'^0^ » • » " A >•> 'bV" 0^ •l*^'. > V ^0^ 0^ ^^^^^^'.^ % ^^vrvc,^^' ;^' °o .**.i^'\ c,°^c;^•% /.jjs^.v ^-a>c,<^' ^^^^ *^" AMERICAN COLONIZATION SOCIETT. A [) D R ESS E S DELIVKRED AT ITS LATK Jh.l^T^TJJk.lLj lM::E3JiS'"JL'"H>5rC3^, IW WASHINGTON, D. C. JOHN H. B. LATllOBE, Esq., AND Rer. PHINEHAS D. GURI.EY, D, D. NEW YOEK. T. K. DA-^VIjEY, T'rinter, 13i& IG Parle lit) w. 1864 >rM ADDRESS OF JOHN E B. LATEOBE, Esq., AlembtTs of the American Colonizatio^n Society, Ladies and Gentlemen : I have been unexpectedly requested by the Executive Com- mittee to occupy the time, this evening-, which had been allotted to one or more speakers, who have failed to attend. I cannot do so more profitably than by saying a few words touching the condition and prospects of the Colonization cause. The question is constantly asked, " What are you doing — how many emigrants are you sending to Africa f And the invari- able reply is, '• We are doing little or nothing — we are sending few if any emigrants ; and yet, never has the success of our scheme appeared more certain than at the present time." The paucity of emigrants and the smallness of our collectionfl are susceptible of easy explanation ; so, too, are the grounds of our unhesitating confidence in the future. We are engaged in a contest unparalleled in the history of -^ the world ; and the prominence which it has given to the sub- ject of slavery, and the general belief that it will end in the freedom, sooner Or later,, of all who are now held in bondage, has led many to suppose that the condition of the negro will be eo much modified, when peace shall be established, that the separation of the two races, toward which Colonization tends, will be no longer necessary ; and that whites and negroes will come to be regarded as equals, socially ; or that, at any rate, there will be a fair division between tliem of the rewards of in- dHstry, if not of place and power. That the negro should be credulous at the suggestion of so pleasant an illusion, is not unnatural ; and although his past ex- perience ought to create doubts, as to the probability of such a result, yet, we would be more surprised if he did not wait to see the issue of the war, before he made up his mind about Col- onization, than we are at his doing so. The hesitation of the free negro to emigrate at this time, abandoning the vague and dreamy hope of some great, but un- defined good that is to befal him when the war is ended, is thus readily accounted for ; and until his eyes shall be opened to the truth, we can expect but very few emigrants from this quarter. While the war, in this way, aflects indirectly the supply of emigrants, it has entirely cut us ofi" from our usual supply of slaves, emancipated by southern masters, for emigration to Li- beria. And here, again, Colonization suflers for the present. But the dreams we have above referred to are not couFmed to the negro. The whites indulge in them. They lose sight of the mighty and paramount question of our Union; and, because the collateral one of the negro has been made prominent, they seem to imagine that the war will end by overcoming all the preju- dices of the whites, annulling the law of races, and iitting the new-made free men for that socal equality, which those of their race, born free, ediwcated and rehned, have never yet been able to attain. They make no attempt to vindicate these views by argument. They have a faith but no reason for it : and while they wait, in the hope that all they wish for may ' turn up,' they suspend their judgment in regard to Colonization. They sus- pend their contributions too. And, here again. Colonization suffers. Verily, if either whites or negroes are right in these antici- pations, Colonization is, indeed, functus officio ; and the most that we can hope to do is, to maintain a respectable position among the missionary associations, difieriug irom them in this only, that we have a peculiar held of operations, cultivated by us in a peculiar manner. But, are they right? We think not. And in demoiistrating their error, we will vindicate our belief that the success of our scheme was never more assured than now. We have ofteii said that African Colonization was destiny. Tin's war will force all men to admit it. Let us assume, that, sooner or later, immediately, or after some comparatively brief interval, every slave in America finds himself a freed man when peace shall be restored ; not freed by Proclamation merely, but actualh', practically free — free to work at pleasure, and for whom he pleases. It requires no stretch >of the imagination to do this ; we have only to fancy ourselves in the State of Pennsylvania, where there are many free negroes, and no slaves. What, then, will be the condition of tlic country ? We have, now, according to the last census, 482, UU5 free negroes. We will then have 4,441,765.* Our population, now, is divided into three classes, whites, free negroes, and slaves. Then, there will L>e but two classes, whites and negroes, both free. A mighty change will have been accomplished ; and the ques- tion is, how will it affect the social condition of the negro race amongst us. Will it reconcile the whites to receive negroes in- to their families — into their counting houses — to work with them ^ in the same factories — to share with them the same out-door labor — to live with them under even the humblest roofs ? Will it do anything, in a wurd, to obviate the strife j\nd heartburn- •The figures of the last ceusus are used iu these rein.irks, although the lapse of time is dailj changing them. Still, thej auswer tlie end of the argu- ment. ings, that have of late years prevailed wherever the races have been brong'ht in contact, and which have been regarded as making their separation, by means of Colonization, a