(iiass _ P^^^Jsi^U— Book » \)^>J DECI DRED SCOTT CASE, WHICH DECLARES THE UJfCONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE MISSOURI COMPROMISE ACT, AND THE SELF-EXTEI^SIOJ^" OF THE COXSTITUTIOi^ TO TERRITORIES, CARRYING SLAVERY ALONG WITH IT. 6itit| mx ^jjpiife, CONTAINING ! I. The Debates in the Senate in Maech, 1849, between Mb. Webstek and Me. Calhoun, ON the Legislative Extension op the Constitution to Teekitoeies, as contained in Tol. II. Ch. CLXXXII. op the "Thirty Yeaes' View." II. The Inside View op the Southern Sentiment, in relation to the Wilmot Proviso, as seen in Vol. II. Cn. CLXVIII. of the "Thirty Years' View." III. Review of President Pierce's Annual Message to Congress of December, 1S56, 60 FAR AS IT RELATES TO THE ABROGATION OF THE MISSOURI COMPROMISE ACT AND THE CLASSI- FICATION OF Parties. BY THE AUTHOR OF THE '' THIRTY YEARS' VIEW." NEW YORK: D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, 346 & 348 BEOADWAY, NEW YORK. 1857. A" 4 ^rn L- ■ t J J . S3t> ff''^3i./3V7 Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1S57, by D. APPLETON & COMPANY, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. ulO 30 1915 NOTIFICATION TO THE READER. The writer of this " Examination " was breaking down under the approaches of a terrible attack, while he was still engaged in writing it, and was prostrate before it was finished, leaving some heads untouched, and the outline of others only sketched. Among these last was the head which related to the temporary government in Florida, and the transactions under it ; General Jackson being Governor, and commissioned (according to the act under which he was appointed) with the powers of Captain- General and Intendant of Cuba, the Floridas having been a de- pendency of that Captain-Generalship. Tlie " Examination " states (and all whose memory or home reading goes back twen- ty-five years, well know the fact), that the power of Captain- General and Intendant was no barren sceptre in Jackson's hand ; that he found occasion to use the power, and did so with the energy which belonged to his nature, and was sustained by Mr. Monroe's Administration. But the history of the transactions was not gone into, and the general assertion remained without the justification which this history would give it. That history is now supplied, and will be found in the Abridged Debates of Congress, text and notes (volume yn., now about ready for the press) ; and is surely of a character and of an authority to put an end to the " Opinion " which nullifies the Missouri Compro- mise Act, and self-eXtends the Constitution to territories. With- out going further into that history in this brief ^cs^ scriptum no- tification, and confining himself to the precise point in issue, the 4: INTKODUCTOEY NOTE. Tlie power of the Court is judicial — so declared in the Con- stitution; and so held in theory, if not in practice. It is limited to cases "^V?- law and equity i''^ ^ and though sometimes en- croaching upon political subjects, it is without right, without authority', and without the means of enforcing its decisions. It can issue no mandamus to Congress, or the people, nor punish them for disregarding its decisions, or even attacking them. Far from being bound by their decisions. Congress may jDroceed criminally against the judges for making them, when deemed criminally wrong — one house impeach and the other try : as done in the famous case of Judge Chase. In assuming to decide these questions, — (Constitutionality of the Missouri Compromise, and the self-extension of the Consti- tution to Territories,) — it is believed the Court committed two great errors : first, in the assumption to try such questions : secondly, in deciding them as they did. And it is certain that the decisions are contrary to the uniform action of all the de- partments of the government — one of them for thirty-six years ; and the other for seventy years ; and in their effects upon each are equivalent to an alteration of the Constitution,f by insert- * The judicial power shall extend to all cases, in law and equity, arising under this Constitution, the laws of the United States, and treaties made, or which shall be made, y that ordinance, and I have never heard its constitutionality questioned, all the civil, military, and judicial powers are vested in such persons as the President may appoint. Judicial powers are vested in per- sons appointed by the President : so with respect to the civil and military powers : and the legislative j)0wer is vested in a body, part of which is appointed by the President. I am, with other gentlemen, unable to say what are the nature and extent of the powers exercised by the present government of Louisiana ; 68 EXA^HNATION OF THE but we must authorize the taking possession of the country ; and we must, in such an event, authorize the exercise of these pow- ers."— Mr. Mitchell, (Dr. Samuel H.) of New York, (Kepubli- can:) "The third section of the fourth article of the Constitu- tion contemplates that territory and other property may belong to the United States. By a treaty with France, the United States has lately acquired title to a new Territory, with various kinds of property on it, 'or annexed to it. By the same section of the Constitution, Congress is clothed with power to disj)ose of such territory and property, and to make all needful rules and regulations respecting it. This is as fair an exercise of constitu- tional power as that by which we assemble, and hold our seats in this house. "^ — Mr, Joseph B. Yarnum, of Massachusetts, (Ke- publican,) and sometime speaker of the House : " We are told we are about to authorize the exercise of power over the ceded territory not authorized by the Constitution : he would ask if the Constitution was to take etfect as soon as the United States took possession of the Territory ? On this point he would refer to the treaty. It provides for the incorporation of the inhabitants into the Union : but when ? As soon as it can be done according to the principles of the Federal Constitution. In the mean time they are to be protected in the enjoyment of their liberty and property, and the religion they profess. In what mean time ? There is a time when the country is acquired, and a time when it will be admitted into the Union. Between these periods — in the mean time — the people are to enjoy their lib- erty, property, and religion." — Dr. Eustis, of Massachusetts, (Kepublican,) and sometime Secretary at War: "Though called upon to take immediate possession of this Territory, you are told you are not to govern it. This is the amount of the argument of gentlemen ; for if you cannot govern it in this way, you can- govern it in no other. He saw no other alter- native : there was no possibility of any other course. He was, therefore, happy to see nothing in the Constitution which for- bade pursuing it. On the contrary, it arose imperiously from the acquisition." — Mr. John Smilie, of Pennsylvania, (llepub- lican :) " He agreed in opinion with the gentleman from Mas- sachusetts, (Mr. Yarnum,) that the Constitution did not extend to this Territory any further than they were bound by the com- pact between the ceding power and the people. On this prin- SUPKEME court's DECISION, ETC. 59 ciple tliey had a riglit, viewing it in tlie light of a colony, to give it such a government as the Government of the United States might think proper, without thereby violating the Con- stitution. When incorporated into the Union, the inhabitants must enjoy all the rights of citizens. He w^ould thank gentle- men to show him any part of the Constitution whioh. extends either legislative, executive, or judicial power over this territory. If none such could be shown, it must rest with the discretion of the Government to give it such a system as might seem best for it," On these objections and answers to the bill, the vote was taken to strike out the second section — the one objected to — and the motion almost unanimously rejected ; and the question being taken on the passage of the bill, it passed in the affirma- tive — 89 yeas to 23 nays : the negatives consisting almost en- tirely of those Federal members who, having opposed the ac- quisition of Louisiana, worked out their principle to its legiti- mate conclusion, in refusing to legislate for it. And thus the act passed the House as good as unanimously. The bill had come from the Senate, and there being but little reporting of debates in that body at that time, and nothing re- ported on this bill, we are remitted to the journal to see the mere proceedings which took place upon it : and these are suffi- ciently fall and significant to show the sentiments of that body upon it. From the journal of these proceedings it appears that on the 21st of October— (it was the session of 1803-'4)— Mr. Jefferson, by special message, informed the Senate as well as the House, that the Senate had ratified the Louisiana treaty, and asked the legislative aid from Congress which would enable him to take possession of the province and govern it tempora- rily. The same day Mr. John Breckenridge, of Kentucky,* gave notice that he would ask the leave of the Senate to bring in a bill to accomplish the objects of the message : — doubtless done in concert with Mr. Jefferson, of whom he was a leading friend. Leave was given, and the bill brought in the next day, and was the same that passed the House, with an amend- ment limiting its duration to the end of the session. It was read a first time, for information, the day it was brought in — the second time for reference, or consideration, the next day — * Grandfather of tlie present Vice President. 60 EXAMINATION OF TEE and was referred to a select committee, (Mr. Breckenridge, Mr. Jonathan Dayton, of New Jersey, and Mr. Abram Baldwin, of Georgia,) to consider and report upon. On the day after, (Oct. 23d,) Mr. Breckenridge reported back the bill without any pro- posed alteration ; the next day it was read the third time, and passed. 'No motion was made to strike out the second section, and the vote on its passage was nearly unanimous,* only six members voting against it, and they the members who opposed the treaty, and would no nothing to carry it into effect. The bill thus passed received the approbation of the President the same day it was laid before him ; and to those who are acquaint- ed with the working of the legislative machinery, it may well be believed that the whole proceeding was in concert with the administration — that Mr. Jefferson picked out Mr. Brecken- ridge to bring in the bill — that its principles were settled in cabinet meeting — that Mr. Madison drew it : and that every question in relation to it was duly considered before it was sub- mitted to final action. And thus, this first instance of Congress legislation upon newly acquired territory Avas as high an in- stance of disregard of the Constitution as the imagination could conceive — being nothing less than the continuation of the Span- ish regal despotism — the President taking the place of the King of Spain ; Governor Claiborne,t the place of the Intendant General, Morales ; the laws of Spain remaining in force and administered by American judges : and the whole provincial administration going on as if no change of government had taken place. It was a royal despotic Government,t and every * The yeas were : Messrs. Joseph Anderson, of Tennessee ; Jheodorus Bailey, of New York ; Abraham Bajdwin, of Georgia ; John Breckenridge, of Kentucky ; John Brown, of Kentucky ; Pierce Butler, of South Carolina ; William Cooke, of Tennessee ; John Condit, of New Jersey'; Jonathan Dayton, of New Jersey; Christoj^her Ellery, of Rhode Island ; Jesse Franklin, of North Carolina ; James Jackson, of Georgia ; George Logan, of Pennsylvania ; Samuel Maclay, of Pennsylvania ; Wilson Carey Nicholas, of Virginia ; John Taylor, of Virginia, (usually discriminated as John Tay- lor, of Caroline ;) Samuel J. Potter, of Rhode Island ; Israel Smith, of Vermont ; John Smith, of Ohio ; Samuel Smith, of Maryland ; David Stone, of North Carolina ; Wil- liam Hill Wells, of Delaware ; Samuel White, of Delaware ; Thomas Worthington, of Ohio ; Robert Wright, of Maryland. f William Charles Cole Claiborne, native of Virginia, sometime representative in Congress from Tennessee, and at that time territorial governor of Mississippi; He was a very proper man to be intrusted with the responsible and delicate duty to which he was appointed — urbane in manners, discreet in judgment, conciliatory iu SUPKEISIE court's DECISION, ETC. 61 body knew it ; and no one tlionglit of testing it by tJie Consti- tution (some few new members in the Honse excepted) than by the Koran. Tliis was the character of the first American territorial gov- ernment of Louisiana — a continuation of Spanish despotism — and established by such men as then constituted the Federal Government — and who have had no superiors, before or since. Many of them had assisted in making the Constitution : all were under oath to support it-: and all, (or as good as all,) voted for a bill which is contrary to that Constitution from beginning to end. And now, by what authority did they so vote ? and the answer is, in the single phrase pronounced by Mr. Randolph — Sovereignty ! High as was this instance of Congressional absolute power over territories, it was succeeded at the same session by another, not so striking in its general character, but more so in some of its features, and very exemplificative of the fact that Congress paid no more attention to the Constitution in governing new Territories than in governing the old ones. The continuation of the Si3anish monarchical government was an exjDedient for the occasion, temporary, and only intended to remain until a more suitable form of government could be matured; and no time was lost in carrying that intention into effect. As early as No- vember 28th, Mr. Breckenridge, always a coadjutor of Mr. Jef- ferson, submitted a resolution in the Senate to raise a committee to prepare a form of government for Louisiana. The motion was ordered to lie for consideration. On the 5th of December it was considered and adopted, and Messrs. John Breckenridge, Bobert "Wright, of Maryland ; General James Jackson, of Georgia ; Abraham Baldwin, of Georgia ; and John Quincy Adams, were the select committee to which t]ie motion was re- ferred. On the 30tli December the bill was reported, and read a first time, and ordered to a second reading ; on the 16th of January, read a second time, and being open to amendment, was taken up for discussion. On the 18th of February it had temper ; and gave so much satisfaction, that he was continued Governor during the eight years that the territorial condition remained, and was elected first Governor of the State, and afterwards Senator in Congress : hut died before taking his seat. * The first territorial government of Louisiana was an imperial one, founded upon a French or Spanish model. — Mr. Justice Campbell. 62 EXAMINATION OF THE received its final consideration, and was passed by a vote al- most unanimous, (only the usual six negatives opposed to the treaty,) and, so far as the provisions of the bill were concerned, quite so ; for on motions to amend, or strike out, those who voted against the passage of the bill voted for its strongest pro- visions separately. I am thus particular with these initiatory steps to show the care and caution with which our Congress proceeded in that early day, its close observance of all the rules which experience had devised for due deliberation in conducting business, and especially to show that all these rules were scrupulously observed in this case, and a most able committee appointed to bring in the bill. The bill thus matured, and passed, and sent to the House, had taken the ordinance of 1787 for its basis, but with devi- ations required by the geographical position of the country, and its peculiar circumstances. It divided the province of Louisiana into two Territories, the upper and the lower ; the upper taking the name, ultimately, of the Missouri Territory ; the lower tak- ing that of Orleans Territory. It is in the part of the bill which relates to this latter Territory, that the provisions were made which most strongly asserted the power of Congress in terri- torial legislation, and especially upon the subject of slavery. Tlie tenth section was wholly taken up with this subject, and ran as follows : — " Sect. 10. It shall not be lawful for any person or persons to import or bring into the said Territory, from any port or place without the limits of the United States, or cause or procure to be so imported or brought, or knowingly to aid or assist in importing or bringing any slave or slaves. And every person so oflFending, and being thereof con- victed before any Court within said Territory, having competent juris- diction, shall forfeit and pay for each and every slave so imported or brought, the sum of three hundred dollars ; one moiety for the use of the United States, and the other moiety for the use of the person or persons who shall sue for the same ; and every slave so imported or brought, shall thereupon become entitled to and receive his or her free- dom. It shall not be lawful for any person or persons to import or bring into the said Territory, from any port or place within the limits of the United States, or to cause or procure to be so imported or brought, or knowingly to aid or assist in so importing or bringing, any slave or suPREaiE coukt's decision, etc. 63 slaves, wliieli shall have been imported since the first day of May, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-eight, into any port or place within the limits of the United States, or which may hereafter be so imported from any port or place without the limits of the United States ; and every person so offending, and being thereof convicted before any Court within said Territory, having competent jurisdiction, shall forfeit and pay for each and every slave so imported or brought from without the United States, the sum of three hundred dollars, one moiety for the use of the United States, and the other moiety for the use of the person or persons who shall sue for the same ; and no slave or slaves shall directly or indirectly be introduced into said Territory, except by a citizen of the United States removing into said Territory for actual settlement, and being at the time of such removal hona fide owner of such slave or slaves ; and every slave imported or brought into the said Territory, con- trary to the provisions of this act, shall thereupon be entitled to, and receive his or her freedom." This section contains three provisions on the subject of slaves : 1. That no one shall be imported into the Territory from foreign parts. 2. That no one shall be carrfed into it who had been imported into the United States since the first day of May, 1798. 3. That no one shall be carried into it except by the owner, and for his own use as a settler ; the penalty in every instance being a fine npon the violator of the law, and freedom to the slave. The first of these prohibitions is the same that was passed for the Territory of Mississippi at its organization, in April, 1Y98 ; and which, as it has been shown, was unanimously supported by Southern members at the time it was adopted. The prohibition in the Orleans Territorial Act was four years before, and that in the Mississippi Act was ten years before, the constitutional right of Congress accrued to prevent the impor- tation of slaves into the original States. It was a strong meas- ure, in both instances, to show the impatience of Congress to put an end to the slave trade, and that, while it discriminated between States and Territories, it made no distinction between old and new territory, and legislated for each according to its discretion. The second prohibition was still stronger, and asserts a still higher power over the subject of slavery in a Territory. It reaches back to the first day of May, 1798, to get hold of a slave imported from abroad into any State or Territory since that time, and gives him liberty, and fines his conductor, if carried 64 EXAMINATION OF THE into the Territoiy of Orleans. Xow, the slave so to be liberated, was property in the State from which he should, be carried, hav- ing been constitutionally imported into that State ; yet if taken into this Territory by authority of his owner, the property was forfeited and lost, without compensation to his owner, and with a fine upon the owner for doing so ; and all this as long as ten years, it might be, before the Congress had a right to prohibit the foreign importation of slaves. For Avhat reason the first day of May, 1798, should have been taken for this date of prohibition, forfeiture and fine, does not apjiear ; but, probably, to make it correspond with the prohibition of im23orted slaves into the Territory of Mississippi — the first Southern Territory in whicli Congress legislated upon slavery. But whether the date was taken for that reason, or for any other, or without reason, arbitrarily, the character of the act is the same — the assertion of a right in Congress to legislate upon slavery in a Territory without regard to the Constitution. The third prohibition w^as in the same line of policy, and still stronger than the two preced- ing. It liberated any slave, from any j)art of the United States, who should have been taken into the Territory, except by the honajide owner, removing into it for actual settlement, and bringing the slave for his own use. These three prohibitions certainly amount to legislating up- on slavery in a Territory, and that a new Territory, acquired since the formation of the Constitution, and without the aid of compacts with any State. None of these prohibitions passed the Senate without obser- vation, or without consideration of their import. They were voted upon separately, either on motions to strike them out, or to extend them; so that the judgment of the Senate was delib- erately expressed in each case, besides being sanctioned in the lump in tlie almost unanimous vote on the final j)assing of the bill. The bill having passed the Senate, was taken up in the House, in which, besides the sanction to all its provisions in the final vote, there were several special votes given on motions of amendment, in which the House showed that it acted independ- ently of the Constitution and repugnantly to it, and that upon special objection. Thus : the right to a jury trial, where the matter in controversy exceeded the value of twenty dollars, was SUPKEME COUET's DECISION, ETC. 65 denied, tlioiigli guaranteed by the Constitution, which was in- voked on the occasion, but in vain. The royal power of proro- gation was continued to the governor, though opposed by some members. Then the appointment of judges for a term of years, instead of during good behavior. In these, and many other instances a direct question was made upon the constitutionality of the provision, and always rejected upon the broad ground that the Constitution was not made for Territories, and had nothing to do with them. A special stand was made on each of these cases, and some others, by a few members, holding the Constitution in their hands, and pleading its infraction by the proposed provisions. Thus, as an example of the whole, and as a repulse of the Con- stitution where its words would clearly apply ; Mr. GeorgeWash- ington Campbell, of Tennessee, moved to amend the section providing for the judicial power ; and which gave the right of jury trial both in civil and criminal cases, '■Hf either pai'ty de- sired it^'' so as to make the right absolute in all criminal cases whatever, and in all civil cases where the value in controversy ex- ceeded twenty dollars. He said : " He conceived that in legislat- ing for the people of Louisiana they were bound by the Constitu- tion of the United States. The Constitution expressly declares that, in criminal cases, the trial shall be by jury, and in all civil cases where the sum in controversy exceeds the value of twenty dollars the trial shall likewise be by jury. The ninth article of the amendments to the Constitution says : ' In all suits at common law where the value in controversy exceeds twenty dollars the right of trial by jury shall be preserved ; ' and the eighth arti- cle says : ' In all criminal trials the accused shall enjoy the right of a speedy trial by an impartial jury.'" Here was a direct question made between the bill and the Constitution, and the vote showed that the House deemed the bill, because territorial, independent of the Constitution. Only about thirty members voted for Mr. Campbell's motion, and about twenty-five of them, the opponents to the treaty, and who would do nothing to recog- nize the acquisition of the purchased province. The anti-slavery section — the tenth — which contained the three prohibitions on importations and removals of slaves into Orleans Territory, encountered but little opposition ; but there was some instnictive debate on the general character of the bill 66 EXAMINATION OF THE for the government of the Territory, as being a novelty in terri- torial government, in not conforming to either of the three grades provided by the ordinance of '87, but being a mixturq of the two first grades. In thi^ sense Mr. Macon, of North Carolina, said : " My first objection to the principle contained in the section, (the 4th,) is, that it establishes a species of gov- ernment nnknown to the laws of the United States. We have three descriptions of governments — that of the Union — that of the States— and that of the Territories. I believe the terri- torial government, as established by the ordinance of the old Con- gress, the best adapted to the circnmstances of the people of Louisiana, and that it may be so modified as to meet their con- venience. The people residing in the Mississippi Territory are under this kind of government. Is it not likely that the people of Louisiana will expect the same form of government and laws with their neighbors ? The simple question is, what kind of government is most fitted for those people ? I will not pre- tend to say they are fitted for a State government. The best way to prepare them for such a government is the system alrea- dy known to our laws — one grade, or the other, of the territo- rial government. For my part, I should prefer (for them) the adoption of the second grade ; but I would prefer the first to any new system." Mr. Lucas, (John B. C.,) of Pennsylvania : " An argument was drawn from the treaty, that these people are to be admitted to the absolute enjoyment of the rights of citizens ; but gentlemen would not deny that ..the time when, and the circumstances under which the provisions of the treaty were to be carried into eff'ect, were submitted to the decision of Congress. It has been remarked that this bill establishes ele- mentary principles of government never previously introduced in the government of any Territory of the United States. Grant- ing the truth of this observation, it must be allowed that the United States had never before devolved upon them the making provision for the government of a people under such circum- stances." Mr. Yarnum was of opinion that the section in the bill, (the 4th,) provided such a form of government as had never been known in the United States. Dr. Eustis, of Massachusetts, "did not believe that the section under consideration, in its pres- ent form, consistent either with the spirit of the Constitu- tion or the treaty. The government laid down in the bill is SUPREME court's DECISION, ETC, 67 certainly a new thing in tlie United States ; but the people of this country differ materially from the citizens of the United States. 1 speak of the character of the people at the present time. When they shall be better acquainted with the principles of our Government, and shall have become desirous of partici- pating in our privileges, it will be fall time to extend to them the elective franchise." Mr. Holland, of North Carolina : — "The provisions of this section are said to be worse than those of the first grade of territorial governments ; but this is incor- rect. The plan is not equal to the second grade, but it is cer- , tainly superior to the first grade. The first grade gives the governor and judges all the power granted by this section ; and this section, in addition to the governor and judges, contem- plates the appointment of thirteen councillors. Is not this pre- ferable to giving the whole power to the governor and judges ? " Mr. Boyle, of Kentucky : " I am unwilling to extend Govern- ment patronage beyond the line of irresistible necessity. For I believe, if ever this country is to follow the destiny of other nations, this destiny will be accelerated by the overwhelming torrent of executive patronage. I feel as high a veneration for the present chief magistrate as any man on this floor. I have retained tlie full force of my regard for him ; but were he an angel instead of a man, I would not clothe him with this power ; because, in my estimation, the investiture of such high powers is unnecessary." Mr. Sloan, of Pennsylvania : " Can anything be more repugnant to the principles of just government ? Can any thing be more despotic than for a President to appoint a gov- ernor and a legislative council, the governor having a negative on all their acts, and power to prorogue them at pleasure ? What liberty, what power, is here vested in the people ? " Mr. Justice Campbell, in quoting from these speeches, has been too brief to show distinctly their points of objection.* In * Mr. Vamum said : " The bill provided such a government as had never been known in the United States." ]\Ir. Eustis : " The government laid down in this bill is certainly a new thing in the United States." — Mr. Lucas : " It has been remarked, that this biU establishes elementary principles never previously introduced in the gov- ernment of any Territory of the United States. Granting the truth of this observation," &c. &c. Mr. Macon ; " My first objection to the principle contained in this section i% that it establishes a species of government unknown to the United States." Mr. Boyle : " Were the President an angel instead of a man, I would not clothe Mm with this 68 EXAMINATION OF TIIE looking at them more fully, and in seeing tlie reasons tliey give for their opinions, they are seen to apply to the form of the gov- ernment to be established, as being despotic, and as not con- forming to the ordinance of '87, which, after its adoption by Congress in the year '89, became a law of the United States, and intended for the South-western as well as the North-western Ter- ritories : the anti-slavery clause alone excepted. The character of the bill was doubtless, as declared by these members, a des- potism, "unsanctioned by any principle in the Constitution, and repugnant both to its spirit and provisions ; but that only proves that they acted independently of the Constitution, and know- ingly refused to be governed by it. The bill was passed by a great majority — 66 to 21. But the legislative action of Congress on Territories at this session — 1803-'4 — did not stop at these two acts for Lower Louisiana : there was another act for the upper half of the prov- ince, afterwards called the Territory of Missouri, very worthy to be considered in this connection for its disregard of the Consti- tution and its want of discrimination between new and old ter- ritory. The Supreme Court makes a great difference between these two classes of territories, and a corresponding difference in the power of Congress with respect to them, and to the pre- judice of the new Territory. The Congress of 1803-'4 did not see this difference ; and acting upon a sense of plenary author- ity, it extended the ordinance across the Mississippi — sent the governor and judges of Indiana (for Indiana had then become a Territory) — sent this governor (William Henry Harrison) and the three Indiana judges across the Mississippi river, to admin- ister the ordinance of '87 in that upper half of Louisiana. Such was the fact ! and here is the law under which it was done, be- ing section 12 of the act erecting Louisiana into two Territories, and providing for their temporary government : — " The residue of the province of Louisiana, ceded to tlie United States, shall be called the District of Louisiana, the government whereof shall be organized and administered as follows : The executive power power." Mr. G. W. Campbell : " On examining the section, it will appear that it really establishes a complete despotism." Mr. Sloan : " Can any thing be more repug- nant to the principles of just government ? Can any thing be more despotic ? " — Mr. Justice Campbell. — Annals of Congress, 1803-'4. SUPKESIE court's DECISION, ETC. 69 now vested in the governor of Indiana, (then including Illinois,) shall extend to and be exercised in the said district of Louisiana. The governor and judges of Indiana Territory shall have power to establish, in the said district of Louisiana, inferior courts, and to prescribe their jurisdiction and duties, and to make all laws which they may deem con- ducive to the good government of the inhabitants thereof— subject to the disapproval of Congress." Here was old and new territory coupled together nnder one territorial government, and the new put under the otiicers of the old, and both governed hj the ordinance of 1787. The law- making power was delegated to them, and they might have suppressed slavery under that power ; but finding the institution there, they let it alone.. Such was the first territorial govern- ment of Upper Louisiana. And now for the men who passed these acts— who established these governments — so incompatible with the Constitution, and so fully asserting absolute power over this new territoiy. Who were they ? They were the men of the Eevolution — of the ordi- nance of '87— of the Constitution of that year— of the first ad- ministration of the Federal Government in its eariy age ;— and the authors of the acquisition of Louisiana. Mr. Jefferson was President— Mr. Madison Secretary of State— and the two Houses of Congress filled with men who had acted their good part in founding, and in putting into operation, the new Federal Gov- ernment. These were the men who did these things, and who ought to be allowed to know something of their own work ; and if they did not, somebody existing at the time ought to have known of their dreadful usm-pations, and proclaimed them to the world. No such discovery was made. Fifty-four years have passed away since these things were done, and by such men, and with universal acceptance at the time, and with a half • century of universal approbation : yet, if the decisions of the Supreme Court are to stand, and these territorial acts subjected to the test of the Constitution, it will only want a case to be got before the Court to subject them to abrogation, as the Missouri Compromise Act was after an honored existence of thirty-seven years. It is now seen, from what has been shown, that, in govern- ing their Territories, Congress and the Executive looked to their 70 • EXAMINATION OF THE rights as sovereigns and proprietors, and not to tlie Constitution, for their authority : and this view seems to have been that of the Supreme Court of the United States some thirty years ago. A case from the Territory of Florida, under a territorial law, was brought up to that Court which gave rise to the question, what Congress might do in the Territory ? and what it might authorize the territorial legislature to do? In deciding this question, the Court, speaking through Chief Justice Marshall, says : — " In the mean time Florida continues to be a Territory of the United States, governed by that clause of the Constitution which empowers Congress to make all needful rules and regulations respecting the terri- tory or other property of the United States. Perhaps the power of governing a Territory belonging to the United States, which has not, by becoming a State, acquired the means of self-government, may result, necessarily, from the facts that it is not within the jurisdiction of any particular State, and is within the power and jurisdiction of the United States. The right to govern may be the inevitable consequence of the right to acquire territory. Whichever may he ihe source from which the power is derived, the possession of it is unquestionable.''^ " The right to govern may be the inevitable consequence of the right to acquire territory," — a very fair deduction, even in a naked case of unconditional acquisition. How much sti-onger where the acquisition is accompanied by an obligation to gov- ern ? where the territory and its inhabitants are received upon the condition that they shall be protected ! protected in their persons, property, and religion ! How was that to be done without government ? This is the case with the Louisiana pur- chase ; and the right to hold the territory, not only gives the right of government, but imposes the duty of government upon the new owner. The present Supreme Conrt, in pronouncing its " Opinion," has noticed this decision of its predecessor, but with an argu- ment to show that it was not a decision, and that the present Court is not bound by it. And it is right to give it the benefit of this argument; tlius : — " It is thus clear, from the whole opinion on this point, tliat the Court did not mean to decide whether the power was derived from the clause in the Constitution, or was the necessary consequence of the right SUPKEME court's DECISION, ETC. 71 to acquire. They do decide that the power in Congress is unquestion- able, and in this we entirely concur, and nothing will be found in this opinion to the contrary. The power stands firmly on the latter alterna- tive put by the Court — that is, as ' ihe inevitable consequence of the right to acquire territory.^ " And what still more clearly demonstrates that the Court did not mean to decide the question, but leave it open for future consideration, is the fact that the case was decided in the Circuit Court by Mr. Justice Johnson, and his decision was affirmed by the Supreme Court. His opinion at the circuit is given in full in a note to the case, and in that opinion he states, in explicit terms, that the clause of the Constitution applies only to the territory then within the limits of the United States, and not to Florida, which had been acquired by cession from Spain. This part of his opinion will be found in the note in page 517 of the report. But he does not dissent from the opinion of the Supreme Court ; thereby showing that, in his judgment, as well as that of the Court, the case before them did not call for a decision on that particular point; and the Court abstained from deciding it. And in a part of its opinion subsequent to the passage we have quoted, where the Court speak of the legislative power of Congress in Florida, they still speak with the same reserve." This is the argument of the present Court, to show the inap- plicability of the Florida decision to the case before itself; and granting, for the sake of the argument, that Chief Justice Mar- shall leaves it doubtful from which source the power is derived, yet he says it is unquestionably possessed : and that is sufficient — for in either case the power is unlimited ; and where there are two concurrent rights, the superior always takes effect, and the inferior is only cumulative. The sovereign derivation of the right is the highest, and is sufficiently affirmed by Chief Justice Marshall in the declaration of the inevitability of the right to govern what you have a right to hold. And this view is confirmed in another part of the same Florida decision, where the Chief Justice, speaking of the territorial courts, and of the right of Congress to establish such courts, with judges holding for a term of years instead of good behavior, he says : — " They are legislative courts, created in virtue of the general right of sovereignty which exists in the Government, or in virtue of that clause which enables Congress to make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory belonging to the United States." 72 EXAMINATION OF THE This is enoiigli — sufficiently explicit — to affirm the sovereign right of government in the owner of these Territories. But a member of the present Court, (Mr. Justice M'Lean,) differed from Chief Justice Tanej in his estimate of this decision. He deemed it sufficiently clear in itself, and authorized by the point raised for the Court's decision. He says, (in his dissent- ing opinion :) — " I can see no want of precision in the language of the Chief Jus- tice ; his meaning cannot be mistaken. He states, first, the third section as giving power to Congress to govern the Territories, and two other grounds from which the power may also be implied. The objec- tion seems to be, that the Chief Justice did not say which of the grounds stated he considered the source of the power. He did not specifically state this, but he did say, ' whichever may be the source whence the power is derived, the possession of it is unquestioned.' No opinion of the Court could have been expressed with a stronger empha- sis ; " the power in Congress is unquestioned." But those who have undertaken to criticise the opinion, consider it without authority, be- cause the Chief Justice did not designate specially the power. This is a singular objection. If the power be unquestioned, it can be a matter of no importance on which ground it is exercised. The opinion clearly was not obiter dicta. The turning point in the case was, whether Congress had power to authorize the territorial Legislature of Florida to pass the law under which the territorial court was established, whose decree was brought before this Court for revision. The power of Congress, therefore, was the point in issue." I think Mr. Justice M'Lean entirely right in his understand- ing of the opinion delivered by Chief Justice Marshall ; and I think that opinion clear in referring a right of governing a Ter- ritory to the right of acquiring it. And in this it corresponds with the action of Congress, and the declaration of eminent members at the time — namely, by Mr. Eandolph, that the right of government was the right of sovereignty ; and by D)-. Eustis, tliat the government of the Territory was imperiously com- manded by its acquisition. Strong as Avas the course of Congress in the act taking pos- session of Louisiana, and continuing therein the Spanish gov- ernment under American officers, it was repeated, in all its extent, sixteen years afterwards, on the acquisition of Florida. The Louisiana act of October, 1803, was copied for Florida in SUPREME COUKT S DECISION, ETC. 73 March, 1819. All the powers exercised there by the King's officers were to be exercised, until the end of the session of the next Congress, by such persons as the President shonld direct.