Abraham
Lincoln was an extraordinary man with many wonderful qualities. He is greatly
admired by many and is generally considered one of America’s greatest
Presidents. Since the era of the founding fathers, he is certainly one of the
most influential Americans. Yet he was President during a brutal Civil War in
which an estimated 625,000 Americans died. This is nearly as many as all the
Americans who have died in all the other wars of the United States. Although
Lincoln was obviously not the only cause of the Civil War, he was probably more
responsible for the nature of the war than any other individual.
The
purpose of this essay is to examine briefly how President Lincoln handled this
crisis and then to learn the lessons of history by imagining how he might have
prevented the military conflict that had such terrible consequences. By looking
at the probable consequences of other policies we may be able to find ways to
resolve conflicts more successfully, especially now in an age when total war
could mean mass suicide.
The
horrible institution of slavery was obviously the issue that provoked the
conflict between the southern slave states and the northern states, where
slavery had been almost completely abolished by 1860. Lincoln was a politician,
and he did not consider himself a radical abolitionist. Lincoln definitely
hated slavery, and he believed it is wrong. He took the political position that
slavery was authorized by the United States Constitution in the states where it
already existed; but he strongly opposed extending it into the territories of
the United States or to other states. He made this policy clear in his speeches
and reiterated it in his first inaugural address on March 4, 1861. By then
seven states had already seceded from the United States and had formed the
Confederate States of America. It is ironic that the slave states would have
had a better chance of preserving their nefarious institution if they had
remained in the Union during Lincoln’s presidency. But Lincoln represented the
new Republican Party that was formed by northerners, and he was the first
President to be strongly opposed to the extension of slavery. In the election
of 1860 he was one of four candidates and won a majority in the electoral
college even though he got less than forty percent of the popular vote.
Many
politicians in both the South and the North believed in the sovereignty of the
states that had come together after the War of Independence to form a “more
perfect Union” under the Constitution of the United States of America. In 1776
the thirteen colonies had essentially seceded from the British Empire in order
to establish that sovereignty and to make sure that they were not taxed without
representation. The US Constitution does not mention secession, does not state
that the Union is to be perpetual, and defines no procedure for states to
withdraw or become independent. Many abolitionists had advocated that northern
states could secede in order to form a nation that would be free of slave
states. During the transition between Lincoln’s election and his inauguration
the Buchanan administration allowed seven of the southern states to withdraw.
John
Pendleton Kennedy, an ex-congressman from Maryland, advocated a “separate
confederacy of the border states” in his pamphlet The Border States,
which was published on December 15, 1860. On January 2, 1861 Governor Thomas
Hicks of Maryland took the position that a central confederacy of border-states
could solve Maryland’s problems. On that day he met with three members of a
Union meeting and wrote to Governor William Burton of Delaware. Hicks also
wrote to the governors of New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Virginia,
Missouri, and Ohio about the idea of forming a central confederacy if the
Federal Union were disrupted. Like many, Governor Hicks opposed the use of
force to keep Maryland or any other state in the Union. While the seven states
in the deep South were seceding, the border slave states of Maryland and
Delaware were considering seceding and forming a Central Confederacy with New
Jersey, Pennsylvania, and New York. Many Democrats and newspapers in these five
states advocated this proposal until Fort Sumter was attacked by the forces of
South Carolina on April 12, 1861. Then sentiment in the northern states quickly
turned to patriotic support for the Union and its war against the southern
rebels. Believing that the war made peaceful secession impossible, they
abandoned the plan for a central confederacy.
Then
why did seven southern states secede when Lincoln had promised to protect
slavery in their states and even enforce the controversial Fugitive Slave Law
in the other states? The South also felt exploited by the North because of the
high tariffs that were the largest source of Federal taxation that resulted in
southern taxes being used in other parts of the country. As a former Whig,
Lincoln was a strong advocate of high protective tariffs. The Morrill Tariff
Act was passed on March 2, 1861, and tariffs were increased early in Lincoln’s
presidency to raise revenues to pay for the war. Politicians are naturally
ambitious, and the southern politicians also wanted to control their own
destiny. Some had imperial ambitions to enlarge their new nation by expanding
into territories and by conquering Cuba and portions of Mexico. They did not
want their slave states to be restricted by Lincoln’s policies.
