T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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37.1 | Can't Ignore Secession | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Thu Sep 05 1991 10:29 | 31 |
| RE 29.9:
"Secession posed no threat to the Federalist philosophy." !???
Wes, secession was a _direct_ challenge to the Federalist
philosophy. The main difference between a _Fed_eration and a
_Confed_eration lies in the assumption about its divisibility. The
United States had tried a confederate form of government, based on the
idea of state sovereignty; it had not worked. The Constitution
established a federation, in which the elements forming the union
agreed to surrender some of their "sovereignty" to the common
government. In simple terms, they gave up the right to "take their
ball and go home" if they didn't like something the government did;
they were provided with means to participate in that government, but
were _not_ provided with a guarantee that things would always go to
their liking. No aggregation of human beings formed to try and
accomplish something will get very far if _each_ member has an absolute
veto.
Note the problems the Confederacy ran into in trying to run the
war, and you can see many of the practical problems which arise when a
"confederation" philosophy tries to deal with the friction between
individual desires and group necessity. I'm not at all saying that the
common government always does the right thing, or that the North was as
helpful and sympathetic to the problems faced by the South as it
could/should have been; I'm saying that secession _is_ a threat, and an
intolerable one, to a voluntarily formed federation. (Think about how
a volunteer regiment _has_ to react to desertion, if it is to remain an
effective fighting force.)
MikeR
|
37.2 | Imposition v. free choice | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Sine titulo | Thu Sep 05 1991 10:44 | 16 |
| Confederation -> Federation. From the Articles of Confederation to the
Constitution.
One thing the Constitution did not guarantee explicitly, for the very
reasons detailed in .1, was the right to secede. The Declaration of
Independence said that a people have the right to throw off a form of
government they find oppressive, but the intent of that phrasing was to
indicate that the right exists in re: an *imposed* government, not one
that the people have agreed to.
we cheer the peoples of the former Soviet Union for gaining their
freedom from that oppression; would we cheer the people of France for
overthrowing their duly constituted participatory government? I think
not.
-d
|
37.3 | the issue of slavery aside... | CRBOSS::QUIRICI | | Thu Sep 05 1991 12:29 | 19 |
| It's certainly true that the Constitution doesn't provide any
mechanism for states to leave; therefore secession is, kind of by
definition, unconstitutional.
On the other hand, this seems more like a legalism than a
constitutional principle, like those explicitly embodied in the Bill of
Rights, for example. Especially since secession is not mentioned at all in
the Constitution. Note that the Constitution specifically gives
all powers not explicitly vested in the Federal government to the
states and/or people.
Under these circumstances, it seems that
any group of people have a natural right to secede, and the existing
government has a natural right to attempt to prevent that secession.
I wouldn't go so far as to say the Constitution sanctions secession,
despite the above, but simply doesn't cover it.
Ken
|
37.4 | more on legality of secession | DECWET::PALMER | A is A | Thu Sep 05 1991 23:29 | 39 |
| The constitution doesn't make any statement about secession.
It was, I think, left ambiguous. Perhaps this was on purpose;
perhaps to get all of the states to ratify it, they couldn't
make any statements about it one way or another.
Similarly, allowing slavery in a nation founded on the
philosophical principles of the U.S. was a glaring contradiction
in the founding of the U.S. Such a contradiction was bound to
lead to trouble some time.
On the issue of the legality of secession, last year I read
a book on General Lee's years after the war that contained some
interesting data. Apparently, there were many in the North who
wanted to try him for treason. To this end, there were some
congressional hearings at which he was compelled to testify.
At these hearings, Lee testified that he had acted in what he
believed was a constitutional manner; i.e., he did not think
secession was illegal.
Of course, Lee wasn't tried for treason. The author suggested
that one reason may have been that, in such a trial, the issue
of the legality of secession would have been paramount; it
would have to have been decided. Suppose the court had decided
that secession wasn't illegal; what then would have become of
the union after the war? Perhaps it was thought better to let
sleeping dogs lie. (I don't know how much of this is the author's
conjecture; I'll dig out the reference tomorrow.)
At any rate, I don't believe that there has ever been any kind of
legal decision in the U.S. regarding the right of a state to
secede (or lack of such right). (The question of whether a
free society *should* allow secession is, I think, an interesting
one, but a rathole in this conference. This question cannot
be answered outside of the context of the *reason* for secession:
is it to form a nation with less freedom, or is it because the
old national government has become oppressive, or some other
reason?)
Jay
|
37.5 | secession vs. federalism | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Fri Sep 06 1991 11:44 | 57 |
| re: Mike R.