* And thus, two different administrations, and two ditierent Con- gresses, at the distance of sixteen years apart, governed two acquisitions of new territory exactly alike, and as incompatibly with our Constitution as a Spanish regal despotism is incompat- ible with our free Eepublican government. That act was ap- proved by Mr. Monroe, and no dissenting voice was ever heard from his cabinet— able, vigilant, and strongly Southern as that cabinet was. Following, step by step, the course pursued in the Louisiana case, a territorial government was afterwards provided there, but after an interval of four years— during all which time the Spanish government was continued over the people — General Jackson, the governor, took care that power should be no " barren sceptre " in his hands. This territorial government, established in March, 1823, took the ordinance of '87 for its basis, but with the modifications which assimilated it to the act for the government of the Orleans Territory. It was nearly a transcript from that act, so far as government was concerned ; and we have seen what that was — a total abnegation of the Constitution of the United States in all its provisions, letter and spirit. So that, in these two first instances of the acquisi- tion of foreign territory — Florida and Louisiana — two different administrations, and three diflerent Congresses — those of 1803 -'4, of 1818-'19, and of 1822-'3— at intervals of sixteen years and twenty years apart, acted in the same way, governing the Territories independently of the Constitution, and incompatibly * The following was the act : Sec. 2. And he it fuHher enacted, That, until the end of the first session of the next Congress, unless pro\'ision for the temporary government of said ten-itories be sooner made by Congi-ess, all the military, civil, and judicial powers, exercised by the officers of the existing government of the same territories, shall be vested in such person and persons, and shall he exercised in such manner, as the President of the United States shall direct, for the maintaining the inhabitants of said temtories in the free enjoyment of their liberty, property and religion ; and the laws of the United States, relative to the collection of revenue, and the importation of persons of color, shall be extended to the said territories. JJ^ Up to this time no one thought of extending the Constitution to a Territory : laws only were so extended, and only the few deemed applicable. '74 EXAMINATION OF THE witli it. Both these acts for the government of Florida passed under the administration of Mr. Monroe — Mr. John Quincy Adams, Secretary of State ; Mr. Wm. H. Crawford, Secretary of the Treasury ; Mr. John C. Calhoun, Secretary at War ; Mr. Smith Thompson, Secretary of the Kavy ; Mr. Eeturn Jona- than Meigs, Post-Master General ; Mr. Wirt, Attorney Gene- ral : a President and cabinet inferior to none that ever appeared in this Union, and who saw no want of power in Congress to pass, or in themselves to approve, these forms of territorial government in which the whole spirit of our Constitution is ignored, and its written provisions either disregarded or flatly contradicted. And what were the two Houses of Congress at that time ? Perliaps if the period of our legislative history was to be picked out when the national legislature appeared to the greatest advantage, it would be in that middle period of Mr. Monroe's administration, when the surviving great men of the first generation were still upon the stage, and the gigantic progeny of the second were mounting upon it. I came into Congress at that period, and such was the awe and reverence with which the Senate inspired me, that I sat there six years without opening my mouth on any subject outside of my own State. ! si sic semper ! And yet this assemblage of the illustrious old, and not less illustrious young, are now, after al- most forty years, to be considered as ignorant of the Constitution which they had helped to make, and were sworn to observe, and doing things which require to be repudiated. The Supreme Court, in its elaborate opinion, has put itself to great labor to prove the territorial legislation of Congress to be incompatible with the Constitution : — most superfluous labor, as I conceive,, there being no pretension on the part of Congress to be acting under the Constitution, and continued de- clarations, (as well as acts,) to the contrary — members continu- ally supporting measures in Territories which they repulsed in States — as, for local objects of internal improvement, for banks, corporations. It can be said, and without allowing a single ex- ception, that there has not been a member of either House, from the formation of the Government to the present day, who has not voted for these objects in Territories who would not vote for them in States, upon the avowed ground that the Constitution did not extend to Territories. I have seen all parties so vote — SUPREME COUKt's DECISION, ETC. T5 the very strictest of the State Eights party. The proceedings of Congress are full of such votes, and of the remark, " It is a Territory : the Constitution does not extend to itP And this finishes the second stage of this Historical and Legal Examina- tion, comprising the governmental legislation of Congress upon these two new Territories — Louisiana and Florida— and showing that they were governed without limitations, and in the pleni- tude of sovereign right, qualified only by the conditions on which they were ceded. THIED STAGE OF THE EXAMINATION,— EMBRAC- ING THE LEGISLATION ON THE MISSOURI COM- PROMISE ACT. HI. It was at tlie session of 1818-'19 that the Missouri Ter- ritory, having been trained through the three grades of territo- rial government prescribed by the ordinance of '87, and being • then in the third grade, and with a competent population, applied through her Territorial Legislature for an Act of Con- gress to enable her 'to hold a convention for the formation of a State Constitution, preparatory to the formal application for admission into the Union. The bill had been perfected, its details adjusted, and was- upon its last reading, when a motion was made by Mr. James Tallmadge, of New York, to impose a restriction on the State in relation to slavery, to restrain her from the future admission of slavery within her borders. The motion gave rise to a vehement debate, which soon divided the House geographically, set the members on fire, and soon attain- ed a height which threatened the Union with dissolution. As a sample, take a specimen of what passed between some members from the Free and the Slave States — thus : — Mr. Scott, delegate from Missouri : " He would trouble the House no longer ; he thanked them for the attention and indulgence already extended to him. But he desired to apprise gentlemen, before he sat down, that they were sowing the seeds of discord in this Union, by attempting to institute States with unequal privileges and unequal rights — that they were signing, sealing, and delivering their own death war- rant — that the weapon they were so unjustly wielding against the people 76 EXAIVIINATION OF THE of Missouri was a two-edged sword. From the curaulative nature of power, the day might come when the Greneral Government might, in turn, undertake to dictate to them on questions of internal policy. Missouri, now young and feeble, whose fate and murmurs would excite but little alarm or sensibility, might become an easy victim to motives of policy, party zeal, or mistaken ideas of power ; but other times and other men would succeed : a future Congress might come, who, under the sancti- fied forms of Constitutional power, would dictate to them odious condi- tions — nay, inflict on their internal independence a wound more deep and dreadful than even this on Missouri. The House had seen the force of the precedent, in the mistaken application of the conditions imposed on the people of Louisiana anterior to their admission into the Union. And, whatever might be the ultimate determination of the House, he considered this question big with the fate of Cassar and of Eome." To this Mr. Tallmadge replied : ** The honorable gentleman from Missouri, who has just resumed his seat, has told us of the Ides of March, and cautioned us to beware of the fate of Csesar and of Rome. Another gentleman, Mr. Cobb, from Georgia,* in addition to other expressions of great warmth, has said, that if we persist, the Union will be dissolved ; and, with a look fixed on me, has told us that we have kindled a fire which all the waters of the ocean cannot put out, and seas of blood can alone extinguish. Sir, language of this sort has no efiFecfc on me. My purpose is fixed ; it is interwoven with my existence ; its durability is limited with my life ■ it is a great and glorious cause, setting boundaries to a slavery the most cruel and debasing the world ever witnessed. It is the freedom of man — it is the cause of unredeemed and unregenerated human beings. Sir, if a dissolution of the Union must take place, let it be so ! If civil war, which gentlemen so much threaten, must eome, I can only say, let it come ! My hold on life is probably as frail as that of any man who now hears me ; but, while that hold lasts, it shall be devoted to the ser- vice of my country — to the freedom of man. If blood is necessary to extinguish any fire which I have assisted to kindle, I can assure gentle- men, while I regret the necessity, I shall not forbear to contribute ray mite." And tliis was the character of the debate on the second day after it opened ! — so rapid was the conflagration of the passions, * Thomas W. Cobb. His speech on this occasion is merely noted, not reported among the debates, as, in fact, but a small part of the speeches were at that day. SUPREME court's DECISION, ETC. YY and the desperation of the resolves. To what height did they not rise in the two years that this exasperating controversy con- tinned in Congress ! inflamed all the while by the resolves of popnlar meetings and legislative assemblies — by newspaper publications — by popnlar harangues — and even by pulpit addresses. The numerical force of the House was against Missouri, and the restriction was there incorporated into the bill by a vote of 87 to 76 ; but in the Senate the majority was the other way, and the restriction was struck out by a vote of 22 to 16. The House then adhered to its amendment : the Senate adhered to its rejection : and so the bill was lost between the two Houses. This was at the end of a short session — the sessions terminating in odd years — when the end of the third da}'' of March is the termination of the session, and of the Congress. It would be nine months before Congress met again, and during that long inter- val the fire kindled in Congress must continue spreading — and did. It was in that period that the anxieties of patriots rose to the highest pitch — that the surviving founders of the Union began to feel as if they were hearing the death-knell of the Con- stitution. Many of them, withdrawn from public cares, tran- quil at home, and happy in the belief of the long duration of their cherished work, were alarmed from their security, and gave vent to their misgivings in letters which found their way to the public eye. Among others, Mr. Madison, who, in the ensuing November, shortly before the inflamed Congress was to meet again — still more inflamed by contact of the members with their constituents — wrote that letter to Mr. Kobert Walsh, of Philadelphia, which has been quoted in high places as his opinion against the Missouri Compromise : that letter, so quoted, in which the word "compromise" does not occur! — Avhich was written four months before the Compromise was made ! and every word of which shows that it was only applicable to the then impending and absorbing question of the restriction on the State. To complicate the question, and render it still more diflicult of settlement, was the attitude beginning to be assumed by Missouri. She had asked Congress for an enabling act to facilitate the holding pf a State Convention. It was deferential to Congress to do so, but not imperative ; and being denied, except on a degrading condition, the young Territory saw her to 78 EXAMINATION OF THE right under the treaty with France, the principles of the Gor- ernment, and the ordinance of '87, to assemble in Convention, form their Constitution, see that it was republican, lay it before Congress, and stand the question of its rejection, because it did not exclude slavery. There was a short way for her to sur-. mount the difficulty — to put in a prohibition, to satisfy Con- o-ress, and strike it out when the Constitution came back, to satisfy herself. There could be no legal objection to that course ; but there was an objection to it of morality and of policy ; it would be neither moral nor politic to do so ; and the determination was, if again denied the enabling act, to erect herself into a State, ask admission into the Union, and throw upon Congress the entire responsibility of refusing to admit her. Such an attitude was impressing a new emphasis on the ques- tion, and portending a crisis of inevitable approach and fearful termination. Thinking men looked with apprehension to the next meeting of Congress ; and, after it met — things continuing to grow worse until the Compromise came, with balm on its wina-s, to heal the wounds which the restriction had inflicted. But before I speak of this Compromise, and the patriotic men who made it, there is another measure to be spoken of, showing still more strongly the dangers of the country, enhancing still higher its merits, and illustrating still more fully the constitu- tional distinction between Stales and Territories. This was the Arkansas question — the question of restricting the Territory of Arkansas in the article of slavery — a question still more startling tlian that of Missouri, and equally portentous at the time, but overshadowed in the greater magnitude and longer duration than the other ; equally deserving of public attention, but, in the impossibility of public access to the past Congress debates, now unknown to the public. The forthcoming abridgment of these debates will make them accessible. The case was this : On fixing the boundaries for the new State of Missouri, it became necessary to curtail her limits, before co-extensive with the whole province of Louisiana out- side of the State of Louisiana. On the southern side of the new State the Territory of Arkansas was to be cut off, and formed into a new Territor}^ It extended from the southern limit of Mis- souri — 30° 30' — to the Louisiana State line, and to the Texas, or Mexi.can boundary ; in fine, to all the territory south of Mis- SUPREME COUKt's DECISION, ETC. 79 souri. To tliis southern Territoiy, tlius appurtenant to tlie South — in tlie latitude of its staple productions — and with a slaveholding population upon it — was proposed to attach the slavery prohibition. Coteniporaneously with the report of the bill to enable Missouri to take steps for the formation of a State government, was another reported for the erection of the Terri- tory south of it into a new territorial government — Arkansas by name, as covering that river. And as soon as the attempt had succeeded in the House to impose the slavery restriction on the State of Missouri, the same attempt was made to impose it on the Territory of Arkansas. Mr. John "\Y. Taylor, of K^ew York, made the motion.* This motion gave rise to an extended de- bate, in which the ablest speakers in the House, from both sides, took part ; and which is more applicable, and authoritative, than any other debate that ever took place in Congress, to the ques- tion now under examination, to wit: the power of Congress over its territory, (and new territory at that ;) and its right to legislate upon slavery in it, and to admit or reject it as deemed proper. The Arkansas question is the master one for this ex- amination ; for it presents the territorial question alone, unin- fluenced by any consideration connected with a State ; and be- cause it applied to a territory so far south ; and wdiich was, so far as the admission or rejection of slavery was concerned, the entire province of Louisiana ; for, if the institution was excluded from that southern part, it would recoil from the rest of itself. It was, therefore, a question to excite the slave States still more than the Missouri question had done, and to stimulate them to the use of the strongest objections against it. The strongest would have been unconstitutionality ! yet no one took that ob- jection. Expedient grounds, and the treaty of cession, were the highest grounds they took; and there were able men in the Government then — both in the Senate and the House, and in the Cabinet. These able men, and zealous for the South, and stimulated to the highest exertions, took no ground under the Constitution ! On the contrary, they admitted the constitu- tional right of Congress to do as it deemed right on the question, * It was in these words : " That the further introduction of slavery, or involuntary servitude, he prohibited, except for the punishment of crimes, whereof the party shall have heen duly convicted. And that all children horn within the State after the ad- mission thereof into the Union, shall be free at the age of twenty-five years. 80 EXAMINATION OF THE and limited tlieir opposition to expedient objections. Among these was Mr. Louis M'Lane, of Delaware, an able and zealous defender of the rights and interests of the slave States, though opposed to the institution of slavery, and wdio was one of the first to reply to Mr. Taylor's proposition to restrict the Territory — repulsing it on expedient grounds, and making the first sug- gestion of a policy which afterwards ripened into the Missouri Compromise. He said : " He would yield to no gentleman in the House in his love of free- dom, or in its abhorrence of slavery in its mildest form. His earliest education, and the habits of his life, were opposed to the holding of slaves and the encouragement of slavery. At the same time, he would yield to no gentleman in the House in his regard for the Constitution of his country, and for the peace, safety, and preservation of the Union of these States. To these great objects all minor considerations should give way. Beyond this, the oath he had taken, as a member of the House, forbade him to go. The fixing of a line on the west of the Mis- sissippi, north of which slavery should not be tolerated, had always been with him a favorite policy, and he hoped the day was not far distant when, upon principles of fair compromise, it might constitutionally be effected. He was apprehensive, however, that the present premature attempt, and the feelings it had eUcited, would interpose new and almost insuperable obstacles to the attainment of the end." In the concluding part of his speech, Mr. M'Lane returned to the idea of dividing Louisiana between the Free and the Slave States— enforced it by referring to the happy efiects in promoting the formation of the Union, of a similar division un- der the ordinance of '87 — and showed that Southern and West- ern members had already avowed the same policy. Thus : — "On the whole, it seems to me that we have no right to impose this restriction ; and that, if we had, it would be useless, impracticable, and unavailing. At the same time, I do not mean to abandon the policy to which I alluded in the commencement of my remarks. I think it but fair that both sections of the Union should be accommodated on this subject, with regard to which so much feeling has been manifested. The same great motives of policy which reconciled and harmonized the jar- ring and discordant elements of our system, originally, and which enabled the framers of our Constitution to compromise the different interests which then prevailed on this and other subjects, if properly cherished SUPREME COUEt's DECISION, ETC. 81 by us, -will enable us to achieve similar objects. If we meet upon prin- ciples of reciprocity, we cannot fail to do justice to all. It has already been avowed by gentlemen on this floor, from the South and the West, that they will agree upon a line which shall divide the slaveholding from the nou-slaveholding States. It is this proposition I am anxious to effect ; but I wish to effect it by some compact which shall be binding upon all parties and all subsequent legislatures — which cannot be changed, and will not fluctuate with the diversity of feeling and of senti- ment to which this empire in its march must be destined. There is a vast and immense tract of country west of the Mississippi yet to be set- tled, and intimately connected with the northern section of the Union, upon which this compromise can be effected. Believing as I do that the Constitution and the compact* before mentioned will not permit us to extend our policy over the whole, I will be very willing to take as great a part as I can obtain ; and in so doing, though I may lament that the humane policy of those who are so anxious to effect this end cannot be more widely diffused, I shall enjoy at least the consciousness of having conformed to the Constitution of the country, and executed the national compacts in good faith." Mr. M'Lane was from a slave-holding State, and acting with the South— I should rather say with the Union— on this occasion. He was of course in communion with the Southern and "Western members, but only spoke of avowals on the floor wlien he alluded to their readiness for a fair com^jromise on the principles of the ordinance of '87. Several of those members spoke— Mr. Clay and George Kobertson, of Kentucky ; Messrs. Hugh Kelson, James Johnson, John Tyler, and Philip P. Barbour, of Yirginia — but their speeches are not reported, only noted. The author- ity of Mr. M'Lane, however, is sufficient for the fact which stamps the Compromise, (for into that measure the suggestions of Mr. M'Lane eventually ripened,) as a Southern measure, con- ceived and shadowed forth, and afterwards embodied as such ; and also shows it to have been a deliberate and considered measure — meditated for upwards of a year before it was adopted. The vote was taken on Mr. Taylor's proposition, the first clause of it to restrict the Territory, and it was handsomely re- jected— 68 to 80 — in Committee of the Whole, where there are * The stipulations in the treaty of cession on which the province was ceded, and which constituted a compact with France. 6 82 EXAlVnNATION OF THE no yefis and nays ; many of the northern members voting with the shive-State members, who were in an absolute minority of the House. But when the same vote came to be repeated in the House, where there are yeas and nays, it was as near even as could be to miss it — YO to 71 — the proposition being only rejected by one vote ; a difference in the voting which showed many free-State members to be, in their private feelings and judgment, what they could not openly show themselves to be. But Mr. Taylor's proposition consisted of two parts : the first prohibiting the future introduction of slaves into the Territory ; the second acting upon those already there, and emancipating the slave children born there, at the age of twenty-five years ; and this part of the proposition was carried — a close vote, 75 to 73 — and Mr. Lewis "Williams, of N'orth Carolina, being one of the seventy-five. His name being low down in the alphabetical order, and the vote so close as to I'aise the apprehension that the clause would be carried, he voted with the affirmatives, that, being one of the majority, he would have the right to move a reconsideration, which he immediately did, and lost it by two votes, some members having come in. It was a mistake in him ; for his vote, taken from the affirmatives, and given to the nega- tives, would have made the two stand 74, 74 ; and the support- ers of the proposition holding the affirmative of the question, and not getting a majority, would be defeated, and that without the casting vote of the Speaker, which is only effective when he votes with the affirmatives ; and in this case, he would go with the negatives. The case now looked desperate. To emancipate the slave children born in Arkansas, was equivalent to saying none such should be born there, or that they should be carried away before arriving at the liberating age. To do this in Arkansas was equivalent to doing it in all Louisiana, as Arkan- sas covered the southern half of the province ; and excluded from there it would stand no chance to go north. It was more extensive in its effects than the Missouri State restriction, and more odious to the slavcholding States, because farther south. The question would immediately come up again upon the en- grossment of the bill, and ordering it to be read a third time. The exigency called for the cool judgment, the urbane deport- ment, and captivating address, of Mr. Lowndear; and he an- swered the call. Consulting a moment with some friends, Mr. SUPREME COTJKT S DECISION, ETC. 83 Scott, of Missouri, Mr. Weldon K Edwards, of N'ortli Carolina, and Messrs. Colston and Pindall, of Virginia, lie took his course, and moved that the bill be laid upon the table — saying, at the same time, that to prevent surprise, and ensure a full vote, he would himself move a call of the House the next day, at twelve o'clock, and then immediately take the final vote. All the Northern members whose feelings were with the South, imme- diately called out " that is fair ! " and the bill was laid upon the table by a good vote. This was a respite for the night, and an occasion for anxious consultation. The course agreed upon was a decided one — that a motion to recommit the bill to a select committee, with instruc- tions to strike out the emancipation clause, should be made ; and that Mr. George Eobertson, of Kentucky, the reporter of the bill, should make the motion. He made it. Tlie A'^ote was even — 88 to 88 — and the motion lost, except for the casting vote of the Speaker, (Mr. Clay,) wdiicli was promptly given, and the bill re-committed, with the instruction. The select committee was Mr. George Eobertson, of Kentucky, Mr. Lowndes, of South Carolina, Messrs. Nathaniel Silsbee and Elijah H. Mills, of Mas- sachusetts, and Mr. "William H. Burwell, of Yirginia. The in- struction was quickly complied with, and the bill returned to the House, when the question was to concur with the committee in the striking out which they reported. The vote was — 89 for the concurrence ; 87 against it. So that the question was car- ried by a majority of two, which was only a difference of one man. But the struggle was not yet over. Mr. Taylor continued his anti-slavery motions, which were finally modified into the following : " That neither slavery nor involuntary servitude shall hereafter be introduced into any part of the territories of the United States, lying north of 36 degrees and 30 minutes of north latitude." This was not the subsequent famous Missouri Compromise ; for that compromise left out the State of Missouri, and this in- cluded it. It was, in fact, the continuation of the line which divides Yirginia from IsTorth Carolina, and Kentucky from Ten- nessee ; and which would cross the Mississippi and continue to the Eocky Mountains, without any deflexion. Mr. Philip P. Barbour, of Virginia, replied to this proposition. He said : 84 EXAJVimATION OF THE " He was opposed to Mr. Taylor's amendment, and to all others of similar character. He spoke with much earnestness against the proposi- tion, and at some length, as partial and inexpedient — arguing that if the principle was wrong in itself, it ought not to be withheld from one part of the Territory and applied to another : that it was legislating partially by applying a rule to the one portion, and a different rule to another portion of citizens having equal rights under similar circumstances. If the rule was wrong at the 25th degree of latitude, it was equally so at the 40th. He argued that it was as impolitic as it was unjust, to draw this line. It was proper to let a future Congress act on it, as it should then seem expedient ; and this opinion, as well as others which he ad- vanced, he maintained at some length." Such was the reply of Mr. Barbour, one of the ablest lawyers, one of the closest adherents of State rights, and of constitutional strict construction, which the Virginia school of lY98-'99 jn-o- duced. He saw much wrong in Mr. Taylor's proposition — all the injury that is now seen in preventing slaveholders in re- straining southern emigration — but no violation of the Consti- tution , and he was afterwards a justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, and died as such. His objections rose no higher than to the class of inexpedient, and several members concurred with him. The discussion became heated ; some Northern members showed themselves indisposed to it ; and Mr. Taylor, seeing more opposition than he had expected, withdrew his proposition, saying it was not probable any line would be agreed upon by the House, or any compromise o^ opinion effected. Tlie bill was then read a third time — seiit to the Senate for concurrence — concurred in there ; and Arkansas be- came a separate Territory, free from slavery restriction. I have deemed it right to give this detailed account of the attempt to exclude slavery froiyi Arkansas ; and to show by what narrow chances that attempt was defeated. It shows more clearly than any thing else — more clearly than the Mis- •souri controversy itself — the danger which beset the Union at that time, and greatly enhances the merits of that compromise, which, a year afterM\ards, averted that danger. It also shows the first germination of the idea of that compromise — that it came from Mr. Louis M'Lane, with the sanction of Southern members, and took the compromise line in the ordinance of '87 for its guide and model. SUPREME court's DECISION, ETC. 85 I return to the Missouri bill, and to the movements of which it continued to be the subject in the two Houses. The session of 1818-'19, had terminated, leaving the bill lost in the disa- greement of the two Houses. It was the short session, termi- nating the 3d of March; the long recess of nine months to intervene before Congress met again ; and, in the mean time, the question becoming more aggravated and inflamed from the daily inflammatory appeals to the public mind : popular meet- ings, harangues, newspaper publications, denunciations, violent resolves. By the time Congress met in December, the whole country was aroused, the geographical line fully developed, and the two halves of the Union arrayed against each other. Things were far worse tlian at the end of the last session. Public opinion at home, and town-meeting resolves, were bearing down the moderate members from the free States who opposed the restriction, or even favored compromise. At the same time the Territory of Missouri had taken its stand— determined not to be restricted ; and it was well known that the slave States would stand by her in a body. So dark an hour had never been seen for the Union as at the commencement of this session — 1819-'20 ; and that darkness continued to deepen during three agonizing months. It was during this time that the whole country became convulsed, and patriots disheartened, and when many of tliem, in letters now extant, gave vent to their mis- givings and despair. It was during this time that Mr. Madison wrote that letter, in reply to Mr. Walsh, wholly directed against restricting the State of Missouri, which has been so strongly applied to the compromise— not then broached. And it was during this time that our Congress, profoundly penetrated with a sense of the public danger, exhibited all the varieties of fervid and patriotic eloquence — close reasoning, calm argument, im- passioned declamation, gorgeous elocution: and all with the impressive earnestness of a real contest involving the fate of the country. And it was now that Pinkney, of Maryland, delivered that grea^ speech which consummated his oratorical fame, and which was worthy to call forth all his powers ; for he was speaking of that Union which patriot heroes had formed, and which it now required patriot heroes to save. In this state of the public mind Congress met, Decembei-, 1819. Bills to enable the Territory of Missouri to hold a con- 86 EXAMINATION OF THE vention to form a State government, were early introduced into each House ; and the friends of compromise in the fi-ee States, who were still able to follow their inclinations, were vigilant and ready, and preoccupied the ground with their conciliatory propositions. Mr. Storrs, of New York, always respectable and sometimes grand in debate, and well disposed to do justice to the South, offered a proposition upon the basis of dividing the whole territory about equally between the two classes of States ; but he proposed the parallel of 38 degrees — which would not suit the friends of Missouri, and came to nothing. Mr. Thomas, of the Senate, from Illinois, also friendly to the slave States, proposed a compromise upon the same principle, but on a dif- ferent line — 36° 30', exclusive of Missouri : being the same that was eventually adopted. Each House had a bill of its own, and both were at work on the same subject, at the same time : for, in fact, nothing else could be attended to in Congress, nor talked of in the country. The friends of compromise had taken the advance in each House ; but their pacifia propositions were quickly superseded, and lost sight of, by the introduction of others of a different character. Mr. Burrill, of Ehode Island, in the Senate, and Mr. John W. Taylor, of N'ew York, in the House, respectively proposed the imposition of the restriction upon the State of Missouri ; and, from that time, a long interval before conciliatory measures could be admitted to any attention. It was the 17th of February before a vote was obtained in the Senate on Mr. Thomas's amendment — when it was carried by a vote of 34 to 10. But this vote included several Senators who would not vote for the bill when so amended ; so that, on ordering the bill to a third reading, the vote was 24 to 20. Thus, in the Senate the bill stood as the friends of Missouri wished it ; to wit : the restriction rejected, and the compromise accepted. But this bill would stand no chance in the House in a trial of strength there : address and management alone could save her : and there was room for something to be done in that way. Massachusetts had divided herself to form the State of Maine : it was determined in the Senate to unite the ^o, (Mis- souri and Maine,) and keep them together : that was one hold upon the House. Then there was another. The Missouri re- striction bill, passed by the House, would come to the Senate for concurrence ; it was determined there to amend it by SUPKEME court's DECISION, ETC. 87 striking out tlie restriction, and inserting the Tliomas Compro- mise ; and that was a second hold upon that body ; and both were firmlj seized. Missouri and Maine, for their admission, were put into one bill, and would go down to the House, united — to sink or swim together. The Missouri House bill v/ould cany back the compromise, in place of the restriction which it brought up ; and thus, address and management, laying hold of coincident circumstances, were working well for the settle- ment of the question, and for the harmony and preservation of the Union. It was the second of March when the vote was obtained on the bill with Mr. Thomas's amendment, and when it was carried by a vote of almost two to one — 27 to 15.* All these affirmative votes affirmed the constitutionality, and the expediency of the compromise ; and it was an imposing list of names. The whole negative vote affirmed the same constitu- tionality ; for it was given on the principle of total exclusion of slavery from the whole province of Louisiana. The question was now in the House, and the restriction on the State having been greatly debated, and the two Houses become mutually impeded by the state of their respective bills — ^for, while each could check the other, neither could carry its own — some of the most strenuous of the restrictionists had begun to relax, and to hold the language of conciliation, and to propose the application of the restriction to Territories alone. In this sense Mr. John "W. Taylor spoke, and acted, and took the initiative for his party. (It was on the 1-ith of December, 1819.) He said : " He rose to invite the attention of the House to a subject of very great moment. The question of slavery in the territories of the United States west of the Mississippi, it was well known, had at the last session of Congress excited feelings, both in the House and out of it, the recur- * The detail of the affirmative vote was : Messrs. James Barhora*, of Vir. ; James Brown, of Lou. ; Eaton, of Tenn. ; Ninian Edwards, of 111. ; John Elliott, of Geo. , Gaillard, of S. C. ; Horsay, of Del. ; William Hunter, of E. I. ; R. M. Johnson, of Ken. ; Henry Johnson, of Lou. ; William Rufus King, of Ala. ; James Lanman, of Conn. ; Walter Leake, of Alppi. ; Edward Lloyd, of Md. ; William Logan, of Ken. ; Nathaniel Macon, of N. C. ; John F. Parrott, of N. H. ; William Pinkney, of Md. ; James Pleasants, of Vir. ; William Smith, of S. C. ; Montford Stokes, of N. C. ; Jesse B. Thomas, of lU. ; Nicholas Van Dyke, of Del. ; John W. Walker, of Ala. ; Freeman Walker, of Geo. ; Thomas H. Williams, of Mppi. ; and John Williams, of Tenn. 88 EXAMINATION OF THE rence of wliich he sincerely deprecated. All who love our country, and Consider the Union of these States as the ark of its safety, must view with deep regret sectional interests agitating our national councils. He could not himself, nor would he ask others, to make a sacrifice of principle to expediency. He could never sanction the existence of slavery where it could be excluded, CQnsistently with the Constitution and public faith. But it ought not to be forgotten that the American family is composed of many members : if their interests are various, they must mutually be respected ; if their prejudices are strong, they must be treated with forbearance. He did not know whether concilia- tion was practicable, but he considered the attainment worthy of an effort. He was desirous that the question should be settled in that spirit of amity and brotherly love, which carried us through the perils of the Revolution, and produced the adoption of our Federal Constitution. If the resolution he was about to introduce should be sanctioned by the House, it was his purpose to move a postponement of the Missouri bill to a future day, that this interesting subject, in relation to the whole Western Territory, may be submitted to the consideration of a committee." Mr. Taylor then introduced the following resolution: — '■'■Resolved^ That a Committee be appointed to inquire into the ex- pediency of prohibiting by law the introduction of slaves into the Ter- ritories of the United States west of the Mississippi." This resolution, limited to Territories, and presented as a feeler to compromise, was received in the spirit in which it was made — as a proposition for a compromise ; and, therefore, to be kindly en- tertained. But it was not adopted in haste, but, on the motion of Mr. Strother, of Virginia, laid upon the table until the next day, " to give time for reflection." The next day it was taken up, and, as the result of the night's reflection was adopted the next day, without debate, and, without division ! a strong symptom that no one in the House, at that time, saw any thing unconsti- tutional in legislating upon slavery in Territories. A committee of seven was appointed : — Messrs. JolmW". Taylor ; Livermore, of N. II.; P. P. Barbour, of Virginia; Lowndes; Fuller, of Mass. ; Hardin, of Kentucky ; Cuthbert, of Georgia. The connnittce could not agree upon a plan, and would not report a mere majority proposition as a basis of compromise ; and, upon their own request, were discharged from the consideration of the SUPEEME COURTS DECISION, ETC. 89 subject. Mr. Taylor then introduced a peremptory resolution, that a committee be appointed, with instructions to bring in a bill prohibiting the further admission of slaves into the Terri- tories of the United States west of the river Mississippi. In com- mendation of this resolution, Mr. Taylor made the following re- markable declaration : — " He 'believed there was no memher — he knew of none — who doubted the Constitutioncd jpower of Congress to impose such a restriction on the Territories ; and the only question which the bill could present loas one of expediency." This was a remarkable declaration, addressing itself to every member of the House, and calling for immediate rectification, if there was any mistake in it. There was no remark made upon it, one way or the other. The declaration of Mr. Taylor must then be taken to be true — that there was not a member of the House who did not hold that Congress had the right to abolish slavery in the Territories. Other parts of the resolution were remarked upon; and, without being acted upon, it went to its place on the calendar, not to be reached until after the Missouri bill should be disposed of, and in the adjustment of which the Southern and Western members preferred that the territorial question should be settled. This was the 27th of December. It was a month afterwards — just a month (26th January) — before the subject was mention- ed again, when it came up on a motion from Mr. Storrs, of New York, to amend the bill, (that of the House,) by inserting a com- promise clause — nearly the same which afterwards came down from the Senate. It was on stating his understanding of the effect of that,motion, that General Smith of Maryland declared the power of Congress to be unlimited and supreme in the Territories — a declaration which no one impugned. These were his words — all that he said on the point : — " He rose principally with a view to state his understanding of the proposed amendment ; viz. : — That it retained the boundaries of Missouri, as delineated in the bill — that it prohibited the admission of slaves west of the west line of Missouri, and north of the north Ihae — that it did not interfere with the Territory of Arkansas, or the uninhab- ited land west thereof. With this understanding, he thought the prop- osition not exceptionable, but doubted the propriety of its forming a part of this bill. He considered the power of Congress over the Terri- tory as supreme, unlimited, before the admission — that Congress could 90 EXAMINATION OF THE bestow on its Territories any restrictions that it thought proper, and the people, when they settled therein, did so under a knowledge of the re- striction." Now, General Smith was not a lawyer, but lie was a man of vigorons common sense, of close bnsiness liabits, of a thinking turn of mind, and large political and legislative experience — having been in Congress from the beginning of Washington's administration. The opinion of such a man, upon the legislative powers of Congress, is always something, and in this case his opin- ion was weighty — for. it was decisive, and no one impugned it. There was, in fact, no question raised on the point of power ; no one disputed it, and no one argued it ; but, from time to time, different members expressed their opinions, chiefly in illus- tration of the difference between States and Territories, and the power of Congress over them, or in elucidation of clauses in the Constitution. Thus Mr. M'Lane, of Delaware :— " No little reliance has been placed by the honorable mover upon the clause in the Constitution, vesting in Congress a power to dispose of, and make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory, or other property of the United States. I do not propose to enter minutely into the inquiry, whether the power of Congress to establish a Territorial Government is derived from this clause. I incline to the opinion that it is not. The power here conferred is a power to dispose of, and make needful rules respecting the property of the United States. It was designed, I think, to authorize the sale of the land for purposes of revenue, and all regulations which might be deemed necessary for its proper disposition ; or to convert it to other public objects disconnected with sale or revenue — to retain this power even after' the territory had assumed the State government, and perhaps to divert from the State government the right of taxing it, as it would do the property of indi- viduals. It is silent as to. the people; and their slaves are the property of their owners, and not of the government. The right of governing a Territory is clearly incident to the right of acquiring it. It would be absurd to say that the government might purchase a Territory, with a population upon it, and not have the power to give them laws : but from whatever source the power is derived, I admit it to be plenary, so long as it continues in a state of territorial dependence, but no longer. I am willing at any time to execute this power. The condition of the people of a Territory is, to be governed by others— of a State, to govern them- selves." SUPREME court's DECISION, ETC. 91 So spoke Mr. M'Lane, a lawyer, and one of the ablest men in Congress. In that part of his imderstanding, of the " needful rules and regulation " clause, he is coincident with the late Opin- ion of the Supreme Court, but diametrically opposed to them in the derivation of the power of Congress over Territories — • they construing it, generally, out of the Constitution — ^he deriv- ing it direct from sovereignty and ownership. And in his whole opinion of this power as being plenary and absolute, whether derived from sovereignty, or from the quoted clause in the Constitution, he so entirely coincides with the former opin- ions of the Supreme Court as twice delivered by Chief Justice Marshall, (heretofore quoted,) that it would be held to be a rep- etition of those decisions were it not for the fact that it was before them. Nearly to the same effect was the opinion of General Alex- ander Smyth, of Yirginia, and one of the best legal and most in- vestigating minds in Yirginia, and who, in the progress of the Missouri Bill, expressed himself thus : — " It has been contended that this clause (the needful rules and regu- lation clause) gives a power of legislation over persons and private prop- erty within the Territories of the United States. The clause obviously relates to the territory belonging to the United States as property only- The power given is to dispose of, and make all needful regulations respecting the territorial property, or other property of the United States, and Congress have power to pass all laws necessary and proper to the exercise of that power. This clause speaks of the territory as property, as a subject of sale. It speaks not of the jurisdiction. That the Convention considered sufficiently provided for hy the Ordinance of Congress. This clause contains no grant of power to legislate over per- sons and private property within a Territory. A power to dispose of, and make all needful regulations respecting the property of the United States, is very different from a power to legislate over the persons and property of the citizens. When it was the intention of the Convention that the Constitution should convey to Congress power to legislate over persons and private property, they expressed themselves in terms not doubtful. Thus, they said, Congress shall have power to exercise exclu- sive legislation in all cases whatsoever within the ten miles square. But no such power to legislate over the Territories is granted." Mr. Smyth is very distinct in his exposition of the meaning of this clause — the needful rules and reorulation clause. He 92 EXAMINATION OF THE considers tliat clause as only applying to the management of property, and that limited to the property of the United States. He considers it no grant of the jurisdiction or right of govern- ment: that, to wit, jurisdiction and government, being pi-ovided for by the Ordinance. This is historically, as well as logically true. The Ordinance and the Constitution were each parts, and essential parts of the same system — made at the same time, by the same men, (it maybe said,) and for the same purpose, that of founding and settling the Union. Each was necessary — the Ordinance for the government of the Territories ; the Constitu- tion for the government of the States. It was necessary to settle the political condition of the Territories, and the Ordinance was their Constitution. It framed their Governments, and the Con- stitution had nothing to do with them. This is what Mr. Smyth means, and what history, and the obvious meaning of language, justities him in saying, to wit, that the needful rule and regulation clause did not confer jurisdiction, and give the right of government to the Territories, hecause that had heen pro- vided for hy the Ordinance. The Ordinance was made for the Territory of the United States, then in possession or expectation. It was not made under the Articles of Confederation, for there was no authority in those articles to make it ; it was not made under the Constitution, for it was made before it. By what authority, then, was it made ? By right of ownership? both of soil and jurisdiction, and by virtue of the compacts with the ceding States ; and the new Territory is governed in the same way — not by virtue of any thing in the Constitution, but by virtue of proprietary rights of soil and jurisdiction — as an inci- dent to its acquisition — and by virtue of the compacts with France in tlie treaty of the cession. And this is what Mr. Smyth says in this most pregnant passage of his. A right to use tlic soil as property, and to govern the people politically, until prepared to govern themselves, necessarily resulted from these premises ; and the right of government was full and com- plete, limited only by the compacts and the treaty. The ordi- nance of '87 compromised the slavery question in Territories by dividing them about equally between the free and the slave States ; the Congress of 1820 had the same right to compromise, and were under the same inducement to do so ; and did it. I say the same inducement, and mean what I say ; for the com- SrPEEME COUKt's DECISION, ETC. 93 promise of '87 made the Union, and the compromise of 1820 saved it. I hasten to the actual compromise. The debate in the House ^vas upon the restriction of the State of Missouri, moved by INIr. John W. Taylor, and most bitterly contested. It was not until the last day of February that the vote was obtained on the motion of Mr. Taylor, and that it was carried by 94 to 86 ; and the bill was passed the next day by a vote nearly the same. In the mean time the bill for the admis- sion of Maine had returned from the Senate, with the Missouri bill attached to it, and embracing the compromise proposition moved by Mr. Thomas. The House promptly disagreed to these amendments, and a committee of conference was appointed, which came in with a compromise proposition — that the Senate should recede from their amendment adding Missouri to Maine, and the House give up the restriction, and take the compromise in its place. Pending this conference, the Missouri House bill returned from the Senate with the restrictions struck out, and the compromise inserted — the same which Mr. Storrs offered in the House, and Mr. Thomas in the Senate. The compromise was then in both bills — the one from the Senate, and the one from the House ; and the struggle became close and intense, — on one side, to strike out the compromise — on the other to retain it ; for that question included in its result the fate of the bill, and with it the fate of the Union. The esteemed Mr. Lowndes, always listened to with deference by the House, was the first to speak, and earnestly for the compromise ; but the reported debates only give briefly the points of his speech, thus : — " Mr. Lowndes spoke briefly in support of the compromise recom- mended by tbe Committee of Conference, and urged with great earnest- ness the propriety of a decision which would restore tranquillity to the country ; which was demanded by every consideration of discretion, of moderation, of wisdom, and of virtue." Mr. Kinsey, of New Jersey, a Free State member who had voted steadily through two sessions for the restriction, was too seriously impressed with the dangers of the country to continue that vote any longer. He determined to change his vote, and gave his reasons publicly for it. He said : — 94r EXAMINATION OF THE '' A period has now arrived when it becomes necessary to close this protracted debate, and, as I shall vote for the compromise offered by the Senate, it is proper to state my reasons for so doing. We have ar- rived at an awful period in the history of our empire, when it behooves every member of this House now to pause, and to consider that on the next step we take depends the fate of unborn millions. I firmly believe that on the question now before ns rest the highest interests of the whole human family. Now, sir, is to be tested whether this grand and hitherto successful experiment of free government is to continue, or, after more than forty years' enjoyment of the choicest blessings of Heaven under its administration, we are to break asunder on a dispute about the division of territory. Gentlemen of the majority have treated the idea of a disunion with ridicule ; but to my mind, it presents itself in all the horrid, gloomy features of reality : and when we unfold the volume of past ages, and, in the history of man, trace the rise and fall of governments, we find trifles, light as air compared to this, dissolving the most powerful confederacies, and overturning extensive empires. If we inquire what causes operated to destroy the Amphyctionic League, or dissolve the German Confederacy, in almost every case we find ques- tions of territorial jurisdiction, and what, for ages, has deluged Europe in blood ? disputes concerning territorial rights. On questions of this high and mighty import, it behooves us to make our approaches with the most awful consideration. What at this period is a matter of con- jecture, may in a short time become real history. It is not a question like that heretofore, in which a diversity of opinion commingled in the same society where a division of sentiment, on subjects political, spread itself over the whole Union ; but on this question the division is, not of individuals, but of States — and of States almost equally divided. And what is the case now before us ? Opinions from which every gen- tleman, a few months past, would have recoiled with horror, as treason to imagine, are no\y unhesitatingly threatened. That which had no ideal existence, engendering as this discussion progresses, assumes a positive shape ; and mixing with this unpropitious debate, presents itself in all the dreadful appearances of reality. May God, in mercy, inspire us with a conciliatory spirit, to disperse its fury and dispel its terrible con- sequences." Other members from Free States, like Mr. Kinsey, changed their votes, and gave their reasons for doing so — among others, Mr. Stephens, of Connecticut. Thus : — " If gentlemen are in favor of any compromise, it is a fit time to discuss that subject, and see if any can be hit on that will give general SUPREME COUKT's DECISION, ETC. 95 satisfaction. We have now arrived at a point at "wliicli every gentleman agrees something must be done. A precipice lies before us, at which perdition is inevitable. Gentlemen on both sides of this question, and in both Houses, in doors and out of doors, have evinced a determination that augurs ill of the high destinies of this country ! and who shall not tremble for the consequences ? I do not pretend to say that, in just five calendar months your Union will be at an end ; but I do say, and for the verity of the remark cite the lamentable history of our own time, that the result of a failure to compromise at this time, in the way now proposed, or in some other way satisfactory to both, would be to create ruthless hatred, irradicable jealousy, and a total forgetfulness of the ardor of patriotism, to which, as it has heretofore existed, we owe, under Providence, more solid, rational glory and social happiness, than ever before was possessed by any people, nation, kindred, or tongue, under Heaven." Amidst sncli appeals the eventful question was called, and resulted 134 for the compromise to 42 against it — a majority of three to one, and eight over. Such a vote was a real com- promise ! a surrender on the part of the restrictionists, of strong feeling to a sense of duty to the country ! a settlement of a dis- ti'acting territorial question upon the basis of mutual concession, and according to the principles of the ordinance of 1Y87. Such a measure may appear on the statute book as a mere act of Congress ; and lawyers may plead its repealability : but to those who were cotemporary with the event, and saw the sacri- fice of feeling, or prejudice, which was made, and the loss of popularity incurred, and how great was the danger of the country from which it saved us, it becomes a national compact, founded on considerations higher than money : and which good faith and the harmony and stability of the Union deserved to be cherished next after the Constitution. Of the 42 who voted against the compromise, there was not one who stated a constitutional objection : all that stated reasons for their votes, gave those of expediency — among others that it was an unequal division, which was true, but the fault of the South ; for, while contending for their share in Louisiana, they were giving away nearly all below 36° 30' to the King of Spain.