<h2><SPAN name="XXV" id="XXV"></SPAN>XXV</h2>
<br/>
<p><i>Negro Soldiers—Fort
Pillow—Retaliation—Draft—Northern
Democrats—Governor Seymour's Attitude—Draft Riots in
New York—Vallandigham—Lincoln on his Authority to
Suspend Writ of Habeas Corpus—Knights of the Golden
Circle—Jacob Thompson in Canada</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>On the subject of negro soldiers, as on many other topics, the
period of active rebellion and civil war had wrought a profound
change in public opinion. From the foundation of the government to
the Rebellion, the horrible nightmare of a possible slave
insurrection had brooded over the entire South. This feeling
naturally had a sympathetic reflection in the North, and at first
produced an instinctive shrinking from any thought of placing arms
in the hands of the blacks whom the chances of war had given
practical or legal freedom. During the year 1862, a few sporadic
efforts were made by zealous individuals, under apparently favoring
conditions, to begin the formation of colored regiments. The
eccentric Senator Lane tried it in Kansas, or, rather, along the
Missouri border without success. General Hunter made an experiment
in South Carolina, but found the freedmen too unwilling to enlist,
and the white officers too prejudiced to instruct them. General
Butler, at New Orleans, infused his wonted energy into a similar
attempt, with somewhat better results. He found that before the
capture of the city, Governor Moore of Louisiana had <SPAN name="page349" id="page349"></SPAN>begun the
organization of a regiment of free colored men for local defense.
Butler resuscitated this organization for which he thus had the
advantage of Confederate example and precedent, and against which
the accusation of arming slaves could not be urged. Early in
September, Butler reported, with his usual biting sarcasm:</p>
<p>"I shall also have within ten days a regiment, one thousand
strong, of native guards (colored), the darkest of whom will be
about the complexion of the late Mr. Webster."</p>
<p>All these efforts were made under implied, rather than expressed
provisions of law, and encountered more or less embarrassment in
obtaining pay and supplies, because they were not distinctly
recognized in the army regulations. This could not well be done so
long as the President considered the policy premature. His spirit
of caution in this regard was set forth by the Secretary of War in
a letter of instruction dated July 3, 1862:</p>
<p>"He is of opinion," wrote Mr. Stanton, "that under the laws of
Congress, they [the former slaves] cannot be sent back to their
masters; that in common humanity they must not be permitted to
suffer for want of food, shelter, or other necessaries of life;
that to this end they should be provided for by the quartermaster's
and commissary's departments, and that those who are capable of
labor should be set to work and paid reasonable wages. In directing
this to be done, the President does not mean, at present, to settle
any general rule in respect to slaves or slavery, but simply to
provide for the particular case under the circumstances in which it
is now presented."</p>
<p>All this was changed by the final proclamation of emancipation,
which authoritatively announced that <SPAN name="page350" id="page350"></SPAN>persons of suitable
condition, whom it declared free, would be received into the armed
service of the United States. During the next few months, the
President wrote several personal letters to General Dix, commanding
at Fortress Monroe; to Andrew Johnson, military governor of
Tennessee; to General Banks, commanding at New Orleans; and to
General Hunter, in the Department of the South, urging their
attention to promoting the new policy; and, what was yet more to
the purpose, a bureau was created in the War Department having
special charge of the duty, and the adjutant-general of the army
was personally sent to the Union camps on the Mississippi River to
superintend the recruitment and enlistment of the negroes, where,
with the hearty coöperation of General Grant and other Union
commanders, he met most encouraging and gratifying success.</p>
<p>The Confederate authorities made a great outcry over the new
departure. They could not fail to see the immense effect it was
destined to have in the severe military struggle, and their
prejudice of generations greatly intensified the gloomy
apprehensions they no doubt honestly felt. Yet even allowing for
this, the exaggerated language in which they described it became
absolutely ludicrous. The Confederate War Department early declared
Generals Hunter and Phelps to be outlaws, because they were
drilling and organizing slaves; and the sensational proclamation
issued by Jefferson Davis on December 23, 1862, ordered that Butler
and his commissioned officers, "robbers and criminals deserving
death, ... be, whenever captured, reserved for execution."</p>
<p>Mr. Lincoln's final emancipation proclamation excited them to a
still higher frenzy. The Confederate Senate talked of raising the
black flag; Jefferson Davis's message stigmatized it as "the most
execrable <SPAN name="page351" id="page351"></SPAN>measure recorded in the history of
guilty man"; and a joint resolution of the Confederate Congress
prescribed that white officers of negro Union soldiers "shall, if
captured, be put to death, or be otherwise punished at the
discretion of the court." The general orders of some subordinate
Confederate commanders repeated or rivaled such denunciations and
threats.</p>
<p>Fortunately, the records of the war are not stained with either
excesses by the colored troops or even a single instance of such
proclaimed barbarity upon white Union officers; and the visitation
of vengeance upon negro soldiers is confined, so far as known, to
the single instance of the massacre at Fort Pillow. In that
deplorable affair, the Confederate commander reported, by
telegraph, that in thirty minutes he stormed a fort manned by seven
hundred, and captured the entire garrison killing five hundred and
taking one hundred prisoners while he sustained a loss of only
twenty killed and sixty wounded. It is unnecessary to explain that
the bulk of the slain were colored soldiers. Making due allowance
for the heat of battle, history can considerately veil closer
scrutiny into the realities wrapped in the exaggerated boast of
such a victory.</p>
<p>The Fort Pillow incident, which occurred in the spring of 1864,
brought upon President Lincoln the very serious question of
enforcing an order of retaliation which had been issued on July 30,
1863, as an answer to the Confederate joint resolution of May 1.