South
Carolina seceded on December 24, 1860, and by February 1, 1861 Mississippi,
Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas had also voted and declared
secession. Six days later these seven states adopted a constitution for the
Confederate States of America in Montgomery, Alabama, and they elected
Jefferson Davis president. If these were revolutions, they were quite peaceful
so far. They went through some democratic process by conventions and in the
state legislatures, and apparently their state governments accepted the new
nation with little resistance.
The
most difficult bones of contention became the federal forts and installations
in the southern states and the collection of tariff revenues in southern ports.
The Federal forces in Charleston harbor withdrew from other forts and moved
into the most defensible Fort Sumter, which was a customs house used to collect
duties. South Carolina had sent three commissioners, who had arrived in
Washington on December 26 to negotiate a treaty between the new republic and
the United States in order to resolve disputes over the forts, the arsenal, and
lighthouses, to divide the public property and apportion the public debt, and
to settle any other issues necessary to establishing South Carolina as an
independent state. President Buchanan took the weak position that he had no
authority to decide any of these questions, and he declined to make any
preparations to fight over them. In fact by his negligence some weapons of the
United States were moved to the South by their sympathizers in his Democratic
administration.
Lincoln
took the strong position, which some would call tyrannical, that states have no
right to secede from the Union. He believed it was his obligation as President
to enforce the laws that would keep the states in the Union even against their
will as expressed by democratic conventions and state legislatures. His policy
is ironic and even hypocritical because this position conflicts with Lincoln’s
own doctrine of the right of revolution that he expressed in Congress on
January 12, 1848 during the Mexican War when he said,
Any
people anywhere, being inclined and having the power,
have the right to rise up and shake off the existing government and form a new one that suits them better.
This is a most valuable—a most sacred right— a right, which we hope and believe, is to liberate the world. Nor is this right confined to cases in which the whole people of an existing government may choose to exercise it.
Any portion of such people that can, may revolutionize
and make their own so much of the territory as they inhabit.
More than this, a majority of any portion of such people
may revolutionize, putting down a minority, intermingled with or near about them, who may oppose their movement. Such minority was precisely the case of the Tories of our own revolution. It is a quality of revolutions not to go by old lines or old laws, but to break up both and make new ones.
have the right to rise up and shake off the existing government and form a new one that suits them better.
This is a most valuable—a most sacred right— a right, which we hope and believe, is to liberate the world. Nor is this right confined to cases in which the whole people of an existing government may choose to exercise it.
Any portion of such people that can, may revolutionize
and make their own so much of the territory as they inhabit.
More than this, a majority of any portion of such people
may revolutionize, putting down a minority, intermingled with or near about them, who may oppose their movement. Such minority was precisely the case of the Tories of our own revolution. It is a quality of revolutions not to go by old lines or old laws, but to break up both and make new ones.
In
his inaugural address President Lincoln warned against a civil war while
promising that he would not invade the South. Yet he indicated that the Federal
Government would continue to occupy its property in the South and would attempt
to collect “duties and imposts.” He promised he would not impose “obnoxious
strangers” in Federal offices in hostile regions. The mails would continue
unless repelled. He called for “a peaceful solution of the national troubles
and the restoration of fraternal sympathies and affections.” However, in his
view this came to mean only by the retention of the states in the Union.
Early
in his presidency Lincoln rejected the option of letting the southern states
withdraw peacefully. He took the position that secession is illegal and that
the use of force against the Federal Government was rebellion and treason
against the United States. He refused to recognize the Confederate States as
legal entities and would not let anyone in his administration negotiate with
their representatives. He also rejected an offer of mediation by Napoleon III
of France. In March 1861 Jefferson Davis sent peace commissioners to Washington
with an offer to pay for all Federal property in the South and to take on the
southern portion of the national debt. However, Lincoln refused even to
acknowledge them, thus blocking any attempt to resolve the conflicts by
peaceful means. He took the hard line that the southern states must return to
the Union. Unless they did so, or unless he relinquished the forts and tariffs,
it became inevitable that the two sides would fight. His position has been compared
to that of the British Empire, which demanded that their American colonists pay
their taxes.
