LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA v'?r?v^>:>.. ^VlAjY^ v-?^^n=i^S>.. W tt CALIFORNIA LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY OF ^^^'m^ CALIFORNIA LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA m GUIFOAmil lIBRHRy OF THE UHIVERSITV OF CUIFORMU LIBRARY 9F I ^^, Digitized by tine Internet Arciiive in 2007 witii funding from IVIicrosoft Corporation littp://www.arGliive.org/details/adoptionoffourteOOflacriGli THE ADOPTION OF THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT BY HORACE EDGAR FLACK »s. OF THE UNfVERSlTY OF A DISSERTATION Submitted to the Board of University Studies of The Johns Hopkins University in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy 1906 BALTIMORE 1908 \ls>'^ Copyright 1908 by THE JOHNS HOPKINS PRESS ^^W Press of The New era Printing company Lancaster, pa. CONTENTS. Page Preface 7 Chapter. I. The Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills 11 II. The Amendment Before Congress 55 Section One of the Amendment 55 Section Two of the Amendment 97 Section Three of the Amendment 127 Section Four of the Amendment 133 Section Five of the Amendment 136 III. The Amendment Before the People 140 IV. The Amendment Before the States 161 V. Congressional Interpretation of Amend- ment 210 ppendix : Text of the War Amendments 278 202689 OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PREFACE. The Supreme Court of the United States, in the Slaugh- ^ ter House Cases, declared that the j)rivileges„aiidJmmmii= - . ties of citizens guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment are those which they possess as citizens of the United States and not those which they enjoy by virtue of state citizenship. ^ This decision means that those privileges and immunities which flow from state citizenship must rest for their security and protection where they have heretofore rested, namely, upon the States. In Maxwell vs. Dow the- Court declared that the privileges and immunities of citi-'^ zens of the United States do not include those enumerated- in, and secured against violation on the part of the Central - Government by the first eight Amendments to the Federal Constitution. The same Court, in the Civil Rights Cases, declared that Congress cannot enact direct, affirmative leg- islation for the enforcement of the Fourteenth Amendment and can enact only remedial legislation.' The decisions in the above cases have given to the Four- teenth Amendment a meaning quite different from that which many of those who participated in its drafting and ratification intended it to have. The decisions in the Slaughter House and Civil Rights Cases especially have been criticized on this ground. Treatises have been writ- ten on the judicial construction of the Amendment, but thus far no effort has been made to give anything like a complete or exhaustive study of the historical incidents connected with its proposal and adoption. An examination, therefore, of the circumstances under which this addition to our fundamental instrument of government was made, and the discovery from them, if possible, of the desires and expectations of its framers and supporters, becomes an interesting and important constitutional inquiry. This has 7 8 Preface. also necessitated an examination of the legislation preced- ing the proposal of the Amendment and that enacted for its enforcement. The purpose of this study is to pass his- torical judgment as to the purpose and object of the Amendment, the powers intended to be granted to the Federal Government as well as those to be prohibited the States, and not to pass political judgment. Further- more, it is not the purpose of the study to consider the effect of the limited construction given the Amendment, but unquestionably it has had the effect of preserving our dual form of government as established by the Constitution of 1789, and, although the Federal Government has to-day, under the Fourteenth Amendment, greater powers than it possessed under the old Constitution, there has been no revolutionary change in the respective powers of the States and the General Government. Those who believe this dual form of Government best, all things being considered, must thank the Judicial, and not the Legislative, Department for preserving it. No opinion has been expressed as to whether the limited construction given the Amendment has been or will be to the best interests of the country, but the assertion may be ventured that the South has welcomed the position taken by the Supreme Court. The chief sources used have been the Congressional Globe and Record, the Reports of Committees, especially those of the Reconstruction Committee, the Journal of the Reconstruction Committee, the Journals and Reports of the Legislatures of the several States, and contemporary news- papers. References to other sources will be found in the foot-notes. It may be said that the Journal of the Recon- struction Committee has, for the first time, been used to any considerable extent in connection with a study of the Fourteenth Amendment. The first eleven Amendments to the Constitution of the United States were intended as checks or limitations on the Federal Government and had their origin in a spirit of jealousy on the part of the States. This jealousy was Preface. g largely due to the fear that the Federal Government might become too strong and centralized unless restrictions were imposed upon it. The War Amendments marked a new departure and a new epoch in the constitutional history of the country, since they trench directly upon the powers of the States, being in this respect just the opposite of the early Amendments. Since reference is made so frequently to the War Amendments, it has been thought advisable to publish them in the Appendix. The writer is greatly indebted to Prof. W. W. Wil- loughby, of the Johns Hopkins University, at whose sug- gestion this study was begun and whose counsel and advice have been invaluable during its preparation. Department of Legislative Reference, Baltimore, Md., Sept., 1908. THE ADOPTION OF THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT. CHAPTER I. The Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. To get at the basis of the Fourteenth Amendment, to grasp its true meaning and purpose, as well as to under- stand the object of its framers and of the people, it is necessary to analyze the legislation which preceded and followed the adoption of the Amendment, the causes or alleged causes which led to such legislation and to the pro- posal and adoption of the Amendment. The legislation preceding the adoption of the Amendment will probably give an index to the objects Congress was striving to obtain, or to the evils for which a remedy was being sought, while the legislation which followed its adoption will give at least a partial interpretation of what Congress thought the Amendment meant and what things or subjects it included. This legislation, together with the debates in Congress, while being considered by that body, as well as the debates on the Amendment itself, should afford us sufficient mate- rial and facts on which to base a fairly accurate estimate of what Congress intended to accomplish by the Amend- ment. In fact, a careful analysis of these measures and debates should enable us to state with as much certainty as most conclusions are stated just what object or objects Con- gress and the framers of the Amendment had in view in submitting it to the States for ratification. As to what the people or the States thought of it, will be considered in a later chapter. A caucus of the Republican members of the House was 12 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. held on Saturday, December 2, 1865. Thaddeus Stevens, by tacit consent, assumed the leadership and submitted the following plan to the caucus : ( i ) To claim the whole ques- tion of reconstruction as the exclusive business of Congress. (2) To regard the steps that had already been taken by the President for the restoration of the Confederate States as only provisional, and, therefore, subject to revision or re- versal by Congress. (3) Each House to forego the exer- cise of its function of judging of the election and qualifi- cations of its own members in case of those elected by the Southern States. This plan was accepted without objec- tion. The caucus also directed the clerk of the House to omit from the roll all members from the Southern States and ordered that a joint resolution for the appointment of a joint committee of fifteen be introduced. This committee was " to inquire into the conditions of the States which formed the so-called Confederate States of America, and report whether they or any of them are entitled to be rep- resented in either House of Congress," and providing that " until such report be made and acted upon by Congress no member from such States be received into either House." This programme was carried out in the House on the fol- lowing Monday.^ This caucus and its programme were but foreshadowing the struggle that was to take place between the President and Congress over the question of reconstruction. -^ The Freedmen's Bureau Bill is the first, in point of time, of the efforts of Congress to reconstruct the Southern States. The original bill was enacted March 3, 1865, and was to expire one year after the termination of hostilities. Its object was to protect and support the freedmen who were within the territory controlled by the Union forces. The Thirty-ninth Congress assembled in December, 1865, and on January 5, 1866, Mr. Trumbull introduced a bill to enlarge the powers of the Freedmen's Bureau. This bill was referred to the Judiciary Committee of the Senate, of ^Dewitt, The Trial and Impeachment of Andrew Johnson, pp. 27-28, and the Congressional Globe, ist Sess., 39th Cong., pp. 5-6. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 13 which Mr. Trumbull was chairman, from which it was reported back six days later with amendments. Aside from the subject-matter of this bill, its consideration is very important as showing the feelings and tendencies of Con- gressmen near the opening of the session, the gradual weak- ening of the conservatives, and their final union with the Radicals, The bill, as reported from the committee by Mr. Trum- bull, consisted of eight sections, the seventh and eighth of which are of importance to us. The other sections author- ized the President to divide the country into districts, to appoint commissioners, to reserve from sale or settlement certain public lands in Florida, Mississippi and Arkansas, which were to be allotted to the loyal refugees and freed- men in parcels not exceeding forty acres, and to direct the commissioners to purchase sites or buildings for schools and asylums. / The seventh section, which is of greatest importance, 'declares it to be the duty of the President to extend military protection and jurisdiction over all cases wher.e_ anyi.of the c ivil rights or immunities belonging to white persons (in- cluding the right to make and enforce contracts, to sue, be parties, and give evidence, to inherit, purchase, sell, hold and convey real and personal property, and to have the full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the secur- ity of person and estate) are refused or denied, in conse- quence of local law, customs or prejudice, on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude, or where different punishments or penalties are inflicted than are prescribed for white persons committing like offenses. J The eighth section was punitive in its nature, making it a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of $1000, or imprison- ment for one year, or both, for any one to deprive another of any of the rights enumerated in the preceding section on account of race, color, or previous condition of servi- tude. These two sections of the bill were only to apply to those States or districts in which the ordinary course of judicial proceedings had been interrupted by the war. The 14 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. officers and agents of the Bureau were to hear and deter- mine all offenses committed against the provisions of this section, as well as all cases where there was discrimination on account of race or color, under such rules and regula- tions as the President, through the War Department, might prescribe.^ (The whole bill may be said to be a war measure, though applicable in time of peace, for military officers were to be put in charge of the districts. There seems to be little doubt but that it was unconstitutional and that it could scarcely be justified even as a war measure/ The measure was unwise and inexpedient to say the least of it, for it petarded rather than aided reconstruction. '/ Besides providing for military courts, the bill took from the States matters which the States and local communities had up to that time entirely controlled, for never before had the Federal Government interfered or attempted to inter- fere with the rights of the States to determine who should be qualified to make and enforce contracts, sue and be sued, five testimony, inherit, e^. It was claimed that th6 second section of the Thirteenth Amendment gave Congress the power to do anything to secure to the f reedmen all the civil rights that were secured to white men. Mr. Hendricks, of Indiana, denied that con- struction, holding that no new rights were conferred upon freedmen, and that the only effect of the Amendment was to break the bonds which bound the slave to his master. He also contended that the laws of Indiana, which did not permit negroes to acquire real estate, make contracts, or to intermarry with whites, would practically be annulled by the bill, since they were civil rights. He also regarded the right to sit on a jury as a civil right.^ Mr. Trumbull, replying to Mr, Hendricks, said that the provisions of this bill which would interfere with the laws of Indiana could have no operation there, since the ordi- * Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 209-10. ■Ibid., p. 318. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 15 nary course of judicial proceedings had not been inter- rupted. He held, however, that the second section of the Thirteenth Amendrnent was adopted for the purpose of giving Congress power to pass laws destroying all discrim- inations in civil rights against. th?._ black man. He denied that the bill interfered with the laws against the amalgama- tion of the races, since they equally forbade the white man to marry a negro. While this bill was to be temporary, he stated that the Civil Rights Bill, which was then before Congress, was intended to be permanent and to extend to all parts of the country. It was incumbent on Congress, he declared, to secure this protection if the States would not.* Senator Wilson, of Massachusetts, who later became Vice President under General Grant, pointed to the fact that the laws of many of the Southern States were incon- sistent with freedom, and that the Civil Rights Bill was to annul the black codes and put all under the protection of equal laws.' Mr. Davis tried to amend the bill to secure an appeal from the decision of the agents of the bureau to the courts, but all his amendments were rejected.^ He also held that the bill was unconstitutional in that it invested the bureau with judicial powers, these powers to be exer- cised by army officers, and that it deprived the citizen of his right to trial by jury in civil cases contrary to the Sev- enth Amendment to the Constitution. He agreed with Mr. Hendricks as to its effect on the laws against the intermar- riage of the races, and predicted that the Southern States would be kept out until Congress had passed some obnox- ious amendments, had conferred suffrage on the negroes in the District of Columbia, had irnposed the .sartt&jg!ji.ious prin- ciple _on the South .which most, of the Nortiiern States rejected with scorn, and had enacted the Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills.'' *Ibid., pp. 321-323. "Ibid., p. 340. 'Ibid., pp. 399-400. 'Ibid., pp. 415-19- i6 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. The bill was passed in the Senate, January 25, 1866, by ^ vote of 37 to 10, the vote being strictly partisan.^ ^ The bill was then debated in the House at considerable length. Mr. Dawson, of Pennsylvania, in opposing it, stated that he regarded the privileges or rights secured by the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Amendments as the birthright of every American. He asserted that the Radicals held that both races were equal, socially and politically, and that this involved the same rights and privileges at hotels, in railway cars, in churches, in schools, the same right to hold office, to sit on juries, to vote, to preside over courts, etc.® While this interpretation probably could not be given to the bill itself, it shows what some of the minority thought and felt to be the inevitable result of the doctrines enunciated by the radical leaders, and as will be seen later, these very principles were finally incorporated into the laws of the Federal Government by the party and men who denied hav- ing any such intentions./ Mr. Kerr,^** of Indiana, and Mr. Marshall, of Illinois, were of the opinion that the Thirteenth Amendment did not authorize the bill. The latter asserted that if the bill were carried out, it would be in the power of the Federal Gov- ernment to establish military tribunals in every State where there was discrimination against negroes. He regarded the right to sit on juries, to marry, and to vote as civil rights, and which could not, therefore, be denied on account of race or color.^^ Mr. Rousseau, of Kentucky, said that under the opera- tion of the bill a minister refusing to marry a negro and white person would be committing a criminal act and con- sequently would be subject to the penalty imposed by the eighth section. He also declared that it gave negroes the same privileges in railway cars and theaters, and that there would be mixed schools where it was in operation. He cited a letter from Charleston to show that he was right in ' Ibid., p. 421. •Ibid., p. 541. "Ibid., p. 623. "Ibid., pp. 628-29. I Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. ly regard to schools, and declared that no one could success- fully combat his position, and, though he was interrupted several times, no one questioned his statements in regard to these things. ^^ Mr. Moulton held that the right to sit on juries and the right to marry were not civil rights, but Mr. Thornton of the same State thought otherwise.^^ Mr. Grinnell, of Iowa, seemed to regard the right to bear arms as a civil right, for in giving evidence to show that the bill was needed in Ken- tucky, he pointed to the fact that negroes were not allowed to keep a gun, to sit on the jury, or to vote.^* J^r. JEliot, of Massachusetts, who had charge of the bill in the House, moved an amendment to the seventh section by inserting as one of the rights to which negroes were entitled " the con- stitutional right to bear arms." ^° Since the House adopted this amendment, which was also concurred in by the Sen- ate, it is evident that the right to bear arms ^as regarded as one of the rights pertaining to citizens, and as this right is secured by the Second Amendment, i^: m^ y reas onably be ig.(erred that the other^ rijgli.t§^^jj4,45-rivileges^ secured^gr enum erated By" the first eight Amendments were also, re- garded as belonging to all persons. The bill passed the House February 6, 1866, by a vote of 136 to 33^® — only one Republican (from Missouri) voting in the negative. When the bill was again before the Senate, with the House amendments, Mr. Trumbull remarked that the amendment as to the right to bear arms did not alter the meaning of the section. That is, that the right to bear arms being a civil right secured by the Constitution would have been secured to the negroes by the bill in its original fprm.^^ //'On February 19, the President returned the bill to the Senate with a veto message. He thought it not only " Ibid., Appendix, pp. 69-71. "Ibid., p. 632. lUlU., p. UJ^. "Ibid., p. 651, "Ibid., p. 654. "Ibid., p. 688. "Ibid., p. 743 1 8 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. inconsistent with the pubHc welfare and unconstitutional in certain provisions, but also obnoxious in that it did not define the civil rights , and immunities to be secured to the freedmen by it.^*/ Messrs. Davis and Trumbull were the only Senators Who spoke on the veto. The for- mer, in supporting it, declared that the intermarriage of the races, commingling in hotels, theaters, steamboats, and other civil rights and privileges, had always been denied " Ibid., p. 916. Among other things he declared : " I share with Congress the strongest desire to secure to the freedmen the full enjoyment of their freedom and property, and their entire inde- pendence and equality in making contracts for their labor; but the bill before me contains provisions which, in my opinion, are not warranted by the Constitution, and are not well suited to ac- complish the end in view. ... In those eleven States, the bill subjects any white person who may be charged with depriving a freedman of * any civil rights or immunities belonging to white persons ' to imprisonment, or fine, or both, without, however, de- fining the ' civil rights and imraunities ' which are thus to be se- cured to the freedman by military law. . . . " The trials, having their origin under this bill are to take place without the intervention of a jury, and without any fixed rules of law or evidence. The rules on which offenses are to be heard and determined by the numerous agents are such rules and regu- lations as the President, through the War Department shall pre- scribe. No previous presentment is required, nor any indictment charging the commission of a crime against the laws; but the trial must proceed on charges and specifications. The punishment will be — not what the law declares, but such as a court-martial may think proper; and from these arbitrary tribunals there lies no appeal, no writ of error to any of the courts in which the Con- stitution of the United States vests exclusively the judicial power of the country." This system of military jurisdiction, he said, could not be reconcile I with the Fifth and Sixth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. In his second veto of the bill, July 16, 1866, the President re- affirmed the objections given in his veto, February 19, and referred to the Civil Rights Bill which had been passed over his veto, April 9, as a further reason against the necessity of the bill. In reference to the Civil Rights Bill, he declared : " By the provisions of the act full protection is afforded through the district courts of the United States, to all persons injured and whose privileges, as thus declared, are ^ in any way impaired ; and heavy penalties are denounced against the person who wilfully violates the law. I need not state that that law did not receive my aooroval; yet its remedies are far more preferable than those proposed in the present bill, the one be- ing civil and the other military." In reference to that part of the bill which made it possible for a man to be 'deprived of his property contrary to the Fifth Amend- ment, he said : " As a general principle, such legislation is unsafe, unwise, partial and unconstitutional." McPherson's Reconstruc- tion, p. 147, Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 19 the free negroes, until Massachusetts had recently granted them.^* Mr. Trumbull spoke quite at length in opposition to the veto, but never denied or questioned the contention of Mr. Davis. The veto was sustained February 20, the vote being 30 to 18 in favor of the bill, and so not the necessary two thirds to override the veto.-'^ Messrs. Doolittle, Cowan, Dixon, Morgan, and Stewart were among the Republicans voting with the Democrats, but some of those who were able, at that time, to be con- trolled by reason were soon won over by the Radicals. While the bill failed to become law, it was practically re- enacted July 16, 1866, over the veto of the President. His second veto was so strong, however, that party discipline and prejudice were necessary to keep it from being sus- tained, as it could not have been sustained on its merits.^^ So bitter was the fight against the President at the time both Houses passed the bill over the veto on the same day that it was received, without debate in the House and with two speeches in the Senate, even before the message was printed.^^ //The Civil Rights Bill was undoubtedly the most impor- tant bill passed during the first session of the 39th Con- gress. It was a companion measure to the Freedmen's Bureau Bill, both being introduced at the same time by Senator Trumbull. Both bills were also referred to the same committee and reported back at the same time. Pre- cedence was given, however, to the Freedmen's Bureau Bill, but after its failure to become law, the Civil Rights Bill was taken up and debated at great length — the minor- ity using every means possible to prevent its passage.' The Radicals were very much chagrined by the successful veto of the Freedmen's Bureau Bill, and every effort was " Globe, 39th Cong., ist Sess., p. 936. *• Ibid., p. 943. ^ Burgess, Reconstruction and the Constitution, p. 89. ^Blaine, in his "Twenty Years of Congress," volume II, p. 171, says : " It required potent persuasion, reinforced by the severest party discipline, to prevent a serious break in both Houses against the bill." 20 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. made to bring the recalcitrant into line. The party whip was brought to bear with telling effect, as it was deter- mined that the Civil Rights Bill should become law. The first section of the Civil Rights Bill was almost identical with section 14 of the Freedmen's Bureau Bill as finally adopted, and pt is to Jhefirst^ section of the Civil Rights^ Bill that we especially wish to direcFattention, since it was I to secure the provisions of this section that the first section j of the Fourteenth Amendment was incorporated into our I Constitution. The first section was in fact the basis of the I ^hole bill, the other sections merely providing the machin- J er v for its enforcement.! — - Section one as originally introduced declared that there shall be " no discrimination in civil rights or immunities among the inhabitants of any State or Territory of the United States on account of race, color, or previous condi- tion of slavery ; but the inhabitants of every race and color, without regard to any previous condition of slaver y^ or involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall have the same right to make and enforce contracts, to sue, be parties, and give evidence, to inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold, and convey real and personal property, and to full and ec[ual _benefits of all laws and proceedings for the security of persons and property, and shall be subject to like punishments, pains, and penalties, and to none other, any law, statute, ordinance, regulation, or custom, to the contrary notwithstanding." It was subsequently added that all persons born in the United States, and not subject to any foreign power, Indians not taxed being excluded, were dtizens of the United_States.2^ The purpose of this clause was to make a declaration that negroes were citizens of the United States, and so avoid the consequences of the Dred Scott decision. This is the only notable difference between the provisions of this section of the Civil Rights Bill and those of the Freedmen's Bureau Bill. Mr^JJVumbull, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Com- * Globe, 39th Cong., ist Sess., pp. 211 and 474. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 21 mittee, and the puta tive f ather_gf_the Civil Rights Bill, said that the purpose of the bill was to destroy the discrim- ination made ag^ainst the negro in the laws of the Southern States and to carry into effect the Thirteenth Amendment. TKe second section of the Amendment gave Congress the power to pass any bill that it deemed appropriate to secure the freedom conferred by the first section. He cited the kws of South Carolina and Mississippi to show that the negroes were discriminated against, and said that nearly all the state legislatures of the Southern States which had met since the adoption of the Amendment abolishing slav- ery, had practically reenacted the slave codes. The r ight to have fire-arms, to go frorn place to place, to teach, to preach, and to own property, he regarded as the rights of a freedmaiTT, aftdlhat the laws denying these rights to the negroes might properly be declared void. He was candid enough, however, to state, without being questioned, that the bill might be assailed~on the ground that it gave to the FederaPGovernment powers which properly belonged to the States, though he did not think it open to that objec- tion, since it would have no operation in any State where the laws were equal. In answer to the i:juerv of what was meant by the term " QJvil rights," he replied that the first section of the bill defined it, and that it did not undertake to confer any polit- ical rights.