig Ad- ministration, we have had two Democratic Administrations, and at one time, for one Congress, the llepublieans had the organiza- tion of this House; and sir, there never has been an act passed against this crime, to make it a peual offence. There it was, be- fore the eyes of the country, before the world, and before Congress; but still no party, until this day, has taken the responsibility of pro- posing that it should be abolished by penal statute and by force of arms. Now there seems, as I said before, to be a feeling in this House, not known in the community at all, which could be accounted for only on the supposition lliat polygamy never was heard of till to-day. There is a spasm, sir, of mo- rality, or a paroxysm, or a panic, or some- thing that seems to impel certain men to feel the necessity of voting, and of voting noxi\ against polygamy, at all hazards. ]\Ir. Reaoax. I desire to correct tlic gen- tleman on a point of fact, lie Is mistaken in supposing that nothing has ever been done upon this subject. I introdued a resolution during the last Congress, which was adopted by the House, referring the subject to the Judiciary Committee for Inquiry. Mr. TiiAYKii. I said no act had been passed. That was my assertion. And now, sir, there is most intense zeal manifested that something shall be voted — voted, not done — to exterminate polygamy in Utah. AVorstof all, it appears that this act of voting would seem to satisfy some consciences, even though this very vote should prolong the existence of that iniquitous Institution. It would seem to satisfy some consciences — I will not call them stupid, or sluggish, or dead — tliat they voted against polygamy. Sir, if the ability of these gentlemen to execute were equal to their zeal to enact, we might almost say that omnipotence would be one of their weak- nesses. But It is not proposed to execute ; and there Is no party in this country to-day, and there has been no party in this country during the last thirteen years, that would dare to vote bayonets and revolvers to shoot or stab polj-gamy out of Brigham Young and his followers. What, sir, do the Judiciary Conmiittee ask us to do ? What claim do tiiey present for our votes in favor of this bill ? Wliat Is claimed V Why, that the Congress of the United States sliould make an expres- sion of opinion, so that the world may know that the United States of America are really opposed to polygamy? How much better, INIr. Speaker, we shall stand before the na- tions of the earth, when we shall have really shown them — what they may now be la doubt about — that we are actuallij opposed to pol}-gamy V "When we shall have shown it, not by doing any thing against the iniquity, but by a solemn vote, recorded upon the journals of this House ! Now, sir, I say that any such expression of sentiment is supei-fluous. There is no State in this Union that has not made polyg- amy a penal offence already; and what is the combined expression of the Representa- tives of these States, more than the individ- ual expression of each of the States acting in its individual capacity ? Do we by this combined action, add any thing to the force of all that separate action ? Certainly not. The world understands now well enough that this country is opposed to polygamy, and it never will understand It any better by a vote of Congress, the whole effect of which will be to prolong the existence of that Institution. 42 Tlien, sir, as an expression of sentiment, this Lill is superfluous. But more than that. It is ui'ged by some as a penal statute. Will it be enforced '? I say no; and I tell you that, should the bill pass, neither you nor I ■will ever live to see a party which Avill dare to vote money and instruct the President to use it in putting in operation and in enforcing the penal statute which this bill proposes. Then, sir, what does it amount to ? I say, as a penal statute it is powerless. I will not go into the argument now to show why it ought not to be enforced, or the cruelty of attempting to enforce it against these men, who never could understand why the bill was enacted. I Avill not go into the argument about the expense of millions that it would cost this Government to enforce it ; or that it v/ould give the Mormons reason to charge that we have made use of persecution against them, driving them to the mountains and hunting them there like jiartridgcs, or that it would inevitably prolong the existence of the institution which it ])roposcs to abolish. All these questions I pass by, for there is nobody here who claims that it is the purpose of any party to vote money or instructions to enforce this penal statute. But, sir, it is said that the honor and au- thority of the United States must be