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Memoir of a narrative received of Colonel John B. Baldwin, of Staunton, touching the Origin of the war.
[The following paper from the able pen of Rev. Dr. R. L. Dabney will be read with deep interest, and will be found to be a valuable contribution to the history of the origin of the war.
It may be worth while in this connection to recall the fact that when soon after the capture of Fort Sumter and Mr. Lincoln's proclamation, a prominent Northern politician wrote Colonel Baldwin to ask: “What will the Union men of Virginia do now?”
he immediately replied: “There are now no Union men in Virginia. But those who were Union men will stand to their arms, and make a fight which shall go down in history as an illustration of what a brave people can do in defence of their liberties, after having exhausted every means of pacification.” ]
In March, 1865, being with the army in
Petersburg, Virginia, I had the pleasure of meeting
Colonel Baldwin at a small entertainment at a friend's house, where he conversed with me some two hours on public affairs.
During this time, he detailed to me the history of his private mission, from the Virginia Secession Convention, to
Mr. Lincoln in April, 1861.
The facts he gave me have struck me, especially since the conquest of the
South, as of great importance in a history of the origin of the war. It was my earnest hope that
Colonel Baldwin would reduce them into a narrative for publication, and I afterwards took measures to induce him to do so, but I fear without effect.
Should it appear that he has left such a narrative, while it will confirm the substantial fidelity of my narrative at second hand, it will also supersede mine, and of this result I should be extremely glad.
Surviving friends and political associates of
Colonel Baldwin must have heard him narrate the same interesting facts.
I would earnestly invoke their recollection of his statements to them, so as to correct me, if in any point I misconceived the author, and to confirm me where I am correct, so that the history may regain, as far as possible, that full certainty of which it is in danger of losing a part by the lamented death of
Colonel Baldwin.
What I here attempt to do, is to give faithfully, in my own language, what I understood
Colonel Baldwin to tell me, according to my best comprehension of it. His narration was eminently perspicuous and impressive.
It should also be premised, that the Virginia Convention, as a body, was not in favor of secession.
It was prevalently under the
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influence of statesmen of the school known as the “
Clay-Whig.”
One of the few original secessionists told me that at first there were but twenty-five members of that opinion, and that they gained no accessions, until they were given them by the usurpations of the
Lincoln party.
The Convention assembled with a fixed determination to preserve the
Union, if forbearance and prudence could do it consistently with the rights of the States.
Such, as is well known, were, in the main,
Colonel Baldwin's views and purposes.
But
Mr. Lincoln's inaugural, with its hints of coercion and usurpation, the utter failure of the “Peace-Congress,” and the rejection of
Mr. Crittenden's overtures, the refusal to hear the commissioners.
from
Mr. Davis' Government at
Montgomery, and the secret arming of the
Federal Government for attack, had now produced feverish apprehensions in and out of the
Convention.
Colonel Baldwin considered
Mr. Wm. Ballard Preston, of
Montgomery county, as deservedly one of the most influential members of that body.
This statesman now began to feel those sentiments, which, soon after, prompted him to move and secure the passage of the resolution to appoint a formal commission of three ambassadors from the
Convention to
Lincoln's Government, who should communicate the views of
Virginia, and demand those of
Mr. Lincoln.
[That commission consisted of
Wm. B. Preston,
Alex. H. H. Stuart and
Geo. W. Randolph.
We will refer to its history in the sequel.] Meantime
Mr. Preston, with other original Union men, were feeling thus: “If our voices and votes are to be exerted farther to hold
Virginia in the
Union,
we must know what the nature of that Union is to be. We have valued Union, but we are also
Virginians, and we love the
Union only as it is based upon the
Constitution.
If the power of the
United States is to be perverted to invade the rights of States and of the people, we would support the
Federal Government no farther.
And now that the attitude of that Government was so ominous of usurpation, we must know whither it is going, or we can go with it no farther.”