^* I lt ^seems _evident. however, that the term \^ "civil rights ■ was meant to include more than the specific rights enumerated in the first section of the bill, for^r. Trumbull had, a few minutes before, declared that the right to travel, to teaclCto' preach, etc., were ri,Q-hts which belonged t o all, "and th a,t the bill was to secure tnem to all. y / It must aVso be remembered that Mr. Trumbull had '' framed the jFreedmen's Bureau Bill which had been passed by the Senafe four days before, the seventh section of which was almost identical with the first section of this bill. That bill made the same enumeration of rights, but they were ''Ibid., pp. 474-76. 22 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. declared to be only a part of the civil rights and immunities of citizens. Mr. Sattlsbury^, of Dela, ware, took a decided stand against the whole measure, declaring that it was not only unconsti- tutional, but that it was subversive of the true theory of our Federal system. His position was that the theory of those who advocated the bill would make the people sub- ject to the absolute control of Congress, and that this was contrary to the intentions of the Fathers. He did not deny that those who voted for the Thirteenth Amendment might have intended to confer the power on Congress to pass such a bill as the one under consideration, but that such inten- tion was not avowed at the time. In his opinion suffrage was a civil right and would, therefore, be conferred on negroes by the bill. The terms of the bill would be con- strued, he said, according to their legitimate meaning and import, and not according to what Mr. Trumbull intended. This bill, if enacted into law, would, he asserted, deprive the States of their police power, and would nullify the laws of his State which forbade negroes to keep fire-arms or ammunition.^^ This last statement was not questioned by any one, and since Mr. Trumbull also seemed to recognize that the right to keep arms was a right to which all were entitled, we may conclude that this right was intended to be conferred upon negroes if the States permitted white men to enjoy it. The right to keep and bear arms is recog- nized in the national Constitution, but only to the extent of saying that the Federal Government could not deny the right, and not at all limiting the power of the States to determine who might exercise that right. As a further evidence that Mr. Saulsbury was correct in his opinion, we have already seen that the right to bear arms was specific- ally recognized as one of the civil rights in the Freedmen's Bureau Bill. Mr. Van Winkle, of West Virginia, and Mr. Cowan, of Pennsylvania, both Republicans, thought the bill unconsti- tutional. Mr. Cowan went so far as to say that if the Con- ''Ibid., pp. 476-78. """^ ~ Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 23 stitution authorized the bill, then Congress had the power to overturn the States themselves.y' If the Jjill became Igiw the statutes o^^Pennsylvania in regard tQJnherit^afies would, he declared, be repealeSTalld the law providing for separate schools would be nullified, thus making tji^e scUoftLiiirectors, should they execute the state law, criminals. In his opin- ion, the Amendment abolishing slavery was not intended to revolutionize the laws of the States, nor was it pretended that it did more than sever the bonds that bound the slave to his former master, and that no wider operation could be given it than to sever the relation between the master and his slave.2« Ije-alsQ thousbt..lkat- tlia-^bilLv^ffig-Uld jj 11 11 if30 ^ate laws in reg3rd^tji.jaiisx;i^ggjiatiQo..!I Mr, Howard, of Michigan, a member of the Reconstruc- tion Committee, spoke in defense of the bill, and in reply to Mr. Cowan said that he was a member of the Judiciary Committee at the time the Thirteenth Amendment was drafted and reported to the Senate; that he remembered very distinctly the views entertained by the members of that committee in regard to the Amendment ; and that it was the intention of its friends and advocates to give Congress the precise power over slavery and freedmen which was pro- posed to be exercised by the bill then under consideration. He said that they easily foresaw what efforts would be made by the South to deprive the freedmen of their rights and privileges, and that it was the purpose of the Amend- ment to give Congress the power to forestall or annul those efforts.^^ Mr. Reverdy Johnson, of Maryland, who was probably the best constitutional lawyer in the 39th Congress, believed that the bill was unconstitutional. He even thought that it would nullify state laws against miscegenation, though he did not think the framers of it intended to do this.^^ If he, a good lawyer and a conservative man, thought the terms of the bill could be so construed as to do this, it is * Ibid., pp. 499-500. ^ Ibid., p. 604. "Ibid., p. 503. "Ibid., p. 505. 24 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. perfectly evident that the courts might fall into the same error, if indeed it would be an error. He suggested that the bill should be made so plain as to obviate this difficulty, but his suggestion was not followed. Some of the Senators from California, Oregon, Minne- sota and other Western States, wanted the first clause so amended as not to make Indians citizens, saying that the state laws which made it an indictable offense for a white man to sell arms or ammunition or intoxicating liquors to Indians, would be nullified, since it could properly be held that the Indians, if declared to be citizens, would have the same right to buy, sell, and use that kind of property as any other citizen. Mr. Henderson, of Missouri, replying to these objections, said that it would not necessarily follow that such laws would be abrogated, since the States would still have the power to declare who were competent to make contracts, etc., just as they did in regard to minors.*" He seems to have been in error here, for in the same section of the bill it was stated that the right to make contracts, to buy, to sell, etc., could not be denied on account of race or color. It would thus be impossible for the States to say that Indians could not keep fire-arms or make contracts, since the law must apply equally to all races. There might be educational or age requirements, but such requirements would have to apply to all. Mr. Davis, of Kentucky, seemed to think that, if the bill became law, suffrage would be conferred on the negroes, that miscegenation could not be prohibited by state law, and that a despotic central government would be created. He characterized the bill as " outrageous," " unconstitu- tional," " iniquitous," " most monstrous," ' and " abomin- able."*^ Mr. Trumbull again reiterated the statement that the bill was applicable exclusively to civil rights and that it did not propose to regulate political rights or to confer suffrage.*^ " Ibid., pp. 572-74- Ibid., pp. 595-99. "Ibid., p. 599. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 25 Mr. Guthrie, of Kentucky, a very fair-minded man, said that Congress was legislating before the States had acted, before they had had time to legislate, and that the bill under consideration attempted to repeal state laws and to enact new laws for them, the enforcement of which was put in new hands. He denied that the people had intended by the Thirteenth Amendment to turn over the state governments and subject them to the dominion of Congress.^^ Mr. McDougall, of California, opposed the bill on the ground both of constitutional law and of sound policy. He ap- proved what was said by Senators Guthrie, Hendricks, and Cowan.^* Mr. Saulsbury, just before the final vote was taken, offered an amendment inserting the words " except the right to vote in the States " after the words " civil rights." He contended that suffrage was a civil right, and since Mr. Trumbull had said that it was not the purpose or intention of the bill to confer suffrage, he wanted it so stated specific- ally. The amendment was rejected, however, by a vote of 39 to 7^^ — three Democrats voting against it, evidently thinking that suffrage was not conferred by it. The bill was then passed by the Senate, February 2, 1866, by a vote of 33 to 12, five being absent.^* Among the nega- tive votes were those of three Republicans, Cowan, Van Winkle and Norton. -^/Mr. Wilson, of Iowa, chairman of the Judiciary Commit- tee, had charge of the bill in the House and opened the ^bate on it March i. It was not the object of the bill, he said, to establish new rights, but to protect and enforce those which already belonged to every citizen. It did not mean that all citizens should have the right to sit on juries, or that their children should attend the same schools, for these were not civil rights or immunities'. He regarded civil rights as synonymous with natural rights/ As to the clause declaring who should be citizens of the United States, ^ Ibid., pp. 600-01. . ^Ibid., p. 604. * Ibid., p. 606. "^Ibid., p. 607. V 26 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. he said that this was but declaratory of what was already the law, holding that all free persons born in the United States were citizens thereof. The opinion of Marshall in the celebrated case of McCulloh vs. Maryland was cited to show that Congress was the sole judge as to the neces- sity of the measure, and it was declared that there could be no appeal from the decision of Congress except to an- other Congress.^^ Mr. Cook, of Illinois, also took the position that Congress was the judge as to the necessity and appropriateness of legislation to secure the rights of freedmen to those who had been freed.^* Mr. Rogers, of New Jersey, one of the leaders of the minority, vigorously opposed the whole measure. He de- clared that the Amendment proposed by Mr. Bingham, and which had just been discussed in the House, was offered to authorize such a bill as this one. Mr. Bingham had offered that Amendment with the approval of the majority of the Reconstruction Committee, and it might properly be in- ferred that those who approved that Amendment at least thought it doubtful whether Congress possessed the power to pass such a bill as the one then under consideration. If Congress had the power to interfere with the state laws, regulating schools and marriage, it equally had the power, contended Mr. Rogers, to confer the elective fran- chise. Jn fact, he regarded suffrage as a civil right and as such would be conferred by the bill. Reference was also made to Secretary Seward's reply to the objections raised against the second clause of the Thirteenth Amendment.^* Governor Perry, of South Carolina, had wired the Presi- dent that the only objection the Legislature had to the Amendment abolishing slavery was tHe~ second section, which it feared might be construed to give Congress power of local legislation over both negroes and white men. To this telegram Secretary Seward replied that the objection "Ibid., pp. 1 1 15-18. ''Ibid., p. 1 124. "Ibid., pp. 1120-23. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 27 to the second section was regarded as " querulous and un- reasonable," since it really restrained, rather than enlarged, the powers of Congress, These telegrams were sent to the Legislature by Governor Perry to be placed on " record aTthe oonstruction which had been given to the Amendment by the executive department of the Federal Government." The Legislature, in ratifying the Amendment, stated that i|' was understood that Congress could not legislate as to the political status or civil relations of the negroes. Alabama and Florida added almost identical declaratory resolutions, to the eflfect that the Amendment was not to confer power upon Congress to legislate upon the political status of the freedmen in those States.*" Mr. Thayer, of Pennsylvania, declared that the bill could nof15e' construed to confer suffrage, suffrage being a polit- ical, and not a civil, right, and that the enumeration of the fights to be secured precluded the possibility of extending the meaning of the general words beyond the particulars enumerated. If his position on this point is correct, then"" the meaning of the general terms used in the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment could be extended, since ^re is no enumeration of. particulars in it-' The first clause of the Civil Rights Bill only reiterated what was already law, he contended, and that if this was not the case, that Congress had the power, under the naturalization clause of the Constitution, to declare who were citizens. He also stated explicitly that he intended, when* he voted for the second section of the Thirteenth Amendment, to give Congress the power to legislate for the purpose of securing the rights which the first section gave to the freed- men; in other words, to authorize such measures as the Civil Rights Bill. He did not think the Amendment pro- posed by Mr. Bingham necessary, though he would sup- port it in order to make things doubly secure.*^ To show that there was a feeling among others than opponents of the bill that it might be construed to confer ** McPherson, Reconstruction, pp. 21-25. *^ Globe, 39th Cong., ist Sess., pp. 1151-53. 28 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. suffrage, Mr. Hill, of Indiana, a Republican and a sup- porter of the measure, proposed that the words " except the right of suffrage " be inserted. This amendment he considered a fair and explicit statement of what the advo- cates of the bill had repeatedly declared in debate. He also thought it necessary in order to relieve the bill from am- biguity upon that point.*^ Mr. Eldridge, of Wisconsin, said that the bill not only proposed to regulate the police and municipal affairs of the States, but that it attempted to prostrate the judiciary of the States, and that it was designed to accumulate and centralize power in the Federal Government. He also cited the fact that Mr. Bingham had introduced a resolu- tion proposing a constitutional amendment for the purpose of meeting the constitutional objections to the passage of the bill.*^ He very tersely presented the objections enter- tained by the minority to such legislation. Mr. Thornton, of Illinois, a conservative Democrat, held that it was not necessary for a man to possess and enjoy all the civil rights and immunities in order to be free, and that the Amendment abolishing slavery only authorized such legislation as was necessary to 4nake men free. He thought the former slaves should have the right to testify and to contract, but to undertake to legislate beyond that would trench upon the rights of the States. He main- tained that the construction put upon the Amendment by the advocates of the bill would make the power conferred upon Congress by it indefinite and unlimited except by the caprices of those who might assume to exercise it. If Con- gress should determine, he continued, that the elective fran- chise was necessary to freedom, then it could enact a law conferring it. This contention seems perfectly proper, for if the premise of the proposition of those advocating the bill is accepted, it logically follows that Congress might declare that any or all of the political rights were either necessary or appropriate to secure freedom to the former **Ibid., p. 1 154. **Ibid., pp. 1154-55. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 29 slaves. Mr. Thornton did not think the term " civil rights " included the right of suffrage, but that with the loose and liberal construction then in use it might be so construed, and for that reason he thought the amendment stating spe- cifically that suffrage should not be granted ought to be accepted.** Mr. Broomall, of Pennsylvania, regarded the right of speech, of transit, of domicil, and of petition as being some of the rights and immunities of citizens.*^ Mr. Raymond, of New York, a conservative or administration Republican, said that the negroes, if made citizens of the United States, would have the right to go from one State to another, to bear arms and to testify in the Federal courts. He, how- ever, thought the bill unconstitutional, especially the second section.*® Mr. Delano, of Ohio, a Republican, thought that the clause " the full and equal benefit of all laws and proceed- ings for the security of persons and property, as is enjoyed by white citizens " conferred the right of being jurors, though Mr. Wilson did not think so. Mr. Delano stated that he was in favor of the main purposes of the bill, but he did not think it advisable to confer upon the negroes at that time the right of being jurors. Furthermore, he thought it doubtful whether Congress had the power to pass the bill, since neither the right to testify nor to inherit was necessary to freedom, as was illustrated by the various state laws declaring that certain persons could not testify or inherit. In some States aliens could not inherit and infidels could not testify. It was also pointed out that the former law of Ohio which did not permit negroes to par- ticipate in the public schools or in the funds would have been void under this bill.*'^ If the phrase " full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings " was not an extension of the privileges enumerated, then it was meaningless and should not have been put in. While opposing the bill "Ibid., pp. 1156-57. ""Ibid., p. 1263. *'Ibid., pp. 1266-67. "Ibid., Appendix, pp. 156-58. 30 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. as being of doubtful constitutionality, as tending towards centralization and consolidation, Mr. Delano nevertheless voted for it.*^ Mr. Davis, of New York, was another who said that the bill was not in consonance with the Constitu- tion, but was in derogation of the rights of the States, and yet voted for it.'*® Mr. Kerr, of Indiana, seemed to think that the bill would permit negroes to engage in certain kinds of business, such as retailing spirituous liquors, which was denied them, to attend the same schools with white children, and to rent and occupy the most prominent pews in churches. These rights as well as the right to testify were not necessary incidents of freedmen, nor did the denial of them render any one a slave. If Congress had the power to confer these privileges it could equally be claimed that it had the power to grant the suffrage.^" The laws of Indiana at that time did not allow negroes to sell spirituous liquors or to attend the common schools. One of the most significant speeches made on the bill was the one delivered by Mr. Bingham, one of the ablest members of Congress. He was also one of the Radical leaders and a member of the Reconstruction Committee, but his objections to the bill were of such a character that he could not support it. Like Delano, Raymond, and other Republicans, his objections were based on constitutional grounds, but unlike Delano and some others he was unwill- ing to give his vote to a measure that he thought was uncon- stitutional. Again, his position was entirely different from that of Cowan, Norton, and Van Winkle in the Senate, and of " " In my opinion, if we adopt the principle of this bill, we de- clare in effect that Congress has authority to go into the States and manage and legislate with regard to all the personal rights of the citizen — rights of life, liberty, and property. You render this Government no longer a Government of limited powers; you concentrate and consolidate here an extent of authority that will swallow up all or nearly all of the rights of the States with re- spect to the property, the liberties, and the lives of its citizens." Ibid., Appendix, p. 158. " Ibid., p. 1265. "• Ibid., p. 1268. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 31 Raymond, Latham, and others in the House, since he was not a Johnson Republican, but one of the extreme Radicals. He did not, however, like many Radicals, permit his par- tisanship to control his judgment and action when it came to a question of constitutional power. He was earnestly desirous of accomplishing the objects aimed at by the bill, but thought that it transcended the Federal jurisdiction, since the questions about which it undertook to legislate ■v^ere left by the Constitution entirely with the States. The great need of the Republic was the enforcement of the Bill of Rights (the first eight Amendments), but this could not be done by the Federal Government, he declared, since those Amendments had been uniformly held to be limita- tions upon the United States. The power to punish of- fenses against life, liberty, or property was one of the re- served powers of the States. Mr. Bingham also took the position that the term " civil rights " was very comprehensive and that it embraced every right that pertained to a citizen as such, including political rights. Mr. Trumbull had admitted to him that the fran- chise of office was a civil right according to all the authori- ties. He thought the evils, which the bill sought to remedy should be remedied by a constitutional amendment expressly prohibiting the States from such an abuse of power, and not by an arbitrary assumption of power by Congress. The Amendment which he had advocated would give Congress the power, he said, to punish all violations of the Bill of Rights by state officers."^ He spoke only thirty min- utes, but within that short time made one of the strongest speeches against the bill — a speech full of sound reasoning and good legal arguments, but his auditors were in no mood to be governed by reason, however strongly presented or no matter what its source. His position on this very important bill, as well as the arguments used by him, should be kept in mind on account of the aid to be derived from them in interpreting the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment, since he was the ■" Ibid., pp. 1291-92. 32 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. author of that section. At a first glance one would be inclined to think that he was inconsistent in voting for the Freedmen's Bureau Bill and then opposing the Civil Rights Bill, since they were so similar, but there was this marked difference which accounts for his votes on both measures. The former bill was to apply only to the insurrectionary States and was to cease upon the restoration of those States to their constitutional relations with the Union, while the latter was to apply to all the States and was intended to be permanent. i Mr. Shellabarger, of Ohio, was among the Republicans J' who had doubts as to the constitutionality of the bill, though I he said he had resolved his doubts in favor of the security \and protection of the American citizen and would vote for ^e bill.^2 . ^_____ Even Mr. Wilson, who had charge of the bill in the House, admitted in his opening speech that precedents, both judicial and legislative, were found in sharp conflict with . its provisions. In his closing speech, he replied to the objections raised by Mr. Bingham, maintaining that state laws in regard to schools, juries and suffrage would not be set aside by the bill if properly construed, since it only embraced those rights which belonged to citizens of the United States as such and did not attempt to regulate those rights which rightfully depended upon state laws and regu- lations. H e de nied the contention of Mr. Bingham that an amendment to the Constitution was necessary to enforce the Bill of Rights, since the possession of the rights by citi- zens necessarily conferred by implication the power upon Congress to provide by appropriate legislation for their protection. If a State undertook to deprive any citizen of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, Congress had the power to provide a remedy for his protection.^^ His posi- " Ibid., p. 1273. ""I find in the Bill of Rights which the gentleman (Mr. Bing- ham) desires to have enforced by an amendment to the constitu- tion that 'no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.' I understand that these constitute Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 33 tion was directly opposed to the ruling of the Supreme Court of the United States, since it had been repeatedly held that the Bill of Rights or the first eight Amendments were limitations upon the Federal Government and by no means limited the powers of the States. Property had been taken by the States without due process of law, and there was no remedy said \^. the Court in the case of Barron vs. Baltimore, His posi- tion was thus untenable, and since he stated that the pur- pose of the bill was to secure the rights enumerated in the Bill of Rights, it becomes clearly evident that, according to the previous rulings of the Supreme Court, the bill was unconstitutional. His speech furthermore strengthens the presumption that Mr. Bingham was striving to make the rights and privileges of the early Amendments applicable to the States as well as to the Federal Government. Mr. Wil- son may have given the opinion of the Judiciary Committee and of many members of Congress, but his arguments fall far short of those produced by Mr. Bingham, especially when considered from the point of view of constitutional law. In fact, his arguments, as well as those of many of the adherents of the bill, were based more upon what ought to be than upon what could constitutionally and legally be, and so were more of the nature of political theory and philosophy than of constitutional law. Mr. Latham, a Republican Representative from West Vir- ginia, held that Congress could not put its interpretation "^ upon the Constitution, this being a matter belonging to the judiciary, though it could give its interpretation to its own acts. This seems perfectly true, for otherwise the Eleventh Amendment would have been unnecessary, and accepting this statement it becomes apparent that Congress could not in- terpret the Thirteenth Amendment since it would be a ques- tion for the Courts to decide just what rights were con- the civil rights belonging to the citizens in connection with those which are necessary for the protection and maintenance and per- fect enjoyment of the rights thus specifically named, and these are the rights to which this bill relates, having nothing to do with subjects submitted to the control of the several States." Ibid., p. 1294. 3 34 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. ferred by it. Congress had the power, in fact it had already exercised it, to declare that all, regardless of color or race, should have an equal right to testify in the Federal Courts, an equal participation in all the rights and privileges which Congress might constitutionally regulate, but he denied that Congress had the right to interfere with the internal policy of the States so as to define and regulate the civil rights and immunities of the inhabitants thereof. His objections were not limited to the questions of its con- stitutionality alone, for he considered it one of a series of measures, which, if adopted, would change the whole policy as well as the very form of our Government " by a complete centralization of all power in the National Government."'^* We have seen that there was apprenhension among Re- publicans, as well as among the Democrats that the term "' civil rights " might be construed to confer suffrage, and in order to remove all doubt on that score, Mr. Wilson, re- iterating that it did not alter his construction of the bill, added a new section by way of amendment that the bill should not be so construed as to affect the laws of any State concerning the right of suffrage. The amendment was agreed to without division or comment.^'^ Mr. Bingham had also moved that the Committee be instructed to strike out " and there shall be no discrimination in civil rights or immunities among citizens of the United States in any State or Territory of the United States on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude." This motion was de- feated by a vote of 113 to 37. It is rather singular that not a Democrat voted to instruct the Committee to strike out the above clause. The bill was then recommitted without instructions by a vote of 82 to 70.^® It is worthy of notice that, although Mr. Bingham's motion was defeated, the Committee nevertheless reported back the bill with the identical changes that he had pro- posed or suggested. Mr. Wilson, in reporting the bill with ** Ibid., pp. 1295-96. "Ibid., p. 1 162, also Blaine's "Twenty Years of Congress," II, p. 175. "Ibid., pp. 1291 and 1296. