WASHINGTON, SATURDAY, February 16th, 1861.
The Conference was called to order
by the PRESIDENT at 12 o’clock M.
Prayer was offered by Rev. Dr. SUNDERLAND.
The Journal was read by the Assistant
Secretary, Mr. PULESTON, and, being corrected, was
approved.
The PRESIDENT: I have received
a communication from Mr. W.C. JEWETT, which I
am requested to lay before the Conference. Should
any member desire to have it read, it will be presented
upon motion. I am not inclined to occupy the
time of the Conference by reading it, unless some
member specially requests that it be read.
Mr. SEDDON: Let it be laid
on the table without reading.
The PRESIDENT: That disposition will be
made of it.
Mr. WICKLIFFE: I am instructed,
by the Committee on Rules and Organization, to propose
an amendment to the Eleventh Rule which has been adopted.
As the Rule now stands, no appeal is allowed from the
decision of the Chair upon questions of order.
It is not probable that either the Chair or the Conference
would wish to be bound in that way. The purpose
of the resolution is to assimilate the Rule in this
respect to the practice in parliamentary bodies, and
to allow an appeal from the decision of the Chair
to the Conference itself. I offer the following
resolution:
“Resolved,
That the Eleventh Rule of this Convention be so
amended as to allow
an appeal from the decision of the
PRESIDENT, which appeal
shall be decided without debate.”
On the passage of this resolution
a division was called for, and upon a count by the
Secretaries, the PRESIDENT declared it adopted.
Mr. WICKLIFFE: I now offer
another resolution the following:
“Resolved,
That in the discussions which may take place in
this Convention, no
member shall be allowed to speak longer
than thirty minutes.”
We must all by this time be impressed
with the necessity of prompt, immediate, and efficient
action. I do not charge any member of the body
with any purpose unnecessarily to consume the time
of the Convention in making speeches. I have
no reason to believe that any such purpose exists.
But the present Congress is rapidly drawing to a close.
If any plan is adopted it will be nugatory, unless
recommended by Congress. If we are to sit here
until each member of the Conference has spoken upon
each question presented, as many times and as long
as he pleases, I fear the Congress will close its
labors before we do ours.
Mr. DAVIS: I think thirty
minutes quite too long. Our opinions are formed.
Before this time probably every member has determined
his course of action, and it will not be changed by
debate. I move to strike out the word “thirty,”
and insert the word “ten.”
Mr. HITCHCOCK: I am altogether
opposed to this attempt in advance to cut off or limit
debate. I am sure it cannot meet with favor from
the Conference, for reasons so obvious that I will
not occupy time in stating them. I move to lay
the resolution on the table.
Several gentlemen here interposed
and appealed to Mr. HITCHCOCK to withdraw his motion,
as it would cut off all debate upon the merits of
the resolution. Mr. HITCHCOCK accordingly withdrew
it.
Mr. SEDDON: We have one
rule already which prohibits any member from speaking
more than twice upon any question without special leave,
and a member cannot speak a second time until every
other, who desires to speak, has spoken. This
was the rule, I believe, in the Convention that formed
our present Constitution, and no one complained of
its operation there. I am as much impressed with
the necessity of expediting our action as any one
can be, and should be among the last to protract our
sessions. But this resolution looks too much like
suppressing discussion like cutting off
debate. I desire at the proper time to be heard
upon the report which I have submitted. It will
be impossible to discuss the grave questions involved
in it in the space of a brief half hour.
Mr. CHASE: I hope Governor
WICKLIFFE will consent to a postponement of his resolution
for the present. It is anticipating a necessity
that may not arise. As yet no one has abused
the privileges of debate. It is not well to assume
in advance that any one will do so.
Mr. WICKLIFFE: I have no
wish to press this resolution upon the Convention,
and it may be as well to postpone it for the present.
I will move its postponement until Tuesday morning
next.
The motion to postpone was unanimously agreed to.
Mr. CRISFIELD: I move that
the hour of meeting hereafter be ten o’clock
in the morning.
Mr. JOHNSON, of Maryland: I
am sure that we shall all agree that this hour is
quite too early. I wish to make all reasonable
progress, but I think we shall find it difficult to
secure a quorum at that hour. I move to amend
by inserting eleven o’clock.