* There being no tie, the speaker (Mr. Clay) could not * Mr. Justice Catron notices this inequality of the division, and considers it a great aggravation of an aggressive measure : " The Missouri Compromise hue of 1820 was very aggressive : it declared that 96 EXAMINATION OF THE vote ; but his exertions were as zealous and active in support of it, as indispensable to tlie pacification of the country. From Congress the bill went to the President for his appro- val ; and there it underwent a scrutiny which brought out the sense both of the President and his cabinet upon the precise point which has received the condemnation of the Supreme Court, and exactly contrary to the Court's decision. There was a word in the restrictive clause which, taken by itself and with- out reference to its context, might be construed as extending the slavery prohibition beyond the territorial condition of the country to which it attached — might be understood to extend it to the State form. It was the word " forever." Mr. Mon- roe took the opinion of his cabinet upon the import of this word, dividing his inquiry into two questions — whether the word would apply the restriction to Territories after they be- came States ? and whether Congress had a right to impose the restriction upon a Territory ? Upon these two questions, the opinion of the cabinet was unanimous — negatively, on the first ; affirmatively, on the other. These questions were put formally, and with a view to official and responsible answers. A sepa- rate, written interrogatory was addressed to each member of his cabinet, and a written answer required. These answers, so re- quired, were received by tlie President, and by him delivered to his Secretary of State (Mr. John Quincy Adams) to be filed in the Department of State : and it is in full proof that they were so filed — though no longer to be found there. The opinions of the cabinet were unanimous, upon both points submitted to them ; and that cabinet was a majority Southern, and the Presi- dent himself a Southern man. Mr. Monroe was the President ; Mr. Crawford, Secretary of the Treasury ; Mr. Calhoun, Secre- tary at War ; Mr. Wirt, Attorney General. And thus, all the branches of the legislative power — the President, the Senate, slavery was abolished forever tlirouj^hout a country reacliing from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean, stretching over thirty-two degrees of longitude, and twelve and a half degrees of latitude on its eastern side, sweeping over four-fifths, to say no more, of the original province of Louisiana." — Mr. Justice Catron. The answer to this is, that the South made the treaty which gave away so much of Louisiana, hut as it was all got V)ack, and more too, before the abrogation of the Missouri Compromise Act, the inequality of the division could no longer be made a subject of regret. SUPKEME COUEt's DECISION, ETC. 97 and the House of Representatives — were of accord on the question of this compromise, both as it regards constitution- ality and expediency : and it may be well said, the three branches were never abler than at that time. Mr. Monroe him- self an experienced man, of sound judgment, and one of the fathers of the Constitution : his cabinet, admitted to be one of the strongest that we have ever had : the Senate, a solid body of able men — Finkney, of Maryland, the orator and the jurist, the prominent and brilliant figure : in the House, a long list of eminent men, of whom Clay and Lowndes shone most conspic- uous. And in that House, and in the thick array of its emi- nent men — themselves eminent — two, who, if Providence had spared their lives, mii^ht have prevented the condemnation of the compromise in the Supreme Court: I speak of Henry Baldwin, of Pennsylvania, and Philip P. Barbour, of Virginia — both members of the House at the time of the compromise — both supporting its constitutionality, (one by his speech, the other by his vote :) both afterwards Justices of the Supreme Court ; and who could hardly be expected to change their old opinions thirty-seven years after they had acted so responsibly upon them. Upon the supposition of their continued life, and seats on the bench, and unchanged opinions, the decision of the. Court might have deen different. It is true, that in the year 18-18, when the new dogma was invented of " No power in Congress to act upon slavery in a Territory," Mr. Calhoun forgot that he had supported the Mis- souri Compromise, and argued that he could not have done so; but it is equally true that ten years before, to wit, in 1838, he had not forgotten it ; but remembered very well that he then supported the Compromise, and blamed Mr. Randolph for op- posing it. It was at that period that Mr. Calhoun had occasion, in the Senate, to speak of that measure, and his course in rela- tion to it, and did so in these words : — " He was not a member of Congress when that compromise was made, but it is clue to candor to state, that his impressions were in its favor ; but it is equally due to it to say that, with his present expe- rience and knowledge of the spirit -which then, for the first time, began to disclose itself, (abolitionism,) he had entirely changed his opinion. He now believed that it was a dangerous measure, and that it has done 7 98 EXAMINATION OF THE much to rouse into action the present spirit. Had it then been met with uncompromising opposition, such as a then distinguished and saga- cious member from Virginia, (Mr. Randolph,) now no more, opposed to it, abolition might have been crushed forever in its birth. He then thought of Mr. Randolph as, he doubts not, many think of him now, who have not fully looked into the subject, that he was too unyielding — too uncompromising — too impracticable ; but he had been taught his error, and took pleasure in acknowledging it." * Thus, in 1838 — eighteen years after the Compromise — Mr, Calhoun well remembered his support of it, and his blame of Mr. Randolph for not supporting it. He also remembered his change of opinion, and the reason for the change, namely, that it encouraged the abolitionists; and up to that time, (1838,) he had no constitutional objection to the Compromise — nothing but its tendency to encourage abolitionism. But it needed not this avowal of Mr. Calhoun to invalidate his subsequent for- getting so material a point. It was fully proved — 1, By a letter from Mr, Monroe to General Jackson : 2. By the diary of Mr. Adams : 3. By the Index-book in the Department of State, re- ferring to the filing of the Cabinet answers : 4. By traditionary history, which told of the Cabinet consultation, and that its opinion was nnanimous.f It is a public loss and a mystery, that * The occasion which drew these remarks from Mr. Calhomi was the introduction of his six famous resolutions of the session l837-'38, laying down a code of slavery legis- lation for the District of Columhia and the Territories, all bottomed upon the constitu- tional right of Congress to legislate upon slavery in these places, but deprecating the exercise of the right by abolishing slavery either in the District or in a Territory where it existed by law, not as a breach of the Constitution but as a ''^dangerous attack" upon slavery in the States, and leading to the dissolution of the Union. The dogma of " No power in Congress to legislate upon slavery in Territories," had not then been invented, and owes its discovery to a period ten years later. \ Extract from Mr. Dix's speech, above referred to : "The Senator from Florida (Mr. Westcott) read to the Senate yesterday theyhc- simile of an original paper found among the manuscripts of ]\Ir. Monroe, and in his handwriting, by which it appears, that when the Missouri Compromise Act, as it is called, was passed, he took the opinions of the members of his Cabinet, in writing, in respect to the constitutionality of that act. The Senator from South Carolina (Mr. Calhoun) was one of the Cabinet ; and as I took and endeavored to sustain, on a late occasion, the position that Congress possesses the right to prohibit slavery in the Ter- ritories of the United States, I am naturally desirous of fortifying it with all the authority I can command ; and I shall be particularly gratified, if it shall be found that the distinguished Senator alluded to, though now denying the right, was then in favor of it. I will read to the Senate all of this paper which relates to the subject : SUPREME court's DECISION, ETC. 99 these Cabinet answers, so carefully obtained by Mr, Monroe, and intended to be preserved as an archive of the government in the Department of State, should have disappeared from that office. Many searches were made for them without effect — the last under General Taylor's administration, when Mr. John M. Clayton was Secretary of State ; but nothing could be found but the Index entry of their filing, as stated by Mr. Adams in (From Mr. Monroe's manuscripts.) — A paper endorsed " Interrogatories, Missouri — March 4, 1820. — To the Heads of Departments and Attorney General." Questions, (on opposite page :) " Has Congress a right, under the powers vested in it by the Constitution, to make a regulation prohibiting slavery in a Territory ? " Is the eighth section of the act which passed both Houses on the 3d instant, for the admission of Missouri into the Union, consistent with the Constitution ? " With the above is the original draft of the following letter, in President Monroe's handwriting, on half a sheet of paper, but not endorsed or addressed to any one- There are interlineations, but the text, as left by the writer, is as follows : — " Dear Sir : The question which lately agitated Congress and the public has been settled, as you have seen, by the passage of an act for the admission of Missouri as a State, unrestrained, and Arkansas likewise, when it reaches maturity, and the estab- lishment of the 36° 30' north latitude as a line, north of which slavery is prohibited, and permitted to the south. I took the opinion, in writing, of the Administration as to the constitutionality of restraining Territories, [and the vote of every member was unanimous and^'\ which was explicit in favor of it, and as it was that the 8th section of the act was applicable to Territories only, and not to States when they should be ad- mitted into the Union. On this latter point I had at first some doubt; but the opinion of others, whose opinions were entitled to weight with me, supported by the sense in which it was viewed by all who voted on the subject in Congress, as will ap- pear by the journals, satisfied me respecting it." This letter has been supposed to have been written to General Jackson, though there is no evidence of the fact. Mr. Calhoun: "If the Senator will give way, it will be perhaps better that I make a {.tatement at once respecting this subject, as far as my recollection will serve me. During the whole period of Mr. Monroe's administration, I remember no occasion on which the members of his Administration gave written opinions. I have an impres- sion — though not a very distinct one — that on one occasion they were required to give written opinions ; but for some reason, not now recollected, the request was not carried into effect. He was decidedly opposed to the imposition of any restriction on the admission of Missouri into the Union, and I am strongly of the impression that he was opposed in feehng to what was called the Missouri Compromise." Mr. Johnson, of Maryland: " Is this the original letter?" Mr. Dix : "I understand it to be a facsimile of the original. As a long period (nearly thirty years) has elapsed since the act to admit Missouri into the Union was passed, it is quite natural that the Senator from South Carolina should have forgotten the circumstances attending the discussion of it in the Cabinet. Having heard, some days ago, of the existence of such a paper, and being very desirous of ascertainmg 100 EX ASn NATION OF THE his diary. This shows that Mr. Callioiin saw nothing unconsti- tutional in the Missouri Compromise in 1838 : another sena- torial act of his shows that he saw nothing unconstitutional in it in ] 847, when he voted, in an amendment to the Oregon Ter- ritorial Bill, to extend tlie Compromise line to the Pacific Ocean — a thing not to be done, if the line was unconstitutional, and null and void. the facts, I wrote to Mr. Charles F. Adams, of Boston, a son of the late ex-President, inquiring of him if his father's diary contained any thing on the subject. In reply to my inquiry, I received an extract from the diary of the father, certified by the son, which I will now read, and which confirms fully the statement contained in Mr. Mon- roe's letter : Extract:^ from the Diary of J. Q. Adams. " Maech 3, 1820. — When I came this day to my office, I found there a note, re- questing me to call at one o'clock at the President's house. It was then one, and I immediately went over. He expected that the two bills, for the admission of Maine and to enable ]\Iissouri to make a Constitution, would have been brought to him for his signature ; and he had summoned all the members of the Administration to ask their opinions in writing, to be deposited in the Department of State, upon two ques- tions : 1. AMaether Congress had a constitutional right to prohibit slavery in a Terri- tory? and 2, Whether the 8th section of the Missouri bill (which interdicts slavery forever in the Territory north of 36| latitude) was applicable only to the territorial state, or would extend to it after it should become a State ? As to the first question, it was unanimomly agreed that Congress have the power to prohibit slavery in the Temtories." This is the first extract ; and before I proceed to the others, I will state that, in respect to the second question, there was a diversity of opinion — Mr. Adams contend- ing that a State would be bound by such a prohibition after its admission into the Union, and the other members of the Cabinet, that it was only operative during the territorial term. In order to secure unanimity in the answers, the second question was modified, as will appear by the remaining extracts, which I proceed to give : " March 5. — ^The President sent me yesterday the two questions in writing, upon which he desired to have answers in writing, to be deposited in the Department of State. He wrote me thai; it would be in time, if he should have the answers to-mor- row. The first question is in general terms, as it was stated at the meeting on Friday. The second was modified to an inquiry, whether tlie 8th section of the Missouri bill is consistent with the Constitution. To this I can without hesitation answer, by a simple affirmative, and so after some reflection I concluded to answer both. * * " March 6. * * "" I took to the President's my answer to his two constitu- tional questions, and he desired me to have thorn deposited in the Department, together with those of the other members of the Administration. Tlicy difFerod only as they assigned their reason for thinking the 8 th section of the Missouri bill consistent -with the Constitution, because they considered it as only applying to the territorial term ; and I barely gave my opinion, without assigning for it any explanatory reason. The President signed the Missouri bill this morning." These extracts arc certified to be " a true copy from the original by me, " Charles Fk.vncis Ad^vjis." SUPKEME court's DECISION, ETC. 101 It was at the conclusion of this eventful session (1819-20), and in allusion to the momentous struggle through which the House had passed, and its happy termination, that Mr. Clay, in taking leave of the House, and in returning his acknowledg- ments for the vote of thanks received, after expressing his personal regrets at parting from so many friends, rose to a higlier senti- ment, and said : — " But interesting as have been the relations in which I have stood, for many years, to this House, I have yet higher motives for continuing to behold it with the deepest solicitude. I shall regard it as the great depository of the most important powers of our excellent Constitution — as the watchful and faithful sentinel of the freedom of the people — as the fairest and truest image of their deliberate will and wishes ; and, as that "branch of the Grovernment where — if our beloved country shall, unhappily, be destined to add another to the long list of melancholy examples of the loss of public liberty — we shall witness its last strug- gles and its expiring throes." It was in the year 1820 that this great compromise was effected. Twenty-five years afterwards it received a re-enact- ment, and under circumstances the most impressive. It was in the year 1845, and on the occasion of the legislative admission of the State of Texas into the Union. In the previous year, annexation by treaty had been refused ; legislation was held by many to be the indis^Densable basis to any incorporation ; and, accordingly, that mode of annexation prevailed. Early in the session, 1844-'45, the last of Tyler's administration, a joint reso- lution was brought into the House of Eepresentatives for the admission of that Republic as a State into the Union. It was in these words : — " That Congress doth consent that the territory properly included within, and rightfully belonging to the Republic of Texas, may be erected into a new State, to be called the State of Texas, with a repub- lican form of government, to be adopted by the people of said Republic, by dej)uties in convention assembled, with the consent of the existing Government, in order that the same may be admitted as one of the States of this Union ; and that the foregoing consent of Congress is given upon the following conditions, and with the following guarantees : "Article I." (Relates to settlement of boundaries.) " Article II." (Relates to public property and vacant lands.) 102 EXAJmSTATION OF THE " Article III. New States, of convenient size, not exceeding four in number, in addition to said State of Texas, and having sufficient population, may hereafter, by the consent of said State, be formed out of the territory thereof, which shall be entitled to admission under the provisions of the Federal Constitution. And such States as may be formed out of that portion of said Territory lying south of thirty-six degrees thirty minutes, north latitude, commonly called the Missouri Compromise line, shall be admitted into the Union, with or without slavery, as the people of each State asking may desire ; and, in such State or States as shall be formed out of said Territory, north of said Missouri Compromise line, slavery, or involuntary servitude (except for crime), shall be prohibited." Here is a complete re-enactment of the Missouri Compro- mise Act, and with such particularity that the line is both astronomically marked by its latitude — 36 degrees 30 minutes — and also nominated, and twice nominated, by its popular de- scri23tive aj^pellation of "^Ad Missouri Coinjproinise Line!''' It is a copy of the Compromise clause in the act of March 6th, 1820, copied to a word, except one, and that one word omitted is as significant of identifi cation as any one of those employed. It is the word " forever," prefixed to prohibit. The Missouri Compromise of 1820 has it; the Texas Compromise of 18-15 omits it, and not by accident, but for a reason, as well under- stood by all who were cotemporary with the event. It was that word which occasioned the cabinet consultation under Mr. Monroe — that word which raised the question whether the re- striction would follow the Territory, and stick to it after it became a State ? and on which all the cabinet of Mr. Monroe were required to give written opinions, to be filed in the Depart- ment of State, for perpetual reference. Mr. Calhoun was a member of Mr. Monroe's Cabinet at the time of the Missouri Compromise, and of Mr. Tyler's at the time of the Texas Com- promise. As Secretary of State, he drew up the joint resolution for the admission of Texas, and, recollecting the trouble which the word '■'■ forever'''' had occasioned in one cabinet of which he was a member, he took care to prevent a like occurrence in another, of which he was head. This is the reason of the omis- sion of that word ; and its omission goes still further to identify the latter Com])romise as the copy — copy in spirit as well as in words — of the former : and Mr. Calhoun its author, a fact other- SUPKEIVIE court's DECISION, ETC. 103 wise well known at the time. Among persons from the South it has become the vogue to cleciy the Missouri Compromise, and to prejudice it with the imputation of being a ISTorthern meas- ure, while its history shows the contrary ; and being an event long since passed, and its history inaccessible to the community, many are persuaded to believe in the fable. But not so with the Texas Compromise ; it is recent, the actors are still on the stage, and the witnesses alive ; and there is no room for mis- take, or deception, or misrepresentation, or misconception, about it. The event is of our own day, and the performers (most of them) still in being. It was done under a Southern administration — an administration not mei-ely of the South, but ultra South ; of the extreme South Carolina States' Rights school. Mr. John Tyler was President ; Mr. Calhoun Secretary of State, with the ascendant in the cabinet which it is the pre- rogative of genius to take over inferior minds ; and that cabinet was a unit for the measure. One hundred and twenty mem- bers of the House — a full majority, and nearly every Southern member — voted for it.* The negatives (97 in number) were * Their names are : Messrs, Archibald H. Arrington, John B. Ashe, Archibald Atkinson, Thomas H. Bailey, James E. Belser, Benjamin A. Bidlack, Edward J. Black, James Black, James A. Black, JuHus W. Rockwell, Gustavnis M. Bower, James B. Bawlin, Linn Boyd, Richard Broadhead, Aaron V. Brown, Milton Brown, William J. Brown, Edmund Burke, Armistcad Burt, George Alfred Caldwell, John Campbell, Stephen Carey, Reuben Chapman, Augustus A. Chapman, Absalom H. Chappell, Duncan L. Clerich, James G. Clinton, Howell Cobb, Walter Coles, Edward Cross, Alvan Cullom, John R. I. Daniel, John W. Davis, John B. Dawson, Ezra Dean, James Dellet, Stephen A. Douglass, George C. Dromgoole, Alexander Duncan, Chesselden Ellis, Isaac G. Farlee, Orlando B. Ficklin, Henry D. Foster, Richard French, George Fuller, William H. Hammett, Hugh A. Haralson, Sam. Hayes, Thomas J. Henley, Isaac E. Holmes, Joseph P. Hoge, George W. Hopkins, George S. Houston, Edmund W. Hubard, William S. Hubbell, James M. Hughes. Charles J. Ingersoll, John Jame- son, Cave Johnson, Andrew Johnson, George W. Jones, Andrew Kennedy, Littleton Kirkpatrick, Alcee Labranche, Moses G. Leonard, William Lucas, John H. Liampkin, Lucius Lyon, William C. McCauslen, William B. Maclay, John A. McClernand, Felix Grundy McConnel, Joseph J. McDowell, James J. McKay, James Matthews, Joseph Morris, Isaac E. Morse, Henry C. Murphy, Willoughby Newton, Moses Norris, jr., Robert Dale Owen, William Parmenter, William W. Payne, John Pettit, Joseph H. Peyton, Emery D. Potter, Zadock Pratt, David S. Reid, James H. Relfe, R. Barn- well Rhett, John Ritter, Robert W. Roberts, Jeremiah Russell, Romulus M. Saunders, Wm. T. Senter, Thomas H. Seymour, Samuel Simons, Richard F. Simpson, Johu Slidell, John T. Smith, Thomas Smith, Robert Smith, Lewis Steemard, Alexander H. Stephens, John Stewart, James W. Stone, Selah B. Strong, Wm. H. Styles, George 104 EXAMINATION OF THE cliiefly from the free States. In the Senate, it was carried by Southern votes, and so close, that no two could have been spared. This re-enactment of the Missouri Compromise stands forth, then, as an unmistakable Southern measure — Southern in its conception. Southern in its support. Southern in its consum- mation ; and the speakers for it either all Southern men, or that part from the free States who most cherished the Southern interest. Of these, Mr. Buchanan, one of the most eminent among the Northern friends of the South, and one of the most zealous for the re-enactment of the Missouri Comjjromise, thus spoke : — " He was pleased witli it (the renewed Compromise) agaiu, because it settled the question of slavery. These resolutions went to re-estabHsh the Missouri Compromise, by fixing a line within which slavery was to be in future confined. That controversy had nearly shaken the Union to its centre in an earlier and better period of our history ; but this Compromise, should it be now re-established, would prevent the recur- rence of similar dangers hereafter. Should this question be now left open for one or two years, the country could be involved in nothing but one perpetual struggle. We should witness a feverish excitement in the public mind ; parties would divide on the dangerous and exciting question of abolition ; and the irritation might reach such an extreme as to endanger the existence of the Union itself; but close ic now, and it will be closed forever. " Mr. 3. said he anticipated no time when the country would ever desire to stretch its limits beyond the Rio del Norte ; and such being the case, ought any friend of the Union to desire to see this question left open any longer ? Was it desirable again to have the Missouri question brought home to the people, to goad them to fury ? That ques- Sykes, William Taylor, Jacob Thompson, John W. Tibbatts, Tilghman II. Tucker, John B. Weller, John Wentworth, Joseph A. Woodward, Joseph A. Wright, Wm. L. Yancy, Jacob S. Yost. The Senators voting for it were : Messrs. Allen, of Ohio ; Ashley, of Arkansas ; Atchison, of IVIissonri ; Atherton, of New Hampshire ; Bagley, of Alabama ; Benton, of Missouri ; Brecse, of Illinois ; Buchanan, of Pennsylvania ; Colquet, of Georgia ; Dickinson, of New York ; Dix, of New York ; Fairfield, of Maine ; Hannegan, of Indiana ; Haywood, of North Car- olina ; Henderson, of Mississippi ; Heger, of South Carolhia ; Johnson, of Georgia ; Lewis, of North Carolina; McDuffie, of South Carolina; Memck, of Maryland; Miles, of Connecticut; Semple, of Illinois ; Sevier, of Arkansas; Sturgeon, of Pennsylvania; Tappau, of Ohio; Walker, of Mississippi; Woodbury, of New Hampshire. SUPEEME COrKT's DECISION, ETC. 105 tion between the two great interests of our country had been well dis- cussed and well decided ; and from that moment Mr. B. had set down his foot on the solid ground then established, and there he would let the question stand forever. Who could complain of the terms of that Compromise ? It was then settled that north of 36 degrees 30 minutes, slavery should be forever prohibited. The same line was fixed upon in the resolutions recently received from the House of Representatives, now before us. The bill from the House for the establishment of a territo- rial government in Oregon, excluded slavery altogether from that vast country. How vain were the fears entertained in some quarters of the country that the slaveholding States would ever be able to control the Union ! "While, on the other hand, the fears entertained in the South and West, as to the ultimate success of the Abolitionists, were not less unfounded and vain. South of the Compromise line of 36 degrees 30 minutes, the States within the limits of Texas applying to come into the Union, were left to decide for themselves whether they would permit slavery within their limits or not. And under this free permission, he believed with Mr. Clay (in his letter on the subject of annexation), that if Texas should be divided into five States, two only of them would be slaveholding, and three free States." Thus spoke Mr. Buclianan, and, in so speaking, was the a:ccepted mouthpiece, and fair reflector of the sentiments of the large party ^vith whom he acted. And here it is proper to explain the reason whj it became necessary to re-enact the Mis- souri Compromise line; and the explanation is found in the history of the times. Thus : six months after the establishment of the Missouri Compromise line, the treaty with Spain was ratified, by which a new boundary with that power was estab- lished, by which Texas was brought up to the river Arkansas in about north latitude 37 ; and followed that river, north-west, to its source, above latitude 39 — according to the treaty, as far as north latitude 42. Texas admitted slavery, and her laws and constitution spread the institution all over her territory ; and as the parallel of 36° 30'— about 450 miles of it— fell within her territory, the Missouri Compromise line was, to that extent, effaced. It was to restore it in that effaced part, being in fact much the greatest part of it, that the line was re-established in the compact for admitting Texas into the Union. This is a clear case of Congress legislating upon slavery in a Territory ; and the distinction taken that it was done by compact, and not law, is 106 EXAMINATION OF THE unfounded and absurd. The compact itself is only a law of Congress, agreed to by Texas ; and tlie law passed before Texas acted : and the Constitution is paramount over treaties and compacts as over laws. Neither statute, treaty, nor compact can alter the Constitution, nor do any thing contrary to it : and the only difierence between the Texas and Missouri Compro- mises is, tliat while both rest upon acts of Congress, one has been made the foundation of a proceeding with a foreign power. Quere : Can the Supreme Court invalidate this re-enacted line ? This brings down the sanctions of the Missouri Compromise to the year 1S45 — being twenty-five years after its first enact- ment — ample time it might be supposed for its constitutionality to be questioned, if there was ground for it ; and ample time for it to have been found out, if such was the fact, that its enact- ment worked an inequality of the States, and involved degrada- tion and injury to a j)art of them. I*To such things were then discovered, and we will now go forward four years further, and under another administration, and that a Southern one, and show that same measure still receiving the sanction of those who have since commenced its repudiation. This further sanc- tion was also on a responsible legislative measure — the estab- lishment of the Oregon territorial government, August, 1848. The bill had come up from the House without any thing in it on the subject of slavery : Mr. Hale moved to extend the anti- slavery ordinance of '87 to the Territory, and it was done. Mr. Douglass moved to extend the Missouri Compromise line to the Pacific Ocean, and tliat motion received the following vote : Yeas— Messrs. Atchison, of Mri. ; Badger, of N. C. ; Bell, of Tenn. ; Benton, of Mri. ; Berrian, of Geo. ; Borland, of Ark. ; Bright, of Ind. ; Butler, of S. C. ; Calhoun, of S. C. ; Cameron, of Penn. ; Davis, of Mppi. ; Dickinson, of N. Y. ; Downs, of Lou. ; Fitzgerald, of Mich. ; Foote, of Mppi. ; Hannegan, of Ind. ; Ilonston, of Tex. ; Hunter, of Vir. ; Johnson, of Md. ; Henry Johnson, of J^ou. ; Johnson, of Geo. ; King, of Ala. ; Lewis, of Ala. ; Mangum, of N. C. ; Mason, of Yir. ; Metcalf, of Ken. ; Pearce, of Md. ; Sebastian, of Ark. ; Spruancc, of Del. ; Sturgeon, of Penn. ; Turney, of Tenn. ; Underwood, of Ken. Tlie amendment itself, thus offered by Mr. Douglass, was not merely an extension of the line in a particular case, but a re- SUPREME COUEt's DECISION, ETC. 107 vival, and a general and perpetual enforcement of the Missouri Compromise line on all Territories. It was in these words : — " That the line of 36 degrees, 30 minutes of north latitude, known as the Missouri Compromise line, as defined by the eighth section of an Act entitled, ' An Act to authorize the people of the Missouri Territory to form a constitution and State government, and for the admission of such State into the Union on an eqiial footing with the original States, and to prohibit slavery in certain Territories, ap- proved March Qth, 1820,' he, and the same is hereby declared to extend to the Pacific Ocean; and the eighth section, together with the compromise therein effected, is hereby revived, and declared to be in full force and binding for the future organization of the Territories of the United States, in the same sense, and with the same understanding, with which it was originally adopted." It was on Thursday, August the 10th, 1818 (for in cases of sudden political conversions it is profitable to look to dates, even to a day) — it was on this first decade of the second month, of the second half, of the year 1818, that this vote passed in the American Senate ; and it must be received as the highest sanc- tion of the compromise on the part of those voting for it, which could be devised. It is not merely an extension of the compro- mise line : it is also its perpetuation, and application of it to all the United States Territories — to enter into their organization, and to be in full force, and binding upon them. Such a vote went beyond the admission of constitutionality : it went to the merits and expediency of the measure — approved it under every aspect. It even went beyond the words of the Missouri act — entered its spirit — seized its sense and intent, as nnderstood at the time of its adoption ; — and solemnly sanctioned and pre- served the whole. Certainly, with respect to those so voting, and they were men to vote responsibly, nothing more could be asked. Constitutionality, and expediency, were equally vouched for. The 33 affirmative votes were a majority of the Senate : the amendment was incorporated with the bill, and went to the House for its concurrence, where it received the vote of the Southern members, and some part of their friends in the free States— 82 in all ; * not enough to carry it : so it was disagreed * The members of the House voting in favor of concnrring with the Senate, i. e. Mr. Douglass's amendment, were : — Messrs. Adams, Atkinson, Barringer, Barrow, 108 EXAMINATION OF THE to, and returned to tlie Senate. It was in tlie niglit, and the last niglit of the session ; and Mr. Benton, fearing the loss of the Oregon bill in the disagreement between the two Houses, moved that the Senate recede from its amendment. Then came another vote on the Missouri Compromise clause ; and twenty -five Sen- ators — being the array that always stood most firmly for the Soutli * — voted against receding; that is to say, in favor of ex- tending, enforcing, preserving, and perpetuating tlie Missouri Compromise line, and making it applicable to all Territories. It was called the 'Missouri Compromise line, and, astronomically, the extension would have been the same as the original part, but politically far different and stronger ; for the Louisiana part went through territory, all slave, and made one side of the line free ; the California part would go through territory, all free, and make one part slave. This was an effect which many of the free State members of the House, usually voting with the South on slavery questions, could not stand : and hence the loss of the amendment there. This vote in the Senate was accompanied by declarations of their opinions by several Senators — among others, by Mr. John- son, of Maryland, who said : " He helieved in the existence of the power in Congress to pass a law to prohihit sla/vei'y, and if such a law loere presented to the Supreme Court for a decision on its constitutionality, it would he in favor of the law. As a judicial question, the decision would he against protection to the SouthP On a previous bill providing territorial governments for Oregon, California, and Kew Mexico, he had said that he should him- Bayly, Beale, Bedinger, Birdsall, Bocock, Botts, Bowdon, Bowlin, Boyd, Boydon, Brodhead, Charles Brown, Albert G. Brown, Buckner, Burt, Cabell, Chapman, Chase, Reverly L. Clarke, Clingman, Howell Cobb, Williamson K. W. Cobb, Cocke, Crozier, Daniel, Donnell, Garuett Duncan, Alexander Evans, Featherston, Flournoy, French, Fulton, Gayle, Goggin, Greene, Willard P. Hall, Haralson, Harmanson, Harris, Haskell, Hill, Hilliard, Isaac E. Holmes, George S. Houston, Charles J. Ingcrsoll, Iverson, Andrew Johnson, Robert W. Johnson, George W. Jones, John W. Jones, Kaufman, Thomas Butler King, Ligon, Lumpkin, McDowell, McKay, M'Lane, Meade, Morehead, Outlaw, Pendleton, Phelps, Pillsbury, Preston, Rhett, Roman, Shepperd, Stanley, Stephens, Thomas, Jacob Thompson, John B. Thompson, Robert A. Thompson, Tom[)kins, Toombs, Venable, Wallace, and Woodward — 82. * Their names :— Messrs. Atchison, Badger, Bell, Berrien, Borland, Butler, Cal- houn, Davis of Mississippi, Downs, Foote, Hunter, Johnson of Maryland, Johnson of Louisiana, Johnson of Georgia, Lewis, Mangum, Mason, Metcalfe, Pearce, Rusk, Sebastian, Turney, Underwood, Westcott, and Yulee— 25. SUPREME court's DECISION, ETC. 109 self have submitted an amendment adopting the line of tlie Mis- souri Compromise, liad lie not been anticipated in his motion by a Senator from Indiana (Mr. Bright). The passage of the Oregon bill gave occasion to President Polk to exj)ress his opinion of the Missouri and Texas com- promises — their happy effects in tranquillizing the Union, and the necessity of preserving them inviolate. He said : — " In December, 1819, application was made to Congress by the people of the Missouri Territory, for admission into the Union as a State. The discussion upon the subject in Congress involved the ques- tion of slavery, and was prosecuted with such violence as to produce excitements alarming to every patriot in the Union. But the good genius of conciliation which presided at the birth of our institutions finally prevailed, and the Missouri Compromise was adopted. This compromise had the effect of calming the troubled waves, and restoring peace and good will throughout the States of the ITnion. I do not doubt that a similar adjustment of the questions which now agitate the public mind would produce the same hapj^y results. If the legislation of Congress on the subject of the other Territories shall not be adopted in a spirit of conciliation and compromise, it is impossible that the coun- try can be satisfied, or that the most disastrous consequences shall fail to ensue. When Texas was admitted into our Union, the same spirit of compromise which guided our predecessors in the admission of Missouri, a quarter of a century before, prevailed without any serious opposition. The Joint Resolution for annexing Texas to the United States, approved March 1st, 1845, provides that, ' such States as may be formed out of that portion of the Territory lying south of 36 degrees 30 minutes north latitude, commonly called the Missouri Compromise line, shall be ad- mitted into the Union with, or without slavery, as the people of such State asking admission may decide. And to such State or States as shall be formed out of said Territory north of the Missouri Compromise line, slavery or involuntary servitude (except for crime) shall be pro- hibited. The Territory of Oregon lies far north of 36 degrees 30 min- utes, the Missouri and Texas Compromise lines. Its southern boundary is the parallel of 42, leaving the intermediate distance to be 330 geo- graphical miles. And it is because the provisions of this bill are not inconsistent with the terms of the Missouri Compromise, if extended from the Rio Grande to the Pacific Ocean, that I have not felt at liberty to withhold my sanction. Had it embraced Territories south of that compromise, the question presented for my consideration would have been of a far different character, and my action upon it would have cor- 110 EXAMINATION OF THE responded witli my convictions. Ought we now to disturb the Missouri and Texas compromises ? Ought we, at this late day, in attempting to annul what has been so long established, and acquiesced in, to excite sectional divisions and jealousies — to alienate the people from different portions of the Union from each other — and to endanger the existence of the Union itself ? " These were the earnest and patriotic appeals of Mr. Polk, in favor of the two compromises ; one of which restored peace to a distracted country, the other brought Texas into the Union. He prayed for the perpetuity of these healing measures, not only in liis message on the Oregon bill, but also in his last an- nual message — the last of his most formal communications to Congress : in that last message he repeated his sentiments, saying :— " Upon a great emergency, and under menacing dangers to the Union, the Missouri Compromise line with respect to slavery was adopted. The same line was extended further west on the acquisition of Texas. After an acquiescence of near thirty years in the