Mr. Lincoln's freedom from every trace of passion was as
conspicuous in this as in all his official acts. In a little
address at Baltimore, while referring to the rumor of the massacre
which had just been received, Mr. Lincoln said:</p>
<p>"We do not to-day know that a colored soldier, or white officer
commanding colored soldiers, has been <SPAN name="page352" id="page352"></SPAN>massacred
by the rebels when made a prisoner. We fear it, believe it, I may
say, but we do not know it. To take the life of one of their
prisoners on the assumption that they murder ours, when it is short
of certainty that they do murder ours, might be too serious, too
cruel, a mistake."</p>
<p>When more authentic information arrived, the matter was very
earnestly debated by the assembled cabinet; but the discussion only
served to bring out in stronger light the inherent dangers of
either course. In this nice balancing of weighty reasons, two
influences decided the course of the government against
retaliation. One was that General Grant was about to begin his
memorable campaign against Richmond, and that it would be most
impolitic to preface a great battle by the tragic spectacle of a
military punishment, however justifiable. The second was the
tender-hearted humanity of the ever merciful President. Frederick
Douglass has related the answer Mr. Lincoln made to him in a
conversation nearly a year earlier:</p>
<p>"I shall never forget the benignant expression of his face, the
tearful look of his eye, and the quiver in his voice when he
deprecated a resort to retaliatory measures. 'Once begun,' said he,
'I do not know where such a measure would stop.' He said he could
not take men out and kill them in cold blood for what was done by
others. If he could get hold of the persons who were guilty of
killing the colored prisoners in cold blood, the case would be
different, but he could not kill the innocent for the guilty."</p>
<p>Amid the sanguinary reports and crowding events that held public
attention for a year, from the Wilderness to Appomattox, the Fort
Pillow affair was forgotten, not only by the cabinet, but by the
country.</p>
<p>The related subjects of emancipation and negro <SPAN name="page353" id="page353"></SPAN>soldiers
would doubtless have been discussed with much more passion and
friction, had not public thought been largely occupied during the
year 1863 by the enactment of the conscription law and the
enforcement of the draft. In the hard stress of politics and war
during the years 1861 and 1862, the popular enthusiasm with which
the free States responded to the President's call to put down the
rebellion by force of arms had become measurably exhausted. The
heavy military reverses which attended the failure of McClellan's
campaign against Richmond, Pope's defeat at the second Bull Run,
McClellan's neglect to follow up the drawn battle of Antietam with
energetic operations, the gradual change of early Western victories
to a cessation of all effort to open the Mississippi, and the
scattering of the Western forces to the spiritless routine of
repairing and guarding long railroad lines, all operated together
practically to stop volunteering and enlistment by the end of
1862.</p>
<p>Thus far, the patriotic record was a glorious one. Almost one
hundred thousand three months' militia had shouldered muskets to
redress the fall of Fort Sumter; over half a million three years'
volunteers promptly enlisted to form the first national army under
the laws of Congress passed in August, 1861; nearly half a million
more volunteers came forward under the tender of the governors of
free States and the President's call of July, 1862, to repair the
failure of McClellan's Peninsula campaign. Several minor calls for
shorter terms of enlistment, aggregating more than forty thousand,
are here omitted for brevity's sake. Had the Western victories
continued, had the Mississippi been opened, had the Army of the
Potomac been more fortunate, volunteering would doubtless have
continued at quite or nearly the same rate. But with success
<SPAN name="page354" id="page354"></SPAN> delayed, with campaigns thwarted, with
public sentiment despondent, armies ceased to fill. An emergency
call for three hundred thousand nine months' men, issued on August
4, 1862, produced a total of only eighty-six thousand eight hundred
and sixty; and an attempt to supply these in some of the States by
a draft under State laws demonstrated that mere local statutes and
machinery for that form of military recruitment were defective and
totally inadequate.</p>
<p>With the beginning of the third year of the war, more energetic
measures to fill the armies were seen to be necessary; and after
very hot and acrimonious debate for about a month, Congress, on
March 3, 1863, passed a national conscription law, under which all
male citizens between the ages of twenty and forty-five were
enrolled to constitute the national forces, and the President was