Lincoln
was careful to avoid beginning the war with an attack. However, he managed to
instigate an attack on Fort Sumter by refusing to negotiate with South Carolina
or to withdraw Federal forces from there. He informed the government of South
Carolina that he was sending in supplies to his besieged men with the warning
that he would retaliate against an attack. President Jefferson Davis and his
cabinet authorized the attack by the forces of South Carolina that began the fighting.
Lincoln had provoked it by insisting on keeping control over Federal forts in
their territory. He took the position that a minority who lost an election
should not be allowed to withdraw from the nation, and he jumped to the
erroneous conclusion that to do so would destroy democracy. Yet from the other
point of view, he was denying democracy to the seceding states. If he had
recognized their right to be independent states, surely both nations could have
co-existed as republics. I do not believe that we should be blind to these
democratic rights, as he was, simply because we believe that slavery is wrong
or because we have a desire that the Union should be perpetual. Clearly the
main motive for the South’s withdrawal from the Union was a bad one, but that
does not mean that they did not have sovereign rights as states.
Lincoln
called for 75,000 volunteers for three months to add to the small Union army of
17,000, and he proclaimed a naval blockade of southern ports in May, excluding
even drugs and medicine. By June 8 the states of Arkansas, North Carolina,
Virginia, and Tennessee had also seceded and joined the Confederate States. On
June 26 the New York Tribune published “The Nation’s War Cry,” urging
capture of the new Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia. The next day the
Republican Chicago Tribune repeated the same cry. Nearly four years
later on February 23, 1865 when Chicago Tribune editor Joseph Medill and
others pleaded with Lincoln not to draft more men, the President reminded them
that Chicago was one of the cities that had called for war, and he told them to
go home and raise the men. The Union Army began robbing and plundering in the
disastrous battle at Manassas (or Bull Run) on July 21, 1861, and the next day
Lincoln called for the enlistment of 500,000 men for three years. This military
victory gave the South hope that they could win the war despite their
disadvantages because they believed the northerners would eventually give up
the task as not worth the costs. However, Lincoln had extraordinary
determination, and he eventually found generals ruthless enough to win battles
while suffering enormous losses. During the Civil War about 2,100,000 men
served in the Union Army, and about 850,000 were in the Confederate Army.
On
April 22 Rev. Richard Fuller had led a delegation of 35 delegates of the Young
Men’s Christian Association from Baltimore, and he asked President Lincoln to avoid
war by recognizing the independence of the southern states; but Lincoln
obstinately referred to Washington, Jackson, and manhood in refusing to
consider a peaceful approach. He complained that people in Baltimore had
harassed Federal troops on their way to Washington, and five days later he
suspended the writ of habeas corpus so that such people could be arrested
without being charged with a crime. Conflicts in Missouri led to the imposition
of martial law there. In May a list of more than a hundred newspapers that
opposed the war was published, and Lincoln ordered Postmaster General Blair to
deny those papers mail delivery, the usual means of circulating newspapers at
that time. President Lincoln widened the suspension of habeas corpus, and
during the summer of 1861 Maryland legislators who favored secession were
imprisoned so that they could not even meet to decide the issue. Lincoln was a
pragmatic commander-in-chief, and he was afraid that if Maryland seceded, his
capital at Washington would be surrounded by Virginia and Maryland. General
Nathaniel Banks reported to Lincoln that every Maryland legislator who
advocated peace had been arrested, and in their November elections judges were
instructed to disallow votes for candidates who opposed the war. Peace Party
ballots were a different color so that they could be thrown out, and those
carrying them were arrested. In the first ten months of the war the Federal
Government arrested 854 civilians.