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 35 this amendment, said it did not materially change the bill, but that some feared the deleted words might give warrant for a latitudinarian construction not intended. If this were true, why had the proposal of Mr. Bingham been objected to so seriously? It is impossible to say just why the words were struck out, though it might be inferred that it was done in order to secure the passage of the bill, for there might have been considerable opposition to the clause which had not been expressed. Thirty-seven Republicans had more- over voted to that effect, and this of itself must have had some weight. The. amendment stating that suffrage was not to be regarded as a civil right or immunity became un- necessary after those words were struck out.^'^ The final vote on the passage of the bill was iii to 38. The following Republicans voted with the Democrats against jthe passage of the bill : Messrs. Bingham, Latham, Phelps, W. H. Randall, Rousseau, and Smith. All of these, ex- cept Mr. Bingham, were from the border states of Ken- tucky, West Virginia and Maryland, where there was a considerable number of negroes. Mr. Bingham's objection to the bill was based entirely upon constitutional grounds. Mr. Raymond would probably have voted against the bill had he been present. To show the view that the minority had of the bill to the last, Mr. LeBlond moved, after the bill had passed, to 1 amend its title by making it read : " A bill to abrogate the | rights and break down the judicial system of the States." The amendments made in the House were concurred in by the Senate without division on March 15. On March 27, the President returned the bill with his ^objections to the Senate, where it had, originated^ He gave his objections ad seriatim to each section, using many of the arguments which had been urged in Congress against it, and holding that it was both unnecessary and unconstitutional and that it discriminated between negroes and intelligent foreigners. He characterized it as a stride towards the con- centration of all legislative power in the National Govern- " Ibid., pp. 1366-67. / 36 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. 'ment.^^ His arguments were calm, clear, and temperate. The galleries and floor of the Senate Chamber were crowded when the veto message of the President was received, but the reading of it was postponed for some time, for the e€tse of Senator Stockton was being considered.^' It is rather significant that his case was not finally disposed of until it was definitely known that the ..Civil Rights Bill had been .vetoed, " Ibid., p. 1679. Referring to the rights secured by the first sec- tion, he said, " a perfect equality of the white and colored races is attempted to be fixed by Federal law in every State of the Union, over the vast field of state jurisdiction covered by the enumerated rights. In no one of these can any State ever exer- cise any power of discrimination between the different races. In the exercise of state policy over matters exclusively affecting the people of each State, it has frequently been thought expedient to discriminate between the two races. By the statutes of some of the States, northern as well as southern, it is enacted, for in- stance, that no white person shall intermarry with a negro or mulatto." He stated that he did not believe that the bill would annul state laws in regard to marriage, but that if Congress had the power to provide that there should be no discrimination in the matters enumerated in the bill, then it could pass a law repealing the laws of the States in regard to marriage. He then continued: "Hitherto every subject embraced in the enumeration of rights contained in this bill has been considered as exclusively belonging to the States. They all relate to the in- ternal policy and economy of the respective States. If it be granted that Congress can repeal all state laws, discriminating be- tween whites and blacks in the subjects covered by this bill, why, it may be asked, may not Congress repeal, in the same way, all state laws discriminating between the two races on the subjects of suffrage and office." Speaking of the general effect of the bill, he declared it inter- fered " with the municipal legislation of the States, with the relations existing exclusively between a State and its citizens or between inhabitants of the same State — an absorption and as- sumption of power by the General Government which, if ac- quiesced in, must sap and destroy our federative system of limited powers, and break down the barriers which preserve the rights of the States. It is another step, or rather stride, towards centrali- zation, and the concentration of all legislative powers in the Na- tional Government. " The tendency of the bill must be to resuscitate the spirit of re- bellion, and to arrest the progress of those influences which are more closely drawing around the States the bonds of union and peace."^ He stated that he was ready to cooperate with Con- gress in any legislation that was necessary to secure the civil rights to all persons " under equal and imperative laws, in con- formity with the provisions of the Federal Constitution." " Ibid., p. 1679, also McPherson's Scrap Book, " The Civil Rights Bill," p. 28. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 37 Unlike the action on the veto of the Freedmen's Bureau Bill, the veto of this bill was not taken up for discussion until AprTT 4. The cause of delay was partially the death of Senator Foote, of Vermont, who died on the morning of the 28th. The Senate, out of respect, adjourned until April 2. The veto message would, it seems, have been the regular order on that day, but there was no mention of it either on that day or the day following. While no reason was given for this delay, a careful study of the record reveals it. Time had to be given for Mr. Foote's successor to be ap- pointed and to reach the city, for every vote was needed. It was also desirable that Mr. Stockton's successor should be on hand. The veto was the occasion of a vigorous debate in the Senate. Mr. Trumbull made an elaborate speech, consid- ering the veto in. detail and maintaining the constitution- alitj and necessity of the bill. He was followed the next day by Reverdy Johnson who made an able speech in sup- port of the veto, holding that if Congress could legislate for the black, it could for the white, thereby destroying the reserved rights of the States. The first section of the bill, in his opinion, struck at the legislative authority of the States ; the second section struck at their judicial depart- ments, and thus prostrated the States at the footstool of the Federal power.*'" Mr. Wade made a very defiant speech in opposition to the veto. During the debate an unusual incident showed the temper which had been engendered in the Senate by the veto and the debate on it. Late in the evening of April 5, Mr. Trumbull intimated his purpose or willingness to have the vote taken if there was no further debate. Mr. Cowan sug- gested that an hour be agreed upon to take the vote the next day, since two Senators, Messrs. Wright and Dixon, were very sick and could not with safety come out at night. Messrs. Guthrie, Hendricks and others strongly insisted upon the point of courtesy. Mr. Wade spoke very bitterly in reply, saying that he was thankful that God had stricken ••Ibid., p. 1761. 38 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. a member so that he could not be present to sustain the veto.^^ Mr. McDougall rebuked him with deserving sever- ity. The Senate adjourned, however, by a vote of 33 to 12, thus failing to sustain Mr. Wade's angry position.®^ Mr. Davis reiterated his objections to the bill, claiming that the distinctions or discriminations made between ne- groes and whites on steamboats, in railway cars, in hotels and in churches, would be swept aside by the bill.^^ Messrs. Doolittle, Saulsbury and McDougall also spoke in support of the veto. The bill passed the Senate, notwithstanding the objections of the President, by the necessary two thirds vote, on April 6, 1866. The final vote was 33 to 15.^* - -" Mr. Wright, of New Jersey, who had been sick for some time, was brought into the Senate chamber for the purpose of sustaining the veto. Mr. Dixon, of Connecticut, the only Senator not voting, was also sick, but would have been brought in had it been seen that his vote would sustain the veto. Mr. Stockton's place had not yet been filled, though strenuous efforts had been made by Thaddeus Stevens and others to have this done, for there was fear among the Radi- cals that the veto might be sustained. Had Mr. Stockton re- tained his seat, with the vote of Mr. Dixon, the bill would not have been passed. Mr. Morgan, who had sustained the veto of the Freedman's Bureau Bill, was applauded when he voted for the bill, for he was the only one who was regarded as at all doubtful. Mr. Edmunds, who had been appointed to fill the va- cancy created by the death of Mr. Foote, took his seat April 5, the day before the vote was taken. The fear on the part of the Republicans that the veto might be sustained made them resort to every possible means to obtain their end. Mr. Stockton, who had been duly elected Senator from New '* " I will tell the President and everybody else that if God Al- mighty has stricken one member so that he cannot be here to uphold the dictation of a despot, I thank him for His interposition and I will take advantage of it if I can." Globe, p. 1786. " Ibid., p. 1786. •"Ibid., Appendix, p. 183. "Ibid., p. 1809. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 39 Jersey, but against whose election certain members of the New Jersey Legislature had protested, was now slated for rejection. His credentials had been passed upon by the Judiciary Committee, of which Mr. Trumbull was Chair- man, and his election declared to be legal. The Committee had made their report January 30, Mr. Clark, of New Hampshire, being the only member of the committee who did not approve the report. No action what- ever had been taken upon the report and there is little prob- ability that Mr. Stockton's right to his seat would ever have be'en called in question had the Republican majority been sufficient without unseating him, for otherwise the delay in regard to his case cannot be accounted for. When it was seen that the Civil Rights Bill was in great jeopardy, and that the Radical plan of reconstruction would conse- quently be endangered, it was decided to get rid of Stock- ton. So on March 22, his case was brought before the Senate. This was four days after the Civil Rights Bill had been placed in the hands of the President. Many Radicals voted to permit Mr. Stockton to keep his seat, and had his colleague, Mr. Wright, been present he would have retained it. Mr. Wright had paired with Mr. Morrill, of Maine, on the question before he left the city, but the latter, after giv- ing Mr. Stockton notice that he considered the pair at an end, voted. To show, however, that he had compunctions about it, he did not vote when his name was first called, but after the roll call had been completed, and seeing it within his power to decide the question, pressure having been brought to bear by Sumner and others, he voted. The final vote by which Mr. Stockton was unseated was taken on March 27, after the veto message of the bill had been re- ceived, but before it was read. Strenuous eflforts were made to postpone final action until Mr. Wright could get to the city, but these efforts were futile. .No debate was -permitted in the House, the bill passing that body on the ninth of April by a vote of 122 to 41 ». The following Republicans, Noel, Raymond and Whaley, in 40 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. addition to those who voted with the minority before, voted to sustain the veto. , /^ Mr. Colfax, the Speaker, requested the Qerk to call his\ / name, his vote being greeted with applause. His announce- \ / ment that the bill, the objections of the President to the i I contrary notwithstanding, had become a law, was received j \ with great applause, both by members of the House and the/ \ throng in the galleries, the hisses of a few sorrowful soldiej« being unnoticed in the general joy.^^ We may conclude, then, that many of the j,liles.t..men in Congress, including strong men in Ifie Republican party I like Doolittle, Cowan, Raymond, and Bingham, thought that Congress was going beyond its power in passing the Civil Rights Bill. All those who opposed the bill, not only took the position that it was unconstitutional, but, mpsi,"of tlieiTr thought it unwise and Jnexpedient_ Many even of those who supported it admitted that it undertook to regu- late affairs that had uniformly been regarded as belonging exclusively to the States. While not regarding the bill as conferring the right of suffrage, or as interfering with the state laws as to the inter-marriage of the races, though many strong legal minds thought it would have that result, it can- not be questioned but that it conferred, or proposed to con- fer, upon the freedmen rights which would greatly interfere with state legislation. Many believed that the negro would be entitled to sit on juries, to attend the same schools, etc., since, if the States undertook to legislate on those matters, it might be claimed that he was denied the equal rights and privileges accorded to white men. It does not appear that all of these contentions were specifically contradicted. It would seem reasonable to suppose that if the bill should prove to be constitutional that these rights could not be legally denied them. Having seen what Congress thought of the bill, it might be well to see what the people thought of it — what rights and privileges they regarded as being conferred by it. As is to be expected, we find the press of the country divided "Ibid., p. 1861, and N. Y. Herald, April 10, 1866. Freedmen's Bureau and Ciznl Rights Bills. 41 on it, largely along political lines, just as was the case in Congress. The Southern press was naturally hostile to the legislation. The Southern mind had long been taught to "regard the Federal Government as one of very limited powers, and any legislation which tended to increase that power at the expense of the States, would obviously be con- demned. Consequently we find the Southern press de- nouncing the bill as infringing the rights of the States and centralizing all or very nearly all power in the Central Gov- ernment.^® Furthermore, the South was the section which would be affected by it and that section would never con- sent to any legislation that tended towards equality with the negroes. Many papers at the North took a similar view, among them being the World, the Herald, and the Times. The Cincinnati Commercial also threw the weight of its edi- torial columns upon this side. All of these except the World were Republican papers. The press, even more than mem- bers of Congress, gave a broad and liberal meaning to the bill, saying that under cover of " full and equal rights " state laws forbidding amalgamation would be set aside and that negroes could not be kept out of theaters, churches, etc.®^ The Cincinnati Commercial, a conservative Republi- can paper, thought that the bill was unconstitutional, in that it would open the schools, hotels, churches, theaters, con- cert halls, etc., to negroes on the same terms with white people, and that it would make it a crime to refuse them these rights.®^ This was also the opinion of the National Intelligencer of Washington, the so-called Administration organ. The Tribune, of which Greeley was the editor, was a strong supporter of the measures and policies of the Radi- cals, but had very little to say about the Civil Rights Bill further than that it was a just measure and should be adopted. It never denied the contention of many that it "Charleston (S. C.) Courier, April 11, 1866. "N. Y. Herald, March 29, 1866. ''March 30, 1866. 42 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. would curtail the rights of the States. The New York Evening Post, a Republican paper, advocated the bill, ap- parently thinking that it would guarantee free speech and free press, which, in its opinion, was badly needed in the South. The right to hold office and to serve on the jury was not considered as among the rights secured by the bill,*® but the right peacefully to assemble, to petition, to have freedom of movement, to have impartial protection of life, person and property were.''*' It was also held that the right to keep fire-arms would be secured to the negroes on the same terms as to whites.''^^ It was declared by a strong opponent of the bill that every argument in its favor savored of centralization, and that the President had properly characterized it when he said it was a great stride towards consolidation. State laws against miscegenation would be made void by it, the ministers or magistrates refusing to marry those of different races being made subject to fine and imprisonment. If the bill became a law the state governments would practically be aboli&bed ; if Congress could confer civil rights, it could with equal propriety confer political rights, since to do either required an invasion of the province of the States.^^ The statement that miscegenation would not only be pos- sible under the bill, but that state laws against it would be nullified, may seem rather extreme, though we have already seen that this view was taken by some while the bill was be- fore Congress. If these statements were limited to oppon- ents of the bill and to partisan newspapers, we might discard them at once as preposterous. There are, however, facts of greater weight than these mere statements. A negro preacher married a white man and a negro woman in the State of Tennessee, for which he was fined $500, while the parties to the marriage contract were imprisoned, being unable to pay the fine of $50, which was imposed on each of them. The Tribune, after recounting this, expressed the ~N. Y. Post, March 28, 1866. "Ibid., March 30 and April 3, 1866. "Ibid., April 7, 1866. "World, March 28, 1866. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 43 desire that the case be brought before the Supreme Court of the United States for adjudication under the Civil Rights Bill.^^ A case somewhat similar to this, and said to be the first case of its kind in Mississippi, occurred at Jackson in June, 1866. The parties were tried, found guilty, and sen- tenced to the county jail for six months, with fine of $500 each. The military officers looked on, but offered no inter- ference.'^* The Civil Rights Bill was probably the basis of both of these incidents. One writer declared that Senator Trumbull's speech on the veto of the bill affirmed a principle " pregnant with dan- ger to the rightful authority and jurisdiction of the States." " Instead of overthrowing the vital objection urged in the veto rnessage," this writer declared, " Mr. Trumbull in reality conceded all that it involves," since he neither denies nor shows that the bill does not include and cover subjects in regard to which the States have up to this time exclu- sively legislated.^^ In the Cincinnati Commercial, it was argued that the bill was more deserving of the veto than the Freedmen's Bureau Bill, since it was an attempt to take from the States the right reserved to them by the Constitution to enact and enforce their own police regulations, and that Congress did not have the power to declare state laws null and void, this being a question for the Courts to determine.'^^ Such legis- lation as the Civil Rights and Freedmen's Bureau Bills was declared to be revolutionary in its character from the fact that it took from the local authorities and legislators mat- ters that had uniformly been referred to them.'^''^ The bill was regarded as tlie death blow to the States in that the state judiciary would practically be abolished by it, since the state courts could only act under powers granted by the Federal Gove:nimS]tlt.--It-was also asserted that the " N. Y. Times, July 16, 1866, under caption : " Amalgamation in Tennessee." "Gamer, Reconstruction in Mississippi, p. 114. "Editorial in Times, April 7, 1866. '• March 27, 1866. "Ibid., March 29, 1866. 44 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. measure carried Federal interference into privacies into which even the most local laws never entered, for the cus- toms of a community were made amenable to Federal authority — an authority entirely foreign to the community. At a public sale of church pews, it was declared negroes could not be prevented from purchasing, while a white man could if he were objectionable to the church or the customs of the church, since such refusal would not be made on account of color. The same would be true, it was urged, in regard to hotels and other places of accommodation, for if a negro was refused admittance, the proprietor would be subject to both fine and imprisonment, while a white man could only recover civil damages however wrongfully he might have been refused accommodations.'^* A mass meeting of the citizens of Carroll County, at Westminster, Maryland, May 19, 1866, adopted a series of resolutions, one of which was a declaration that the Civil Rights Bill was unconstitutional, and that if carried into effect would upheave the foundations of social order. These resolutions were sanctioned both by the Republicans and Democrats.'^® The belief that the bill conferred upon the negroes the right of attending churches and theaters was not limited to the so-called loyal States, for this opinion was also held in the South, and the desire was expressed that, if it was to be enforced in this respect, it be first enforced in Boston. " What that city has so effectually sowed," it was declared, " let it reap ! " *° The view was also held in the South that the Civil Rights Bill not only infringed, but that it de- stroyed, the rights of the States by concentrating all power in the Central Government, by making the state judiciary amenable and subservient to Federal authority, and by con- ferring upon Congress powers unknown to the original law of the country.*^ A view of the bill not generally taken by the Southern press was that taken by the Mobile Regis- " National Intelligencer, March 24, 1866. "N. Y. Herald, May 26, 1866. *• Atlanta Intelligencer, May 3, 1866. ^ Charleston Courier, April 2, 1866. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 45 ter. This journal did not think that the bill would inter- fere with the regulations and customs of steamboats, rail- roads, street cars, theaters, or other places of public resort.®^ It is apparent, from this examination, that many of the leading papers of the country, including some of the prin- cipal Republican papers, regarded the Civil Rights Bill as a limitation of the powers of the States, and as a step towards centralization, in that it interfered with the regu- lation of local affairs which had hitherto been regulated by state and local authorities or by custom. This opinion was . held in the North as well as in the South, There also seems to have been a general impression among the press that negroes would, by the provisions of the bill, be admitted, on the same terms and conditions as the white people, to schools, theaters, hotels, churches, railway cars, steam- boats, etc. The bill enumerated certain specific rights, such as the right to testify, to sue, be sued, etc., but it was generally felt that more than these enumerated rights were conferred, and that under its provisions negroes could not be kept out of the jury-box, and that they were to have equal rights with the whites in every respect, even to the right of inter- marriage. The right of intermarriage, however, was not so generally held to be conferred by the bill, but the other opinions, it seems, were clearly warranted, both by the con- text of the bill and by the declarations of some of its supporters. What the papers gave as their opinion must necessarily have been the opinion of large numbers of the people. There is much evidence to substantiate this conclusion, for almost immediately after the passage of the bill over the President's veto, efforts were made by the negroes to secure these rights. " Quoted in Cincinnati Commercial, April 21, 1866. The Mem- phis Argus practically held the same opinion as the Charleston Courier, stating that it consolidated all power in the hands of Congress. The Cincinnati Commercial of April 21 quoted the Argus on this point, but did not deny its interpretation of the bill, merely saying that a part of the bill was similar to the fugitive slave law. 46 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. About two weeks after the bill had passed Congress, two so-called tfeeclmen," In order to see whether the bill had really benefited them in a practical way, went to a sleeper and demanded accommodations as a train was about to leave Washington for New York. The demand was re- fused them at the request of the other passengers fall said to be New Englanders), who threatened to leave the car if the negroes were admitted. The negroes thereupon threat- ened prosecution under the Civil Rights Bill and took their departure. ^^ Two or three incidents occurred in Baltimore at an earlier date. A negro asserted the right to ride in a railway car on the York Road among the other passengers, and when compelled to go to the front platform where col- ored persons were allowed to ride, noted the number of the car, probably to bring suit, and departed. On the same night, another negro, James Williams, appeared at the ticket office of the Holliday Street Theater, and asked for a ticket, which was of course refused. The next night another negro went to a public house and asked for a drink, and on the refusal of the proprietor to sell him the liquor, went away to file complaint at the station, claiming that " as a citizen he was entitled to the same privileges as white men."** Before the middle of May the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company had a suit pending against it for refus- ing to sell a negro a first-class ticket. It was also stated that several suits had been brought in Baltimore and other parts of the country against persons refusing to admit negroes to entertainments from which they were at that time excluded by state or municipal laws.*^ The editor of the National Intelligencer, commenting upon these facts, observed that if the bill was constitutional it would be diffi- cult to see how negroes could be debarred, except at the risk of a suit, from going into hotels, theaters, restaurants, billiard rooms, or any licensed house where men have a legal right to accommodations. Towards the last of April ^ Cincinnati Commercial, April 30, 1866. " National Intelligencer, April 24, 1866, also Baltimore American, April 16, 1866. ■"Ibid., May 16, 1866. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 47 the negroes of New York began to " feel their civil rights " T^ _ '' ■ ' i.-»rfl , ^ J M jr I " II I IMI ■ ■ U BII ■ I ' i i ~i Wit — foiir or nve going into a fashionable restaurant, sitting down among white ladies and gentlemen, and appealing to the Civil Rights Bill to protect them from ejectment.^^ The editor referring to this incident said the same game would probably be tried at the churches, theaters and other resorts, but that after some annoyance and inconvenience, the negroes would be quietly regulated by public opinion. It was also stated®^ that the negroes of Boston proposed to contest the power of theater managers, church wardens, etc., to exclude them from mingling with the whites in an " equality " of position. They evidently carried out their intentions, but were excluded from the theaters, since only a nominal fine was imposed by the law which had been passed on that subject.^* There were several occurrences in the North and West where negroes claimed the right to attend places of amusement to the discomfiture of white ladies. The editor added that the South would have to endure the same thing, though not responsible for it.*^ The first suit under the Civil Rights Bill was in Indiana, and~Tii this case the bill was held constitutional. This was the case of Barnes vs. Browning. Barnes, a negro, sued Browning, a hotel proprietor, for wages, and the plea offered by Browning was that Barnes was not entitled to sue in the courts of Indiana, since he had come into the -"State contrary to the Constitution of the State. There was a provision in the Indiana Constitution which prohibited negro immigration and declared null and void any contracts made with such persons. There was also a law to enforce this provision, which was to the effect that no negro coming into the State could make or enforce contracts. Barnes demurred to the answer of the defendant main- taining that the Indiana law and Constitution in that respect were void, because: (i) It was opposed to the spirit and letter of the Constitution of the United States. (2) It was "N. Y. Herald, April 28, 1866. "Atlanta Intelligencer, April 18, 1866. "* Cincinnati Commercial, May 2, 1866. "Atlanta Intelligencer, April 26, 1866. 