principles of compromise recognized and established by these acts, and to avoid the danger to the Union which might follow, if it were now disregarded, I have heretofore expressed the opinion that that line of compromise should be extended on the parallel of 36° 30' from the western boundary of Texas, where it now terminates, to the Pacific Ocean." Such were the reiterated sentiments of President Polk, up to the end of his presidential service, which, unfortunately, was only precursor to the termination of his life. Far from seeing any thing in the Missouri Compromise violative of the Consti- tution, or insulting and injurious to the slave States, or as mak- ing an inequality in the States, he saw in it only beneficent and felicitous effects — pacification of the country, extinction of a rising conflagration, and preservation of the Union. He was a Southern man and a slaveholder, and certainly could not be blind to dangers to Southern States and slaveholders ; liis cabi- net, also, were men of the South, or Northern men deep in South- ern sympathies, principles, and feelings : James Buchanan, Secretary of State ; Kobert J. Walker, of the Treasury ; Wil- liam L. Marcy, of New York, War Department ; John Y. Mason, Navy ; Cave Johnson, Postmaster-General ; Isaac Toucey, At- torney-General. SUPREME court's DECISIO]^, ETC. Ill Tlie year 1850 presents the last instance to be given of Southern sanction of the Missouri Compromise line — a date suf- ficientl}^ recent to avoid the statute of limitations, if an_y date can be late enough to prevent the running of that statute against mutable politicians. Mr. Calhoun was then dead : Mr. Davis, of Mississippi, seemed to succeed to the head of his party ; and in the discussion of Mr. Clay's compromise scheme, reported from the Committee of Thirteen, demanded the extension of the Missouri line to the Pacific Ocean, and the recognition of slavey on the south side of that line ; and declared these terms to be tlie least that he would take. Thus : — " I here assert that never will I take less than the Missouri Com- promise line extended to the Pacific Ocean, with the specific recognition of the right to hold slaves in the Territory below that line ; and that, before such Territories are admitted into the Union as States, slaves may be taken there from any of the United States, at the option of their owners." Mr. Clay replied to the demand of Mr. Davis, and said : — " I am extremely sorry to hear the Senator from IMississippi say that he requires, first, the extension of the Missouri Compromise line to the Pacific, and, also that he is not satisfied with that, but requires, if I understood him correctly, a positive provision for the admission of slavery south of that line. And now, sir, coming from a slave State as I do, I owe it to myself, I owe it to' truth, I owe it to the subject, to say that no earthly power could induce me to vote for a specific measure for the introduction of slavery where it had not before existed, either south or north of that line. Coming as I do from a slave State, it is my solemn, deliberate, and well-matured determination, that no power — no earthly power — shall compel me to vote for the positive introduction of slavery either south or north of that line. Sir, while you reproacli, and justly too, oitr British ancestors for the introduction of this institution upon the continent of North America, I am, for one, unwilling that the posterity of the present inhabitants of California and of New Mexico, shg-ll reproach us for doing just what we reproach Great Britain for doing to us. If the citizens of these Territories choose to establish slavery, and if they come here with Constitutions establishing slavery, I am for admitting them with such provisions in their Constitutions ; but then it will be their own work, and not ours ; and their posterity will have to reproach them, and not us, for forming Constitutions allowing the in- stitution of slavery to exist among them. These are my views, sir, and 112 EXAlVnNATION OF THE I clioose to express them ; aud I care not how extensively, or universally they are known." Mr. Turiiey, of Tennessee, moved the amendment to cover the demand of Mr. Davis : it was to extend the Missouri Com- promise line to the Pacific, limiting the State of California to the north side of that line, and establishing slavery to the south of it. His amendment consisted of two sections, and constituted a new bill, and was in these words : — " When it shall be made to appear to the President of the United States, by satisfactory evidence, that the people inhabiting the Territory of California, (or so much of said Territory as is comprehended in the limits proposed by this bill as the boundaries of the State of California,) assembled in convention, have agreed to a line not further south than the parallel of 36 degrees 30 minutes north latitude, as the southern boundary of said State, and limited the representation of said State to one State until after the next census of the inhabitants of the United States, the said State of California may be admitted into the Union upon the proclamation of the President, upon an equal footing with the origi- nal States. " Sec. 2. And he it further enacted, That the line of 36 degrees 30 minutes north latitude, known as the Missouri Compromise line, as de- fined in the eighth section of an act entitled, ' an act to authorize the jpeople of the Missouri Territory to form a Constitution and State Gov- ernment, and for the admission of such State into the Union on an equal footing tvith the original States, to prohibit slavery in certain Terri- tories,'' approved March 6th, 1S20, be, and the same is declared to extend to the Pacific Ocean : and the said eighth section, together with the compromise therein eflPected, is hereby revived, and declared to be in full force and binding for the future organization of the Territories of the United States in the same manner and with the same understanding with which it was originally adopted.'" For this amendment twenty-four Senators voted ; to wit: — Ifessrs. Atchison, Badger, Barnewell, Bell, Berrien, Butler, Clemens, Davis, of Mississippi; Dawson, of Georgia; Downs, of Louisiana; Foote, Houston, Hunter, (R. M. T.), King, of Alabama ; Mangum, Mason, Morton, of Florida ; Pearce, of Maryland ; Pratt, of Maryland ; Eusk, of Texas ; Sebastian, of Arkansas ; Soule, of Louisiana ; Turney, of Tennessee ; and Yulei;, of Florida. It was Tuesday, the Gth day of August, jUino Domini 1850, SUPEEME court's DECISION, ETC. 113 tliat this vote was given ; so that up to that day, this array of Senators, reputed to represent Southern interests, feelings, and principles, saw nothing unconstitutional, unjust, or derogatory to other States in it ; and adopted it in spirit and understanding, and with the same intent of perpetual observance with which it was originally adopted. That understanding was, that Con- gress had power to legislate upon slavery in Territories, and to abolish it therein when it saw fit, and that such legislation worked no inequality in the States ; and, in the particular case of the Missouri Compromise act, the partition of the province of Louisiana between free and slave States was a continuation of the policy which divided the territory east of the Mississippi, between the same classes of States ; and as necessary then to save the Union as the ordinance of 1787 had been to save it. This is the "understanding" to which those Senators bound themselves who voted for Mr. Turney's amendment, on Tuesday, the 6th day of August, Anno Domini 1850. The amendment w^as not agreed to. Thirty-two Senators voted against it — not for unconstitutionality, but for being the reverse in its effects of the measure it professed to extend, the original line acting on territory all slave, and abolishing it on one side ; the extension acting upon territory all free, and establishing slavery where it never had been. The non-extension of this line was a great subject of complaint, and deluded many people into a belief of its injustice — deceived by a name which, being the same throughout, was exactly the reverse in its practical effect. The California State bill passed : the Compromise line was not ex- tended to the Pacific : ten Senators signed a protest against it, and presented it to the Senate for entiy on the journal, (which was refused,) as injurious to the slave States, '■^ fatal to the peace and equality of the States they represented, and leading, if per- sisted in, to the dissolution of that confederacy in which the slaveholding States have never sought more than an equality, and in which they will not he content to remain with less^ This protest was signed by — Messrs. Mason and Hunter, of Virginia ; Butler and Barnewell, of South Carolina ; Mr. Turney, of Ten- nessee ; Mr. Pierre Soule, of Louisiana ; Mr. Jeftersou Davis, of Mississippi ; Mr. Atchison, of Missouri ; and Messrs. Yulee, and Morton, of Florida. It was in this discussion on the Oregon territorial bill that 114 EXAIVIINATION OF THE Mr. Calhoun arrived at his ultimate doctrines on the slavery question. The extension of the ordinance of '87 to Oregon greatly excited him — proclaiming it the end of the Union.* He denounced that ordinance as proper to constitute the first chapter when the history of the dissolution of this Union should be written : he denounced the Missouri Compromise Act as fit to constitute the second chapter of that same history ; and he denounced tlwj extension of the old ordinance to Oregon as furnishing proper matter for the third chapter of that same history. He declined to say what would be the fourth chapter, but clearly intimated its character, f But while thus making the Missouri Compromise Act a cause for the dissolution of the Union, and a theme for the future American historian as such, yet it was not for unconsti- * " The oreat strife between the North and the South is ended. The North is de- termined to exclude the property of the slaveholder, and, of course, the slaveholder himself, from its territories. On this point there seems to be no division in the North. In the South, he regretted to say there was some division of sentiment. The efifect- of this determination of the North was to convert all the Southern population into slaves ; and he would never consent to entail that disgrace on his posterity. He denounced any Southern man who would not take the same course. Gentlemen were greatly mistaken if they supposed the presidential question in the South would over- ride this more important one. The separation of the North and the South is com- pleted. The South has now a most solemn obligation to perform— to herself— to the Constitution— to the Union. She is hound to come to a decision not to permit this to go any further, but to show that, dearly as she prizes the Union, there are questions which she regards as of greater importance than the Union. She is bomid ^o fulfil her obligations as she may best understand them. This is not a question of territorial governnTent, but a question involving the continuance of the Union."— 3/r. Calhoun, an Oregon. Mr. BeU, of Tennessee, replied to this annunciation and denunciation, saying: " He believed that the Senator from South Carolina (Mr. Calhoun), and those who concurred with him, had placed the South in a wrong position, when they assumed that by the decision of this question the die would be cast, and the issue now be made which involves the dissolution of the Union. He contended that the issue was prema- turely made when it was made on the Oregon question. If we are to quarrel ^v^th the North, let us be sure that in all respects oiu: ground of dispute be tenable for us." — Mr. BelVs Speech. f "Now let me say. Senators, if our Union and system of government is doomed to share the fate of so many great people who have gone before us, the historian, who, in some future day, may record the events leading to so calamitous a result, will devote his first chapter to the ordinance of 1787, as lauded as it and its authors have been, as the first in Uiat series which led to it. His next chapter will be devoted to the Missouri Compromise, and the next to the present agitation. Whether there wiU bo another beyond, I know not; it will depend on what we may do."— Saine speech. SUPKEME court's DECISION, ETC. 115 tutionality, but for its effects — for the insult, injustice, degrada- tion of preventing a slaveholder from carrying his slave property (?*. e. the law of the State which makes it property) into a com- mon estate, procured by the blood and money of all. For this reason he condemned it, but not to abrogation, or repeal, ex- pressly stopping short of these remedies, because of the effect which the " attempt " even would have upon the Union. In this sense, he. thus delivered himself: — " After an arduous struggle of more than a year on the question, whether Missouri should come into the Union, with or without restric- tions prohibiting slavery, a compromise line was adopted between the North and the South; but it was done under circumstances which made it nowise obligatory on the latter. It is true it was moved by one of its distinguished citizens, (Mr. Clay,) but it is equally so that it was carried by the almost united voice of the North against the almost united voice of the South ; and was thus imposed on the latter by supe- rior numbers in opposition to her strenuous efforts. The South has never given her sanction to it, or assented to the power it asserted. She was voted down, and has simply acquiesced in an arrangement which she has not had the power to reverse, and which she could not attempt to do without disturbing the peace and harmony of the Union — to which she has ever been adverse."* I quote this part of the speech for two purposes : jlrst^ to show that the dogma of the unconstitutionality of the Missouri Compromise Act, had not at that time, (Aug. 1848,) been invent- * "It was on this occasion that Mr. Dix, of New York, brought out the proof that Mr. Calhoun, as a member of Mr. Monroe's cabinet, had given a written opinion in favor of the constitutionality of the Missouri Compromise, and also in favor of its expediency — a fact which he himself had stated in the Senate ten years before, (in 1848,) and how he blamed Mr. Randolph for opposing it, and that he had since changed his opinion because it encouraged the abolitionists. As for the rest of his account of the compromise, it was all of a piece with his own forgetfuhiess of the part he had acted in it — all moonshine and figment of the brain. It was not Mr. Clay who moved the compromise, but it came down from the Senate, where it had been moved by Mr. Thomas, of Illinois, a friend to the South, and voted for by every Southern senator, and some of their friends from the North. It had been first suggested in the House the year before it was passed by Mr. Louis M'Lane, of a slaveholding State, and as a friend to the South, and as he said, with the approbation of Southern members. It was moved in the House by Mr. Storrs, of New York, a friend of the South, but rejected by Northern votes. It was not imposed upon the South by Northern votes, but sought by the South and obtained by its vote — the whole vote in the Senate and a majority in the House. The South did give her sanction to it, in her almost undivided support of its re-enactment at the admission of Texas. 116 EXAMINATION OF THE ed ; and, secondUj^ that its abrogation was not to be attempted, be- cause '■''the attempt to Teverse it would disturl) the 'peace and har- mony of the JJnionP Mr. Calhoun was a man of head and sys- tem, and though working at a dissohition of the Union since the year 1830, his system was to throw upon the North the blame of the separation — to make the segregation of the slave States an act of necessity — of self-defence — forced upon them by aggressions, encroachments, and crusades against their slave property. To attack the Missouri Compromise was to give up tliat defensive attitude — to make the South the aggressor — and consequently to make it responsible for disturbing the peace and harinony of the Union, and also for furnishing matter for the contents of that fourth chaj)ter in the history of its dissolution which he shad- owed forth, but forbore to name. It was in one of the bills brought forward at this period, (July, 1848,) to give governments to the newly acquired Terri- tories, that Mr. Calhoun gave glimpses of two doctrines which, classing with the vagaries of an over-excited imagination, at- tracted no attention at the time, but have since acquired an ominous pre-eminence ; namely, 1. The self-extension of the Constitution to Territories, carrying slavery along with it. 2. The remission of the slavery question in Territories to the Supreme Court of the United States,* by appeals from the Territorial Courts, authorized to try questions of freedom or slavery between the slave and his master. The first of these doctrines was ex- hibited in the declaration quoted in the introductory note to this examination, that upon the instant of the ratification of the treaty with Mexico, the sovereignty of the United States enter- ed upon the acquired territory, carrying with it the Constitu- * " Writs of error and appeals from the final decisions of said Supreme Court shall be allowed, and may be taken to the Supreme Coiu-t of the United States, in the same manner and under the same regulations as from the circuit courts of the United States, except only that iu all cases involving title to slaves the said writs of error or appeals shall be allowed and decided by the said Supreme Court, without regard to the value of the matter, property, or title in controversy ; and except, also, that a \vi-it of error or appeal shall be allowed to the Supreme Court of the United States from the decision of the Supreme Court created by this act, or any judges thereof, or of the district courts created by this act, or of any judge thereof, upon any writ of habeas corpus involving the question of personal freedom ; and each of the said district courts shall have and exercise the same jurisdiction in all cases arising under the Constitution and laws of the United States, as is vested in the circuit and district courts of the United States ; and the first six days of every term of said courts, or so much thereof as SUPKEME COIJKT's DECISION, ETC. 117 tion, ■with its overriding control over all the laws and institu- tions of Mexico inconsistent with it. Tlie second was formally proposed in a bill to give governments to California, ISTew Mexico, and Oregon, all lumped together in one conglomerate enactment, with a special provision to authorize the initiation of freedom proceedings in the two fornler by the slave against his master, either in a trial at law, or upon a writ of habeas corpus ^ with appeal to the Supreme Court. This bill passed tlie Senate, after a curious debate, of more import now than then, but was unce- remoniously repulsed from the House without even the respect of a first reading — being tabled for ever the instant its advent was announced. It was a strange bill, and voted for by those who did vote for it, upon most contradictory reasons — some because they deemed it the best kind of a TVilmot proviso — some to gratify Mr. Calhoun, whose solicitude for it was excessive — some as for an absurdity which could not pass, and if it did, could have no operation, as no man would carry a negro free or bond, to California or l!^ew Mexico, just to try the question of freedom with him, with appeal to the Supreme Court — a trial in which the owner would be loser, whether he won or lost tlie suit. For the slave being entitled to his liberty while the suit was going on, would be free during that period, say seven years ; and having no property, and subject to no process for costs or damages, the owner would merely get him back at the end of the suit — if he could catch him after seven years of free range from the shores of the Pacific to "Washington City — minus the loss of his labor for the time, his court fees, and lawyers' fees, his personal expenses attending courts in California, and in the District of Columbia, and in his journey ings backwards and forwards all the while, and damage to his other neglected business — besides the degradation of being sued by his own negro, and dragged by him across the continent, and outshone by him in the splendor of his living and in liberality to his counsel (for the anti-slavery societies would supply him with bags of gold, while his poor master would be selling his stinted crops to get the means of carrying on the suit). AVith such shall be necessary, shall he appropriated to the trial of causes arising under the said Constitution and laws ; and writs of error and appeals, in all such cases, shall be made to the Supreme Court of said Territory, the same as in other cases." — Section 2i of the Conglomerate bill. 118 EXAillNATION OF THE consequences before him, no man would cany his slave six thousand miles by water, and over free soil at Panama or Nica- ragua, or three thousand miles over land and Indian countrj^ between the old States and the Pacific Ocean, just to begin that suit with him which the Senate's bill proposed. Yet the bill was the work of a Select Committee, eight in number, (being three more than the usual Senate committees,) including Mr. Calhoun, and a majority of his friends on the slavery question.* Mr. Badger, of !North Carolina, saw in it a surrender of the rights of the South, and as effectual a bar to the introduction of slavery as the "Wilmot proviso could have been. He said, " He regarded this bill as a complete surrender of the rights of the South. He believed negro slavery would be as eflectually ex- cluded by this bill as if the "Wilmot proviso, or any other bill, had passed.f " It was in the discussion on this bill that those remarks upon the probable decision of the Supreme Court were made which were quoted in the Introductory Note, and which foreshadowed the fate of any judges who should have to pronounce upon the question of African slavery, as a political question under our Constitution. The remarks and speculations ran right off to the geographical locus in quo of each judge ! and when that could take place in the American Senate, and in anticipation of any decision, what might not be expected after an actual deci- sion, and a strongly developed geographical line, in the line of division between different oj^inions ? It was also in the same bill — the conglomerate for giving governments to three Territories together — that was placed that section, unobserved at the time, as mentioned in the Introduc- tion to this Examination, which jjroposed to extend the Consti- * They were : — Messrs. Jobn M. Clayton, of Delaware ; Bright, of Indiana ; Cal- houn, of South Carolina ,- Clarke, of Ilhode Island ; Atchison, of Missouri ; Phelps, of Vermont ; Dickenson, of New York ; Underwood, of Kentucky. Of this committee, two of its members, Messrs. Clarke and Underwood, voted against the bill. Of course, the authors of the bill believed that a slave of the African race could maintain a suit in the United States Supremo Court. + Mr. Benton voted for it, (taking care to condemn it in his speech,) " to estop Mr_ Calhoun," with a measure of his own — a Wilmot proviso of his own concoction. Cer- tainly, no Wilmot ever devised so efficacious a measure for keeping slavery out of New Mexico and California, and Mr. Benton was perfectly willing that Mr. Calhoun should have that credit. SUPREME COUEt's DECISION, ETC. 119 tution to Territories. It was in section 35 of the bill — tliat is to say, in the penultimate section of an enormous bill of 36 sec- tions, where no one would look for a new principle, that this unprecedented novelty found its berth. Nothing but details and matters of form go to the end of the bill — its whole power and character being in a few of the front sections. Parliamentarily, nothing but formal details to carry out a principle can follow the principle, always put foremost. To these front sections the opponents of bills look ; and fighting the battle upon these main sections, the details are left with the friends of the measure. They are considered matters of form, to carry out what the leading sections establish ; and, in that point of view, are left to the committee who prepares the bill. This is the case in all bills, even those of considerable length, where the whole could be read in a reasonable time. How much more so in an enormous bill of six and thirty sections ! and that upon as old a subject as territorial government, all the details of which had been a matter of course since the ordinance of 1787. Of such a bill it may well be conceived that none but those who di-ew it ever saw the concluding sections ; and such I am able to say, upon the highest presumptive evidence, was the case with tliis conglomerate bill of 36 sections. Tliat presumption is founded upon two facts : first^ that no speaker for, or against the bill, ever alluded to it in a single word spoken ! an absence of remark on such a new and startling provision which can only be accounted for upon the hypothesis of a total absence of all knowledge of its existence. Secondly, that I myself knew nothing of it ! and so actually voted for a bill containing a novel provision, never heard of before — and of absurd impossibility. The section was in these words : Section 35. And he it further enacted^ That the Constitution and laws of the United States are hereby extended over^ and declared to he in force in said Territories of California and New Mexico, so far as the same, or any provision thereof, may he appllcahley As the bill did not pass the House, this section, though it passed the Senate, became in fact as if it never had been ; but it answers a purpose now, in showing that the framers of the bill then deemed an act of Congress necessary to extend the Constitution over Territories, and give it force and effect therein 120 EXAMINATION OF THE — the same as acts of Congress are so extended : witli this in- congruity, that the laws so extended being rules of action, are capable of operation ; while the Constitution, being a collection of principles, can operate nowhere until these principles are vitalized by law : and that can only be done by Congress- Congress alone being the body which can legislate under the Constitution. So that, if the Constitution could be extended to a Territory, not a provision in it could take effect until Congress had passed an act to put it in operation. Nine months afterwards, that is to say, at the end of the ensuing session, (March 3d, 1849,) that attempt was made through Mr. "Walker, of Wisconsin, to extend the Constitution to the three Territories in a lump, which has been noticed here- tofore, and which being repulsed, the higher ground is taken that the Constitution goes of itself to Territories, carrying slavery along with it, in defiance of Congress and the people of the Territory. And this is what the Supreme Court has decided — the judicial power deciding a political question ! and in a way which the political power had twice repulsed.* * One good effect the decision of the Court has had, and that is — the extermina- tion of Squatter Sovereignty. It tears up that doctrine root and hranch ; and, it would seem, to the gratification of its votaries. For they rally to the Court's decision, and make adherence to it the test of democracy, with the same zeal with which they supported that doctrine during its brief day. Wliat tests of democracy we have seen in three brief years ! Adherence to the Missouri Compromise the test when Mr. Douglass brought in his Nebraska bUl, and until IMr. Dixon's proposed amendment started new game. Then destruction to the Compromise, and devotion to Squatter Sovereignty was the test. And this test con- tinued for about two years, when it was exploded by the Supreme Court's decision. Then that decision becomes the test, and the democrat is politically excommunicated who does not change again — give up Squatter Sovereignty, as he did the Compromise ; and take the Constitiition, per se, as sole slavery legislators in a temtory, and only a one-sided legislation ! to carry slavery into all territories, and abolish it in none ! and keeping it, and protecting it, there in defiance of Congress, and the people, and in de- fiance of all laws previously existing there. And this to be done by virtue of a Consti- tution in which its framers would not permit the word " slave," or any equivalent phrase, to be used ! SUPREME COUEt's DECISION, ETC. 121 CONCLUSIOK This completes tlie historical view which I proposed to take of the Supreme Court's decision on the two points deemed po- litical — 1. The invalidation of the Missouri Compromise Act ; 2. The self-extension of the Constitution to Territories, carrying African slavery along with it. And the result is, that the de- cisions conflict with the uniform action of all the departments of the Federal Government from its foundation to the present time, and cannot be received as rules to govern Congress and the people witliout reversing that action, and admitting the po- litical supremacy of the Court, and accepting an altered Con- stitution from its hands, and taking a new and portentous point of departure in the working of the Government. These deci- sions being political, are dependent upon moral considerations for their effect, Tliey cannot be enforced. No mandamus can be directed to Congress and the people : no process of contempt can issue against them. Influence — not authority — is the only power the Court can wield. This being the case, and the two conflicting powers, (that of two generations on one hand, and the Supreme Court on the other,) being reduced to moral consider- ations to establish the best title to supremacy, it becomes indis- pensable to run a comparison between their respective claims to superiority, and strike the balance on the side that shows the best title. This I propose to do, and to make the points of com- parison co-extensive with the influencing considerations in the whole case : 1. Numbers on each side. 2. Qualifications for forming a correct judgment. 3. Adaptation of times to calm consideration, .4. Freedom from connection with party contests. 5. Jurisdiction. 6. Unanimity, 7. Weight of reasons: — and of these, each in its order. 122 EXAMINATION OF THE 1. The numbers. These are as units to myriads. Two gen- erations stand on one side : six judges sit on the other, and these six morally reduced to live, by the non-concurrence in one of them in the reasons of the others. So that, compared by numbers, the result is that one side counts with the stars of heaven : the other, with the fingers or toes on the hand or foot. — 2. Qualifications for forming a correct judgment. Here the comparison is entirely in favor of the same side. They were the men who formed the Constitution, and put it into operation, while the Court are only new comers in that field, and can hardly be supposed to know more about the Constitution than those who made it, and the two generations who agreed with them. "Without disparagement to the members of the Court, it must be admitted that the other side is their equal in point of ability, and these equals outnumbering them as myriads do units. And, without disparaging the legal profession, it must be remembered that the lawyer and the statesman are held to be incompatible characters — the cast of mind which qualifies a man for the great lawyer, disqualifying him for the safe states- man ;* and in this case our ancestors were statesmeu, the judges lawyers, and the questions political. — 3. Adaptation of times to calm consideration. Here the advantage is with the two gene- rations. They acted in times of calm : the judges during a storm of the passions. They acted upon an old light, shining steadily in a calm atmosphere : the judges on a new light, sud- denly breaking out, and flashing fitfully in the bursts of a rao-ing tempest. And such new lights are not considered safe guides in law, religion, or politics.j — 4. Freedom from connec- * See the speeches of 'Wmiam Pitt, (the father,)— of Burke, Fox, Sheridan, and tlie American John Randolph ; and the histories of almost all great lawyers who have turned their hands to politics. Also remember Webster, already quoted, going out of his way to point out lawyers and judges as peculiarly subject to inaccurate ideas on the question of the Constitution and the Tenitories. f And of this opinion was the present Supreme Court some two years ago, (1855,) as quoted by Mr. Justice M'Lean in his dissenting opinion— Mr. Justice Gricr being the organ of the Court. "We entertain the highest respect for that learned Court, (the Supreme Court of Michigan,) and in any question affecting the construction of their own laws, where we entertain 'any doubt, would be glad to be relieved from doubt and responsibility by re- posin-r on their decision. There arc, it is true, many dicta to be found in our decisions, averrLcr that the courts of the United States are bound to follow the decisions of the SUPREME COFKt's DECISION, ETC. 123 tion with party contests. With our ancestors these questions knew no party, political or geographical. The Kepublican and the Federalist of the first generation, the "Whig and the Democrat of the second, — the man of the North, South, East and "West, — all concurred, (until the new light sprung up,) in one concur- rent opinion, manifested by continual acts, that Congress Iiad power to legislate upon slavery in Territories, and that the Con- stitution did not extend to Territories : while the new opinion which conflicts with that, was born of party, and has be- come a new test of party, (of democracy,) outlawing from the democratic ranks every man that does not go it — that does not keep up with the changes, from the abrogation of the Missouri Compromise (which saved the Union) to squatter sovereignty, ^whicli killed the compromise ;) and thence to the decisions of the Supreme Court (wliich kills both). So that the new doc- trine is both the child and champion of party, and itself a touchstone of party. — 5. Jurisdiction. As a political question, the Court had no right to decide it, even if it came fairly before it. Congress had not only a right to act, but was bound to do so ; and always had the subject fairly before it in seventy years' necessity to act upon it. "Without right to try it, even if the case before them made it necessary, yet here the Court had no jurisdiction, and dismissed it for want of jurisdiction ; and State courts on the construction of their own laws. But although this may be cor- rect, yet a rather strong expression of a general rule, it cannot be received as the annunciation of a maxim of universal application. Accordingly, our reports furnish many cases of exceptions to it. In all cases where there is a settled construction of the laws of a State, by its highest judicature established by admitted precedent, it is the practice of the courts of the United States to receive and adopt it, without criti- cism or further inquiry. When the decisions of the State court are not consistent, we do not feel bound to follow the last, if it is contrary to our own convictions ; and much more is this the case where, after a long course of consistent decisions, some new light springs up, or an excited public opinion has elicited new doctrines subver- sive of former safe precedent." Upon which Mr. Justice M'Lean remarks : " These words, it appears to me, have a stronger application to the case before us than they had to the cause in which they were spoken as the opinion of this court; and I regret that they do not seem to be as fresh in the recollection of some of my brethren as in my own. For twenty-eight years, the decisions of the Supreme Court of Missouri were consistent on all the points made in this case. But this consistent course was suddenly terminated, whether by some new light suddenly springmg up, or an excited public opinion, or both, it is not necessary to say." — Dissenting Opinion. 124 EXAMINATION OF THE thus, left without a leg to stand on, it reached far over to get hold of the political questions by virtue of a rule which had no application, even in an actual existing case : so that, on the point of jurisdiction, our ancestors had it, and were under a necessity to act upon it : the Court had it not, and assumed it upon a supposition which had nothing to rest on, and as an adden- dum to a case which had no existence, and by virtue of a rule which had no application. — 6. Unanimity in the decisions. Here again the flagrant contrast appears. Our ancestors were the myriad, and acted through seventy years without division of sentiment. All departments of the Government — legislative, executive, and judicial — and both classes of governments. State and Federal — men changing all the while — acted with one voice.* The Court was but nine — a single term — the same men *"The judicial mind of this country, State and Federal, has agreed on no subject, within its legitimate action, with equal unanimity, as on the power of Congress to es- tablish territorial governments. No court, State or Federal, no judge or statesman, is known to have had any doubts on this question for nearly sixty years after the power was exercised. Such governments have been established from the sources of the Ohio to the Gulf of Mexico, extending to the Lakes on the north and the Pacific Ocean on the west, and from the lines of Georgia to Texas. Great interests have grown up under the territorial laws over a country more than five times greater in ex- tent than the original thirteen States ; and these interests, corporate or otherwise, have been cherished and consolidated by a benign policy, without any one supposing the law-making power had united with the Judiciarj^, under the universal sanction of the whole countr)', to usurp a jurisdiction which did not belong to them. Such a dis- covery at this late date is more extraordinary than any thing which has occurred hi the judicial history of this, or any other country. What do the lessons of wisdom and experience teach, under such circumstances, if the new hght, which has so suddenly and unexpectedly burst upon us, be true ? Acquiescence ; acquiescence under a set- tled construction of the Constitution for sixty years, even if erroneous." — Mr. Jus- tice McLean. To the same effect Mr. Justice Catron, in his concurring opinion, who, although agreeing with the Court in its judgment, did so for a different reason ; resting his own on a supposed violation of the treaty with France, and the equality of States under the Constitution. Thus : " More than sixty years have passed away since Congress has exercised power to govern the Territories, by its legislation directly, or by territorial charters, subject to repeal at all times, and it is now too late to call that power into question, if this Court could disregard its own decisions ; which it cannot do, as I think. It was held in the case of Cross v. Harrison, (IG How., 193-'4,) that the sovereignty of California was in the United States, in virtue of the Constitution, by which power had been given to Congress to dispose of and make all needful rules and regulations respecting the ter- ritory or other property belonging to the United States, with the power to admit new States mto tlic Union. That decision followed preceding ones, there cited. The ques- SUPREME court's DECISION, ETC. 125 all the while ; and great diversity of opinion. Two of the Justices dissent entirely from the opinion of the Court, and give well reasoned arguments against that opinion, and in favor of a different one. Another of the Justices (Mr. Justice Nelson) abstained from expressing any opinion on the point in question. That reduced tlie concurring Justices to six ; and of these, one, (Mr. Justice Catron,) while concurriug in the judgment, did so for different reasons, wholly incompatible with those of the Court, and attacked their reasons as wholly unfounded. And, as in this case we only go by moral weight, his vote, though legally counted against Scott, weighs nothing for the Court's opinion ; but the contrary, as impeaching its reasons : which re- duces the concurrent judges to five — a majority of one. And then two of the remaining concurrents give elaborate separate opinions, agreeing in the result, but for reasons not always the same ; and, to the extent of that difference, invalidating the reasons of tlie Court, and lessening the weight of its decision. So that, upon the head of unanimity, the difference again in tion was tlien presented, how it was possible for the judicial mind to conceive that the United States Government, created solely by the Constitution, could, by a lawful treaty, acquire territory over which the acquiring power had no jurisdiction to hold and govern it, by force of the instrument under whose authority the country was ac- quired ; and the foregoing was the conclusion of this Court on the proposition. What was there announced, was most deliberately done, and with a purpose. The only question here is, as I think, how far the power of Congi-ess is limited." — Air. Justice Catron, concurring. " My opinion is, that the third article of the treaty of 1803, ceding Louisiana to the United States, stands protected by the Constitution, and cannot be repealed by Congress. And, secondly, that the act of 1820, known as the Missouri Compromise, violates the most leading features of the Constitution— a feature on which the Union depends, and which secures to the respective States and their citizens an entire EQUALITY of lights, privileges, and immunities." — Same. " It would certainly be a subject of regret that the conclusions of the Court have not been assented to by all of its members, if I did not know from its history, and my own experience, how rarely it has happened that the judges have been unani- mous upon Constitutional questions of moment, and if our decision in this case had not been made by as large a majority of them as has been usually had on constitu- tional questions of importance. Two of the judges, Messrs. Justices M'Lean and Curtis, dissent from the opinion of the Court. A third, Mr. Justice Nelson, gives a separate opinion upon a single point in the case, with which I concur, assuming that the Cir- cuit Court had jurisdiction ; but he abstains altogether from expressing any opinion upon the eighth section of the act of 1820, known commonly as the Missouri Compromise law ; and sis of us declare that it was unconstitutional." — Mr. Justice Wayne. 126 EXAJSIINATION OF THE favor of our ancestors is as a mountain to a mustard seed. And then, again, in these differences of opinion the geographical line which divides the free from the slave States was palpably developed, while no such line was ever seen in the Congress decisions. To conclude this head, it is to be remembered that two Justices of the Court who had voted for the . Missouri Com- promise, (Messrs. Baldwin, of Pennsylvania, and Philip P. Bar- bour, of Yirginia,) and became judges afterwards, had died be- fore the decision — who, if they had lived, and retained tlieir former opinions, would have made the majority the other way.* — 7. "Weight of reasons on each side. This is a difficult point of comparison, as the Court points to no clause in the Constitu- tion on which it relies to overturn the practice of seventy years. Its great labor seems to have been, by a careful verbal exami- nation of the Constitution, to prove that it did not authorize Congress to legislate upon slavery — an unnecessary labor, as the whole territorial legislation of Congress, from the 7th day of August, 1789, has been independent of the Constitution, and incompatible with it, and for the endless reason that the Consti- tution was not made for Territories, nor extends to them, nor gives them a single right under it. Naming no clause which gives the right of carrying slaves into Territories against an act of Congress, they derive it from general political considerations founded in the equality of States, the common right of all to the enjoyment of the common territory, and the denial of that * The Boston Law Reporter for June, 1857, contains an article ascribed to John Lowell and Horace Gray, jr., Esquires, two well-known legal gentlemen of Boston, in which the discrepancies among the members of the Court, on another point in the Dred Scott case, show the judgment of Courts to be too uncertam to be admitted as a political expounder of the Constitution, Thus : "As to the question, " Can a negro bo a citizen of the United States ?" It has been commonly supposed that the Court decided tliis question in the negative. This is a mistake. From the form in which it was presented, it was very doubtful whether it was before the Court for a decision. Four of the nine judges thought that it was ; these were the Chief Justice, and Justices Wayne and Daniel, who answer the question m the negative, and Justice Curtis, who answered it in the affirmative. Of the judges who gave no opinion on the point, one (Judge M'Lean) declares that if he answered the question at aU it would be in the affirmative ; Judge Catron, when Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, gave an opinion directly involving an affirmative answer to the question ; the three other judges give no clue to their opmions. On this question, then, the Court stands thus : Three in the affirmative, three m the nega- tive, and three silent." SUPREME court's DECISION, ETC. 127 right in the prohibition of sLaverj. In this general way the Court gets its authority, the powers and rights for which it con- tends seeming to ooze out of the body of the Constitution in a sort of pohtical insensible perspiration, which being collected and condensed, form little streams leading to the conclusions they arrive at — running in different channels, but falling into the same gulf.