authorized to call them into service by draft as occasion might
require. The law authorized the appointment of a
provost-marshal-general, and under him a provost-marshal, a
commissioner, and a surgeon, to constitute a board of enrollment in
each congressional district; who, with necessary deputies, were
required to carry out the law by national authority, under the
supervision of the provost-marshal-general.</p>
<p>For more than a year past, the Democratic leaders in the
Northern States had assumed an attitude of violent partizanship
against the administration, their hostility taking mainly the form
of stubborn opposition to the antislavery enactments of Congress
and the emancipation measures of the President. They charged with
loud denunciation that he was converting the maintenance of the
Union into a war for abolition, and with this and other clamors had
gained considerable successes in the autumn congressional elections
of<SPAN name="page355" id="page355"></SPAN> 1862, though not enough to break the
Republican majority in the House of Representatives. General
McClellan was a Democrat, and, since his removal from command, they
proclaimed him a martyr to this policy, and were grooming him to be
their coming presidential candidate.</p>
<p>The passage of the conscription law afforded them a new pretext
to assail the administration; and Democratic members of both Houses
of Congress denounced it with extravagant partizan bitterness as a
violation of the Constitution, and subversive of popular liberty.
In the mouths of vindictive cross-roads demagogues, and in the
columns of irresponsible newspapers that supply the political
reading among the more reckless elements of city populations, the
extravagant language of Democratic leaders degenerated in many
instances into unrestrained abuse and accusation. Yet, considering
that this was the first conscription law ever enacted in the United
States, considering the multitude of questions and difficulties
attending its application, considering that the necessity of its
enforcement was, in the nature of things, unwelcome to the friends
of the government, and, as naturally, excited all the enmity and
cunning of its foes to impede, thwart, and evade it, the law was
carried out with a remarkably small proportion of delay,
obstruction, or resulting violence.</p>
<p>Among a considerable number of individual violations of the act,
in which prompt punishment prevented a repetition, only two
prominent incidents arose which had what may be called a national
significance. In the State of New York the partial political
reaction of 1862 had caused the election of Horatio Seymour, a
Democrat, as governor. A man of high character and great ability,
he, nevertheless, permitted his partizan <SPAN name="page356" id="page356"></SPAN>feeling
to warp and color his executive functions to a dangerous extent.
The spirit of his antagonism is shown in a phrase of his
fourth-of-July oration:</p>
<p>"The Democratic organization look upon this administration as
hostile to their rights and liberties; they look upon their
opponents as men who would do them wrong in regard to their most
sacred franchises."</p>
<p>Believing—perhaps honestly—the conscription law to
be unconstitutional, he endeavored, by protest, argument and
administrative non-compliance, to impede its execution on the plea
of first demanding a Supreme Court decision as to its legality. To
this President Lincoln replied:</p>
<p>"I cannot consent to suspend the draft in New York, as you
request, because, among other reasons, time is too important.... I
do not object to abide a decision of the United States Supreme
Court, or of the judges thereof, on the constitutionality of the
draft law. In fact, I should be willing to facilitate the obtaining
of it; but I cannot consent to lose the time while it is being
obtained. We are contending with an enemy who, as I understand,
drives every able-bodied man he can reach into his ranks, very much
as a butcher drives bullocks into a slaughter-pen. No time is
wasted, no argument is used. This produces an army which will soon
turn upon our now victorious soldiers already in the field, if they
shall not be sustained by recruits as they should be."</p>
<p>Notwithstanding Governor Seymour's neglect to give the enrolling
officers any coöperation, preparations for the draft went on
in New York city without prospect of serious disturbance, except
the incendiary language of low newspapers and handbills. But
scarcely had the wheel begun to turn, and the drawing commenced on
July 13, when a sudden riot broke out.<SPAN name="page357" id="page357"></SPAN> First
demolishing the enrolling-office, the crowd next attacked an
adjoining block of stores, which they plundered and set on fire,
refusing to let the firemen put out the flames. From this point the
excitement and disorder spread over the city, which for three days
was at many points subjected to the uncontrolled fury of the mob.
