The record was indeed made up, and
the issue thus made, between Slavery and Freedom,
would be the chief one before the People. Already
the Republican National Convention, which met at Baltimore,
June 7, 1864, had not only with “enthusiastic
unanimity,” renominated Mr. Lincoln for the
Presidency, but amid “tremendous applause,”
the delegates rising and waving their hats had
adopted a platform which declared, in behalf of that
great Party: “That, as Slavery was the cause,
and now constitutes the strength, of this Rebellion,
and as it must be, always and everywhere, hostile
to the principles of Republican government, Justice
and the National safety demand its utter and complete
extirpation from the soil of the Republic; and that
while we uphold and maintain the Acts and Proclamations
by which the Government, in its own defense, has aimed
a death-blow at this gigantic evil, we are in favor,
furthermore, of such an Amendment to the Constitution,
to be made by the People in conformity with its provisions,
as shall terminate and forever prohibit the existence
of Slavery within the limits or the jurisdiction of
the United States.”
So, too, with vociferous plaudits,
had they received and adopted another Resolution,
wherein they declared “That we approve and applaud
the practical wisdom, the unselfish patriotism and
the unswerving fidelity to the Constitution and the
principles of American Liberty, with which Abraham
Lincoln has discharged, under circumstances of unparalleled
difficulty, the great duties and responsibilities of
the Presidential Office; that we approve and endorse,
as demanded by the emergency, and essential to the
preservation of the Nation, and as within the provisions
of the Constitution; the Measures and Acts which he
has adopted to defend the Nation against its open
and secret foes; that we approve, especially, the
Proclamation of Emancipation, and the employment,
as Union soldiers, of men heretofore held in Slavery;
and that we have full confidence in his determination
to carry these and all other Constitutional Measures
essential to the salvation of the Country, into full
and complete effect.”
Thus heartily, thoroughly and unreservedly,
endorsed in all the great acts of his Administration and
even more emphatically, if possible, in his Emancipation
policy by the unanimous vote of his Party,
Mr. Lincoln, although necessarily “chagrined
and disappointed” by the House-vote which had
defeated the Thirteenth Amendment, might well feel
undismayed. He always had implicit faith in the
People; he felt sure that they would sustain him;
and this done, why could not the votes of a dozen,
out of the seventy Congressional Representatives opposing
that Amendment, be changed? Even failing in
this, it must be but a question of time. He
thought he could afford to bide that time.
On the 29th of August, the Democratic
National Convention met at Chicago. Horatio
Seymour was its permanent President; that same Governor
of New York whom the 4th of July, 1863, almost at the
moment when Vicksburg and Gettysburg had brought great
encouragement to the Union cause, and when public
necessity demanded the enforcement of the Draft in
order to drive the Rebel invader from Northern soil
and bring the Rebellion speedily to an end had
threateningly said to the Republicans, in the course
of a public speech, during the Draft-riots at New
York City: “Remember this, that the bloody,
and treasonable, and revolutionary doctrine of public
necessity can be proclaimed by a mob as well as by
a Government. When men accept despotism, they
may have a choice as to who the despot shall be!”
In his speech to this Democratic-Copperhead
National Convention, therefore, it is not surprising
that he should, at this time, declare that “this
Administration cannot now save this Union, if it would.”
That the body which elected such a presiding officer, after
the bloody series of glorious Union victories about
Atlanta, Ga., then fast leading up to the fall of
that great Rebel stronghold, (which event actually
occurred long before most of these Democratic delegates,
on their return, could even reach their homes) should
adopt a Resolution declaring that the War was a “failure,”
was not surprising either.
That Resolution “the
material resolution of the Chicago platform,”
as Vallandigham afterward characters it, was written
and “carried through both the Subcommittee and
the General Committee” by that Arch-Copperhead
and Conspirator himself.
It was in these words: “Resolved,
That this Convention does explicitly declare as the
sense of the American People, that after four years
of failure to restore the Union by the experiment
of War, during which, under the pretense of a military
necessity, or War-power higher than the Constitution,
the Constitution itself has been disregarded in every
part, and public Liberty and private right alike trodden
down and the material prosperity of the Country essentially
impaired Justice, Humanity, Liberty, and
the public welfare demand that immediate efforts be
made for a cessation of hostilities, with a view to
an ultimate Convention of the States, or other peaceable
means, to the end that at the earliest practicable
moment Peace may be restored on the basis of the Federal
Union of the States.”
With a Copperhead platform, this Democratic
Convention thought it politic to have a Union candidate
for the Presidency. Hence, the nomination of
General McClellan; but to propitiate the out-and-out
Vallandigham Peace men, Mr. Pendleton was nominated
to the second place on the ticket.