Mr. Preston especially declared that if he were to become an agent for holding
Virginia in the
Union to the destruction of her honor, and of the liberty of her people and her sister States, he would rather die than exert that agency.
Meantime
Mr. Seward,
Lincoln's
Secretary of State, sent
Allen B. Magruder,
Esq., as a confidential messenger to
Richmond, to hold an interview with
Mr Janney (
President of the
Convention),
Mr. Stuart, and other influential members, and to urge that one of them should come to
Washington, as promptly as possible, to confer
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with
Mr. Lincoln.
Mr. Magruder stated that he was authorized by
Mr. Seward to say that
Fort Sumter would be evacuated on the
Friday of the ensuing week, and that the
Pawnee would sail on the following
Monday for
Charleston, to effect the evacuation.
Mr. Seward said that secrecy was all important, and while it was extremely desirable that one of them should see
Mr. Lincoln, it was equally important that the public should know nothing of the interview.
These gentlemen held a conference, and determined that as each of them was well known in
Washington by person, the required secrecy could not be preserved if either of them went.
They therefore asked
Colonel Baldwin to go, furnished with the necessary credentials to
Mr. Lincoln.
He at first demurred, saying that all his public services had been to
Virginia, and that he knew nothing of
Washington and the
Federal politics, but they replied that this was precisely what qualified him, because his presence there would not excite remark or suspicion.
Colonel Baldwin accordingly agreed to the mission, and went with
Mr. Magruder the following night, reaching
Washington the next morning by the “
Acquia Creek route” a little after dawn, and driving direct to the house of
Mr. Magruder's brother.
[These gentlemen were brothers of
General J. B. Magruder of
Virginia]. These prefatory statements prepare the way for
Colonel Baldwin's special narrative.
He stated that after breakfasting and attending to his toilet at the house of
Captain Magruder, he went with
Mr. A. B. Magruder, in a carriage, with the glasses carefully raised, to
Seward, who took charge of
Mr. Baldwin, and went direct with him to the
White House, reaching it, he thought, not much after nine o'clock A. M. At the door, the man who was acting as usher, or porter, was directed by
Colonel Baldwin's companion, to inform the
President that a gentleman wished to see him on important business.
The man replied, as
Colonel Baldwin thought, with an air of negligence,. that he would report the application of course, but that it would be useless, because the
President was already engaged with very important personages.
Some card, or such missive, was given him, and he took it in. He soon returned with a surprised look, and said that the gentleman was to be admitted instantly.
Colonel Baldwin accordingly followed him and
Mr. Seward into what he presumed was the
President's ordinary business room, where he found him in evidently anxious consultation with three or four elderly men, who appeared to wear importance in their aspect
Mr. Seward whispered something to the
President, who at once arose
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with eagerness, and without making any movement to introduce
Colonel Baldwin, said bluntly, in substance: “Gentlemen, excuse me, for I must talk with this man at once.
Come this way, sir!”
(to
Colonel Baldwin). He then took him up stairs to quite a different part of the house, and into what was evidently a private sleeping apartment.
There was a handsome bed, with bureau and mirror, washstand, &c., and a chair or two.
Lincoln closed the door and locked it. He then said: “Well, I suppose this is
Colonel Baldwin, of
Virginia?
I have hearn of you a good deal, and am glad to see you. How d'ye, do sir?”
Colonel Baldwin presented his note of credential or introduction, which
Lincoln read, sitting upon the edge of the bed, and spitting from time to time on the carpet.
He then, looking inquiringly at
Colonel Baldwin, intimated that he understood he was authorized to state for his friends in the Virginia Convention the real state of opinion and purpose there.
Upon
Colonel Baldwin's portraying the sentiments which prevailed among the majority there,
Lincoln said querulously: “Yes!
your
Virginia people are good
Unionists, but it is always with an
if! I don't like that sort of Unionism.”
Colonel Baldwin firmly and respectfully explained, that in one sense no freeman could be more than a conditional Union man, for the value of the
Union was in that equitable and beneficent Constitution on which it was founded, and if this were lost, “Union” might become but another name for mischievous oppression.