Secession does not threaten a Federalist system. Sorry, Mike, but
I disagree with you. The Federal system can continue to govern
the remaining states with no hinderance. Now I will grant you that
secession DID threaten the U.S. treasury! Almost 80% of the tax
revenues in the Federal government came from Virginia, North and
South Carolina, and [I think] Georgia. (Four Southern states, anyway.)
What secession does is to challenge the principle of an all-powerful,
absolute dictatorship. If a Federal government were to remain just
and honorable, and respect its commitments to *ALL* its people,
it would not be threatened at all by secession. (I don't how secession
would ever come up under such a government.)
However, if a Federal government has reneged on its responsibilities
and has embarked on a path of systematic and calculated infringements
on the rights of part of its citizens, then that government might
feel threatened by any group of those citizens' having the guts
to stand up to it. This was the viewpoint of American secessionists
in 1860.
They said the government they had voluntarily joined had ceased
to exist. A new and despotic government had risen in its place.
They owed no allegiance to such a new government. The Constitution
had been so thoroughly trodden upon as to be virtually meaningless.
Participation in such a government, for the purpose of reforming
or even redirecting it is a contradiction in terms: if it could
have been reformed or redirected by the people, it would have been
a despotic government.
Southerners did not try to overthrow the U.S. government except
by rejecting it and trying to get out from under its thumb. Such
rejection would be a threat only to a despotic government that could
ill afford to allow such an independent spirit.
In my opinion, the authors of the Constitution left out the matter
of secession for one of two reasons: either the question was just
too hot to handle (remember they were *REALLY* under the gun to
get that thing ratified!) or they figured that if the government
became so corrupt that anyone might want to leave it, the question
would be made academic by a revolution to overthrow it. (That's
why they put in the 2nd Ammendment; to ensure the opportunity for
an armed rebellion should one become necessary. If the Constitution
didn't recognize secession, it tacitly recognized revolution!)
RE: Lee's trial
The same was true of Jeff Davis' trial. Johnson was told by [I
think] Seward that if he put Davis on the witness stand, Davis would
totally gut every argument against secession and thus every
justification for the war. That is the real reason Davis and Lee
were never brought to trial. Spirit of reconcilliation and charity?
Right.
Wess
|
37.6 | _All_ the time? | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Fri Sep 06 1991 14:30 | 39 |
| RE .5:
Careful, Wes! No government can ever satisfy _all_ of the people under
it _all_ the time. Any restriction of a behavior (and that is what
government is about - regulating behaviors at some level in some areas)
will be seen as unacceptable by some people. Some governments permit a
small minority to prosper at the expense of many people; some (like the
one formulated under the Constitution) try to place controls on the
arbitrary exercise of power. Cooperative endeavor requires some
subordination of individual preferences.
The problem, of course, lies in deciding _when_ that subordination is
"excessive", and then in deciding _what_ can be done about it. If an
individual decides that some law is too restrictive, and breaks it, we
apply the label "criminal". We even do that with some groups, and
consider such "personal rulemaking" unacceptable, and a threat to
society. So what is the magic size of group that does _not_ threaten
society?
Even the Confederacy did not follow the logic that _any_ group of
people could "opt out" of a government they perceived to be
undesirable. They allowed _states_ to secede, but not parts of states
- or at least they tried hard (by force) to restrain West Virginia,
east Tennessee, and scattered other groups of residents from staying
with the U.S. Evidently they perceived some "threat" to their
government in such action.
I was _not_ trying to say that the Confederacy threatened the remaining
states, as government to government. I was pointing out that the
concept of unilateral withdrawal from an association like the United
States (i.e. the _idea_ and _fact_ of secession, not the Confederacy
per se) _was_ threatening to the basis of a federal government - that
it is in fact exactly the kind of action a _federal_ system is supposed
to exclude.
Now a revolution is a different discussion...
MikeR
|
37.7 | governments tend to tyranny | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Fri Sep 06 1991 16:12 | 45 |
| re: .6
Since, as you said, government is about regulating behavior, all
governments tend toward tyranny. That is why the best government
is the least government, which is the position of state's rights.
The idea is to keep as much power as possible concentrated in
relatively small, local governments. When several such governments
are united into a single nation, ie, "These United States," the
independence of the states can only be assured by a true republican
form of government. That is what our Founding Fathers established
- not a democracy, or an oligarchy, or Federation in the sense that
Lincoln applied the concept. They set up a republic, comprised
of representatives from the several states.
Now I'm not saying the Confederation approach is flawless, either.
It is very hard to wage a major war with such a government. The
CSA was, in some ways, destroyed by its own ideals.