This combination was almost as great
a blunder as was the platform than which
nothing could have been worse. Farragut’s
Naval victory at Mobile, and Sherman’s capture
of Atlanta, followed so closely upon the adjournment
of the Convention as to make its platform and candidates
the laughing stock of the Nation; and all the efforts
of Democratic orators, and of McClellan himself, in
his letter of acceptance, could not prevent the rise
of that great tidal-wave of Unionism which was soon
to engulf the hosts of Copperhead-Democracy.
The Thanksgiving-services in the churches,
and the thundering salutes of 100 guns from every
Military and Naval post in the United States, which
during the week succeeding that Convention’s
sitting betokened the Nation’s especial
joy and gratitude to the victorious Union Forces of
Sherman and Farragut for their fortuitously-timed demonstration
that the “experiment of War” for the restoration
of the Union was anything but a “Failure”
all helped to add to the proportions of that rapidly-swelling
volume of loyal public feeling.
The withdrawal from the canvass, of
General Fremont, nominated for the Presidency by the
“radical men of the Nation,” at Cleveland,
also contributed to it. In his letter of withdrawal,
September 17th, he said:
“The Presidential contest has,
in effect, been entered upon in such a way that the
union of the Republican Party has become a paramount
necessity. The policy of the Democratic Party
signifies either separation, or reestablishment with
Slavery. The Chicago platform is simply separation.
General McClellan’s letter of acceptance is
reestablishment, with Slavery. The Republican
candidate is, on the contrary, pledged to the reestablishment
of the Union without Slavery; and, however hesitating
his policy may be, the pressure of his Party will,
we may hope, force him to it. Between these issues,
I think no man of the Liberal Party can remain in
doubt.”
And now, following the fall of Atlanta
before Sherman’s Forces, Grant had stormed “Fort
Hell,” in front of Petersburg; Sheridan had routed
the Rebels, under Early, at Winchester, and had again
defeated Early at Fisher’s Hill; Lee had been
repulsed in his attack on Grant’s works at Petersburg;
and Allatoona had been made famous, by Corse and his
2,000 Union men gallantly repulsing the 5,000 men
of Hood’s Rebel Army, who had completely surrounded
and attacked them in front, flank, and rear.
All these Military successes for the
Union Cause helped the Union political campaign considerably,
and, when supplemented by the remarkable results of
the October elections in Pennsylvania, Indiana, and
Maryland, made the election of Lincoln and Johnson
a foregone conclusion.
The sudden death of Chief-Justice
Taney, too, happening, by a strange coincidence, simultaneously
with the triumph of the Union Party of Maryland in
carrying the new Constitution of that State, which
prohibited Slavery within her borders, seemed to have
a significance not without its effect upon the public
mind, now fast settling down to the belief that Slavery
everywhere upon the soil of the United States must
die.
[Greeley well said of
it: “His death, at this moment, seemed to
mark the transition
from the Era of Slavery to that of Universal
Freedom.”]
Then came, October 19th, the Battle
of Cedar Creek, Va. where the Rebel General Early,
during Sheridan’s absence, surprised and defeated
the latter’s forces, until Sheridan, riding
down from Winchester, turned defeat into victory for
the Union Arms, and chased the armed Rebels out of
the Shenandoah Valley forever; and the fights of October
27th and 28th, to the left of Grant’s position,
at Petersburg, by which the railroad communications
of Lee’s Army at Richmond were broken up.
At last, November 8, 1864, dawned
the eventful day of election. By midnight of
that date it was generally believed, all over the Union,
that Lincoln and Johnson were overwhelmingly elected,
and that the Life as well as Freedom of the Nation
had thus been saved by the People.
Late that very night, President Lincoln
was serenaded by a Pennsylvania political club, and,
in responding to the compliment, modestly said:
“I earnestly believe that the
consequences of this day’s work (if it be as
you assure, and as now seems probable) will be to the
lasting advantage, if not to the very salvation, of
the Country. I cannot at this hour say what
has been the result of the election. But whatever
it may be, I have no desire to modify this opinion,
that all who have labored to-day in behalf of the
Union organization have wrought for the best interests
of their Country and the World, not only for the present
but for all future ages.
“I am thankful to God,”
continued he, “for this approval of the People;
but, while deeply gratified for this mark of their
confidence in me, if I know my heart, my gratitude
is free from any taint of personal triumph.
I do not impugn the motives of any one opposed to me.
It is no pleasure to me to triumph over any one;
but I give thanks to the Almighty for this evidence
of the People’s resolution to stand by Free
Government and the rights of Humanity.”
