Glass £ 4^ Book. OUR \^^^^f<^ -^i-^-f-i^p^. NATIONAL CONSTITUTION : ITS ADAPTATION STATE OF WAR INSURRECTION. PHILADELPHIA: C. SHERMAN, SON & CO., PRINTERS. 1863. M^^^*<^^^- ■ From an Address of Hon. Edward Everett, delivered before the Boston Union Club, Thursday, April 9, 1863. Gentlemen of the Union Club: In that year (1789) the Federal Constitution went into operation in the United States; the great political consummation of the design of Providence in the discovery and settlement of America; the happy framework of some of the wisest and best men that ever lived, intended to effect the extension of civilization in the shortest possible time, over a vast continent lying in a state of nature; to provide a city of refuge for the starving millions of Europe; to prepare the way for the civilization and Christianization of Africa by the re- turn of a portion of her children from the house of bondage, and to combine upon a scale of unprecedented magnitude, the homebred and fireside blessings of small States and local administrations with the security, influence, and power of a great empire. For seventy years it has been working out these great results ; it has conferred upon the rapidly increasing population of the country a degree of general prosperity never equalled ; it has welcomed the surplus and suffering multitudes of Europe to the enjoyment of a state of well- being never before vouchsafed by Providence to the same extent to the sons of men ; and not without the imperfections, and the errors, the woes and, I am sorry to add, the wrongs, which attend all human things, the incidents neither of republics nor of monarchies, but of our common, frail humanity, it has con- ferred upon more than two generations an amount of good, with an exemption from the sacrifices and trials which have afflicted other States, altogether with- out a parallel in history. And now the great question which we have to settle is, shall this mighty aggregate of prosperity perish, or shall it endure? Shall this imperial heritage of blessings descend unimpaired to our posterity, or shall it be ignominiously, profligately thrown away? Shall the territory of the Union, lately so happy under the control and adjustment of the national and State governments, be broken up into miserable fragments, sure to be engaged in constantly recur- ring border wars ; and all lying at the mercy of foreign powers, or shall it pre- serve its noble integrity under the aegis of the National government? Admit the right of the seceding States to break up the Union at pleasure, nay, of each and every State to do so, and allow them to enforce that right by a successful war;— deny the authority of the Central government to control its members, and how long will it be, before the new Confederacies created by the first dis- ruption, shall be resolved into still smaller fragments, and the continent be- comes a vast Jbhjealre of civil war, military license, anarchy, and despotism? Better, at whaj^yev cost, by whatever sacrifice, settle the question at once, and settle it forever. But it may be asked, how can men support the Administration in the con- duct of the war, if they do not approve its measures; how, I ask, in return, can any free government carry on a war, if every one is to stand aloof, who does not approve all its measures? That the war must be carried on, till the rebel- lion is subdued, is the all but unanimous sentiment of the loyal States. It is as much the interest of the South as of the North to hasten this consumma- tion, for she suflFers infinitely more than the North by the continuance of the war, and there can be no leturn to a state of general and permanent prosperity [Omtinutd on third pagf of cover.] UE NATIONAL CONSTITUTION : 3At ITS ADAPTATION STATE OF WAR INSURRECTION. 6C^''XXUA PHILADELPHIA: C. SHERMAN, SON & CO., PRINTERS. 18 63. ^ ^^1. COEEESPONDENCE. Harrisbukg, Pa., March 19th, 1863. Hon. Daniel Agnew, President Judge Seventeenth Judicial District, Pennsylvania. Dear Sir : The undersigned having listened with great pleasure to your truly able, appropriate, and patriotic address delivered last evening, and being desirous that our fellow-citizens throughout the State shall participate in our pleasure, as well as enjoy the profit that its perusal must confer, respectfully request that you will furnish a copy for publi- cation, if in your power to do so. With much respect, Your obedient servants, John P. Vincent, W. F. Smith, E. W. Twitchell, Thomas Cochran, A. W. Benedict, Gr. V. Lawrence, A. H. Gross, Harry White, James C. Brown, J. H. Robinson, R. McMuRTRiE, Smith Fuller, H. C. McCoy, A. R. Bingerton, George Connell, Franklin Bound, William Henry, James L. Graham, Isaiah White, M. B. Lowry, H. W. Grant, Henry Johnson, William Hutchman, S. F. Wilson. J. W. Huston, Harrisburg, March 19th, 1863. Gentlemen : I have your note of this morning. I am willing to be guided entirely by your wishes and judgment as to the publication of my lecture. The manuscript is therefore at your service. With great respect^ I am your obedient servant, Daniel Agnew. To Messrs. John P. Vincent, A. W. Benedict, William Henry, George Connell, And others. OUE NATIONAL CONSTITUTION. My subject is the adaptation of the Federal Constitution to a state of insurrection. Hoping that I may succeed in presenting some clear views of the change wrought by war upon this framework of National hfe, and of the dormant energies it starts into activity, I shall endea- vor to remember that a popular lecture demands more than close logic and dry detail. The transition our country has undergone, is exquisitely pain- ful. Plunged by a wicked rebellion, from a state of peace and high prosperity, into an abyss of ruin, she presents a spectacle unexampled in the past,— save in that rebellion, described in the grand epic of Milton, when the race itself was buried beneath the desolation of the fall. How blest was the charm in the poet's lines, which, in earlier days, you have repeated with swelling heart and highborn hope: " Columbia, Columbia I to glory arise, The queen of the world, and the child of the skies !" And you felt how dear to you was the country that gave you birth, or in whose happy bosom you found an asylum from the wrongs and oppressions of other lands. But if the America of sixty years ago could thus inspire the poet, and furnish to his lay a subject more noble than ever Calliope breathed in heroic numbers, or Homer sang, what was the America of three short years ago. when she proudly stood the cynosure of nations, the home of liberty, and the exemplar of republics! 