48 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. in conflict with the 13th Amendment. (3) It was void under the first section of the Civil Rights Bill. The lower court sustained the demurrer, and the case was brought before Judge Test of the Circuit Court by way of appeal. He sustained the decision of the lower court, though basing his decision on the 13th Amendment, since the Civil Rights "Biir had not been officially promulgated."" The suit was no doubt inspired by the passage of the bill, for it was instituted April ii, only two days after its passage, and reference being made to it in reply to the plea set up by the defendant. This decision was rendered at LaFayette, Indiana, April 14, 1866, just five days after the passage of the bill by Con- gress. Another case very similar to this one was decided by the Supreme Court of Indiana at its May term. Smith, a negro, sued Moody to collect a promissory note. The same plea was set up in this case as in the other, the lower court deciding in favor of Moody. The Supreme Court, however, reversed this decision, holding that the Civil Rights Bill had nullified the provision of the Indiana Con- stitution prohibiting negroes from coming into the State or making contracts."^ This was probably the first decision of the highest court in any State in which the Civil Rights Bill was involved. Probably the second case in which the measure was brought before the Courts was at Annapolis, Maryland. Here, on April 17, a negro was introduced as a witness. The State's Attorney was greatly surprised at this, saying that there was no authority for it, but it was claimed that the Civil Rights Bill had given it."^ Soon after the Four- teenth Amendment had been submitted to the States, th,e C^ief Tu stice of the Court of Appeals of Maryland held that the Civil Rights Bill was constitutional. On June 22 one~Somers assaulted a negro and was brought before a justice of the peace. His counsel held that the negro could '" McPherson's Scrap-^book, "The Civil Rights Bill," pp. 91-92, also the Chicago Republican, April 17, 1866. " 26 Indiana Reports, p. 299. "Baltimore American, April 20, 1866. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 49 not testify, but the justice held that the state law had been abrogated by the Civil Rights Bill. In default of bond, Somers was put in jail. Effort was made to secure a writ of habeas corpus, but Judge Bowie upheld the decision of the justice, saying that the bill was constitutional in regard to the right to testify. Since the other provisions of the bill were not involved, he did not undertake to say whether they were constitutional or not."^ More than a mon th bef ore this Judge Thomas, of the Circuit Couri: ot Virginia, in a case before him at Alexandria, declared that the Civil Rights Bill was unconstitutional and that negro evidence could not be admitted, since the state law forbade it in civil cases in which white men alone were parties. In his opin- ^ion Congress did not have the power to impair the right of the States to decide what classes of persons were competent to testify in their Courts.** The first case which we have found where the constitu- tionality of the bill was decided in the Federal courts is that of the United States vs. Rhodes, decided by Justice Swayne, of the Supreme Court, sitting as a Circuit Justice. On May I, 1866, the home of Nancy Talbot, a negress, was entered by white men named Rhodes for the purpose of robbery. She was not allowed to testify against them in the Kentucky Courts. The Federal Court had jurisdiction under the Civil Rights Bill. Justice Swayne said the bill was remedial and should be liberally construed ; that the Thirteenth Amend- ment was the first Amendment which trenched upon the power of the States, the others limiting the power of the Federal Government ; that the Congress succeeding the one which proposed that Amendment had passed the bill, many of the members being the same, and that this fact was not " without weight and significance." The bill was declared to be constitutional in all its provisions.®" A negro was indicted in Memphis, Tennessee, for keeping "* Baltimore American and N. Y. Times, July 7, 1866. ** Annual Cyclopedia, 1866, p. 765. Also Eckenrode, Political Reconstruction in Virginia, p. 50. * Abbott (U. S.), 28, and 37 Federal Cases, 785. 4 50 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. a tippling house and billiard room contrary to state law. His attorneys claimed that the state law was annulled by the Civil Rights Bill, but the State's Attorney declared that he would not obey or observe that bill, since it was uncon- stitutional.^* The Criminal Court of the city, however, sus- tained the contention of the defendant that the state law was null and void because in conflict with the Civil Rights Bill. An appeal was taken to the Supreme Court of the State.*^ Judge Gilpin, Chief Justice of Delaware, held that the Civil Rights Bill was void and inoperative in so far as it assumed to regulate the rules of evidence, etc., of state courts. This decision was rendered in November, 1867, though prior to this he seems to have accepted that part of the bill which provided that a different punishment could not be inflicted on account of color, without, however, passing on the constitutionality of the bill. It may be proper to add that he was a Republican.®* Several arrests were made for refusing to receive negfro testimony. Five magistrates of the Corporation Court of Norfolk were arrested for this, the United States Commis- sioner holding that they had violated the Civil Rights Bill and binding them over for trial at the May term (1867) of the District Court.*® ' Judge Thomas, who refused to re- ceive negro testimony at Alexandria, was arrested and taken to Richmond, where he was released on his own recognizance in the sum of $1,000 to appear at the November term of the Court.^°" Judge Magruder, of Maryland, was several times arrested for a similar offence. John Hopwood, a Justice of the Peace, of the same State, was also arrested. The Maryland Legislature passed a law to reimburse any magistrate or judge for costs and fines to which they were liable for rendering decisions adverse to the Civil Rights Bill. It was stated in the bill that this was done for the purpose ••Baltimore American, April 21, 1866. (From Memphis Argus.) "McPherson's Scrap-book, "The Civil Rights Bill," pp. no and 119. " Ibid., p. 149. Ibid., p. 134. • ^°«Ibid., p. 136. Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 51 of making the judiciary free — to enable the judicial officers to render decisions according to their views of the law.^"^ Judge Abell, of Louisiana, was arrested July, 1866, being charged with having " wickedly, wilfully, and with malice aforethought " declared the Civil Rights Bill unconstitu- tional. The decision for which he was arrested was made May 9, 1866. In this decision he declared that it aimed to strike down the independence of the States, to sap the foundation of Republican Government, to override the laws of the States, and to obliterate every trace of the independ- ence of the state judiciaries.^*'- Chief Justice Hardy, of Alabama, declared that the bill was unconstitutional, confirming the sentence of the lower court which had convicted a negro for carrying fire-arms contrary to state law.^°^ J^dge Harberson, of Kentucky, held the bill unconstitutional, as did also the city judge of Louisville, in the same State. The former declared that the right to testify was not essential to freedom as was shown by the action of the free States in denying that right to free negroes for eighty years in cases where whites were involved. He, therefore, decided that the bill was not " appropriate legislation " under the Thirteenth Amendment, and that if it was, it could not apply to those who were free before the Amendment was ratified.^"* This was practically the position taken by Judge Krecket, of the United States District Court, January 29, 1867, for he held that the Civil Rights Bill was intended to protect negroes who had been slaves, and did not include white persons at all.^"'' It was stated that the bill had been held unconstitutional in Nevada, but no reference to the case was giveu,^*" A negro in Gilmer County, West Virginia, sued the clerk of the county court for refusing to sell a license for his mar- riage with a white woman. It was stated that this would *"*Ibid., pp. no, 122, 134, 135. '"Ibid., pp. 112, 118. '■"Ibid., p. 120. '"Ibid., pp. 113, 115. '«Ibid., p. 134. •"■Ibid., p. IIS. 52 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. bring the Civil Rights Bill before the Courts.^"^ Judge Wal- ton, of Augusta, Maine, imposed a fine of $40 and thirty days imprisonment on a negro and a white woman for hav- ing married in violation of the state law. The punishment was so light because the parties were ignorant of the law. Their counsel made the plea that the Civil Rights Bill allowed them to marry, but the judge was unable to agree, say- ing that the bill could not alter the laws of the State, and that the marriage was null and void. The writer reporting this incident stated that some of the Radicals were exasper- ated from the fact that a radical judge had renounced and set at naught a law of the United States which gave the negro the same rights that were enjoyed by white men.^"^ Under the caption " Negroes Getting their Civil Rights," an account was given of a negro and white woman before the court in Nashville. The woman was slightly fined and sent to the work house, while the negro was sent to the Freedmen's Court."» In addition to the instances we have already given in which the Civil Rights Bill was held to be constitutional, there are several others, but in most of these cases the ques- tion at issue was as to the right to testify. As early as June, 1866, the Orphan's Court for Baltimore decided that negroes could testify under the Civil Rights Bill.^^" The same pro- vision of the bill was held to be valid by Judge French, of Washington County, Maryland. He followed the decision of Judge Bowie rather than that of Judge Magruder.^^^ Judge Durrell, of the United States District Court for Louis- iana, held the bill to be constitutional.^^^ The Civil Court of Detroit, Michigan, decided, September, 1866, that negroes could not be prevented from enjoying any privilege they chose and could pay for. The case before the court was brought by a negro for the refusal of the door- '"Ibid., p. 115. "^ Ibid., p. 136. "•Ibid., p. 113. "•Ibid., p. 113. "> Ibid., p. 132. '•"Ibid., p. IIS. Freedman's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. 53 keeper to admit him and his companions to the main body of the theater — they being directed to the gallery. The judge in this case was said to be a Democrat/^^ The United States Commissioner, at Mobile, Alabama, decided June 26, 1867, that the railway company of that city could not pre- vent negroes from riding in the same cars with white per- sons, since to do so was in violation of the law, evidently referring to the Civil Rights Bill, for the counsel for the negro asked that the president of the company be bound over to the Federal Court under that bill, which was done.^^* Mayor Horton of the same city, an appointee of the mili- tary authorities, banished a negro boy from the city, this not being possible in regard to white people. He was indicted, tried, and found guilty for violation of the Civil Rights Bill. There was much rejoicing that the " trap made to catch the Southerners had first gobbled up a yankee official."^^^ Among the incidents to show the view generally taken of the bill is that of two negro women of Portsmouth, Vir- ginia, who tried to enter the cabin on a ferryboat intended for ladies.^^® A similar incident occurred in Baltimore as to a waiting room set apart for ladies at one of the depots.^^' Suits were instituted in both cases under the Civil Rights Bill. There were other incidents, more or less similar to those we have given, in which attempts were made by negroes to enjoy the same privileges accorded to white persons. There were doubtless a number of similar incidents which did not receive public notice, as well as many which we have not observed. The instances we have cited, however, are apparently suffi- cient to justify the conclusion that the belief prevailed gen- erally — north, east, west and south — especially among the negroes, that the Civil Rights Bill gave the colored people the same rights and privleges as white men as regards travel w "' Ibid., p. 120 "* Ibid., p. 136. '"Ibid., p. 151. "• N. Y. Tribune, May 18 and 21, 1867. "' McPherson's Scrap-book, "The Civil Rights Bill," p. 109. 54 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. schools, theaters, churches, and the ordinaryrights which may be legally demanded. There also seems to have been a less general belief that it also permitted the intermarriage of the races. / Many of these cases occurred before the Four- teenth Amendment passed Congress. Reference was also made to some of them in the debates, and weight must be given them in interpreting the purposes of the Amendment, since it was acknowledged that the first section of the Amendment was the Civil Rights Bill incorporated into the Constitution. This somewhat extended account of the bill, therefore, and the cases arising under it, have been given for the purpose of aiding us in the interpretation of that Amendment, and this will become more apparent in the chapters that are to follow. CHAPTER II. The Fourteenth Amendment Before Congress. SECTION one of THE AMENDMENT. The consideration of the Amendment itself will take us back in point of time, for it was not presented as a whole at first, but by sections, nor were these sections finally acted upon by both Houses until after the Civil Rights Bill had been disposed of, having been side tracked to give full sway to that important measure. There may also have been other considerations which caused the postponement of the vari- ous amendments; for example, to let the Reconstruction Committee formulate and present its entire plan of recon- struction, to give it time to secure all the evidence it could to aid in the enactment of that plan, or to postpone final action until after the spring elections in some of the New England States, so that the Republican interests might not be affected by the plan of reconstruction proposed. The Amendment was not a spontaneous creation, was not the product of one mind, but of many. It was also a product of evolution, and its growth' and development make an interesting study. In considering this evolution of the Fourteenth Amendment, it seems advisable to consider each section separately in order to rerider the connection and meaning more clear and apparent!] This may necessitate a certain amount of repetition, but we trust that the object aimed at, clearness, will justify this course. /' The first section is by far the most important section of the Amendment, for it is the only one which has played any i / very noticeable part in our country's history or has had any I / influence whatever upon our customs or legislation. This / / section also underwent more changes than any of the others / ' before receiving the form in which it now stands in the Con- ' 55 $6 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. stitution. In the various forms in which it was presented the same purpose and spirit were observable. It is about this section also that there has been so much contention as to its meaning and object. ,/ ^ Probably the interpretation most generally given and most 'readily accepted is that its principal and almost only purpose was to define citizenship ; that it was to make federal citizen- ship primary, a citizen of the United States becoming by resi- dence therein, ipso facto, a citizen of one of the States. The Courts have practically given this interpretation to it, declar- ing that it was to make citizens of the freedmen. A careful examination of the proceedings of Congress should show whether or not this was the principal object originally aimed at./ On the second day of the session, December 5, 1865, Mr. Stevens, the Republican leader in the House, introduced a joint resolution proposing an Amendment to the Constitu- tion of the United States. It was in the following form: " All national and state laws shall be equally applicable to every citizen, and no discrimination shall be made on account of race and color." The next day, Mr. Bingham, of Ohio, introduced a resolutiqn to accomplish the same object, though the forms of the two resolutions were quite different. The i resolution introduced by Mr. Bingham was reported back by I him from the Reconstruction Committee, February 13, 1866, - in the following form :" " Article . The Congress shall have power to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper to secure to the citizens of each State all privi- t 1 leges and immunities of citizens in the several States, and to ^ * all persons in the several States equal protection in the rights of life, liberty, and property." ^ This was practically the form in which it had been introduced December 6. Mr. Bingham, its author, in bringing this resolution before the House, February 26, made known his reason for propos- ing it as an amendment. He stated that it had been the Vdefect of the Republic that there was no express grant of power in the Constitution to enable Congress to enforce ^ Globe, 39th Cong., ist Sess., pp. 14 and 813. Fourteenth Amendment Before Congress. 57 the requirements of the Constitution, and cited the fact that the contemporaneous construction, the continued construc- tion, legislative, executive and judicial, had been and was that the provi^sions of the immortal Bill of Rights embodied in the Constitution rested for their execution and enforcement upor the fidelity of the States.^ In this brief statement he re- jirealed the nature and purpose of the Amendment. It meant nothing less than the conferring upon Congress the power to enforce, in every State of the Union,~tEe'BilI of Rights, as^ found in the first eight Amendments. If his purpose shoulc succeed, it meant that Congress, and not the Legislatures " On the same day. May 24, Mr. Sherman proposed an amendment to strike out sections three and four and to insert in their stead a section basing representation on the qualified voters in each State, including those disfranchised on account of rebellion; and a section to the effect that direct taxes should be apportioned among the several States according to the taxable property in each State.^^" Mr. Sherman proposed his amendment on May 24, but the resolution was not considered again until May 29. The intervening time was not idly used, however, since the Sen- ate remained in session but a short time on the two days, Friday and Monday, in which it was in session, in order to give the Republicans an opportunity to discuss the whole measure in caucus.^^^ The several propositions, by way of substitutes or amendments, had made it evident that there was danger that the entire resolution might again be de- feated or so radically altered as to render it valueless in the eyes of the party leaders or subject it to an almost certain rejection by the States. The latter event was especially to be avoided, since, if a proposition which the people disap- proved were submitted, the reaction might be so great as to involve the loss of the control of the next House by the Radicals. Consequently it was decided to defer further debate or action in the Senate until a definite programme had been decided upon by the majority. Unity of action was necessary if anything was to be accomplished, and it was soon perceived that so many objections had been or would be raised as to endanger its passage by the Senate or its ratification by the States. "' Ibid., pp. 2800-03. "' Ibid., p. 2804. "" N. Y. Herald, May 26, 1866. Fourteenth Amendment Before Congress. 121 A party caucus was called, therefore, to decide just what changes, if any, were to be made in the plan as submitted by the Committee of Fifteen. It would be both interesting and valuable to know what took place in the caucus, for no doubt there was a free expression as to what was to be accomplished by the proposed Amendment, since the meet- ing was behind closed doors and only those Republicans being present who were pledged to abide by the action of the caucus. Party caucuses had been held before this time, but never before had such policy been pursued, either in framing or amending the Constitution. It is possible, by such methods, to amend the Constitution by an actual min- ority of Congress instead of the two thirds which is re- quired by the Constitution, since a majority of the two thirds can bind the others. In this way an amendment might be submitted by Congress which a majority of its own members, if acting and voting independently, might disap- prove. This was very probably true of the second section, for there seems to be evidence to show that a majority of the Senators preferred a measure basing representation on voters. It is unnecessary to remark that no purely party measure should ever find a place in a Constitution. Mr. Barnes, a contemporary writer, says of this caucus: " The several days during which the discussion was sus- pended in the Senate were not fruitless in their eflFect upon the pending measure. The Amendment was carefully con- sidered by the majority in special meetings, when such amendations and improvements were agreed upon as would harmonize the action of the Republicans in the Senate." The Republican party consisted of two divisions of fac- tions — the extreme Radicals like Sumner, Wade, and Yates, and the conservative Radicals like Fessenden, Trumbull, and Morgan. It was necessary to harmonize these two fac- tions if anything was to be accomplished in the way of 122 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. amending the Constitution. This condition may, to some extent, justify the caucus, but approval should seldom, if ever, be given to a party caucus upon which such an im- portant thing as changing the fundamental law depends. When the Amendment was again before the Senate, May 29, certain amendments were made as the Result of the cau- cus. The second section was amended by striking out " citizens " and inserting' " inhabitants, being citizens of the United States." This was the amendment which had been submitted by Mr. Wilson a few days before. Mr. Howard stated that the change was made in order to har- monize sections one and two, but it was evidently done to make sure that the Southern States could not evade the measure by holding that negroes were not citizens of the several States even if declared to be citizens of the United States. The amendment was agreed to without a divi- sion.^^^ Mr. Hendricks pointed out the fact that the section did not rest upon the principle that those who were regarded as unfit to vote by the States should not be represented, as had been claimed by the advocates of the measure, since it was so framed as to permit the Northern and Eastern States to retain their twenty Representatives based upon a non- voting population. It also permitted Maryland, West Vir- ginia, Tennessee, and Missouri to have representation for those they regarded as unfit to vote. His amendment, how- ever, was rejected.^^* A favorite argument with the majority was that the South would come back with increased power if the basis remained unchanged. To test the sincerity of that argu- ment, Mr. Hendricks proposed an amendment to the section providing that only three fifths of those who had been released from servitude should be counted in the basis, thus 'Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., ist Sess., p. 2897. Ibid., p. 2939. Fourteenth Amendment Before Congress. 123 restoring the status quo in regard to representation as it existed prior to the war, but this was not accepted.^^* Mr. DooHttle moved as a substitute for the section an amendment identical in meaning to that proposed by Mr. Sherman on May 24, that is, basing representation on male electors over 21 years of age. He discussed his amendment at length, showing that New England would lose 4 while the Northwest would gain 12 Representatives. If suffrage laws remained unchanged, the South would lose 15 and the North would gain 15 Representatives on a voting basis, but the amendment was rejected by a vote of 31 to 7.^^° An objection brought against Mr. Doolittle's amendment was that it would tend to degrade suffrage by inducing the States to grant the privilege to aliens and others. To test the sense of the Senate and to avoid that objection, he sub- mitted another amendment in which " male citizens " who were qualified by state law to vote for members of the most numerous branch of the Legislature was substituted for " male electors," but this was defeated by the same vote, 31 to 7."« Mr. Poland thought that population, not voters, should constitute the basis of representation, though he was op- posed to having the negroes included in the basis unless they were allowed to vote. In case suffrage was granted to them, there would be some Republicans from the South, thus insuring the continued dominance of his party, he declared, and that there would be no reasonable fear of losing control of the Government if the ballot was not put in the hands of the negro and the South's representation reduced accordingly. The rejection of the amendments submitted by Mr. Doo- Httle clearly brought out the fact that the Republicans were bound by the caucus. Mr. Sherman did not hesitate to "* Ibid., pp. 2940 and 2942. "*Ibid., pp. 2942-44 and 2986. "'Ibid., p. 2991 124 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. express his opinion in favor of Mr. Doolittle's amendment, holding that it embodied the true principle upon which rep- resentation should be based, and that if it were adopted, the South would feel no local jealousy, since it would apply to all sections alike. " Then every citizen," he continued, " would stand equal before the law, with precisely the same political power, no more and no less. I say, therefore, that this is the only amendment to the propositions now sub- mitted to us that I desire to make ; but I feel bound by the action of my political friends to vote against this amend- ment. I place my vote distinctly on this ground." For political reasons, therefore, he voted for a proposition which he knew to be unfair and unjust, for he said of it : "It endeavors to save representation for certain portions of our country where they have a population whom they deprive of the right to vote; but it deprives the South of represen- tation for a population which has no right to vote.""^ Mr. Wilson, of Massachusetts, in reply to Mr. Sherman's remarks, stated, as his reason for opposing the amendment offered by Mr. Doolittle, that it would strike over 2,000,000 unnaturalized foreigners from the basis, thus diminishing the representation of the loyal States 17 and correspond- ingly increasing the power of the disloyal States. This statement by Mr. Wilson reveals, if we were otherwise lacking in information, the main purpose of the section, for it will be remembered that it was Mr. Wilson who sug- gested the change in the form of the section which was finally adopted. Mr. Sherman had no difficulty in answer- ing Mr. Wilson's argument by saying that if 4,000,000 blacks were denied representation because they were not allowed to vote, then all other classes which were denied the right of suffrage should also be denied representation.^^* His position was that an Amendment to the Constitution "'Ibid., p. 2986. " "* Ibid., p. 2987. Fourteenth Amendment Before Congress. 125 should rest upon some fundamental principle, and not upon how it would affect this or that community or section, but how it would affect the country at large. Mr. Henderson thought the section was objectionable in that it inflicted a punishment upon the States for excluding negroes from the suffrage, while at the same time permit- ting white citizens and alien inhabitants to be excluded without loss of representative power. He was also of the opinion that it offered too great an incentive to the States to extend the elective franchise to those incompetent to exercise it intelligently. Notwithstanding these and other objections, Mr. Henderson voted for the measure.^^* Mr. Doolittle, a short time before the final vote was to be taken, presented an amendment, of which he had given notice, providing that each of the sections be submitted to the States as separate Amendments, any one or all of which might be adopted or rejected by the States. He cited the fact that when Amendments were first submitted to the States, the policy of submitting them as separate Amend- ments was inaugurated and that it should not now be de- parted from. At that time twelve Amendments were sub- mitted, of which ten were adopted and two rejected. The sections of the proposed Amendment were distinct and inde- pendent propositions, he contended, and should, therefore, be submitted as such. It has already been noted in the pre- ceding pages that Mr. Stevens had at first opposed uniting the various propositions and that the Committee, by a vote of 10 to 4, had also placed itself on record against such a course. His amendment was rejected by a vote of 33 to II."" No reason was given for the action of the majority, but it takes very little discernment to discover it. Mr. Sherman asked that the sections be voted on sepa- rately in the Senate, though he had voted a few minutes "» Ibid., pp. 3033-35. Ibid., p. 3040. 