Mr. EWING: I think we had
better let the hour of meeting remain where our rules
leave it. We shall find our labors severe enough
if we commence at twelve o’clock.
Mr. CRISFIELD: I will accept
the amendment of my colleague. Let the time of
meeting be eleven o’clock.
The motion of Mr. CRISFIELD as amended
was agreed to without a division.
Mr. CHASE: I have a motion
which I desire to make, and as I do not wish to press
it to a vote at the present time, I will move to lay
it on the table. But I wish to have it before
the Conference. It is apparent to me that we
ought to pass it at some time, in order to give members
who may belong to delegations in which differences
of opinion exist, an opportunity of appearing on the
record as they personally wish to vote. I move
to amend the first rule by inserting after the word
“representing,” the words, “The yeas
and nays of the delegates from each State, on any
question, shall be entered on the Journal when it
is desired by any delegate.”
On motion of Mr. CHASE, the amendment
was laid upon the table.
The PRESIDENT: The Conference
will now proceed to the order of the day, the question
being upon the several reports presented by the General
Committee of one from each State.
The chair was taken, at the request
of the PRESIDENT, by Mr. ALEXANDER, of New Jersey.
Mr. BALDWIN: I move to
substitute the report presented by myself for the
report of the majority of the Committee. I will
consent to strike out that part of it which relates
to
Mr. TURNER: Before the
gentleman from Connecticut proceeds with his argument
I trust he will give way for the introduction of a
resolution. I am sure the time has come when we
ought to pass such a resolution as I now offer.
I am unwilling to sit here longer unless some means
are taken to secure a report of our proceedings.
The PRESIDENT: A resolution is not now
in order.
Mr. TURNER: I ask that
the resolution may be read for the information of
the Conference, and also ask the leave of the Conference
for its introduction.
The resolution was read. It provided
for the appointment of a stenographer.
The question was taken, and upon a
division the leave to introduce it was refused.
Mr. BALDWIN: I rise for
the purpose of supporting my motion to substitute
the report presented by myself for that presented by
the majority of the committee. As I was about
to remark, when the resolution just disposed of was
introduced, I will consent to strike out all that
portion of my report which precedes the words “whereas
unhappy differences,” &c., in order that the
substitute offered may conform more nearly in substance
to the proposition of the majority. It seems
desirable on all hands that whatever we adopt here
should be presented to Congress; and if it receives
the sanction of that body, should be by it presented
to the States for their approval. My report when
thus amended will be in a proper form for such a disposition.
My report, it will be noticed, is
based mainly upon the action of the Legislature of
Kentucky. I have adopted those resolutions of
Kentucky as the basis of my recommendation, on account
of the short time which remains for any action at
all, and because it appears to me that the kind of
proceeding indicated in them is best calculated to
meet with favor in the States which must approve any
action taken here before it can be made effectual.
The resolutions of Virginia, under
which this Convention is called, were adopted on the
19th of January last. The resolutions of Kentucky
to which I have referred were adopted on the 25th of
the same month. It is not only the necessary
presumption that the latter were passed with a full
knowledge of the action of Virginia, but I understand
from their reading that they were adopted in consequence
of the proposition of the latter State. I am
disposed to favor the line of policy initiated in
the resolutions of the State of Kentucky.
There are two ways of presenting amendments
to the Constitution provided in that instrument.
By the first, by Congress whenever two-thirds of both
Houses shall deem such amendments necessary: or
by the second, the same body, upon the application
of the Legislatures of two-thirds of the States, may
call a convention for the purpose of proposing amendments.
These two are the only modes in which, under
that instrument, amendments can be proposed to the
Constitution. Either of these is adequate, and
it was the manifest intention of its framers to secure
due consideration of any changes which might be proposed
to the fundamental law of our Government.