0, my country! if ever I could wish the fire of genius to light up the dark chambers of my soul, and inspire ray heart with the 6 poet's fervor, as well as the patriot's love, it would be to describe thee as thou wert, and as, to my fond, confiding hope, thou seemedst destined ever to be ! From the pine-clad hills of Maine to the grassy glades of Texas ; from the busy marts of the Atlantic to the golden gate of the Pacific, — bearing the fruits of every clime, abounding in the products of every zone, — this delightful home of man spread its vast fields of culture, its exhaustless mines, and its countless avenues of trade, to a busy, a happy, and a prosperous people. No dream of Utopia ever saw man so favored, or scene so fair. The" gifts of Providence, held by no miserly hand, showered down abundance, far above ordinary wants. Never had gaunt, lean-ribbed Famine stalked through the land, calling for heca- tombs to appease his hungry sacrifice. Labor, unlike that of older lands, eking out a scanty subsist- ence, rewarded here, ever produced a surplus ; while the door to learning, wealth, and fame, opened to the humble and the high. Her commerce whitened every sea, and anchored in every port. Bounding over mountains, leaping oceans, and crossing the Antarctic, her sons overcame every obstacle, — unsealing the closed ports of Japan, sounding the Dead Sea, and laying bare a South Polar continent. That bright constellation, which sparkled upon the flag of liberty, but emblematized the Union of States ; which, plant- ing its first signal station on the crest of Mount Washington, and, pausing for a moment on the tops of the Alleghanies, faltered not until it had spanned a continent, and rested on the the peaks of the Golden State. So stood this Federal Union in 1860, a synonyme of power, the temple of freedom, and a light to the world, when South Carolina, raging with diabolism, and drunken with passion, fran- tically cut the golden cord of Union, which bound her to liberty, prosperity, and honor; and like a bark suddenly burst from her moorings, rushed upon the foaming sea of Secession. This was on the 20th day of December, 1860. On the 7th, 11th, 12th, 19th, and 28th of January, 1861, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and Louisiana, respectively, and Texas on tlie 1st day of February, passed their ordinances of secession, and plunged into the same frightful gulf of ruin. On this first day of February, 1861, while the old administra- tion was yet in power, and before the Federal Government had picked up the gauntlet of war, thrown down by Secession, let us pause a moment, to consider the true character of secession, in reference to the Constitution of the United States. The world is governed by names. Never was a great crime in national life committed under its appropriate appellation, but wicked men have ever sought to dignify or justify it under the name of some virtue. Call it patriotism, call it honor, or glory, or what you will, and veil it under the mild term, secession; but before the first day of February, 1861, secession was trea- son,— treason of the plainest stamp, as defined in the Constitu- tion; its avowed purpose the overthrow of the Government, its accomplishment by force of arms. "Treason against the United States" (says the Constitution) "shall consist only in levijing war, against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort." Fortunately, the phrase "levying war" received a settled inter- pretation in the best days of the republic. In the trial of Aaron Burr, C. J. Marshall held this term to be technical, borrowed from'the English statute, and he adds, " It is scarcely conceiva- ble that the term was not employed by the framers of the Con- stitution in the sense which has been affixed to it by those from whom we borrowed it." "Levying war," says Lord Hale, in his Pleas of the Crown, " is direct, when the war is levied directly against the Govern- ment, with intent to overthrow it ; such, for instance, as holding any of the Government's forts or ships, or attacking them, or delivering them up to the rebels through treachery." In the United States vs. Fries, it was said, " If a body of men conspire or meditate an insurrection to resist or oppose the ex- ecution of any statute of the United States by force, they are guilty of a high misdemeanor ; but if they proceed to carry such intention into execution hj force, they are then guilty of treason by levying war." . In the trial of the Christiana rioters in this State, Judge Grier, following this early interpretation of the fathers, laid down the law of treason, thus : " That the levying war against the United States is not necessarily to be judged alone by the number and 8 array of troops. But there must be a conspiracy to resist by force, and an actual resistance by force of arms, or intimidation of numbers. The conspiracy and the insurrection connected with it, must be to effect something of a public nature, to overthrow the Government, or to nullify some law of the United States, and totally to hinder its execution or compel its repeal." In Bollman's case, C. J. Marshall said, " It is not the inten- tion of the Court to say that no individual can be guilty of this crime, who has not appeared in arms against his country. On the contrary, if war be actually levied, that