* This letter was
signed by McClernand, Col. William H. L. Wallace, Col. Leonard F. Ross, and
eight officers of McClernand's staff.
SOURCE: Simon, John
Y., The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant, Volume
04: January 8-March 31, 1862, vol. 4, p. 338
* This letter was
signed by McClernand, Col. William H. L. Wallace, Col. Leonard F. Ross, and
eight officers of McClernand's staff.
SOURCE: Simon, John
Y., The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant, Volume
04: January 8-March 31, 1862, vol. 4, p. 338
SPEECH IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES,
AUGUST 29, 1850.
MR. BROWN said he
designed to make a few remarks only in reply to the gentleman from Illinois
[Mr. McClernand], and the gentleman from New York [Mr. Brooks], who had just
taken his seat. Both these gentlemen had taken a position which had been
assumed since the beginning of the session by many gentlemen from the Northern
States, and had put forth views which they seemed to regard as likely to obtain
the favor of the South. If these gentlemen (said Mr. B.) were right in
supposing that we of the South are mere shadows, occupied only in the pursuit
of shadows, then they might succeed in the object at which they aim. But if we
are real, substantial men, things of life and not shadows, then they will find
themselves mistaken in their views. What was it the South had demanded? She had
asked to be permitted to go into these newly-acquired territories, and to carry
her property with her, as the North does; and he desired to tell his friends
from Illinois and from New York, that she would be satisfied with nothing less
than this. It was in vain to tell the people of the South that you will not
press the proviso excluding slavery, because circumstances are such as to
exclude slavery without the operation of this provision, and therefore it is
not necessary to adopt it. He would tell gentlemen who use this argument, that
the southern people care not about the means by which slavery is to be
excluded. They will not inquire whether nature is unpropitious to the existence
of slavery there, while they know that the whole course and desire of the North
has been with a view to its exclusion from the shores of the Pacific. It was
only necessary to look at the history of the last few years to satisfy
ourselves that it has been the purpose of the North to produce this exclusion.
The honorable
gentleman from Illinois had administered a welldeserved rebuke to the factious
spirit of free soil, as manifested in the proposition of the gentleman from
Ohio [Mr. Root]; for that he (Mr. B.) felt as profoundly grateful as any other
man. It was a spirit which ought to be rebuked everywhere. It deserved the
universal execration of all good men. But it was his duty to say to his
honorable friend, that so much of his remarks as were directed against the
proviso, on the ground that it was not necessary to our exclusion, failed to excite
his (Mr. B.'s) gratitude, as they would fail to elicit the gratitude of the
southern people. The gentleman from Illinois would not be informed that he had
Mr. B.'s highest respect as a gentleman, and his sincere personal regard—but,
as a southern man, he felt bound to say at all times, and on all occasions, to
all persons, friends and foes, that he and his section demanded as a right an
equal participation in all these territories, and they could not feel grateful
to any man who placed his opposition to the proviso on no higher grounds than
that they were excluded by other means. If his honorable friend had placed his
opposition to the proviso on the grounds that the South had rights, and that
those rights ought to be respected, then Mr. B. and the whole South would have
felt a thrill of gratitude which none of them would be slow to express. If the
proviso was wrong, it ought to be opposed on the high ground of principle, and
not on the feeble assumption that it was unnecessary. To oppose it on the ground
that it was not necessary, was to say in effect that it would be sustained if
it was necessary.
The gentleman from
New York had just informed the House that he was elected as a Wilmot proviso
man, and now he rises and makes it his boast that he is backing out from the
position he then assumed.
Mr. BROOKS (Mr.
Brown yielding) said, that although this proviso was made a test, he had told
the people who elected him that he would not pledge himself to vote for it;
that he was willing to remain at home, but that, if he was elected, he must go
as an independent man.
Mr. BROWN resumed.