necessity? The subject is too grave to be dealt with by dogmatic asser- tions. The happiness and destiny of a people are not to be perilled through pride of opinion. We have no justification in continuing our scheme, and urging it upon whites and negroes, merely because we believe that we are right. Proof is neces- sary to justify us; and there is, happily, any amount of it at hand. In Massachusetts, the free negro population is a little more than three-quarters of one per cent, of the aggregate. With a population of 1,221,464 whites, she has but 9,602 negroes. And no whore have the wrongs of the negro been more emphatically discussed than in this State. The press, the pulpit, and the platform, have all been eloquent in this behalf And, yet, after the war began, and when all t!ie contingencies of the future had become prominent, Massachusetts, officially, eschewed the 'in- crease of the negro element within her borders. It was thus shown, that words were not to be relied on; that it was one thing to talk of negro wrongs, and quite another thing to take negroes by the hand, and hail them as friends and neighbors. And can it for a moment be imagined, that the feeling in Mas- Bachuselts, due to less than one per cent, of free negro popu- lation, would be modified in favor of the latter, by increasing tlie ratio to ten per cent ? It is onl}- necessary to ask the ques- tion, to see how ineffably absurd would be the idea of any such result. Where there is one hate~or to use a milder word — pre- judice, in the one case, there would be ten times as many in the other. Now, we do not find fault with Massachusetts, when we thus put her forward as onr illustration of what must take place throughout the land, when the number of free negroes shall be ten times greater than it is at present ! Wise and prudent, keen of obsarvation, learning fast from experience, her own or other people's, with schools everywhere, with thrift everywhere, with hospitals and colleges and libraries, and with soldiers, too, that do her honor, Massachusetts lias but majiifested a matured judgment, formed with all the means of making it a correct one, of the inexpediency, looking to the happiness and prosperity of her people, of lessening the present great disparity of numbers between the wdiites and the negroes within her borders. Mas- sachusetts may love the negro race, as she does, if we believe her orators and poets ; but it is at a distance that her affection is the strongest. So far from holding that Massachusetts is to blame in this re- spect, we would have her example imitated throughout the land, BO far as might be consistent with humanity and the duties that we owe to the negro race ; and it is because we firmly believe 4 6 that it will be imitated, that we are coloiiizationists. When all the States shall feel as Massachusetts feels, a homc'for-the freo negro beyond the sea will be all that can save the race from extirpation ; and that home we have prepared in Liberia. But, while Massachusetts merely protests against the increase of her free negro population from abroad, Indiana, another free State, proud, wise, intelligent and wealth}', brave, too, as the bravest, has gone a step further, and actually taken measures to expel the free negro from her confines. What will the iuci-oase of the free negroes, at the end of the war, or in a comparatively short time afterwards, when all ne- groes shall be free, do to modify the feeling or the action of In- diana in this regard ? Will it cause the repeal of the unkind legislation on her statute book';* Will slaves, just freed across the Ohio, in Kentucky, be more welcome in IStio than they were in 1856 ? How idle to imagine anything of he kind ! On the contrary, unless the war should change humanity, the tendency of circumstances wnll be to make the legislation of Indiana more severe, rather than more liberal. We might go on, and refer to New York, where, witliout law, whites are permitted to exclude negroes from certain employ- ments — to Pennsylvania, where, in Philadelphia, negroes at one time were assailed by mobs — to Ohio, where, in Cincinnati, can- non have been brought into the streets to quell a negro riot. But why multiply illustrations ? Surely enough has been said to show that the mere increase of the numbers of the free ne- groes, after the war, will not operate to remove or lessen the obstacles which now effectually exclude them from social equal- ity wath the whites, and threaten to leave them no alternative to extirpation but emigration. When the negro race shall be a free race here, wherein will they differ from'the Indian race ; and why sliould tiie destiny of the one be different from that of the other. Will it be because negroes are tillers of the soil, aiid more docile and more amena- ble to restraint than the Indians? Why, this very mildness of character will operate against them, when the whites, armed with political power, increase in numbers to such a degree as to produce a strife with negroes for the means of livelhiood. Will it be because they are mixed up with us in the same com- munities, wfeile the Indians have been pushed beyond our bord- ers, and maintained as a separate organization remote from us? Why. this very commingling is another elemonl of weakness, ahox'ild the anticipated struggle ever arise. Is it because there are more educated men among them than are to bo ibund among the Indians, with more refinement, more civilization, more reli- gion? While the fact here is doubted — for John lu)ss and tlni Folsoms. and others, yield to few of any race in information and intelligence— yet, even were it conced(id. of what avail will all their qualities be wlien tlie question of bread present-s itself, a« in time it must, to the masses of the population, with whom the negroes