E .S qs .f^- ^"'V. ^ '^^ ^ V. .\ -N^ .'*^'* ^V V. \' ,0^ V (. * • °^ o v-^^ <^ <. 'o . . " G^ ^o ^,* -^^ o 4 o y^ o ^^ ^^ 0^ < ^ .r «<» ^°." d ' ' ° ^ b^ -^^x^ THE REPUBLICAN PARTY; ITS ORIGIN, NECESSITY & PERMANENCE. SPEECH OF Hon. CHARLES SUMNER, '■ BEFOllfJ THE YOUNG MEN'S REPUBLICAN UNION OF NEW- YORK, ^ JXJLY 11 til, I860. ^; NEW-YORK : J. A. IT. HASBROUCK & CO.. PRINTERS, 180 BROADWAY. I860. vj:^ THE \^ _J883^^ ^^j ITS ORIGIN, NECESSITY AND PERMAKENCK SPEECH OF Hon. CHAKLES SUMNER, BEFORE THE YOUNG MEN'S EEPUBLICAN UNION OF NEW-YORK, JULY 11th, 18 GO. Fellow-Citizens op New York: : — Of all men in our history, there arc two whose influence at this moment is most peculiar. Though dead, they yet live, speak and act in the conflict of principle which divides the country — standing face to face like two well-matched champions. When I add that one was from South Carolina, and the other from Massachusetts, you will sec at once that I mean John C. Calhoun and John Quincy Adams. Statesmen both of long career, of marked ability, and of unblemished integrity — act- ing together at first — sitting in the same cabinet which they quitted — one to be- come Vice-President, and the other Pres- ident, then for the remainder of their days battling in Congress and dying there — each was a leader in life, but each has be- come m death a grander leader still. Mr. Calhoun possessed an intellect of much originality and boldness, and, though wanting m the culture of a scholar, made himself felt in counsel and in debate. To native powers unlike, but not inferior, Mr. Adams added the well ripened fruits of long experience in foreign lands, and or studies more various and complete than those of any public man in our history besides an indomitable will, and that spirit of Preedom which inspired his father when in the Continental Congress he so eloquently maintained the Declaration of Independence, making himself its " Colos- sus" on that floor. Sitting together in the Cabinet of Mr. Munroe.thcy concurred in sanctioning the j Prohibition of Slavery in the Missouri ! Territory as constitutional, and so ad- j vised the President. But here the di- j vergence probably began — though for a lono- time it was not made manifest. The diary of Mr. Adams shows that at that early day, when slavery had been little discussed, he saw its enormity with in- stinctive quickness, and described it with corresponding force. The record is less full with regard to Mr. Calhoun; but ■when in later life tlicy rc-appcared, one in the Senate, and the other in the House of Representatives, each openly assumed the position by which he -will be known in history — one as the leader in all the preten- sions of Slavery and of slave -masters, and the other as the champion of Freedom Mr. Calhoun regarded Slavery as a per- manent institution ; Mr. Adams regarded it as something transitory Mr. Calhoun vaunted it as a form of civilization ; Mr. Adams scorned it as an unquestionable barbarism. Mr. Calhoun did not hesitate to call it the most stable basis for fre government; Mr. Adams vehemently de- nounced it as a curse, full of weakness and mockery and ^doubly offensive in a boastful Republic. Mr. Calhoun, not con- tent with thus exalting Slavery, proceeded to condemn the early opinions of Wash- ington and Jefferson as " folly and delu- sion." to assail the self-evident truths of the Declaration of Independence as " ab- surd," and then to proclaim that human beings are property under the Constitu tion. and as such, may be transported into the Territories and there held m Slavery ; while Mr Adams added to the glory of his long and diversified career, by persistent efforts, which are better for his famo than having been President — ^upholding the gieat rights of petition and of speech , vindicating the early opinions of the Fa thcrs, and the self-evident truths of the Declaration of Independence ; exposing the hateful character of Slavery ; insist ing upon its prohibiten m the Territories ; denying the asserted property m man, and especially and often exhibiting the unjust power in the National Government, usurped by what ho called " the little cluster" of slave-masters, whose yoke was to him intolerable Such, most briefly told, were the antago nist opinions of these two chiefs. Never was great conflict destined to involvo a great country more distinctly foresha- dowed All that the Republican party now opposes may be found in John C. Calhoun. All that the Republican party now maintains may be found in John Quincy Adams. Choose yc, fellow citi- zens, between the two. The rule of ' Principles, and not men" is hardly applicable to a man whose life now bears the sacred seal of death, and whose name is the synonym of principle . yet I do not hesitate to say that our cause is best appreciated in its precise objects and aims. Proud as we may be to tread where John Quincy Adams laads the way. there is a guide of more commanding au- thority found in the eternal law of Right, and the concurring mandate of the Con- stitution itself when properly interpreted, which teaches the duties of a good citizen. Such is the guide of the Republican party which, I sny fearlessly, whore most known, will be most trusted, and which, when understood in its origin, will be seen to be no accidental or fugitive organization, merely for an election, but an irresistible ne essity, which in the