It is conceded on all hands that our
action here will amount to nothing, unless it meets
the approval of Congress, and such proposals of amendment
as we shall agree upon are recommended by that body
to the States for adoption. The session of the
present Congress is drawing to a close. There
remain only fifteen or sixteen days during which it
can transact business. Can any one suppose that
in the present state of the country, with the large
number of important measures before Congress and awaiting
its action, any proposition of real importance emanating
from this Conference could be properly considered
by either House in this short time? I am assuming
just now that this is a Convention which has the right,
under the Constitution or by precedent, to make such
propositions. But if we do not remember, most
certainly Congress will, that however respectable this
body may be, however large may be the constituency
which it represents, it is, after all, one which has
no existence under, and is not recognized by the Constitution.
In a recent speech in the Senate, Judge COLLAMER, of
Vermont, one of the ablest lawyers in that body, has
more than intimated a doubt whether Congress could,
under the Constitution, entertain proposals of amendment
presented to it by such a body as this. But,
waiving all technicalities, the substantial objection
which influences my mind is, that the course of action
proposed by the majority of the committee is contrary
to the spirit of the Constitution. When the people
adopted that instrument and subjected themselves to
its operation, they intended and had a right to understand
that it should be amended only in the manner provided
by the Constitution itself. They did not intend
that amendments should be proposed under, or the existence
of the Constitution endangered by any extraneous pressure
whatever. They wisely provided a way in which
amendments might be proposed, or rather two ways.
Under either of them, due examination and consideration
was secured. They would not have consented to
any other way of proposing amendments. The General
Government, on the adoption of the Constitution, for
all national purposes, took the place of the State
Governments. The people of the United States
from that time, in the language of a distinguished
Senator from Kentucky, owed a paramount allegiance
to the General Government, and a subordinate allegiance
only to the State Governments. Changes in the
Constitution, then, can only be properly made
in the manner provided by the Constitution. Propositions
for changes in it must come from the people, or their
representatives in Congress. Any attempt to coerce
Congress, or to influence its action in a manner not
provided by the Constitution, is a disregard of the
rights of the people.
Why are we assembled here to urge
these amendments upon Congress? to induce Congress
to recommend them to the people for adoption?
Are we the representatives of the people of the United
States? Are we acting for them, and as their
authorized agents, in this endeavor to press amendments
upon the attention of Congress? Because, if our
action is to have any effect at all, it must be to
induce Congress to conform to our wishes to
propose the very amendments which we prepare.
The members of the House of Representatives
were elected by the people. They were selected
to perform, and they do perform, their duties and
functions under the obligations of their official oaths.
There is no question about their agency, or their right
to act in the premises. The Constitution makes
them the agents of the people. The Legislature
of the State of Kentucky, well understanding and appreciating
the only true method in which constitutional amendments
should be proposed, with all the formality of a legislative
act approved by the Executive of that State, has applied
to Congress for the call of a convention for proposing
amendments to the Constitution of the United States,
and has requested the President to lay those resolutions
immediately before Congress. She wishes other
States to unite with her in the preparing and proposing
of amendments to the Constitution. This is the
correct, the legal, the patriotic course. This
was what Kentucky had the right to ask, and this is
all she has asked.
Mr. BALDWIN here read the Kentucky
resolutions, as follows:
Resolutions recommending
a call for a Convention of the
United States.
Whereas, The people of some
of the States feel themselves deeply aggrieved
by the policy and measures which have been adopted
by some of the people of the other States; and whereas
an amendment of the Constitution of the United States
is deemed indispensably necessary to secure them against
similar grievances in the future: Therefore,
Resolved, by the General Assembly
of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, that application
to Congress to call a Convention for proposing
amendments to the Constitution of the United States,
pursuant to the fifth article thereof, be, and the
same is hereby, now made by this General Assembly
of Kentucky; and we hereby invite our sister
States to unite with us, without delay, in a
similar application to Congress.
Resolved, That the Governor
of this State forthwith communicate the foregoing
resolution to the President of the United States,
with the request that he immediately place the
same before Congress and the Executives of the several
States, with a request that they lay them before
their respective Legislatures.
Resolved, If the Convention
be called in accordance with the provisions of
the foregoing resolutions, the Legislature of
the Commonwealth of Kentucky suggest for the consideration
of that Convention, as a basis for settling existing
difficulties, the adoption, by way of amendments to
the Constitution, of the resolutions offered in
the Senate of the United States by the Hon. JOHN
J. CRITTENDEN.
DAVID MERIWETHER,
Speaker of the House
of Representatives.