* Such invisible, impalpable exudations cannot be weighed as reasons, and besides, had been all addressed in vain to the political power — to Congress itself— to get it to do what the Court has done. On the other hand, all the reasons for the old opinions are palpable and visible, have been seen and handled for seventy years, and always the same thing : Sover- eignty, and Proprietorship, and a right to make rules and regu- lations respecting the territory of the United States. Between the weight of reasons, impalpable and invisible on one side, and those which have been seen and felt, and by all beholders for two generations, on the other, there is no rule of comparison * " It appears, however, from wliat has taken place at the bar, that notwithstand- mo- the language of the Constitution, and the long line of legislative and executive pre- cedents under it, three different and opposite views are taken of the power of Congress respecting slavery in the Territories. " One is, that though Congress can make a regulation prohibiting slavery in a Territory, they cannot make a regulation allowing it ; another is, that it can neither be estabhshed nor prohibited by Congress, but that the people of the Territory, when organized by Congress, can establish or prohibit slavery ; while the third is, that the Constitution itself secm-es to every citizen who holds slaves, under the laws of any State, the indefeasible right to carry them into any Territory, and there hold them as property. " No particular clause of the Constitution has been referred to at the bar in sup- port of either of these views. The first seems to be rested upon general considera- tions concerning the social and moral evils of slavery, its relation to republican Governments, its inconsistency with the Declaration of Independence, and with natural right. " The second is drawn from considerations equally general, concerning the right of self-government, and the nature of the pohtical institutions which have been estab- lished by the people of the United States. " While the third is said to rest upon the equal right of all citizens to go with their property upon the public domain ; and the inequality of a regulation which would admit the property of some and exclude the property of other citizens ; and, inas- much as slaves are chiefly held by citizens of those particular States where slavery is estabhshed, it is insisted that a regulation excluding slavery from a Territory operates, practically, to make an unjust discrimination betw-een citizens of different States, in respect to their use and enjoyment of the territory of the United States." — Mr. Justice Curtis. 128 EXAIVIINATION OF THE wliicli can reach tlie case ; and the task of comparing them must be given np. So that the decisions of the Court tried by all the tests of comparison — ^numbers on each side, qualifications for right de- cision, tranquillity of times, freedom from party; jurisdiction, unanimity, precedents, antiquity, and weight of reason — sink out of view in the ]3resence of the old, established, invariable, and venerable practice of our ancestors. One further remark will conclude this conclusion. The Court dwells upon the supposed unconstitutionality of any regulation which would prevent a master from taking his slaves with him to a Territory. "Why, the master himself may be prevented from going, or turned out after he gets tliere. From the day of becoming a landholder, the old Continental Congress first, and the Federal Congress since, have exercised the right of every other landholder to prevent trespasses, intrusions, and settlements upon their territory, expelling with military force, and punishing with fine and damages, tlie violator of its rules. This began under the Confederation, and has continued ever since.* All the old settlers on the frontiers can remember the dragooning the settlers on the United States territory, driving them ofi", and destroying their houses and growing crops. All can remember the old familiar operation of cutting up a Terri- tory, running a line through it, giving one half to the Indians, and driving the white people from it, and their slaves also.f * Resolved, That tlie Secretary at War, to whom was referred the letter from Major Wyllis, of the 16th instant, direct the commanding officer of the troops of the United States on the Ohio, to take immediate and efficient measures for dispossessmg a body of men who have, in a lawless and unauthorized manner, taken possession of port St. Vincent's (Vincennes), in defiance of the proclamation and authority of the United States, and that he employ the whole, or such part of the force under his com- mand, as he shall judge necessary to accomplish the object. — Journal of the old Con- gress, 1787. t Tlio last instance of this kind, and a strong one it was, was in the year 1828, when the organized Territory of Arkansas was amputated ; a slip 40 miles wide and 300 long, with its counties and settlements, was cut off and transferred to the Cherokee Indians, and the inhabitants, with their herds, and flocks, and slaves, were driven from their homes. The boundaries of the Territory had been fixed by Congress in 1824 ; the Indian title had been extinguished; it was open to settlcmcut, laid off into counties, and Courts held in them by judges appointed by the United States. Yet by a treaty with the Cherokees, it was agi-eed to give up these 12,000 square miles to the Chero- kees, and " to remove all white persons, and also all others, from the west of said line, SUPEKME court's DECISION, ETC. 129 Sucli is the power which Congress exercises over its territory, and witli which the Constitution has notliing to do. To sum up, in a few words, the resuUs of this Examination, and to present the conclusions under a single view, and it is shown that the Constitution was not made for Territories, and does not include them — that it cannot he extended to them by law, and if it could, would be barren and fruitless without law to put it into operation — that no law could be made under it to give any help to the slaveholder, either in recovering his pro- perty, if the slave ran away, or in bringing back for justice the fugitive felon that should steal it ; or in getting protection from the Federal Government against revolt, or in that acknowledg- ment of property in the slave which results from his federal taxation. In no one of these cases, nor in any other one which can be imagined, can any law be made imder the Constitution to help the slave-owner, for every provision in that instrument which relates to slavery is confined to States ; and the owner must be thrown upon the ordinance of 1Y87, and the power of Congress, independent of the Constitution, for every species of protection which he may need about that property. I have performed an unpleasant task, but unavoidable. I have been on the kindest personal terms with the judges, and in my long senatorial service, and as part of the appointing power, have cordially given my voice for the elevation of each of them to the honorable stations they hold — for every one ex- cept Mr. Justice Curtis, appointed since the termination of my service. I am a friend to the Supreme Court as an institution — as a high and essential part of our system — and would not will- ingly derogate from its respect, or impair its utility. But the whole sj'stem, of which it is a part, and the whole people, of whom its members are a few, are overruling considerations ; and the evil of the late decision being actually upon us, going and keep them away." And this treaty, against an urgent opposition, was ratified by Southern votes, and carried into eflfect by Southern votes in the House of Representatives, to the almost ruin of the State of Arkansas, reducing her to a state of the middle or small class, when, from her frontier position, national policy required her to be strong and powerful, with which view her boundaries were fixed in 1824. The people were driven ofiF, and Congress afterwards made them indemnity in other land, but that came from the bounty of Congress, and was no contract with the people who were driven off, as any proprietor might drive people from his land. 9 130 EXAMINATION OF THE SUPREME COUEt's DECISION, ETC. into parties,* entering into elections, giving the rule for the ap- pointment of all future federal judges, establishing a new party test, bringing the federal judiciary into the vortex of federal politics, and developing still more strongly the geographical line which divides ns ; seeing all these evils now upon us, and others to come, I have found it impossible to remain silent, or to have said less. I am among the last of those who, acting with the generations that are passed, still adhere to their teachings. I labor to preserve what they established, lamenting that the task had not fallen into abler hands. A few years earlier, and the preservation of the Missouri Compromise would have found its adequate defender in one of its greatest architects, and the in- tegrity of the Constitution would have found its champion in its great expounder ; but Clay and Webster are gone ; and, before them, went Pinkney and Lowndes, gloriously identified with the work which recent hands have just torn down. And of those who survive, and who stood by them in their great efforts, and still stand where they stood, I am one of the few — no longer in power, but still in armor when the works of our fathers are in danger. I write for no party, but for all men who venerate the works of our ancestors, and who wish to see our Government kept on the foundations on which they placed it. * So entirely has it gone into parties, that it is often a question (along the borders of the free and slave line) of profit, or loss, to adopt or denounce it. In one case, on the north side of the line, which I noted, the convention found itself in a state of im- possibility from the inability to determine on which side the loss or gain would be. One delegate proposed its adoption, because it would give them strength to the South ; another objected that they would lose more in the North than they would gain in the South. And opinions being about equally balanced, the upshot was, that the decision was neither adopted nor condemned ! APPENDIX. I. PROPOSED EXTENSION OF THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES TO THE TEERITOPJES, "WITH A VIEW TO M^AKP. IT CAERY 8LAVEKT INTO CALI- FOENIA, UTAH, AND NEW MEXICO. (From the Thirty Tears' View: Vol. II., Chap. 182.) The treaty of peace with Mexico had been ratified in the session of 184T-'4S5 and all the ceded Territory became subject to our Government, and needing the immediate establishment of terri- torial governments : but such were the distractions of the slavery question, that no such governments could be formed, nor any law of the United States extended to these newly acquired and or- phan dominions. Congress sat for six months after the treaty had been ratified, making vain efforts to provide governments for the new Territories, and adjourning without accomplishing the work. Another session had commenced, and was coming to a close with the same fruitless result. Bills had been intro- duced, but they only gave rise to heated discussion. In the last days of the session, the civil and diplomatic appropriation bill, commonly called the general appropriation bill — the one which provides annually for the support of the Government, and with- out the passage of which the Government would stop, came up from the House to the Senate. It had received its considera- tion in the Senate, and was ready to be returned to the House, when Mr. Walker, of Wisconsin, moved to attach to it, under the name of amendment, a section providing a temporary govern- ment for the ceded Territories, and extending an enumerated list of acts of Congress to them. It was an unparliamentary and disorderly proposition, the proposed amendment being in- congruous to the matter of the appropriation bill, and in plain violation of the obvious principle which forbade extraneous matter, and especially that which was vehemently contested, 132 APPENDIX. from going into a bill upon the passage of whicli the existence of the Government depended. The proposition met no favor ; it would have died out if the mover had not yielded to a south- ern solicitation to insert the extension of the Constitution into his amendment, so as to extend that fundamental law to those for whom it was never made, and where it was inapplicable, and impracticable. Tlie novelty and strangeness of the propo- sition called up Mr. Webster, who said : — " It is of importance that we should seek to have clear ideas and correct notions of the question which this amendment of the member from Wisconsin has presented to us ; and especially that we should seek to get some conception of what is meant by the proposition, in a law, to ' extend the Constitution of the United States to the Territories.' Why, sir, the thing is utterly impossible. All the legislation in the world, in this general form, could not accomplish it. There is no cause for the operation of the legislative power in such a manner as that. The Con- stitution — what is it ? We extend the Constitution of the United States by law to Territory ! What is the Constitution of the United States ? Is not its very first principle, that all within its influence and compre- hension shall be represented in the legislature which it establishes, with not only a right of debate and a right to vote in both Houses of Con- gress, but a right to partake in the choice of the President and Vice President ? And can we by law extend these rights, or any of them, to a Territory of the United States ? Every body will see that it is alto- gether impracticable. It comes to this, then, that the Constitution is to be extended as far as practicable ; but how far that is, is to be decided by the President of the United States, and therefore he is to have abso- lute and despotic power. He is the judge of what is suitable, and what is unsuitable ; and what he thinks suitable is suitable, and what he thinks unsuitable is unsuitable. He is ' omnis in hoc ; ' and what is this but to say, in general terms, that the President of the United States shall govern this Territory as he sees fit till Congress makes further provision. Now, if the gentleman will be kind enough to tell me what principle of the Constitution he supposes suitable, what discrimination he can draw between suitable and unsuitable which he proposes to fol- low, I shall be instructed. Let me say, that in this general sense there is no such thing as extending the Constitution. The Constitution is extended over the United States, and over nothing else. It cannot be extended over any thing except over the old States and the new States that shall come in hereafter, when they do come in. There is a want of accuracy of ideas in this respect that is quite remarkable among APPENDIX. 133 eminent gentlemen, and especially professional and judicial gentlemen. It seems to be taken for granted that the right of trial by jury, the habeas corpus.^ and every principle designed to protect personal liberty, is extended by force of the Constitution itself over every new Territory. That proposition cannot be maintained at all. How do you arrive at it by any reasoning or deduction ? It can be only arrived at by the loosest of all possible constructions. It is said that this must be so, else the right of the habeas corpus would be lost. Undoubtedly these rights must be conferred by law, before they can be enjoyed in a Ter- ritory." It was not Mr. Walker, of AVisconsin, the mover of the propo- sition, that replied to Mr. "Webster : it was the prompter of the measure that did it, and in a way to show immediately that this extension of the Constitution to Territories was nothins: but a new scheme for the extension of slavery. Denying the power of Congress to legislate upon slavery in Teriitories — finding slavery actually excluded from the ceded Territories, and desir- ous to get it there — Mr. Calhoun, the real author of Mr. Walk- er's amendment, took the new conception of carrying the Con- stitution into them ; which arriving there, and recognizing slavery, and being the supreme law of the land, it would over- ride the anti-slavery laws of the Territory, and plant the insti- tution of slavery under its ^gis, and above the reach of any territorial law, or law of Congress to abolish it. He, therefore, came to the defence of his own proposition, and thus replied to Mr. Webster :— " I rise, not to detain the Senate to any considerable extent, but to make a few remarks upon the proposition first advanced by the Senator from New Jersey, fully endorsed by the Senator from New Hampshire, and partly endorsed by the Senator from Massachusetts, that the Con- stitution of the United States does not extend to the Territories. That is the point. I am very happy, sir, to hear this proposition thus asserted, for it will have the effect of narrowing very greatly the controversy be- tween the North and the South as it regards the slavery question in con- nection with the Territories. It is an implied admission on the part of those gentlemen, that, if the Constitution does extend to the Territories, the South will be protected in the enjoyment of its property — that it will be under the shield of the Constitution. You can put no other in- terpretation upon the proposition which the gentlemen have made, than that the Constitution does not extend to the Territories. Then the 134 APPENDIX. simple question is, does the Constitution extend to the Territories, or does it not extend to them ? Why, the Constitution interprets itself. It pronounces itself to be the supreme law of the land." Wlien Mr. "Webster heard this syllogistic assertion, tliat the Constitution being the supreme law of the land, and the Terri- tories being a part of the land, ergo the Constitution being ex- tended to them would be their supreme law : when he heard this, he called out from his seat—" What land f " Mr. Calhoun replied, saying : — *' The land ; the Territories of the United States are a part of the land. It is the supreme law, not within the limits of the States of this Union merely, but wherever our flag waves — wherever our authority goes, the Constitution in part goes, not all its provisions certainly, but all its suitable provisions. Why, can we have any authority beyond the Constitution ? I put the question solemnly to gentlemen ; if the Con- stitution does not go there, how are we to have any authority or juris- diction whatever ? Is not Congress the creature of the Constitution ; does it not hold its existence upon the tenure of the continuance of the Constitution ; and would it not be annihilated upon the destruction of that instrument, and the consequent dissolution of this confederacy ? And shall we, the creature of the Constitution, pretend that we have any authority beyond the reach of the Constitution ? Sir, we were told, a few days since, that the courts of the United States had made a decision that the Constitution did not extend to the Territories without an act of Congress. I confess that I was incredulous, and am still incredulous that any tribunal, pretending to have a knowledge of our system of gov- ernment, as the courts of the United States ought to have, could have pronounced such a monstrous judgment. I am inclined to think that it is an error which has been unjustly attributed to them ; but if they have made such a decision as that, I for one say, that it ought not and never can be respected. The Territories belong to us ; they are ours ; that is to say, they are the property of the thirty States of the Union ; and we, as the representatives of those thirty States, have the right to exercise all that authority and jurisdiction which ownership carries with it." Mr. "Webster replied, with showing that the Constitution was made for States, not Territories— that no part of it went to a Territory unless specifically extended to it by act of Congress— that tlic Territories from first to last were governed as Congress APPENDIX. 135 chose to govern them, independently of the Constitution, and often contrary to it, as in denying them representatives in Con- gress, a vote for President and Vice President, the protection of the Supreme Court : — that Congress was constantly doing things in the Territories without constitutional objection (as making mere local roads and bridges), which could not be at- tempted in a State. He argued : — " The Constitution, as the gentleman contends, extends over the Territories. How does it get there ? I am surprised to hear a gentle- man so distinguished as a strict constructionist, affirming that the Con- stitution of the United States extends to the Territories, without showing us any clause in the Constitution in any way leading to that result ; and to hear the gentleman maintaining that position without showing us any way in which such a result could be inferred, increases my surprise. «' One idea further upon this branch of the subject. The Constitu- tion of the United States extending over the Territories, and no other law existing there ! Why, I beg to know how any government could proceed, without any other authority existing there than such as is created by the Constitution of the United States ? Does the Constitu- tion of the United States settle titles to land ? Does it regulate the rights of property ? Does it fix the relations of parent and child, guar- dian and ward ? The Constitution of the United States establishes what the gentleman calls a confederation for certain great purposes, leaving all the great mass of laws which is to govern society to derive their exist- ence from State enactments. That is the just view of the state of things und^r the Constitution. And a State or Territory that has no law but such as it derives from the Constitution of the United States, must be entirely without any State or territorial government. The honorable Senator from South Carolina, conversant with the subject as he must be, from his long experience in different branches of the Government, must know that the Congress of the United States have established principles in regard to the Territories that are utterly repugnant to the Constitu- tion. The Constitution of the United States has provided for them an independent judiciary ; for the judge of every court of the United States holds his office upon the tenure of good behavior. Will the gentleman say that in any court established in the Territories, the judge holds his office in that way ? He holds it for a term of years, and is removable at Executive discretion. How did we govern Louisiana before it was a State ? Did the writ of habeas corpus exist in Louisiana during its territorial existence ? Or the right to trial by jury ? Who ever heard of trial by jury there before the law creating the territorial government 136 APPENDIX. gave the right to trial by jury ? No one. And I do not believe that there is any new light now to be thrown upon the history of the pro- ceedings of this Grovernment in relation to that matter. When new ter- ritory has been acquired it has always been subject to the laws of Con- gress — to such laws as Congress thought proper to pass for its immediate government ; for its government during its territorial existence, during the preparatory state in which it was to remain until it was ready to come into the Union as one of the family of States." All this was sound constitutional law ; or, rather, was vera- cious history, showing that Congress governed as it pleased in the Territories, independently of the Constitution, and often con- trary to it ; and consequently, that the Constitution did not extend to it. Mr. Webster then showed the puerility of the idea that the Constitution went over the Territories because they were " lancl,^'' and exposed the fallacy of the supposition that the Constitution, even if extended to a Territory, could operate there of itself, and without a law of Congress made under it. This fallacy was exposed by showing that Mr. Calhoun, in quoting the Constitution as the supreme law of the land, had omitted the essential words which were part of the same clause, and which couples with that supremacy the laws of Congress made in pursuance of the Constitution. Thus : — " The honorable Senator from South Carolina argues that the Con- stitution declares itself to be the law of the land, and that, therefore, it must extend over the Territories. ' The land,' I take it, means the land over which the Constitution is established, or, in other words, it means the States united under the Constitution. But does not the gentleman see at once that the argument would prove a great deal too much ? The Constitution no more says that the Constitution itself shall be the supreme law of the land, than it says that the laws of Congress shall be the supreme law of the land. It declares that the Constitution and the law of Congress passed under it shall be the supreme law of the land." The question took a regular slavery turn, Mr. Calhoun avow- ing his intent to be to carry slavery into the Territories under the wing of the Constitution, and openly treated as enemies to the South all that opposed it. Having taken the turn of a slavery question, it gave rise to all the dissension of which that subject had become the parent since the year 1835. By a close vote, and before the object had been understood by all the Sena- APPENDIX. 137 tors, the amendment was agreed to in the Senate, but imme- diately disagreed to in the House, and a contest brought on between the two Houses by which the great appropriation bill, on which the existence of the Government depended, was not passed until after the constitutional expiration of the Congress at midnight of the third of March, and was signed by Mr. Polk (after he had ceased to be President) on the 4th of March — the law and his approval being antedated of the 3d, to prevent its invalidity from appearing on the face of the act. Great was the heat w^hich manifested itself, and imminent the danger that Congress would break up without passing the general appro- priation bill ; and that the Government would stop until a new Congress could be assembled — many of the members of which remained still to be elected. Many members refused to vote after midnight — which it then was. Mr. Cass said : — • " As I am among those who believe that the term of this session has expired, and that it is incompetent for us now to do business, I cannot vote upon any motion. I have sat here as a mere looker on. I merely desire to explain why I took no part in the proceedings." Mr. Yulee, of Florida, moving an adjournment, said : — " I should be very sorry, indeed, to make any proposition which may in any degree run counter to the general sentiment of the Senate ; but I feel bound, laboring under the strong conviction that I do, to arrest at every step, and by every means, any recorded judgment of the Senate at a time when we are not legally engaged in the discharge of our sena- torial duties. I agree entirely in the view taken by the Senator from Michigan." Mr. Turney, of Tennessee, said : — " I am one of those who believe that we have no right to sit here. The time has expired ; one-third of this body are not present at all, and the others have no right to sit here as a part of Congress. But a mo- tion has been made for adjournment, and the presiding officer has refused to entertain that motion. This being the case, I must regard all that is done as done in violation of the Constitution, or rather not in pur- suance of it. It appears to me that we sit here more in the character of a town meeting than as the Senate of the United States, and that what we do is no more binding on the American people than if we did 138 APPENDIX. it at a town meeting. I shall express no opinion by saying yea or nay on the question before the Senate. At the same time, I protest against it, as being no part of the constitutional proceedings of the Senate of the United States." Mr. Benton, and many others, declined to vote. The Honse of Eepresentatives had ceased to act, and sent to the Senate the customary message of adjournment. The President, who, ac- cording to the usage, had remained in the Capitol till midnight to sign bills, had gone home. It was four o'clock in the morn- ing of the fourth, and the greatest confusion and disorder pre- vailed. Finally Mr. Webster succeeded in getting a vote, by which the Senate receded from the amendment it had adopted, extending the Constitution to the Territories ; and that reces- sion leaving the appropriation bill free from the encumbrance of the slavery question, it was immediately passed. This attempt, pushed to the verge of breaking up the Gov- ernment in pursuit of a newly invented slavery dogma, was founded in errors too gross for misappi-ehension. In the first place, as fully shown by Mr. Webster, the Constitution was not made for Territories, but for States. Li the second place, it cannot operate any where, not even in the States for which it was made, without acts of Congress to enforce it. This is true of the Constitution in every particular. Every part of it is in- operative until put into action by a statute of Congress. The Constitution allows the President a salary ; he cannot touch a dollar of it without an act of Congress. It allows the recovery of fuo-itive slaves : you cannot recover one without an act of Congress. And so of every clause it contains. The proposed extension of the Constitution to Territories, with a view to its transportation of slavery along with it, was then futile and nu- gatory, until an act of Congress should be passed to vitalize slavery under it. So that, if the extension had been declared by law, it would have answered no purpose except to widen tlie field of the slavery agitation— to establish a new point of con- tention — to give a new phase to the embittered contest — and to alienate more and more from each other the two halves of the Union. But the extension was not declared. Congress did not extend the Constitution to the Territories. The proposal was rejected in both Houses ; and immediately the crowning dogma APPENDIX. 139 is invented, that tlie Constitution goes of itself to the Territories without an act of Congress, and executes itself, so far as slavery is concerned, not only without legislative aid, but in defiance of Congress and the people of the Territory. This is the last slavery creed of the Calhoun school, and the one on which his disciples now stand — and not with any barren foot. They ap- ply the doctrine to existing Territories, and make acquisitions from Mexico for new applications. It is impossible to consider such conduct as any thing else than as one of the devices for ^^ forcing the issue with the North^^ which Mr. Calhoun in his confidential letter to the member of the Alabama Legislature avows to have been his policy since 1835, and which he avers he would then have effected, if the members from the slave States had stood by him. II. THE SLAVERY AGITATION: DISUNION: KEY TO MR. CALHOUN'S POLICY: FORCING THE ISSUE: MODE OF FORCING IT. (From the Thirty Years' View : Vol. II., Chap. 16S.) In the course of this year (1847), and some months after the submission of his resolutions in the Senate denying the right of Congress to abolish slavery in a Territory, Mr. Calhoun wrote a letter to a member of the Alabama Legislature, which furnishes the key to unlock his whole system of policy in relation to the slavery agitation, and its designs, from his first taking up the business in Congress, in the year 1835, down to the date of the letter ; and thereafter. The letter was in reply to one asking his opinion " as to the steps which should he taken " to guard the rights of the South ; and was written in a feeling of personal confidence to a person in a condition to take steps ; and which he has since published to counteract the belief that Mr. Calhoun was seeking the dissolution of the Union. The letter disavows such a design, and at the same time proves it — ^i-ecommends forcing the issue between the North and the South, and lays down the manner in which it should be done. It opens with this paragraph : — " I am much gratified with the tone and views of your letter, and 140 APPENDIX. concur entirely in the opinion you express, that instead of shunning, we ought to court the issue with the North on the slavery question. I would even go one step further, and add that it is our duty — due to ourselves, to the Union, and our political institutions, to force the issue on the North. We are now stronger relatively than we shall be here- after, politically and morally. Unless we bring on the issue, delay to us will be dangerous indeed. It is the true policy of those enemies who seek our destruction. Its effects are, and have been, and will be to weaken us politically and morally, and to strengthen them. Such has been my opinion from the first. Had the South, or even my own State backed me, I would have forced the issue on the North in 1835, when the spirit of abolitionism first developed itself to any considerable extent. It is a true maxim, to meet danger on the frontier, in politics as well as war. Thus thinking, I am of the impression, that if the South act as it ought, the Wilmot Proviso, instead of proving to be the means of suc- cessfully assailing us and our peculiar institution, may be made the occasion of successfully asserting our equality and rights, by enabling us to force the issue on the North. Something of the kind was indispen- sable to rouse and unite the South. On the contrary, if we should not meet it as we ought, I fear, greatly fear, our doom will be fixed. It would prove that we either have not the sense or spirit to defend our- selves and our institutions." The phrase " forcing the issue " is here used too often, and for a purpose too obvious, to need remark. The reference to his movement in 1S35 confirms all tliat was said of that move- ment at the time by Senators from both sections of the Union, and which has been related in chapter 131, vol. i., of the Thirty Years View. At that time Mr. Calhoun characterized his movement as defensive — as done in a spirit of self-defence : it was then characterized by Senators as aggressive and offensive : and it is now declared in this letter to have been so. He was then openly told that he was playing into the hands of the abolitionists, and giving them a champion to contend with, and the elevated theatre of the American Senate for the dissemina- tion of their doctrines, and the production of agitation and sec- tional division. All that is now admitted, with a lamentation that the South, and not even his own State, would stand by him then in forcing the issue. So that chance was lost. Another was now presented. The Wilmot Proviso, so much deprecated in public, is privately saluted as a fortunate event, giving an- other chance for forcing the issue. The letter proceeds :— APPENDIX. 141 " But in making up the issue, we must look far beyond the proviso. It is but one of many acts of aggression, and, in my opinion, by no means the most dangerous or degrading, though more striking and palpable." In looking beyond the proviso Mr. Calhoun took up the re- cent act of the General Assembly of Pennsylvania, repealing the slave sojournment law within her limits, and obstructing the recovery of fugitive slaves, saying : — " I reo-ard the recent act of Pennsylvania, and laws of that descrip- tion, passed by other States, intended to prevent or embarrass the reclamation of fugitive slaves, or to liberate our domestics when travel- ling with them in non-slaveholding States, as unconstitutional. Insulting as it is, it is even more dangerous. I go further, and hold that if we have a right to hold our slaves, we have a right to hold them in peace and quiet, and that the toleration, in the non-slaveholding States, of the establishment of societies and presses, and the delivery of lectures, with the express intention of calling in question our right to our slaves, and of seducing and abducting them from the service of their masters, and finally overthrowing the institution itself, is not only a violation of in- ternational laws, but also of the Federal compact. I hold, also, that we cannot acquiesce in such wrongs, without the certain destruction of the relation of master and slave, and without the ruin of the South." The acts of Pennsylvania here referred to are justly com- plained of, but with the omission to tell that these injurious acts were the fruit of his own agitation policy, and in his own line of forcing issues ; and that the repeal of the sojournment law, which had subsisted since the year 1780, and the obstruction of the fugitive slave act, which had been enforced since 1793, only took place twelve years after he had commenced slavery agita- tion in the South, and were legitimate consequences of that agitation, and of the design to force the issue with the North. Tlie next sentence of the letter reverts to the Wilmot Proviso, and is of momentous consequence as showing that Mr. Calhoun, with all his public professions in favor of compi-omise and con- ciliation, was secretly opposed to any compromise or adjust- ment, and actually considered the defeat of the proviso as a mis- fortune to the South. Thus : — " With this impression, I would regard any compromise or adjust- 142 APPENDIX. ment of the proviso, or even its defeat, without meeting the danger in its whole length and breadth, as very unfortunate for us. It would lull us to sleep again, without removing the danger, or materially diminish- ing it." So that, while this proviso was, publicly, the Pandora's box which filled the Union with evil, and while it was to Mr. Cal- houn and his friends the theme of endless deprecation, it was secretly cherished as a means of keeping up discord, and forcing the issue between tlie North and the South. Mr. Calhoun then proceeds to the serious question of disunion, and of the manner in which the issue could be forced. " This brings up the question, how can it be so met, tviihout resort- ing to the dissolution of the Union ? I say without its dissolution, for in my opinion, a high and sacred regard for the Constitution, as well as the dictates of wisdom, make it our duty in this case, as well as all others, not to resort to, or even to look to that extreme remedy, until all others have failed, and then only in defence of our liberty and safety. There is, in my opinion, but one way in which it can be met ; and that is the one indicated in my letter to Mr. , and to which you allude in yours to me, viz., by retaliation. Why I think so, I shall now proceed to explain." Then follows an argument to justify retaliation, by represent- ing the Constitution as containing provisions, he calls them stipulations, some in favor of the slaveholding, and some in favor of the non-slaveholding States, and the breach of any of which, on one side, authorizes a retaliation on the other ; and then declaring that Pennsylvania and other States have violated the provision in favor of the slave States in obstructing the re- covery of fugitive slaves, he proceeds to explain his remedy, saying :— " There is and can be but one remedy short of disunion, and that is to retaliate on our part, by refusing to fulfil the stipulations in their favor, or such as we may select, as the most efficient. Among these, the right of their ships and commerce to enter and depart from our ports is the most effectual, and can be enforced. That the refusal on their part w'ould justify us to refuse to fulfil on our part those in their favor, is too clear to admit of argument. That it would be effectual in compelling them to fulfil those in our favor can hardly be doubted, when the im- APPENDIX. 143 mense profit they make by trade and navigation out of us is regarded ; and also the advantages we would derive from the direct trade it would establish between the rest of the world and our ports." Eetaliation by closing the ports of the State against the commerce of the offending State : and this called a constitu- tional remedy, and a remedy short of disunion. It is, on the contrary, a flagrant breach of the Constitution, and disunion it- self, and that at the very point which caused the Union to be formed. Every one acquainted with the history of the formation of the Federal Constitution, knows that it grew out of the single question of commerce — the necessity of its regulation between the States to prevent them from harassing each other, and with foreign nations to prevent State rivalries for foreign trade. To stop the trade with any State is, therefore, to break the Union with that State ; and to give any advantage to a foreign nation over a State, would be to break the Constitution again in the fundamental article of its formation ; and this is what the retali- atory remedy of commercial non-intercourse arrives at — a double breach of the Constitution — one to the prejudice of sister States, the other in favor of foreign nations. For immediately upon this retaliation upon a State, and as a consequence of it, a great foreign trade is to grow up with all the world. The letter pro- ceeds with further instructions upon the manner of executing tJie retaliation : — " My impression is, that it should be restricted to sea-goivg vessels, which would leave open the trade of the valley of the Mississippi to New Orleans by river, and to the other Southern cities by railroad ; and tend thereby to detach the North-western from the North-eastern States." This discloses a further feature in the plan of forcing the issue. The North-eastern States were to be excluded from Southern maritime commerce : the Korth-western States were to be admitted to it by railroad, and also allowed to reach Kew Orleans by the Mississippi Kiver. And this discrimination in favor of the North-western States was for the purpose of detach- ing them from the North-east. Detach is the word. And that word signifies to separate, disengage, disunite, part from : so that the scheme of disunion contemplated the inclusion of the North-western States in the Southern division. The State of 144 APPENDIX. Missouri was one of the principal of these States, and great efibrts were made to gain her over, and to beat down Senator Benton wlio was an obstacle to that design. The letter concludes by pointing out the only difficulty in the execution of this plan, and showing how to surmount it. " There is but one practical diflSculty in the way ; and that is, to give it force, it will require the co-operation of all the slaveholding States lying on the Atlantic Gulf Without that, it would be ineffective. To get that is the great point, and for that purpose a convention of the Southern States is indispensable. Let that be called, and let it adopt measures to bring about the co-operation, and I would underwrite for the rest. The non-slaveholding States would be compelled to observe the stipulations of the Constitution in our favor, or abandon their trade with us, or to take measures to coerce us, which would throw on them the responsibility of dissolving the Union. Which they would choose, I do not think doubtful. Their unbounded avarice would, in the end, control them. Let a convention be called — let it recommend to the slaveholding States to take the course advised, giving, say one year's notice, before the acts of the several States should go into effect, and the issue would fairly be made up, and our safety and triumph certain." This is the only difficulty — the want of a co-operation of all the Southern Atlantic States : and to surmount that, the indis- pensability of a convention of the Southern States is fully de- clared. This was going back to the starting point — to the year 1835 — when Mr. Calhoun first took up the slavery agitation in the Senate, and when a convention of the slaveh6lding States was as much demanded then as now, and that twelve years be- fore the Wilmot Proviso— twelve years before the Pennsylvania unfriendly legislation — twelve years before the insult and out- rage to the South, in not permitting them to carry their local laws with them to the Territories, for the protection of their slave property. A call of a Southern convention was as much demanded then as now ; and such conventions often actually attained ; but without accomplishing the object of the prime mover. No step could be got to be taken in those conventions towards dividing and sectionalizing the States, and after a vain reliance upon them for seventeen yeai-s, a new method has been fallen upon : and this confidential letter from Mr. Calhoun to a member of the Alabama Legislature of 1847, has come to light, APPENDIX. 145 to furnish the key which unlocks his whole system of slavery agitation which he commenced in the year 1835. That system was to force issues upon the North under the pretext of self- defence, and to sectionalize the South, preparatory to disunion, through the instrumentality of sectional conventions, composed wholly of delegates from the slaveholding States. Failing in that scheme of accomplishing the purpose, a new one was fallen upon, which will disclose itself in its proper place. III. KEVIEW OF PRESIDENT PIEECE'S ANNUAL MESSAGE TO CONGEESS, OF DE- CEMBER, 1S56, SO FAR AS THE SAME RELATES TO THE ABROGATION OF THE MISSOURI COMPROMISE ACT: WITH A VIEW TO EXPOSE AND CORRECT ITS ERRORS OF FACT AND OF LAW. I ENTER upon this task with the declaration that I believe this part of the message to have been written by Mr. Pierce's law officer, (Mr. Caleb Gushing,) dominated by his Secretary at War, (Mr. Jefferson Davis,) and that Mr. Pierce is not obnoxious to the strictures I am forced to make, and is only culpable in covering with his name the fallacious statements of others. And with this salvo in behalf of an innocent man, I proceed to the review of the message, first presenting a specimen of the epithets which are lavished upon the act, (and by consequence on its authors,) the abrogation of which is the subject of so much laudation and joy. "A mere nullity," "unconstitu- tional," " no obligatory force," " an imperfection on the statute book," " objectionable enactment," " a monument of error," " a beacon of warning." " a dead letter in law," " injurious," " conferring no right," " taking away no right," " affecting no sense of permission or prohibition," " a nullity permitted to re- main for some years on the statute book," " no moral force," •' its repeal a matter of form, being dead of itself," " the statute book rightfully i-elieved by its repeal of an unconstitutional, injurious, objectionable enactment :" such are the terms (a sample of the quality and a fraction of the quantity) which the message piles up on this healing and pacifying measure of 1820, as if it was intended by a mere accumulation of odious epithets to " crush out " an act which was balm to the wounds of the 10 146 APPENDIX. countiy at the time of its enactment, and peace and safety to a distracted Union, for nearly thirty years afterwards. And to whom do these epithets apply ? To the twenty-four senators, headed by Pinkney, of Maryland, the jurist and orator, and to the one hundred and thirty-four representatives, headed by Clay and Lowndes, and to the administration of Mr. Monroe, to whom the country was indebted for that beneficent act. To these men these epithets apply. These are the men stigmatized in the message as dolts and ninnies, foolish, if not wicked, and barely escaping the imputation of criminality in consideration of their ignorance and folly. But the stigmatizing does not stop there : it reaches back to Washington, to his cabinet, and the entire Congress of 1789 : for Washington and that Congress, in adopting the ordinance of '87, adopted that slavery clause, which, being copied into the Missouri act, has given rise to all this vituperation of this measure, and to all this exultation over its repeal. Nor does the obloquy stop there, but reaches the President, the cabinet, and the Congress of 18^5, all of whom, re-enacting the Missouri Compromise, become subject to the obloquy which the message lavishes upon that measure. All these, and the whole body of the American people, who ac- cepted the act, come in for their share of these fine epithets : but there is certainly one who ought to have been excepted, one, who being twice the supporter of the vituperated act, (in Mr. Monroe's cabinet and Tyler's cabinet,) ought to have es- caped denunciation, and who, although he had forgotten that support in 1848, could not make Mr. Monroe's letter forget it ; nor Mr. Adams's diary forget it ; nor the index to the papei-s filed in the department of State forget it ; nor make his own speech of 1838 forget it. This gentleman ought to have been excepted, both as the supporter of the Missouri Compromise in 1820, and of its re-enactment in 1845; and as the favorite states- man of the party which the message represents. And now to the review. It is a law of Providence, from which there are but few de viations, and of which the jibrogation of the Missouri Compro- mise has given occasion for the largest modern illustration, that those who commit a great wrong are condemned, during the remainder of their lives, to the painful task of inventing excuses and justifications for the delinquent act. So in this case ; since APPENDIX. 