will then be intermixed ':* On more than one occasion, the speaker lias asked, what would have been the fate of the negro, had Ireland, during the famine of 1847, been inhabited by a mixed population of whites and blacks, in the proportions in which they exist in the United States, ai.d entertaining the feelings towards each other there that prevail here ? Who can doubt which would have starved ? This is a question which will bear repetition. It suggests an illu- stration that cannot be overlooked by those who, regardless of Kpecious declamation, when the interests of humanity are at stake, are not afraid to lace the facts in coming to their conclu- sions. But, as the cflect of the war, in freeing the slaves, is to ope- rate in the States wliere slavery exists, it would not do, in the examination we are giving to the subject, to omit these in our discourse. To one of 'them, Maryland, the speaker has the honor to belong. There are, in Maryland. 83,942 free negroes —more than in anv other State of the Union— more than in the two great free States of New York and Ohio, put together. Nearly one-fiftli of the free negroes of the United States are to be found in this state. In Maryland they liave increased to more than twelve per cent, of the entire population, by emanci- pation, immigration, and births. And in Maryland, with. the experience afforded by this large per centage, more has been done for colonization than in all the other States combined. And vet, in Marvland, notwithstanding the kindness which has at- tracted them from other States^ until tiieir numbers have reached the ratio above mentioned, they have been gradually and finally e:sc]uded from the ship-yards,"^ from the coal-yards, and Iroin many an old and accustomed calling. Ii^ Maryland the fr e negro population is already so large, that doubling it by freeing the slaves will not produce so stri- king a change as where— further South, for instance— the pro- portion of free negroes is now comparatively small. For years past, free n.egroes have formed an important portion of the ag- ricultural labor of many counties ; and the experiment of work- ing the plantations bv hirelings, instead of slaves, has been more than -tried. It has become, in fact, a part of the agricultural system of the State. And, without going into the rationale of the fact, at this time, it may be remarked that it has been found necessary, apparently, to make the violation of a free negro contract' for hire, on the part of the laborer, a penal oflenee, instead of leaving it to be punished by a civil action at the suit of tlie aggrieved party. That Maryland will", before long, rank as a free State, cannot now be questioned ; but there is nothiug in her history or expe- rience to make us hope that the increase of free negroes will operate to produce kindlier feelings towards the race than have heretofore existed, and which have not sufficed to make Mary- t 8 land an exception to the operation of the law of races, that renders the existence of two peoples, which cannot amalgamate by intermarriage, in the same land, on a footing of social equality, impossible. Amalgamation, extirpation, or emigra- tion, would seem to be the only alternatives. Going further South with our examination, it is impossible to imagine that emancipation of the slaves will improve the feel- ings towards them of their late masters. Compulsory, as the emancipation will be, in the vast majority of .cases, the angry feelings which the measure will produce, will certainly, not j)ro- mote relations there between the races, looking in the directipn of social equality. Wherever else this condition might obtain, •we know enough of the character and temper of the South to satisfy us that there, under any circumstances, it must bfe hope- less. Generations upon generations would have to elapse, be- fore the ignorant uneducated slaves of Carolina and Georgia would attain the condition of the free negroes of the North; and, during all this time, the pride, the very nature of the whites, would be in constant revolt against the very idea of so- eial equality. We have thns gone over the ground for the purpose of show- ing, that the idea that the increase of the free negro population of the country, assuming that slavery, sooner or later, is to pass awar as the result of the war, will benefit thfe race, elevate the negro to the white man's level, or operate, in any one i)articular. in his favor, is -an illusion — a vain and idle dream. We will now proceed to show, that instead of enhancing the negro's prospects of social advancement, the war in which we are engaged will impair them ; aj*id. in so doing, make coloniza- tion, more than ever, a necessity. And this requires a word or two touching (he theory upon which colonization rests. It m:ty be stated epigraniatically almost, when we say, that coloTiization rests upon the iact that WHILK THK I'OFULATION INCKKASKS. THK LAND DOKS NOT. We learn little new now-a-days. We are living over and over the experience of the past. African coloiizatioii is the same as American colonization. The attractions of the new home, the repulsions of the old otic, or both cfmibine-i. have produced all the colonizations that have taken place -since the days of Noah. Where population ha,? been in excess, where religious persecu- tion has jnevailed, where distinct races have found it impossi- ble to amalgamate, colonization has depended on repulsion ; where gold has tempted, where a sj)irit of adventure has needed a wider field, attraction has fostered colonization. To y)rodnce the great results of African colonization, the re- pclfiiig agencies, operating in harmnnv, will be a rer will arise and call them blessed. ^^ 54 W 7. ^^^ -^oV* s** %/ V .1 4. "V/MW.* x^^'V .0 .O'^ %''*^^*\^'^' ''^^c,^' , V^^\«'* %.'-'-\