I don't want this to go down a ghastly rathole, but I think the
erosion of our rights today is directly attributable to the destruction
of the repbulic in 1865. The principles of unlimited federal power
have been applied on a local level to corrupt state and city
governments. When the Constitution was written, state governments
were intended to give individual citizens more access to their
government, and to provide a layer of insulation between the citizens
and the national government. Today state governments are nothing
more than little imitators of the national government, totally under
its power, providing an added [and more personal] layer of bureaucracy
and tyranny. Where they originally provided citizens with a hedge
against a despotic national government, they now provide a despotic
national government with a hedge against organized resistance.
The ideals of the two nations that fought the War Between the States
are brought into sharp contrast by the attitude of our national
government today.
The doctrine of State's Rights was not a pragmatic ploy to keep
from having to change. It was a legitimate and very well-conceived
political philosophy. It differed from federalism in many very
important ways. Frankly, I don't know that two large segments of
a society - espeically if they are pretty well regionalized - could
ever get along if one held to federalist doctrine and the other
to states' rights.
Wess
|
37.8 | | CRBOSS::QUIRICI | | Fri Sep 06 1991 16:40 | 35 |
| Another way to look at the secession question is this:
suppose the federal government of the time had respected the rights
of the seceding states. I think in fact a majority of southerners,
at least white southerners, would have approved their secession from
the union, so in a sense secession was their 'right'.
the question is, what now happens to the rights of that other bloc
of southerners, namely the slaves? well, i suppose you could rather
callously say, nothing, since they never had any rights to begin with.
on the other hand, despite what individual southerners might have said
about freeing the slaves, the society as a whole was not about to
do so, at least not for a long while.
so you have a case where, on the eve of secession, that is, while the
southerners are still citizens of the u.s., there is a big chunk
of people that are being oppressed by the status quo in the south,
essentially with no rights whatsoever - to the slaves, the constitution
was just a piece of paper; while another, bigger, chunk of people,
namely the white southerners, were being 'oppressed' by the
northerners, or threatened with 'oppression' - this oppression being,
of course, preventing them from oppressing another segment of the
people.
i would tend to think that, in the balance, the rights of the slaves
would take precedence over the rights of the white southerners; does
a slave-owner have a 'right' to enslave? the trend of thinking at the
time, except of course in the south, was toward the view that he did not.
in other words, to protect the blacks, at least tentative citizens of
the country, certainly working towards that status, from being removed
from the union, and subject to oppression from a new confederation, with
little hope for freedom, a war to oppose secession was justified.
ken
|
37.9 | Slavery wasn't the issue. | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Tue Sep 10 1991 12:26 | 39 |
| re: .8
SEveral points here and I have only a few minutes. The North was
not fighting against slavery. The North was not fighting against
secession so it could eliminate slavery. The North was fighting
against slavery so it could continue to loot the Southern states
via taxation and tarrif.
Very few - under 10% - white Southerners owned slaves.
There was a very strong anti-slavery movement in the South. It
was not as radical or vocal as that in the North, but more than
half of all anti-slavery societies in the U.S. in 1861 had originated
in the South. Many were still there.
Slavery and the feudal system that had grown up around it was not
tenable in the world economy. Southerners would have very quickly
had to face that fact. It was only the industriailization of the
North that allowed slavery to prosper. Break that tie and slavery
would become an economic disaster. The pressure of world opinion
was growing very strong against slavery. The South would have also
been faced with being viewed as barbaric in the world, and the
nationalist ego that had sprung up could not have endured that for
long.
In my opinion, slavery could not have existed another 20 years.
Southerners would have had to end it on their own terms, by their
own means and initiaitive. That would have meant perhaps another
decade of slavery, but when the institution had been abolished,
the blacks would have been ever so much better off than they were
in 1865. The U.S. and the C.S. would have 600,000 more people to
come up with ideas - billions of dollars more capital with which
to deal with the issue - and most important, withOUT the hatred
and trauma that attended the war and reconstruction.
It would not have taken American Blacks more than 100 yers to become
full citizens.
Wess
|
37.10 | principles? | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Tue Sep 10 1991 12:31 | 19 |
| Just as a point of discussion, which is the more immoral situation?
The opinion of a small majority, at best, that Blacks should be
slaves, with a strong majority opinion that ALL men should be free,
and a powerful sense of contradiction driving the entire society
to deal morally with the issue of slavery.
or
The opionion of a strong majority that all men, of whatever race,
should be utterly subservient to the national government and the
will of the majority, and with no consideration given at all to
freedom or moral principles.
I say the North was, ON PRINCIPLE, more in favor of slavery than
was the South. A slim majority in the South might have favored
*BLACK* slavery, but a majority in the North favored *HUMAN* slavery.
Wess
|
37.11 | | CRBOSS::QUIRICI | | Tue Sep 10 1991 12:55 | 39 |
| re: .9, .10
A lot of interesting points. I'd like to take some of them up. If
I'm misquoting or misinterpreting, please let me know. Also, the
questions I'm going to ask are not intended to be ironic, but
are actually intended to get information.