He also gave
Mr. Lincoln assurances, that the description which he was making of the state of opinion in
Virginia, was in perfect candor and fidelity, and that he might rest assured the great body of
Virginia, in and out of the
Convention, would concur in these views, viz: That although strongly opposed to a presidential election upon a sectional, free-soil platform, which they deplored as most dangerous and unwise,
Virginia did not approve of making that, evil as it was, a
casus belli, or a ground for disrupting the
Union.
That much as
Virginia disapproved it, if
Mr. Lincoln would only adhere faithfully to the
Constitution and the laws, she would support him just as faithfully as though he were the man of her choice, and would wield her whole moral force to keep the border States in the
Union, and to bring back the seven seceded States.
But that while much difference of opinion existed on the question, whether the right of secession was a constitutional one, all
Virginians were unanimous in believing that no right existed in the
Federal Government to coerce a State by force of arms, because it was expressly withheld by the
Constitution;
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that the
State of Virginia was unanimously resolved not to acquiesce in the usurpation of that power, as had been declared by unanimous joint resolution of her present Legislature, and by the sovereign Convention now sitting, according to the traditionary principles of the
State; that if
Virginia remained in the
Union, the other border States would follow her example, while, if she were driven out, they would probably go with her, and the whole
South would be united in irreconcilable hostility to his. Government; and that the friends of peace desired to have a guarantee that his policy towards the seven seceded States would be pacific, and would regard their rights as States; without which guarantee the
Convention could not keep the people in the
Union,. even if they would.
Lincoln now showed very plainly that this view was distasteful to him. He intimated that the people of the
South were not in. earnest in all this.
He said that in
Washington he was assured that all the resolutions and speeches and declarations of this tenor from the
South were but a “game of brag,” intended to intimidate the administration party, the ordinary and hollow expedient of politicians; that, in short, when the
Government showed its hand, there would “be nothing in it but talk.”
Colonel Baldwin assured him solemnly that such advisers fatally misunderstood the
South, and especially
Virginia, and that upon the relinquishment or adoption of the policy of violent coercion, peace or a dreadful war would inevitably turn.
Lincoln's native good sense, with
Colonel Baldwin's evident sincerity, seemed now to open his eyes to this truth.
He slid off the edge of the bed, and began to stalk in his awkward manner across the chamber, in great excitement and perplexity.
He clutched his shaggy hair, as though he would jerk out handfuls by the roots; he frowned and contorted his features,. exclaiming: “I ought to have known this sooner!
You are too late, sir,
too late! Why did you not come here four days ago, and tell me all this?”
turning almost fiercely upon
Colonel Baldwin.
He replied: “Why,
Mr. President, you did not ask our advice.
Besides, as soon as we received permission to tender it, I came by the first train, as fast as steam would bring me.”
“Yes, but you are too late, I tell you,
too late!”
Colonel Baldwin understood this as a clear intimation that the policy of coercion was determined on, and that within the last four days. He said that he therefore felt impelled, by a solemn sense of duty to his country,. to make a final effort for impressing
Lincoln with the truth.
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“Never,” said he to me, “did I make a speech on behalf of a client, in jeopardy of his life, with such earnest solemnity and endeavor.”
“And,” he added, “there was no simulated emotions; for when he perceived from
Lincoln's hints, and from the workings of his crafty and saturnine countenance, the truculence of his purpose, his own soul was filled with such a sense of the coming miseries of the country, and of the irreparable ruin of the
Constitution, that he felt he would willingly lay down his life to avert them.”
He endeavored to make the
President feel that
Providence had placed the destiny of the country in his hands, so that he might be forever blessed and venerated as the second
Washington — the savior of his country — or execrated as its destroyer.
What policy, then, did the
Union men of
Virginia advise?
We believe, answered
Colonel Baldwin, that one single step will be sufficient to paralyze the secession movement, and to make the true friends of the
Union masters of the situation.