126 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. before against the proposition of Mr. Doolittle to allow the States the same privilege, but his request was denied on the ground that all the sections constituted but one resolution and must be voted on as such.^^^ The resolution proposing the Fourteenth Amendment was passed by a vote of 33 to 1 1. "2 The resolution as amended in the Senate was brought before the House on June 13, when Mr. Stevens announced that the Union part of the Committee of Fifteen had exam- ined the amendments made in the Senate and were unani- mously of the opinion that they should be adopted. These amendments were concurred in the same day by a vote of 20 to 32.^^* From the above examination of the discussion of the sec- ond section, it is quite obvious that its chief purpose was to weaken the power of the South, and so of the Democratic party, and to keep the Republican party in power. It is also equally evident that it was not based upon any funda- mental principle, and this was not only recognized but stated by some of those who voted for it. The one distinctive principle, that basing representation on legal male electors, was rejected./ This would have affected the South to a far greater extpifit than any other section of the country, but it could not have been attacked on the ground of unfairness and of sectionalism. Party expediency was the determin- ing factor, however, and for the first time in the history of our country there was engrafted upon the Constitution a purely partisan proposition, a proposition to perpetuate^ a poUtical party. / The section was obnoxious in that it permitted the alien to be represented and denied that right to the negro. In this respect the alien was given preference over the citizen, though it might be answered that the alien would become a ;^Ibid., p. 3041. Ibid., p. 3042. "^ Ibid., p. 3149. Fourteenth Amendment Before Congress. 127 citizen, when, if not granted suffrage, he would no longer be represented. The principle that those classes which had not the right of suffrage should not be represented, the principle upon which the section pretended to be based, was violated nevertheless. Even the answer given above does not apply to the case of the Chinese, for here were aliens who were not expected to become citizens and could not become such under the laws of the United States, and yet under the section they would be represented. /, Section Three of the Amendment. The third section may be called the punitive section of the Amendment, for by it the leading men of the South were prevented from holding office, either federal or state. In this way it was hoped to weaken, if not to destroy, the in- fluence of those who had shaped the policies of the South up to this time. The section was also to serve a political purpose, being a concession to those who desired to see the Southern leaders punished,yAs an indication of the animosity held by many toward the South, the resolution submitted by Mr, Sumner on the first day of the session, December 4, 1865, may be cited. The fifth proposition of the resolution, which .was in reference to the restoration of the Southern States, is as follows : " The choice of citizens for office, whether state or national, of constant and un- doubted loyalty, whose conduct and conversation shall give assurance of peace and reconciliation,"^^* The accept- ance of this proposition would mean the exclusion of all who aided the South, On the 20th of December, 1865, Mr. Broomall submitted a resolution to be referred to the Re- construction Committee, a part of the sixth section of which provided " and forever exclude from all political power the active and willing participants in the late usurpation,"^^' With the same purpose in view, Mr, Spalding, in a speech, January 5, 1866, suggested that a measure should be adopted "*Ibid., p. 2. ""Ibid., p. 98. /b 128 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. to prevent anyone who had taken up arms against the United States from being admitted to a seat in Congress. Mr. ConkHng submitted a resolution to this effect on January 16, 1866.126 'The resolutions, which were generally referred to the Reconstruction Committee, and the remarks made in debate, /• go to show that there was a feeling on the part of many /' that the participants in the hostilities against the Federal I Government should be denied political rights for some time ! at least. The reasons given were that treason was a crime ( and should be made odious, and that it would be unsafe to trust the Government in the hands of those who had waged war against it. It must also be remembered that there was i a political aspect to these resolutions, for it can readily be perceived that if a large number of those in the South were . disfranchised, it would make it much easier for the party Vin power to continue in control of the Government. The Reconstruction Committee seemed in no great haste, however, in regard to this particular phase of reconstruc- tion, for it was not until April 28, 1866, just two days be- fore the proposed plan was reported from that Committee, that Mr. Boutwell submitted a proposition almost identical with the third section as finally adopted. His proposition was rejected by a vote of 8 to 6. Mr. Harris then moved to insert after section two the following : " Sec. — . Until the 4th day of July, in the year 1870, all persons who volun- tarily adhered to the late insurrection, giving it aid and com- i fort, shall be excluded from the right to vote for Represen- I tatives in Congress and for electors for President and Vice- \^ President of the United States." This proposition was re- jected at first by a vote of 8 to 7, but was subsequently reconsidered and adopted by 8 to 7 — Mr. Grimes having changed his vote.^^^ This is the only reference to the third section in the Journal of the Committee, and it was re- ported in the form given above on April 30. On the same date, Mr. Stevens reported two bills from the ReconstructioiT "•Ibid., pp. 133 and 252. "'Reconstruction Committee Journal, p. 34. Fourteenth Amendment Before Congress. 129 Committee, one of wh ich decla red certain classes of persons ineligible to office. During the debate on the resolution proposing the Four- teenth Amendment, it developed that there was considerable opposition to the third section. Mr. Blaine thought that it would override the pardons granted by the President, thereby subjecting the Federal Government to the charge of bad faith. Mr. Stevens replied that a pardon would release any one from the penalty, whereupon ]\Ir. Blaine observed that the section would become practically useless since all below the rank of Colonel had already been pardoned, and that at the proper time he would move to strike out the third sec- tion."* Mr. Garfield said that the section was obnoxious in that it was susceptible of a double construction and not founded on a principle. He further asserted that it would be regarded everywhere as a piece of politics for the pur- pose of carrying the presidential election, and moved that the resolution be recommitted to the Committee with in- structions to strike out the third section.^-* Mr. Thayer, who advocated , the other sections, thought the third section both improper and inexpedient, and added : " I am opposed to it because it looks to me like offering to the people of the States lately in rebellion peace and restoration with one hand, while you snatch it from them with the other."^^" Mr. Boyer declared that the section furnished convincing evi- dence that the Amendment was not intended for adoption, but was to serve as an excuse for the indefinite exclusion of Southern Representatives, since the South could not be expected to accept such terms as those contained in this section. He also contended that it was in the nature of an ex post facto law, thereby being contrary to the great prin- ciple incorporated in the Constitution.^^^ Mr. Shanklin asserted that the purpose of the section was to disfranchise the people of the South until the party in power could so ^^ Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., ist Sess., p. 2460. ^ Ibid., p. 2463. ''» Ibid., p. 2465. "* Ibid., p. 2466. 9 130 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. hedge themselves in as to be able to control that section at will, and that if the Southern people accepted the degrading conditions imposed by the section, they would be unworthy to be American citizens.^^^ Mr. Raymond opposed the section on the ground that it rendered his party obnoxious to the charge of amending the Constitution for the purpose of controlling the election of 1868. He thought Mr. Blaine's objection a very strong one, T)ut to his mind, the fatal objection was that it was inserted for the express purpose of preventing the Southern States from adopting any Amendments submitted by Congress. The result would be, he said, to keep the States out, since the adoption of the Amendment was to be the condition precedent to their re-admission. The concession which the States of the South would be called upon to make in adopting the Amendment were then recited by Mr, Raymond, which concessions were an equality of civil rights, a great reduction of political power in the change of the basis of representa- tion, the repudiation of their debts, and the surrender of all claims for compensation for slaves. After summarizing these concessions, he pertinently asked : " What do we offer them in return for all these concessions ? " We cannot do better than give his own answer, which was in these ex- pressive words : " The right to be represented on this floor, provided they will also consent not to vote for the men who are to represent them ! It is not merely a sham, it is a mockery."^^^ Notwithstanding his severe arraignment of this section and his belief that it would cause the defeat of the proposed Amendment, Mr. Raymond voted for the entire resolution. Many Republicans doubted^ the _expedieucy_ox_ propriety of the section, especially as_a_gart^^f the Four- teenth Amendment, and suggested that it be submitted as j, separate and distinct propositiom^^* Several of the majority leaders thought that it would endanger the entire Amend- ment, among them being Mr. Bingham, who also stated that ' Ibid., p. 2500. 'Ibid., p. 2503. Ibid., pp. 250S-10. Fourteenth Amendment Before Congress. 131 it might subject their party to the charge of inserting it for the purpose of controlling the next presidential election.^^" Of all the speakers, Mr. Stevens was the only one who stated that he regarded the third section as the most im- portant and vital, and that it was necessary to save the Union party. He had no hesitancy in saying that it was a party measure pure and simple. He admitted, however, that Con- gress would have to pass registry laws and other laws to en- force it, just as would have to be done in regard to the other sections. This is probably the most important statement made in regard to the third section, since it shows very clearly that he thought congressional legislation was neces- sary to make the first section effective. Before closing his speech he moved the previous question, but Mr. Garfield and others opposed this inotion with the view of moving to strike out the third section. The previous question was sec- onded, however, only by a union of the partisan Democrats with the partisan Republicans, and then by the close vote of 84 to 79. The entire resolution was then adopted by a vote of 128 to 37."* When the resolution was under discussion in the Senate, May 23, Mr, Howard stated that he had not favored this section in the Committee. The Journal of the Committee shows, however, that he voted for its insertion and that with- out his vote that section would not have been reported to Congress. In fact, it was only included after some pressure or influence had induced Mr. Grimes to change his vote. Mr. Howard's objection to the section, as disclosed in his speech, was that it would be of no practical benefit in the .presidential election,^^^ There seemed to be no one in the Senate to advocate the section as it passed the House, and 'the Republican caucus decided to strike it out. In place. of the deleted section, there was submitted on May 29, a sub- stitute in the form of the present third section. The Senate, by a vote of 43 to o, voted to strike out the original section^ The change was no doubt made for the purpose of strength- "' Ibid., pp. 2540-43. "' Ibid., p. 2545. ^'' Ibid., p. 2768. 132 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. effing the Amendment before the people. Several amend- ments were offered to limit the effect of the section to those who had taken the oath. to support the Constitution within the ten years preceding January i, 1861, to those who had voluntarily aided the Confederacy, etc., but all were rejected by the usual Republican majority .^^^ The section was also characterized as ex post facto}^^ The amendment to the third section as made in the committee of the whole was adopted by the Senate by a vote of 42 to i,^*° since it was regarded as much more satisfactory than the form in which it had passed the House. The amendment made in the Senate was agreed to in the House, June 13, by a vote of 120 to 32. Mr. Finck called attention to the position taken by Mr. Stevens when an attempt had been made to strike out the third section in the House, and his present position.^*^ It will be recalled that Mr. Stevens stated that he regarded the third section as the most important of the Amendment, and that without it, it would be of little value. / There may be said to be two underlying motives which caused the insertion of the third section in the Amendment — the one penal, the other political. Undoubtedly it was to serve as a punishment for the Southern leaders, but it is equally true that it was to serve a political purpose as well. The chief political features were eliminated in the Senate, for some of the leading Republicans admitted that it was largely political in the form in which it came from the Com- mittee and was adopted by the House. The penal features, however, probably bore more heavily on the South in the amended form, since it prevented those most capable from holding any office. As was repeatedly charged in debate, the chief political value of the section was that it would prevent the acceptance of the Amendment until after the \ election. Some of the majority were also of the opinion \ I Ibid., pp. 2897, 2900 and 2918. ' Ibid., pp. 2915, 2940 and 2990. Ibid., p. 3042. Ibid., p. 3146, 3149. Fourteenth Amendment Before Congress. 133 that the entire Amendment would be endangered by it and desired to have it submitted as a separate proposition. One result of the third section was the defeat of the pro- posed Amendment in the South, though to be sure it may be questioned whether the Southern States would have adopted it with this section omitted, but there can be no doubt that it caused greater irritation and opposition than any other section. There was probably one factor in con- nection with this section which was not mentioned in the debates, and this was the fact that it would afford the op- portunity later on to offer an inducement to the Southern leaders — those proscribed by the section — in the way of amnesty as a return for aid given to the party in power. A quid pro quo agreement of this kind might prove effective at times, and the fact that attempts were made to reach a compromise along these lines, the granting of amnesty to the Southern leaders to be linked with the so-called Civil Rights Bill of Sumner gives weight to this view. The sec- tion as originally proposed limited the time to four years, but as passed there was no time limit, and it required a vote of two thirds of Congress to exempt any one from its pro- visions. Although the section did not apply to the mass of the people, it could hardly be expected that those who had followed their leaders so loyally would abandon them under the circumstances. The section was impolitic to say the least of it, and it really rhade those affected by it more popular, since they were regarded as unjustly singled out to bear the punishment for all those who had participated in or sympathized with the struggle for Southern inde- pendence. Section Four of the Amendment, The fourth section of the Amendment declaring that the pufelic (iebt of the United States should be inviolable, but that neither the United States nor any State should assume or.-Eaj any debt incurred by the Confederate States in aid 134 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. of the war against the United States, or any claim for the loss or emancipation of any slave, aroused the least opposi- tion of any of the sections.; In fact, there was very little opposition to the section, for a resolution introduced by Mr. Randall, of Pennsylvania, December 5, 1865, declaring that the national debt should be held sacred and inviolable, was agreed to by a vote of 162 to i.^*^ Two weeks later, De- cember 19, a resolution proposing an Amendment to the Constitution was reported from the Judiciary Committee and adopted the same day under call of the previous ques- tion by a vote of 150 to 11.^*^/ This proposed Amendment declared that neither the United States nor any State should pay any debt contracted in aid of war against the United States, and the above vote shows that there was a general feeling that such debts should not be paid. The resolution was sent to the Senate the following day, but no action whatever was taken in regard to it until June 20, 1866, when it was indefinitely postponed on the ground that it had been incorporated into the fourth section of the Fourteenth Amendment. ^^^ ^1 -r-"^"^", __ __ ^^ ^"v..,.,,^ The number of resolutions submitted to Congress on the subject clearly indicates that it was thought advisable to secure the national debt against any future danger and to / put it beyond the power of Congress or any State to assume/ or pay any part of the Conjederate debt or to pay for any of the emancipated slaves;'!' The provisions in regard to the Confederate debt and the compensation for slaves were per- fectly proper to prevent action by any future Congress, but the provision in regard to the national debt seems of doubt- ful value. The consideration of this subject was at first almost entirely free from politics, but it was made to serve the politicians at a later stage. Just as was the case with - the other sections, there was no idea of combining this sec- '" Ibid., p. 10. '"Ibid., pp. 84-87. Fourteenth Amendment Before Congress.' 135 tion with any other proposition until the plan of Robert Dale Owen was submitted to the Reconstruction Committee ■■■ April 21, 1866. ^ Very little" time or attention was given to this section, being hardly mentioned by some, never alluded to'b3^ Others, and little discussed by any. Mr. Stevens probably gave the Republican view of it in the following sentence, which was all he said in regard to it: "I need say nothing -of the fourihsection, for none dare object to it who is not himself a rebel.^'*"' No opposition to speak of was manifested by the Democrats, except to the provision in regard to the com- pensation for slaves, and the opposition to this provision was almost entirely limited to its effect upon Maryland, Delaware, Kentucky, and Missouri — States which had re- mained loyal to the Union. JV|n 3^haxiklin, jsf Ker^^ declared that it repudiated the pledge of the National Gov- ernment to pay $300 for each slave enlisted from the loyal States. According to his statement, Kentucky was en- titled to JiOjO(X)jPOQjir Mr. Randall, who was several times Speaker when the Democrats came into power, said tiiat if this section were submitted as a separate proposition that it would be adopted almost unanimously.^** y ^ Mr. Howard, who had charge of the Amendment in the Senate, stated. May 23, when it was under discussion, that he did not suppose there was any one in that body who would oppose the fourth section. He said it was necessary to prevent future political squabbling and wrangling and to put it beyond the field of discussion and to avoid all agita- tion of the subject in the future.^*^ Although admitting all were in favor of this section, he was unwilling to submit it as a separate proposition, evidently desiring to use it as a means to strengthen the other sections or to secure votes *"Ibid., p. 2460. "" Ibid., p. 2501. '*" Ibid., p. 2530. "Mbid., p. 2768. 136 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. for his party, thereby being made political to that extent. Mr. Davis offered an amendment to the section for the purpose of securing the bounties provided to the owners of slaves who enlisted, but this was rejected.^*^ The only serious objection which might be brought against the sec- tion was that in regard to this part of it, since many slaves of those who were loyal to the Union had enlisted under the Act of Congress of February 29, 1864. By adopting this section, Congress violated its plighted faith, but aside from this the section probably served a good purpose by remov- ing all agitation in the future in regard to compensation for slaves or the payment of any debts contracted in aid of the Confederacy. Of course this statement has nothing to do with the question whether, as a matter of fact, compensa- tion should have been given for the slaves or not, though the condition of the public finances at the time would hardly have warranted the assumption of such an enormous obli- gation. Section Five of the Amendment. -.Section five declares that " The Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this Article." It was never deemed necessary to add a section similar to this to any proposed Amendment to the Constitution prior to the Thirteenth, so that it is essential that a brief account be given of the reason for adding it to the War Amendments. It is of little importance for the purpose of this study whether the section really gave any additional power to Congress or not, but it was evidently added for some reason, and that reason does concern us. Very little was said of it when the Thirteenth Amend- ment was before Congress, though the subsequent legisla- tion elicited statements which revealed the purpose of the section. Some of the Southern States seemed to fear that some danger was concealed in the second section of the ^"Ibid., p. 3041. "^ Fourtfiffith Amendment Before Congress. 137 Amendment, and made objection on account of it. Gov. Perry7 of South Carolina, wrote President Johnson that there was no objection to the Thirteenth Amendment except the second section. The objection to this section was that it^ might be held to give Congress power to legislate for the freedmen. Secretary Seward replied to this letter, saying Ifaat the effect of the second section was to restrain, not to enlarge, the power given by the first section.^y North Carolina^and other States made the same objection. The opinion given by Mr. Seward was evidently that of Mi\_ 5tevens also, for when Mr. Cook introduced a resolu- tion, January 5, 1866, declaring that it was the sense of the House that the second section conferred power upon Con- gress to legislate for the freedmen in the way of securing the rights of freemen, he stated that it was contrary to the opinion of the Secretary of State, and added: "„We all know that the second section is restraining." ^^^ Although this was the view at first taken by the Federal Government, it was not consistently adhered to, for it has already been noted that the power to pass the Civil Rights Bill was €lairned to be derived from this section. The passage of that bill over the veto of the President declared, so far as Congress could do so, that the second section of the Thir- teenth Amendment did confer legislative power upon Con- gress. Whatever claim was made in regard to the second section of that Amendment applies with equal force to the fifth section of the Fourteenth Amendment. Mr. Howard gave a more complete statement in regard to the fifth section than any other member/ After refer- ring to the privileges and immunities to b6 secured by the first section, stating that the provisions of that section, were merely restrictions upon the States and not grants of power to Congress, -Tie made the following declaration in regard to ■■ ^ /ki: ______ **• Hollis, Reconstruction in S. C, p. 44. "*Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., ist Sess., p. 130. 138 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. the fifth^ section : "Here is a direct affirmative delegation of power to Congress to carry out all the principles of all these guarantees, a power not found in the Constitution." ^^^ Thus according to Mr, Howard the power which Congress has under the Fourteenth Amendment is not derived from either or all of the first four sections, but entirely from the fifth section. /His statement in regard to it was not ques- tioned by any one, evidently being acceded to by all as a true statement of its purpose. Indeed, there could be little doubt as to the purpose of the section, especially in view of the legislation enacted under the second section of the Thirteenth Amendment. iWith a single exception, the min- ority in the Senat e gave no attentio n to the section/ but it ' so happens that the VieWs expressed by Mr. Howard and ]\^r. Hendricks agree. Mr. Hendricks sounded the danger of the section, that is, according to the view of the minority, when he said that it " provides that Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions (of the Article. When these words were used in the Amend- ment abolishing slavery, they were thought to be harmless, but during this session there has been claimed for them such force and scope of meaning as that Congress might invade the jurisdiction of the States, rob them of thtir reserved rights, and crown the Federal Government with absolute and despotic power. As construed, this provision is most dangerous. Without it the Constitution possesses the vital- "^Ibid., p. 2766. Speaking further of it, he said: "It (5th sec.) gives to Congress power to enforce by appropriate legislation, all the provisions of this Article of Amendment. Without this clause, no power is granted to Congress by the Amendment or any one of its sections. It casts upon Congress the responsibility of see- ing to it, for the future, that all the sections of the Amendment are carried out in good faith, and that no State infringes the rights of persons or property. I look upon this clause as indis- pensable for the reason that it thus imposes upon Congress this; power and duty. It enables Congress, in case the States shall en- act laws in conflict with the principles of the Amendment, to cor-' rect that legislation by a formal Congressional enactment" (p. 2768) . Fourteenth Amendment Before Congress. 139 ity and vigor for its own enforcement through the appro- priate departments." ^°^ These unequivocal statements by the representatives of the two parties leave little room for doubt as to the purpose of the section or of the power to be conferred on. Congress. What the one regarded as essential to the Amendment to make it effective, the other regarded as dangerous. Prac- tically the same declaration was made in the House by Mr. Harding, of Kentucky, for he asserted that it transferred all power over their citizens from the state Governments to Congress, and that Congress would thus hold all power of legislation over the citizens of the States in defiance of the States."^ "* Ibid., p. 2940. "»Ibid., p. 3147. CHAPTER III. The Amendment Before the People. ^^he Amendment having passed Congress June 13, 1866, was formally presented to the Secretary of State, June 16, and was by him submitted to the several States for ratifica- tion or rejection.^; Before considering the action of the several Legislatures, it may be well to see what the people in general thought of it, what they understood it to mean, what powers were to be given to Congress and the Central Government, and what evils were to be remedied by it. Our source of information, on this particular question, is, with few exceptions, limited to newspapers, both editorial and correspondence. This will also include the open letters of public men and the speeches made during the campaign. When the nature of the Amendment proposed by the Com- mittee April 30 became known, it was declared that the object of the first section seemed to have been secured by the Civil Rights Bill, and that the main purpose of the Amendment was, therefore, to keep the South out until after the election.