FROM THE FOUNDATION OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT DOWN TO 1830, BOTH THE NORTH
AND THE SOUTH HELD THE CONSTITUTION TO BE A COMPACT BETWEEN THE STATES.
One of the great difficulties in arguing
the question of the relative power of the States and
of the Federal Government, consists in the fact that
the present generation has grown up under the shadow
of the great Federal monster, and has been blinded
by its giant proportions. They see around them
all the paraphernalia and power of a great government its
splendid capital, its armies, its fleets, its Chief
Magistrate, its legislature, and its judiciary and
they find it difficult to realize the fact, that all
this grandeur is not self-created, but the offspring
of the States.
When our late troubles were culminating,
men were heard frequently to exclaim, with plaintive
energy, “What! have we no government capable
of preserving itself? Is our Government a mere
rope of sand, that may be destroyed at the will of
the States?” These men seemed to think that there
was but one government to be preserved, and that that
was the Government of the United States. Less
than a century had elapsed since the adoption of the
Constitution, and the generation now on the theatre
of events had seemingly forgotten, that the magnificent
structure, which they contemplated with so much admiration,
was but a creature of the States; that it had been
made by them for their convenience, and necessarily
held the tenure of its life at sufferance. They
lost sight of the fact that the State governments,
who were the creators of the Federal Government, were
the governments to be preserved, if there should be
any antagonism between them and the Federal Government;
and that their services, as well as their sympathies,
belonged to the former in preference to the latter.
What with the teachings of Webster and Story, and
a host of satellites, the dazzling splendor of the
Federal Government, and the overshadowing and corrupting
influences of its power, nearly a whole generation
in the North had grown up in ignorance of the true
nature of the institutions, under which they lived.
This change in the education of the
people had taken place since about the year 1830;
for, up to that time, both of the great political parties
of the country, the Whigs as well as the Democrats,
had been State-Rights in doctrine. A very common
error has prevailed on this subject. It has been
said, that the North and the South have always been
widely separated in their views of the Constitution;
that the men of the North have always been consolidationists,
whilst the men of the South have been secessionists.
Nothing can be farther from the truth. Whilst
the North and the South, from the very commencement
of the Government, have been at swords’ points,
on many questions of mere construction and policy, the
North claiming that more ample powers had been granted
the Federal Government, than the South was willing
to concede, there never was any material
difference between them down to the year 1830, as to
the true nature of their Government. They all
held it to be a federal compact, and the Northern
people were as jealous of the rights of their States
under it, as the Southern people.
In proof of this, I have only to refer
to a few of the well-known facts of our political
history. Thomas Jefferson penned the famous Kentucky
Resolutions of ’98 and ’99. The first
of those resolutions is in these words: “Resolved,
That the several States comprising the United States
of America are not united on the principles of unlimited
submission to their general Government; but that by
a compact, under the style and title of the Constitution
of the United States, and of amendments thereto, they
constitute a general Government for special purposes;
and that whensoever the general Government assumes
undelegated powers, its acts are unauthoritative,
void and of no force; that to this compact each State
acceded as a State, and is an integral party, its co-States
forming, as to itself, the other party; that the government
created by this compact was not made the exclusive
or final judge of the extent of the powers delegated
to itself, since that would have made its discretion,
not the Constitution, the measure of its powers; but
that, as in all cases of compact among persons having
no common judge, each party has an equal right to
judge for itself, as well of infractions, as of the
mode and measure of redress.”
It is unnecessary to quote the other
resolution, as the above contains all that is sufficient
for my purpose, which is to show that Mr. Jefferson
was a secessionist, and that with this record
he went before the American people as a candidate
for the Presidency, with the following results:
In 1800 he beat his opponent, John Adams, who represented
the consolidationists of that day, by a majority of
8 votes in the Electoral College. In 1804, being
a candidate for re-election, he beat his opponent
by the overwhelming majority of 162, to 14 votes.
In the Northern States alone, Mr. Jefferson received
85 votes, whilst in the same States his opponent received
but 9. This was a pretty considerable indorsement
of secession by the Northern States.