THOMAS P. PORTER,
Speaker of the Senate.
Approved January 25, 1861.
B. MAGOFFIN.
By the Governor:
THOMAS B. MONROE, JR.,
Secretary of State.
Mr. BALDWIN continued: Now,
what are we asked to do by the majority of the committee?
It is not to unite with Kentucky or to accede to her
wishes for a convention of the States, under the Constitution,
but to thwart the wishes of Kentucky, and to induce
Congress itself to originate and propose amendments,
or to propose those which we may originate. Kentucky
asks that the people of the States themselves might
elect delegates to a convention, who should carefully
consider the whole subject. The Kentucky resolutions
were transmitted to the President, who sent them to
Congress, as he said, with great pleasure. Kentucky
stated that she was in favor of the so-called Crittenden
resolutions, but she did not request Congress to propose
them as amendments to the Constitution.
How is this body constituted?
Do we, its members, represent the people of the several
States? Have they had an opportunity to elect
delegates, to select those in whom they had confidence
and whom they could trust? Not at all. Why
should we assemble here and express our wishes to
Congress in reference to the Constitution without permitting
California, Oregon, or many other States not here represented,
to unite in our deliberations? I cannot assent
to such an unfair proceeding toward other States.
Suppose one-half the States should
request Congress to propose amendments, will Congress
agree to it? No, sir. The Constitution provides
that Congress shall not propose amendments without
the consent of two-thirds of the States. Congress
has not deemed any amendments necessary, so far as
we know, and yet a majority of the committee of this
body ask Congress to propose the amendments on our
responsibility alone. It appears to me, then,
that this proceeding must be regarded not as one known
to the Constitution, but as a revolutionary proceeding.
All the States are not represented here, nor have
all had an opportunity to be so represented. Some
of us are acting under the appointment of the Legislatures
of our States; other delegates are simply appointed
by the Executives of their States and are acting without
any legal authority. We are not standing upon
equal ground; some are only acting upon their own
judgment; others are acting under instructions from
their several Legislatures. If the Virginia Legislature
itself were here, its action would differ materially
from the present views of the delegates from that State.
But how is this? The Resolutions
of the Legislature of Virginia make the statement
that unless these questions are settled, and settled
soon, there is danger of the disruption of the Union.
Admit this to be so, and it furnishes no reason for
changing the mode of proposing constitutional amendments.
The Constitution knows no such danger. It is
a self-sustaining Constitution, and was supposed to
contain within itself the power to secure its own
preservation. The Constitution ought not to be
amended without the deliberate action of the people
themselves. I cannot and I will not disregard
their rights. I cannot recognize the claim that
the secession of a State, by an ordinance of its Convention,
can carry either the State or its people out of the
Union. There is no such thing as legal
secession, for there is no power anywhere to take
the people out of the protecting care of the Government,
or to relieve them from their obligations to it.
And where is the clause in the Constitution
that authorizes the call upon Congress to do what
Congress is asked to do here? The Constitution
was adopted “to form a more perfect Union.”
The people were not to be allowed to alter it, except
in the two modes prescribed in it. The Convention
which adopted it did not propose that changes should
be made in it without ample time for deliberation and
discussion. We are here, then, simply as conferees
from States expressing our individual opinions.
We are now asked to recommend to Congress amendments
to our fundamental law; we have no more right to do
so than members of the so-called Southern Confederacy.
We, a mere fraction of the people, propose to unite
in bringing a pressure upon Congress, which shall
induce it to propose these amendments. This was
not one of the modes contemplated or provided by the
framers of that sacred instrument.
General WASHINGTON presided over the
Convention which prepared our Constitution. None
knew better than he the reasons which made its adoption
necessary to the preservation of the Government none
knew better the dangers which would probably surround
it in after years. In that last counsel of his
to the American people his Farewell Address a
paper drawn up with the greatest deliberation, embodying
opinions which he entertained as the result of a long
life of active study and reflection, he warns us against
all such proceedings as those contemplated by the
majority of the committee. I am sure the delegates
from Virginia will not now refuse to listen to the
words of that illustrious man, uttered upon the most
solemn and momentous occasion of his life. Hear
his words:
“Here, perhaps, I ought to stop.