nature of things must be as permanent as the pretensions, moral and political, which it seeks to con- strain and counteract. Let us dwell, then, on the Republican party, its Origin, its Necessity, and its Permanence : All must admit that if no Republican party existed now — oven if that halcyon day so often promised by cajoling politi- cians had come, when the Slavery Ques- tion was settled — still there would be a political necessity for a great party of Op- position to act as a check on the Adminis tration A kindred necessity was once expressed by an eminent Entish states- man, "wlio gave as a toast, " A strong Administration and a strong Opposition." Parties are unknown in despotic countries. They belong to the macliinery of free governments. Tlirougli parties, public opinion is concentrated and directed. Througb parties, principles are maintained above men. And tlirougli parties, men in power are held to a just responsibility. But if ever there was occasion for such a party, it is now, when the corruptions of the Administration have been dragged to light by recent Committees of Congress. On this ground alone, good men might be summoned to rescue the Government of our country. It is now an attested fact that Mr. Bu- chanan became President through corrup- tion. Money, familiarly known as a " cor- ruption fund," first distilled in small drip- pingfe from clerks and petty ofRcials, was swollen by the larger contributions of merchants and contractors, and with this ^accumulation votes were purchased in Philadelphia, enough to turn the election in that great metropolis, and in the chain of cause and effect, to assure the triumph of the Democratic candidate. I speak now only what has been proved. Fraudu- lent naturalization papers in blank, by which this was perpetrated, have been produced before a Committee of Congress. It was natural that an Administration thus corrupt in origin, should continue to exer- cise power through the same corruption by which power was gained ; but nothing else than that insensibility to acts of shame, which is bred by familiarity, can explain how all this should be done with such absolute indecency of exposure — wearing scarcely so much as a fig-leaf. A letter from a local politician, addressed to the President himself, urging without disguise the giving of ajlarge contract for machinery to a particular house in Phila- delphia, employing 450 mechanics, with a view to the approaching election, was sent to the Secretary of the Navy, with this indorsement, in a well-known hand-wri- ting, signed by well-known initials, " Sept. 15, 1858. The inclosed letter from Col. Patterson of Philadelphia is submitted to the attention of the Secretary of the Navy. J. B." Thus did the President of the United States, in formal written words, now of record in the history of the countr}', recommend the employment of the public money, set apart for the public service, to influence an election. Here "was corruption as positive as when his supporters purchased votes in the streets. From one, learn all ; and from such a characteristic instance, learn the character of the Administration. But there are other well-known instances ; and the testimony before .the Congressional Com- mittees discloses the President on Sundays in secret conclave with one of his corrupt agents, piously occupied in discussing the chances of an election, and how its expen- ses were to be met, while, at the same time, like another Joseph Surface, he was uttering in public fine sentiments of po- litical morality, and lamenting the preva- lence of the very indecencies in which ho was engaged. It was natural that a President, who with professions of purity on the lips, made himself the pander of such vulgar cor- ruption, should stick at nothing needed to carry his purposes. I shall not dwell on the Lecompton Constitution ; but it be- longs to this chapter. You all know its wickedness. Concocted originally at Wash- ington, with the single purpose of fasten- ing Slavery upon the people of Kansas, it was by execrable contrivance so arranged a,s to prevent the people, when about to become a State, from A'oting on that ques- tion. Next, sanctioned by a convention of usurpers, who in no respect represented the peopk^ of Kansas ; then fraudulently submitted to the people for their votes, it was fraudulently adopted by stuffing bal- lot-boxes on a scale never before known — thus at the Delaware Crossing, where there v.'ere but forty-three legal voters, 400 were returned ; at Oxford, where there were but forty-two legal voters, 1,000 were returned ; and at Shawnee, where there were but forty legal voters, 1,200 were returned. And yet this Constitution, disowned by the very Governor who had gone to Kansas as the agent of the Presi- dent — rotten with corruption — gaping with fraud — and steaming with iniquity, was at once recognized by the President, urged upon Congress in his Annual Message, and pressed for adoption bj all the appliances of unprincipled power. If the words of Jugurth-a, turning his back upon Eome, cannot be repeated, that all had a price, it was not from any forbearance in the Presi- dent. A single editor was offered the printing of \X\& Post-Office blanks,, worth at least $80,000, upon the condition that he should, by an editorial no larger than a man's hand, promise subserviency to the Administration. Bribes of office