The gentleman from New York had certainly taken high ground. But, if he was not
mistaken, that gentleman was the editor of a daily paper in New York (the
Express), and in that journal, unless he was again mistaken, the Wilmot proviso
had been supported. The gentleman, therefore, had not left much room for doubt
as to his real sentiments. There was very little occasion for him now to come
forward and to say whether he was for or against the proviso. But he desired to
ask that gentleman, whether he was for or against this proviso when its
adoption was deemed necessary for the exclusion of slaves from the new
territories? If he was then in favor of the proviso, the fact that he is now
opposed to it, because he is satisfied that the
South cannot carry
her slaves thither on account of the hostility of the climate and soil, and
other more potential causes, his position was one not calculated to excite the
gratitude of the friends of the South.
Mr. BROOKS (Mr.
Brown yielding) said, he had not changed one principle, but he had been
converted to the gentleman's doctrine of nonintervention, or non-action. It had
always been his opinion that the power of the general government ought never to
be exercised, whether in favor of or against slavery. If the South should
suffer from her inability to carry her slave property into these territories,
the North would suffer still more if she was permitted to do so, because her
citizens would not consent to go to these territories if slavery existed there.
Mr. HOLMES. I
congratulate the whole country that the gentleman from New York has given up
his adhesion to the Wilmot proviso.
Mr. BROWN
(resuming). The conversion of the gentleman from New York to the doctrine of
non-intervention had come about as much too late as his abandonment of the
Wilmot proviso. They were both too late to do any good. If the gentleman had
kept his hands off slavery before the last presidential election, then, indeed,
the southern people might have had some reason for gratitude. But, instead of
doing that, the gentleman adheres to the proviso until it is too late for
non-intervention to do any good, and then he forsakes the former and becomes a
convert to the latter.
The gentleman from
New York appeared to be greatly horrified at what he was pleased to call
political associations on this floor—at the strange phenomenon of the two great
extremes of the North and the South voting together. He would explain this
apparent inconsistency. The South regarded the whole of the territory to
latitude 42° and east of the Rio Grande as the property of Texas, and was not
disposed to permit any portion of that territory to be surrendered for the
purpose of being made free soil. This was the position occupied by the southern
extreme. The northern extreme considers the title of the United States to all
this territory as clear beyond dispute, and therefore are opposed to purchasing
it. This is the reason why the two extremes are acting together on principles
apparently antagonistical, for the purpose of defeating this bill. Is it
remarkable that he (Mr. B.) and his southern associates, believing
conscientiously that the title to the country, in the language of the gentleman
from Kentucky [Mr. Marshall], is in Texas, and that the United States has
neither title nor color of title, should refuse to give it up? Is it strange
that other gentlemen, believing, as they say they do, that the title of the
United States is clear and indisputable, should refuse to pay Texas ten
millions to withdraw an unfounded claim? Gentlemen may pretend to marvel at
this singular political conjunction, but they all know perfectly well the
motives which have produced it.
He, however, deemed
that it would be found quite as remarkable a political phenomenon that the
gentleman from New York, and many of his political friends from the South,
should be found cheek-by-jowl with these same detested Free-Soilers on another
question. We vote with them from exactly opposite motives, as the gentleman and
the whole country very well know. But from what motive does the gentleman and
his southern friends vote with them for the admission of California? Is there
any opposite motive there? None, sir, none. There is one motive common to them
all, and that is, the admission of a free state into the Union. The gentleman
expresses special wonder that we are found voting with the Free-Soilers. Can he
give any other reason than the one just assigned why he and his southern
friends vote with them on another question?
Until the gentleman
could assign some satisfactory reason why he and his party, North and South,
were found in political fellowship with every Free-Soiler and Abolitionist in
the land for the admission of California, it would be modest to suppress his
wonder at the accidental association of Free-Soilers and southern gentlemen on
the boundary of Texas.
The difference
between us (said Mr. B.) is this: we act with them from extremely opposite
motives; you from concurrent opinions and sentiments; and we will leave to
posterity and the country to decide which stands most justified in the eyes of
all honest and impartial men.
But his main object
in rising to address the House was to say what were the demands of the South.