After
suffering several defeats by the Confederates led by General Stonewall Jackson,
General John Pope began waging war on civilians in Virginia. His General Order
No. 11 was issued on July 23, 1862 and required men behind Union lines to take
a loyalty oath to the United States; those suspected of breaking their oath
could be shot and have their property confiscated. Hundreds of southern
churches were burned, and ministers who refused to pray publicly for Lincoln
were imprisoned. On July 25 Pope issued General Order No. 13 which ordered
soldiers not to guard private homes or property of those who were hostile to
the Federal Government. This and the previous General Order No. 5 allowed Union
soldiers to rob and mistreat civilians.
Two
days after he announced the Emancipation Proclamation on September 22, 1862,
Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus throughout the nation. Careful
research by scholars, such as Mark E. Neely, Jr., indicates that during the
Civil War the Federal Government imprisoned more than 14,000 civilians for
opposing the Government or its war in some way. Lincoln authorized military
officers to shut down newspapers if they were disrupting recruiting or the war
effort. The Provost Marshal General’s Bureau was organized in 1863, and by the
end of the war two years later they had arrested and returned to the Union Army
76,526 deserters. During the draft 161,286 citizens failed to report to the
Union Army, but how many of them were arrested is unknown.
Lincoln
also had imperial ambitions for the United States, and he used Government
subsidies to finance the transcontinental railroad to the west coast. In 1862 a
crop failure caused starvation among the Santee Sioux because the Federal
Government refused to pay them the $1,410,000 owed them from the sale of 24
million acres in 1851. When the Sioux revolted, General John Pope tried to
exterminate them. Hundreds of Indians were held as prisoners of war and were
given military trials that sentenced 303 to death. President Lincoln commuted
most of these sentences, but thirty-nine were put to death in the largest mass
execution in the history of the United States. After Lincoln’s death under
mostly Republican administrations the experienced military would be used to
attack any Indians who were in the way of the railroads and the western
expansion of the United States. Lincoln was ambitious on behalf of the United
States and did not want to see the empire divided. He developed the power of
the imperial presidency as commander-in-chief by arrogating to himself
extra-constitutional “war powers.”
In
1863 at Geneva efforts were made to codify an international convention on the
conduct of war, and on April 24 President Lincoln issued General Order No. 100
on proper conduct during war. Written by his advisor Franz Lieber, this was
issued as “Instructions for the Government of Armies of the United States in
the Field.” However, this code allowed military commanders to make exceptions
when they believed it was necessary. Specifically the code allowed them to
destroy property and withhold the means of subsistence from the enemy and to
appropriate whatever the country afforded for the subsistence of the army. This
code also endorsed military retaliation, and Union commanders were allowed to
take hostages to deter guerrilla action.
While
General George McClellan and other generals in the east tended to be more
conciliatory, in the west Generals Ulysses S. Grant, William T. Sherman, and
others soon began foraging and burning towns and crops. Sherman declared all
people in the South enemies and traitors so that he could justify waging war
against civilians. As they closed in on Vicksburg in 1863, the Union Army
stripped the surrounding land in Mississippi of crops and burned the houses.
Sherman ordered Jackson bombarded every five minutes day and night, and then
his soldiers sacked and destroyed the city. Sherman told Grant that they had
devastated the land for thirty miles around. Sherman’s forces also destroyed
the city of Meridian.
In
the late summer of 1864 Sherman’s army bombarded Atlanta and then destroyed
ninety percent of the city. As they marched to Savannah robbing and plundering,
Sherman ordered randomly chosen civilians killed in retaliation for attacks by
Confederate soldiers. Because South Carolina began the secession movement,
Sherman ordered his men to pillage, plunder, and sack cities there even more
ruthlessly. His chaplain James Stillwell reported that a majority of the
cities, villages, and county houses were burned to the ground. In late 1864 the
Union cavalry led by Philip Sheridan ravaged the Shenandoah Valley by
pillaging, plundering, and burning. Lincoln was overjoyed by the “victories” of
Sherman and Sheridan because they assured his re-election that November.
