i F 215 .T7 Copy 1 THE SOUTH. ^N ADDRESS DELIVERED BY W. L. TRENHOLM, Esq., ok THE i^^- ^ THIRD ANNIVERSARY OF THE CHARLESTON BOARD OF TRADE, APRIL 7, 1869. CHARLESTON, S. C: WALKER, EVANS & COGSWELL, STATIONERS AND PRINTERS. 3 Broad and 109 Ea^t Bay Streets. 1869. /aAul^ ex -' '::i THE SOUTH. ^]Sr ADDRESS DELIVERED BY W. L. TRENHOLM, Esq., ON THE THIRD ANNIVERSARY OP THE CHARLESTON BOARD OF TRADE, APRIL 7, 1869. CHARLESTON, S. C: WALKER, EVANS k COGSWELL, STATIONERS AND PRINTERS, 3 Broad and 109 East Bay Streets. 1869. 7- G THK SOUTH. Our native South, the " Land we love," finds herself in new and unlooked for times. Her tranquil and happy past was rudely broken by one of those epochs of which history is full — sudden revulsions in the life of a people, when that which is, terminates, and that which is to be begins. Such moments of transition, of brief revolution, are the land- marks of great eras ; following one upon another they are the giant steps by which nations mount to a higher destiny; they are never found upon the smooth descent which leads to degra- dation ; no serrated epochs jar the easy movement of the down- ward bound ! How short a time ago does it seem that with gay colors flut- tering in a favoring breeze, we sailed out from peace and afflu- ence to dare the storms of war. Adventurers into unknown sea-i, tempest- tossed and disheartened, we have been thrown upon undesired shores, and all the hopes in which we embarked have been shattered, and now lie stranded before our desi)onding eyes. It is not unnatural that our minds should be unsettled and our apprehensions excited; old oracles are sileut; |)recedents cannot be applied; startling phenomena in government and so- ciety present themselves; we feel wants tiuit we do not under- stand and cannot supply ; we are alarmed by portents which we are not able to interpret. To obtain a respite from these anxieties by musing on the past and dreaming of its restoration, has been too tempting to be resisted; but it is no longer permitted tons to indulge in dreams, nor to linger beside the old wrecks, which can never carry us back whence we came. We must advance to the ex- ploration of what lies before us, and we should advance hopefully and confidently, for we stand l)cf()re the large opening of a new world. Ill our former state wo had enjoyed rare tranquillity, and had amassed great wealth, and it is not easy for the individual losei'S to be reconeiled to the loss of such substantial blessings ; yet, looking back u})on that state and examining its characteristics and its tendencies, we must perceive that, as a whole, the people of the South were not in a healthy condition. It is capable of demonstration that our condition was one of intellectual and industrial stagnation — a state in which the mind rests upon axioms instead of grappling with problems, in which the scope of aspiration becomes inverted and the circleof enterprise is con- stantly growing less. Not indolent, but having the culture to apjn-eciate leisure, we preferred comj)etency with ease to riches without it. The accumulations of our ])redecessors, and the bounty of our soil procured us this indulgence, while the per- manence of our society discouraged exceptional exertion. In these characteristics, as well as in those more immediately derived from our system of labor and the isolation of plantation life, we had been for several generations growing unlike other branches of the English-speaking family, and had, in conse- quence, fallen into a condition of morbid exclusiveness. We were averse to contact with strangers ; we looked with suspi- cion and dislike upon immigration; we were even discouraged from travelling, and were beginning to turn away from current literature. We had no great questions in science or humanity to occupy us at home ; our concei)tions of government were confined to Avhat existed ; our habits of thought and feeling bound us to a strict construction of written law and a rigid conservatism of all that was old ; our simple faith would brook no scepticism as to the merit of what was established ; our declining tastes gave no stimulus to invention ; our narrowing enterprises dispensed with the spirit of progress. Well was it for the South that the voice of war roused her from this fatal lethargy ; seeking to avert the chance of future change, our own precaution was made by Providence the means of our rescue. By change alone could we have been brought to the threshold of the destiny now opening before us. At the epoch of the war the South had fulfilled all the possi- bilities of her peculiar civilization; she had reached the culmi- nation of her development ; she had accomplished the ends of her existence ; she had filled the measure of her destiny. It is no new thing in modern history for a people to live out more than one i)hase of civilization. The genius of Egyp- tian labor, the grace of Grecian art, the power of Roman law, the honor of Mediseval chivalry — had, indeed, each in turn, flowered and passed away, but England, France and Germany have per- petually renewed, in changed institutions, the vigor of their national life, and it is to modern, and not to ancient instances, that we must look for the true t3'pe of our own