This was a simple proclamation, firmly pledging the new administration to respect the
Constitution and laws, and the rights of the States; to repudiate the power of coercing seceded States by force of arms; to rely upon conciliation and enlightened self-interest in the latter to bring them back into the
Union, and meantime to leave all questions at issue to be adjudicated by the constitutional tribunals.
The obvious ground of this policy was in the fact that it was not the question of free-soil which threatened to rend the country in twain, but a well grounded alarm at the attempted overthrow of the
Constitution and liberty, by the usurpation of a power to crush States.
The question of free-soil had no such importance in the eyes of the people of the border States, nor even of the seceded States, as to become at once a
casus belli. But, in the view of all parties in the border States, the claim of coercion had infinite importance.
If, as
Mr. Lincoln had argued, secession was unconstitutional, coercion was more clearly so. When attempted, it must necessarily take the form of a war of some States against other States.
It was thus the death-knell of constitutional Union, and so a thorough revolution of the
Federal Government.
It was the overthrow of the reserved rights of the States, and these were the only bulwark of the liberty of the people.
This, then, was the real cause of alarm at the
South, and not the claim of free-soil, unjust as was the latter; hence, all that was necessary to reduce the free-soil controversy to harmless and manageable dimensions, was to reassure the
South against the dreaded usurpation of which free-soil threatened to be
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made the pretext.
This,
Colonel Baldwin showed, could easily be done by a policy of conciliation, without giving sanction to what
Mr. Lincoln's administration chose to regard as the heresy of secession I The Government would still hold the
Union and the
Constitution as perpetual, and the separate attitude of the seceded States as temporary, while it relied upon moderation, justice, self-interest of the
Southern people, and the potent mediation of the border States to terminate it. “Only give this assurance to the country, in a proclamation of five lines,” said
Colonel Baldwin, and we pledge ourselves that
Virginia (and with her the border States) will stand by you as though you were our own
Washington.
So sure am I, he added, “of this, and of the inevitable ruin which will be precipitated by the opposite policy, that I would this day freely consent, if you would let me write those decisive lines, you might cut off my head, were my life my own, the hour after you signed them.”
Lincoln seemed impressed by his solemnity, and asked a few questions: “But what am I to do meantime with those men at
Montgomery?
Am I to let them go on?”
“Yes, sir,” replied
Colonel Baldwin, decisively, “until they can be peaceably brought back.”
“And open
Charleston, &c., as ports of entry, with their ten per cent. tariff.
What, then, would become of my tariff?”
This last question he announced with such emphasis, as showed that in his view it decided the whole matter.
He then indicated that the interview was at an end, and dismissed
Colonel Baldwin, without promising anything more definite.
In order to confirm the accuracy of my own memory, I have submitted the above narrative to the
Honorable A. H. H. Stuart,
Colonel Baldwin's neighbor and political associate, and the only surviving member of the commission soon after sent from the Virginia Convention to
Washington.
In a letter to me, he says: “When
Colonel Baldwin returned to
Richmond, he reported to the four gentlemen above named, and to
Mr. Samuel Price, of
Greenbrier,
the substance of his interview with Lincoln substantially as he stated it to you.”
I asked
Colonel Baldwin what was the explanation of this remarkable scene, and especially of
Lincoln's perplexity.
He replied that the explanation had always appeared to him to be this: When the seven Gulf States had actually seceded, the
Lincoln faction were greatly surprised and in great uncertainty what to do; for they had been blind enough to suppose that all Southern opposition to a sectional president had been empty bluster.
They were
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fully aware that neither Constitution nor laws gave them any right to coerce a State to remain in the
Union.
The whole people, even in the imperious
North, knew and recognized this truth.
The New York
Tribune, even, admitted it, violent as it was, and deprecated a Union “pinned together with bayonets.”
Even
General Winfield Scott, the military “Man Friday,” of Federal power, advised that the
Government should say: “Erring Sisters, go in peace.”
