Washington, Jany 7, 1851.
My Dear Sir, I
am not certain whether I replied to your letter of the 22nd which I received in
New York where I spent Christmas. At any rate I will write you a few lines now.
I rejoice greatly in the unanimity which characterizes the
action of the majority of the free democrats in the Legislature and I still
more rejoice in their determination to make good their title to the name of
democrats by their acts. We reproach the old line democracy for their
inconsistency in allying themselves with slaveholders to effect their purposes.
We profess to see more clearly and to follow more unreservedly the teachings of
Jefferson. But in what is our inconsistency less, if we yield to alliances with
the Black Power or Monopoly Power, for the sake of carrying particular points
of our own. My only hope for the triumph of our antislavery principles is by
consistent action upon a truly democratic platform under the democratic banner
& with the democratic name. If our brethren of the old Line see us
consistent they will infallibly be drawn to cooperation & final union with
us. Designing men may delay this for a time, but as you remark the
continuances will be at their costs.
Giddings, now, thinks, I believe, very much as I do on this
subject, and when you all go home in the spring a movement in the right
direction of tremendous power may be and should be made.
But to secure our greatest efficiency we should have papers
of the right stamp at the most important points. The “Standard” should be placed
under vigorous editorial control and its circulation extended as far as
possible. I am in hopes we shall not be long without a genuine antislavery
democratic paper at Cincinnati. The true Democrat at Cleveland is far from what
we need. Its Whig sympathies paralyze its efficiency for good. I have conversed
with Mr. Vaughan, whom I cordially esteem for his many good qualities, though I
differ widely from him as to the proper course to be pursued by the Free
democracy, upon this subject, but he is not at all inclined to adopt the views
which seem to me obviously sound. Do — let me beg of you — consult our friends
and if it be a possible thing get the Standard into right hands and under
vigorous headway, I am willing to be taxed what is right.
I am glad that Col. Medary takes a liberal view of things.
His paper favors cooperation between old line democrats and the radical
democrats, and has drawn down upon itself the wrath of some of the Hunkers — I
hope our friends will make up, by their support, all it loses by the hostility
of the proslavery folk.
There is nothing new here. Give my best regards to Pardee — “a
brother beloved,” though unknown in the flesh.
_______________
* Lent by Mr. Homer E. Stewart, Warren, Ohio.
SOURCE: Diary and correspondence of Salmon P. Chase, Annual
Report of the American Historical Association for the Year 1902, Vol.
2, p. 227-8
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