^ Even as early as December 15, 1865, the purpose of the first section was, it was said, to " confer upon Congress all the powers now exercised by the state Legislatures, and to re- duce the States to the conditions of counties."^ The same writer also asserted that it was proposed to give " Congress absolute power over the social and civil laws of each State." _ *N. Y. Herald, April 30, 1866. The Herald claimed to be an independent paper but usually supported the administration. 'N. Y. World, December 15, 1865. To show that reference was had to what finally became the firit section, the following resolu- tion introduced by Mr. Bingham was given in the same editorial : " The Congress shall have power to make all laws necessary and proper to secure to all persons in every State of the Union, equal protection in their rights of life, liberty and property." 140 The Amendment Before the People. 141 This same paper, which was strongly opposed to the entire Congressional plan of reconstruction, on April 30, follow- ing, stated that the whole plan of the Committee had two objects in view: (i) To keep the South out of the Union. (2) To put the onus of its remaining out on the States of that section. The aim of the first, it continued, was to pre- vent those States from participating in the Presidential elec- tion of 1868, and that of the second was to retain their sup- porters in the North — the cardinal principle thus being to keep the Radicals in control of the Government. The Amendment, after its passage by Congress, was declared to be a mere party platform, since it was neither intended nor desired to be ratified.^ A rather conservative organ said that if the Amendment passed Congress and was submitted to the States, it would secure the next President to the party in power whether it were ratified or not, but stated that the scheme was milder than had been expected.* It was pre- dicted that, if the third section as proposed by the Recon- struction Committee, which was to keep the South out until after the presidential election, could practically be nullified by the pardons of the President, and many thought it could be, something else would be substituted to accomplish the same purpose.^ As a matter of fact this was done, but probably because the original section seemed too radical and severe, though the above view doubtless had some weight since several members of the House were of the same opinion. The section, as has been stated previously, was retained by the House only by a combination of the extrem- ists of both sides. The Amendment was also declared to be an ingeniously contrived scheme for popular support in the North, while unnecessarily reenacting the Civil Rights Bill.* The paper gave a correct expression of the popular impulse and feeling when it said that the great majority of the peo- ple would approve the scheme, which was declared to be a " powerful platform for the approaching fall elections," *Ibid., June 15, 1866. *N. Y. Herald, May i, 1866. ^Ibid., May 10, 1866. * Ibid., June 2 and 10, 1866. 142 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment, while the proposition that all should be equal before the law was calculated to have " a pleasing effect upon the popular ear."^ The New York Times, a Republican paper, agreed with the Herald and the World that the main purpose of the Amendment, was to secure the presidential election of 1868, though declaring that most of its propositions or provisions were sound, but that the South could not be expected to sub- scribe to some of them.^ In fact it went so far as to say that Mr. Stevens and the Radicals did not want the South restored until after that election and that the Committee evi- dently did not want it accepted by the States.® Four days later this same paper stated that all of the sections of the Amendment, except the third, had been acted upon as sep- arate measures, and that the third section had been added for partisan purposes. Mr. Howard's speech of May 23 was declared to be frank and satisfactory and his exposition of the need for securing, by constitutional Amendment, the privileges and immunities of citizens to be " cogent and clear,"^° It was in this speech that Mr. Howard said that one of the purposes of the first section was to give Congress power to enforce the Bill of Rights. By declarations of this kind, by giving extracts or digests of the principal speeches made in Congress, the people were kept informed as to the objects and purposes of the Amendment. The Senate's sub- stitute for the third section was said to be more acceptable, but that it was too exacting for the South to accept ;^^ and that though the Amendment, per se, was just and reasonable, it should not have been made a condition precedent for the admission of the Southern States, since its ratification was practically impossible.^^ The New York Evening Post,^^ a conservative Republi- can paper, practically stated the same view as that stated *Ibid., June 15 and 19, 1866. 'April 30, 1866. • Ibid., May 14, 1866. " Ibid., May 25, 1866. " Ibid., June 2, 1866. " Ibid., Sept. 13, 1866. " Ibid., May i, 1866. The Amendment Before the People. 143 by the Times, but furthermore declared that the first section was unnecessary since the Civil Rights Bill secured the same thing.^* It also stated that the most thoughtful press either disapproved the Amendment altogether or gave faint praise to it, the third section especially being the object of attack.^'^ Extracts from other papers were given in this issue to sub- stantiate this statement. This paper objected to the third and fourth sections on the ground that only permanent things should be put in the Constitution, while the first sec- tion was thought unnecessary unless the Civil Rights Bill was unconstitutional. The Southern whites should be con- ciliated, it continued, without sacrificing equal justice, free speech, and free press, evidently thinking these things were secured by the Civil Rights Bill.^' This bill, in the opinion of the Post, was approved by the people.^'^ The New York Tribune, one of the strongest Radical journals in the country, never discussed the different sec- tions of the Amendment, though it published them several times. It also published speeches made in advocacy of the Amendment and of course advocated its adoption, though its appeals for votes were made more to the passions and selfish- ness of the people than to their judgments. Moreover, it never denied the statements which were made as to the effect or result on the States in case it were adopted. The leading organ of the Radicals at Washington declared that the first section embodied the principles of the Civil Rights Bill.^^ This same organ declared, after the Amend- ment had been adopted by Congress, that " appropriate legis- lation " would be necessary to give real vitality to it, and that it would be monstrous, " after such an auspicious restor- ation of peace among men of common sentiments and com- mon obligations " to have differences as to legislation impera- tively necessary to enforce an Amendment which had cost "Ibid., May 11, 1866. " Ibid., May 7, 1866. "Ibid., June 5, 1866. "Ibid., July 5, 1866. "The Washington Chronicle, April 29, 1866. It was published by D. C. Forney, but his brother, J. W. Forney, the Secretary of the Senate, seems to have written or inspired many of the editorials. 144 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. " so much time, reflection, and research."^® This was a plain declaration by a Radical organ, and may be accepted as stating the position of the majority, that " appropriate legislation " ought to be passed to enforce the Amendment when it became a part of the original law. The second sec- tion was, however, declared to be the most important — the statement that the North would gain lo representatives and that the South would lose lo, making a total gain of 20 for the North, if the Amendment were adopted, and just the opposite if rejected, being inserted in every issue of the paper from September 20 to October 10, 1866.^° In an editorial on Secretary Browning's letter, it was declared that the independence of the States " within their appropriate and constitutional spheres " was not to be interfered with, though the Federal Government (Congress) would decide as to the spheres.^^ If Congress could say what were the " appropriate and constitutional spheres " of the States, was it not practically admitting the statements made in Brown- ing's letter ? In this same editorial it was stated that so long as the States provided for the protection of life, liberty and property of the citizens the Federal Government would be relieved of an obligation, but the opinion was expressed that federal protection was imperatively needed in certain States. The Cincinnati Commercial, a conservative Republican paper, said that the proposal of the first section, while right in principle, was a recognition of a doubt as to the con- stitutionality of the Civil Rights Bill.^^ The object of the Amendment was declared to be to throw the protecting arm of the Constitution around all classes, native and naturalized. Under the first section no special codes could be passed, as had been done by several States, but all citizens were to be equal before the law, to have the same rights and priv- ileges, and, added the writer, the only way this could be obtained was by an Amendment to the Constitution which would enforce it. The people had the right, he continued, " Ibid., June 14, 1866. " Ibid., September 20, 1866. '* Ibid., October 26, 1866. "•May 3, 1866. The Amendment Before the People. 145 to change the organic law when their judgment thought it necessary.2^ It was not denied but that the tendency of the Amendment was towards centralization, but that the people had the right to do this if they saw fit. Even a New England paper said that the third section would be fatal to the Amendment, and that the object of the Amendment, taken as a whole, was to prevent the restora- tion of the Southern States until after the presidential elec- tion.2* Mr. Tremain, president of the Republican State conven- tion of New York, declared, in a speech before that body at Syracuse, September 5, 1866, that the first section was necessary on account of the Dred Scott decision and to make the Civil Rights Bill permanent by putting it beyond the power of repeal or of the Courts to declare it unconstitu- tional.^^ The Convention adopted the resolutions advocat- ing the Amendment and declaring that the New Orleans riot was due to the President's policy of reconstruction. The Herald, which had at first made quasi objections at least to the Amendment, said that there was nothing very objectionable in it, but that every principle of it had, at one time or another, been recommended by the President to some Southern State or to Congress, and that he should have accepted it.^® In this same issue a correspondent had writ- ten that the first section would only extend federal protec- tion over, and provide equal laws for all classes of citizens in the several States. Thus it will be seen that the Northern press, with few ex- ceptions, if any, took the view that the first section of the Amendment reenacted, or gave authority for, the Civil Rights Bill, and conferred citizenship upon the negro, there- ^ Ibid., June 21, 1866. " It is sheer nonsense to talk about a centralized despotism making inroads upon the Constitution, chang- ing the form and sweeping away ancient prerogatives and im- munities. The people have a clear right to make changes in their organic law as in their judgment are demanded." ^ Ibid., May 6, 1866. Quoted Springfield (Mass.) Republican. « N. Y. Herald, September 6, 1866. *Ibid., September 13, 1866. 146 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. by nullifying that portion of the Dred Scott decision which had denied this under the original Constitution. As a gen- eral thing the press did not go into any elaborate discussion of the Amendment itself, but spoke of the possibility of its ratification. Many speeches and letters were, however, pub- lished in regard to it. Probably the strongest and most illuminating letter giv- ing an exposition of the Amendment was that written by Secretary Oliver H. Browning to Colonel W. H. Benneson and Major H. V. Sullivan. It was written October 13, 1866, and was given a wide publication, with much comment on it by the leading papers. In this letter Mr. Browning, who was a member of the President's Cabinet, declared that new and enormous powers would be conferred upon Congress by the proposed Amendment ; that it would be possible to de- rstroy the judiciaries of the States under it ; and that the 'object and purpose of the clause " nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, and property without due process of law " was to subordinate the state judiciaries to federal supervision and control, thereby totally annihilating the inde- •pendence and sovereignty of state courts in the administra- I tion of state laws, as well as destroying the authority and ^control of the States over purely local affairs. He also asserted that, since the federal judiciary already had juris- diction of all questions arising under the Constitution and laws of the United States, this new provision would make possible the drawing of every matter of judicial investigation, civil and criminal, however insignificant, into the vortex of ithe federal judiciary. For it was certainly possible, he con- tinued, for either party to a controversy to claim that he was being deprived of life, liberty, or property, as the case might be, by the States without due process of law, and that this question would be cognizable in a Federal Court, resulting in delay if nothing else. There will be a tendency, he says, on the part of the Federal Government to take away the con- trol of local affairs from the people, the States, and the local municipal bodies, and to concentrate it in its own hands.^'' ^ Cincinnati Commercial, October 26, 1866. The letter was given in full. The Amendment Before the People. 147 The editorial comment in the paper from which the letter was taken never controverted the statements of Mr. Brown- ing as to the effect of the first section, but rather admitted them by saying that the danger to our country was disinte- gration, not consolidation. The editorial comment of the New York Times, October 25, in regard to this same letter did not deny any of the statements made in it, but said that it was impolitic to pub- lish it since it was supposed to express the views of the Pres- ident. The same paper, three days later, seemed to admit Browning's contentions by saying that the dangers set forth in his letter could be avoided if the States would act justly — would deprive no one of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. It evidently agreed, however, with the dec- laration made in that letter that any one who alleged that he was deprived of either of those things, could bring his case before the Federal Courts. If that much be granted, then the whole case falls, and Mr. Browning's position be- comes unanswerable. To show further the view taken by the Times in regard to the Amendment, citation was made in the same editorial of the case of James Lewis, colored, which had been decided by Justice Hardy, of Alabama. In that case the Civil Rights Bill was declared unconstitutional, the decision of the lower court fining the negro for carrying arms being sustained. The Times added that this could not have been done had the Amendment been a part of the Con- stitution, and that its object was to prevent such legislation and such decisions. The Herald of the same date, also writing of Browning's letter, declared it to be the old Southern State's Rights argu- ment with secession eliminated, though it did not contradict any of the statements made in the letter. The Tribune prac- tically acknowledged that the position taken by Mr. Brown- ing was unassailable, but declared that the arguments used by him to reach his conclusion were too trivial to be refuted. This seems contradictory, but in regard to the clause which Mr. Browning especially attacked, it declared : " It is enough to say that fact as well as theory requires that this principle 148 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. should be embodied in the national Constitution. The Rebel States have repeatedly and grossly outraged it, and it is be- cause life, liberty, and property have been illegally taken away in spite of mere state laws, that the Federal Govern- ment is bound to extend equal protection to all citizens."^® The editorial also states that it was the purpose of the Amendment, that is of the first section, to extend the equal protection of the laws, not only in cases where the laws are unjust and unequal, but in cases where people are denied equal treatment in spite of state laws. The laws might be fair and just, but their execution might not be. In other words, the Federal Government was to see to it that all were equally protected, whether this equal protection was denied by the States or by individuals. This distinction is very im- portant as will be seen in the chapters that are to follow. It was feared by some that the Amendment would have the effect of postponing reconstruction and that what had been gained by the Civil Rights Bill, which secured freedom of speech in every part of the Union, might be lost.^® It was later asserted that the first section was the same as that bill,^" thus being unnecessary unless the latter was unconstitutional, a concession which was not admitted.^^ In a previous chapter we have given the opinion of the Civil Rights Bill which was generally held by the press of the country and by the people. We have in this chapter given some instances where it was stated that the first section was but a reenactment of that bill. It is but proper, however, that further evidence should be given to see whether that was the general impression. The press, with few, if any, excep- tions, either held this view or uttered no opinion on it. We find that no one denied this contention, though many claimed that it did more than merely reenact that bill. The views expressed by the papers were verified by the speakers during the Campaign, many of whom were mem- bers of Congress. Senator Trumbull, in a speech at Chi- "* October 25, 1866. **N. Y. Evening Post, May i, 1866. **Ibid., May 11, 1866. "Ibid., June 5, 1866. The Amendment Before the People. 149 cago, August I, said that the first section was a reiteration of the Civil Rights Bill, probably a needless reiteration, but /' that it was thought proper to put it in the fundamental law.^^ Mr. Colfax, Speaker of the House, expressed the same view at Indianapolis a week later, saying that the Amendment was necessary to keep the Southern judges from declaring the bill unconstitutional.^^ General Lane, at Indianapolis, and General Schenck, at Dayton, declared the same thing on August 18.^* Both of these were members of Congress. Senator Sherman, at Cincinnati, September 28, said that the first section embodied the Civil Rights Bill. Hannibal Ham- lin, who later became a Senator, made the same declaration at Philadelphia, October 13.^^ Carl Schurz, in an Article in the Atlantic Monthly for March, 1867, asserted the same thing. Mr. E. P. Whipple, in the same magazine for No- vember, 1866, gave expression to a similar view. Since the Amendment was, in theory at least, the main ^ issue of the Campaign, the speeches which were made should be of much help to us in determining what the peo- ple understood by it, for a vigorous campaign was waged and great crowds attended the rallies. Mr. Colfax, in the speech to which we have already referred, seemed to think that freedom of speech would be secured by the Amend- ment, for he said : " I desire that in this free land every freeman shall speak his honest sentiment without fear of molestation." Mr. Hendricks, who was one of the few Democratic Senators, declared on the next day at the same place that negroes would demand to hold office and to sit on juries if the Amendment were adopted, and that even suf- rage might be granted under the first section.^® Mr. George W. Morgan, the Democratic nominee against Columbus De- lano, who was a candidate for reelection, declared in a speech August 21, that the first section was a bold stride to- wards centralization ; that under it the Federal Government ^ Cincinnati Commercial, August 3, 1866. ^ Ibid., August Q, 1866. ^ Ibid., August 22, 1866. =* N. Y. Herald, October 6, 1866. ^ Cincinnati Commercial, August 9, 1866. 150 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. would claim the power to define the rights of citizens of the States ; and that there would in a short time be negro jurors, voters, judges, and legislators in Ohio by virtue of laws of Congress. He then asked the people if they were prepared for such a state of affairs, and that if they were, advised them to vote for Delano, who would aid in putting them on an equality with the negroes.^'' Mr, Bingham, the author of the first section, asserted in a speech at Bowerstown, Ohio, August 24, that that section was a strong, plain declaration / that " equal laws and equal and exact justice " should be secured in every State " by the combined power of all the people of every State." ^^ Mr. Hannah, a former United States District Attorney for Indiana, said that those who opposed this section sanctioned class legislation and were willing to permit States to deprive American citizens of life, liberty, and property without due process of law.^® Judge Perkins, of the same State, declared that the Amendment was a stab at the right of the States to control their own af- fairs, and asked where was to be the limit of the power of the Federal Government.*" Hon. George H. Pendleton, Demo- cratic nominee for Vice President in 1864, said in a speech at Edinburg, Indiana, that the effect of the Amendment would be to make a consolidated government.*^ Mr. Delano, in a speech at Coshocton, Ohio, August 28, where his oppo- nent, Mr. Morgan, had spoken a week before, declared that suffrage was not granted by the Amendment, but that it was a guarantee that the Federal Government would protect its citizens in their civil rights.*^ General M. F. Force, who was a candidate for a judicial office, said, in a speech, Sep- tember 22, in reply to the objection that the clause about due process of law would give the Federal Courts occasion to in- terfere in local affairs, that in the first place federal judges were as good as state judges ; and in the second place, that it " Ibid., August 23, 1866. ^ "Ibid., August 27, 1866. t "Ibid., August 27, 1866. ** Ibid., August 28, 1866. " Ibid., August 30, 1866. ** Ibid., August 31, 1866. The Amendment Before the People. 151 was no new phase, since the Constitution already provided that the National Government should not deprive any citizen of life, liberty, or property " without due process of law," and that he desired to see this cornerstone of liberty the law in every State.*^ He evidently thought that the first section would make the national " due process of law " the law of every State. Since this clause, as used in the Constitution and exercised in the Courts, requires a jury trial, it would follow that the States could not deprive any one of life, liberty, or property without a trial by a jury composed of twelve men. This was no doubt the general understanding of the clause. Judge T. W. Hartley, at Cincinnati, Sep- tember 29, in reply to Mr. Sherman's speech of the night be- fore, said that the first section, together with the fifth, prac- tically made the Federal Government absolute, since Con- gress was given the power to define and determine the privi- leges and immunities of American citizens, thereby being able to confer suffrage.** Mr. George W. Weston, of Bangor, Maine, who was said to be the founder of the first Republican newspaper, in a letter to the editor of the New York Tribune, June 25, 1866, gave his approval to the first clauses of section one, saying that it was desirable that they become a part of the Constitution. It was a great misfortune, he declared, that these clauses were inextricably mixed up with a clause hav- ing no relation to the rights or interests of the negroes. The last clause was the objectionable one. The words of it, he said, had a pleasing sound to the ear, but that the people should not on that account be deceived as to their effect in this new form. He called attention to the fact that Congress and the Federal Government were already restrained in this particular by a similar clause in the Bill of Rights, which was enforceable by the federal judiciary. Similar provisions in the Constitutions of the several States restrained their respective Legislatures, while these safe- " Ibid., September 24, 1866. "Ibid., September 30, 1866. A y 152 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. guards were enforceable by the state judiciaries. This had been the case since 1789, he continued, and, with no griev- ance to which public attention had been called, it was now proposed, in the third generation after the Fathers, by a provision applicable to 30,000,000 of whites as well as to 4,000,000 of blacks, " to place the protection of life, liberty, and property as against state legislation, under a national guaranty, which will be enforceable by the federal judi- ciary." The clause which declared that no State should " deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal pro- tection of the laws " was sufficient to put an end to all caste distinctions and was all that was necessary for the security of the blacks. Under the last clause, he asserted, nearly every case could be brought before the Federal Supreme Court under the plea that " due process of law " had been denied. Furthermore, it involved a revolution of our ju- dicial system, being " an alarming concentration of power in the central tribunals, and a prostitution of the independ- ence of the States in many and vital particulars. It is in all respects as wholly uncalled for and gratuitous as it is indefensible and dangerous." He also objected to the third section, and concluded by saying : " The terms of settle- ment which are offered are shameful, both to the victors and the vanquished, and are more so to us than to them." It was also stated in the letter that he was in sympathy with the Republican party, but that he could not support the Amendment on account of the dangers in it.*® The National Intelligencer, of Washington, declared that the fifth section authorized Congress to enact any law which a mere majority might deem necessary to secure equal rights to all classes of citizens, and that this would result in an invasion of the power of the States to legislate, with a consequent centralization of power in the hands of Con- gress.*® This same paper said that, under the first and fifth ** National Intelligencer, July 10, 1866. **Ibid., October 25, 1866. The Amendment Before the People. 153 sections, Congress might declare that suffrage was a privi- lege, thereby annulling state laws requiring residence, pay- ment of taxes, etc. This might also be made to include the right to hold office. Congress could also constitutionally extend the jurisdiction of the Federal Courts, continued the writer, to include all manner of cases, even so far as prac- tically to destroy the local governments and state judi- ciaries. The opinion was also expressed that the people did not intend to clothe Congress with such power nor did they intend to express by their votes a desire that the Fed- eral Government should be put in a position so to cripple the power of the States. He seemed to give his approval to the other provisions of the Amendment, but said that his objections to these were invincible.*'^ This declaration was made after the overwhelming victory of the Radicals, and cannot, therefore, be charged with a partisan motive. The great object of the Amendment, another paper as- serted, was to take away the power of the people and to place it in the hands of a political party in Congress. " In its whole tenor, scope, and design, it is opposed to every conceded and sound principle of Republican government. It belongs only to a fatherless despotism." *^ The declarations and statements of newspapers, writers and speakers, which have been given, show very clearly, it seems, the general opinion held in the North. That opin- ion, briefly stated, was that the Amendment embodied the Civil Rights Bill and gave Congress the power to define and secure the privileges of citizens of the United States. There does not seem to have been any statement at all as to whether the first eight Amendments were to be made applicable to the States or not, whether the privileges guar- anteed by those Amendments were to be considered as privi- leges secured by the Amendment, but it may be inferred "Ibid., November 17, 1866. ** Pittsburg Post, September 26, in World, November 5, 1866. 