Loud threats to destroy the New York "Tribune" office, which the
inmates as vigorously prepared to defend, were made. The most
savage brutality was wreaked upon colored people. The fine building
of the colored Orphan Asylum, where several hundred children barely
found means of escape, was plundered and set on fire. It was
notable that foreigners of recent importation were the principal
leaders and actors in this lawlessness in which two million dollars
worth of property was destroyed, and several hundred persons lost
their lives.</p>
<p>The disturbance came to an end on the night of the fourth day,
when a small detachment of soldiers met a body of rioters, and
firing into them, killed thirteen, and wounded eighteen more.
Governor Seymour gave but little help in the disorder, and left a
stain on the record of his courage by addressing a portion of the
mob as "my friends." The opportune arrival of national troops
restored, and thereafter maintained, quiet and safety.</p>
<p>Some temporary disturbance occurred in Boston, but was promptly
put down, and loud appeals came from Philadelphia and Chicago to
stop the draft. The final effect of the conscription law was not so
much to obtain recruits for the service, as to stimulate local
effort throughout the country to promote volunteering, whereby the
number drafted was either greatly lessened or, in many localities,
entirely avoided by filling the State quotas.<SPAN name="page358" id="page358"></SPAN></p>
<p>The military arrest of Clement L. Vallandigham, a Democratic
member of Congress from Ohio, for incendiary language denouncing
the draft, also grew to an important incident. Arrested and tried
under the orders of General Burnside, a military commission found
him guilty of having violated General Order No. 38, by "declaring
disloyal sentiments and opinions with the object and purpose of
weakening the power of the government in its efforts to suppress an
unlawful rebellion"; and sentenced him to military confinement
during the war. Judge Leavitt of the United States Circuit Court
denied a writ of <i>habeas corpus</i> in the case. President
Lincoln regretted the arrest, but felt it imprudent to annul the
action of the general and the military tribunal. Conforming to a
clause of Burnside's order, he modified the sentence by sending
Vallandigham south beyond the Union military lines. The affair
created a great sensation, and, in a spirit of party protest, the
Ohio Democrats unanimously nominated Vallandigham for governor.
Vallandigham went to Richmond, held a conference with the
Confederate authorities, and, by way of Bermuda, went to Canada,
from whence he issued a political address. The Democrats of both
Ohio and New York took up the political and legal discussion with
great heat, and sent imposing committees to present long addresses
to the President on the affair.</p>
<p>Mr. Lincoln made long written replies to both addresses of which
only so much needs quoting here as concisely states his
interpretation of his authority to suspend the privilege of the
writ of <i>habeas corpus</i>:</p>
<p>"You ask, in substance, whether I really claim that I may
override all the guaranteed rights of individuals, on the plea of
conserving the public safety—when I may choose to say the
public safety requires it. This <SPAN name="page359" id="page359"></SPAN>question, divested of the
phraseology calculated to represent me as struggling for an
arbitrary personal prerogative, is either simply a question who
shall decide or an affirmation that nobody shall decide, what the
public safety does require in cases of rebellion or invasion. The
Constitution contemplates the question as likely to occur for
decision, but it does not expressly declare who is to decide it. By
necessary implication, when rebellion or invasion comes, the
decision is to be made from time to time; and I think the man whom,
for the time, the people have, under the Constitution, made the
commander-in-chief of their army and navy, is the man who holds the
power and bears the responsibility of making it. If he uses the
power justly, the same people will probably justify him; if he
abuses it, he is in their hands, to be dealt with by all the modes
they have reserved to themselves in the Constitution."</p>
<p>Forcible and convincing as was this legal analysis, a single
sympathetic phrase of the President's reply had a much greater
popular effect:</p>
<p>"Must I shoot a simple-minded soldier boy who deserts while I
must not touch a hair of a wily agitator who induces him to
desert?"</p>
<p>The term so accurately described the character of Vallandigham,
and the pointed query so touched the hearts of the Union people
throughout the land whose favorite "soldier boys" had volunteered
to fill the Union armies, that it rendered powerless the crafty
criticism of party diatribes. The response of the people of Ohio
was emphatic. At the October election Vallandigham was defeated by
more than one hundred thousand majority.</p>