So strong was the conviction, even in the
Northern mind, that such journals as Harper's
Weekly and
Monthly, shrewdly mercenary in their whole aim, were notoriously courting the secession feeling.
New York, the financial capital of
America, was well known to be opposed to the faction and to coercion.
The previous Congress had expired without daring to pass any coercive measures.
The administration was not at all certain that the public opinion of the
American people could be made to tolerate anything so illegal and mischievous as a war of coercion.
[Subsequent events and declarations betrayed also how well the
Lincoln faction knew at the time that it was utterly unlawful.
For instance: when
Lincoln launched into that war, he did not dare to say that he was warring against States, and for the purpose of coercing them into a Federal Union of force.
In his proclamation calling for the first seventy-five thousand soldiers, he had deceitfully stated that they were to be used to support the laws, to repossess Federal property and places, and to suppress irregular combinations of individuals pretending to or usurping the powers of State Governments.
The same was the tone of all the war speakers and war journals at first.
They admitted that a State could not be coerced into the
Union; but they held that no State really and legitimately desired to go out, or had gone out--“the great Union-loving majority in the
South had been overruled by a factious secession minority, and the
Union troops were only to liberate them from that violence, and enable them to declare their unabated love for the
Union.”
No well informed man was, at first, absurd enough to speak of a State as “committing treason” against the confederation, the creature of the States; the measure was always spoken of as “Secession,” the actors were “Secessionists,” and even their territory was “Secessia.”
It remained for an ecclesiastical body, pretended representative of the
Church of the
Prince of Peace, in their ignorant and venomous spirit of persecution, to apply the term “treason” first to the movement in favor of liberty.] The action of the seven States, then, perplexed the
Lincoln faction excessively.
On the
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other hand, the greed and spite of the hungry crew, who were now grasping the power and spoils so long passionately craved, could not endure the thought that the prize should thus collapse in their hands.
Hence, when the administration assembled at
Washington, it probably had no very definite policy.
Seward, who assumed to do the thinking for them, was temporizing.
Colonel Baldwin supposed it was the visit, and the terrorizing of the “radical governors,” which had just decided
Lincoln to adopt the violent policy.
They had especially asserted that the secession of the seven States, and the convening and solemn admonitions of State conventions in the others, formed but a system of bluster, or, in the vulgar phrase of
Lincoln, but a “game of brag;” that the
Southern States were neither willing nor able to fight for their own cause, being paralyzed by their fear of servile insurrection.
Thus they had urged upon
Lincoln, that the best way to secure his party triumph was to precipitate a collision.
Lincoln had probably committed himself to this policy, without
Seward's privity, within the last four days; and the very men whom
Colonel Baldwin found in conclave with him were probably intent upon this conspiracy at the time.
But when
Colonel Baldwin solemnly assured
Lincoln that this violent policy would infallibly precipitate the border States into an obstinate war, the natural shrewdness of the latter was sufficient to open his eyes, at least partially, and he saw that his factious counsellors, blinded by hatred and contempt of the
South, had reasoned falsely; yet, having just committed himself to them, he had not manliness enough to recede.
And above all, the policy urged by
Colonel Baldwin would have disappointed the hopes of legislative plunder, by means of inflated tariffs, which were the real aims for which free-soil was the mask.
Thus far
Colonel Baldwin's narrative proceeded.
The conversation then turned upon the astonishing supineness (or blindness) of the conservatives, so-called, of the
North, to the high-handed usurpations of their own rights, perpetrated by
Lincoln and
Seward, under pretext of subduing the seceded States, such as the suspension of
habeas corpus, the
State prisons, the arrests without indictment, and the martial law imposed, at the beck of the
Federal power, in States called by itself “loyal.”
I asked: “Can it be possible that the
Northern people are so ignorant as to have lost the traditionary rudiments of a free government?”
His reply was, that he apprehended the
Northern mind really cared nothing for
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liberty; what they desired was only
lucrative arrangements with other States.
