Machan,
Secession, and Slavery
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
My
friend Tibor Machan has courageously entered the fray over the issue
of Lincoln and secession with a typically eloquent essay, "Lincoln,
Secession and Slavery," on the Cato Institute’s website
(June 1). I say "courageous" because his essay is not
entirely a hymn of praise to Father Abraham, the standard prerequisite
for "Lincoln scholarship" in America. Anyone who offers
even the slightest criticism of Lincoln risks being smeared, lied
about, and accused of the vilest intentions by the cult of "Lincoln
scholars."
Machan
does (rather timidly) admit to Lincoln’s "blemished record
of following the ideal of free government in his political life"
by suspending the writ of habeas corpus and ordering mass arrests
of tens of thousands of Northern civilian opponents of his regime
including dozens, if not hundreds, of newspaper editors and owners.
And he correctly points out that when it suited his political purposes
Lincoln clearly advocated secession, as he did in an 1848 speech
about the Mexican War and with his unconstitutional orchestration
of the secession of western Virginia during the war.
I
use the word "timid" because generations of historians
have agreed with Clinton Rossiter, author of Constitutional
Dictatorship, when he called Lincoln a "dictator"
and said that Lincoln’s "amazing disregard" for the Constitution
was "considered by nobody as legal." In his 1998 book,
Abraham
Lincoln, Constitutionalism, and Equal Rights in the Civil War Era,
Herman Belz expresses an odd puzzlement over "the persistence
of the dictatorship convention" in descriptions of Lincoln
by the scholarly community. There’s nothing puzzling about it, however;
the "dictatorship convention" persists because it is true.
Machan’s
analysis suffers from the exclusion of some very important facts.
For example, he correctly states that many Southerners "endorsed
out-and-out racist ideas" but this was true of the entire western
world including the Northern United States during
the Victorian era. To his credit, he points out that Lincoln also
held such ideas by repeatedly stating his opposition to "bringing
about in any way the social and political equality of the white
and black races" (Aug. 21, 1858, debate with Stephen Douglas
in Ottawa, Illinois).
In
assessing the reasons for the war it is important to recognize that,
as Tocqueville wrote in Democracy
in America (1945 Macmillan edition, p. 359): "[T]he
prejudice of race appears to be stronger in the states that have
abolished slavery than in those where it still exists; and nowhere
is it so intolerant as in those states where servitude has never
been known." As Eugene Berwanger wrote in The
Frontier Against Slavery (p. 97), "In virtually
every phase of existence [in the North], Negroes found themselves
systematically separated from whites." They were excluded or
assigned to "Jim Crow" sections of all means of transportation;
could not enter most hotels, restaurants, and other public buildings;
had to sit in "Negro pews" in church; and were almost
completely segregated from the white population.
Many
Northern states adopted laws like Indiana’s which prohibited Negroes
and mulattos from entering the state; did not recognize contracts
with them; fined employers who encouraged black employees to enter
the state; prohibited blacks from voting, marrying white persons
(punishable by imprisonment), or testifying in court against white
persons. Illinois the "Land of Lincoln"
prohibited the immigration of black people into the state. Lincoln
never expressed opposition to this, and even supported a state program
to "colonize," i.e., deport, free blacks out of Illinois.
Lincoln
and most Northerners did more than make racist statements; they
discriminated against and legally abused the small number of free
blacks among them. In states such as Indiana, the inability of blacks
to testify in court against whites invited criminal abuse. This
pervasive and institutionalized Northern racism is one reason why
the standard story that hundreds of thousand of Northerners gave
their lives during the war for the benefit of black strangers in
the South is bizarre.
Machan’s
abstract statements that a group that secedes from a political union
should have no right to "take along hostages" and that
the slaves would probably have preferred to keep the Union intact
are complicated by actual American history. Both Confederate Vice
President Alexander Stephens and the preeminent abolitionist William
Lloyd Garrison believed that slavery was "more secure in the
Union than out of it," as Stephens stated. This is because
of the Fugitive Slave Act, which Lincoln wholeheartedly supported.
The Act compelled the Northern states to capture runaway slaves.
They were provided due process, but local magistrates were paid
$10 for returning a slave to his owner, and only $5 for granting
him freedom. It was a gigantic federal subsidy to prop up the institution
of slavery, and would have become defunct with secession, making
the enforcement of slavery much more costly. This is why Garrison
and other Northern abolitionists advocated the secession of the
Northern states. ("No Covenant with Death" was
the secessionist banner across Garrison’s newspaper, The Liberator).