civilization. Death is the consummation, not the condemnation of life, and the institutions of a people, like the bodies of men, must die in order that the souls which animate them may live. Hence, it is no reproach to our past to say that it had accomplished its allotted days, and that its dissolution was the natural process by which we have emerged into a new and larger life. Looking back now upon the dead past of the South, we need not blush for it, for its life was vigorous and fruitful. It is true that long ago the world condemned slavery, but the world has never known it as we have known it, and history will yet do us justice, for it must record how difficult its duties were and how faithfully and successfully we discharged them. Haifa century before the war, when the slave trade ceased, the South contained less than a million souls of the African race; when the war occurred they had increased to upwards of four millions. These four million descendants of savages were more orderly and moral than the same class in any other civilized country, and they remain soup to the present moment, notwithstanding the temptations and pri- vations of the war, the license of sudden freedom and the bad advice of political agitators. They were deeply imbued with the principles of Christianity, insomuch that since emancipation they have cheerfully devoted their scanty earnings to the building and maintenance of churches and schools, and the establishment 6 oi'ehariUible societies; their intellcetual powers \\ere stiniuUited and improved as far as they logically could be in a condition of slavery, and were sufficiently developed to furnish a stimulus for continued effort, and to constitute the basis of their future self- improvement. Slavery was something more than a contrivance for consolida- ting labor with capital ; it was a discipline for both races, a school for the formation of character. As far as slavery and our administration of it arc amenable to moral judgment, it must be judged by its influence ui)on the maturity, and not by its im- pression upon the pupihige of those whom God placed under its restraints. Tlie masters as well as the slaves, the whites as well as the blacks, learned many noble lessons in life at this discontinued school. Providence and forecast for dependents, indulgence of the weak, and an habitual consciousness of responsibility upon the part of those invested with power — the obligations of honor, the force of character, the power of self-reliance, the sanctity of individual rights, the elevation of dignity above gain, of worth above wealth, were all acquired there and are characteristics of which we had a right to be proud, and to which we should still tenaciously cling. Outside our own limits we exercised an influence for good, the effect of which is conspicuous all over the United States. While New England was exploring communism and dissipating personal identity and responsibility, the South was perfecting the ideal of the individual. When the great flood of Democracy at the North had obliterated all venerable landmarks and levelled all society, the South elevated still higher her ancient families and historic names to point a contrast which should abash the levellers. When the West was all one human river, rolling ever over new soils and territories, retaining nothing, preserving nothing, but pursuing all things, until home meant a camp and companionship was an incumbrance, the South rested tranquilly within her ancient borders, inhabited still her ancestral man- sions, and cultivated attachment to the soil, repose and content- ment. It is not necessary to weigh the value of the contributions to the now harmonizing national character, which have been made by the different sections of our common country. Before the war we stood too widely opposed in all the relations of life for our various qualities to combine, but now the quick intellect and fertile invention of the East, the large aims and broad culture of the North, the restless spirit and boundless ambition of the West, the conservative tenacity and intrepid courage of the South, will all become interwoven and form one substantial and well defined American national character. Planted at the opposite poles of human development, the North at the social and the South at the individual, our contrary systems strained the bond of union and would have rent it asunder. One-half century ago the separation would have been inevitable, but the characteristic of the present age is unifica- tion. We have seen all the ancient principalities of Italy brought together into a single nationality; we have seen the great Teutonic Fatherland restored to unity and a common des- tiny ; we hear from afar the murmur of pan-Sclavonic aspira- tions ; we have seen the combined power of Europe invoked to keep down a little longer the unconquerable yearnings of Grecian consanguinity. Our late opposing sections, too, have felt the hand of Providence constraining us to draw closer together, and having in the past been severally spinning the web and the woof, we. are to-day uniting them in the firm texture of a com- mon and uniform nationality. At the North government and society have been approximat- ing the Southern