147 the month of May, 1854, when this deed was done, its authors have been in a permanent state of excuse and justification ; and being many, and in possession of the Government, and with the control of many newspapers, and the right of composing official papers and public documents, they have plied the public mind with incessant repetition of these justificatory pieces, each an improvement upon its predecessor in all the qualities which the defence of so bad a cause requires ; undaunted mendacity, moral callosity, mental obliquity. Old Bailey attorney perver- sions of law and evidence. The last annual message of Mr. Pierce was the last opportunity for this defensive pleading, and being the last, it was carefully seized on, and vigorously im- proved to the best advantage. The message was big with it. It was a large plea, and a bold one, and conspicuously presented. In quantity it filled eleven octavo pages, (leaving but seventeen for all the appropriate subjects which belong to that official paper ;) in boldness, it inaugurated a new era in our Presidential messages — the era of historical falsification in those high papers, heretofore considered the sacred receptacle of veracious history ; in conspicuity, being thrust into the front of the message, in- stead of being relegated to its fag-end, where such low matter should go, if, indeed, allowed to enter a message at all ; which it never was before. Veracious history must rebuke this first attempt to make the Presidential annual message a vehicle of historical falsification ; and the work is easily done, all the facts necessary to the correction of the fallacious statements being of record in the debates and journals of Congress, and other au- thentic public evidence. These misstatements, after a prelimi- nary one to usher in the others, arrange themselves under three heads : fir8t^ in what relates to the formation of the Missouri Compromise; secondly^ in what relates to its abrogation; thirdly^ in what relates to the present state of parties, and their respective shares in producing the present agitation. This preliminary misstatement is the assumption,that the issue of the last Presidential election was a national ratification of the abrogation of the Missouri Compromise. Ko assumption could be more unfounded. That election proved just the reverse of what has been assumed. It was intended that it should be so, (in the nomination and election of some one of the prominent destroyers of the compromise,) and the Convention at Cincinnati was 148 APPENDIX. gorged with office-holding retainers of the administration for that purpose : but no such destroyer of the compromise could be nominated; and no one of them could have been elected if nominated. It was the trump argument in favor of Mr. Bu- chanan, that he was not one of these destroyers ; and, although known to " acquiesce " in the deed after it was done, yet his long and most conspicuous championshi]) of that measure, and his geographical position, led to the belief that he would not improve upon its abrogation, nor complete its iniquities by lending himself to the ulterior designs of its authors. That belief, and the discredit brought upon his opponent by the support of some violent men, (and it is the violent always who impress character upon a party,) who preached against the ex- istence of slavery in the States — against the admission of any more slave States — and against the compromises of the Consti- tution and of the ordinance of '87, for the surrender of fugitive slaves : it was this belief, and this discredit, which turned the scales in the election; and it required all that both these cardinal causes could do to elect Mr. Buchanan. This is public, unde- niable truth ; and it requires a courageous and veteran disregard of the laws of veracity to assume the contrary, as the message is made to do. And now for the enactment of the Missouri Compromise, which the message very properly styles " a political enact- ment," as it certainly is ; and then gives this account of it : — " The enactment, ■which established the restrictive geographical line, was acquiesced in rather than approved by the States of the Union. It stood on the Statute Book, however, for a number of years ; and the people of the respective States acquiesced in the re-enactment of the principle as applied to the State of Texas ; and it was proposed to ac- quiesce in its further application to the territory acquired by the United States from Mexico. But this proposition was successfully resisted by the representatives from the Nortliern States, who, regardless of the statute line, insisted upon applying restriction to the new territory generally, whether lying north or south of it, thereby repealing it as a legislative compromise, and, on the part of the North, persistently violating the compact, if compact there was. Thereupon this enactment ceased to have binding virtue in any sense, whether as respects the North or the South ; and so in effect it was treated on the occasion of the admission of the State of California, and the organization of the Territories of New Mexico, Utah, and AVashiugton." APPENDIX. 149 This paragraph is characteristic, ana exemplifies all the modes of couveyiug untruths which long ages have invented : direct assertion, fallacious inference, equivocal phrase, and false inuendo. The word " restrictive " has no application to the Compromise Act. It applied exclusively to the State of Mis- souri, and the attempt to restrain her, as a State, from the ad- mission of slaves. The compromise was a territorial measure, applying exclusively to territory, and establishing^ not a re- strictive, but a partition line ; a line of territorial division, upon the principle of the division of the South-west and ]N"orth-west Territory by the old Congress in 1787, and sanctioned by the new Congress in 1789. The principle of each was the same, and the dividing line so nearly the same, that the Louisiana line may stand for a continuation of the north-west line, making about equal division, until the South gave away nearly the whole of hers. A compromise is agreed to ; a restriction is im- posed ; and it is falsifying the character of the act of 1820 to call it restrictive. The power of each House of Congress agreed to it ; the negative in each was inconsiderable. Then comes a litter of unfounded suggestions, implied in the word " acquiesce," three times repeated in six lines, and every time pregnant with a fallacious implication — each more glaring than the other. It is the lawyer-like way of saying what Mr. Calhoun said pointedly, that the Missouri Compromise was imposed upon the South by the Korth, and only acquiesced in because too weak to relieve herself. For it is as notorious as that the South exists, that both these compromises — that by which Missouri and Arkansas became admitted as slave States, and that of 1815 by which Texas (and four more slave States to be made out of her territory) became admitted — were measures of the South, carried by her votes, and the votes of her friends in the free States ; and that, in each case, she was so determined upon the measure as to threaten secession from the Union if it was not obtained. This is matter of public history ; and therefore, the mendacity of these three implications, in six lines, becomes too flagrant to admit of comment, or to require proof. We pro- ceed to another, the Southern proposal to extend the Missouri Compromise line to the Pacific, or, in the language of the message, "to acquiesce" in the extension; and its defeat by Northern votes. In the first place, that extension was resisted 150 APPENDIX. bj others as well as by Northern votes — resisted by all Southern men opposed to planting slavery in new places — and vehemently by Mr. Clay, who rej^ulsed the proposition indignantly when pushed at him by Mr. Davis of Mississippi, declaring, with an emphasis which electrified the Senate, that no power on earth should ever make him vote for slavery in any place where it did not already exist. For that was the nature of the vote in- volved in this insidiously proposed extension — being directly the reverse of voting for the same line in the ancient Louisiana. Astronomically, the lines were the same : politically, they were opposite : one running through territory all slave, and making one-half free ; the other running through territory all free, and making one-half slave. Call this extended line the same ! You had as well call black and white the same. And this, in fact, is what the message is made to do, with a reproach to all Northern men who would not agree to spread slavery over the broad expanse of all that half of California, New Mexico and Utah, which lies south of 36° 30' ; and it is for not agreeing to convert this great extent of old free soil into new slave soil, that these Northern representatives are thus chid and reproached in the message. Certainly, Mr. Cushing would not so have re- buked them in the year 1836, when he was opposing the admis- sion of Arkansas as a slave State ; * or, in the year 1838, when, with Mr. Slade, of Yermont, and with all the abolitionists in the * The extraordinary circumstances under -whicli I rise to address the Committee, impel me to brevity and succinctness ; but they would afford me no justification for a passive acquiescence in the admission of Arkansas into the Union, with all the sim of its constitution upon its head. The constitution of Arkansas contains a provision, forbidding the legislature to emancipate slaves without the consent of the owner, and forbidding it to pass any law to prevent slaveholders with their slaves from ejnigrating to the State. This provision of the constitution of Arkansas is condemned by those I represent as anti-republican, as wrong on general principles of civil polity, and as unjust to the inhabitants of the non-slavcholding States. I concur in reprobating such a clause. I cannot, by any vote of mine, ratify or sanction a constitution of government which undertakes in this way to foreclose in advance the progTess of civilization and of liberty for ever. The gentleman from Virginia (Mr. Wise), who I cheerfully admit is always frank and honorable in his course upon this floor, has just declared that, as a Southern man, he had felt it to be his duty to come forward and take a stand in behalf of an institution of the South. That institution is slavery. In like manner I feel it to be my duty, as a Northern man, to take a counter stand in conservation of one among the dearest of the institutions of tlie North. This institution is liberty." — Mr. Cushing's Speech against the admission of Arkansas. APPENDIX. 151 House of Eepresentatives, by bis efforts to abolisb sbaveiy in tbe District of Cohimbia, be drove tbe Soutbern members to secession from tbe floor of tbe House, to consult in a committee room in tbe basement of tbe Capitol, upon tbe decisive step of returning to tbeir constituents. * Tben comes tbe fundamental falsehood wbicb lies at tbe foundation of tbe attack on tbe Missouri Compromise, affirming tbat it bad been virtually repealed by tbe negative action of Congress in 1850, in refusing to extend tbe compromise line to tbe Pacific, and in refusing to legislate upon slavery in Califor- nia, New Mexico, U tab and Wasbington — Washington, as tbe message says ; tbougb tbere was no Territory of Wasbington at tbat time, and tbe territory wbicb afterwards composed it, bad been included in tbe legislation on Oregon, of wbicb it was a part ; and from wbicb tbat institution was excluded. But, take tbe statement as it stands, and judge it upon its words ; and for tbat purpose it must be given in its own words : for notbing but itself can do justice to itself in tbe exbibition of such legerde- main in bandling law and facts. And bere it is : — " But this proposition was successfully resisted by the represen- tatives from the Northern States, who, regardless of the statute line, insisted upon applying restriction to the new territory generally, whether lying north or south of it, thereby repealing it as a legislative compro- mise, and, on the part of the North, persistently violating the compact, if compact there was. Thereupon this enactment ceased to have bind- ing virtue in any sense, whether as respects the North or the South ; and so in effect it was treated on the occasion of the admission of the State of California, and the organization of the Territories of New Mexico, Utah and Washington." Here is a farrago of law and fact for you — a sample of asser- tion and inference — wbicb ignores trutb, reason, common sense, and law logic. A refusal to extend a line is, to repeal it : a refusal to act upon slavery in Territories wbere it was already * Of the sixty-three members of the House who pertinaciously backed Mr. Slade dui-ing the two days that the struggle continued, one was Mr. Caleb Gushing, then as zealous to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia (for the motion was to instruct a committee to bring hi a peremptory bill for that purpose) as he has since shown himself active to abolish all impediments to the general territorial diffusion of slavery — even in the old free territory, once a part of the empire of Montezuma. 152 APPENDIX. abolished by Mexican law is, to violate the Missouri^ Compact — if there was one. The admission of the State of California with her free constitution, and the organization of the Territories of Utah and ]^ew Mexico, without excluding slavery where it was already excluded, was, in effect, to depriv^e the Missouri Com- promise of binding virtue in any sense ; and, consequently, to authorize the Congress of 1854 to rub it out of the statute book as being a dead thing, put to death by the Congress of 1850. Happily for the inventors of all this false assertion and prepos- terous inference, Mr. Clay was dead before they found out that he had, in his compromise measures of 1850, destroyed the Missouri Compromise of 1820. He was not the man to hear such a libel upon himself without instantly blasting, with his indignant invective, both the foul imputation, and its luckless author. But no one of these destroyers of that compromise was so unlucky as to subject himself to the lightning of that reply. Tliey had too much discretion for that. They waited four years for him to be dead, and buried, before the foul im- putation was cast upon him : an imputation sufficient to start his spirit from the grave. I was a member of that Congress of 1850, and saw what was done : I was a close observer of his compromise measures, and know what they were : I have ex- amined them all since, and find that I was not mistaken in my recollection of them. And upon all this knowledge, and upon the measures themselves as they now stand on the statute book, I take upon myself to affirm, that the assertion that they re- pealed, or impaired in any way, the Missouri Compromise Act, is one of the most unfounded assertions which ever fell from the lips of man. The assertion is, that the compromise measures of 1850 repealed the Missouri Compromise, and established the doctrine of non-interference with slavery in Territories. This repeal, it has been seen, was effected by refusing to extend the line to the Pacific Ocean — certainly a new way of repealing a statute ! and the non-interference will be found to be worthj- to take its place by the side of such an invention. Certain it is that Con- gress did not legislate upon slavery in any Territory in 1850 ; l3ut why ? precisely because there was no room for legislation ! because the question was then settled, by law, in every inch square of territory belonging to the United States! and settled APPENDIX. 153 to the satisfaction of Congress, and as it was intended to remain for ever, and to be, what was then called, " a finality ! " It was settled every where ; in the remnant of the old North-west Territory," by the ordinance of '87, re-enacted by the act of Congress of 1789 ; in all the Territory of Louisiana, by the Missouri Compromise line ; in Oregon, by her own organic act, and by the act of her organization, extending the ordinance of '87 to her; in California, by her State constitution ; in Utali and New Mexico, by the laws of Mexico, abolishing slavery there before their cession to the United States ; in Texas, by the terms of her admission, allowing her to come in with her slave constitution, and the right to form four more slave States out of her territory. This closed up the question every where. It left not one inch square of territory in the United States open to the slavery question. There was no way to get at the question, then, but by breaking down a law ; and this was what neither Mr. Clay, nor Congress would do. In his plan of compromise measures, he reviewed the question of slavery in the Territories, and showed it to be settled every where, and refused to unsettle it any where, for the purpose of settling it over again. With respect to Utah and New Mexico, the second of the resolutions submitted by him expressly declared that slavery did not exist there — that it was abolished by the laws and constitution of Mexico, and would remain abolished until those laws were re- pealed by Congress — and that it was unnecessary and inexpedient " to adopt any restriction or condition on the subject of slavery." This was the non-intervention of 1850. It was the non-inter- vention which respects existing law ! which would not abolish law, to get at tha slave institution in these Territories, either to restrict, or allow it; or to set the people themselves to quarrelling and fighting about it. It was the non-intervention of submission to law ; and to quote it as a precedent and authority for abro- gating the Missouri Compromise, was to unsettle what had been settled for thirty-four years by that compromise. And the clear lesson taught by the measures of 1850 was, that Congress would not repeal a law to re-open the hideous slavery question. That is the lesson taught ! non-interference witli existing laws ! and upon this lesson the Congress of 1854 has felt itself called upon to do just the contrary of what that teaches — to break down one of the most sacred and extensive of these benign 154 APPENDIX. laws, and to revive the slavery agitation wliicli had been so well and so long settled before. This is what the Congress of ■54 did ! just the reverse of what the conduct of the Congress of 1850 taught — breaking up the " finality " then established — setting the people to fighting in the Territories — and bringing the question back into Congress under the pretence of keeping it out of Congress, when it was already out, and no way to get it in again except by breaking down a law. Such is the inven- tion, as barefaced as wicked, to which the repealers have had recourse to justify their destruction of the Missouri Compromise — a crime in itself, and doubled by laying it on an innocent party ; but they found it no easy matter to come up to this invention. Long it was before they conceived it, and various the forms under which it appeared before it took the shape on which all rallied and stood ; but of this hereafter. II. We come now to the second head of this Review, namely, the manner, {modus operandi,) in which the repeal of the Mis- souri Compromise was efiected, the suddenness of the turn against that measure, and the unanimity with which all took the track after its repeal was determined uj^on, and the excuse provided for it. To do this it will be necessary to go back a year — to the end of the previous session of Congress — and see how the question of repeal stood then ; see how the party stood aftected towards the compromise at that time. This will be done by giving the words of one who is authority upon this point — Mr. Atchison, of Missouri — and who, in coming into the support of the then impending Nebraska Bill upon the basis of the compromise, thus expressed himself: — " I will now state to the Senate the views which induced me to op- pose this proposition in the early part of the session. I had two objec- tions to it. One was that the Indian title to that Territory had not been extinguished, or at least a very small portion of it had been. Another was the Missouri Compromise, or, as it is commonly called, the slavery restriction. It was my opinion at that time — and I am now very clear on that subject — that the law of Congress when the State of Missouri was admitted into tlie Union, excluding slavery from the Territory of Louisiana north of 30°, 30', would be enforced in that Territory unless it was specially rescinded ; and whether that law was in accordance with the Constitution of the United States or not, it would do its work ; and that work would be to preclude slaveholders from going into that Terri- APPENDIX. 155 tory. Bui when I came to look into that question, I found there was no prospect — no hope — of a repeal of the Missouri Compromise exclu- ding slavery from that Territory. Now, sir, I am free to admit that at this moment, at this hour, and for all time to come, I should oppose the organization or the settlement of that Territory, unless my constitu- ents, and the constituents of the whole South, of the slave States of the Union, could go into it upon the same footing, with equal rights and equal privileges, and carrying that species of property with them as other people of this Union. Yes, sir, I acknowledge that that would have governed me ; hut I have no hope that the restriction will ever he repealed. I have always been of opinion that the first great error com- mitted in the political history of this country, was the ordinance of 1787, rendering the North-western Territory free territory. The next great error was the Missouri Compromise. But they are hoth irreme- diable. There is no remedy for them. We must submit to them. I am prepared to do so. It is evident that the Missouri Compromise cannot he repealed. So far as that question is concerned, we might as well agree to the admission of this Territory now as next year, or five, or ten years hence." So spoke Mr. Atchison ; and from these multiplied declara- tions of no hope for the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, and from the declaration that, unless si^ecially repealed, it would exclude slaves from the Territory, we are allowed to draw two conclusions. First : That no idea of ever repealing the Missouri Compromise then existed. Secondly: That no idea tliat the compromise measures of 1850 had repealed, or impaired that line, then existed. These are two important points necessary to be known, in order to understand the subsequent movement. It was on a motion to take up the I^ebraska Bill, and put it on its passage, that Mr. Atchison made these remarks. Mr. Dong- lass, the reporter of the bill, was present, and urgent to take it up, and pass it, saying : " That it was a bill very dear to his heart — that for eight long years he had been trying to get it through — and that, in his anxiety to pass it, he would yield his privilege of speaking, that he might get an immediate vote." But others would speak : it was the last night of the session, when discussion was fatal to any bill. It was not taken up. If it had been, it would certainly have passed ; and if it had, the American people would never have heard of the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, either as a direct act in 1854, or as 156 APPENDIX. tlie eifect of tlie compromise measures of 1850 — albeit two- thirds of the Senate, and nearly all of those engaged in the sub- sequent repeal were present ! not one recollecting that the com- promise had been dead for three years ! and deprived of life by themselves ! This was the end of Mr. Fillmore's administration. His suc- cessor, Mr. Pierce, found the country in the most haj^py and tranquil state ; peace and prosperity at home and abroad, and slavery agitation stone dead. Felicitating himself upon this delightful state of the countrj^, he made it a topic of national congratulation in his first annual message, and thus dilated upon the happy auspices which saluted his nascent administration : — " We are thus not only at peace with all foreign countries, but in regard to political affairs, are exempt from any cause of serious disqui- etude in our domestic relations. The controversies which have agitated the country heretofore, are passing away with the causes that produced them, and the passions they had awakened; or, if any trace of them re- mains, it may be reasonably hoped that it will only be perceived in the zealous rivalry of all good citizens to testify their respect for the rights of the States, their devotion to the Union, and their common determi- nation that each one of the States, its institutions, its welfare, and its domestic peace, shall be held alike secure under the sacred sogis of the Constitution." Such was the picture of the national felicity, at home and abroad, which Mr. Pierce drew in his first annual message. Slavery agitation extinct ; its causes and its passions all gone ; no trace of it remaining ; and the only contention among the people a zealous rivalry iu showing devotion to the Union, re- spect for the rights of the States, and regard for their domestic institutions. It was a charming picture, and faithfull}'' drawii, and universally greeted with joy ; for never, since the first term of "Washington's administration, had there been such a political millennium in our country as then reigned. The message did right to exult-over it : — but, oh ! how sadly this lovely picture, drawn, no doubt, by the President's own hand, contrasts with the hideous one prepared for him by others in his last annual message, and which it required eleven pages to describe. At this session of Congress, the first under Mr. Pierce's ad- ministration, Mr. Douglass renewed his Nebraska Bill, being for the ninth time, and still on the basis of respect and perpetu- APPENDIX. 157 ity to the Missouri Compromise Act — a proof that, up to that time, he had no idea of its repeal by the compromise measures of 1850, or any suspicion that it had been in any way atfected by those measures, then tlu-ee years old, and certainly long enouofh in force for their eifect to be known. The bill was re- ferred to a Committee, which returned it with what appears to have been a unanimous report, reciting that there was a con- troversy about the validity of the Missouri Compromise Act ; some eminent statesmen holding it to be null and void under the Constitution, and others holding the act to be valid ; and conclu- ding with declaring that the Committee did not feel itself called upon to engage in the discussion of these disputed points, and that it was not prepared to recommend either the repeal or the affirmation of the Missouri Compromise Act; or to declare the meaning of the Constitution with respect to the disputed point, to loit : the power of Congress to prohibit slavery in a Terri- tory. The following is the language of the report on these points : — " In the opinion of some eminent statesmen, who hold that Congress is invested with no rightful authority to legislate upon the subject of slavery in the Territories, the 8th section of the act preparatory to the admission of Missouri into the Union is null and void ; while the pre- vailing sentiment in large portions of the Union sustains the doctrine that the Constitution of the United States secures to every citizen an inalienable right to move into any of its Territories with his property, of whatsoever kind and description, and to hold and enjoy the same under the sanction of law. Your committee do not feel themselves called upon to enter into the discussion of these controverted questions. They involve the same issues which produced the agitation, the sectional strife, and the fearful struggle of 1850. As Congress deemed it wise and prudent to refrain from deciding the matters in controversy then, either by affirming or repealing the Mexican laws, or by an act declara- tory of the true intent of the Constitution, and the extent of the pro- tection afforded by it to slave-property, so your committee are not pre- pared to recommend a departure from the course pursued on that memo- rable occasion, either by affirming or repealing the 8th section of the Missouri act, or by any act declaratory of the meaning of the Con- stitution in respect to the legal points in dispute." This report was made January 4th, 1854 ; and up to that day it is seen that the eminent committee which made it saw 158 APPENDIX. no repeal of the Missouri Compromise Act in the measures of 1850 — saw no occasion to recommend its repeal — no occasion to declare the meaning of the Constitution with respect to sla- very in Territories. They abstain from doing any of these things, and for a solid and patriotic reason, Avhich they state ; and which addresses itself to the best feelings of all the friends of the Union. It was, because the discussion of these points " involved the same grave issues which produced the agitation, the sectional strife, and the fearful struggle of 1850.-' Solid, and patriotic reasons for not engaging in such business, and good for all time. The struggle of 1850 was indeed fearful, and por- tended the immediate dissolution of the Union. One of those conventions which commenced in 1830, and which have be- come an institution of the South, and whicli Mr. Madison qual- ified as " insidious," liad then assembled at Nashville, Tennes- see — taken the question of union, or disunion, into its hands — and were openly passing measures for the separation and segre- gation of the Southern States. The compromise measures of 1850, being received as a " finality " by the country, checked this parricidal work ; and the committee, of whose report we speak, acted wisely and patriotically in not touching those questions which " produced the agitation, the sectional strife, and the fearful struggle of 1850 ; " and in not disturbing those compromise measures of that year which allayed that agitation, composed that strife, and terminated that fearful struggle. The committee which made the report was strongly Southern in its composition — one half from the slave States — the other half (except one) as strongly Southern as the South itself on all the slavery issues ; and unanimous in the report. They were : Messrs. Douglass, of Illinois, chairman ; Houston, of Texas ; Johnson, of Arkansas ; Bell, of Tennessee ; Jones, of Iowa ; and Everett of Massachusetts. The report was so acceptable to the Senate that, as soon as it was read, the large number of 5,000 extra copies were ordered to be printed for the use of the body — that is to say, for the Senators to distribute among the citizens of the States, for their information of the manner in which the Senate was keeping out of its chamber the portentous issues which had so lately convulsed the countr3^ This report was received as cordially outside of the Senate as in it. All the friends of the Administration applauded it. APPENDIX. 159 The Daily Union, — the administration paper, its organ, — and in which several members of tlie cabinet habitually wrote, was most encomiastic in its favor ; and not merely in favor of the report, but of the Senator who drew it, applauding him for the " sound, national, and Union-loving sentiments with which it abounds." The report itself was immediately published in full in the official paper, and earnestly commended to the care- ful perusal of every democrat, with the declaration that the President and cabinet all approved it. And this laudation be- came more and more intense from day to day, until it took the form of fierce censures " against the whigs and abolitionists," who were against it, because they wanted to embarrass the ad- ministration — and a rebuking caution to such Southern demo- crats as shov/ed a disposition to bring " an angry element of discord into the halls of legislation." The occasion for these censures and admonitions was this : Mr. Dixon, a whig Senator from Kentucky, gave notice on the 16 th of January, that when the bill came up for consideration he should move to add a sec- tion to it, repealing the Missouri Compromise Act of 1820 ; and Mr. Sumner, a free-soil Senator from Massachusetts, gave notice on the other hand, that he would at the same time move an amendment affirming that compromise. Both these propo- sitions were immediately denounced by the Daily Organ in terms, not only of condemnation, but of opprobrium — thus : " Two propositions have been made in the Senate — one by Sen- ator Dixon, a whig, and the other by Senator Suinner, an abo- litionist — which indicate that the bill, as proposed by Mr. Doug- lass, is to be vigorously assailed. Mr. Dixon proposes to amend it, by a clause expressly repealing the act of 1820, commonly known as the Missouri Compromise. Mr. Sumner proposes to amend it, by expressly declaring that the Missouri Compromise is to be continued in force." Thus, these two propositions were immediately denounced, and the democratic party warned against them. They were met as hostile. They indicated as- sault (and vigorous assault) upon the bill of Mr. Douglass ; and to aggravate the nature of this assault, as if not bad enough in itself, it was carefully noted that these propositions came from a whig and an abolitionist. The Daily Union, by way of commend- ing Mr. Douglass's bill and report, went on to declare Mr. Cass's perfect satisfaction with it, and to deprecate the reopening of the 160 APPENDIX. slavery question, as proposed by tlie whig and abolition Sena- tors. It gave its opinion of the effect of their propositions, saying : " Mr. Dixon's amendment would stir up excitement on one side, whilst Mr. Sumner's will effect the like object on -the other : and as whigism and abolitionism have every thing to gain, and nothing to lose, the upshot may be that the agitation may enure to the benefit of the common opposition of the demo- cratic party." These remarks of the Organ are as significant as explicit. The proposed amendments are to stir up excite- ment, and to produce agitation ; and this excitement and agita- tion, it is apprehensively expressed, may enure to the benefit of the enemies of democracy. The Organ then proceeds to counsel adherence to the bill and report of Mr. Douglass — to let well enough alone — and, in that phrase, to let the Missouri Comijromise alone. In this sense, it thus discoursed: "In a word, it would be wise in all democrats to consider whether it would not be safest to let well enough alone." And then goes on to say — " The repeal of the Missouri Compromise might, and, according to our view, would, clear the principle of Con- gressional non-intervention of all embarrassment ; but we doubt whether tlie good thus promised is so important, that it would be wise to seek it through the agitation which necessarily stands in our path." And upon this view of tlie consequences of dis- turbing the compromise — inevitable agitation — and upon this doubt of profit or loss to the democratic party in rousing that agitation, the Daily Union deems it " safest," and " wisest,'^ to let well enough alone — that is to say, let the Missouri Compro- mise stand untouched, as proposed in Mr. Douglass's bill and re- port. And to this effect were several articles, and sometimes as high as seven in one paper, all denouncing the whig and abolition propositions of Mr. Dixon and Mr. Sumner, and re- enforcijig its denunciations by constantly assuming to speak the sentiments of the President, his cabinet, and the democratic party. But it would seem that Mr. Dixon's proposition inflamed the hopes of some Southern members who wished for the direct re- peal of the compromise, and who began to object to Mr. Doug- lass's bill and report, for not going far enough ; and these the Daily Organ undertook to restrain and pacify, by addressing to them a sort of -curtain lecture — a mixture of expostulation, per- APPENDIX. 161 suasion, and menace. In this vein it thus discoursed in its issue of the 17th of January : " If any portion of the South demands more than is granted in this plan of settlement, the demand is preposterous. We sincerely trust the democratic party in Con- gress, representing all sections of the Confederacy, will, wdthout permitting an angry element of discord to enter the halls of leg- islation, unite in adopting a measure which commands the ap- proval of a vast preponderance of the American people." This appeal to the " South" — or rather, to a portion of the South — is every word of it significant. In the first place, to give weight to its exhortation, the Organ declares its own sincerity in trust- ing that no one of the democratic party, from any section of the Union, will indulge in a demand which it stigmatizes as " preposterous." It deprecates the entrance into the halls of legislation of the angry element of discord which the attempt- ed repeal of the Missouri Compromise would involve, and calls for all to " unite " in the adoption of Mr. Douglass's hill and re- port. And to give weight to this exhortation to unity in the whole democratic party, the Organ emerges from the mere pre- cincts of the party, and takes post upon the whole American people ! declaring the measures to have a vast preponderance of tliis whole people ! And here the date is as important as the words, showing how the question stood up to the eve of the cri- sis ; it was the 17th of January — that is to say, twelve days after Mr. Douglass's report had been made, and six days before the unforeseen catastrophe that history will have to record. In the same vein, the Daily Organ again wrote three days afterwards, to wit, on the 20th, under the head, in capitals, " Missouki Com- PKOMisE," when it said : " We trust that we shall not be con- sidered oflicious in noting the fact, that the x:)roposition in the Senate for the amendment of Mr. Douglass's bill has proceeded from members of the two parties who are irreconcilably op- posed to democratic ascendency." And again, on the 22d, " The settlement of the question involved in the IS'ebraska Bill, calls for the exercise of that spirit of conciliation and forbear- ance by which alone sectional issues can be amicably and satis- factorily adjusted." Thus, up to the morning of the 22d day of January, the President and the cabinet, (according to the Daily Union,) the democratic party, and a vast majority of the whole American 11 162 APPENDIX. people, were opposed to disturbing the Missouri Compromise — and none but abolitionists and wbigs were for that disturbance — and thus to excite agitation, and to bring an angry element of discord into the halls of legislation. But these quotations are but a sample of the articles to this effect diurnallj apj^earing in the administration paper for seventeen days, and by all of which Mr, Douglass's plan was made an administration measure, supported by all true democrats, and only opposed by whigs and abolitionists. But the ides of March were approaching — close at hand — and the event to take place of which there were no portents in the 23olitical horizon. Mr. Douglass had got the Nebraska Bill (for up to this time that is the only name it bore) recommitted to the Committee which had reported it, and had got Monday, the 23d day of January, fixed as the day for its consideration ; but when the day came, that bill, instead of being taken up for consideration, as agreed upon, was dropj^ed from the calendar of the Senate ; and two bills in one, called a substitute, for two Territories, rose up in its place. It was an apparition which required explana- tion — and received it, Mr. Douglass rose to ask leave to make a report from the Committee on Territories ; and leave being given, he reported a substitute for the bill which he liad report- ed on the 5th of the month, and after stating the reasons for making two Territories instead of one, went on to speak of what he termed "the more delicate questions" it involved, in this wise : " We have also incorporated in it one or two other amend- ments, which make the provisions of the bill upon other and more delicate questions, more clear and specific, so as to avoid all conflict of opinion." "Without stating what these " delicate " amendments were, he moved that the substitute be printed — which motion prevailing, necessarily postponed the considera- tion of the substitute bills until the printing could be accom- plished. Mr. Douglass had said that the substitute had come from the Committee : to make sure on that point, Mr. Mason, of Yirginia, addressed a question to Mr. Douglass, thus : " I did not hear the honorable Senator from Illinois distinctly, and I wish to know whether the amendment he now proposes as a substitute is reported from the Conmiittee ? " To which Mr. Douglass answered in two woi'ds, of two letters each, " It is;" APPENDIX. 163 and tlie answer may be said to include the whole of the Com- mittee, except Mr. Everett, of Massachusetts, as he alone, in the course of the proceedings, showed himself to be in opposition to it. And at this point the proceedings for the day stopped — no one inquiring what these delicate amendments, which had been so gingerly * alluded to, might be. The 24th came, and Mr. Douglass asked for the considera- tion of his substitute bill — a bill to organize the Territories of ISTebraska and Kansas ; and by that title the bill was subse- quently known. Several Senators objected to taking up the bill so suddenly, and asked for a week's delay — among tliem Mr. Cass. Mr. Dixon also was in favor of the delay, giving the manly reason that there ought to be time for all to understand the measure proposed. In this sense Mr. Dixon spoke, conclu- ding with giving his idea of what the "delicate" amendment was, thus : — " The amendment, which I notified the Senate I should offer at a proper time, has heen incorporated by the Senator from Illinois into the bill which he has reported to the Senate. The bill, as now amended, meets my views, and I have no objection to it. I shall, at the proper time, as far as I am able to do so, aid and assist the Senator from Illi- nois, and others who are anxious to carry through this proposition, with the feeble abilities I may be able to bring to bear upon it" With this declaration, Mr. Dixon formally withdrew his proposition for the repeal of the Missouri Compromise Act, and Mr. Douglass formally accepted his exposition of its meaning ; and the consideration of the bill was then postponed for a week. Mr. Dixon advocated this postponement, saying : — " I think it due to the Senate that they should have an opportunity of understanding precisely the bearings and the effect of the amend- ment which has been recently incorporated into the bill — I mean that portion of the amendment which alludes to slavery in the Territories proposed to be organized — Nebraska and Kansas. So far as I am indi- vidually concerned, I am perfectly satisfied with the amendment reported by the Senator from Illinois, and which has been incorporated into the bill. If I understand it, it reaches a point I am most anxious to attain — that is to say, it virtually repeals the act of 1820, commonly * Used in the primitive sense of the word ; nicely, cautiouslj/. 164 - APPENDIX. called the Missouri Compromise Act, wliicli declares that slavery shall not exist north of 36 degrees 30 minutes, north latitude." This " delicate " amendmeri,t was very daintily and circni- tously expressed, coming in the way of exception to the exten- sion of the Constitution and laws of the United States to the two Territories, and because superseded by the Compromise measures of 1850, and become inoperative. Thus : — " The Constitution, and all laws of the United States, not locally inapplicable, shall have the same force and effect in the said Territory, as elsewhere in the United States, except the eighth section of the act preparatory to the admission of Missouri into the Union, approved March 6th, 1820, which was superseded by the principles of the legisla- tion of 1850, commonly called the Compromise measures, and is de- clared inoperative." This mode of rejjeal was satisfactory to Mr. Dixon, but it Avas not so to those who drew it, or some of those who would have to support it. It was too glaringly absurd and false for them to go to trial upon it. The Missouri Act " superseded by the principles of the legislation of 1850." The assertion was as un- true in fact as in logic, and would so appear at the first touch of examination. Holding the affirmative of the assertion, its authors would be called upon for the proof, and required to show the principle which "superseded" an old Act of Congress of thirty-four years' standing. That could not be done ; on the contrary, it would appear, from all the legislation of Congress of that year, that the Missouri Compromise Act remained un- touched — neither extended nor contracted in length, nor en- larged or diminished in its application, nor interfered with by any enactment. It became necessary, therefore, to drop this " superseding," and change it into " inconsistent ; " and also to introduce the principle of " non-intervention," and to add the word " void " to " inoperative ; " and then to add a little stump speech to explain what all this meant. Thus altered, the re- pealing enactment, as eventually settled down upon, ran in these words : — " The Constitution, and all laws of the United States which are not locally inapplicable, shall have the same force and effect within the said Territory of Nebraska as elsewhere in the United States, except the eighth section of the act preparatory to the admission of Missouri into APPENDIX. 