In 1808, Mr. Madison, who penned the
Virginia Resolutions of ’98, similar in tenor
to the Kentucky Resolutions, became a candidate for
the Presidency, and beat his opponent by a vote of
122 to 47; the Northern majority, though somewhat
diminished, being still 50 to 39 votes. Mr. Madison
was re-elected in 1812, and in 1816, James Monroe was
elected President by a vote of 183 to his opponent’s
34; and more than one half of these 183 votes came
from the Northern States. In 1820, Mr. Monroe
was re-elected over John Quincy Adams, of Massachusetts,
by a majority of 231 votes to 13. Besides Monroe
and Adams, Crawford and Jackson were also candidates,
but these two latter received only 11 votes between
them. This last election is especially remarkable,
as showing that there was no opposition to Jefferson’s
doctrine of State-Rights, since all the candidates
were of that creed. The opposition had been so
often defeated, and routed in former elections, that
they had not strength enough left to put a candidate
in the field.
John Quincy Adams succeeded Mr. Monroe,
and his State-Rights doctrines are well known.
He expressed them as follows: “The indissoluble
link of union between the people of the several States
of this confederated nation, is, after all, not in
the right, but in the heart. If
the day should ever come (may heaven avert it) when
the affections of the people of these States shall
be alienated from each other; when the fraternal spirit
shall give way to cold indifference, or collision
of interests shall fester into hatred, the bands
of political association will not long hold together
parties, no longer attracted by the magnetism of conciliated
interests, and kindly sympathies; and far better
will it be for the people of the dis-united States
to part in friendship with each other, than to be
held together by constraint. Then will be
the time for reverting to the precedents, which occurred
at the formation, and adoption of the Constitution,
to form again a more perfect union, by dissolving
that which could no longer bind, and to leave the separated
parts to be reunited by the law of political gravitation
to the centre.”
General Jackson succeeded Mr. Adams
in 1828, and was re-elected in 1832. It was during
his administration that the heresy was first
promulgated by Mr. Webster, that the Constitution
was not a compact between the States, but an instrument
of government, “ordained, and established,”
by the people of the United States, in the aggregate,
as one nation. With respect to the New England
States in particular, there is other and more pointed
evidence, that they agreed with Mr. Jefferson, and
the South down to the year 1830, on this question
of State rights, than is implied in the Presidential
elections above quoted. Massachusetts, the leader
of these States in intellect, and in energy, impatient
of control herself, has always sought to control others.
This was, perhaps, but natural. All mankind are
prone to consult their own interests. Selfishness,
unfortunately, is one of the vices of our nature, which
few are found capable of struggling against effectually.
The New England people were largely
imbued with the Puritan element. Their religious
doctrines gave them a gloomy asceticism of character,
and an intolerance of other men’s opinions quite
remarkable. In their earlier history as colonists,
there is much in the way of uncharitableness and persecution,
which a liberal mind could wish to see blotted out.
True to these characteristics, which I may almost
call instincts, the New England States have always
been the most refractory States of the Union.
As long as they were in a minority, and hopeless of
the control of the Government, they stood strictly
on their State rights, in resisting such measures as
were unpalatable to them, even to the extremity of
threatening secession; and it was only when they saw
that the tables were turned, and that it was possible
for them to seize the reins of the Government, that
they abandoned their State-Rights doctrines, and became
consolidationists.
One of the first causes of the dissatisfaction
of the New England States with the General Government
was the purchase of Louisiana, by Mr. Jefferson, in
1803. It arose out of their jealousy of the balance
of power between the States. The advantages to
result to the United States from the purchase of this
territory were patent to every one. It completed
the continuity of our territory, from the head waters
of the Mississippi, to the sea, and unlocked the mouths
of that great river. But Massachusetts saw in
the purchase, nothing more than the creation of additional
Southern States, to contest, with her, the future
control of the Government. She could see no authority
for it in the Constitution, and she threatened, that
if it were consummated, she would secede from the Union.
Her Legislature passed the following resolution on
the subject: “Resolved, That the
annexation of Louisiana to the Union, transcends the
Constitutional power of the Government of the United
States. It formed a new Confederacy, to which
the States [not the people of the United States, in
the aggregate] united by the former compact, are not
bound to adhere.”