type ; individuality has been emancipated from communism, the rank license of thought and speech has been restrained within the bounds of decorum, propriety has become more influential than extravagance, and distinction is no longer conferred by wealth alone. At the South similar and correlative changes have turned the current of our future development towards the Northern ideal. Here authority has been deprived of its prerogative, personal distinction is being eclipsed by representative prominence, expe- diency shares the influence which used to belong to sentiment alone, reason is more consulted than usage, inducement is used 8 rather than compulsion, public advantage prevails over private pretension. All the elements of character and society which formerly were bent in one direction arc now straining in that which is the opposite, and yet the one as much as the other will bear us onward to prosperity. When a ship, which seeks her port against an adverse wind with all her sails aslant, has won the utmost limit of her tack, and turning sharp athwart her former course hauls round her yards and spreads her canvas for a changed career, the seaman's science tells him that her progress is still onward; and so may we, if we look to principles and not to appearances, be assured that the South is moving still onward to the haven of her hopes — whether her prow points northwardly or southwardly. AVhile we rejoice in the assurance of general progress, we are, nevertheless, not all free from apprehension as to the future of individual interests ; we look back upon the crude communism of the North as we remember it in the past, and cling still more fondly to the protection of our ancient safeguards. This is natural, but it is not altogether justified by reason, for we are approaching their civilization from the opposite side to that at which they entered it ; we are moving to meet them, we are not following in their steps. When once these currents shall have mingled, their united stream cannot flow upward to the source of either. Apart from reason and interest, many of us are still held back by a sentiment which all must respect, but to which none ought to yield ; our destiny is not our own to make or mar as we like, but we must conform to the recpiircments of our times and move to the cadence of the great march of the world. The feudal barons built lofty towers to shield their tenants and their herds in lawless times, but now those empty strong- holds stand in picturesque decay upon the hills that look down on the peaceful Rhine, untenanted by man or beast, serving no purpose but to adorn the landscape, while on the level plains below a thousand humbler dwellings give the shelter and security of home to a more numerous and a happier people. 9 So it is with us. Our castled crags of individualism have become obsolete. He who still abides there chooses solitude and proud penury ; those who descend to the vineyards below will find liberty and prosperity, peace and companionship. Let none imagine that they who join this movement are doing any wrong to their ancestors whose effigies stand in the niches of the ancient walls. The institutions, the laws, the manners of the past, subserved their purpose and fulfilled their destiny. God imposed them, God has changed them. " What is man that he should contend with the Almighty?" In the past we and those who, alas, are buried with it, did our duty according to the requirements of our circumstances, but now other duties wait upon us, and different circumstances encompass us. We must explore our new times, discover the resources and take possession of the opportunities that lie before us. To this task we must bring courage and patience, minds un- fettered by prejudice, and eyes undazzled by authority ; we must be intrepid enough to give offence to ignorance, we must forget to defer to senility, we must learn to respect energy and to make use of youth. Let the true and the wise direct our counsels; let the brave and the young march in the van ; let the infirm and the timid follow safely in the rear. Thus and thus only can we advance, thus and thus only can we achieve. With common ends in view, and common objects to attain, our energies should be united, and a common sentiment should pervade our minds. It is easy for men to be combined under the constraint of authority. The influence of position, the pres- tige of fame, place a sceptre in the hands of distinction by which unthinking minds are swayed, and indolent dispositions directed. Such union constitutes the power of empire, it consolidates energy, it represses independence of thought and action, it is strong for conquest but weak in defence, it may win renown but it drives off j^rosperity. This is not the combination we should seek — our new con- dition must be a republic or it will be nothing; no single mind can solve its varied problems, no single character can prevail against its difficulties. The solid front of voluntary combina- 10 tion, the irresistible movoiiicnt of intelligence freely massed and understanding its aims, are the only forees that can avail against the obstacles in the way of that kind of progress which is alone worthy of our efforts and our aspirations. Look abroa