The correctness of
Colonel Baldwin's surmises concerning the motives of
Lincoln's policy receives these two confirmations.
After the return of the former to
Richmond, the
Convention sent the commission, which has been described, composed of
Messrs. Wm. B. Preston,
A. H. H. Stuart, and
Geo. W. Randolph.
They were to ascertain definitely what the
President's policy was to be. They endeavored to reach
Washington in the early part of the week in which
Fort Sumter was bombarded, but were delayed by storms and high water, so that they only reached there via
Baltimore, Friday, April 12th.
They appeared promptly at the
White House, and were put off until Saturday for their formal interview, although
Lincoln saw them for a short time.
On
Saturday Lincoln read to them a written answer to the resolutions of Convention laid before him, which was obviously scarcely dry from the pen of a clerk.
“This paper,” says
Mr. Stuart, “was ambiguous and evasive, but in the main professed peaceful intentions.”
Mr. Stuart, in answer to this paper, spoke freely and at large, “urging forbearance and the evacuation of the forts, &c.”
Lincoln made the objection that all the goods would be imported through the ports of
Charleston, &c., and the sources of revenue dried up. “I remember,” says
Mr. Stuart, “that he used this homely expression: ‘If I do that, what will become of my revenue?
I might as well shut up house-keeping at once!’
But his declarations were distinctly pacific, and he expressly disclaimed all purpose of war.”
Mr. Seward and
Mr. Bates,
Attorney General, also gave
Mr. Stuart the same assurances of peace.
The next day the commissioners returned to
Richmond, and the very train on which they traveled carried
Lincoln's proclamation, calling for the seventy-five thousand men to wage a war of coercion.
“This proclamation,” says
Mr. Stuart, “was carefully withheld from us, although it was in print; and we knew nothing of it until Monday morning, when it appeared in the Richmond papers.
When I saw it at breakfast, I thought it must be a mischievous hoax; for I could not believe
Lincoln guilty of such duplicity.
Firmly believing it was a forgery, I wrote a telegram, at the breakfast table of the
Exchange Hotel, and sent it to
Seward, asking him if it was genuine.
Before
Seward's reply was received, the
Fredericksburg train came in, bringing the
Washington papers, containing the proclamation.”
The other confirmation of
Colonel Baldwin's hypothesis was presented
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a few weeks after the end of the war, in a curious interview with a personal friend and apologist of
Seward.
The first volume of my life of
Jackson had been published in
London, in which I characterized the shameless lie told by
Seward to the commissioners from
Montgomery, through
Judge Campbell, touching the evacuation of
Sumter.
This friend and apologist of
Seward said that I was unjust to him, because when he promised the evacuation, he designed and thought himself able to fulfil it; but between the making and breaking of the pledge, a total change of policy had been forced upon the administration, against
Mr. Seward's advice, “by
Thad. Stevens and the radical governors.”
Seward, abolitionist, and knave as he was, still retained enough of the statesman-like traditions of the better days of the republic, to know that coercion was unlawful, and that a war between the States was, of course, the annihilation of the
Union.
It suited his partisan and selfish designs to talk of an “irrepressible conflict,” and to pretend contempt for “effeminate slavocrats;” but he had sense enough to know that the
South would make a desperate defence of her rights, and would be a most formidable adversary, if pushed to the wall.
Hence,
Mr. Seward, with
General Scott, had advised a temporizing policy towards the
Montgomery government, without violence, and
Mr. Lincoln had acceded to their policy.
Hence, the promises to
Judge Campbell.
Meantime, the radical governors came down, “having great wrath,” to terrorize the administration.
They spoke in this strain: “
Seward cries perpetually that we must not do this, and that, for fear war should result.
Seward is shortsighted.
War is precisely the thing we should desire.
Our party interests have everything to lose by a peaceable settlement of this trouble, and everything to gain by collision.
For a generation we have been ‘the outs;’ now at last we are ‘the ins.’