The
question I am raising is whether war was the best way to resolve these
conflicts. To answer this question as best we can, let us explore various
scenarios of what might have happened if Lincoln had allowed the South to
secede. In the 19th century most nations in the world abolished slavery by
peaceful means. The British freed all the slaves in their empire in six years,
completing the process in 1840. Most Latin American nations emancipated all
their slaves between 1813 and 1854, and the gradual liberation of slaves in
Brazil was completed in 1888. The only other violent emancipation of slaves was
the slave uprising in Haiti in 1794.
Clearly
the historical trend in this era was toward emancipation and the abolition of
slavery. The proportion of slaves in the population had been declining for
three decades in Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri, and most of Virginia.
The American Civil War, which Lincoln called the War of the Rebellion and
others called the War Between the States, cost $6.6 billion and was borne about
equally by both sides. The greatest cost of the Civil War was the death of 625,000
people—one-third in combat and two-thirds by disease. In the South one out of
four males between the ages of twenty and forty perished in the war. Hundreds
of thousands were also wounded, and tens of thousands were crippled. Nearly
forty percent of the American economy was destroyed directly by the war. From the monetary costs alone all the
slaves could have been freed by compensating their former owners while
providing each of the former slaves with forty acres.
If Lincoln had agreed to
negotiate the settlement of the Federal installations in the seceded states and
their portion of the national debt, and if he gave up the exploitative taxes,
then most of the costs of the war probably could have been saved. The remaining northern states may have
lost some of the wealth they were exploiting from the South by the tariffs, but
that would have been a small loss compared to the war costs. The greatest
advantage of a peaceful settlement would have been saving the 625,000 lives
that were lost and the other injuries. One can hardly overestimate the
psychological trauma caused by young men being forced to kill their fellow
countrymen in miserable conditions that caused so many to die of disease. Many
civilians were also killed, wounded, or imprisoned.
If
some of the slave states had remained in the Union, then they would have
continued as before. Gradual emancipation with compensation to the former
owners might have been negotiated so that the Union would eventually have
become free of slavery. The question is how long the Confederate States would
have maintained their “peculiar institution” of slavery against the trend of
modern history. Instead of being forced to emancipate the slaves without
compensation, they could have worked out some sort of gradual emancipation
eventually. Without a war surely almost all those staying in the Union would
have been much better off. Also the whites in the seceded states would have
been more prosperous and safe compared to the utter defeat they suffered in the
war and during the military occupation referred to as “Reconstruction.”
One
can argue that the slaves in the seceded states would have been worse off. Yet
they also suffered in the devastating war. The southern slaves liberated by the
North were given a period of twelve years to reconstruct their lives during
which they were favored with exceptional political opportunities because of the
Union occupation that disenfranchised the rebels. Yet the resentment of the
white southerners to having this forced on them led to a strong reaction after
Reconstruction was ended in 1877. The whites then developed the segregation
system of Jim Crow laws that perpetuated hatred between the races for the next
century. So for several generations this discrimination lowered the quality of
life for the slaves’ descendants.
If
there had been no war, the northern abolitionists could have found ways to help
the slaves in the South, and most likely the Fugitive Slave Law would not have
been enforced. If all the slave states seceded, then slaves could have run away
to the northern states. One could argue that this might also have led to a war.
Yet the North could simply defend its borders. It seems to me that in this
situation it would have been much less likely that either side would have
significantly invaded the other’s territory. The northerners might have used
economic pressures to urge the southerners to emancipate their slaves.
Eventually the southern states would have learned what all other countries had
found out—that free labor is more productive and more socially desirable than
slavery.
After
the Confederate States emancipated their slaves, they would likely have wanted
to be readmitted into the United States. Thus the nation could have been
reunited with less resentment than after a war because the northerners would
have respected the right of the southerners to exercise their own sovereignty
and learn their own lessons their own way without having them forced upon them.
Americans claim to value freedom greatly, but the military tradition of fighting
and winning wars is the opposite of the respect for the freedom of others. The
history of the United States since then would probably have been more peaceful.
The United States might not have gone to war against the Spanish empire in
1898. If the United States had not gone abroad to join the useless carnage of
the First World War in Europe, some historians have argued that the peace may
not have caused the resentments in Germany that led to the Second World War.