She asks for an equal participation in the enjoyment of all the common
property; and if this be denied, she demands a fair division. Give it to her,
give it by non-intervention, by non-action, or by any other means, and she will
be satisfied. This is her right, and she demands it. But if, instead of doing
this, the North insists on taking away the territory and abridging the rights
of the South, she will not submit to the wrong in peace, nor meanly kiss the hand
that smites her. He uttered no threat, but it was his duty to say that the
South could neither forget nor forgive a wrong like this. She cannot forget
that these new territories were purchased in part by her blood and treasure,
and she will not forgive the power that snatches them from her. He had never
undertaken to say what course the South would feel it her duty to pursue on the
consummation of her unjust exclusion from these territories, but he would say,
that the act of her exclusion would sink like a poisonous arrow into the hearts
of her people, and it would rankle there, and in the hearts of their children,
as long as the union of these states continued. The consummation of northern
policy may not produce an immediate disunion of these states; but it will
produce a disunion of northern and southern hearts; and he left it to others to
say whether a political union under such circumstances could be long
maintained, or whether it was worth maintaining.
It can excite no
feeling of gratitude that the gentleman from New York [Mr. Brooks] says he is
now opposed to the Wilmot proviso. He is for the spirit of the proviso. He
would be for its letter, if it was necessary for our exclusion. He consents to
abandon it simply because it is useless. There was a day when it was potential.
Then the gentleman was for it. Now, when he supposes our exclusion almost
perfect, and the means at hand for its entire consummation, he magnanimously
abandons the proviso. Wonderful liberality! Amazing generosity to the South! If
the gentleman is not canonized as the most generous man of his age, surely
gratitude will have failed to perform her office.
We of the South well
understand the means employed for our exclusion. This proviso, once so much in
favor with the gentleman from New York, now so graciously abandoned, performed
its office. It was held in terrorem over California: southern property, termed
as property always is, was kept out of the country. The column of southern
emigration was checked at the onset—whilst every appliance was resorted to to
swell the column of northern emigration. Every means was resorted to which
political ingenuity could devise and federal power make effective, to hurry on
this emigration, and then, with indecent haste, the emigrants, yet without
names or habitations in the country, were induced to make a pretended state
constitution, and insert in it the Wilmot proviso. The gentleman need not be
told how far the federal administration was responsible for these things. He
need not be reminded that he and his quondam proviso friends were prominent
actors in all these scenes. Need he be told that the proviso was the SHIBBOLETH
of their power? It was used so long as it was effective. It was used for our prostration,
and now it is thrown aside for no better reason than that it is useless— that
it is no longer necessary.
Does not the
gentleman from New York know very well that the California constitution is no
constitution until adopted by Congress? Does he not know that that constitution
contains the proviso? Does he not know that the proviso is powerless in that
constitution until sanctioned by Congress? And does he not mean to vote for
that constitution, with the full intent and purpose of giving vitality to that
proviso? With how much of liberality—with how much of justice to the South,
does the honorable gentleman come forward to assure us that he is against the
proviso? The gentleman is opposed to ingrafting the proviso on the territorial
bills for Utah and New Mexico; and we thank him for his opposition. But what
reason does the gentleman give for this opposition? The decrees of God have
already excluded us. He has no idea that slavery would ever penetrate the
country opposed to the proviso, because it is unnecessary. If it was at all
necessary for our exclusion, the honorable gentleman would be for it. He must
excuse us if our gratitude fails to become frantic for this singular exhibition
of forbearance and liberality.
Mr. Brown was
willing to trust the rights of the South on the strict doctrine of
non-intervention. If God, in his providence, had in fact decreed against the
introduction of slavery into Utah and New Mexico, he and his people bowed in
humble submission to that decree. We think the soil and climate are propitious
to slave labor; and if they are not, we shall never seek the country with our
slaves. All we ask of you is, that you will not interpose the authority of this
government for us or against us. We do not fear the Mexican laws, if you will
in good faith stand by the doctrine of non-intervention. We will risk the
protection of the Federal Constitution, and the banner of the stars and
stripes, for ourselves and our property. All we ask of you is, that you will in
good faith stand neutral.
