Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Robert Toombs to Congressman Alexander H. Stephens, January 1, 1844

Washington [ga.], Jan. 1st, 18441

Dear Stephens, . . .  The session2 passed off well. We succeeded in carrying everything but the Court3 — lost that in the Senate by three votes. When I was at Milledgeville I thought its passage would have injured the party4 but benefitted the country; but from the general regret expressed at its loss among the people since we adjourned, I am inclined to think it would have been popular with the people. The session is decidedly popular with all classes. The people are better pleased than they have been for many years with their legislature, and I begin to think our power in Georgia is tolerably firmly fixed. Our election for Congress took place to-day. I have not heard from all the precincts, but from what we have heard Wilkes will give a considerably increased majority to Clinch,5 say over 100 votes. I have no doubt of his election by at least four thousand. The Democrats made a false move on the Rail Road question,6 which I think will very seriously affect them in the Cherokee counties.7 They made a party question of its abandonment. The Whigs stood up well in the House and tolerably in the Senate. We had to gild the pill a little for them. But I have no doubt but that a large majority of the people are opposed to its abandonment, and since our adjournment I see some of the Democratic papers are inclined to claw off. Even the Columbus Times talks softly on the subject.

The congressional district bill is a fair one. We had to gerrymander a little in order to give the Democrats their third district — the first instance I expect of a party's ever doing that thing for the benefit their opponents. The Senatorial district bill looks strong but is in fact weak — we could have done much better with greater appearance of fairness but every Senator almost was fixing for himself. Crawford8 is much pleased and says we have left him the State government in such condition that if it is not satisfactorily administered it will be his fault. Write me as often as you can. It will give me pleasure to attend to any business for you.
_______________

1 Erroneously dated Jan. 1, 1843, in the original.

2 Of the State legislature.

3 A bill to establish a supreme court for the State of Georgia.

4 Whig.

5 Duncan L. Clinch, Whig candidate for Congress. He was elected in place of John Millen, deceased.

6 The question of completing or abandoning the Western & Atlantic Railroad, then under construction by the State of Georgia.

7 The northwestern portion of Georgia, recently vacated by the-Cherokee Indians.

8 George W. Crawford, then governor of Georgia.

SOURCE: Ulrich Bonnell Phillips, Editor, The Annual Report of the American Historical Association for the Year 1911, Volume 2: The Correspondence of Robert Toombs, Alexander H. Stephens, and Howell Cobb, p. 53-4

1 comment:

Seeker said...

Hilarious -- this was not only not in the Civil War, for some reason, the CW Notebook seems to shy away from the wacko and very authenticated Toombs quotes -- from his own book, and elsewhere.

Toombs was a demagogue, and guy who loved to rile up folks with hate speech, and one of his tools was to tell folks blacks will destroy the white race -- unless we spread slavery.

Over and over, Toombs (as did others) told crowds that just restricting the SPREAD of slavery would be our DEATH. D E A T H.

This was not unique to Toombs, it was common for this type of hate speech at the time - from 1854 on.

The most prolonged ranting was probably by Alexander Stephens, who gave a series of six or eight speeches to cheering crowds BRAGGING that the Confederacy was created to spread slavery, and the "great moral truth" that blacks are inferior beings, intended by God to be enslaved in perpetuity, and then he threw in what Lee would say too, blacks are being punished by God for biblical sins.

So what does the CW Notebook come up with? Anything about the speeches regularly given about how white race will be doomed or destroyed if slavery does not SPREAD?

Oh nooooo -- CW notebook gives some drivel.

Tell you what, start being candid about what Southern leaders bragged about, in context, over and over, including killing to spread slavery, how God intended blacks to be enslaved, how the FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE of the confederacy was to spread slavery.

How about that? How about just tell what they bragged about.