This is the
anniversary of my arrival in St Louis, 45 years ago — Apl. 29, 1814. Then, I
was a ruddy youth, of 20, now I am a swarthy old man of 65, with a grey beard,
and a head beginning to grow bald. In that lapse of time, I have witnessed
mighty changes in population, locomotion, commerce and the arts; and the change
is still going on, with a growing impetus. And every year adds to the relative
importance of the Central position of St Louis. Already, it is the focal point
of the great Valley, and, in course of time, will become the seat of Empire in
North America. I will soon sink into oblivion, but St Louis — the village in
which I studied law — will become the seat of wealth and power — the ruling
city of the continent. "Slavery, Ethnologically Considered "
The New York
Saturday Press of Feb 19. 1859, contains a curious and very interesting essay42
read by Thomas Embank (Feb 8. 1859) before the New York Ethnological Society.
This paper is the
most suggestive of any thing I have read for a long time — It suggests the
causes of and the necessity for diversities of races of men — As savage and
untaught Peoples cannot have that sort of powers which comes of Knowledge, art,
Science, they can use little else than their own animate forces; whereas, all
the great forces of Nature are inanimate.
The author surmises that the Earth could not produce food enough to sustain life in the multitude necessary to do the work by their bodily strength — animate force — that is now actually done by machinery — inanimate force — the power of dead matter put in motion and kept at work, by mind, by knowledge.
He thinks that
steam, and electricity and other motors yet to be found out, and their various applications
by inventive art, will change the character of labor, and increase its amount
incalculably — The slave, he thinks, will become an overseer — that is, instead
of doing a little work himself, he will direct steam &c how to do a great
deal.
. . .43
42 Later published as Inorganic
Forces Ordained to Supersede Human Slavery, William Everdell & Sons, N.
Y., 1860.
43 An entry in red ink in which Bates secures a
town lot for his son. Woodson, as a fee for past legal service.
SOURCE: Howard K.
Beale, Editor, Annual Report of The American Historical Association For
The Year 1930, Vol. 4, The Diary Of Edward Bates, p. 13
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