vindi- cated. The honor and authority of the United States vindicated, indeed, by a law which its very framers admit is, from its very inception, a dead letter ! Nobody here now dare stand up and ])ledge his party to enforce this law. I challenge any man of any partv to do that. I claim tliat it is a sham ah initio ; that it is a false pretence; and I never will vote for a sham or a false pretence, by what- ever man or whatever part}- it may be brought into this House. I do not deal in such thino-s, sir, especially upon practical questions like this now before us. The reasons that I have given are sufficient to govern my vote upon this bill, and that vote will be against it ; that, as an expression of the moral sense of the country, it is superfluous ; that as a penal statute, it is powerh^ss ; that, as a vindication of the honor and authority of this Govern- ment, it is worse than futile ; for it would bring both the honor and authority of the Government into ridicule and contempt. Now, sir, if these are facts, and if that is the prospect before us, should this bill be ele- vated to the dignity of a law by our votes? Moral reformations should never be attempted by law, which can be accompliL.4icd without the aid of law. This Avould be true, even were the law proposed sure to effect the con- templated object, even if it were a law made and enforced by the political community where the offence existed. What excuse, then, can gentlemen give for a law like this, sure not to accomplish the object contem- plated, made by a non-resident power, and intended never to be enforced ? Now, Mr Speaker, let us iiu^uire whether some act cannot be done which shall prove a perpetual and insurmountable barrier to the progress of this gigantic monstrosity. I am happy to be able to say that I believe- that a solution — a peaceful, quiet, easy, natural, and practical solution ■ — of this question is now within our reach. I am happy in the belief that the gold mines of Pike's Peak and the silver mines of Carson Valley do now furnish us a solution of this ve.Kcd question of polygamy. I have therefore proposed an amendment to this bill, that the Territory of Utah, together with a part of Kansas and Nebraska, shall be divided into two land dis- tricts, in such a way that the IMormon jieople shall be divided nearly eouall}' between the two. Now, sir, what are the facts about popula- tion ? I come now to an argument which ad- dresses itself directly to the judgment of the House, — an argument not of theories, but of facts. The Mormons, by the best intelligence, by the highest authority I can get, are to-day about forty thousand people. I have it from officers of the United States army who have been in Utah during the last two years, and they assure me that not more than one-seventh of this population of Mormons are voters. What are the facts in relation to the popula- tion of the two proposed land districts? I have the opinion of the Delegates from Jef- ferson, Kansas, and Nebraska, and numerous others, that there are now within the limits of the proposed land district of JeflTcrson forty thousand men, and that there are at least in that district twenty thousand voters ; and we have it from papers last received from Cali- fornia, that there are now in Carson Yalh-y at least thirty thousand men, and not less than fifteen thousand voters. I believe there has been a rapidity of increase of population in these districts which has no parallel in the history of this country ; not even in the case ^(ri^ of California. Why, sir, at the rate of increase now going on, it is confidently expected that at the next session of Congress these people ■will come here with the right to be admitted as sovereign States. Then, sir, you may de- feat the policy of these ^lormons at once, by erecting these land districts, which have al- ready more than five times the voters of the Jlormon jjojjulation, and which population is rapidly increasing, while the number of Mor- mon voters is diminishing. AVith this pros- ])ect before us, is tliere any risk that Mormon- ism will not be e-\terminated by local law, provided we pass this amendment, constitut- ing the land districts proposed ? "Would not a local law be much better to accomplish the purpose than a law made by a non-resident power ? I contend that the law of a non-resi- dent power is only fit to be laughed at and despised. The true authority, in my judg- ment, and the only authority worthy of being regarded, is the law that is made, approved, and enforced, by the peo[>le where it is law. Tiiat local law is what ^lormonism, polyga- my, or any other crime, cannot evade. This non-resident law may do very well as capital for politicians; it may do for political preten- ces