On the 10th of November, in response
to another serenade given at the White House, in the
presence of an immense and jubilantly enthusiastic
gathering of Union men, by the Republican clubs of
the District of Columbia, Mr. Lincoln said:
“It has long been a grave question
whether any Government, not too strong for the Liberties
of its People, can be strong enough to maintain its
existence in great emergencies. On this point
the present Rebellion has brought our Republic to
a severe test, and a Presidential election, occurring
in regular course during the Rebellion, has added
not a little to the strain. But the election,
along with its incidental and undesired strife, has
done good, too. It has demonstrated that a People’s
Government can sustain a National election in the
midst of a great Civil War, until now it has not been
known to the World that this was a possibility.
It shows, also, how sound and how strong we still
are.
“But,” said he, “the
Rebellion continues; and now that the election is
over, may not all having a common interest reunite
in a common effort to save our common Country?
“For my own part,” continued
he as the cheering, elicited by this forcible
appeal, ceased “I have striven, and
shall strive, to avoid placing any obstacle in the
way. So long as I have been here I have not
willingly planted a thorn in any man’s bosom.
While I am deeply sensible to the high compliment
of a reelection, and duly grateful, as I trust, to
Almighty God for having directed my countrymen to a
right conclusion, as I think, for their own good,
it adds nothing to my satisfaction that any other
man may be disappointed or pained by the result.”
And, as the renewed cheering evoked
by this kindly, Christian utterance died away again,
he impressively added: “May I ask those
who have not differed with me, to join with me in
this same spirit, towards those who have?”
So, too, on the 17th of November,
in his response to the complimentary address of a
delegation of Union men from Maryland.
[W. H. Purnell, Esq., in behalf
of the Committee, delivered an address, in which
he said they rejoiced that the People, by such an
overwhelming and unprecedented majority, had again
reelected Mr. Lincoln to the Presidency and endorsed
his course elevating him to the proudest
and most honorable position on Earth. They felt
under deep obligation to him because he had appreciated
their condition as a Slave-State. It was
not too much to say that by the exercise of rare
discretion on his part, Maryland to-day occupies her
position in favor of Freedom. Slavery has
been abolished therefrom by the Sovereign Decree
of the People. With deep and lasting gratitude
they desired that his Administration, as it had been
approved in the past, might also be successful
in the future, and result in the Restoration
of the Union, with Freedom as its immutable basis.
They trusted that, on retiring from his high and
honorable position, the universal verdict might
be that he deserved well of mankind, and that
favoring Heaven might ’Crown his days with
loving kindness and tender mercies.’]
The same kindly anxiety to soften
and dispel the feeling of bitterness that had been
engendered in the malignant bosoms of the Copperhead-Democracy
by their defeat, was apparent when he said with emphasis
and feeling:
“I have said before, and now
repeat, that I indulge in no feeling of triumph over
any man who has thought or acted differently from myself.
I have no such feeling toward any living man;”
and again, after complimenting Maryland for doing
“more than double her share” in the elections,
in that she had not only carried the Republican ticket,
but also the Free Constitution, he added: “Those
who have differed with us and opposed us will yet
see that the result of the Presidential election is
better for their own good than if they had been successful.”
The victory of the Union-Republican
Party at this election was an amazing one, and in
the words of General Grant’s dispatch of congratulation
to the President, the fact of its “having passed
off quietly” was, in itself, “a victory
worth more to the Country than a battle won,” for
the Copperheads had left no stone unturned in their
efforts to create the utmost possible rancor, in the
minds of their partisans, against the Administration
and its Party.
Of twenty-five States voting, Lincoln
and Johnson had carried the electoral votes of twenty-two
of them, viz.: Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, Connecticut, Vermont, New York, Pennsylvania,
Maryland, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Michigan,
Iowa, Wisconsin, Minnesota, California, Oregon, Kansas,
West Virginia, and Nevada; while McClellan and Pendleton
had carried the twenty-one electoral votes of the
remaining three, viz.: New Jersey, Delaware,
and Kentucky the popular vote reaching
the enormous number of 2,216,067 for Lincoln, to 1,808,725
for McClellan making Lincoln’s popular
majority 407,342, and his electoral majority 191!
But if the figures upon the Presidential
candidacy were so gratifying and surprising to all
who held the cause of Union above all others, no less
gratifying and surprising were those of the Congressional
elections, which indicated an entire revulsion of popular
feeling on the subject of the Administration’s
policy. For, while in the current Congress (the
38th), there were only 106 Republican-Union to 77
Democratic Representatives, in that for which the elections
had just been held, (the 39th), there would be 143
Republican-Union to 41 Democratic Representatives.
It was at once seen, therefore, that,
should the existing House of Representatives fail
to adopt the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution,
there would be much more than the requisite two-thirds
majority for such a Measure in both Houses of the succeeding
Congress; and moreover that in the event of its failure
at the coming Session, it was more than probable that
President Lincoln would consider himself justified
in calling an Extra Session of the Thirty-ninth Congress
for the especial purpose of taking such action.
So far then, as the prospects of the Thirteenth Amendment
were concerned, they looked decidedly more encouraging.