165 the Union, approved March Gth, 1820, wliich, being inconsistent with the principle of non-intervention by Congress with slavery in the States and Territories, as recognized by the legislation of 1850, commonly called the Compromise measures, is hereby declared inoperative and void ; it being the true intent and meaning of this act not to legis- late slavery into any Territory or State, nor to exclude it therefrom, but to leave the people thereof perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their own way, subject only to the Constitution of the United States." And thus, three years after the event, and by a sort of polit- ical coroner's inqnest, the Missouri Compromise Act was found to be dead, and killed by those who- (in much j^art) composed the jury ; and who, for so long a time, had remained ignorant of what they had done. Tliis was the final form which the repealing clause took ; and the variations it underwent, with its circumlocutions and ambiguities, show the infinite trouble its authors had in cook- ing up sometliing which would make the repeal without saying so, and throw upon others the odium of an abrogation which they had the will but not the face to make. Though not so glaringly absurd and false as the first edition of the " delicate " amendment, it was more crooked and circuitous — equally un- founded in fact and inference — equally false and unjust in making the Congress of 1850 the scape-goat of its own sin — and dishonorable to the name of legislation, by the little stump speech which is stuck into its belly. Fairly interpreted, and this novel method of enactment signifies that they found the Mis- souri Compromiie repealed three years before, and therefore they would repeal it over again — about as bad a plea in legisla- tion as in the administration of justice. For, a plea from a man arraigned for a homicide, that he found the man dead and killed him over again, would not be admitted as a good plea in any court, either of law or conscience. And yet of that nature is the plea for repealing the Missouri Compromise. This amended amendment, in a substitute bill, brings for- ward the principle of " non-intervention " on the subject of slavery in Territories, and finds it established in the legislation of 1850 !— which legislation established directly the contrary. That legislation, in plain language, refused to pass any provision on the subject of slavery in the Territories acquired from Mex- 166 APPENDIX. ico, either admitting or proliibiting it, hecause slavery was already abolished there T)y the laws of Mexico. It would not prohibit slavery there, because it was already prohibited. It would not repeal that law to admit slavery, because it would not plant slavery where it did not exist. It would not repeal the law and say nothing, because that would be to unsettle the question where it was already settled, and settled to the satis- faction of a great majority of Congress, and of the people of the United States. This was the " non-intervention " of the legislation of 1850 ! JSTot intervene to break down a law to open the slavery question where it was settled, and set people to quarrelling and fighting about it. That was the non-inter- vention (if the absurd term must be used where there was no- thing to get between), and on this point one shall speak whose voice will be potential, and from the grave rebuke those who libel his memory in quoting him falsely, to justify the destruc- tion of a measure which it was one of the glories of his life to have promoted. I speak of Mr. Clay, and of his report and speeches on his compromise measures of 1850, and in which he has spoken for himself with a clearness and precision which admits of no mis- understanding. His report, embracing all his compromise measures, con- cluded with digesting their substance into seven resolutions, presented for the adoption of the Senate, the second one of which applied to the point now under examination, and was in these words : — " Eesolved, That as slavery does not exist by law, and is not likely to be introduced into any of the territory acquired by the United States from the Republic of Mexico, it is inexpedient for Congress to provide by law, either for its introduction into, or exclusion from, any part of the said territory; and that appropriate territorial govern- ments ought to be established by Congress in all of the said territory, not assigned as the boundaries of the proposed State of California, without the adoption of any restriction or condition on the subject of slavery." This was the principle of Mr. Clay's non-intervention, as it is called. It was non-interference ! I^on-interfercnce to unsettle slavery where it was settled ! It was non-interference with the 1 APPENDIX. ler law which settled it ! and there was no clap-ti-ap blarney about leaving the inhabitants of the Territories to regulate their domes- tic institutions as they pleased. Tliere was no explanatory stump speech in it to declare its true intent and meaning. That true intent and meaning was placed at the head of the resolu- tion, and showed that Congress would not interfere with slavery in these Territories, because, by law, it was already prohibited there. This is what the resolve says, and the same sentiment was reiterated in the speech which recommended its adoption to the Senate. Every where in his speeches and reports his non-interference was put upon tliat ground ; and many Senators, in voting against the Wilmot proviso, gave the express reason for their vote, that there was no necessity for it, for the Mexican laws had put an end to slavery there, and that further legisla- tion to that effect was supererogation. And thus the interference of 1850 was a refusal to break down a law to open the question of slavery ; and that is quoted in 1854 as authority for doing precisely the contrary. The little stump speech which was put into the act about not legislating slavery in or out of the Terri- tory, and leaving the people free to regulate their domestic in- stitutions, could only deceive those who forgot the first word of the amendment — the extension of the Constitution to the Terri- tory! — carrying along with it (according to the doctrine of those who put it there) African slavery in the most inexorable form ! — beyond the power of Congress, or of the people in the Territory to keep it out ! And this was the crooked, ambigu- ous, falsely pretexted, and contradictory mode of repealing the Missouri Compromise, which the substitute bill of Mr. Douglass BO " delicately " provided. Tlie report and speech of Mr. Clay — ^liis resolve submitted to the Senate for its vote — ^is a sufficient vindication of himself, his measures, and the legislation of 1850, from the imputation cast on them ; but there is another authority, equally potent in this case, to make the same vindication : it is the report of Mr. Douglass made at the first introduction of liis bill, as heretofore quoted. That report, after reciting that there was a dispute about the Mexican laws, as there was about the Missouri CoAi- promise, went on to applaud the wisdom and prudence of the Congress of 1850 in refraining from deciding that dispute, " either hy affirming or repealing the Mexican laws ; " which is 168 APPENDIX. the exact truth. The Congress of 1850 would not interfere with that Mexican law. And that non-interference, after being first quoted in the report to justify non-interference with the ]\Iis- souri Compromise, is afterwards quoted in the amended amend- ment of the substitute bill, as a precedent and authority for re- pealing the Missouri act. The first quotation was right; the second, flagrantly false. The Dixon whig amendment was now incorporated in the democratic substitute bill, but without any of the manliness which belonged to it when ofltered by the whig Senator. His amendment was direct and to the j)oint, without any of the cir- cumlocutions, excuses, justifications, bolsterings, explanations, recommendations, and reference to others, which imply a con- sciousness of wrong which requires defence before it is attacked. It went direct to the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, and to the admisson of slavery into all the Territories of the United States, while the substitute went to the same effect, but circui- tously, crookedly, apologetically, and argumentatively ; and im- proving in its reasons as it advanced, the second substitute being a large emendation of the first, and both in flat contradiction of the original bill and report, upon which all democrats had been required to stand and to fight, under the penalty of political ex- communication, and future classification with whigs and aboli- tionists. For the sake of convenient comparison, I here repro- duce, and in juxtaposition, the four shifting phases of this legis- lative luminary : — f First Phase. — " In the opinion of some eminent statesmen, who hold that Congress is invested with no :jiglitful authority to legislate upon the subject of slavery in the Territories, the eighth section of the act preparatory to the admission of Missouri into the union, is null and void ; while the prevailing sentiment in large portions of the Union sus- tains the doctrine, that the Constitution of the l/nited. States secures to every citizen an inalienable right to move into any of its Territories with his property, of whatsoever kind and description, and to hold and enjoy the same under the sanction of law. Your Committee do not feel themselves called upon to enter into the discussion of these controverted questions. They involve the same issues which produced the agitation, the sectional strife, and the fearful struggle of 1850. As Congress deemed it wise and prudent to refrain from deciding the matters in con- troversy then, either by affirming or repealing the Mexican laws, or by APPENDIX. 169 an act declaratory of the true intent of the Constitution, and the extent of the protection aflForded by it to slave property, so your Committee are not prepared to recommend a departure from the course pursued on that memorable occasion, either by affirming or repealino- the eio-lith section of the Missouri act, or by any act declaratory of the meaning of the Constitution in respect to the legal points in dispute." [3fr. Douglasses Report. Second Phase. — " That so much of the eighth section of an act ap- proved March 6th, 1820, entitled < An act to authorize the people of the Missouri Territory to form a constitution and State government, and for the admission of such State into the Union on an equal footino- with the original States, and to prohibit slavery in certain Territories,' as de- clares ' That, in all that territory ceded by France to the United States, under the name of Louisiana, which lies north of 36° 30' north latitude slavery and involuntary servitude, otherwise than in the punishment of crimes whereof the parties shall have been duly convicted, shall be for ever prohibited,' shall not be so construed as to apply to the Territory contemplated by this act, or to any other territory of the United States • but that the citizens of the several States or Territories shall be at lib- erty to take and hold their slaves within any of the Territories of the United States, or of the States to be formed therefi'om, as if the said act, entitled as aforesaid, had never been passed." [ilfr. Dixon'' s Amendment. Third Phase. — " That the Constitution, and all laws of the United States which are not locally inapplicable, shall have the same force and effect within the said Territory as elsewhere in the United States, except the eighth section of the act preparatory to the admission of Missouri into the Union, approved March 6th, 1820, which was superseded by the principles of the legislation of 1850, commonly called the Compro- mise Measures, and is declared inoperative." [First Siibstitute. Fourth Phase. — " The Constitution, and all laws of the United States which are not locally inapplicable, shall have the same force and effect within the said Territory as elsewhei-e in the United States, except the eighth section of the act preparatory to the admission of Missouri into the Union, approved March 6th, 1820, which, being inconsistent with the principle of non-intervention by Congress with slavery in the States and Territories, as recognized by the legislation of 1850, com- monly called the Compromise Measures, is hereby declared inoperative and void ; it being the true intent and meaning of this act, not to legis- 170 APPENDIX. late slavery into any Territory or State, nor to exclude it therefrom, "but to leave the people thereof perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their own way, subject only to the Constitution of the United States." [Second Substitute. In this fourth phase, it is to be noted by the reflecting reader, that " States " are introduced, and placed on a level witli Terri- tories in the article of negro slavery ! and making it a merit in the bill, that it did not legislate slavery into any State, or out of any State ; but left it free to States, as well as Territories, to have slaves, or not, as they pleased ! as if Congress, or any one out of Bedlam, had ever proposed such impertinent nonsense. Surely the " States " must feel grateful for such forbearance ex- tended to them, and such indulgence allowed them, and such high consideration manifested for them in such slashing times. But, in the name of wonder, and in virtue of the inquiring mood of the " sober second thought," how comes it that " States " were lugged in liere, in such company, and in such a bill ? Why were they lugged in ? for it was not accident. Twice they are brought in, which shows it was not chance-medley, but design ; and each time with the same gracious accord of the same privi- leges, and the same equalization and yoking with the Territories by the connective conjunction " or," which, at once, levels them as equals, and yokes them as fellows. This shows design, and precludes the possible conception of accident. Design, then, being,established, the inquiry recurs : What was it ? And the answer is. It was to promote the general scheme of the bill ! which was to mystify, obfuscate, bamboozle, and befog the " squatter sonereigns^^ by making them believe that they were equal to States, and might have black slaves or not, as they pleas- ed, while, in reality, they themselves were to be made into white slaves, under that head-clause in the bill which spreads the Con- stitution of the United States over them, carrying " niggerdom " along with it ! and fastening it on their sovereign backs, beyond their power to kick it off, or the power of Congress to lift it off, or of any law to keep it off. That is the design of this desecra- tion—this dragging in of the States— all to promote the general scheme of the bill ! which is all fraud, cheat, trick, swindle, quackery, cluirlatanry, demagoguery, bladdery, and legislative black-leggery. That is its design ! and if its fathers think other- -^ise—for there were many fathers and no mother for it— let APPENDIX. 171 tliem out with their tools (wind and instrumental), and give us a touch of their music. In the mean time I dismiss, for the pres- ent, the infamous enactment, passing it through the portals of the pillory — ears cut off, back scourged, cheeks smoking under the fierj touch of the hot, red, hissing brand. The bill was postponed for a week, and such a week of po- litical g,yrations was never beheld. If Dryden had not written so long before, it might have been supposed he was describing it : " Quick, and more quick, in giddy gyres they turn." First, the Daily Union, laureate organ to the administration, and apparent manager of the democratic party, now headed by nullifiers, and gorged with renegades. This paper had gone to sleep on the night of the 22d of January in the reiteration of all its imprecations on the Dixon amendment, and all its exhorta- tions to the democracy of the Union to stand clear of it, and a special warning to the Southern democracy not to expect any thing so preposterous : it waked up on the morning of the 23d, rejoicing in the adoption of that amendment in the substitute bill, declaring it to be an administration measure, making adhe- sion to it a test of political orthodoxy, and the sole rule of pro- motion, or even of retention in the democratic ranks. Party outlawry was immediately pronounced against every halting brother that did not come to the "right about," and applaud the measure which he had damned the day before. 'Next thej^d- ministration. The organ proclaimed it to be a unit in favof of the metamorphosed amendment, and in its name promised re- wards and punishments. The democrat who refused to turn was to be excommunicated : those who turned were to be the only true men : all who lost the favor of their constituents by turning, were to be indemnified with public office. And with these declarations corresponded the conduct of the President, the members of the cabinet, and their immediate friends on the floor of Congress. The former sent for members, and plied them with exhortations, entreaties, and promises : the latter openly denounced hesitation as a crime to be punished — lauded adhe- sion as a merit to be rewarded — reproached the refractory with abolitionism — and made the support of the new-fangled amend- ment not only an administration measure, but a measure of life and death to the administration, in the struggle for which no 172 APPENDIX. neutrals "^ere to be allowed. Tlien came the body of the party, and it was variously aifected. The venal embraced the change witli alacrity, the instant they knew the administration had adopted it, and ferociously assailed all who did not change with them. The timid gave in slowly and sorrowfully, declaring that they could not resist an administration measure, and lose their place in the party. The distress of many of them was pitiable to behold. Their fear of party outlawry, not their will, consented — showing timidity in a public man to be equivalent, in its effects, to downright treachery. Several of these unwil- ling converts became champions afterwards of the detested measure, and thereby ceased to be pitiable, and became con- temptible. A few old democrats, solitary monuments, stood firm upon the faith that was in them ; and these few were im- mediately denounced as whig abolitionists, and visited with all the punishment the administration could inflict upon such men — the exclusion of their friends from ofhce, and the appointment of the most vulgar and venomous of their enemies, l^ullifiers ex- ulted, and became the leaders of the democracy, and the drivers of the administration. They got possession of all power, and worked it to the steady purpose of carrying the bill. Patronage and the press — rewards and punishments — the double battery of seduction and intimidation — were all in their hands ; and they wielded all without halt, and witliout remorse. And to theijf honor it must be said — personal honor in the midst of po- litical corruption — they faithfully complied with all the promi- ses they had made. The killed and wounded were provided for ! office to all who lost the favor of their constituents ! favor to all that turned ! open arms to all deserters from all ranks ! nulli- fiers and disunionists preferred ! and this continued to be the rule of action during the whole Pierce administration. Such conduct required much defence, and received a large instalment of it in those eleven pages of the last annual message, which it is the object of this brief notice to point out to history for her severe condemnation. Tliis is the record history of that abrogation of the Missouri Compromise into Mliich the administration of Mr. Pierce was forced ; and the record history I only propose to give. But there is well authenticated history belonging to the transaction which does not appear on the record; as that, the sudden APPENDIX. 173 determinaticn to adopt tlie Dixon proposition was the effect of a council, wliicli, different from the Scythians, who always re- solved twice before they acted — first drunk to give them courage, then sober to give them discretion — resolved but once ; and that in the former predicament. And, also, that there was hard work to force some into the support of the measure who afterwards became its champions — the more zealous, in order to invest forced conversion with the semblance of honest conviction. But, that no ingredient of infamy should be wanting in such a transaction, the element of fraud was added to all the other means of success. The case was this : The Daily Organ, after having diurnally, for many days, laid down the law of political death to any democrat who flinched at the adoption of the Dixon-whig proposition, now became administration democratic, and was authorized to publish a dispensation as to " details." A special article was published, to let it be known that there was to be freedom of action on the " details " of the bill— that every democrat was not to be required to vote for every " detail : " many worthy members remonstrated against that, as recpiiring too much. Some members, friendly to the repeal of the Mis- souri Compromise, could not subscribe to the reasons given for it, nor to the future grand movement of which it was to be the basis.* Here then was an opening for the loss of the bill — its * As Mr. Seward, of Georgia. This gentleman, a friend to the object of the- bill, as repealing the Slissouri Compromise, and determined to vote for it, yet objected to the reasons for their untruth and unfau-ness, saying : " I oppose the details of this bill, because they are not consistent with themselves, or with the transactions to which they relate ; and the bill itself shows that it was manufactured for a particular pur- pose. Some of the clauses embraced in it, conflicting as they are, were inti-oduced for the purpose, in my opinion, of settmg up a principle to be asserted in future, and which the acts of 1850 never contained. Now, sir, let us see. We are called upon here, now to vote for this bill, which is not drafted in the ordinary shape of legislative acts. But the framers of this bill have furnished the reasons, within the bill itself, on which we must act, and which they call on us to subscribe to. What is it ? They tell us that the law of 1820, being inconsistent with the legislation of 1850, therefore, that the act of 1820 is inoperative and void. I take issue with them, and for myself, occupying the position that I do as a Southern man, I never have subscribed, never will, and never can subscribe to the doctrines contained in the acts of 1850. And now, when that portion of the South having feelings in common with me on this question, have waived their objections to it for the purpose of rmiting with the South, and hai-monizing public feeling on this great question, it is put here as the basis of some grand movement in this country." — 2Ir. Seward's (of Geo.) Speech. Extract With these objections to the details of the bill, and desire for its object, Mr. Seward 174 APPENDIX. loss in the House of Representatives, where its fate was most dubious. It would be easy for some half dozen of the forced members, by a critical vote, to adopt, or reject some detail, on whicli the fate of the whole bill would depend. This danger had to be guarded against ; and that required a fraudulent vio- lation of a rule of the House — a rule specially made to secure fair legislation, and indispensable to it where the previous ques- tion has become the ordinary legislative weapon in passing, or defeating bills. The regular effect of that question, when or- dered, was to cut off all debate, and all amendments, and bring the House to a dii-ect vote upon the passage of the measure ; and this question came to be so abused by a dominant majority for the time being, (often bringing the House to vote in total darkness upon the measure, or cutting off amendments neces- sary to honest legislation,) that all parties agreed to modify its effect, so as to give a chance to the House to understand a bill, and a chance to amend it by offering an amendment, to be voted upon without debate. A rule was accordingly adopted for that purpose, and by virtue of which amendments might be offered after the previous question had been ordered, and the member offering it allowed five minutes to explain its object. This, to be sure, was but small liberty of speech in a legislative body, boasting of the largest liberty in the world ; but, small as it was, it was not allowed to be used in the abrogation of the most momentous law that Congress ever passed. The bill went into Committee of the Whole : it was the House bill : and the friends of the bill, being a majority, moved to strike out the first section. It was done ! and the bill was then dead — in the slang language of the House — its head cut off. Of course, there was nothing more to be done with it in committee. The House was the next place for it to appear, and the question before the House was to concur with the committee. This re- found himself in the dilemma of not being able to vote at all. The grand movement, obscurely hinted at by Mr. Seward, was immediately remarked upon by Mr. Benton, who interpreted it to bo the acquisition of Cuba, and large slices from Mexico, the latter to be made into slave soil under the extension of the Constitution and the vote of Southern emigrants, a few of whom would overpower the feeble, ignorant Mexican population. (AVe Appendix IV.) On these details of the bill, Mr. Benton felt certain of smashing it up upon motions to amend ; but all such motions were cut off by the fraudulent use of rules. APPENDIX. 175 quired every supporter of the bill to reverse the vote he had given in committee — to vote directly contrary to what he had done ; and this change was made. The same who voted to kill tlie bill in committee, voted to bring it to life in the House — which was done. The bill being then alive, could receive an amendment : and instantly there was a motion to amend, by striking out the whole of the House bill, and substituting the whole of the Senate bill — all which Avas done under the gag of tlie previous question. Though called an amendment, the Sen- ate bill, thus adopted, was a complete bill in itself, and a long one of thirty-seven sections, and, as a hill^ requiring three read- ings on different days ; but, as an amendment^ to be read once, which it had not been when offered ; but a reading was forced afterwards under the rule which authorizes a demand for the reading of an amendment. Technically, it was an amendment : in reality a bill ; and, although the rules required but one reading, yet it was an outrage upon all fair legislation to drive it through as it was done. It was under the gag of the previous question, and no further debate, nor the least amendment per- mitted—not even to a friend of the measure. Viewing the whole proceeding as a fraud, about eighty members refused in the committee to vote on the motion to strike out the enacting clause of the House bill ; and when the motion was made for the committee to rise and report the bill to the House, only 103 members voted ; to wit : 101 for the motion, and 2 against it ! upwards of 100 refusing to vote ! and among the number, to their honor be it said, no less than 12 who were for the bill. Only 103 voting, there was no quorum, and objection was made to rise and report. The temporary chairman, Mr. Olds, of Ohio, decided that a quorum was not necessary to authorize the committee to rise — which was true ; but a quorum was necessary to authorize a report to the House, as, without a quorum, nothing could be done in the committee ; and the rules provided for the case by requiring the roll to be called, to bring in the absent members. The chairman, Mr. Olds, reported the bill and the proceedings upon it to the House, without telling there was no quorum. Several members ob- jected on the report, proclaiming that there had been no quorum to authorize it ; but the Speaker (Mr. Linn Boyd) said he had no "official" notice of this want of a quorum, and could only know 1Y6 APPENDIX. " officially " what the chairman of the committee (Mr. Olds) re- ported to him. It was a most humiliating scene — the whole proceedings, from the motion in committee to cut off the head of the House bill, down to the substitution and passage of the Senate bill — the House being in a continued state of uproar through a most extended day and night session, all motions to adjourn being negatived, and the result received in the galleries with clapping and shouting — as in the old time of the Bank of the United States.* * Monday, May 22, 1854. In Committee of the Whole, Mr. Olds of Ohio, in the Chair. House hill (No. 236) /or the Orgarvizatim of Kansas and Nebraska Territories, being under consideration. Extract from the Register of Debates. Mr. Stephens, of Georgia: "I rise to a privileged question. I move to strike out the enacting clause of this bill. I -will state to the committee, and I want the atten- tion of the committee to my object in making that motion ; it is to cut off all amend- ments, and to have this bill reported to the House, that we may have a vote upon it." Mr.Chandler, of Pennsylvania: "I rise solemnly to protest against this extra gag which is applied to the passage of this bill, and to say, that while it is possible a majority may thus ride rough-shod."— (Loud cries of " Order" and great excitement.) —Mr. Orr, of South Carolina: "Does my friend, from Pennsylvania, say that this is not in strict comformity to the rules ? "—(Renewed and vociferous cries of " Order.")— Mr. Chandler : " I am satisfied that the motion now made is one that was not contem- plated by those who drew up these rules ; nor was it, I hope, contemplated by those who drove us from the regular debate m the committee, and told us to take shelter under the five minutes debate rule."— Jfr. Washburn, of Maine : "I rise to a question of order. It is this : that it is not in order to move to strike out the enacting clause of the bill, while the House is in Committee of the Whole, but that the motion can only be made m the House."— (Loud cries of " Order" and " Question.")— The Chahr- man overruled the point of order.— (Vociferous cries for the question.)— il/r. Rogers, of North Carolina: " I wish to state to the country, and to the members of the House with whom I have been acting to tliis time, that I desire to introduce an amendment to this bill. I feel it due to myself to state "—ClMirman, 3Ir. Olds : " Is it the pleasure of the committee that the gentleman from North Carolina be heard ? "—(Cries of " No ! No ! No!")— i^/?•. Sage, of New York: "I desire to offer an amendment to the amend- ment."— T^^ Chairman, Mr. Olds: "The amendment is not amendable."— J/r. Dickinson, of Massachusetts : "I desire to offer an amendment to the biU now before the Committee."— 77(e Chairman : " It is not in order while a motion to strike out the enacting clause is ^^ndSng."— Mr. Dickinson: "I wish to have the bill read."— Chairman: " It is not in order to have it read while a motion to strike out the enact- ing clause is pending."— (Incessant cries for the question.)- Question taken: 103 for the motion to strike out, 2 in the negative.— Jl/r. Dean, of NewYork (in the midst of great confusion) : " I hope that no member in the minority will vote upon the question. Oppose tyranny by revolution."— (Vehement cries of " Order," and calls for the Ser- geant-at-arms.)— J/»-. Lewis D. Campbell, of Ohio, (passing through the tellers) : " There will be one vote against the motion at all events."— (The tellers thereafter reported 103 ayes, 22 noes.)— 77(e Chair announced the motion carried.— J//-. Richardson, of APPENDIX. 177 And thus fraud was superadded to all the other iniquities of the bill, and its passage — superadded to the seduction, intimida- tion, coercion, the moral duresse under which it was driven along, and the false pretexts on which it was founded, and the sudden adoption of it, as an administration democratic measure, after stigmatizing it as a whig abolition measure. And this is the measure, thus conducted and thus passed, to the laudation of Illinois : " I move that the Committee rise, and report to the House the action of the Committee." — The question for the Committee to rise was then put, and only 103 voted, and two of them in the negative. — (Cries of " No quorum ! " " No quonim !") — Tlie Chair : " No quorum is necessary to enable the Committee to rise." — The Committee rose, and the Chairman reported the bill to the House, saying : " The Committee had directed him to report the bill back, with a recommendation to strike out the enacting portion of the bill." — 3fr. Dean, of New York : " I rise to a question of order. It is this : That less than a quorum of the Committee of the Whole cannot report a bill to the House." — 77ie Speaker, {Mr. Boyd,) being in the Chair: "The Chair has no of- ficial knowledge of the mmiber of votes given in Committee." — Mr. Hughes, of New York : " I rise to a question of order. I submit that the report of the Chairman of the Committee of the Whole on the state of the Union, shows that the action of that Committee is tantamount to a rejection of the bill, which the Committee have no power to do." — Hie Speaker : " Will the gentleman from New York indicate the mle under which it denies the Committee that power ? " — Mr. Hughes : " It is under rule 119, and under that rule the Speaker of the House once decided in the same manner. The Speaker refused to entertain the report of a Committee upon the ground that it was tantamount to a rejection of the bill, which was beyond the power of the com- mittee. The note to the 119th rule gives the same construction to the rule, and upon that I raise my question of order." — The Speaker : " Would remark that the same note declares the very object of the rule was to supersede and obviate the offering of further amendments." — Mr. Meacham, of Vermont : "I rise to a question of privilege under the 34th rule, which provides that * where debate is closed by order of the House, any member shall be allowed in Committee five minutes to explain any amendment, after which any member, who shall first obtain the floor, shall be allowed to speak five minutes in opposition to it.' Now, I submit that the rights of members under this rule have not been respected in Committee." — The Speaker : " That Is a question for the Committee to decide for itself. It is not competent for the Chair to know ofiicially what has taken place in Committee except through the report of its Chairman." — Mr. Richardson, of Illinois : " I demand the previous question upon concurring with the report of the Committee." — Mr^llison, of Ohio : " I rise to a question of order. The 26th rule provides that when the Committee of the Whole on the state of the Union finds itself without a quorum, the Chairman shall cause the roU to be called. Now, Sir, I submit, that the Committee did find itself without a qiiorum — that it was not competent for it to report the bill to the House without a quorum — and that the roll was not called as the rule directs." — The Speaker : " That is a question which the gentleman should have raised in Committee, and which it is not competent for the House to have any knowledge of, unless so reported by the chairman of the Committee." — Mr. Campbell, of Ohio : " I 12 178 APPENDIX. wliicli, and to the condemnation of all who opposed it, eleven pages of his last message was devoted by President Pierce. Bnt the message was not allowed to stop at one falsification of history, large as that was, but was made to go on to another, supposed to be written by the same hand ; and, in fact, a sup- plement and continuation of the first one. It undertakes to give the state of parties in the United States, classifying them, and assuming to say which is culpable for the present distracted condition of the country ; and, of course, putting all censure upon one, and all praise upon the other. It sees but two par- ties — abolitionists, and democrats : and lays all blame upon the former. The message is severe upon the abolitionists ; * and so would make an appeal to the gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Richardson), to withdraw his call for the previous question until I can make a suggestion in relation to this bill." Mr. Richardson : " The appeal is in vain. I decline to withdraw the call." — (The House refused to concur with the Committee in striking out the enacting clause of the bill.) — 3fr. Richardson : " I now move to amend the bill by striking out all after the enacting claiise, and inserting in lieu thereof what I send to the Clerk's table : and upon that proposition I demand the previous question." — (It was the substitute bill from the Senate which was thus sent, and upon which the previous question was de- manded before it was even read, as an amendment.) — Mr. Bean : " I call for the read- ing of the substitute." — (It was read, consisting of 37 sections.) — The vote on adopting the substitute was then taken under the pre%ious question, and instantly Mr. Richard- son moved the third reading of the bill under the same gag : and it was passed — not one word being spoken, or any amenduaent allowed to it.) — The announcement of the vote was received with prolonged clapping of hands, and hisses, both in the House and the galleries, and cries of " Order ! " " Order ! " * " To accompUsh their objects, they dedicate themselves to the odious task of de- preciating the government organization which stands in their way, and of calumni- ating, with indiscriminate invective, not only the citizens of particular States, with whose laws they find fault, but all others of their fellow-citizens throughout the coun- try, who do not participate with them in their assaults upon the Constitution, framed and adopted by our fathers, and claiming for the privileges it has secured, and the blessings it has conferred, the steady support and grateful reverence of their children. They seek an object which they well know to be a revoh;tiouary one. They are per- fectly aware that the change in the relative condition of tlie white and black races in the slaveholding States, which they would promote, is beyond their lawful authority ; that to them it is a foreign object ; that it cannot be effected by any peaceful instru- mentality of theirs ; that for them, and the States of which they are citizens, the only path to its accomplishment is through burning cities, and ravaged fields, and slaugh- tered populations, and all there is most terrible in foreign, complicated with civil and servile war; and that the first step in the attempt is the forcible disruption of a country embracing in its broad bosom a degree of liberty, and an amount of m- dividual and public prosperity, to which there is no parallel in history, and substituting in its place hostile governments, driven at once and inevitably into mutual devastation APPENDIX. 1T9 far as the severity is confined to tliem — to persons who deny property in slaves, and labor to defeat that property — I have nothing to say, and leave them to the tender mercies of the presumed writer of that part of the message. He was long enongh among them to know their designs, and it would not become me to hazard speculative opinions against his positive knowledge. But, to include all under that definition who were opposed to the abrogation of the Missouri Compromise, and all who object to the further extension of slavery into free territory, and especially into territory free under the law^s of other coun- tries and to be slaves under ours : to include all such in the class of abolitionists, is to libel ninety-five per centum of the population of the free States. I claim for this ninety-five per centum total exemption from any part in word, deed, or wish, in producing the present slavery agitation. It comes exclusively from the nullifiers and the abolitionists playing into each other's hand, and embroiling tlie country with their equal fanaticism for and against slavery, and their criminal designs against the Union. The message is unjust in throwing upon the abolition- ists (even those properly so called) the exclusive censure of producing the present troubles. They are culpable, but not exclusively, or even equally so. There is another party more culpable than they, and whom the message qualifies as patriotic, and who originated this agitation, — who began it, and keep it up ; but who, without the co-operation of the abolitionists, could never have brought it to a head. These are the Southern nullifiers and secessionists, Siamese twins to the Northern abo- litionists, and the two as indispensable to each other as the two halves of a pair of shears, neither of which can cut without being joined to the other. The brief story of this close co-operation between Southern nullifiers and ]!Tortliern abolitionists, is this : In the year, 1830, some Southern politicians, having some private griefs of their and fratricidal carnage, transforming the now peaceful and felicitous brotherhood into a vast permanent camp of armed men, like the rival monarchies of Europe and Asia. Well knowing that such, and such only, are the means and the consequences of their plans and purposes, they endeavor to prepare the people of the United States for civil war, by doing every thing in their power to deprive the Constitution and the laws of moral authority, and to undermine the fabric of the Union by appeals to passion and sectional prejudice, by indoctrinating its people with reciprocal hatred, and by edu- cating them to stand face to face as enemies, rather than shoulder to shoulder as friends." — Message, p. 9. 180 APPENDIX. own to redress, and some aml)itions objects of tlieir own to ac- comjjlisli, conceived that a separation of the States, and the erection of a new RejDublic South, was the way to accomplish their purposes: and at that object (the segregation of the States south of the Potomac) they went to work — pretexting their op- erations with " the oppressions of an unconstitutional protective tariff." With this view, and upon this pretext, the first South- ern (South Carolina) Convention was held, J^Tovember, 1832, which passed the ordinance of nullification and secession — de- claring the revenue laws null and void, fixing the first day of February, then next ensuing, for the secession, (unless Congress in the mean time should abandon protective tarifi";) and levy- ing an army to maintain her attitude. The Jackson Proclama- tion of December, 1832,* denouncing the penalties of high trea- son upon all who should commit the " overt act " under that ordinance, and the full belief that he would do what he said, * " A recent proclamation of the present Governor of South Carolina has openly defied the authority of the Executive of the Union, and general orders from the head- quarters of the State, announced his determination to accept the services of volunteers, and expressed his belief that, should their country need their services, they will be found at the post of honor and duty, ready to lay down their lives in her defence. Under these orders the forces referred to are directed to ' hold themselves in readiness to take the field at a moment ; ' and in the city of Charleston, within a collection dis- trict and a port of entry, a rendezvous has been opened for the purpose of enhsting men for the magazine and municipal guard. Thus, South Carolina presents herself in the attitude of hostile preparation, and ready even for military violence, if need be, to enforce her laws for preventing the collection of the duties within her limits. Under these circumstances, there can be no doubt that it is the determination of the authori- ties of South CaroHna to carry into effect their ordinance and laws, (for nullification and secession,) after the first of February next. This solemn denunciation of the laws and authority of the United States, has been followed up by a series of acts, on the part of the authorities of that State, which manifest a determination to render inevita- ble a resort to those measures of self-defence which the paramount interest of the Federal Government requires, and upon the adoption of which, that State will proceed to execute her purpose of withdrawing from the Union. By these various proceed- ings, therefore, the State of South Carolina has forced the General Government, una- voidably, to decide the new and dangerous alternative, of peimitting a State to obstruct the execution of the laws within its limits, or seeing it attempt to execute a threat of withdrawing from the Union. In my opinion, both puri^oses are to be regarded as revolutionary in their character and tendency, and subversive of the supremacy of the laws and of the integrity of the Union. In this posture of affairs, the duty of the Government seems to be plain. Duty to the rest of the Union demands that open and organized resistance to the laws, should not be executed with impunity." — Proclama- tion, December, 1832. APPENDIX. 181 balked that project, and gave birth to the tariff compromise of 1833, by which protective tariff (as a pretext for secession) was laid aside, to be substituted by the slavery agitation, generated out of the alarms of the slave States for their lives and property through fear of the anti-slavery "aggressions, en- croachments, and crusades " of the Korth against the South. The substitution was instant, and notorious. On returning home from Congress, Mr. Calhoun told his friends that the South could never be united against the Nortli on the tariff question — that the sugar interest of Louisiana would keep her out — and that the basis of Southern union must be shifted to the slave question; and, shifted accordingly it immediately was. Incontinently all the nullification newspapers opened for seces- sion for that new cause, filling the country with alarm for the safety of slave property, and spreading the terrors of servile in- surrection — inevitable consequence of the abolition designs. The whole South immediately took fire. Before the month of June — that is to say, in less than three months after the protective tariff' pretext for secession had been laid aside — the new pretext had been installed in its place, and so fully developed as to be seen by all observers. Mr. Clay saw it, and on the 28th of May, in a letter to Mr. Madison, expressed his apprehensions of this new danger, and declared his disbelief of any foundation for the alarm which was attempted. Mr. Madison immediately replied, reciprocating, both his apprehensions and his disbelief; and, in a brief paragraph, fixing all the points — date, locality, actors, pretext, and mode of operation — in this new phase of the secession movement ; and branding it with as much repro- bation as the amiable moderation of his temper would permit. That letter becomes a starting point in this inquiry, which his- tory will seize upon, and find in it the key which unlocks the door that gives the inside view of all the machinations which have led to the present portentous slavery agitation. In that letter to Mr. Clay, he said : — " It is painful to see the unceasing eflforts to alarm the South, by imputations against the North of unconstitutional designs on the sub- ject of the slaves. You are right, I have no doubt, that no such inter- meddling disposition exists in the body of our Northern brethren. Their good faith is sufficiently guaranteed by the interest they have as 182 APPENDIX. mercliants, as ship-owners, and as manufacturers, in preserving a union with the slaveholding States. On the other hand, what madness in the South to look for greater safety in disunion. The danger from the alarms is, that the pride and resentment excited by them may he an overmatch for the dictates of prudence, and favor the project of a South- ern Convention, insidiously revived, as promising by its councils, the best securities against grievances of every sort from the North." This is the stand-point — this letter from Mr. Madison to Mr. Claj — from which to view and to understand, the whole nature, origin, and design, and operative means, of the slavery agita- tors which has brought our country to its present distracted condition. It puts the finger upon every part of the disease. Mr. Madison sees, and sees with pain, the efforts — the unceas- ing efforts — made to alarm the South with the fear of uncon- stitutional designs in the Korth upon slave property. He does not believe in the considerable extent of any such designs on the part of our JSTorthern brethren, and in that disbelief he con- curs with Mr. Clay — a concurrence which shows that Mr. Clay had expressed the same sentiment in the letter which he was answering. He believed there was danger from the alarm, though unfounded ; and that this fear of danger, acting on the passions, might be an overmatch for prudence, and favor the revival of that convention, which he qualified as " insidious." It was the convention which passed the secession ordinance to which he referred, and which, having failed to combine the South against the ]!