E .N S644 OassL ?>4Q_ Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2010 with funding from The Library of Congress http://www.archive.org/details/speechofhoncharlOOsedg SPEECH HON. CHARLES B. SEDGWICK, OF NEAV YORK, ^ OM THE BILL TO RAISE ADDITIONAL SOLDIERS. DELIVERED IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, JAN. 30, 1863. The House having under consideration the bill to raise additional soldiers for the service of the Government, Mr. SEDGWICK said : Mr. Speaker : I am in favor of the bill which is before the House for its consideration, for the reason that I believe it to be a proper and necessary measure to carry out the settled policy of the Government in the conduct of the war. This Congress has already twice approved the principle upon which this bill proceeds ; and it is only necessary be- cause the two acts of Congress which have already santioned the employment of negroes in the military service were defi- cient in detail. But as the policy of the employment of col- ored men has been attacked in the course of this debate, I trust to the patience of the House to hear me for a few mo- ments, while I undertake to defend the policy of the Govern- ment in reference to these measures. This war is strictly a war of self-defense. The Government ha$^ been forced and is trying to defend the principles upon which the Republic is founded, against the encroachments and unreasonable and unconstitutional demands, and^ finally, the warlike violence of an insolent aristocracy. This aristoc- racy is of the most detestable character, depending neither upon long descent and ancient renown, nor upon any great achievement in arts or in arms, nor on great commercial or manufiicturing success tending to develop a country's re- sources and add to its prosperity, nor on great accomplish- ments in literature, but solely on human slavery. It is the foe of labor, incompatible with free public education, with commercial prosperity, entirely irreconcilable with the prin- ciples of true democracy. It is an aristocracy impatient of re- straint, intolerant, insolent ; assuming a superiority which it never can possess, and to which it is entitled neither by birth, education, nor superior capacity. To establish the right of this aristocratic class to the mastery of this Government they have set on foot this rebellion, have inflamed the pas- sions of their people by artful appeals to the prejudices of the ignorant, and have invoked the arbitrament of the sword. " mere brutum fulmen as the proclamation. It is despised and trampled on. Ko officer sworn to support it, and no one pre- tending to abide by its provisions', exists throughout the length and breadth of their country; no Federal court is open to hear the complaints of sutors ; no tribunal existing under the authority of the Constitution exists within the rebel States. And I ask gentlemen what more power and efficiency has the Constitution than the proclamation of the President ? That proclamation goes before and in aid of the Constitution. It lifts up the loyal people friendly to the Constitution, strikes off their shackles, and will enable them to enforce respect for its authority. It is said it will produce insurrection and servile war. Is insurrection of the slave against the master so much, worse than the insurrection and rebellion of the master against the Government and the Constitution ? Is servile war so much more full of horrors than a civilwar? But the proclamation does no such thing. It incites neither insurrection nor a servile war, but this bill puts arms into the hands oi freemen^ not of slaves — but into the hands oi free- men fighting at the same time for the preservation of the Gov- ernment and their own liberties. It is said that these men are timid and cowardly, and that to them the eword is a ter- ror. But inspired by the hopes of liberty, with motives of home and family, with motives of advancement and improve- ment, you will find that the slaves of the plantation differ from the freemen armed by the authority of this bill to fight for their own liberty. For such a people, in such a contest the swor(J has no terrors — "The sword! a name of dread 1 But when upon &freemarCs thigh 'tis bound, While for his altar and his hearth, While for the land which gave him birth, The war drums roll — the trumpets sound, How sacred is the sword." There .never has been an instance in history, there never can be an instance in history, where humanity has become so degraded that it cannot strike for freedom. But gentlemen say it is a confession of failure to employ the negro. Why, the greatest republic of the Old World was saved by the cackling of geese. Rome was saved by this bird; and I think sometimes, when I hear these mattera discussed, that gentlemen on the other side seem to prefer that way of salvation to the employinent of the negro. [Laughter.] . But is it true that these men are unfit for soldiers and for sailors ? What has been the experience of our country ? It is no new experiment. Instances have been brought to the notice of this House repeatedly of the raising of regiments of slaves in Rhode Island ; the employment of negroes in New York ; the fighting of the battles of the Eevohition by men •of color, stimulated by promises of freedom as their reward. And numerous are the testimonials of men of character and intelligence who have the respect of the country, and whose names are emblazoned upon its history, testifying to the efficiency of these men in other times and other contests. Gentlemen upon this floor yesterday said that we should make