and shams; but it never will do for prac- tice. 1 am not disposed to spend any time now in showing this House the ine.xtricablc didicuUies and complications this precedent would lead us into if ado])tcd. Tliere is no end of them. Do gentlemen propose that Congress shall follow u[) this mode of reforming all abuses that may occur upon the public lands of the United Slates? Shall we make laws against drunkenness, and profanity, and Sabbath- breaking, and larceny, — in short, shall we make a com[)lete criminal code for our public lands, and establish a police and judicial force sullicicnt to arrest and convict and punish all olfenders on this immense area ? If this is to be our policy, then this bill proposes a good beginning. We shall probably have enough to do for some time to come, without attend- ing at all to the legitimate j)urposes of the Government. Local law is the true remedy for these evils. The operation of such law, as contemplated in my amendment, will be suflicient for the speedy abolishment of do- lygamy. Js it to be supposed that one hundred thou- sand miners at Pike's Peak, and the same number ol' miners at Carson Valley, Avithout any women at all, will allow a monopoly of women at Salt Lake ? [Laughter.] Sir, I do not agree with gentlemen who denounce these men in the Territories, these hardy pioneers, as men of no education, as men of no refine- ment, as men destitute of intelligence and moral power. I have never called them " runaways and outlaws." They are men of more vigor of body and of mind, of more heroism and enterprise, of more power of en- durance, of more persistency, and of more character, than the people of the old States. They are also superior in intelligence to the average of the people in the old States. I doubt not, sir, that there are some educated men in Carson Valley, and some educated men in Pike's Peak ; some who have read histoiy, and some of them may have read Roman history. [Laughter.] I feel perfectly secure, then, in the position that Mormonism and polygamy, and all things connected therewith, should be left to the local laws of the two land districts which I propose, by the action of Congress, to estab- lish. Now, sir, is it safe to leave poljgamy to the cure of a democracy ? Is is safe to leave it to a republican form of government, made by the people themselves, in these two land districts ? Every man acquainted with the history of the world knows that polygamy never has existed under a democratic or re- publican form of government. Every man who knows any thing, even without reading history, would decide beforehand that it never could exist under such a form of government while the sexes continue to be equal in num- bers. Wherever it has existed, — in Turkey, in Arabia, among the chiefs of Central Africa, or among the aborigines of America, — it has always been protected by absolute military despotism. It can be sustained under no other system of government. Then I hold that the argument is conclu- sive, that, by suly'ecting polygamy to the ac- tion of the democracy of these two land dis- tricts, it would most effectually put an end to it. This is one reason why I shall vote for the amendment to the bill as I have proposed it. But it may be inquired, why we do not or- ganize the Teri-itories of Jefferson and Neva- da, instead of simply constituting them land districts ; why we do not pass an organic act. Now, sir, I am going to give my own views upon this subject ; and I am going to say, for the amendment which I have proposed, that 44 it neither aflirms nor denies tlie power of Congress to legislate for the Territories. But while pursuing that course, I still hold my own views upon the subject; and if inquired of why I would not vote for a Territorial or- ganization, my answer is ready ; that I am opposed to the whole policy of organizing Territories by this Federal Government. I say here and now, that I will never vote, — as I believe I have never voted in the past, — to organize any Territory under this Govern- ment ; neither would I acquire another foot of land to be governed by the Congress of the United States, or to be sold by the authority of this Government. The purposes of this Government are few and simple, as has been before said in this Ilall. It is no part of the purpose for which this Government was or- ganized, to exercise non-resident jurisdiction, or traffic in real estate ; and thcrelbre 1 am for getting rid of the nuisance, and of confin- ing the Government to its legitimate purposes as soon as we can possibly do it. Therefore, again, 1 am o])posed to the organization of any more Territories, and of inaugurating again the old policy of the Government, which has led to all the sectional quarrels