But a solicitude for your welfare, which cannot
end but with my life, and the apprehension of
danger natural to that solicitude, urge me on
an occasion like the present to offer to your solemn
contemplation, and to recommend to your frequent
review, some sentiments which are the result
of much reflection, of no inconsiderable observation,
and which appear to me all-important to the permanency
of your felicity as a people. These will
be offered to you with more freedom, as you can
only see in them the disinterested warnings of a parting
friend, who can possibly have no personal motive to
bias his counsel.”
Again:
“But as it is easy to foresee,
that from different causes and from different
quarters much pains will be taken, many artifices
employed, to weaken in your minds the conviction of
this truth; as this is the point in your political
fortress, against which the batteries of internal
and external enemies will be most constantly
and actively (though often covertly and insidiously)
directed, it is of infinite moment that you should
properly estimate the immense value of your national
union to your collective and individual happiness;
that you should cherish a cordial, habitual,
and immovable attachment to it; accustoming yourselves
to think and speak of it as the Palladium of your
political safety and prosperity; watching for
its preservation with jealous anxiety; discountenancing
whatever may suggest even a suspicion that it
can in any event be abandoned; and indignantly
frowning upon the first dawning of every attempt
to alienate any portion of our country from the
rest, or to enfeeble the sacred ties which now link
together the various parts.”
Are not these admonitions at the present
moment peculiarly worthy of our attention? And
with them before us, can we invoke the action of Congress
for the alteration of the fundamental law of the Government
in any other ways than those provided in the Constitution?
I earnestly hope not. If we act at all, let us
act in that regular method which gives time for consultation,
for consideration, and for action among the people
of all the States. It appears to me, that in adopting
the line of policy proposed by the majority of the
committee, we are doing the very thing which WASHINGTON
warned us not to do.
He said further:
“To the efficacy and permanency
of your Union, a government for the whole is
indispensable. No alliances, however strict,
between the parts, can be an adequate substitute;
they must inevitably experience the infractions
and interruptions which all alliances in all
times have experienced. Sensible of this
momentous truth, you have improved upon your
first essay, by the adoption of a Constitution
of Government better calculated than your former
for an intimate union, and for the efficacious management
of your common concerns. This Government, the
offspring of our own choice, uninfluenced and
unmoved, adopted upon full investigation and
mature deliberation, completely free in its principles,
in the distribution of its powers, uniting security
with energy, and containing within itself
a provision for its own amendment, has a just
claim to your confidence and your support.
Respect for its authority, compliance with its
laws, acquiescence in its measures, are duties
enjoined by the fundamental maxims of true liberty.
The basis of our political systems is the right
of the people to make and to alter their Constitutions
of Government. But the Constitution which
at any time exists, till changed by an explicit
and authentic act of the whole people, is
sacredly obligatory upon all.”
And again:
“Toward the preservation of your
Government, and the permanency of your present
happy state, it is requisite, not only that you
should steadily discountenance irregular oppositions
to its acknowledged authority, but also that you resist
with care the spirit of innovation upon its principles,
however specious the pretexts. One method of
assault may be to affect in the forms of the Constitution
alterations which will impair the energy of the
system, and thus to undermine what cannot be
directly overthrown. In all the changes
to which you may be invited, remember that time and
habit are at least as necessary to fix the true character
of governments, as of other human institutions.”
And still further:
“If, in the opinion of the people,
the distribution or modification of the constitutional
powers be in any particular wrong, let it be
corrected by an amendment in the way which the
Constitution designates. But let there be no
change by usurpation; for though this in one instance
may be the instrument of good, it is the customary
weapon by which free governments are destroyed.
The precedent must always greatly overbalance
in permanent evil any partial or transient benefit
which the use can at any time yield.”
If we adopt the majority report here,
we attempt to correct the Constitution by an amendment
in a way which, the Constitution does not designate.
WASHINGTON says if there is any thing wrong, let it
be corrected in a constitutional way; and that, sir,
is just what Kentucky has said, and that is what every
loyal State will say. Kentucky has inaugurated
this proceeding, and it is one eminently worthy of
her true as she has always been to the Union.