ourselves the scorn of Europe if we appeal to the negro to fight our battles ; and yet at this very day there is hardly a European State that does not now employ, and has not con- stantly for years employed, colored soldiers in all their depen- dencies, where colored men, by reason of climate or other- wise, could be used and made of service. So Denmark and England and Holland and France and Spain and Portugal have all had organized regiments of negroes in their armies at different times. The gentleman who has just taken his seat has said that Eome's legions were her citizens ; and that the citizens of all the ancient republics were those who fought their battles. The gentleman should not forget that the name of Spartacus, the Thracian gladiator, at the head of an army of slaves, was the terror and the scourge of Eome— drove back, defeated, and disgraced her consuls, at the head of her legions, to the very gates of the city, and left upon the plains of Italy the marks of desolation and ruin which time has not yet efifaced. But we have some experience in this rebellion in relation to the efficiency of negro soldiers. There are at this moment serving in the Navy of the United States probably five thou- sand colored seamen. I have in my possession a letter from the commander of the fleet on the Mississippi, Rear Admiral iPorter which says that he has shipped upon his squadron four hundred negroes, able-bodied contrabands, who work at the guns, and that he hopes in a little time to make the number a thousand. This excludes all who are employed upon the transports at Cairo, and upon the powder ships. At Hatteras, Commodore Stringham testifies to the courage and conduct of the negro crew working one of the guns of the Minnesota. Admiral Du Pont, at Port Royal, bears the same testimony. Colonel Beard, who led them upon an expedition so dangerous that he could not induce white soldiers to follow him, testifies to their good conduct and courage, and he shows his faith in negro soldiers by resigning the position he held in the Army, the command of a white regiment, and coming back and ask- ing the President to put him at the head of the negro soldiers to be raised, that he may take them into the country of the enemy. General Butler, following the example of General Moor, the rebel governor of Louisiana, who had commission- ed a colored captain of a company of colored soldiers, organ- ized, with the sanction of the Govetnment, the colored men 6 in N'ew Orleans to fight the battles of the Union, instead of fighting the battles of the rebellion. And with all this testimony upon the subject — the concur- rent testimony of all civilized nations, the testimony of our own history, and the examples which this war has produced, is it to be said now that the negro is an efficient soldier ; and is it to be said that the country does not need his services? In a few months the term of service of the two years en- listed soldiers from New York and other States will expire, and it is a very large number. In a little more time the ser- vices of the nine months men, raised last summer, will expire ; and with traitors in the North resisting conscription, with rebel and semi-rebel authority in the North, and traitor sympa- thizers in high places resisting conscription and discouraging drafting, I ask if it is not common sense to appeal to that class of loyal citizens, who, I believe, will make good soWiers, having the highest motives to success, and who have been demonstrated to be such, and take them into the public ser- vice as soldiers and sailors. The confederate authorities complain of their conscription laws that they allow one man to be exempt for every twenty slaves, making an army of one hundred and fifty thousand men who might be brought into the service of the rebel authorities if they were not compelled to stay at home to watch the negroes. Now, suppose one hundred and fifty thousand of those slaves upon the plantations had arms in their hands, without any organization, without any interfer- ence by the officers of the Government, how many more men do you think would stay at home from the rebel ranks to watch them ? Why, the very fact that these men, by their own admissions, are driven to this necessity, shows that if the negroes had arms put into their hands to enforce their own rights against the rebels, it would disperse in a day the whole rebel army. They could not stay in the field if the negroes on the plantations were barely furnishe^'^'-with arms, though without instruction or discipline. But it is said dissatisfaction is to be produced by this. You hear threats of combinations of white men to resist this arm- "ing of negroes. And this is the love for the Constitution of those who at this day have undertaken its guardianship ; those who have habitually violated it for years. These are the men who come forward now as the special advocates of the Con- stitution ; men whose political strength and control have been secured by infractions of the Constitution ; the men for whose purposes Louisiana was purchased without constitutional au- thority, and Florida, and, in our own day, Texas. And yet these things have been yielded to as accomplished facts, and so will it be with this proclamation, even though it had not the sanction of constitutional authority, when once you put this bill into practical operation ; for no community of negroes who have once had arms in their hands can again he subjugated to the restraints of slavery. History furnishes no such example. The arming of the slave population is the end of the institution