154 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. that this was recognized to be the logical result by those who thought that the freedom of speech and of the press as well as due process of law, including a jury trial, were secured by it. It is proper, at this place, to see what view was taken of the Amendment in the South. Only a few references are necessary to show that the opinion which prevailed gener- ally in the South was similar to that held in the North. The Charleston Courier approved the interpretation which Mr. Browning gave of it, in that it conferred new and enormous powers upon Congress and was fraught with evil.*^ This same paper published, with apparent approval, the messages of Governor Jenkins, of Georgia, and Governor Walker, of Florida, to the same effect.^" Another leading Southern paper took an even stronger position than did the Courier. It was declared that the negro, being made a citizen by the first section, was to be placed on an equality with the whites as well as to be given protection before the courts in all his civil rights, the latter of which Georgia had already done. It was then asked where was the limit to the power bestowed upon Congress by the fifth section. The follow- ing statement of Governor Sharkey, of Mississippi, was also quoted approvingly : " Should the Amendment become a part of the Constitution, we shall have a far different government from that inherited from our fathers," and to this the editor added : " Then indeed will the Sun of Lib- erty have set in the South."^^ In another issue the editor discussed and approved the interpretation given in the let- ter of Mr. Browning.''^ Another very influential paper asserted that the first sec- tion, which struck at the foundation of American liberty, changed the character of the government, transferred from "November i, 1866. ■" November 7, 1866. "Atlanta Intelligencer, October 4, 1866. "Ibid., October 30, 1866. The Amendment Before the People. 155 the States to the General Government the right to define the qualifications of their citizens, and obliterated the rights and powers of municipal authority in the States. It was also declared to be clearly evident, from the language of the section, that the Civil Rights Bill, the provisions of which ignored and set aside the jurisdiction of the civil courts of the States over their own internal municipal regulations was to be given constitutional validity or authority.^^ The editor called attention to the fact that little attention was given to the first section, though he regarded it as the most dangerous part of the whole Amendment. Two days later this same writer, who was an exceptionally strong man, declared that the States would be made the executive de- pendencies of a consolidated despotism by the Amendment and that the conclusion was inevitable that the designs of the Radicals, as shown in the Amendment, were to merge all the reserved powers of the States in the Central Gov- ernment. Later in the campaign, the same paper said that the New York Herald, the Raleigh Standard, and the Newbern Times proceeded upon the idea that the third section was the most offensive to the South, but again reiterated its statement of an earlier date that this was not the case, but that the first section was the objectionable one.^* '' The Radicals," continued the Sentinel, "who understand the hearing of the Amendment upon the organic law and genius of the Government, keep their deep and revolutionary de- signs out of the view of the people. North and South, alto- gether, and only dwell upon the demagogical features of the Amendment. They know that to talk of disfranchising ' rebels and traitors ' is a sweet sound to the ears of the Northern people. But we repeat what we have before said, "Raleigh Sentinel, June 20, 1866. _ "Ibid., September 19, 1866, in the World of October 29. Italics in the original. 156 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. the disfranchising clause is the least objectionable feature of the Howard Amendment." The first sentence of this quotation is an admirable state- ment of the actual condition at the time, as the aftermath clearly shows. It has already been noted that most of the attention of the speakers during the campaign was given to the second, third, and fourth sections, the " demagogical features " or partisan elements of the Amendment, and that little stress was put upon the first and fifth sections. It would seem that the Sentinel had given the proper reason for this. A later statement of the same paper is almost equally as significant.^"^ The same writer also maintained that the first and fifth sections contained the germ of consolidation as well as the destruction of the efficiency, if not the very existence, of the state governments. Congress was empowered by the fifth section, he continued, to pass any law necessary to enforce the Amendment, and might, under this provision, declare that suffrage was a privilege which could not be denied by state law. There was nothing, he asserted, in the Constitution which would render such a law unconsti- tutional, and that it would clearly be within the province of Congress to define citizenship and the privileges with which it should be endowed. Congress would also be em- powered, he added, to organize such courts and bureaus as it might deem proper, to give jurisdiction over a particular class of persons to these courts, and to permit them not only •^ Ibid., October 8, in World of October 29, 1866. The editorial is in part as follows: "That Amendment, we hold, is adverse to the inherent and rightful powers of the States, pro- vides for and looks to a solid sovereignty, instead of a govern- ment of limited powers, breaks down the wholesome checks of the Constitution and the state governments, and must inevitably result in universal negro suffrage, not by the free, voluntary consent of the people of the States, but by the future forced action of Con- gress and the consequent transfer of municipal control of the state governments over their internal affairs into the hands of Congress. We believe that this is a wrong — a wrong which neither Providence indicates nor the results of war render necessary or proper." The Amendment Before the People. 157 to sue and be sued, and to testify, but to be jurors, lawyers, and judges. In conclusion he asked : " What evil, then, could Congress fasten upon the Southern States which is not constitutionally and legally provided for in this Amend- ment? Is there not more reason to hope for a change of a had law than to change a had constitution? " This writer was not opposed to an Amendment fixing a just ratio of representation, an Amendment defining treason and its pun- ishments for the future, an Amendment declaring the Union indissoluble, or an Amendment preventing the States from abridging in any manner the civil rights of the negroes, but was opposed to Amendments like the Howard Amendment which, he asserted, clearly violated " the principles of the Constitution as it now is." '*' The Nashville Union and American said the Amendment was the initial step of the Radical plan for centralizing power in the Central Government and for keeping the gov- ernment in control of the Radical States, and that one who could not see this was incompetent to advise men of intel- ligence as to their rights and interests."^ The Florida Union, of Jacksonville, declared that the Amendment would destroy the old Constitution, with its system of checks and balances, would tear away the safeguards of the States, and would give the Federal Government power to control the local affairs of the States, even to the extent of declaring who should hold office.^* The Louisville Journal, October 9, 1866, said it tended towards centralization and en- croached upon the domestic independence of the States, and was furthermore partisan, unequal, unjust, and inex- pedient."' The Memphis Avalanche, November 13, 1866, said that it had been the " war cry of the partisan leaders in the late struggle on the hustings and at the ballot-box," °* Ibid., in World for October 29, 1866. "^ In World for October 29, 1866. "Ibid., also in McPherson's Scrap Book, "The Fourteenth Amendment," p. 40. * Ibid., p. 27. 158 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. and that it meant, to Northern people, negro equaUty, social and political, but not applicable to themselves.^** The Montgomery Mail, February, 1867, said the chief objection to the Amendment was the first section, which " forbids a State from depriving him (a negro) of any rights or privi- leges which a white man may possess." *^ The Picayune, of New Orleans, said that the first section was but an incorporation into the Constitution of the Civil Rights Bill.®^ An opponent of the Amendment said that it secured the negro the right to vote, to sit on juries, to enter hotels, lecture rooms, etc.^' The Vicksburg Herald was of the opinion that the Radicals neither expected nor desired the South to adopt the Amendment, its object being to keep that section out until after the presidential election.®* A press correspondent, seemingly a Republican, said that the Democrats of Kentucky feared that Congress would be empowered by the Amendment to confer the suffrage. The writer further said that the Amendment admitted negroes to the witness stand, the jury box, street cars, good seats in public conveyances, good accommodations at hotels, the public schools, and all other civil rights which white people enjoyed, and that if it went this far, the Democrats rea- soned that it might go further.®" It was stated by the Vicksburg Republican, after the Amendment had been de- clared a part of the Constitution, that under the first sec- tion negroes were entitled to sit on juries and advised them to see that they were granted this right.®® The Philadel- phia News, July 31, 1868, maintained that the elective fran- chise was one of the privileges secured by the Amendment, not only to negroes, but to women and children.®^ This "Ibid., p. 43. "Ibid., p. 9. Ibid., p. 26. *■ Ibid., p. 24. " Ibid., p. 27. * Ibid., p. 84. "Ibid., p. 83. "Ibid., p. 77. The Amendment Before the People. 159 was an unusual view, however, and while the paper seems to have bitterly opposed the Radicals, this statement can hardly be said to have been made for partisan purposes since it had been announced more than a week before that the Amendment had been ratified. Mr. Benjamin H. Hill, of Georgia, who was later elected Senator, stated, in an open letter to the editor of the New York Herald, that the South accepted the conditions of the President without complaint as well as the Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills without representation, but that they objected to the requirement of Congress that they disfranchise their leaders.®^ Mr. Hill was a Union man. The statements which have been given seem amply suffi- cient to show that the Southern press and people discerned the tendency of the Amendment and pointed out their ob- jections to it. The objection to the third section was prob- ably the one which influenced the great mass of the people more than any other. That section was easily understood and its effect could be seen and felt, and as becomes a brave and noble people they would not willingly consent to the degradation and punishment of their own leaders, for they were unable to see that their leaders were more deserving of such treatment than were they themselves. But for this section, the South, under the circumstances, might have been induced to give its assent to the Amendment in order to regain its position in the councils of the nation, though this may be doubted. With that section in, however, it preferred to endure military rule rather than humiliate itself by deserting its brave and loyal leaders. It is a rather striking coincidence that the thoughtful men, North and South, regarded the first section, in connec- tion with the fifth, as the most objectionable of the entire Amendment, for in it they saw the possibility, and no doubt the purpose, of a strong consolidated Federal Government, "Herald, October 10, 1866. i6o Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. with greatly enlarged powers put into the hands of Con- gress. These views were presented to the people in able letters and editorials, and many were undoubtedly aware of the dangers pointed out. So many questions, however, were presented that some of these dangers were lost sight of, but we shall not at present consider the motives which induced the great majority of the people to give their assent to the Amendment. CHAPTER IV. The Amendment Before the States. It now becomes our duty to trace the course of the Amendment before the Legislatures of the several States and to determine, if possible, what they thought it meant and what reasons were given for its approval or disap- proval. Connecticut was the first State to take action on the ._Amendment, which had been submitted to the Secretary of State on June i6, 1866, and by him submitted to the several " States. There was no delay in Connecticut, for the Gover- nor of that State sent it to the Legislature on June 19. A motion was made in the Senate that the consideration of the Amendment be postponed until the next General As- sembly. This was done no doubt for the purpose of giving the people an opportunity to express their opinion, but the motion was defeated. The Amendment was ratified in the Senate by a vote of 11 to 6, June 25, after a short debate. \ The House, two days later, ratified it by a vote of 125 to 88. It was a party vote in both houses, the Democrats opposing it on the grounds of expediency and policy, and declaring that Congress could not change the Constitution during the enforced absence of certain Representatives / from Congress. The Republicans contended that Congress had all the powers of conquest against the conquered rebels.^ New Hampshire followed close upon the heels of Con- necticut in taking action, for the Legislatures of these two ^ Senate Journal of Conn., 1866, p. 374, and Annual Cyclopedia, 1866, pp. 255-56. II 161 1 62 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. States were in session at the time. Qn^ Iuae-26^-i^6$j Jhe. House Committee reported a resolution for the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, the minority submitting a .jreport with their objections. The resolution was debated f at some length, June 26, 27 and 28, and was adopted on June 28, by a vote of 207 to 112.^ The minority report gave the following reasons, among 1 "^thers, against the ratification of the Amendment : j ^.^^ M. Because the States most deeply interested were un- justly excluded from all participation in Congress on the subject of the Amendment. 2. Because there was nothing in the condition of any sec- tion of the country to render the Amendment necessary. 4. Because there were several amendments in one, each of which should be given separate consideration and action, and not be acted upon as a unit. 5. Because the proposed Amendment is ambiguous or contradictory in its provisions, jthe first section prohibiting any State from abridging the privileges of citizens of the United States, the right of suffrage being claimed as one of these privileges, and the second section, by inference, allowing the States to restrict the right of suffrage if will- ing to submit to the consequent disabilities. " 6. Because said Amendment is a dangerous infringe- ment upon the rights and independence of all the States, ' North as well as South, assuming, as it does, to control their legislation in matters purely local in their character, and impose disabilities on them for regulating, in their own way, the right of suffrage, — clearly a state right, — a right vital to the theory of our government, and most sacredly guarded by the framers of the Constitution." 7. Because there was no corresponding reduction in direct taxes for loss of representation. " 13. And finally, because the only occasion and real de- * N. H. House Journal, 1866, p. 231. The Amendment Before the States. 163 sign of the proposed Amendment is to accomplish indirectly what the General Government has and should have no power to do directly, namely, to interfere with the regula- tion of the elective franchise in the States, and thereby force negro siiffrage upon an unwilling people." ^ The fifth, sixth and thirteenth sections of this report show clearly what the minority thought would be the effect of the Amendment. The sixth reason is especially impor- tant since it shows that the view, which was later held by many eminent men to be the true interpretation of the Amendment, was perceived at this early date. It is to be regretted that we have no record of the debates which took place, for we are unable to know what answers, if any, were given to the above objections. The Senate Committee reported the House resolution favorably on July 2, a minority report identical with that made in the House being submitted. The resolution was debated July 5 and 6, passing the Senate on the latter date . by a vote of 9 to 3.* ,.,... — — i The third State, strange to say, which considered the Amendment, was Tennessee. The Legislature of that State was not in session at the time, but a special session was called for the purpose of ratifying the Amendment. The Legislature met in accordance with the summons of Gov- ernor Brownlow/ sometimes called Parson Brownlow, July 4. / In the Senate it was proposed to submit the question of ratification or rejection of the Amendment to the people, but this resolution was defeated. Senator Frazier then offered an amendment to the resolution proposing the rati- fication of the Amendment. This amendment was in the following terms: "Provided, that the foregoing proposed Amendments to the Constitution of the United States shall ' Ibid., pp. 176-178. *N. H. Senate Journal, 1866, p. 94. 164 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. not be so construed as to confer the right of suffrage upon "a negro, or person of color, or to confer upon such negro "oi-'person of color the right to hold office, sit upon juries,^ or to intermarry with white persons! nor shall said proposed Amendments be so construed as to prohibit any State from enacting and enforcing such laws as will secure these ends, not inconsistent with the present Constitution of the United States, nor shall said proposed Amendments be so con- strued as to abridge the reserved rights of the States in the election and qualification of their own officers, and the man- agement of their domestic concerns, as provided and secured by the present Constitution of the United States." This_ amendment was rejected, and the Amendment was then rati- fied by a vote of 16 to 14.° There was very little, if any, debate in the Senate, but the amendment proposed by Sen- ator Frazier shows what the minority thought would be the construction put upon the Amendment. It is of course evident that a State, through its Legislature or otherwise, cannot limit or extend the construction or interpretation of a proposed Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, but its effort to do so would be a clear indication of what it feared would be the construction of the proposed Amendment. The effort of the minority to do this in this particular case is of importance only as showing their views of the Amendment. It may not be altogether proper to say that the majority, by rejecting Senator Frazier's amendment, recognized that the Amendment would secure those things which his amendment proposed to include, and that they, therefore, intended to secure them. In ordinary cases, it would be perfectly proper to draw such a conclu- sion, but in this case the reason for the rejection of the amendment of the minority might properly have been that the Legislature had no right to pass such a restrictive reso- lution, or, in other words, to make a conditional ratification *Tenn. Senate Journal (Extra Session), 1866, pp. 18 and 24. The Amendment Before the States. 165 of the AmendmguL... It is evident, however, that if Mr. ' Frazier's ihterpretation or Hmited construction were to be placed upon it, that the first eight Amendments would not be made binding upon the States. There was no quorum in the House for some time, so that nothing could be done except to adjourn from day to day. After considerable ejffort, two of the recalcitrant members wcre^ arrested and brought into a committee room opening into the Chamber of the House. They refused to vote when their names were called, whereupon the Speaker ruled that jtbefe'Avas no quorum. His decision, however, was over- ruled, and the Amendment was declared ratified July 19, 1866, by a vote of 43 to 11, the two members under arrest in the adjoining committee room not voting.^ New^ Jersey followed the example set by Tennessee in call ing an extra session of the Legislature. In the latter case it was called ostensibly to elect a United States Senator, but really to pass upon the Amendment. Governor Ward urged its ratification " as the most lenient amnesty ever offered to treason, while every provision is wisely adapted to the wel- fare of the whole country." This message was sent to the Legislature September 10, 1866, and the Amendment was ratified the following day in the House by vote of 34 to 29 ; in the Senate it received 11 votes, the 10 Democrats not voting.'^ The Democrats of New Jersey were successful in the elec- tion of 1867, securing a large majority in the House. The Legislature elected at this time met on January 14, 1868, and eight days later the Judiciary Committee of the Senate was instructed to report a joint resolution withdrawing the assent of New Jersey to the Fourteenth Amendment. On January 28, the Committee on Federal Relations (composed of the Judiciary Committees of both houses) reported a joint reso- lution rescinding the resolution approved September 11, 1866, relative to the Amendment, and withdrawing the assent of •Tenn. House Journal (Extra Session), 1866, p. 25. 'Annual Cyclopedia, 1866, pp. 53^40- 1 66 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. New Jersey thereto.^/ The resolution declared that a State had the right to witTTdraw its assent to an Amendment until it had been ratified by three fourths of the States. The origin and object of the Amendment were declared to be un- just, and that the necessary result of its adoption would be " the disturbance of the harmony, if not the destruction of our system of self-government." It was also declared that eleven States had been excluded from Congress in order to secure two thirds of both Houses for it, and finding that two thirds of the remaining States would not be obtained, the design was deliberately formed and carried out by eject- ing one of the Senators of New Jersey, Senator Stockton. The resolution further declared that no pretext or justifica- tion could be given for his ejection, and that it and the Amendment had the same object in view, namely, " to place new and unheard of powers in the hands of a faction." The immense alterations to be made in the fundamental law by the proposed Amendment, continued the resolution, were concealed by the gilded propositions of justice which were drawn from the Constitutions of the States. The third sec- tion was denounced on account of its ex post facto char- acter as well as for the reason that it conferred upon the legislative branch of the government the pardoning power — a power which properly belonged to the executive. The resolution further declared that it imposed new pro- hibitions upon the power of the States to pass laws or to ex- ecute such parts of the common law as the national judiciary might hold inconsistent with the vague provisions of the Amendment. The provisions were made vague, it was asserted, for the purpose of facilitating encroachments upon the liberties of the people. The federal judiciary, further- more, was to be so enlarged as to bring within its jurisdic- tion every state law and every principle of common law re- lating to life, liberty and property. The whole Amendment was " couched in ambiguous, vague, and obscure language, the uniform resort of those who seek to encroach upon public liberty." It was also stated in the resolution that this Legis- *.N. J. Senate Journal, 1868, pp. 31 and 40. The Amendment Before the States. 167 lature had the support of the largest majority ever given ex- pression to by the public will.* The resolution passed the Senate February 19, 1868, by a vote of ii.Jto^8/° and the House concurred the next day by a vote of 44 to 11.^^ The Governor returned the resolution, February 24, without his approval, stating that he did not be- lieve that a State could withdraw its assent to a proposed Amendment,/and besides, that the people had approved the Amendment/in the election after its adoption and that it had not been mentioned in the campaign preceding the election of the present Legislature.^^ The resolution passed the Senate a second time, March 5, by a vote of 11 to 9,^^ while the "House passed it by a vote of 45 to 13.^* In the House, Mr. Atwater presented a protest for himself and others against the passage of the resolution, but this protest was not allowed to be printed in the Minutes of the Assembly. The General Assembly of Oregon assembled September 10, 1866, ^he same day on which the special session of the New Jersey Legislature met. The resolution ratifying the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted by the Senate four days later by a vote of 13 to 9, after having rejected an amend- ment to submit the question of ratification or rejection to the people.^'' On the 17th the Senate resolution was reported to the House, where it had a somewhat checkered history. It was reported back from the Judiciary Committee on the 19th, and was agreed to the same day, apparently without debate, "by a vote of 25 to 21. A protest was filed by the minority against the passage of the resolution on the ground that it was only considered one day by the Committee ; that the minority of the Committee had not been consulted ; that some of those holding seats were not entitled to them; and that such an important matter as the Amendment should receive .'N. J. Legislative Documents, 1868, pp. 951-55. ' *'*N. J. Senate Journal, 1868, p. 198. " N. J. Minutes of the Assembly, 1868, p. 309. "N. J. Senate Journal, 1868, pp. 249-53. " Ibid., p. 356. " N. J. Minutes of the Assembly, 1868, p. 743. " Oregon Senate Journal, 1866, pp. 34-36. 1 68 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. some consideration and deliberation.^* In fact some of those holding seats were afterwards unseated, thus demonstrating the correctness of the declaration of the minority. Then on October 6, a resolution, declaring the passage of the resolu- tion of September 19 illegal, was adopted by a vote of 24 to 18. This was done on the ground that the passage of that resolution was obtained by the votes of those not entitled to seats.^^ The resolution of October 6 was reconsidered on October 10, and was lost by a vote of 24 to 23, thus refusing to declare invalid the resolution of September 19.^* ' ^ resolution rescinding the ratification of the Amendment vjvas introduced early in the session of 1868. It was stated in the resolution that the ratification by Oregon had been ob- tained by fraud, and that the Amendment was not properly a part of the Constitution, since the Southern States had ratified it under governments created by a military despot- ism.^^ The Committee on Federal Relations, in reporting the resolution September 23, 1868, declared that the ratifica- tion of the Amendment by the last Legislature was one of the reasons for the overthrow of the Radicals at the recent election. The report also stated that the people expected them to rescind the action of the last Legislature. The reso- 4ution was adopted October 5, by vote of 13 to 9.^° The House concurred October 15, by vote of 26 to 18.^^ Vermont was the sixth and last State to ratify the Amend- X ment during the year 1866. The Legislature assembled ^-"^ctober 11, 1866, and the resolution ratifying the Amend- ment was adopted unanimously by the Senate October 23, the vote being 28 to o.^^ The resolution was agreed to by the House October 30, by a vote of 196 to ii.^' ,' There seems to have been no minority report nor any debate whatever. New York was the first to ratify in 1867, the Legislature " Oregon House Journal, 1866, pp. 74-77. Mbid., pp. 192-93. " Ibid., p. 228. "Oregon Senate Journal, 1868, p. 32. "Ibid., pp. 66 and 131. ** Oregon House Journal, 1868, p. 273. **Vt. Senate Journal, 1866, p. 75. "Vt. House Journal, 1866, p. 140. The Amendment Before the States. 169 of that State meeting January i. On the first day of the session resolutions were introduced in both Houses for the ' ratification of the Amendment. Little time was lost in the \ Senate, for the resolution was referred to a special Commit- tee the next day, and was adopted the day following by a vote of 23 to 3.