is, if a body of men be actually assembled for the purpose of effecting by force a treasonable purpose, all those who perform any part, however minute, or however remote from the scene of action, and are actually leagued in the general conspiracy, are to be considered traitors." Thus it becomes clear to the commonest understanding that secession for the avowed purpose of overthrowing the Constitu- tion and authority of the Federal Government in the seceding States, supported by armed troops, and the seizure of forts, arsenals, vessels, and arms, is the act of " levying war," defining treason in the Constitution ; and is treason of the plainest stamp, according to the current of judicial decision, from the earliest to the latest days. In order to display the true character of secession as treason, we have therefore only to ascertain its purpose and tlie means of its accomplishment. Fortunately for the discussion, the purpose of secession, is written on its own frontlet. The South Carolina ordinance of secession, after repealing the ordinance ratifying the Constitu- tion in 1788, proceeds thus: "And that the Union now subsist- ing between South Carolina and other States under the name of the United States of America, is hereby dissolved." Some of the ordinances of secession are more specific. That of Virginia adds : " And they do further declare, that the said Constitution of the United States is no longer binding on any citizen of this State." Upon the adoption of the South Carolina ordinance, a question immediately arose in the Convention, what is the new status of affairs ? Said Mr. Gregg, in debate on this point, " After South J^JT Carolina abrogated the Constitution of the United States, are its laws still in force ? I think not. All the laws of Congress fall instantly to the ground on the act of secession." Said Mr. Calhoun, " We have pulled a temple down that has been built three quarters of a century. We must clear away the rubbish to reconstruct another. We are now houseless and homeless, and we must secure ourselves against the storms." Accordingly, steps were instantly taken to erect this new temple, this new home, resulting in a Convention of the seceding States at Montgomery, on the 6th of February, 1861, the estab- lishment of a constitutional and provisional Government for the new Confederate States, and the election of Mr. Davis, and Mr. Stephens, as President and Vice-President. It being the avowed purpose of secession to overthrow the Constitution and Government in the seceding States, and estab- lish the Confederate in their stead, it remains only to look at the means of accomplishment. The South Carolina ordinance was adopted on the 20th of December, 1860. On the 23d, eighty minute men or Sons of the South ariived at Charleston, and tendered their services to Go- vernor Pickens, On the 24th, the Governor issued his procla- mation under the ordinance of secession, declaring South Carolina a separate and sovereign State, with the right to levy war, con- clude peace, &c. On the 28th, the palmetto flag was raised over the custom-house and post-office ; and the South Carolina troops took possession of Castle Pinckney and Fort Moultrie. On the 29th, the United States revenue cutter " William Aiken" was surrendered to the authorities of the State. At this time the Governor was tendered troops from other parts of South Caro- lina, and from Georgia and Alabama. On the 31st, the troops took possession of the United States arsenal at Charleston, con- taining many thousand stands of arms, and large military stores. On the 3d of January, 1861, troops were despatched by the Governor of North Carolina, to take possession of Fort Macon, the forts at Wilmington, and the arsenal at Fayetteville. On this day Fort Pulaski was seized by the State troops of Georgia. On the 4th, the arsenal at Mobile was taken. On the 5th, Fort Morgan was taken, and garrisoned by Alabama troops. On the 9th, the "Star of the West," carrying provisions and troops to 10 Fort Snmter, was fired into by the South Carolina State troops, from Morris Island and Fort Moultrie. On the 13th, Fort Bar- rancas and the Navy Yard at Pensacola ^yere seized. The com- mandant telegraphed to the Government, "Armed bodies of Florida and Alabama troops appeared before the gates of the Navy Yard, and demanded possession. Having no means of resistance, I surrendered, and hauled down my flag. They are now in possession." The design of this detail is to exhibit, by numerous facts, admitting of no denial or evasion, that before the middle of January, 1861, the purpose of overthrowing the Constitution, laws, and Government of the United States, was executed by armed force and military means, — by bodies of armed troops, acting under the authority, and throughout the territory of the seceded States, in prosecution of the common design to secede. The detail might be further continued, showing the movement of large bodies of troops, the seizing of public property, vessels, and munitions of war; the building of batteries, planting of cannon, constructing of defences, and all the various means of war. • Thus we have a clear case of levying war against the United States, and treason , not on the low grade of a local insurrec- tion, but upon the extraordinary scale of i^tate rebellion; not merely to resist or nullify a law^ but to overturn the Government itself, — a treason, full to the very brim, before Sumter fell, before the new Administration took the reins of poAver, and before the meeting of the Peace Convention, on the 5th of Feb- ruary, 1861. I would impress upon every heart, with vivid distinctness, the depth of meaning concealed under this mild word, Secession ; its avowed purpose, the overthrow of the Constitution ; its means of accomplishment, military force; its completeness, before the 1st of February, 1861, — before it could be averted, except by that salutary force, which those then in power thought it better to