While in opposition, it was very well to prate of Constitution, and of rights; but now
we are the government, and mean to continue so; and our interest is to have a strong and centralized government.
It is high time now that the government were revolutionized and consolidated, and these irksome ‘States’ rights' wiped out. We need a strong government to dispense much wealth and power to its adherents; we want permanently high tariffs, to make the
South tributary to the
North; and now these Southern fellows are giving us precisely the opportunity we want to do all this, and shall
Seward sing his silly song of the necessity of avoiding war?
War is the very thing we should hail!
The Southern men are rash, and now profoundly irritated.
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Our plan should be, by some artifice, to provoke them to seem to strike the first blow.
Then we shall have a pretext with which to unite the now divided North, and make them fly to arms.
The Southerners are a braggart, but a cowardly and effeminate set of bullies; we shall easily whip them in three months. But this short war will be, if we are wise, our sufficient occasion.
We will use it to destroy slavery, and thus permanently cripple the
South.
And that is the stronghold of all these ideas of ‘limited government’ and ‘rights of the people.’
Crush the
South, by abolishing slavery, and we shall have all we want — a consolidated government, an indefinite party ascendancy, and ability to lay on such tariffs and taxes as we please, and aggrandize ourselves and our section!”
These,
Mr. Seward's apologist declared to me, were the reasons which, together with their predictions and threats of popular rage, converted
Lincoln from the policy of
Seward to that of
Stevens.
Hence the former was compelled to break his promise through
Judge Campbell, and to assist in the malignant stratagem by which the South Carolinians were constrained “to fire on the flag.”
The diabolical success of the artifice is well known.
The importance of this narrative is, that it unmasks the true authors and nature of the bloody war through which we have passed.
We see that
the Radicals provoked it, not to preserve, but to destroy the Union. It demonstrates, effectually, that
Virginia and the border States were acting with better faith to preserve the
Union than was
Lincoln's Cabinet.
Colonel Baldwin showed him conclusively that it was not free-soil, evil as that was, which really endangered the
Union, but coercion.
He showed him that, if coercion were relinquished,
Virginia and the border States stood pledged to labor with him for the restoration of Union, and would assuredly be able to effect it. Eight slave-holding border States, with seventeen hireling States, would certainly have wielded sufficient moral and material weight, in the cause of what
Lincoln professed to believe the clear truth and right, to reassure and win back the seven little seceded States, or, if they became hostile, to restrain them.
But coercion arraigned fifteen against seventeen in mutually destructive war.
Lincoln acknowledged the conclusiveness of this reasoning in the agony of remorse and perplexity, in the writhings and tearings of hair, of which
Colonel Baldwin was witness.
But what was the decisive weight that turned the scale against peace, and right, and patriotism?
It was the interest of a sectional tariff!
His single objection, both to the wise advice of
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Colonel Baldwin and
Mr. Stuart, was: “Then what would become of my tariffs?”
He was shrewd enough to see that the just and liberal free-trade policy proposed by the
Montgomery Government would speedily build up, by the help of the magnificent Southern staples, a beneficent foreign commerce through Confederate ports; that the
Northern people, whose lawless and mercenary character he understood, could never be restrained from smuggling across the long open frontier of the
Confederacy; that thus the whole country would become habituated to the benefits of free-trade, so that when the schism was healed [as he knew it would be healed in a few years by the policy of
Virginia], it would be too late to restore the iniquitous system of sectional plunder by tariffs, which his section so much craved.
Hence, when
Virginia offered him a safe way to preserve the
Union, he preferred to destroy the
Union and preserve his tariffs.
The war was conceived in duplicity, and brought forth in iniquity.
The calculated treason of
Lincoln's Radical advisers is yet more glaring.
When their own chosen leader,
Seward, avowed that there was no need for war, they deliberately and malignantly practiced to produce war, for the purpose of overthrowing the
Constitution and the
Union, to rear their own greedy faction upon the ruins.
This war, with all its crimes and miseries, was proximately concocted in
Washington city, by Northern men, with malice prepense.