He had never
announced his purpose of voting against the territorial government for Utah. He
meant to vote for it, and he should vote for the territorial government for New
Mexico if the boundary was so arranged as to respect the rights of Texas. He
was opposed to the admission of California, because her constitution was a
fraud—a fraud deliberately perpetrated for the purpose of excluding the South;
but he was in favor of giving governments to Utah and New Mexico on the ground
of strict non-intervention. He did not want to be cheated in this business, and
he therefore proposed this question to the honorable gentleman from New York:
Suppose we pass these Utah and New Mexican bills at this session without the
Wilmot proviso; and suppose the Southern people commence moving into the
territories with their slaves, and it becomes apparent that they are to be
slave territories and ultimately slave states; and suppose that the gentleman
from Ohio [Mr. Root], at the opening of the next Congress, offers the Wilmot
proviso with a view to check our emigration and to exclude us from the
territories with our slaves, will the gentleman, if a member of Congress, then
vote for the proviso?
Mr. BROOKS replied
in the negative, as far as he was heard.
Mr. BROWN. Then if
we take our slave property into the territories, we are assured that we are not
to be disturbed in its peaceable and quiet enjoyment by any act of this
government.
Mr. BROOKS said,
that if he should be here he certainly should not vote to repeal any
territorial bill for which he had voted. He only spoke for himself.
Mr. BROWN was
gratified to hear this statement; whilst he could not insist on the gentleman
answering for the North, he must express his regret that he did not feel
authorized to answer at least for his political friends. The gentleman had
answered manfully, and, he did not doubt, sincerely; and if the whole North, or
a majority even, would answer in the same way, it would go far towards
restoring harmony. He asked honorable gentlemen whether they were ready to pipe
to the tune set them by the gentleman from New York? If they were, the whole
South. would listen. It was a kind of music they liked to hear from the North.
There was in it more of the gentle harp, and less of the war-bugle than they
had been accustomed to from that quarter.
Mr. BROOKS said, it
appeared after all that there was no essential difference between them.
Mr. BROWN. So far as
this Congress is concerned, we ask nothing more than that we shall be treated
as equals, and that no insulting discrimination should be made in the action of
Congress against slave property. If the gentleman agrees to this, there can be
no essential difference between us.
Now, Mr. Speaker, to
the subject of the Texas boundary. Is there one man in this House, or throughout
the nation, who does not know that but for the question of slavery, there would
be no such question as that of the Texas boundary? Suppose, sir, that Texas and
New Mexico were both as clearly slaveholding countries as North and South
Carolina, how long, sir, do you think it would take this Congress to fix a
boundary between them? Not one hour—certainly not one day. Of what consequence
could it be to the North, whether Texas extended to the 32d or to the 42d
degree, or to any intermediate point? Take out the question of slavery, and of
what consequence is it where the boundary of Texas may be fixed? Does any man
suppose that the money-loving men of the North would vote ten millions of
dollars from a common treasury to buy a slip of soil from a slaveholding State,
simply to give it to a slaveholding Territory? No, no. We all understand this
matter. If the country is left in the possession and ownership of Texas, it
must be slave territory, and if it is given up to New Mexico, you mean that it
shall become free territory, and you do not intend to leave any stone unturned
to accomplish this end. We know this, and we govern ourselves accordingly. Let
northern gentlemen speak out on this subject.
The thin covering,
that they want to do justice between Texas and New Mexico, furnishes a poor
disguise to the real purpose. We all know that slavery restriction is the lever
with which you are lifting the title of Texas off this country, and giving it
up to New Mexico; and we all know that you are attempting to do this without
right, or color of right, to perform such an act.
Mr. MCCLERNAND (Mr.
Brown yielding) said, that Texas claimed the Rio Grande for its whole extent to
be her western boundary. By the resolutions annexing Texas to the United
States, slavery is interdicted north of 36° 30' within her professed limits.
The amendment proposed by the gentleman from Kentucky (Mr. Boyd) provides that
slavery may exist in any portion of the territory west of the boundary of
Texas, as proposed by the Senate bill, between 32° and 38° north latitude, east
of the Rio Grande. That is, the amendment provides that slavery may exist in
any part of said territory, according as the people inhabiting it may determine
for themselves when they apply for admission into the Union. So that to the
extent of so much of said territory now claimed by Texas, lying between 36° 30′
and 38° north latitude, the South, according to the test of my able and worthy
friend from Mississippi, stands upon a better footing under the amendment
proposed than she does under the resolutions of Texas annexation.