1. Why was the South hurt more than the North by taxation? Or were
they just smart enuf to see it and 'not stand for it'?
2. Why do you think the blacks would have better off in an
independent South than in the post-Civil War Union? Notice that it
took the blacks in South Africa until now to achieve political
freedom. I don't want to get into a rathole about South Africa, but
my point is simply that there are many ways to keep a people down
(as we know from the actual history of the blacks after the
Civil War).
3. I agree that the North didn't, at least initially, fight the
Civil War 'to free the slaves'. I think a point can be made, however,
that slavery was the main reason the South LEFT the Union, thus
precipitating the war.
4. The fact that only 10% of the South owned slaves doesn't seem
relevant to me - what's the point?
5. The issue of states' rights seems different from the issue of
slavery. The issue seems to be that, if a group of states decide
the federal government has too much power, do they have a right
to secede peacefully, to create a country of their own with their
own 'constitution'? Another issue is, even if you allow them to do
so, in principle, how to you handle the issue of slavery in detail?
Until secession, as I suggested before, the slaves were in a sense
protected by the American Federal Government. Did that government have
a right to let them go into uncertain status in a new south?
I know I had some more points, but I can't think of 'em right now!
Ken
|
37.12 | | TLE::SOULE | The elephant is wearing quiet clothes. | Tue Sep 10 1991 16:13 | 28 |
| My view on some of this:
I see slavery as the underlying issue of the war. This was the issue
that had to be finessed during the Constitutional Convention, and that
had to be compromised several times (1820, 1850 ?). But the issue did
not go away. Slavery, in the 1850's, was showing no signs of "withering
away". Each compromise was increasingly more difficult to arrange. The
abolitionists were becoming more strident and the elected officials of
the slave-holding interests were become more intransigent. The ability
of the lawmakers to work things out within the given framework was not
up to the task.
If slavery had been evenly spread throughout the nation, with the same propor-
tion of slaves, slaveholders, abolitionists, don't-cares, etc., then the result
would have been far different. If slavery had existed in only a small
portion of one state, the result would have been different. But the fact
that slavery was uniquely associated with a large, fairly well-defined, and
possibly self-sufficient portion of the country, and a portion of the
country that was accustomed to a large voice in the affairs of the nation,
all this made the forces for disunion greater than those holding the
union together under the government of 1860.
Yes, states' rights can be pointed to as the major cause for seccession,
but I say that had states' rights been paired with any issue of the day
other than slavery, then something could have been worked out. Slavery was
far too fundamental an issue to be finessed further.
Ben
|
37.13 | Small Twist on Slavery | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Wed Sep 11 1991 09:23 | 39 |
| RE .12:
One small, but I think significant, point about the situation as it had
developed to 1860 was that the question agitating the South was not
exactly the _existance_ of slavery, but the _extension_ of slavery.
While there was an abolitionist movement, and a noisy one, it did not
command a large political following - most people in the North were
willing, then, to leave slavery alone where it existed. What a lot of
those same people were _not_ willing to allow, and one of the things
the Republican platform spoke to in 1860, was the extension of slavery
into new territories (and most of the compromises during the early 19th
century had this issue in them, too).
There was a small group, numerically, in the South to whom the
containment of slavery was unacceptable - whether for economic gain, or
a sense of property rights, or because they foresaw that containing
slavery would eventually kill it (either through votes or through the
failure of the crops that slavery supported by soil exhaustion). Such
people had a lot of influence in the Democratic party, and worked to
prevent the selection of any "compromise candidate" (i.e. Douglas) at
the 1860 convention. The split in the Democrats effectively gave the
election to the Republicans, and this gave the Southern fire-eaters the
wedge they needed to get votes for secession.
(I should stick in here that I draw a distinction, based largely on the
testimony of the individuals who volunteered to serve in the Union and
Confederate armies in 1861, between the issue that caused secession -
which .12 argues convincingly was slavery (or its extension ;^}) - and
the issue that people _fought_ for, which was preservation of the Union
(North) and defense of their states and rights (South). As a result, I
see nothing dishonorable or reprehensible in what motivated most of the
fighting men on _either_ side, or in reenactors protraying whomever
they choose. I tend to agree with Catton's assessment that TLUBTNATS
settled with bullets an issue that should have been settled with
ballots, through the working of the political process.)
MikeR
|
37.14 | | TLE::BSOULE::SOULE | These are the times that try Ben Soule | Wed Sep 11 1991 15:57 | 9 |
| Your point about the difference between "causes of the war" and "personal
motives for fighting" is a good one, and one that I meant to make, except
I never remember to write down everything in my head when I start a long
note.
Saying that slavery was the major cause of the war does not mean that that
would have been the motive behind the majority of enlistees on either side.