<p>In sustaining the arrest of Vallandigham, President Lincoln had
acted not only within his constitutional, but also strictly within
his legal, authority. In the<SPAN name="page360" id="page360"></SPAN> preceding March, Congress had
passed an act legalizing all orders of this character made by the
President at any time during the rebellion, and accorded him full
indemnity for all searches, seizures, and arrests or imprisonments
made under his orders. The act also provided:</p>
<p>"That, during the present rebellion, the President of the United
States, whenever in his judgment the public safety may require it,
is authorized to suspend the privilege of the writ of <i>habeas
corpus</i> in any case, throughout the United States or any part
thereof."</p>
<p>About the middle of September, Mr. Lincoln's proclamation
formally put the law in force, to obviate any hindering or delaying
the prompt execution of the draft law.</p>
<p>Though Vallandigham and the Democrats of his type were unable to
prevent or even delay the draft, they yet managed to enlist the
sympathies and secure the adhesion of many uneducated and
unthinking men by means of secret societies, known as "Knights of
the Golden Circle," "The Order of American Knights," "Order of the
Star," "Sons of Liberty," and by other equally high-sounding names,
which they adopted and discarded in turn, as one after the other
was discovered and brought into undesired prominence. The titles
and grips and passwords of these secret military organizations, the
turgid eloquence of their meetings, and the clandestine drill of
their oath-bound members, doubtless exercised quite as much
fascination on such followers as their unlawful object of aiding
and abetting the Southern cause. The number of men thus enlisted in
the work of inducing desertion among Union soldiers, fomenting
resistance to the draft, furnishing the Confederates with arms, and
conspiring to establish a Northwestern Confederacy in full accord
with the South, which formed the ultimate dream of their
<SPAN name="page361" id="page361"></SPAN> leaders, is hard to determine.
Vallandigham, the real head of the movement, claimed five hundred
thousand, and Judge Holt, in an official report, adopted that as
being somewhere near the truth, though others counted them at a
full million.</p>
<p>The government, cognizant of their existence, and able to
produce abundant evidence against the ring-leaders whenever it
chose to do so, wisely paid little heed to these dark-lantern
proceedings, though, as was perhaps natural, military officers
commanding the departments in which they were most numerous were
inclined to look upon them more seriously; and Governor Morton of
Indiana was much disquieted by their work in his State.</p>
<p>Mr. Lincoln's attitude toward them was one of good-humored
contempt. "Nothing can make me believe that one hundred thousand
Indiana Democrats are disloyal," he said; and maintained that there
was more folly than crime in their acts. Indeed, though prolific
enough of oaths and treasonable utterances, these organizations
were singularly lacking in energy and initiative. Most of the
attempts made against the public peace in the free States and along
the northern border came, not from resident conspirators, but from
Southern emissaries and their Canadian sympathizers; and even these
rarely rose above the level of ordinary arson and highway
robbery.</p>
<p>Jacob Thompson, who had been Secretary of the Interior under
President Buchanan, was the principal agent of the Confederate
government in Canada, where he carried on operations as remarkable
for their impracticability as for their malignity. One plan during
the summer of 1864 contemplated nothing less than seizing and
holding the three great States of Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio, with
the aid of disloyal Democrats, <SPAN name="page362" id="page362"></SPAN>whereupon it was supposed
Missouri and Kentucky would quickly join them and make an end of
the war.</p>
<p>Becoming convinced, when this project fell through, that nothing
could be expected from Northern Democrats he placed his reliance on
Canadian sympathizers, and turned his attention to liberating the
Confederate prisoners confined on Johnson's Island in Sandusky Bay
and at Camp Douglas near Chicago. But both these elaborate schemes,
which embraced such magnificent details as capturing the war
steamer <i>Michigan</i> on Lake Erie, came to naught. Nor did the
plans to burn St. Louis and New York, and to destroy steamboats on
the Mississippi River, to which he also gave his sanction, succeed
much better. A very few men were tried and punished for these and
similar crimes, despite the voluble protest of the Confederate
government but the injuries he and his agents were able to inflict,
like the acts of the Knights of the Golden Circle on the American
side of the border, amounted merely to a petty annoyance, and never
reached the dignity of real menace to the government.</p>
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