^orth on the tarifl' j^^'^^^^^j "^^^s now to at- tempt the same thing on a slavery pretext. And it was re- vived, and for that purpose, and has been kept alive ever since — having become a new Southern institution, sitting annually, and vindicating its title to the character of '' insidious," (so far as the managers are concerned,) by masking its real object of segregating the Southern States by presenting an endless suc- cession of barren projects for their amelioration. Every thing which Mr. Madison foresaw in 1833, we have all seen since — the unceasing attempts to alarm the slave States — its success in re- viving the " insidious " conventions — its effect on the i3ride, and resentment of the Southern people — and the mastery which the nullificrshave acquired in gaining control in all the slave States, and brinji-ino; them to act as a unit a^-ainst the ISTorth in the Federal APPENDIX. 183 elections and legislation. His letter, and that of Mr. Clay, are cardinal to the history of these times, and cannot be overlooked, or discredited, by any one who seeks either to teach truth, or to learn it, on this eventful period of American history. They mark the origin of the slavery agitation. They show its local- ity, and fix it in the South : they show its pretext, and expose its want of truth : they point to its designs, and probable suc- cess — and in that they were prophetic. But tliis was not the only letter of Mr. Madison to this effect. The last three years of his life were occupied, and rendered miserable, by the pro- gress which nullification, through an unfounded slavery alarm, was making in getting control of the State governments, with the undisguised object of a new Southern confederacy. All his letters of this period were filled with this subject. Many of these .letters have been saved from loss by Mr. James 0. M'Guire, of Washington City, and a quarto volume of them beautifully printed for presents to the friends of the great states- man — among them, several to his early and life-long friend. Governor Edward Coles, now of Philadelphia. In one of these, of date August, 1834, he says : — " On the other hand, what more dangerous than nullification, or more evident than the progress it continues to make, either in its original shape, or in the disguises it assumes ? And for its progress, hearken to the tone in which it is now preached. Cast your eye on its increasing minorities in most of the Southern States, without a decrease in any one of them. Look in Virginia herself, and read in the gazettes, and in the proceedings of popular meetings, the figure which the anar- chical principle now makes, in contrast with the scouting reception given to it hut a short time ago. A susceptibility of the contagion in the Southern States is visible ; and the danger not to be concealed, that the sympathy arising from known causes, and the inculcated impression of a permanent incompatibility of interest between the North and the South, may put it in the power of popular leaders, aspiring to the high- est stations, to unite the South, on some critical occasion, in a course that will end in creating a new theatre of great though inferior extent. In pursuing this course, the first and most obvious step, is nullifica- tion ; the next, secession ; and the last, a farewell separation." This is enough to mark the origin, the authors, and the pur- poses of the present slavery agitation, and to expose the falsity 184. APPENDIX. of the message in tlirowing all upon the Kortli ; but it is only the beginning of the public proof on that liead. In the year 1835, Mr. Calhoun undertook to install the agitation in the Sen- ate of the United States : the design was rebuked, and repulsed by Southern Senators — Mr. Bedford Brown, of North Carolina ; Mr. John P. King, of Georgia. Foiled in 1835, he returned to the work in 1838, and was again rebuked by slave State Sena- tors—Mr. Clay, Mr. Crittenden, Mr. Strange, of North Caroli- na ; Mr. Eichard H. Bayard, of Delaware ; Mr. William Camp- bell Preston, of South Carolina ; and by Mr. Buchanan, of Pennsylvania. He brought in a set of resolutions, five in num- ber, intended to be a digest of territorial slavery laAV, all bot- tomed upon the right of Congress to legislate upon slavery in Territories, (for the dogma of no such power was not invented at that time, and he had not then forgot his support of the Missouri Compromise,) and deprecating the abuse of the right. In support of tliese resolutions Mr. Calhoun delivered many speeches, all tending to promote slavery agitation, and to excite the South against the North ; for which he was rebuked by all the Sena- tors named.* But I am not now writing the history of the present slavery agitation — a history which the young have not learnt, and the old have forgotten, and which every Amei-ican ought to under- stand. I only indicate cardinal points to show its character ; and of these a main one remains to be stated. Up to Mr. Pierce's administration the plan had been defensive — that is to * By some of tliem severely — by the mildest more temperately— but not less deci- sively ; as this from Mr. Buchanan : — " / cannot believe that the Senator from South Ca- rolina {Mr. Calhoun) has taken the best course to attain these results (quieting agitation.) This IS the great centre of agitation : from this Capitol it spreads over the whole Union. I, therefore, deprecate a protracted discussion of the question here. Jt can do no good, but ■mag do much harm both in the North and in the South." Mr. Buchanan then added, that the Northern members who stood up for the rights of the South, and had to bear the brunt of the battle at home, were forced into false positions, and made to fight aboli- tionism on the right of petition, and placed between the fire of friends and foes— saying, " Thus ve stand: and those of us in the North who must sustain the brunt of the battle are fm-ced into false positions. Abolitionism thus acquires force by bringing to its aid the right of petition, and the hosiilifg which exists at the North against the doctrines of mdlification. The fact is, and it cannot be disguised, that those of us in the Northern States who have deter- mined to sustain the rigUs of the Southern States at evertj hazard, are placed in a most embarrmsing situation. We are almost literally between two fires. While in front we are assailed by the abolitionists, our own friends in the South are constantly driving us into po- sitions where their enemies, and our enctnies, nuiy gain important advantages'' APPENDIX. 185 say, to make the secession of the South a measure of self-defence against the abolition encroachments, aggressions, and crusades of the JSTorth : in the time of Mr. Pierce, the plan became offen- sive — that is to say, to commence the expansion of slavery, and the acquisition of territory to sjDread it over, so as to overpower the Korth with new slave States, and drive them out of the Union. In this change of tactics originated the abrogation of the Missouri Compromise, the attempt to purchase the one half of Mexico, and the actual purchase of a large part ; the design to take Cuba ; the encouragement to Kinney and to Walker in Central America ; the quarrels with Great Britain for outlandish coasts and islands ; the designs upon the Tehuantepec, the Nic- aragua, the Panama, and the Darien routes ; and the scheme to get a foothold in the Island of San Domingo. The rising in the free States in consequence of the abrogation of the Missouri Compromise, checked these schemes, and limited the success of the disunionists to the revival of the agitation which enables them to wield the South against the ISTorth in all the federal elections and federal legislation. Accidents and events have given this party a strange pre-eminence. Under Jackson's ad- ministration, proclaimed for treason ; since, at the head of the Government and of the Democratic party. The death of Har- rison, and the accession of Tyler, was their first great lift ; the election of Mr. Pierce was their culminating point. It not only gave them the government, but power to pass themselves for the Union party, and for Democrats ; and to stigmatize all who refused to go with them, as disunionists, and abolitionists. And to keep up this classification, is the object of the eleven pages of the message which calls for this Review — unhappily assisted in that object by the conduct of a few real abolitionists, (not five per centum of the population of the free States ;) but made to stand, in the eyes of the South, for the whole. 186 APPENDIX. IV. ABROGATION OF THE MISSOURI COMPROMISE: ITS ULTERIOR OBJECTS. Those who suppose that there was no object in view in this abrogation but merely to make Kansas a free State, are far behind the state of the facts, and can have had but little oppor- tunity of knowing the intentions of the prime movers of that measure — those who ruled the council that commanded it. Certainly that Avas one of the objects ; but there were others far beyond it, far transcending it in importance ; and of which the establishment of Kansas as a slave State was only an intro- duction, and a means of attainment. To form the slave States into a unit for federal elections and legislation, by the revival of the slavery question, was one object, counting upon the fed- eral patronage to gain as much help from the free States as would give the slave States the majority. Yast acquisitions of free territory to the southward, to be made slave (besides Cuba), was another object; and for this purpose the principles of the Kansas-Kebraska bill were doubly contrived; first, to carry slavery into these free Territories by the Constitution ; next, to establish it by the inhabitants of the States, enough Southern people going in to dominate over the feeble and ignorant natives. Separation of the slave States, or domination over the free States, driving out of the Union the North Atlantic States, was to be the consequence of this consolidation of the slave States and vast acquisition of Southern territory. All these objects would have been brought out, on motions to amend the bill, if amendments and discussion had been allowed : as it was, they were only glanced at by a couple of speakers, and one of these enigmatically and gently, and the other more clearly, but stintedly in the few minutes which were allowed him, and which were in fact borrowed out of another member's time. Mr. Seward, of Georgia, was one ; Mr. Benton, of Missouri, the other. Mr. Seward was thoroughly in favor of the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, but could not stomach the pi-etexts on which the repeal was founded, nor favor the ulterior objects of which it was the forerunner, nor respect a piece of legislation with a demagogical stump speech in its belly. lie expressed himself gingerly, but strongly (considering his geographical APPENDIX. 187 position and party relations) and clearly enongh to be under- stood, and also to show more than party fealty permitted him to tell. He opposed the details of the bill, and showed wherein and why. First: "These details were not consistent with themselves, nor with the transactions to which they relate : " a mode of expression, to expose a double falsehood, sufficiently emphatic in a friend. Then : " That these details were manu- factured for a particular purpose :" the word manufactured here being clearly equivalent to fabricated, and the purpose intended being sufficiently indicated as selfish and sinister, by the use of the word particular instead of public. Then : " Some of the clauses in it were introduced for the purpose of setting up a principle to be acted on in future, and which the acts of 1850 never contained " — a significant intimation of future ojjerations, to be pretexted upon the acts of 1850, falsified for the purpose. Then again, he says : " We are called upon now to vote for this bill, which is not drafted in the ordinary shape of legislative acts." And well might Mr. Seward object to such a shape of drafting laws, for never was such a farrago of uiilegislative and demagogue stufi" put into any bill before. Mr. Seward then denied that the acts of 1850 authorized it, declaring that he would subscribe to no such thing ; and offered to "join issue" upon it. Far from joining issue, all chance for it was cut off by the manner of dropping the House bill and driving the substitute bill through. Then Mr. Seward alluded to " a grand movement" which was in contemplation, professing not to know what it was, for, probably as disaffected to the bill, he was not let into the secret, but clearly showing that there was some " grand movement " on foot. Mr. Benton got a chance to say a few words, and interpreted that " grand movement " to be the seizure of Cuba, and the purchase of the northern half of Mexico. He got a chance to say a few words by a contrivance — a representative from Illinois, Mr. Knox, who had the floor for an hour, giving him some minutes of his time — for which he and the speaker were called to account, when it was seen what was said. The Congressional Globe shows this scene : — Fridav, May 19, 1854 : {Jaie in the evening.) Mr. Knox was assigned the floor. Mr. Wright, of Pennsylvania. If the gentleman from Illinois will 188 APPENDIX. give way for a moment, I ■will move that the committee take a recess until seven o'clock. Mr. Benton. If no gentleman wants the floor now, I wish to occupy it for about ten minutes. The Chairman. The gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Knox) is en- titled to the floor, the Chair having recognized him. If the gentleman from Illinois will yield the floor for ten minutes, and if the committee will be willing that the gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Benton) may proceed, he may do so. The gentleman from Illinois yielded the floor, and general assent was given to the gentleman from Missouri to proceed. Mr. Benton said : Mr. Chairman, I have nothing more to say to this bill on account of its interference with the Missouri Compromise. On that point I have spoken my share, and shall not recur to it again. I pass on to a new point — one significantly revealed to us some ten days ago by a Bepresentative from Georgia, the member from the first con- gressional district of that State, (Mr. Seward.) That gentleman spoke against the bill in a way entirely accordant to my own opinions ; but came to the conclusion that he would vote for it, * and ga^■e his reasons for doing so — reasons which had not been mentioned by any other speaker, and which struck me as momentous, and worthy to arrest the attention of the House, and of the country. He objects to the bill because it is unfounded and contradictory in its statements and assump- tions — inconsistent with itself, with the act of 1820, and of the acts of 1850 — because it was manufactured for a particular purpose, and is of no value in itself to the slave States ; but which commands his support, as a Southern man, on account of its ulterior operations, as containing a principle to be asserted in future, and which was put into the bill to become the basis of some grand movement in this country. I will read what he said, as the proper way of doing justice to his clear and well- expressed opinions — to his momentous revelations — and as the best way of availing myself of his important declarations. I find them thus in the official copy of the speech : — " I oppose the details of this bill, because they are not consistent with themselves or with the transactions to which they relate ; and the bill itself shows that it was manufactured for a particular purpose. Some of the clauses embraced in it, conflict- ing as they are, were introduced for the purpose, in my opmion, of setting up a prin- ciple to be asserted in future, and which the acts of 1850 never contained. Now, su-, let us see. "We are called upon here now to vote for this bill, which is not drafted in * This was said before the vote was taken, when it was supposed that Mr. Seward, notwithstanding his objections, would vote with his party for the bill ; but he did not. He did not vote at all, neither for nor against. APPENDIX. 189 the ordinary shape of legislative acts. But the framers of this bill have furnished the reasons, within the bill itself, on which we must act, and which they call on us to subscribe to. What is it ? They teU us that the law of 1820, being inconsistent with the legislation of 1850, therefore that the act of 1820 is inoper.ative and void. I take issue with them ; and, for myself, occupying the position that I do as a Southern man, I never have subscribed, never wiU, and never can subscribe to the doctrines con- tained in the acts of 1850. My objections to the acts of ] 850 are known at home. They are recorded in the proceedings of the convention which took place in Georgia in 1850. I was a member of that convention. I voted against the Georgia platfoim on principle. And now, when that portion of the South having feelings in common with me on this question, have waived their objections to it for the purpose of iiniting with the South, and harmonizing public feeling on this great question, it is put in here as the basis of some grand movement in this country. I know not what that move- ment is." I concur in the truth and justice of every thing which the member from Greorgia has here said, but differ from him in the conclusion to which he arrives — that of voting for the bill ; and find in his reasons for that vote, additional reasons for my own vote against it ; but he votes as a Southern man, and votes sectionally. I also am a Southern man, but vote nationally on national questions. He sees in it a prin- ciple set up which is false and useless in its application to Nebraska, but whicli is to be asserted in future, and which is put into the bill as the basis of some grand impending movement in this country. Of the nature of this movement, which is to be so grand, and at the same time sectional, the member declares himself to be ignorant ; and that igno- rance, I woiild suppose, should be a reason for holding back from a bill which commits its supporters to great unknown things. That is the way it works with me. I also am ignorant, that is to say, uninformed of this grand movement which is to be in this country ; but I believe in it, and so believing am the more against the bill. I am against any thing that I do not understand, and which nobody will explain to me, and which, according to my own short and dubious lights, is dangerous to the peace and honor of the country. I believe in the futility of this bill — its absolute futility to the slaveholding States — and that not a single slave will ever be held in Kansas or Nebraska under it, (even admitting it to be passed.) Though adapted to slave labor in two of its great staples, (hemp and tobacco,) I do not believe that slaves will ever be held there. The popular vote will expel them. Kansas is contiguous to middle and southern Missouri, where slave labor is profit- able, and slaves held in great number — a single owner within two hours' ride of the line holding one hundred more than the five hundred of Randolph of Roanoke ; and five thousand in his county alone ; but the holder of slaves will have but one vote, and will be beat at the polls by 190 APPENDIX. the many who have none. In relation to Kansas and Nebraska, then, I hold the bill to be a deception and a cheat — what gamesters call cammon, congressmen buncombe, and seamen a tub to the whale : that is to say, an ambidextrous operation upon the senses of confiding people, by which they are made to see what is not, and not to see what is. This is what I believe ; and not being obliging enough to join in a scheme of self-deception, or to suffer a game of deception to be played upon me, I must now turn my back upon the illusions of this Nebraska bill, and look out for its real object — the particular purpose for which it was manufactured, and the grand movement of which it is to be the basis. In this search I naturally look about into the signs and rumors of the times, and into the cotemporaneous events which may connect them- selves with the grand movement in question ; and think I find them in two diplomatic missions, of which the country has heard much — but not all. I speak upon rumor, but neither tell, nor believe, the half of the half of what I hear ; but believe enough to excite apprehension, and to justify inquiry. What is a state secret in the city of Washington, is street talk in the city of Montezuma. First. The mission of Mr. Gadsden to Santa Anna. It must have been conceived about the time that this bill was ; and, according to transpiring accounts, must have been a grand movement in itself — $50,000,000 for as much Mexican territory on our southern border as would make five or six States of the first class. The area of the acqui- sition, as I understand it, was to extend from sea to sea, on a line that would give us Santander, Monterey, Saltillo, Parras, Sonora, and all Lower California. This was certainly a large movement, both in point of money and of territory, and also large in political consequence ; and clearly furnishing a theatre for the doctrine of non-intervention, if there should be any design to convert the newly-acquired territory from free- soil, that it is, into slave soil that it might be desired to be. Here, then, I believe I have found one branch of the grand movement ; and although ]Mr. Gadsden returned from his mission with a small slice only of the desired territory, yet he has returned to his post, and may have better luck on a second trial — if Santa Anna escapes from the speckled Indians (Los Indios Pintos) who have him at bay in the Sierra. I say nothing on the merits of this new acquisition, only that it is an old acquaintance with me, having first heard of it in November, 1846, and afterwards in March, 1848— at which latter time it was proposed in the Senate, (by Mv. Davis, of Mississippi,) on the ratification of the Guada- lupe Hidalgo treaty; and rejected by the Senate. I voted against the Santander and Monterey line then, and have not seen cause to change APPENDIX. 191 my opinion. [Here Mr. Benton read the article proposed by Mr. Davis for the new line.] Secondly. The mission of Mr. Soule to Madrid — also a grand move- ment in itself, if reports be true — two hundred and fifty millions for Cuba ; and a rumpus kicked up if the island is not got. Here again might be found a case for the non-intervention principle ; but of that I say nothing, because I know nothing, and wish to know something. Of the acquisition itself I say nothing now, but did say something, about forty-four years ago, in a Nashville newspaper, published by Thomas Eastin, called the Impartial Beview ; in which I discussed Cuba as the geographical appurtenance of the valley of the Mississippi, and eventu- ally to become its political appurtenance ; but to be got with honor whenever it was got ; and in all that faith I still remain firm. No dis- honor ! no stain on the bright and spotless fame left us by our fathers ! Mr. Chairman, I discuss nothing in relation to those rumored acqui- sitions of the Island of Cuba and a broad side of Mexico ; I only call attention to them as probable indexes to the grand movement of which the member from Georgia gave us the revelation, and which no one has denied. According to him, and according to my own belief, this Ne- braska bill is only an entering-wedge to future enterprises — a thing manufactured for a particular purpose — a stepping-stone to a grand movement which is to develop itself in this country of ours. I wish to know what that movement is. I have a right to know, to enable me to discharge my duties understandingly ; and I respectfully crave the in- formation from those who have the conducting of the bill. Mr. Smith, of Virginia. — I would like to know, Mr. Chairman, how much of this time consumed in the remarks of the gentleman from Missouri, is to be taken out of the hour allotted to the gentleman from Illinois ? The Chairman. — The gentleman from Missouri occupied twenty minutes. As a matter of course, that time must be taken out of the hour allowed to the gentleman from Illinois. It is distinctly understood that the Chair did not authorize the gentleman from Missouri to take the floor from the gentleman from Illinois. Mr. Knox. — I am very happy in having yielded to the gentleman from Missouri so much of my time, because what he may have said is of far greater interest, and of far more importance to the country, than any poor remarks of mine would have been. [This declaration was greeted with warm applause.] This is the end of the reported proceedings, and not a word was said more on the ominous subject broached by IMr. Seward, 192 APPENDIX. of Georgia, and pursued by me, (by tlie favor of Mr. Knox, of Illinois, in giving me part of liis time,) for twenty minutes, for which he had to defend himself ; and did it bravely and gener- ously, commanding the applause of the House. There was spirit in the House, and if a few of us could have had a chance at the bill, it would have been smashed into atoms, and the country roused to a knowledge of the meditated crimes. But there was no chance. A vulgar, infuriate tyranny prevailed — greater than ever was seen in the French National Convention in the Reign of Terror ; for even there, debate could not be entirely silenced. Members carried arms there ; and brave men (but no braver than w^e were) with loaded pistols in their hands, would say what they pleased, and see Robespierre, Marat, CoUot, Merlin, turn pale under their terrific denunciations. We could not carry arms into the national hall of legislation, and parliamentary rules signified nothing against an inexorable majority, some subdued by their fears, some seduced by the administration, some debauched by gambling, and drinking, and plunder legis- lation ; and all driven along by the furious nullifiers, to whom the administration had surrendered the government. Still there was a plenty of good material, if it could have been worked up. Many voted with the majority, who only waited a favorable moment to attack the tyranny of which they were the unwilling and mortified instruments. The war upon the details of the bill would have furnished the opportunity. Successive attacks upon the details, even with the five minutes' speeches, would have been enough ; for, in certain conditions of all public bodies — the inflamed and excited condition — long speeches are not wanted : they are even bad ; and a sudden, vehement, and brief appeal to the passions has often sufficed to overturn a powerful majority, or even a whole government. But the fraudulent use of the rules, and the fatality of having all questions of order de- cided against us, left us without rights, or favors, in presence of an inexorable majority, which, governed by party machinery, drove on to their object regardless of law, decency, or shame. APPENDIX. 193 A LAST WOED I was breaking down under the terrible attack which kept me, for two weeks, face to face with death, when I was writing this Examination ; and had to break off abruptly — leaving two entire heads untouched, and not even alluded to. Besides these two heads, now postponed, there was another which I wished to bring before the American people, to wit : The conduct of an Administration and a Senate (called Democratic), which has done, and is doing, what no former administration and Senate, (whether Whig, Federal, Democratic, or Kepublican,) ever did ! that is to say, supi^ressing and concealing the evidences of a foreign negotiation, after the negotiation is all over and done with ; which negotiation is surrounded by circumstances which connect it with a scheme to bring on a separation of the slave from the free States : I speak of the Gadsden negotiation, and of the fifty millions he was authorized to give for a broad side of Mexico, with a port on the Gulf of California, and a railway to it, to suit the United States South after the separation— to which point all the schemes for a Southern Pacific Eailroad tend, while the credulous public are made to believe they are hunting the best way to California, where they mean it shall never go, because California rejects slavery. Every Union- loving State Legislature should post its Senator under instruc- tions to bring those hidden negotiations to the public view, though with but little prospect of getting the whole truth after so many years' suppression — the same reasons which have in- duced suppression thus far, being ec[ually strong to make it per- petual ; so that much may be gone past recovery. Wabhtn&ton Citt, Septemljer, 1857. PROSPECTUS AND SPECIMEN PAGES OP THE OF GENERAL KNOWLEDGE. EDITED BY OHC-A-IiriES j^. I3.A.nsr.A. AND OEOHO-B mi>LE"2', Aided by a Numerous Select Corps of Writers in all Branches of Science, Art, and Literature. The design of tlie New American Cyclopedia is to furnish the great body of intelligent readers in this country with a popular Dictionary of Universal Knowledge. All branches of scholastic erudition will be fully represented, and the scholar and professional man will find it stored with references in every sphere of learn- ed inquiry. 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It is worthy of mention that this is the only profession open to women on equal terms with the stronger sex. ACTS OF THE Apostles, the fifth book of the New Testament, written by Luke, a phy- sician and painter of Antioch, who had been converted by St. Paul, whose friend and com- panion he afterwards was, and whom he accom- panied to Rome, sharing his first captivity in that city. The Acts of the Apostles could not have been written before A. D. 62, at which time St. Paul was at Eome, and were probably written between that and the period of his death, A. D. 68. Tlie jiersonal acquaintance of the writer with the subject, especially with the life and experiences of St. Paul, must have given him every facility for the work. The Acts include the history of the church in Judea and Asia Minor during a period of about 30 years after the death of Christ. Theophilus (friend of God), mentioned in the dedication, has by some been considered an ideal for the inquiring hea- then, by others a real person. The dates in the Acts have been assumed to be, martyrdom of Stephen, A. D. 35, Paul's conversion, A. D. 36, Paul's journey to Rome, A. D. 62 and 63. the style in which the Acts are written is perspicu- ous, the narrative striking. The principal per- sonage is St. Paul ; next to him St. Peter and Philip. The labors and trials of the other apos- tles, whose missions led them to distant coun- tries, are but slightly adverted to. ACTUARY, a word generally used to signify the manager of a joint stock company under a board of directors, particularly of an insur- ance company. ACUNA. I. Christoval de, Spanish Jesuit missionary in the 17th century. He was one of the early explorers of the river Amazon, and was sent in Texeira's expedition to that river, .vath the special object of reporting the inci- dents of the exploration. Father Andres de Artieda was appointed as his associate. The expedition lasted from February to December, 1639. Acufia went to Spain with his history of the expedition, but the distraction of the country prevented the government from taking any interest in the colonization of the country, on which so much energy and talent had been devoted. He returned to South America, and died on his journey from Panama to Lima. The narrative was published at Madrid, 1641, in 4to. II. Pediio dk, Spanish governor of the Philip- pines and Moluccas, 16th century. lie fought at the great battle of Lcpanto in 1 572, and in 1593 held the post of captain-general of the pi'ovince of Carthagena, and resisted the attacks of the English. He drove the Dutch out of the Moluccas, and annexed them to Spain. ACUPUNCTURE, a surgical operation em- ployed among the Chinese and Japanese, in headaches, lethargies, convulsions, colics, &c. It is accomplished by piercing the part which is the seat of the malady with a silver needle. It has recently been adopted, in some cases, by British suro:eons. ACUTE DISEASES. An acute disease is one that is severe in character, rapid in its progress, and short in its duration. Chronic disease is the very opposite ; it is less severe in character, slow in its progress, and of comparatively long dura- tion. Measles, scarlet fever, small pox, cholera morbus, are acute diseases, Avhich may be more or less severe in character, but always run their course in a short time ; and even where they prove fatal, they are rapid in their progress, and of short duration ; when neither fatal, nor com- plicated with other morbid symptoms, they are easily and promptly cured. Diseases are often distinguished by the words acute and chronic, but these terms are not sufficiently definite to form the basis of a general classification of dis- eases ; for many affections are acute in the first instance, and not being cured in this stage of their progress, they abate somewhat in the se- verity of their symptoms, and assume, first, a subacute form, and then a lingering chronic state, which may continue for mouths and years, until the vitality of the patient is exhausted, unless medical advice be sought in time to con- quer the disease, and renovate the system. — Dis- eases are more conveniently divided into " gen- eral and local," rather than " acute and chronic," the latter words being applicable to two differ- ent stages of the same disease, without regard to the periodicity of certain affections, which run their course in a few hours, days, or weeks. General diseases include those which affect the whole system at the same time ; local diseases, those which affect mainly some particular tis- sue, organ, or function, and in which the gene- ral disturbance arising therefrom is only second- ary. — General diseases are mostly connected with diseases of the blood, which being univer- sally distributed, causes general disturbance, fever, and prostration to the whole organism. This may be caused either by the direct admis- sion of some virus or miasmatic poison into the blood, or by disease of the nervous system, and consequent defective innervation in the organs, perturbation in their functions, and reaction on the blood by defective elaboration or secre- tion. Eruptive fevers, gout, and rheumatism, are the leading forms of general disease. Irrita- tive fevers, miasmatic fevers, intermittent fevers, remittent or continued fevers, inflammatory re- mittent fevers, congestive or malignant fevers, hectic fevers, pernicious fevers, country fever, yellow fever, typhus fever, typhoid fever, re- lapsing fever, rubeola, scarlatina, variola or small pox, varioloid, varicella, or chicken pox, vaccina, erysipelas, gout, and rheumatism—, some of these are acute diseases, others chronic^ but all are general, and easily distinguished from local affections, though erysipelas and gout may seem to hold an ambiguous relation to both classes. — Local diseases aro those which are ABUIDGMENT OF THE DEBATES OF CONGRESS. PUBLISHED BY D. AP P LET ON & CO., NEW YORK OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. New York Szaminer. "Mr. Benton fully sustains his reputation for energy .^nd Industry. A careful examination of the second volume con- firms the opinion which we have already expressed of the great Importance of this truly national work." New York Commercial. 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" These Debates will contain the wisdom of Congress for seventy years, and form a history of the government from the time of its institution. The advantages which this abridgment offers will be appreciated by every one." New York Independent. " Tills work will bring to the attention of the present gene- ration a multitude of things connected with the government which have long lain in forgetfulness." New York Tribune. " Our parliamentary history will now not only be reduced to a compass which will bring the work within the means of private individuals, but it will render it easy of consultation and reference." New York Courier & Enquirer. " This work will prove of Immense value to public men, and to every American citizen who aims to know the civil history of his country." Boston Evening Transcript. "This abridgment will form one of the most valuable com- pendiums for private and public libraries ever issued. They will contain the history of the working of the government from its foundation — show what has been done and how it was done." Boston Daily Advertiser. " It is surprising to see how many of the subjects which are still before us were discussed by the fathers in the very in- fancy of the confederation. "We shall welcome each successive volume of this work as a very valuable addition to the his- tory of the country." Boston Courier. " Here Is a work of unusual value, for without coming for- ward exactly in the form of history, it yet is a compendioas history of our public affairs." Boston Journal. "Punctual to the time appointed, the secona volume of this great work has made its appearance. Mr. Benton gives the Bpirit of these Debates, and the material seems well digested, gnd "Xh impartiality. The indexing is very complete." Boston Traveler. " col. Benton's qualifications for this task no one can dis- pute. His name upor the title page at once inspires confi- dence in its statements, and faith in its impartiaiJlir xaA en- tire faithfulness." Boston Post. " An enterprise like this, so Interesting, invaluable, and n» tional, deserves the most ample encouragement. The author says In his preface that the work will be to him a labor oi love and of pride, resuscitating the patriotic dead — no one skipped, and each in his place, with the best of his works in hand." Boston Atlas. " The parliamentary history of the United States will be in these volumes made accessible." Philadelphia North American. " In this work the people will have, for the first time, au opportunity to become acquainted with the manner and spirit; in which public affairs were discussed in the early stages of the government This abridgment or ' annals,' will be an in- valuable part of the history ol the country." Philadelphia Pennsylvanian. "We are glad that Mr. Benton has devoted himself to thll important undertaking. The task could not have been con- fided to abler hands. The work is of national interest and Importance." Fhiladeiphia Inquirer. "All the important debates will be given, and every act and resolution that possesses the slightest interest." Philadelphia Ledger. " The great merit of this work is, that while It is (Twrdensed within a compass which enables every reader to find ti,^" master them, every argument which tends to throw !U.i, upon the question discussed is given clearly and intelligibly." Rochester Democrat. " For the future of the country — for the information of po- liticians, and of legislators and others now in public service — for the instruction of posterity in the principles of our govern- ment, and the rights and duties of its citizens — for permane^ and perpetual use in all that relates to politics and statesman ship — there is nothing so much required as the debates of ■»■• national legislature oy a competent hand, and this the country has now the assurance of from the hand of CoL Benton." Rochester Union. "It is in itself an invaluable history of our country, as well as a contemporaneous exposition of the theory of our government and our varied institutions, proceeding from our ablest statesman." Buffalo Advertiser. " The theory of our institutions, the nature and working of the various parts, can be correctly understood by those who wUl be at the trouble to study ; and the sources of this infor- mation will be, in these Debates, within the reach of every citizen. The indexes at the end of each volume render it easy to turn to any particular subject." Buffalo Courier. " We regard the extensive circulation of this work as a matter of national importance, In that it will instruct men in what has been the principles and policy of contending par- ties, and which has been the controlling ones." Madison Dally Argus. " Rs wide range of characters — each one speaking for him- self and representing his own party — and its far stretch of time, make it of the greatest value to the nation." Chicago Daily Democrat. " Col. Benton has condensed the Debates Included In this volume into a form at once convenient and intelligible, and is vigorously at work preparing the succeeding volumes. The work will be at least one of the monuments which he wiU himself erect that will bear his memory through coming time." Cincinnati Daily Commercial. "For tho statesman, politician, historian, and brief chroni cler of the times, this work will be of almost iccalculabla vaJue." OPINIONS OF THE PRESb. Olncinnati Commercial. "This woil. to to contain the history of the working of onr government, preserve and hand down to posterity the wisdom rf ages, and shed light upon the study of all impending ques- tions — ^for there will not be a question of the day which will not be illustrated by something in said debates." Coltmibiis State Journal. "We are willing to trust the Old Statesman, and we wish him God speed in his undertaking." Mobile Advertiser. "With all his faults, no man now living is so well aaapted to the compilation of the Debates of Congress as Mr. Benton." Montgomery Advertiser. " It commends itself to the favor of all Americans. The work is most important. It will place within the reach of thousands otherwise inaccessible treasures of historic know- Commercial Bulletin, New Orleans. "This abridgment, considering the inestimable value of the Debates, as a complete political history of the country, forms a treasury of knowledge which should be possessed by every citizen who can afford it— and there are few who are not able, coming out as it will, serially." Daily Picayune, New Orleans. " This abridgment Is not to be restricted to the speeches of celebrated orators, but will extend to the b^isiriess men, and to the plainest speakers who spoke, bo as to give information on sabjects of surviving interest." Memphis Weekly AppeaL " The compilation of the Debates of Congress Is a laboi. which requires immense research, untiring energy, strong memory, and a tolerable knowledge of great principles — and in this work CoL Benton has at length found his true occu- pation. The reader will get the gist of the debates — and there are many questions upon which the early patriots seemed to throw a clearer and steadier light than the politicians of the present day are able to do." N- Y. Correspondent Charleston News. " Col. Benton will reduce the pile of huge, unhandy volumes of the legislative history of the country into a convenient form, excluding all the chaff and retaining all the grain.'" Troy Whig. "An American statesman, seeking a profnnd knowledge t the nature and operations of our government, cannot well dt without them." Christian Mirror, Portland. '• The brain and nerve to accomplish the herculean .aboi of bringing seventy years of congressional debates into flfteer volumes will insure a reward more desirable than gold." Portland Argus. "Another valuable feature of this work is that the discus sions are so arranged as to render them readable. One car sit down at his leisure, and read the book through, as h< would an interesting history. And a marvellous history it is These pages are the recording and everlasting evidence thai ' man is capable of self government,' and will go farther tc solve that great problem than a thousand theories." National Intelligencer, Washington. " By these Debates we find the first business introdncec into the House of Representatives. After the inauguratioi was a bill to collect ' Duties on Imports,' and a curious an( interesting feature of the debate was, that every speake; seemed to regard the protection of home industry as one o the objects to be embraced as a matter of course in any pro ject for raising the revenue. We shall probably receive th( assent of every reader in saying, that no living person com bines more of the qualities necessary for the proper execntioi of this work than the veteran ex-senator who has undertakei it." Albany Statesman. " It will be found in the retrospect of the Presidency o Washington, moderate expenses and moderate taxatioi marked the era. During the space of that eight years mos important measures matured, so that it may truly be calle< ' the age of gold ' in the history of the United States." Albany Argus. "The compiler, while he retains the substance of all tb debates of the slightest interest, will exclude all unimportan matter. These volumes should be in every public library and every young man should have a copy " Foreign Books from all parts of the European Continent imported to order on most favorable terms. Special Orders for single Books, as well as for large invoices, are sent by the ste^u ers, and returns obtained with the least possible delay. ^ Colleges, Universities, and other Incorporated Institutions, are supplied wit. Books FREE OF DuTY. Catalogues of our own Publications furnished free of charge on application. D. APPLETON &, CO., Publishers. New York, May, 1857. Persons writing to us for American or Foreign Books, are respectfully requested 1| j,ive their own signatures as well as the name of the Tovm, County and State in vrhic they reside. ^