Ben
|
37.15 | Is there another side to the war?? | ANARKY::WILLIAMS | | Wed Sep 11 1991 23:30 | 12 |
| The thing that gets me about the civil war/war between the states is
that it is always given from one piont of view. Some say it was slavery
and others say states rights, but this was always given from the white
piont of view. Rich or poor/famous or not famous north or south most
books I read came from one side. Being black and interested in the war
I would like to know/read what did the blacks think. Some of the more
famous blacks during that time period wrote a few things, but what
about the field hands/the house blacks, blacks working with the south
and the north. It would be interesting. Oh Wess was wondering when you
would pop up in this note file.
phillip
|
37.16 | the black point of view | JUPITR::ZAFFINO | | Thu Sep 12 1991 00:33 | 5 |
| That is a very good point. I never really gave that one much thought,
and I don't have an answer to it, but I hope that someone else can. I
think that would be very interesting.
Ziff
|
37.17 | I hope this helps a'little | OGOMTS::RICKER | With a Rebel yell, she cried, more, more, more | Thu Sep 12 1991 02:50 | 23 |
|
Interesting viewpoint, but, in all honesty I have never seen much
in print concerning the viewpoint of slaves, house servants, maids,
etc.
I have seen and purchased two excellent books concerning the role
of the black soldier in the Civil War. The titles are,
"The Sable Arm, The Role of the Black Soldier, 1861 - 1865"
"Forged in Battle, Black Soldiers and their Commanders"
(I believe that is the correct title? If not, I will
correctly re-post it.)
My wife also has a diary written by an Black woman from that span
of time. I can't remember the title for the life of me! I will look it
up and post it here. (Third shift foggies! :^) ) I think the title is,
"The Oldest Living Confederate Tells All"
Odd title, I know, but I believe that is it. I post the author when I
can dig it up.
The Alabama Slammer
|
37.18 | | TLE::SOULE | The elephant is wearing quiet clothes. | Thu Sep 12 1991 10:49 | 7 |
| I imagine the writings of Frederick Douglas have been gathered and
published. Although he was not a slave at the time of the war, he
had been some time previous to that. Some of the quotes in the Burns'
movie/book are from slaves. I'll look to see if there's a bibliography
in the back of the book.
Ben
|
37.19 | Some Data on Blacks | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Thu Sep 12 1991 11:00 | 50 |
| RE .15:
I'll give a few bits and pieces I've picked up, without claiming any
more for them than they deserve as evidence.
From the start of the war, whenever Union troops appeared in part of
the Confederacy, large numbers of blacks would come into the Union
lines. I don't remember if there was any clear articulation of _why_,
but the accounts give the impression that blacks felt Union troops =
freedom. This kind of thing started well before the Emancipation
Proclamation was even hinted at, at places as diverse as the Carolina
coast, Norfolk, and Tennessee.
This caused considerable trouble for the North, because no one quite
knew how to treat slaves who had run away from Confederate masters. I
think it was Ben Butler who came up with the interesting theory that
this "property" of rebels was contraband of war, like any other seized
property, and could be "used" by the government. (The origin of the
term "contrabands" for escaped slaves who worked for the Union army.)
That theory was popular because it prevented sending the slaves back to
their masters while _not_ making any decision about slavery per se.
I have not yet read the regimental history of the 54th Mass. (I think
Wes has), but I've heard that the movie "Glory" was pretty accurate in
portraying the attitudes of the blacks who enlisted to fight for the
Union (motives as diverse, probably, as those of other soldiers).
However, there _were_ blacks who volunteered to _fight_ for the
Confederacy. It was only at the very end of the war that the
Confederate government allowed it, and I think the units never saw any
action, but it at least shows that there was no monolithic "black
viewpoint" on the war.
I also remember reading that news of the Emancipation Proclamation
spread rapidly among blacks in the South, and that it intensified the
"migration" of blacks to Union lines. Refugee camps had to be set up
to handle them, and some (most?) were badly run - worse physical
conditions in some cases than the people had been in under slavery.
[ A personal observation: I suggest being careful, as a historian, with
the idea that skin pigmentation influences thought processes. Any
person's thoughts, attitudes, habits, etc. are influenced by
surroundings; the attitudes of other people towards skin color (or
accent, or religion, or economic status, or...) can _definitely_ be
part of a person's surroundings, but the idea that a certain level of
melanin made (or makes) a Georgia field hand think the same things as a
Boston clerk or a Soweto merchant - or even the same things as another
Georgia field hand - is not supported by evidence.]