for all time, and no less the end of this rebellion. I talk not about the Constitution. It has become in the hands of the timid lawyers and time-serving politicians, a shield between the Government and the persons and the estates of the rebels. "To such base uses has it eome at last." It is continually frustrating the eftorts of this Govern- ment to put down this rebellion. The men who can stand up here and use it for no other, no better purpose, I care not how honored such men may be ; I care not how long may have been their public service; I care not how illustrious their career; the men who come here and in this way destroy the love of every man and his respect for the Constitution of his country, it may be justly said of the best of them : "Superfluous lag8 the veteran on the stage. " It is time that his departure was signalized. The true way to enlist the sympathies of this people in behalf of the Consti- tution of the country is to show them that it is no longer to be used for the protection of an institution hostile to all its prin- ciples. It is time that the people should be taught the prac- tical lesson that the great ends for which the framers of the Constitution made it, to form a more perfect union, promote the general welfare, and secure and perpetuate liberty, are to be thought of in the uses which politicians shall make of the instrument. JSow, sir, while the timid are disheartened; while the dis- loyal grow bold and threatening and riotous ; while wicked partisans are striving to rise upon the ruins of their country ; while a sham Democracy are shutting the door in the face of. northern laborers a'- i southern laborers, and the emigrants^ from Europe to the avenues to the fertile fields of the ttouth^, and trying to perpetuate, in the name of human rights, the vilest and most infamous aristocracy with which a long-auf- fering country was ever cursed, this most wise and humane and necessary measure is rallying around *^^'^ Government, and will bring to its aid a class of earnest, ughtful, con- scientious men ; of men who, however they i j^ be sneered at and despised, have always fixed the destiny Df nations and controlled the policy of their age ; who have established the rights of conscience, fought the battles of civil liberty upon a hundred fields, and snatched popular rights from unwill- ing despots ; Puritans, if you will ; Eoundheads, if you will ; whose ancestors were the soldiers and companions of Crom- well, who engraved upon their shields the motto of "trust in God ;" the heroes of every age ; the masters and conquerors of the aristocrats in every controversy which. they have sought with them, and where they have brought privilege in con- flict with popular rights. These are the men who, with their strong arms, will rally around this proclamation and the: policy of the Government. They will sustain it ; they will sustain it triumphantly ; they will carry the policy announced in this proclamation to its legitimate ends. Let me assure gentlemen that the logical consequences of this controversy do not stop even here. We have already provided by a law of Congress for the sale of estates for taxes in insurrectionary territory. I hope that before the end of this Congress we shall pass a law for the seizure and confiscation of the fee of rebels in their land — a thoroughly constitutional measure, in my judgment — not merely of the life estate, but of the whole estate. I hope to see the estates of rebels distributed, under our homestead law, to emigrants ; to see them divided in bounties to our soldiers ; to see a well- considered system of land laws, in which all sales of the public domain in the rebel States shall be upon the invaria- ble condition that freedom shall be impressed upon the soil, atid that a forfeiture of the estate shall follow the holding or the working of a slave thereon — a perfectly competent condition for the Government to impose in the sale of its lands, and one which conflicts with no State law, and inter- feres with no State law for the protection of slavery. They may hold the institution, but they shall not hold it upon the' lands of the Government. These are some of the bitter but wholesome and necessary fruits of this rebellion. They put an end to the vilest aris- tocracy upon which the sun has ever shone ; and when that is accomplished, no child in the distant future, as he plays upon the battle-fields of this contest with 'the bleached bonee^ of our soldiers, shall have old traditions satisfy his curiosity with the idle and empty sound that, although liberty has gained nothing, although humanity has gained nothing, although progress and civilization have gained nothing, yet, " 'twas a famous victory ?" "We want something more deci- sive than barren victory and conquest. The madness of the slaveholder has put his institution in our hands. We are re- sponsible for <' se of thepower with which he', in his folly, has intrusted ■ ; and we should see to it that the basis of justice, equai , and liberty upon which our independence was gained, the basis upon which our Constitution was form- ed, should, by the exercise of our legitimate authority, be so established in this land that, to the end of time, the genera- tions that come after us shall look back and call down bless- ings upon this Congress. IfoTE. — I desire to acknowledge my indebtedness to Wra. Whiting, Esq,, a distinguished member of the Boston Bar, for his admirable treatise on "The War Powers of the President, and the Legislative Powers of Congress, in rela- tion to Rebellion, Treason and Slavery."