I cannot disregard this action of her Legislature.
I do not think any exigency exists which requires
us to disregard it. I am ready, and my State is
ready, to confer with other States in reference to
the Constitution, when asked to do so in any of the
modes pointed out by that instrument.
Entertaining these opinions, and with
these convictions, I should be untrue to my sense
of duty to the Government and the State I represent,
and to the people of the United States, if I should
consent to disregard the Constitution and my obligations
to it.
I have stated these considerations
because they are powerful enough to influence and
control my course. Others must act upon their
own convictions. I have come to the conclusion
that I ought to submit this minority report with distrust,
and with distrust only, because so many of the able
statesmen composing the majority of the committee have
seen fit to adopt different views. My report leaves
every thing to the people, where I think every such
question should be left. When they consult together
and decide in the constitutional way I shall bow to
their decision, whatever it may be.
Mr. GUTHRIE: I do not propose
to follow the gentleman (Mr. BALDWIN) through all
the ramifications of his speech. I have made the
Constitution my study for many years, and I have looked
at the causes which give it strength and the causes
which give it weakness. I believe that our fathers
organized this Government in great wisdom. Its
strength was in the affections of the people.
It never had any other strength, and it was never
intended it should have. It was not intended
to be sustained by standing armies. Its strength
was intended to be placed in the affections of the
people, and I had hoped it would endure forever.
Without the affections of the people it is the weakest
Government ever established. The people!
What a spectacle do we witness now! One portion
of the people has lost confidence in the Government,
and now seven States have left it. The Government
cannot realize that they are gone. We have established
the right of revolution, and that right gave to the
world this splendid Government. This was the
first precedent; it will stand for all time. It
will always be acted upon when the people have lost
confidence in the Government. I hate that
word secession, because it is a cheat! Call things
by their right names! The Southern States have
framed another Government; they have originated a
revolution. There is no warrant for it
in the Constitution, but it is like the right of self-defence,
which every man may exercise. The gentleman from
Connecticut has forgotten that the Government made
Congress the recipient of petitions. Why was
this? It was that Congress might be influenced
by the wishes of the people and act upon them.
We are twenty States assembled here.
Congress has been in session more than two months.
The Government is falling to pieces. Congress
has not had the sagacity to give the necessary guarantees,
the proper assurances to the slaveholding States.
This session will make a shameful chapter in the history
of this Government, to be hereafter written.
Why should this Congress refuse to give the people
guarantees? The proudest Governments in the world
have been compelled to give their people guarantees.
We are assembled here to consult,
and see what can be done; to consult as representatives
of the States. Is there any impropriety in our
stating what would restore confidence, to our putting
this in writing, and to our proposing the plan of
restoration we think should be adopted to Congress,
and asking Congress to submit that plan to the people?
Are we not the representatives of the people, sent
here to do what we think ought to be done, and to
ask Congress by way of petition to repair the foundations
of the Government? It is all legitimate, and
legitimate in the most technical sense.
Suppose we ask Congress to act on
this proposition. We come directly from the people.
We ask Congress to submit a plan which we think will
save the Government, to the people. Is this taking
any advantage of the States? They can take
all the time they wish for deliberation, and we can
bring no pressure to bear on them. In these times
of great peril and trouble, we ask Congress, backed
by the moral force of the States we represent, to
act and save the country.
Two or three years hence will not
answer. The foundations of the Government are
undermined and growing weaker every day, and if the
people who may give to it the necessary repair and
strength do not do so, they will be called to a fearful
account. When the building is on fire, it is
no time to inquire who set it on fire. The North
say the South did it, and the South say the North
did it.
We are all interested in this Government;
we love the Constitution; we love the Union; we want
to repair it we want to lay the foundation
for bringing back the States who have left us, by reason
and not by the sword. The delay which the gentleman
proposes is too long; the Constitution has provided
a shorter way. In adopting that we are only recognizing
the right of petition.