MikeR
|
37.20 | political paradigms | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Tue Sep 17 1991 19:21 | 45 |
| The extension of slavery into the territories was one of the primary
causes of secession. Even with this, though, slavery was but a
single thread in the cloth. Slavery was associated with a lifestyle
and a political paradigm: agrarianism and a decentralized, almost
feudal power structure. When a Southern Democrat spoke of slavery
in the territories, he was, likely as not, packaging the whole business
together. The prohibition of slavery in the territories would
eventually mean that political interests of the less-agrarian,
less-feudal North would prevail in the Congress. This would largely
disenfranchise citizens living in areas that practiced the Southern
lifestyle.
The political paradigm most commonly associated with the North was
that of Federalism and a powerful, centralized national government.
This paradigm was antithetical to that of the Southern states in
many ways, but not necessarily slavery. For example, the Federalist
viewpoints differed from the Confederationist viewpoints on interstate
commerce, public works, public education, military service, and,
[I think] most important, on taxation.
I do not think there was any inherent conflict between the two camps
on the subject of slavery. If you take slavery out of the picture,
but keep the rest of the two political paradigms intact, I think
you still wind up with a fracture and secession.
Slavery was not, as I was taught in school, withering away. It
was as profitable in 1860 as ever. It was, however, evolving.
In the 1840's, a large majority of slaves were held in units of
three or less. By the outbreak of war, that majority was held in
units of 100 or more. In other words, slavery was being concentated
in fewer and more wealthy hands. Such social trends seldom survive
long. I do not think the institution would have "withered" without
considerable pressure. Such pressure would have come from two points:
world opinion (remember that Southerners thought themselves quite
modern and valued highly the opinions of European leaders, espeically
the British and the French.) and the economic reality of being
politically severed from the industrial base of the North.
The Southern lifestyle survived as long as it did only because of
its relationship with the Northern lifestyle. Now here I do not
mean the Federalist paradigm, but the lifestyle of large population
centers and large-scale manufacturing. Severed from the North,
the South would have been forced to evolve or perish.
Wess
|
37.21 | roles of Blacks | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Tue Sep 17 1991 19:34 | 35 |
| re:: opinion of Blacks
With the exception of a few like Frederick Douglas, Blacks had no
political voice in the question of secession or its repression.
The role of Blacks was overwhelmingly that of bystanders.
Slaves flocked to the Union camps because they, like many white
Southerners, had been convinced tthat the radical abolitionist movement
was dominant in the North. Slaves were exposed to the propaganda
of the abolitionist camp - "The army of the north will set you free
and destroy your masters," - and the army of the secessionists -
"Abe Lincoln is going to free the slaves and turn them loose on
our womenfolk."
While the Confederate government authorized the enlistment of Blacks
very late in the war, many Blacks had been serving the Southern
army in combat roles. Nathan Bedford Forest supposedly had a number
of slaves in his unit. They had been promised freedom if they served
well. There are many accounts of Black servants or even slaves
taking up arms to defend their masters.
I think the enlistment of Blacks into the Confederate army is a
very telling point in the matter of what the South was fighting
for. They offered slaves liberty in exchange for military service.
It seems to me, then, that independence was more important to them
than was slavery.
[OPINION/FANTASY ALERT] I would like to think that had a large
number of slaves served well and faithfully and been freed, the
Southern people and their leaders would have been forced to admit
the basic Humanity of Blacks. The result would have been either
general abolition of slavery or an absolutely horrendous conflict
of conscience.
Wess
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37.22 | | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | As magnificent as that | Tue Sep 17 1991 22:32 | 8 |
| > .... There are many accounts of Black servants or even slaves
Z taking up arms to defend their masters.
Sure, you bet there were. A sure beating from your master is far worse
than a possible gunshot wound from a Northerner who isn't out to get
you anyway. It's called playing the odds.
-d
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37.23 | please say you weren't serious... | JUPITR::ZAFFINO | | Wed Sep 18 1991 00:15 | 12 |
| I don't believe that fear of a beating was the motivating factor here,
and I'm sure you meant that half in jest. A much more prudent course
would have been to hide safely away, as all slaves knew that it meant
death to be armed except in very few areas. Very few slaves were ever
mistreated, despite what Uncle Tom's Cabin said, and many slaves
actually loved their masters enough to fight and die for them. For
example, I put forward Stonewall Jackson's servant Jim. He accompanied
his master on every campaign, and in several instances put his life on
the line alongside his master within easy running distance of federal
troops.
Ziff
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37.24 | There are exceptions in every crowd. | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | As magnificent as that | Wed Sep 18 1991 11:28 | 13 |
| Sorry, Ziff, but no. I wasn't kidding. I am too astute a student of
human nature to buy your argument.
Slaves who *loved* their masters were a *significant* exception to the
normal run of human nature. Kind treatment notwithstanding, most
slaves knew all too well that they risked flogging -- even unto death --
for disobedience or evidence of disloyalty. If Jackson's Jim had run
for the Federal lines, it is highly likely that Jackson himself would
have shot him. And been very sad for losing such a good and valuable
slave, but property is property. You can't just let slaves get the idea
they can run away, that's no better than an unruly horse.