This purchase of Louisiana rankled,
for a long time, in the breast of New England.
It was made, as we have seen, in 1803, and in 1811
the subject again came up for consideration; this
time, in the shape of a bill before Congress for the
admission of Louisiana as a State. One of the
most able and influential members of Congress of that
day from Massachusetts was Mr. Josiah Quincy.
In a speech on this bill, that gentlemen uttered the
following declaration: “If this bill passes,
it is my deliberate opinion that it is virtually a
dissolution of the Union; that it will free the States
from their moral obligation, and as it will be the
right of all, so it will be the duty of some definitely
to prepare for separation, amicably if they can, violently
if they must.”
Time passed on, and the difficulties
which led to our War of 1812, with Great Britain,
began to rise above the political horizon. Great
Britain began to impress seamen from New England merchant
ships, and even went so far, at last, as to take some
enlisted men from on board the United States ship
of war Chesapeake. Massachusetts was furious;
she insisted that war should be declared forthwith
against Great Britain. The Southern States, which
had comparatively little interest in this matter, except
so far as the federal honor was concerned, came generously
to the rescue of the shipping States, and war was
declared. But the first burst of her passion
having spent itself, Massachusetts found that she had
been indiscreet; her shipping began to suffer more
than she had anticipated, and she began now to cry
aloud as one in pain. She denounced the war, and
the Administration which was carrying it on; and not
content with this, in connection with other New England
States, she organized a Convention, at Hartford, in
Connecticut, with a view to adopt some ulterior measures.
We find the following among the records of that Convention:
“Events may prove, that the causes of our calamities
are deep, and permanent. They may be found to
proceed not merely from blindness of prejudice, pride
of opinion, violence of party spirit, or the confusion
of the times; but they may be traced to implacable
combinations, of individuals, or of States,
to monopolize office, and to trample, without remorse,
upon the rights and interests of the commercial sections
of the Union. Whenever it shall appear, that these
causes are radical, and permanent, a separation
by equitable arrangement, will be preferable to an
alliance, by constraint, among nominal friends but
real enemies, inflamed by mutual hatred, and jealousy,
and inviting, by intestine divisions, contempt and
aggressions from abroad.” Having recorded
this opinion of what should be the policy of the New
England States, in the category mentioned, the “Journal
of the Convention” goes on to declare what it
considers the right of the States, in the premises.
“That acts of Congress, in violation of the Constitution,
are absolutely void, is an indisputable position.
It does not, however, consist with the respect, from
a Confederate State toward the General Government,
to fly to open resistance, upon every infraction of
the Constitution. The mode, and the energy of
the opposition should always conform to the nature
of the violation, the intention of the authors, the
extent of the evil inflicted, the determination manifested
to persist in it, and the danger of delay. But
in case of deliberate, dangerous, and palpable infractions
of the Constitution, affecting the sovereignty of
the State, and liberties of the people, it is
not only the right, but the duty, of each State
to interpose its authority for their protection,
in the manner best calculated to secure that end.
When emergencies occur, which are either beyond the
reach of judicial tribunals, or too pressing to admit
of the delay incident to their forms, States,
which have no common umpire, must be their own
judges, and execute their own decisions.”
These proceedings took place in January, 1815.
A deputation was appointed to lay the complaints of
New England before the Federal Government, and there
is no predicting what might have occurred, if the
delegates had not found, that peace had been declared,
when they arrived at Washington.
It thus appears, that from 1803-4
to 1815, New England was constantly in the habit of
speaking of the dissolution of the Union her
leading men deducing this right from the nature of
the compact between the States. It is curious
and instructive, and will well repay the perusal, to
read the “Journal of the Hartford Convention,”
so replete is it with sound constitutional doctrine.