I, sir, will answer to Kentucky; I
don’t want the gentleman to come between me
and the people of Kentucky. He has no right to
speak for the people of that State her
representatives here have that right and will exercise
it. Why were these resolutions passed? Because
Congress had failed to provide the means needful to
our safety. The resolutions under which the Kentucky
delegation came here were passed on the 29th, not
the 25th of January. They were passed after the
resolutions to which the gentleman refers. They
ought to be regarded, as they are in fact, as the
deliberate expression of the Legislature of Kentucky
in favor of this Conference. In them it is stated
that Kentucky heartily accepts the invitation of her
old mother Virginia. She acts in no unwilling
spirit, she hastens to avail herself of any opportunity
to save the Government. She believes a favorable
opportunity is offered by this Conference. I
repeat again: Adopt the report of the majority
of the committee and I will answer to Kentucky.
I will go farther. I will answer that Kentucky
herself will adopt the very proposals of amendment
to the Constitution contained in the committee’s
report.
But the gentleman insists that the
action proposed is not only improper but that it is
revolutionary. I deny that it is revolutionary.
It is no more revolutionary than any other form of
petition. It is a petition sustained by the moral
force of twenty States a petition which
Congress will not disregard.
But if the report of the majority
is revolutionary, what of the gentleman’s report?
Is that provided for by the Constitution? Is that
according to the forms of the Constitution? No,
sir. Every argument he has brought against the
report of the majority, applies with equal force to
his own. His views will answer for those who are
willing to stand by and see this Government drift
toward destruction to see this country
involved in civil war. It will answer for those
who will oppose all action, and who wish to do nothing
at all. His report is a new excuse for inaction.
It will not answer for us.
Sir, we are acting under a fearful
responsibility. The eyes of every true patriot
in the nation are turned toward this body. The
people are awaiting our action, with anxious and painful
solicitude. They know and we know that, unless
the wisdom of this Conference shall devise some plan
to satisfy the people of the slaveholding States to
quiet their apprehensions, a disruption of the Government
is inevitable. If we adopt the gentleman’s
views, go home and do nothing, we take the responsibility
of breaking up the Government.
I do not propose to discuss the merits
of the majority report at the present time. I
have only sought to answer the arguments of the gentleman
against our acting at all. But I claim that this
way of proceeding is entirely irregular. The
report of the gentleman is not in order. The
report of the majority was first presented, and should
be first acted upon. I move to lay the report
of the gentleman from Connecticut upon the table.
Mr. LOGAN: I would ask
Mr. GUTHRIE to withdraw his motion. If the motion
were adopted it would prevent discussion. It was
expected that we were to discuss the subject to-day.
It is not of much consequence which report is first
acted upon. They are all before the Conference,
and the merits of all of them are under discussion.
Mr. GUTHRIE withdrew the motion to lay on the table.
Mr. MOREHEAD, of Kentucky, took the chair.
Mr. CURTIS: I am a member
of the present Congress; I have faithfully attended
its deliberations, and have anxiously watched its course.
Mr. GUTHRIE will find that there are other and different
objections to the line of policy he proposes, to which
he has not alluded, and which he does not understand.
But they are objections which have determined, and
will determine, the action of Congress. I would
ask Mr. GUTHRIE if the adoption of his propositions,
previous to their action, would have prevented the
States which have already seceded from going out.
Mr. GUTHRIE: I think it
would have prevented them; all but South Carolina.
I did not intend to assail Congress, or any member
of it, personally.
Mr. CURTIS: I do not agree
with the gentleman. We know, and the gentleman
knows, that there has been for a long time a purpose,
a great conspiracy in this country, to begin and carry
out a revolution. That has been avowed over and
over again in the halls of Congress. Can you
expect a member of Congress to do more than reflect
the will of his constituents, the will of his people?
Would you have him do any thing different? There
were forty or fifty different propositions before
the Congressional Committee of Thirty-three. There
are many here. There are many difficulties attending
the solution of this question in every respect.
But we may as well speak plainly. I cannot go
for the majority report of the committee, and among
other reasons, for this reason: Their proposition
makes all territory we may hereafter acquire slave
territory.
Mr. JOHNSON: No; such is not the fact.
Mr. CURTIS: I have read it, and such is
my construction.
Mr. JOHNSON: Such is not the intention.