-d
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37.25 | How about the free blacks? | TAPS::DENCS | Les Dencs | Wed Sep 18 1991 14:57 | 10 |
| Beside the slaves the South had a large proportion of freed blacks.
Some of these people were southerners in every sense. They joined the
Confederate Army and some of them served with distinction. Some of
them were captured several times to returne again, or even to bring
back prisoners. As a matter of fact in several engagements the blacks
served the guns, I recall one at the Bull Run. As I recall one of the
NY papers mentioned that against Grant the batteries were manned by
blacks. We should remember the last person staying with Jefferson
Davis was his slave James Jones, who tried to peotect him, and at the
end hid the Confederate Seal.
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37.26 | Confederate Blacks | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Wed Sep 18 1991 16:34 | 24 |
| re: beating vs. loyalty
I would not argue that in some cases it might have been fear of
their masters that motivated slaves to serve, but there are many
other cases of genuine loyalty. An example off the top of my head
was a slave named Uncle John who served with Co. B, 4th Texas Infantry
throughout the war. At Gettysburg, when the Texas Brigade was pinned
down on the slopes of LIttle Round Top, John showed up with a sack
full of biscuts and roasting ears. He had crossed a half-mile or
more of no-man's land, and had at least as good a chance of making
it to the Federal lines as to his own company.
There was another slave who belonged to a Rebel officer killed at
Shiloh, who carried his master's body back home.
It is dangerous to make flat statements about motives, but I think
the evidence is very strong that many slaves and black servants
acted out of loyalty and/or affection.
Thousands of free blacks worked for the C.S. Corps of Engineers,
building the breastworks that figured in some of the bloodiest battles.
These blacks worked for wages and required no floggings.
Wess
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37.27 | Well Done! | USEM::PMARTIN | | Wed Sep 18 1991 19:07 | 5 |
| .20 is perhaps the most objective and best-written explanation of the
situation in the South that I have ever read.
Paul
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37.28 | not as cut and dried as you think | JUPITR::ZAFFINO | | Wed Sep 18 1991 19:37 | 24 |
| Sure, the examples which I presented are rare, but that still doesn't
mean that slaves fought because they were afraid of beatings. Remember
that slaves were a very expensive investment. One of the main reasons
that the South didn't raise black regiments earlier is that their
masters were worried that they wouldn't be properly recompensed for
their "property". With such an expensive investment, one doesn't go
around taking chances on losing it. Rare indeed would be the master
who gave his slave a rifle, even with the yankees so close by. What
would prevent that slave from using that rifle on him? Would you use
your brand new mercedes to mark the end of your driveway for the plows
after a big snowstorm? I doubt it. Nor would most slaveowners use
their slaves, unless those slaves were willing of their own accord.
I know enough about human nature to realize that if somebody who
mistreated me forced me to take a gun and defend his property, I would
look for the opportunity to use it on him. Doubly so if he gave many
others whom he had also mistreated guns. Especially as we would
outnumber him since most of the male members of his family were off
fighting with Marse Robert! However, I would gladly put my life on
the line to defend my home from invaders; even though that home was
not as free as it could be. If I grew up as a slave, slavery would be
all I knew; and home would still be home and yankees would still be
threatening that home and all I ever knew.
Ziff
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37.29 | Not All Economics | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Fri Sep 20 1991 10:02 | 56 |
| RE .20:
No basic conflict over slavery? Wes, if you mean that in the narrow
sense that most people in the North were willing to let slavery
continue where it existed, then I would tend to agree. But the
conflict came not because slavery _existed_; it came because the
_expansion_ of slavery was being pushed, hard, by the South (as you
pointed out). The "free soil" Northwest did, in fact, trigger much of
the conflict over slavery, so _without_ slavery, I can't see another
issue big enough to cause the kind of intransigence that led to
secession.
Let us remember, too, that in 1860 the North was _not_ an "industrial"
society in anything close to a modern sense. It was _becoming_
industrialized, and _becoming_ an area of large population centers, but
most people, North and South, lived in small towns and were focused on
agriculture. And the South, even if they _had_ seceded, would not have
been "severed" from the North economically. (Hey, the two regions
couldn't even stop trading _during_ the war! Why would they stop
_after_ the war?) Northern industry would still have demanded cotton,
and the South still needed salt, plus lots of manufactured goods. The
North was the closest place to get them.
On a third point, I'm not sure that the primary prop for slavery was
economic, and that slavery would have died when it became
"unprofitable". What I have read suggests that the problem of race
relations (and fear of what freeing all blacks would mean) was a strong
motivator for keeping slavery. It was a convienient way of keeping the
two races "in their place" from the point of view of many people, North
and South.