Understanding
this tragic flaw in Lincoln’s character that led to the terrible Civil War is
especially significant because his virtues of honesty, intellect, integrity,
compassion, mercy, humor, determination, diligence, and sense of justice make
him one of America’s greatest heroes. His talents would have been much better
put to use in using diplomatic and political skills rather than in prosecuting
a brutal war. Because of Lincoln’s imperialistic approach to this crisis, the
Federal Government of the United States was greatly strengthened and centralized.
Without the war the people in the states would have retained more local
control. He also developed the role of the President as commander-in-chief in
perhaps the largest war in western civilization up to that time. This war was a
transition to modern warfare in which the industries of nations are pitted
against each other, and millions of people are put in harm’s way.
These
lessons are important now when the United States has become bogged down in two
unnecessary wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. When are we going to learn that it
does not spread freedom to force others to do what we want? Force is the
opposite of freedom. If we used a fraction of what we waste on military
spending to help people in other nations, they would be our friends as well as being
much more prosperous. Humanity needs to learn how to solve its conflicts in
peaceful ways because otherwise we are likely to destroy ourselves and ravage
the environment of this planet with the possible consequence of leaving a
desolate place to those who may survive.
As
Americans maybe we need to ask ourselves why we allowed the terrible injustice
of slavery to lead to such a destructive war when every other nation except
Haiti managed to resolve this issue without horrendous violence. Why is the United
States continuing to arrogate to itself the role of policing the world with our
military might? Huge military spending since World War II and especially since
1981 has led to a national debt that has passed ten trillion dollars. The
United States is now spending more on the military than the rest of the world
combined. The United States Government is currently teetering on the brink of
bankruptcy because we have been wasting our resources and living beyond our
means. Let us pray and work hard in peaceful ways so that the day of reckoning
for our country can be faced and resolved without massive violence and
suffering. Let us work together for a world that is peaceful, just, free,
prosperous, and ecologically sustainable.
Copyright © 2008 by Sanderson Beck
http://www.san.beck.org/LincolnCivilWar.html
Could the
Civil War have been averted
Slavery was
on the wane in 1861. In the United States, the transport of slaves had been
outlawed 53 years earlier by Thomas Jefferson in the Act Prohibiting the
Importation of Slaves (1807) and the Abolition of the Slave Trade Act in
England (1807). Slavery was a dying and repugnant institution.
http://www.emarotta.com/protective-tariffs-the-primary-cause-of-the-civil-war/
Comments
Secession
was legal in 1861 and it is legal today. The Civil War was instigated by the
North with the combination of the Tariff, the blockade and the insistence on
ending slavery. The offer to compensate slave owners should have ended the
conflict if it had been coupled with some relief on the tariff. The South took
in most of the tariff revenue for the entire US. That didn’t help make the
South think they should negotiate.
This should
have been handled immediately after 1807. Besides banning slave import,
Jefferson could have passed laws ending the ownership of persons. Slave owners would have immediately lost the
ownership, but would have been fully reimbursed by the North for dollar value
of their slaves. Slaves could have been
declared “indentured servants” and worked off the cost in 5 years. Slaves would no longer be beaten and slave
families would no longer be separated.
Slaves would be able to remain on their plantations to work for food and
lodging. Some slaves would have stayed
and others would move to other plantations or otherwise fend for themselves.
Slaves would be encouraged to read and write to prepare for citizenship.
Starving Irish could have been offered plantation work for food and lodging.
Given the
fact that the Founding Documents stated that “all men are created equal”, I
would have been a good idea to transition to slavery earlier to remove this
conundrum in the law.
Lincoln’s
“opinion” that secession wasn’t legal needs to be settled by the Congress to
reinstate the rights of all states to secede and all states’ rights according
to the 10th Amendment. This
would include even those states who formed later; they obviously believed they
would remain sovereign. We need an entirely new group in the federal
government. We need patriots who will
restore the US Constitution, Bill of Rights and founding documents (as
written).
Norb Leahy,
Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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