Mr. BROWN resumed.
If we are left in that condition in which we were by the annexation
resolutions, we are satisfied. What we ask in regard to Utah, New Mexico, and
California, is, that the North will not, by means direct or indirect, disturb
us then in the quiet enjoyment of our property. What we ask in regard to Texas
is, that you will abide by the resolutions of annexation. We are satisfied with
the contract, and we are opposed to making any other. This contract gives us
all south of 36° 30' as slave territory, and dedicates all north of that line
to free soil. We stand by this. If gentlemen want to buy from Texas her
territory north of 36° 30′, let them do it. They had his full consent to give
her ten, twelve, or fifteen millions of dollars. He should interpose no
objection. But when it came to selling out slaveholding Texas with a view of
enabling the North to make New Mexico a non-slaveholding state the more
readily, he felt it his duty to interpose by all the means in his power. He
never meant to give his vote for any proposition or combination of propositions
which looked to the deprivation of Texas of one inch of her rightful soil. He
wanted to deal fairly by all parts of the country. He trusted he should be as
ready to act fairly by the North as by the South, but he invoked the vengeance
of Heaven if ever he gave his vote for any bill or proposition to buy the soil
of a slave state to convert it into free soil.
SOURCE: M. W.
Cluskey, Editor, Speeches, Messages, and Other Writings of the Hon.
Albert G. Brown, A Senator in Congress from the State of Mississippi, p. 208-14
On the 13th of June,
1850, in the House of Representatives, an amendment to the bill admitting
California was rejected, to the effect that thereafter it should not constitute
an objection to the admission of a state lying south of the Missouri Compromise
line that her constitution tolerated slavery. Mr. BROWN, of Mississippi, renewed
the amendment, pro forma, and said:
I LONG since made up my mind that I would
introduce no proposition of my own, nor vote for any other man's proposition,
which did not give ample justice to my section. My determination was not formed
without consideration. The whole ground had been duly examined, and my judgment
was based on a solemn conviction, that no proposition which did not inflict
positive injury on the South had the least chance of favor in this House. If I
had ever been brought to doubt the correctness of this judgment, the vote just
taken would have convinced me beyond all dispute that I was right.
Day by day our ears
are filled with the cry of "compromise!" "adjustment!!" We
have been invoked time and again to come forward and settle this angry dispute,
on terms equitable and just to all sections of the confederacy. We have been admonished,
in high-sounding phraseology, that to the people of the states, when forming
their constitutions, belonged the duty and the right of settling for themselves
the question of slavery or no slavery. Some, we have been told, fanatical and
violent, would repudiate this doctrine; but the great body of the moderate men
of the North, of all parties, we have been assured, had planted themselves on
this broad, republican platform. Now, sir, what have we seen? The question has
been taken on a proposition declaring that it shall hereafter be no objection
to the admission of a state lying south of 36° 30′ that her constitution
tolerated or prohibited slavery, and this proposition has been voted down-voted
down, sir, by a strictly sectional division-all the southern members voting for
it, and all the northern members, with but one honorable exception, voting
against it.
Mr. HARRIS, of
Illinois. Three or four.
Mr. BROWN. I saw but
one—Mr. McClernand. There may have been three or four. It may have been that
five or six threw up their hats and cried "God save the country!"
Mr. BISSELL. I was
not in my seat. I should have voted for it with great pleasure.
Mr. HARRIS, of
Illinois. I voted for it.
Mr. BROWN. It may be
that five or six voted for the proposition. But what of that? Where was the
great body of the northern members, Whigs and Democrats? They were just where I
have always predicted they would be when it came to voting. They were found
repudiating the very doctrine on which they ask us to admit California—the
doctrine of self-government in regard to slavery.