Prejudice was as common then as it is today, and there were many
different kinds. The U.S. had just passed through a period of intense
anti-Irish sentiment (job discrimination, violence, segregation), and
similar feelings were directed against German immigrants. It may be
that the North was actually more hostile to free blacks than the South
was; neither region, as a region, can claim to be more "tolerant" than
the other.
I think most of your analysis in .20 is quite accurate, but unless you
can cite some additional facts, I don't think you can lean as heavily as
you do on regional differences other than slavery and on economics to
explain the split.
[ A side note on economics, and habit as a motivator over profit: the
South clung to a one-crop economy long after TLUBTNATS, to the point
where soil was becoming exhausted in many areas, and an objective view
would have dictated change. It took, however, a bug - the boll weevil
- and a black man (George Washington Carver and his research on the
economic uses of the peanut) to break the cycle. I believe there is
even a monument to the boll weevil in some Southern city in recognition
of its contribution in driving the region to diversify. Again, I'm not
sure economic pressure would have killed slavery very quickly. ]
MikeR
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37.30 | industry | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Mon Sep 23 1991 17:13 | 12 |
| re: .29
I only have a few seconds for this: the North was not as
industrialized then as it was by 1900, but was still far more so
than was the South. There were more manufacturing businesses in
every county of Ohio than in the entire state of Texas!
True, the image of every Yankee soldier as a denizen of NYC is bogus.
They even do a bit of farming in Minnesota! ;-)
Wess
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37.31 | "Oh, when them cotten balls get rotten..." | STRATA::RUDMAN | Always the Black Knight. | Tue Sep 24 1991 19:17 | 10 |
| IMS, there were more cotton mills in Lowell, Ma. than
in the entire South! All but 6% of Southern cotton was
exported.
I can't recall the exact figures (see the Civil War topic in
HISTORY), but the rate of industrialization in the South was
nowhere near the rate of industrialization in the North, even
after the war started.
Don
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37.32 | Jefferson .vs. Hamilton | DKAS::KOLKER | Conan the Librarian | Mon May 04 1992 14:12 | 15 |
| re .20 and others
I think the main difference between the North and the South was the
underlying Federal paradigm. The South followed Jeffersonian lines as
evidenced by its heavy emphasis on States rights and decentralization
of power.
The North followed Hamiltonian lines. Hamilton favored central govt.
intervention and promotion of manufactures (i.e. industrialization and
technology). This alone could account for the fracture. With the folks
up North looking for government funds to develop roads, railroads and
subsidize industry and the folks down South looking to keep the Feds
out of their wallets you could see how profound the divergence was.
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37.33 | Not So Simple As That | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Tue May 05 1992 09:19 | 18 |
| RE .32:
But the "Jeffersoninan" South was not only willing, but _adamant_, to
summon "Hamiltonian" central government to protect the right of slave
owners to take their property where they pleased, even if the
"decentralized" power of a state or territory wanted to forbid slavery.
There _were_ significant differences between the sections, but they
were not yet in 1860 primarily "industry vs. agriculture" - the North
had many more farmers than factory workers. Perhaps a more profound
difference was in the style of local government. The town meeting
style of New England was prevalent in the North, but most of the South
had an almost feudal system where the local "aristocracy" held
positions of power and ran local affairs (which was not the sort of
system Jefferson had in mind _at all_).
MikeR
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37.34 | | DKAS::KOLKER | Conan the Librarian | Wed May 06 1992 10:47 | 4 |
| re .-1
All generalizations are false, including mine :-)
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37.35 | Alittle more info on Colored Troops | ANOVAX::DGRAY | | Thu Jan 19 1995 17:39 | 23 |
| RE .19
The 54th and 55th Massachsetts Regiments were composed mostly of freed
Black volunteers. Many of those volunteers had sacrificed their own
businesses and personal fortunes at the time they enlisted.
The Movie "Glory" had many inaccuracies, from the unit sergeant-major,
who was Frederick Douglass' son, Alvin, to the direction of the 54th's
attack on Fort Wagner. It failed to mention the 54th's first medal of
honor winner, Sergeant William Carney, it took the Army until the
1880's to finally award him that medal. Contrary to the portrayal in
the movie, Colonel Shaw was contemptuous of his Black troops until
their last four or five months together, according to letters and
archives I have read onthe subject.
There were over 179,000 Black soldiers who participated in the official
U.S. regiments and another estimated 3,000 to 10,000 Blacks who'd
served in unofficial state sanctioned units during the era. There is
alot more about the U.S. Colored Troops during the Civil War I could
relate, but I have to go back to many of my old references.
Doug Gray
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