Machan
is not entirely correct in stating that "the citizens of the
union who intended to go their own way" were "kidnapping"
slaves. Only a small percentage of Southerners owned slaves, who
were mostly on the large plantations. The average Confederate soldier
was a yeoman farmer, laborer, or merchant who did not own slaves
and had no interest in maintaining the institution. As James McPherson
wrote in What
They Fought For: 1861-1865, most Confederate soldiers believed
they were fighting against a tyrannical federal government that
was invading their country and threatening their homes and families.
Another
relevant fact is that the upper South Virginia, Tennessee,
North Carolina, and Arkansas initially voted to remain in
the Union after the lower South had seceded. Virginia voted two-to-one
to remain in the Union and Lincoln was pleased to have her, slaves
and all. It was only after Lincoln launched an invasion of Virginia’s
sister states that she reversed herself and seceded after taking
a popular vote; the other three states of the upper South
then followed suit. Lincoln’s unconstitutional invasion was the
main reason for Virginia’s secession. Machan’s condemnation of all
Southerners as "kidnappers" is patently unfair and inaccurate.
Machan
expresses concern for "unwilling third parties" during
an act of secession but he ignores the fact that Lincoln conscripted
tens of thousands of unwilling third parties, many of whom who were
sent to grisly deaths in the war. Thousands of other conscripts
were maimed for life. The fate of some of these men was truly horrific.
In the May 1864 "Battle of the Wilderness" Ulysses S.
Grant’s army suffered 2,246 soldiers killed and 12,037 wounded in
just 48 hours. The battle was fought in a dense Virginia forest
that caught on fire, trapping hundreds of wounded men who perished
in the fire. Gordon Rhea cites a first-hand account of the scene
in The
Battle of the Wilderness: May 5-6, 1864 (p. 451): "Forest
fires raged, ammunition trains exploded; the dead were roasted .
. . ; the wounded, roused by its hot breath, dragged themselves
along, with their torn and mangled limbs, in the mad energy of despair
. . . ; and every bush seemed hung with shreds of blood-stained
clothing . . . hell itself had usurped the place of earth."
There
were draft riots in New York City and elsewhere after the conscription
law was put into place (see Iver Bernstein, The
New York City Draft Riots). Federal troops shot and killed
hundreds of New York City antiwar protesters. Tens of thousands
of Northern men either deserted or evaded the draft by hiding out
in the mountains of Pennsylvania and elsewhere. In short, Machan’s
"unwilling third parties" defense of Lincoln is not much
of a defense if it does not incorporate a concern for all unwilling
third parties.
Moreover,
the purpose of the war was "to save the Union," as Lincoln
said over and over again, not to free the slaves. (Actually, the
war destroyed the Union as a voluntary association
of states). As Machan notes, in his August 22, 1862 letter to New
York Tribune editor Horace Greeley, Lincoln very clearly stated
his position that if he could "save the Union" without
freeing a single slave, he would do so. The issue of slavery was
an ex post facto rationale for the war, at best.
The
US Congress supported Lincoln’s position in mid-1861 when it issued
a resolution on the purpose of the war. The war was not being waged,
Congress declared,
". .
. in any spirit of oppression, or for any purpose of conquest
or subjugation, or purpose of overthrowing or interfering with
the rights or established institutions of those [Southern] states,
but to defend and maintain the supremacy of the constitution,
and to preserve the Union with all the dignity, equality and rights
of
the several states unimpaired." (W.A. Dunning, Essays
on the
Civil War and Reconstruction,
p. 13)
As
I argue in The
Real Lincoln, the Constitution that was established by the
founders was largely overthrown by the war and replaced with
what Columbia University law professor George P. Fletcher calls
"our secret Constitution," one that promotes "egalitarianism,
nationalism, and democracy" rather than liberty. The Southern
states were in fact made into conquered provinces run by puppet
governments set up by the Republican Party. The Tenth Amendment
was effectively abolished, making a mockery out of the Congress’s
"dignity, equality, and rights of the several states"
pronouncement. The main purpose (and effect) of the war was to consolidate
governmental power in Washington by military dictatorship. That
is what 320,000 Northern men died for.
Lincoln
and the Republican Party didn’t advocate consolidation for its own
sake. Republican Senator John Sherman explained why Lincoln was
elected in 1861 when he said: "Those who elected Mr. Lincoln
expect him to secure to free labor its just right to the territories
. . . to protect by wise revenue laws, the labor of our people;
to secure the public lands to actual settlers . . . to develop the
internal resources of the country by opening new means of communications
between the Atlantic and Pacific."