There could be no mistaking
the intention of this vote. The gentleman from Kentucky [Mr. Marshall], in a
speech of marked emphasis, had called on the South to cease debating, and let
us have a vote—a vote which should test the question, whether northern members
were prepared to assert the doctrine, that under no circumstances should any
other slaveholding state enter this Union. The debate did cease in obedience to
that appeal, the vote was taken, and the result is before us. And now, sir, in
reference to that result I have a word to say. It explodes at one dash, the
hollow-hearted and hypocritical pretension that this question was to be left to
the people, when they came to form their respective constitutions. It verifies
what I have said here and elsewhere, that this doctrine was a miserable cheat,
an infamous imposition, a gross fraud upon the South. If the people, as in the
case of California, make an anti-slavery constitution, the doctrine is applied
and the state is admitted; but if any other state shall offer a pro-slavery
constitution, we are given by this vote distinctly to understand, that such
state, her constitution, and this doctrine, will all be trampled under foot
together.
I want my
constituents and the country to see to what end we are to come at last. The
bold stand is taken by this vote that not another slave state is to be
admitted, no odds what her constitution may say.
I take ground with
the eloquent gentleman from Georgia [Mr. Toombs], and now declare, that if this
is to become the ruling principle of the North—if we are thus to crouch at the
footstool of power—if we are to be brought down from our high position as
equals to become your dependants-if we are to live for ever at your mercy,
rejoicing in your smiles and shrinking from your frown—if indeed, sir, it has
come to this, that the Union is to be used for these accursed purposes, then,
sir, by the God of my fathers, I am against the Union; and so help me Heaven, I
will dedicate the remnant of my life to its dissolution.
Men may talk of
adjustments, letters may be written, speeches may be made, newspapers printed
to glorify the Union—but, sir, if this is the Union you would glorify, it is
base-born slander to say the South is for it. If we are to have a Union of
equals, it will for ever rest upon all our hearts and all our hands—it will be
eternal. But if it is to be a Union of the tyrant and the serf, a Union of the
monarch and the menial, a Union of the vulture and the lamb, then, sir, I warn
gentlemen it will be a Union of perpetual strife. Say what you will, write what
you will, speak what you will, think what you will, the South will wage eternal
warfare upon such a Union. We will invoke with one voice the vengeance of
Heaven upon such a Union—we will pray unceasingly to the God of our deliverance
that he will send us a bolt from heaven to shiver the chain which thus binds us
to tyranny and oppression.
WASHINGTON, March 30, 1850.
MY DEAR SIR,—I received your letter of the 19th inst., for which I am very much obliged to you. All that is done here is so fully detailed in the daily papers that I need not attempt to give you an account of it. We are proceeding slowly with the debate on the absorbing topic growing out of our territorial acquisitions. I begin to believe that the whole question will be satisfactorily settled by admitting California as a State and making territorial governments for the residue of the country without the proviso. I regret, however, to state that we can hope for very little, if any, aid from the Whigs of the North in the House. I do not know one man that we can certainly count. There were eight or ten who promised to go with us, but I have reason to believe that the cabinet influence has drawn them off. Ewing and Meredith have evidently much feeling on the subject. Clayton, Crawford, Preston, and Johnson, I understand, will go for territorial bills. It is understood that General Taylor himself would be glad if such bills can be passed without the proviso, and would prefer such a settlement to the non-action policy. I cannot, however, speak from any personal knowledge on this subject. I have no doubt, however, as to the four members of the cabinet I have named. Indeed, it is indispensably necessary that it should be settled on this basis. There is not one single man from any slaveholding State who would agree to any other settlement, and I fear the very worst consequences from any attempt to force through the California bill without a full settlement. Fifty members, under our rules, can prevent the bill from being reported from the committee of the whole, where it now is, to the House. But I believe we have a decided majority for such a settlement as the South demands. There are twenty-nine Democrats from the North pledged to go with us. McClernand, from Illinois, has prepared a bill upon general but private consultation, embracing all the points of difference, and will offer it as a substitute, in a few days, to the California bill. If General Taylor would take open ground for a full settlement, we could get ten or twelve Whigs from the North. I believe he only wants a suitable occasion to do so. I never have in my life had so deep and abiding a conviction upon any subject as at this moment of the absolute necessity of a settlement of this whole question. I am pained to say that I fear that there are some Southern men who do not wish a settlement. We have certainly something to fear from this source, but they are so few that I think we can do without them.