It abounds in such expressions as these: “The
constitutional compact;” “It must be the
duty of the State to watch over the rights reserved,
as of the United States to exercise the powers which
were delegated;” the right of conscription
is “not delegated to Congress by the Constitution,
and the exercise of it would not be less dangerous
to their liberties, than hostile to the sovereignty
of the States.” The odium which has
justly fallen upon the Hartford Convention, has not
been because of its doctrines, for these were as sound,
as we have seen, as the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions
of ’98 and ’99, but because it was a secret
conclave, gotten together, in a time of war,
when the country was hard pressed by a foreign enemy;
the war having, in fact, been undertaken for the benefit
of the very shipping States which were threatening
to dissolve the Union on account of it.
Mr. John Quincy Adams, the sixth President
of the United States, himself, as is well known, a
Massachusetts man, speaking of this dissatisfaction
of the New England States with the Federal Government,
says: “That their object was, and had been,
for several years, a dissolution of the Union and
the establishment of a separate Confederation, he knew
from unequivocal evidence, although not provable in
a court of law; and that in case of a civil war, the
aid of Great Britain, to effect that purpose, would
be assuredly resorted to, as it would be indispensably
necessary to their design.” See Mr. Adams’
letter of Deth, 1828, in reply to Harrison Gray
Otis and others.
We have thus seen, that for forty
years, or from the foundation of the Federal Government,
to 1830, there was no material difference of opinion
between the sections, as to the nature of the league
or compact of government which they had formed.
There was this difference between the sections, however.
The South, during this entire period of forty years,
had substantially controlled the Government; not by
force, it is true, of her own majorities, but with
the aid of a few of the Northern States. She
was the dominant or ruling power in the Government.
During all this time, she conscientiously adhered
to her convictions, and respected the rights of the
minority, though she might have wielded her power,
if she had been so inclined, to her own advantage.
Constitutions are made for the protection
of minorities, and she scrupulously adhered to this
idea. Minorities naturally cling to the guarantees
and defences provided for them in the fundamental law;
it is only when they become strong, when they throw
off their pupilage, and become majorities, that their
principles and their virtues are really tested.
It is in politics, as in religion the weaker
party is always the tolerant party. Did the North
follow this example set her by the South? No;
the moment she became strong enough, she recanted all
the doctrines under which she had sought shelter,
tore the Constitution into fragments, scattered it
to the winds; and finally, when the South threw herself
on the defensive, as Massachusetts had threatened
to do, in 1803 and 1815, she subjugated her.
What was the powerful motive which
thus induced the North to overthrow the government
which it had labored so assiduously with the South
to establish, and which it had construed in common
with the South, for the period of forty years?
It was the motive which generally influences human
conduct; it was the same motive which Patrick Henry
had so clearly foreseen, when he warned the people
of Virginia against entering into the federal compact;
telling them, that interested majorities never had,
in the history of the world, and never would respect
the rights of minorities.
The great “American System,”
as it has been called, had in the meantime arisen,
championed by no less a personage than Henry Clay of
Kentucky. In 1824, and again in 1828, oppressive
tariffs had been enacted for the protection of New
England manufacturers. The North was manufacturing,
the South non-manufacturing. The effect of these
tariffs was to shut out all foreign competition, and
compel the Southern consumer to pay two prices for
all the textile fabrics he consumed, from the clothing
of his negroes to his own broadcloth coats. So
oppressive, unjust, and unconstitutional were these
acts considered, that South Carolina nullified them
in 1830. Immediately all New England was arrayed
against South Carolina. An entire and rapid change
took place in the political creed of that section.
New England orators and jurists rose up to proclaim
that the Constitution was not a compact between the
States. Webster thundered in the Senate, and
Story wrote his “Commentaries on the Constitution.”
These giants had a herculean task before them; nothing
less than the falsifying of the whole political history
of the country, for the previous forty years; but their
barren and inhospitable section of the country had
been touched by the enchanter’s wand, and
its rocky hills, and sterile fields, incapable of
yielding even a scanty subsistence to its numerous
population, were to become glad with the music of
the spindle and the shuttle; and the giants undertook
the task! How well they have accomplished it,
the reader will see, in the course of these pages,
when, toward the conclusion of my narrative, he will
be called upon to view the fragments of the grand old
Constitution, which has been shattered, and which will
lie in such mournful profusion around him; the monuments
at once of the folly and crimes of a people, who have
broken up a government a free government which
might else have endured for centuries.