David
Donald "reinterprets" this in Lincoln
Reconsidered to say that "Lincoln and the Republicans
intended to enact a high protective tariff that mothered monopoly,
to pass a homestead law that invited speculators to loot the public
domain, and to subsidize a transcontinental railroad that afforded
infinite opportunities for jobbery."
Donald
left one thing out, however: The Republican Party’s opposition to
the extension of slavery (but not Southern slavery) in its
1860 Platform was based on its desire to win votes from white laborers
by promising to protect them from the labor market competition that
slavery or even the existence of freed blacks would
bring. None of this could have been achieved if the Southern states
were allowed to secede and to quit paying federal taxes, especially
the tariff on imported goods.
The
Northern states ended slavery peacefully, as did dozens of other
countries during the first half of the nineteenth century. This
includes the British and Spanish empires and the French and Danish
colonies. Only in the US was war and massive death associated with
emancipation. Yet, Machan argues that for the US to have chosen
the peaceful path to emancipation that the entire rest of the world
had taken would be "obscene." But this must be weighed
against the actual costs of the war, which included 620,000 deaths.
Standardizing for today’s population, this would be the equivalent
of more than 5 million deaths, or over 100 times the number of Americans
who died in Vietnam. Not to mention the destruction of the Southern
economy, the death of federalism and states’ rights, and the evisceration
of the Constitution.
In
Emancipating
Slaves, Enslaving Free Men Jeffrey Hummel estimates that
some 50,000 Southern civilians perished during the war, as Lincoln’s
army waged war on civilians as well as combatants with its indiscriminate
bombardment of Southern cities, even after Confederate troops had
evacuated. This number of deaths has to include thousands of slaves.
Machan’s analysis illegitimately ignores all of these obscene costs
imposed on the nation by Lincoln’s war.
If
Lincoln deserves the designation "Honest Abe," he should
be taken at his word that he never intended to disturb Southern
slavery and that the Emancipation Proclamation (which freed no one)
was only a war measure intended to discourage European support for
the Confederacy. Of all the countries on earth, the United States
dealt with the issue of slavery in the worst possible way because
of Lincoln’s obscene ambition (a "little engine that knew no
rest," as William Herndon quaintly described it) to consolidate
state power for the benefit of the Northern plutocracy that got
him elected. It is doubtful that one in a million Northerners voted
for Lincoln because they thought he would wage the bloodiest war
in history up to that point to free the slaves, a power that no
president possessed at the time.
A
genuine statesman as opposed to a cynical, manipulating,
power-mad politician would have done what England did and
vigorously pursued a policy of compensated emancipation over five
years. By the 1880s slavery was nonexistent throughout the world,
and there is no reason to believe that America would have remained
the lone exception on earth.
Two
of the most prominent libertarians of Lincoln’s time the
British historian of liberty, Lord Acton, and the Massachusetts
abolitionist Lysander Spooner opposed Lincoln’s war. Lord
Acton, who closely followed all the events of the war, concluded
that slavery was not Lincoln’s main concern , but destroying the
system of federalism and states rights (which Lincoln called "saving
the Union") was. He took Lincoln at his word. In a November
4, 1866, letter to General Robert E. Lee Lord Acton wrote that "I
saw in States’ rights the only availing check upon the absolutism
of the sovereign will, and secession filled me with hope, not as
the destruction but as the redemption of Democracy . . . . you were
fighting the battles of our liberty, our progress, and our civilization;
and I mourn for the stake which was lost at Richmond more deeply
than I rejoice over that which was saved at Waterloo."
Spooner,
the author of the 1845 book, The
Unconstitutionality of Slavery and a celebrated abolitionist,
wrote in his 1870 essay, "No Treason," that "all
these cries of having ‘abolished slavery,’ of having ‘preserved
the union,’ of establishing a ‘government by consent,’ and of ‘maintaining
the national honor’ are all gross, shameless, transparent cheats
so transparent that they ought to deceive no one." Thanks
to 140 years of propaganda in the government schools, these "cheats"
now appear to deceive nearly everyone.
These
two nineteenth-century libertarian giants had a much clearer picture
of Abraham Lincoln and his real agenda than does my friend Tibor
Machan.
June
4, 2002
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
is
the author of the LRC #1 bestseller, The
Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an
Unnecessary War
(Forum/Random House 2002) and professor of economics at Loyola College
in Maryland.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
Thomas
DiLorenzo Archives
|