The cabinet, as you might well imagine from the present state of things, receives no support from any quarter. John Tyler had a corporal's guard who defended him manfully, but the cabinet has not one man that I can now name. Each member of the cabinet has a few friends, but I do not know one man who can be called the friend of the cabinet. I apprehend that they are not even friendly to each other. You may have noticed in the Union, if you ever read it, a charge against Ewing for having allowed a very large claim in which Crawford was interested personally to the extent of one hundred and seventeen thousand dollars. It turned out that Mr. Ewing had nothing to do with it; that Whittlesey reported that there was nothing due, and Meredith, in accordance with the opinion of the Attorney-General, allowed it. Now, Ewing, if I am not mistaken (but conjecture on my part, I acknowledge), through his friends is attacking Crawford for having a claim acted on in which he was interested while a member of the cabinet. Upon the whole, I am clearly of opinion that there is but one safe course for General Taylor to pursue, and that is to reconstruct his whole cabinet. I am perfectly satisfied that he cannot carry on the government with his present ministers. Your name and that of Winthrop and of Webster have been spoken of as Secretary of State in the event of a change; but if I had to make a full cabinet I could not do it satisfactorily to myself. I am inclined to think that Mr. Webster would like to be Secretary of State, not from anything I ever heard him say but from occasional remote intimations from his friends. Just at this time his appointment would be exceedingly popular in the South. I wish most sincerely that you were here. We are altogether in a sad, sad condition. There is no good feeling between Mr. Clay and General Taylor, and I am afraid that meddling and busybodies are daily widening the breach. keep entirely aloof, taking especial and particular pains to participate in no manner whatever in the feeling on the one side or the other. I hear all, at least on one side, and try always to reconcile rather than widen the breach. I have sometimes, however, thought that a want of confidence in me resulted from the fact of my being his immediate representative. I may be mistaken—probably am; it may arise altogether from a less flattering consideration. At all events, I have never been able to converse one minute with the President upon politics without his changing the subject, so that when I see him now I never, in the remotest manner, allude to political matters.
WASHINGTON, April 25, 1850.
DEAR CRITTENDEN,—I have been thinking for several months that I would write to you, but as I did not wish to annoy you with disagreeable intelligence, I deferred it, hoping that events would open up a better prospect for the future. That expectation has not yet been realized. "It were a tale too long" to detail all the blunders of the cabinet, which have brought the Whig party to the brink of ruin; but of the special question upon which their policy has nearly estranged the whole Whig party of the South it is proper to give you some brief hints, that you may understand our position. During the last summer, the government, with the consent of the whole cabinet, except Crawford, threw the entire patronage of the North into the hands of Seward and his party. This was done under some foolish idea of Preston's, that they would get rid of a Northern competition for 1852, as Seward stood for 1856. The effect of this was to enable Seward to take the entire control of the New York organization, and force the whole Northern Whig party into the extreme anti-slavery position of Seward, which, of course, sacked the South. I knew the effect of this policy would certainly destroy the Whig party, and perhaps endanger the Union. When I came to Washington, I found the whole Whig party expecting to pass the proviso, and that Taylor would not veto it, that thereby the Whig party of the North were to be built up at the expense of the Northern Democracy, who, from political and party considerations, had stood quasi opposed to the proviso. I saw General Taylor, and talked fully with him, and while he stated he had given and would give no pledges either way about the proviso, he gave me clearly to understand that if it was passed he would sign it. My course became instantly fixed. I would not hesitate to oppose the proviso, even to the extent of a dissolution of the Union. I could not for a moment regard any party considerations on the treatment of the question. I therefore determined to put the test to the Whig party and abandon its organization upon its refusal. Both events happened to defeat this policy; it was of the first importance to prevent the organization of the House going into the hands of the Northern Whig party. I should have gone to any extent to effect that object, they foolishly did it themselves. Without fatiguing