were added to bribes of money. As the votes of electors had already been purchased to make Mr. Buchanan President, the votes of Kepresentatives were now solicited to carry out his scheme of corruption, and the halls of Congress were changed into a political market-house, where men were bought by the head. Is not all this enough to arouse the indignation of the people % It is true that the President, whose power began in corruption, and who is the responsible author of the corruption by which his administration has been de- based, is no longer a candidate for office. Already judgment has begun. His own political party has discarded him The first avenging blow has been struck. In- corruptible history will do the rest. The tablet conspicuously erected in Genoa to expose the crimes of Doges, branding one as Fur Magmis and the other as JSIaxi- nms Latroman, will not be needed here. The exposed corrupter, the tyrant ensla- ver, and the robber of Human Freedom, cannot be forgotten. Unhappy President '. After a long career of public service, not only tossed aside, but tossed over to per- petual memory as an example to be shunned. Better for him the oblivion of- common life than the bad fame which he has won ' But, though not himself a candidate for office, his peculiar supporters, animated by his spirit, linked with him in all his misrule, are embodied as a party, and ask your votes. Simply to resist this combi- nation, and to save the Bcpublic from its degrading influence, would justify the for- mation of tlie Bepublican party ; and I doubt not tliat there are many who will be content to unite with us on this ground alone, anxious to put the National Govern- ment once again in pure hands. To all such, welcome I AVhile this consummation necessarily enters into the present purposes of the Bepublican party, while we naturally be- gin by insisting upon purity in the Gov- ernment, and make this one of our urgent demands, it is obvious that the quickening impulse of the party, is to be found in other purposes, which cannot pass away in a single election. The Republican party seeks to overthrow the Slave Oligarchyin the Nation- al Government, and especially at this mo- ment to stay its aggressions in the Territo- ries, which, through a corrupt interpreta- iS.t'.S""'^:.:';;-.--' ■ tii'" ""■ '••"-"'■ "•■ -'• «-■• '•- corruption of all kinds, can a better order of things prevail. It is out of slavery that all our griefs proceed ; nor can the cor- ruptions of the present Administration bo fully comprehended without considering^ Abolitionists, the honorary degree of Doc- tor of Laws. The Literature of the land, such as it was, agreed with the Colleges.' The Church, too, added its powerful vo'ice; and here, amid the diversities of relicrious trr ^ ^:!- !!--->-• - ■- - ::^;:r:;;rs fluence over our Government, reaching everywhere by subtle agencies or n7.orc subtle far-reaching example, but still in itself the original and all-sufficient activi- ty. As well attempt to explain the Gulf Stream without the Gulf of Mexico, or the origin of evil without the human heart, as attempt to explain the present degraded character of our National Goverament animated all. Quakers, Methodists, Pres- byterians, and Congregationalists, seemed almost to have vied with each other in this pious testirdony. The Constitution was adopted, but the iTord "slave" was not allowed to pollute Its text ; and this was in declared defer- ence to the prevailing opinion, which re- garded Slavery as temporary, destined w hut Slavery. As well attempt to soon to pass away. All looked forward to .nact tne play of Othello without the j this glad day, which seemed to be almost Moor. And permit me i, say that our at hand. In harmony with this expecta- Trarfare with these corruptions will be tion. Slavery was prohibited in all the ex- teebie unless we attack them in iheir isting territories of the Union, so that when ^''^'!'^' , . I Washington, as first President of the Uni- -ihe subject IS so vast that I can under- ted States, at his inauguration here in take to expose it by glimpses only. New York, took his first oath to support At the beginning ot our history, Slavery the Constitution, the flag of the Republic ,^^as universally admitted to be an Evil.- nowhere on the land within the jurisdic .^obody then so hardy as to vindicate it. | tion of Congress covered a single slave. in the Convention which framed the Con- 1 Little then did the Fatherjs dream that stitution, It was branded as '- a nefarious the Evil which they regarded with shame institution," or more mildly called simply and which they exerted themselves to pro- ^' wrong;" and these generous voices came jhibit, would elevate its obscene crest as from the South as well as from the North. | it now does, and flaunt its obscene preten- Out of the Convention there was a similar j sions before i\iQ world. Little did they accord. I shall not quote the words of j dream that the Constitution, from whic\ Washington, Jefferson, or Franklin, or they had carefully excluded the very ^^-or./ Jay, for they are familiar to all. But as they spoke others spoke, and I might oc- CHpj the whole evening simply in recit- would, in defiance of reason and of com- mon sense, be held to protect the thin4VlU-e.Ve^!- _,^"-'<*-. .r^.- /.. .<^ :mi/K^ ^^...-^ ' .^ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 011895 847 4 Hti).