Mr. CURTIS: Any future
territory which we acquire must be from the south;
we have extended as far as we can to the north and
the northwest.
Mr. WICKLIFFE: Will you agree to divide
all future territory?
Mr. CURTIS: I will do almost
any thing to save the Union. I will reflect the
will of my constituents. I think it ought not
to be divided equally, but the South ought to have
its share. There is another trouble. Look
at the difficulty of getting any proposition through
Congress. Congress has only fifteen days of life.
I ask you, even with general unanimity, if you can
hope to pass at this session any new proposals of
amendments? If you do, you will get along faster
than is generally the case. There is one proposition
before Congress that I believe can pass. It is
the Adams proposition, to admit all the territories
south at once. It is already slave territory.
It is now applying for admission. If this is
acceptable to the South, I will go for it. We
are bound to admit it under the ordinance of 1789.
Mr. GOODRICH: Do I understand
my friend to claim that the ordinance of 1789 involves
a proposition to divide the territory?
Mr. CURTIS: I understand
that in connection with the subsequent legislation
it does.
Mr. GOODRICH: The concession
of territory from North Carolina contains a prohibition
from acting on the subject of slavery in the territory
ceded.
Mr. CURTIS: I agree entirely
with the gentleman. I am opposed to slavery,
but we must divide the territory. Let us leave
slavery where it is, and admit the territory for the
purpose of settling the question. I do not agree
with Mr. GUTHRIE that this Government depends on the
will of the people. It is a self-supporting government;
it will support itself. There is no justification
for the action of the seceded States, and I cannot
agree that Congress is responsible for their action.
The secession plot was formed before Congress assembled.
There was a power to check it. If our President
had acted as Jackson did, there would have been an
end of it. The day for hanging for treason has
gone by. We must look at things as they are.
Even in battle the white flag must be respected.
Let this subject be frankly discussed in a conciliatory
manner. If any State has the right to go out
of the Union at its own volition, then this Government,
in my opinion, is not worth the trouble of preserving.
The President is sworn to protect and uphold the Government.
So long as there is a navy, an army, and a militia,
it is his sworn duty to uphold it to uphold
it as well against an attack from States as from individuals.
The Government is one of love and affection, it is
true, but it is also one of strength, and power.
Where was there ever a more indulgent people than
ours? Our forts have been taken, our flag has
been fired upon, our property seized, and as yet nothing
has been done. But they will not be indulgent
forever. Beware, gentlemen, how you force them
further. Gentlemen talk about the inefficiency
of Congress; I wish there was some efficiency in the
Executive. If there was, or had been, our present
troubles would have been avoided.
Mr. TURNER: I do not understand
that the report of the majority is applicable to future
territory. I move the recommitment of the report,
to have that question settled.
Mr. JOHNSON: It is true
there are different constructions which may be placed
on the report. I think if it had been understood
to apply to future territory, it could not have received
the support of a majority of the committee. Mr.
CRITTENDEN’S proposition applies to future territory.
I submitted a proposition to the committee also intended
to apply to future territory. A majority of the
committee was opposed to it. Mr. EWING drew this
part of the amendment, and there is some difference
of opinion about it. In my opinion the amendment
would not apply to future territory, and I intended
at the proper time to offer an amendment which should
make it plain, and not leave it open to construction.
Personally, I should be glad to apply it to future
territory, but I shall yield. I think if we can
settle the question now, there will be no further
trouble. I do not believe any territory will
be acquired hereafter without great unanimity.
It is not quite true, although it may be probable,
that the future territory will be south of the line
proposed.
Mr. TURNER: I am still
more confirmed that it was the intention of the committee
to have the amendment only apply to existing territory.
If this is settled now, it will shorten the debate.
If the gentleman will move to amend now, I will withdraw
my motion.
Mr. JOHNSON: I move to
amend by inserting the word present before
the word territory in the first line of Section
I., with such other verbal amendments as may make
the sense conform, and to adopt that amendment now.
This covers the whole ground. I wish to discuss
these amendments, but am physically unable to speak
to-day, and would prefer to have the discussion deferred.
Mr. JOHNSON then moved an adjournment,
which was carried on a division, and the Convention
adjourned at two o’clock and fifty minutes.