you with details, my whole subsequent course has been governed by this line of policy. I have determined to settle the question honorably to my own section of country, if possible, at any and every hazard, totally indifferent to what might be its effect upon General Taylor or his administration. In the course of events, the policy of the cabinet has vacillated to and fro, but has finally settled upon the ground of admitting California, and non-action as to the rest of the territories. Seward and his party have struck hands with them on this policy, but Stanly is the only Southern Whig who will stand by them. I think it likely the course of events may throw the whole of the Southern Whigs into opposition,-such a result will not deter us from our course. We are willing to admit California and pass territorial governments on the principle of McClernand's bill; we will never take less. The government, in furtherance of their stupid and treacherous bargain with the North, are endeavoring to defeat it; with their aid we could carry it, as more than twenty-five Northern Democrats are pledged to it. They may embarrass us, possibly may defeat us, but our defeat will be their ruin. The cabinet have intense hostility to Mr. Clay, and I think it likely we, and the country, will be greatly benefited by the feud, inasmuch as it makes Clay the more anxious to conform to the interests of his own section and of the Southern Whigs, and this the rather because the government has the whip hand of him (through Seward) with the Northern Whigs. The Senate's committee will, I think, agree upon propositions which will pass; this can only be defeated by the want of common sense and common prudence on the part of Mason, Butler, and others of that "ilk" in both houses of Congress, and the efforts of the administration. But as to the latter it is but candid to say that they have little power, either for good or evil. For some reason, wholly unaccountable to me, the Northern members of the cabinet are universally odious, even to the Northern Whigs. Clayton is a dead body tied to the concern. Johnson is honorable and clever, but without wisdom. Preston is speculative, and, what is worse, has no sentiment in common with the section which he represents. Crawford alone is true and faithful to the honor and interest of our section, and the late scene about the Galphin claim is an effort of men in the service of government to drive him out. He is the last link that binds a majority of the Southern Whigs to the government, and I have no doubt but they will soon make it inconsistent with his own honor to remain there. I have thus given you a brief outline of men and parties in the government. I have said nothing of General Taylor; my opinion is that he is an honest, well-meaning man, but that he is in very bad hands, and his inexperience in public affairs, and want of knowledge of men, is daily practiced upon, and renders him peculiarly liable to imposition. I think there has been a studied effort to alienate him from his original friends, and that it has been eminently successful; time will show that he and not they will suffer most by that alienation. Morehead is now making a good speech at my back, and has perhaps, to some extent, destroyed the continuity of my narrative. Let me hear from you.
[June 8, 1863]
The one hundred
& Eighth 108 Ill Infy & twenty third 23 Iowa are still at youngs point
& have not reported to their Commands.
SOURCE: John Y.
Simon, Editor, The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant, Volume 8, p. 322
[June 8, 1863]
You will direct Col
Whitney to send over and ascertain, if there would be any danger in the Negroes
marching across to Youngs Point, and if there would be none, send them there
without delay, and if they cannot be sent by that route, let them go round by Chickasaw
Bayou, travelling at night They cannot be kept at Warrenton. The 108th Ills,
and 23d Iowa were to join their Divisions as soon as they could be releived by
the 63d Illinois, which went to Youngs-Point yesterday. The disturbed state of
that place may delay them there, but they will obey the order as soon as they
can be spared from there. No Official report has been received from Gen'l [Dennis],
one is expected momentarily. Admiral Porter reports the enemy were repulsed
yesterday with a loss of 80 left dead on the field[.]
SOURCE: John Y.
Simon, Editor, The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant, Volume 8, p. 322
[June 8, 1863]
Col Whiting reports
that twenty five hundred 2500 Negro women & children arrived at Warrenton
last night from Grand Gulf the person having them in charge refusing to go on
to Youngs point on account of report that the rebels were within two or three
miles of it Col Whiting asks what should be done with them at Warrenton they wil
soon will eat us out of every thing[.]
SOURCE: John Y.
Simon, Editor, The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant, Volume 8, p. 322