which have existed, and now exist, between the States of the Union., I tell you we cannot afford to spend the time of this nation quar- relling about these provinces, which the Con- stitution docs not know. The Constitution knows nothing less than a State ; and why should we be Ibrever ([uarrelling about Ter- ritories ? Sir, I am so nuich a popular sov- ereignty man, that I deny that Congress can, b}' an organic act, bestow sovereignty upon the people of a Territory. jNlr. Smith, of Virginia. Let me ask the gentleman a question. The gentleman says that the Constitution does not recognize any thing else than a State. Then, what does he think of that clause of the Constitution which gives to Congress the power to dispose of the Territory and other property of the United States ? Mr. TiiAYKU. I ought to have said, as a political community. The Constitution speaks of territoi-y as property, as land ; but, sir, as a political conmiunity it knows nothing less than a State. As a member of Congress, I would not be wiser than the Constitution. 1 am opposed even to granting jiermission to any Territory to make any laws, or to manage its own ail'airs in its own way. Why should the citizens of ]\Iainc and Connecticut, of Georgia and South Carolina, and the other States, insult their equals in the Territories by the favor of granting them peimission, through Congress, to govern themselves ? Is a man who was a citizen of Iowa yesterday, and is to-d4,y an inhabitant of Nebraska, less than the equal of him who remains a citizen and inhabitant of Iowa ? How and why is his right of self-government impaired ? No man can tell. If, then, he is the equal of any citizen of the States, it must be conceded that there is no occasion for the citizens of the States, to graciously grant him equality of right. No, sir; to gi-ant permission to a Territory to make its own laMs, Implies authority which never rightfully existed in Congress. It im- plies the same authority as to command or to withhold permission. I will never vote such an insult to my fellow-citizens in a Territory. They are my equals in every right under this Government, and have just as good reason and authority to grant permission to their fellow-citizens in the States to govern them- selves, as we in the States have to grant this permission by act of Congress to them. INIr. Smith, of Virginia. I want to ask an- other question. If Congress has no power over the Territory of the United States, ex- ecTpt as property, — not as a political commu- nity, — then Congress has no power over the people of a Territory. Mr. Thaykr. Exactly, sir. It may be that, under the construction of the Consti- tution which has obtained. Congress would really be decided to have the same right to govern the people that George III. had to govern these colonies. I deny that it has now or ever had any moral right to govern Amer- ican citizens in the Territories. To be ex- plicit: if Congress has that right, where did it get it ? Congress is the servant and not the king of the people. Tiie people, Mr. Speaker, in this country, are king. There is no other. Nobody else has the attribute of sovereignty. If Congress can dispense sov- ereignty, certainly Congress has either ac- (juired that sovereignty or has created it. No- body believes that Congress creates sover- eignty. If Congress acquired it, then when and where did it acquire it ? Even the Church of Rome, absolute as is her authority, professes to give a reason for what .she has and what she dispenses. When that church 45 :^^y sells indulcrcnces, she declares that she only sells the superabundant merit of the saints, so that men that are not as good as they oui^ht to be, may have their deficiencies made up by men who are better than they need to be. [Laughter.] I would like to know where this superabunilant sovereignty comes from, that Congress can dispense it. Only think what a reservoir of sovereignty this Congress must be, which has dispensed or pretends to have dispensed sovereignty to twenty sover- eign States since the formation of this gov- ernment, and has never had any sovereignty itself, except what it must have accpiired from the sovereign people of this country. The fact is. Congress has never bestowed sover- eignty upon one of them. It has only relin- (juislied tiie sovereignty which it has usurped and withheld. IS'o, sir, this thmg is a mistake. It is worse, — it is a fiction ; it is a fallacy. The gentle- man from Alal)ama [Mr. Curry], the other o' tf^ -^ »* ^^ :0-' V, -..'• ,* -'- v'' .•^•' ''\""/ ^^ " > *> - » • ♦ .^^' % ,w ^ ^o '^^ ^T?^o* o'^ ■ ^U .% ^^ A \^ V-^-. •^\ r -- 0'- ^, *°v^ ^^ "o. "**. ^_ .<^- :^^. o^ .^^-^ ^: <> .0^ i''J4.% ?^°--<^. ^^ '^o^ ■"°o A ' V. -VJ!^\>^.* ^"^ '^ .•S^ > ''Q