^* The members of the Senate had been elected "m^ November, 1865, but they doubtless considered the suc- cess of the Republican party at the polls in 1866 as an ex- pression of the will of the people that the Amendment should be ratified since it had been made the issue in that election. The Senate resolution was received by the House January 9, and was adopted the next day by a vote of 71 to 36.^^ The members of the House had been elected the November pre- ceding, and were, therefore, acting in accordance with the expressed desire of the people. Bernard Cregan, nicknamed " Tom Thumb " on account of his size, was the only Demo- crat in the House who voted for the Amendment.^^ In fact he seems to have been the only one in any of the Legislatures who did this. Ohio was equally as prompt as New York in ratifying the Amendment, her ratification being one day later. Governor Cox ,^^ in his message to the General Assembly, January 2, 1867, recommended the ratification of the Amendment, de- claring that it was necessary to correct the evils remaining in -the Southern States. The first section, he maintained, was a grant of power to the National Government to protect the citizens of the United States in their legal privileges in case any State should attempt to oppress any individual or class or to deny equal protection to any one. The necessity for this section, he asserted, had been manifested long before the war, since the freedom of speech and of discussion was not tolerated there prior to the war. The power conferred by the section would remain in abeyance so long as the States acted in good faith and gave equal protection. A resolution for the ratification of the Amendment was introduced in '*N. Y. Senate Journal, 1867, p. 34. ''N. Y. House Journal, 1867, p. 77. "•N. Y. Herald, January 11, 1867. "Executive Doc. (Ohio), 1866, Pt. I, p. 281. I/O Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. and adopted by the Senate the next day, the vote being 21 to 12,^^ The House agreed to this resolution the next day, January 4, by a vote of 54 to 25.^® ^he resolution was not signed, however, until January 11, /'thus preventing Ohio from taking precedence over New^ York. A resolution was also introduced in the Senate January 3, to the effect that no Southern State should be admitted into the Union until a sufficient number of States had ratified the Amendment to secure its incorporation into the Constitution of the United States, but this failed to pass.^° Ohio has the distinction of being the first State to with- draw its assent to an Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. The Democrats were successful in the elec- tion of 1867, and when the Legislature assembled, January 6, 1868, resolutions were introduced in both Houses for the withdrawal of Ohio's assent to the Amendment and for re- scinding the resolution adopted January 11, 1867./ The rescinding resolution declared, among other things, that the Amendment was ex post facto in its nature and operation, and that it conferred upon Congress the power " to legislate on subjects foreign to the original objects of the Federal Compact." It was also stated to be one of the objects of the Amendment to enforce negro suffrage and negro equality in the States, and the ratification of it by the previous Legislature was declared to be a misrepresentation of the public sentiment of Ohio and contrary to the best in- terests of the white race. The resolution passed the House January 11, 1868, by a vote of 52 to 37.^^ The resolution was amended in the Senate so as to de- clare that no Amendment to the Constitution was valid until three fourths of all the States had duly ratified it, and that until it was so ratified, any State had the right to with- draw its assent. The President was to be requested to for- ward to the Governor of Ohio all papers on file in the Executive Department certifying the ratification of the ^ Ohio Senate Journal, 1867, pp. 7-9. ''Ohio House Journal, 1867, p. 12. ** Ohio Senate Journal, 1867, pp. 9 and 446. ** Ohio House Journal; 1868, pp. 12 and 32. The Amendment Before the States. 171 Amendment by the General Assembly of Ohio, and copies of the rescinding resolution were to be sent to the President, to each of the Senators and Representatives of Ohio in Con- gress and to the Governors of the several States. The reso- lution as amended was adopted by the Senate January 13, "By'aTvote of 19 to lyp The House agreed to the amend- rnent by a vote of 56 to 46,^^ and the resolution was signed January 15. The statement made in the resolution that the Amendment had been ratified against the wishes of the people can hardly be sustained, for the Legislature which ratified it was elected in the fall of 1866 after a full discussion of the Amendment. Governor Hayes, in his inaugural address, 1868, said that the Amendment had been approved by the people and that there was no evidence to show that they desired the assent of Ohio to it to be withdrawn.^* It was also stated that the Amendment had not been even a side issue in the campaign of i867.='5 Governor Oglesby, of Illinois, in his message to the Gen- eral Assembly, January 7, 1867, said that the people had en- "dqrsedjhe Amendment most emphatically " after a full and "deliberate discussion." The Amendment could have been made with propriety before the war, he asserted, but that the necessity for it might have grown out of the war. He thought all persotis born or naturalized in the United States were citizens, and were, therefore, entitled to all the polit- ical and civil rights which citizenship conferred.^** Four days after the reception of this message, the Senate, after a short debate, passed a resolution ratifying the Amendment by a vote of 17 to 8.^^ The House refused, by a vote of 57 to 24, to refer the resolution to the Committee on Fed- eral Relations. It then agreed to the resolution by a vote of 60 to 25, January 15.^* "' -^^Ohio Senate Journal, 1868, pp. 33-38. ^'Ohio House Journal, 1868, pp. 44-50. "Executive Docs. (Ohio), 1867, Pt. I, p. 207. " Cincinnati Commercial, January 15, 1868. ^ 111. Senate Journal, 1867, p. 40. " Ibid., p. 7^. "III. House Journal, 1867, p. 134. 1/2 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. West Virginia was the fourth state to ratify the Amend- ment in January, 1867, giving her assent to it the i6th. The vote in the House was 43 to 11 ; in the Senate 15 to 3.^® Kansas disposed of the Amendment without delay. The Legislature met January 8, 1867, and on the following day the House adopted a resolution ratifying the Amendment by a vote of y6 to 7.*° Two days later the Senate con- curred, the vote being 23 to o.,/ Governor Crawford, in his message of the 9th, stated thaf the Amendment had been the platform submitted to the people in the canvass of 1866, from Maine to California.*^ On January 11, 1867, the Committee on Federal Relations reported back to the House of the Maine Legislature the resolution proposing the ratification of the Amendment^ The resolution was given the three readings on the same day, being adopted by a vote of 126 to 12.*^ The most prominent member of the House who voted for the resolu- tion was the Hon. Wm. P. Frye, at present a United States Senator from Maine. The vote in the Senate four .days later was unanimously in favor of the resolution.*^ J^ The Republican State Convention** at Bangor, June 22, 1866, had emphatically endorsed the Amendment. There was about as little opposition to the Amendment in Nevada as there was in Maine, for the House ratified it January 10, 1867, by a vdte of 34 to 4,*^ and the Senate January 21, by 10 to 3.*^ The members of both Houses had been elected in November, 1866. Governor Fletcher, of Missouri, in his r^iessage to the Legislature, January 4, 1867, said that the first section of the Amendment prevented any State " from depriving any citizen of the United States of any of the rights conferred *" Documentary History of the Constitution, II, p. 693, and Annual Cyclopaedia, 1867, p. 765. ** Kansas House Journal, 1867, p. 79. "Kansas Senate Journal, 1867, pp. 40, 76. " Maine House Journal, 1867, p. 78. ** Annual Cyclopaedia, 1867, p. 471. "Ibid., 1866, p. 467. "Nev. House Journal, 1867, p. 25. **Nev. Senate Journal, 1867, p. 47. The Amendment Before the States. 173 on him by the laws of Congress," and secured to " all per- sons equality in protection of life, liberty, and property, under the laws of the State." ^^ This is a specific declara- tion that no State could deprive any citizen of any right conferred upon him by Congress, and it may be inferred that the Legislature gave an implied sanction to it by rati- fying the Amendment. On the day following the reception of the Governor's message the Committee reported back the resolution ratify- ing the Amendment. There was little, if any, debate on it, and the resolution was adopted the same day, the vote "being 26 to 6.*® On January 8, the House agreed to the Senate resolution by a vote of 85 to 34.*** <-- Governor Morton, in his message to the General Assembly ^\J^ ofThdiana, January 11, suggested that schools be provided for negroes, and advised that separate schools be established on account of the dissatisfaction which would be engendered if they were required to be admitted to the schools for the whites.^** Immediately after the delivery of the message a resolution was introduced in the Senate for the ratification of the Amendment. This resolution was favorably reported by the Committee on Federal Relations on January 16. The minority of the Committee filed a report stating that they did not believe that the public mind was at present in a condition for changing the organic law, and recommending that the question be submitted to the people at another time and un- der more auspicious circumstances. The resolution was adopted, however, on the same day, the vote being 29 to 18.^^ No speech was made in the Senate in favor of the resolu- tion and only two against it, the previous question having been called. Mr. Hanna spoke for one hour and a half in opposition to it, declaring that the Amendment would change the whole organic structure of the Government and that it " Mo. Senate Journal, 1867, p. 14. " Ibid., p. 30. *' McPherson, Reconstruction, p. 194. ** Ind. Documentary Journal, 1867, I, p. 21. "Ind. Senate Journal, 1867, pp. 77-79- 1/4 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. put "the ax to the roots of the tree (the Constitution) itself."°2 The House Committee, in reporting the resolution, stated that the people had emphatically declared for the adoption of the Amendment after it had been fully discussed. The minority report said that the purposes of the Amendment were partisan in that it was intended to perpetuate power in the hands of a minority of the people. The report further asserted that the first section placed all citizens on a political level, and conferred, therefore, upon the negroes the same political and civil rights enjoyed by white persons, includ- ing the right of suffrage. It was also stated that the people had been most thoroughly deceived by the Republican ora- tors and that, if the Amendment were submitted to the people it would be defeated by 100,000 majority.^ ^ Mr. Ross, discussing the Amendment in the House de- clared that it would have the effect of striking out the word " white " from the state Constitution and of repealing all state laws making distinctions on account of race and color. He also contended that it would make the negro eligible to seats in the Legislature, would open the jury box to him, and would permit him to send his children to the com- mon schools with the white children.^* Another speaker de- clared next day that the Amendment was not sincerely drafted and was intended to destroy the power of the States 1^ to determine the status of citizenship, and that its " ratifica- tion would be a dangerous, if not a crowning step toward that consideration against which the country has been warned by the Fathers." He also denounced it as a sectional, partisan effort to confer suffrage on the negroes.^^ Mr. Dunn, speak- ing in advocacy of the Amendment, said that the interpre- " The entire sentence was as follows : " It (the Amendment) pro- poses to change the whole organic nature of our government. It does not purpose merely to lop off from the limb of the old oak a crooked and leafless limb that is thought useless, or to engraft upon some branch of its noble arms additional luxuriance and beauty, but it lays the ax to the roots of the tree itself." Ind. Brevier Legislative Reports, 1867, pp. 44-46. " Ind. House Journal, 1867, pp. 101-105. "Ind. Brevier Legislative Reports, 1867, p. 80. " Ibid., p. 88. The Amendment Before the States. 175 tation put upon the first section in regard to suffrage by its opponents was opposed by the second section. In reply to the objection that it but repeated the principles of the Civil Rights Bill, Mr. Dunn said : " Well, we propose to make those principles permanent by writing them in the funda- mental law." If the Amendment were not adopted, he added, and the Civil Rights Bill should be held unconstitu- tional, the negroes would be in a worse condition. than before their emancipation.^" Mr. Baker followed Mr. Dunn in op- position to the Amendment, quoting the words of Senator Trumbull to the effect that he hoped to see the day when the judges would declare that the Civil Rights Bill conferred suffrage on the negroes. He then pointed out the similarity of that bill to the first section of the Amendment."'^ An advocate of the measure said that suffrage was not a privilege of citizenship, and was not, therefore, conferred by the first section.*^* The following significant declaration was made by Mr. Wolfe in explaining his vote. "And there never has been an Amendment to it [the Constitution] but it has been to take power from the General Government and to give it to the people. This Amendment is the reverse of that, therefore, I vote no.' "^® The statement that suffrage was conferred by the first section was denied by the advo- cates of the Amendment, but no denial was made to the statement that negroes would be given the right to sit on juries, to hold office, and to attend schools on equal terms with the whites. The previous question was called and the resolution agreed to by the House January 23, by a vote of 55~tb 36.»° 'Scarcely any time was given to the consideration of the Amendment in the General Assembly of Minnesota, for the resolution ratifying it was passed by the House the same day on which it was introduced, the vote being 40 to i^.^"^ ■* Ibid., p. 89. " Ibid., p. 89. "Ibid., p. 90. " Ibid., p. 90. "Ind. House Journal, 1867, p. 184. "Minn. House Journal, 1867, p. 25. 1/6 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Senate, after refusing to submit it to the Committee, concurred the next day, January i6, 1867, by a vote of 16 to 5.^^ ' The Governor had declared in his message of Jan- uary 10 that it would secure equal civil rights to all citi- zens of the United States.^' In Rhode Island the Senate ratified the Amendment Feb- ruary 5, 1867, with only two opposing votes, the vote being 26 to 2, while the House ratified it two days later by a vote of 60 to 9.^* Wisconsin and Pennsylvania ratified the Amendment on the same day, February 13, 1867. Gov_grnor Fairchild, of Wisconsin, in his message January 10, declared that the people were familiar with the provisions of the Amendment, and, " With-a-^uiLaf^derstanding of them in all their bear- ings," ihad approvedlthem by an overwhelming majority. He also stated that it had been the basis of the campaign and that most of the members of the Wisconsin Legislature were there because the people knew they deemed the Amendment just and necessary.®" The minority of the Committee on Federal relations filed a report setting forth their objections to the Amendment. In this report it was stated that the Amendment would^ive Congress power to confer suffrage on the negroes and to Jegislate for the citizens "of the several States and"" that it WQuld surrender certain rights and powers now belonging to the States. This surrender, it was declared, was made by the first section in connection with the fifth. Under the original Constitution, the report continued, the States re- served the right to make laws for the protection of life, liberty, and property of those within their borders, but that the first section of the proposed Amendment would make the Federal Government the arbiter between citizens of the "Minn. Senate Journal, 1867, p. 23. "Minn. Ex. Doc, 1865-66, p. 25. •* McPherson, Reconstruction, p. 194. "Wis. House Journal, 1867, p. 33. The Amendment Before the States. 177 same State. Moreover, the Federal Government would have the power to judge state laws and the manner in which the state authority was exercised over its citizens, thereby destroying the harmony between the States and the Federal Government and being a long stride towards consolidation. It was also declared that numerous rights, for example, the enforcement of contracts, the regulation of the inter- course between citizens, the protection of life, liberty, and property, etc., which were enjoyed under the States, would be put under the control of the Central Government."" The Amendment, contended the minority in this report, would work a complete subversion of the " fundamental princi- ples upon which the Union was founded," since Congress would have power to appoint Commissioners and provide Courts to determine whether any one was being deprived of his rights without due process of law. " If this was not the object of this section of the Amendments," it was asked, "what other purpose or object was sought by it?" The report also asserted that the " absolute rights of per- sonal security, personal liberty, and the right to acquire and enjoy private property, descended to the people of the gov- ernment as a part of the common law of England," and that there was no necessity of engrafting into the Constitu- " The report is as follows : " The powers of the Federal Gov- ernment, respecting the people of the States, are mostly external and are seldom felt by the individual or citizen in social or domestic relations. The powers of the state governments are constantly felt in the regulating of our intercourse with each other; in the making of our municipal laws; in the regulating our estates; in our town, village, city and county organizations; in redressing our wrongs and enforcing our contracts ; in protecting us in life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness as members of society. In all these things the power of the State is supreme. The first section of these Amendments aims a blow at these powers of the States. All these rights which we now enjoy under state authority, by it are made subordinate to federal power. " The first section, in connection with the fifth, will give the Federal Government the supervision of all social and domestic re- lations of the citizen in the State and subordinate state govern- ments to federal power." Ibid., p. 96. 1/8 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. tion "nor shall any State deprive any person of life, lib- erty, and property without due process of law" unless it was intended to confer power upon the Federal Govern- ment. Its evident purpose, it was declared, was to be con- strued to subordinate state authority to the Federal Govern- ment, and by it the independence and sovereignty of the state judiciary would be destroyed, and that when this was done, the State would be sovereign in nothing. In reference to the second section, the report said that it was an insidious distinction, since it allowed the alien non-voters in the North to be counted while the negroes would not, and asked how Wisconsin could insist upon it when the people had decided so adversely to negro suffrage in 1865." There is no record that these statements of the minority were denied, though the vote shows that the majority either did not believe them, or, accepting them, desired to accom- plish the purpose for which the minority said the Amend- ment was intended. „.- -' f The Senate ratified the Amendment January 23, 1867, by a vote of 22 to 10;** the House, February 7, by a vote of 69 to i8.«» Governor Curtin, of Pennsylvania^ in his message to the Legislature January 22, 1867, re'f erred to the fact that the people of Pennsylvania had had an opportunity to pass on the Fourteenth Amendment and had shown their approval of it by electing a large majority of those who had openly advocated it.'^'* On the same day that the message was received, a resolution was introduced in the Senate for the ratification of the Amendment. Xbis resolution,, after con- .siderable debate, was passed January 11, 1867, by a vote oT " Ibid., pp. 96-103. "Wis. Senate Journal, 1867, p. 119. Wis. House Journal, 1867, p. 224. •Penna. Senate Journal, 1867, p. 16. The Amendment Before the States. 179 21 to 11.'^^ The House, after a fairly full debate, con- curred in the resolution, February 6, by a vote of 62 to 34^^*" The Governor approved the resolution, February 13, 1867^ Tfie debates in the Pennsylvania Legislature were partici- pated in by both parties, and on this account are especially valuable. The debates are given in full, Pennsylvania being the only State which gave a full account of the debates at that time. It was the only State, too, which gave any con- siderable time to the discussion of the Amendment. Mr. Connell, speaking in favor of the Amendment, Jan- uary 4, 1867, quoted the law of Alabama for the year 1866 making it a crime, punishable by a fine of not less than $50.00 or more than $500.00, for any conductor, station agent, officer, or employee of any railroad to allow any freedman, negro or mulatto, except nurses with their mis- tresses, to ride in first-class passenger cars. After citing this statute, Mr. Connell declared that the adoption of the Amendment was a political necessity on account of the state of things in the South.'^^ An opponent of the Amend- ment asserted that the people had been deceived as to the purpose of it, being told that it made voters the basis of representation."'* Mr. Wallace, also an opponent of the Amendment, said that the first and fifth sections taken together declared who " Ibid., p. 125. It may be remarked that the only two instances recorded of petitions laid before the Senate of Pennsylvania in opposition to the Amendment, were made by members of the anti- slavery society and by Mrs. E. Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone and others of the Equal Rights Association. The former's opposition no doubt was due to the fact that the second section recognized the right of the States to regulate suffrage — thus being able to exclude the negro; the opposition of the latter was due to fact that suffrage was not granted to women. " Pa. House Journal, 1867, p. 278. '* In reference to this statute he said : " Not much Shakespeare in that. That section gives one a glimpse of the poetry, refinement, and humanity of Mississippi (Alabama) life." Pa. Legislative Record, 1867, vol. II (Appendix), p. 3. « Ibid., p. s. i8o Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. were citizens and conferred upon Congress the power to protect that citizenship. He defined privilege as " every- thing that is desirable " and immunity as " a privileged free- dom from anything painful," and asserted that, under the power conferred upon Congress by the second clause of section one, the dearest rights could be bestowed upon negroes. He also maintained that Congress would be au- thorized to enact laws concerning the regulation and control of liberty and property and to provide for the equal protec- tion of the laws. " H this be the power granted," he added, "what further need have we of the state government?" He contended that, even if concurrent jurisdiction were granted to the States and to the Federal Government, the latter would be superior, since it would have the right to review the state jurisdiction.'^^ An advocate of the Amendment said that the first section guaranteed " state rights to every human being," evidently having reference to the rights which were in the Bill of Rights in the several States. He also said that this section gave sanction or authority to the Civil Rights Bill, though he thought that bill constitutional without this section.'^* Mr. Davis, an opponent of the Amendment, declared that the people had not decided for it in the last election, since the issue presented to them had been negro suffrage in some instances, while in others it had been the validity of the United States bonds. He said that good Republicans had admitted and claimed that their success was due almost entirely to the immense amount of United States securities held by the people, " and to the adroit manner in which that trump card was played." He also stated it as his belief that thousands of ignorant men were induced to vote the Republican ticket by being told and made to believe that the success of the Democrat party would render the gov- " Ibid., p. 13. ' ~~ " Ibid, p. 16. The Amendment Before the States. i8i ernment bonds worthless, but that this belief was not enter- tained for a moment by the shrewd men who played the trick. The mass of the people, he asserted, also believed that the Amendment was to base representation on voters — this view having been presented by the speakers in favor of the Amendment. But the issue was, in his opinion, whether the ideas of Jefferson or those of John Adams were to prevail ; whether we were to continue to have a Federal Union of States or to have a grand central, consolidated Government under which the domestic laws of the States would be decided by Congress. " The issue is, whether the Constitution of the United States or the will of Congress shall be the supreme law of the land." '^'^ Another Senator declared that the Amendment struck at the very foundation stone of our republican form of gov- ernment. The first section was to meet the doctrine enun- ciated in the Dred Scott decision and to validate the Civil Rights Bill. Under this section, he continued. Congress might declare suffrage to be a privilege, since it was sus- ceptible of that interpretation. He cited the case of Cor- field vs. Coryell (4 Wash. Cir. Court Repts., p. 389) to show that the Court had considered the franchise a privi- lege. The fourth section was inserted, he declared, to secure votes. Of the fifth section he said, "If we are to judge the future by the past, I shall never vote to give Congress any such power. All the dangers that threaten republican institutions are centered in the Congress of the United States. ... I will never vote to enlarge their pow- ers. If I did, I would do it under the conviction that I was voting against the life of the Republic." "^^ In reply to the argument of Democrats that the Amend- ment was an invasion of State Rights, it was said that the right to define the qualifications of suffrage was not neces- " Ibid., p. iS. "Ibid., pp. 23-26. 1 82 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. sarily one of the reserved rights of the States, and that the argument was invalid anyway, since the Constitution pro- vided that three fourths of the States could alter it J® This was an admission on the part of a Republican that Q)ngress would have the right to declare that suffrage was a privi- lege, and therefore to define its qualifications. This was not generally admitted by them, however, the question either being avoided or the assertion of the minority denied. An opponent asserted that not only would Congress be empowered to regulate the franchise, but that it would re- sult in the taking of other rights from the States, since the efforts of the Republicans were to centralize the Govern- ment.®" An eminent statesman (Mr. Browning) was quoted as saying that the Amendment would change the entire structure and texture of the Government and sweep away all the guarantees provided by the framers of the Constitution. The speaker then asked whether any ra- tional man could doubt those facts.^^ A Republican went so far as to declare that Congress had the power to change the status of the States if the weal of the country made it necessary or desirable; that the power of the age and the country was in Congress, as representing the millions of men who had saved the Government and that it was both their " prerogative and duty to do anything and everything that the peace and perpetuity of the country require and demand." ^^ This was undoubtedly an extreme view — one to which only the veriest Radicals would subscribe, but it showed the spirit of some of the men of the time, and the speaker undoubtedly thought the Amendment was making more sure the powers which he asserted belonged to Con- gress. Speaking on another occasion, one of the Senators said "Ibid., p. 32. "Ibid., p. 35. « Ibid., p. 38. "Ibid., p. 37. The Amendment Before the States. 183 that Philadelphia was the only city which did not allow negroes to enter street cars, and that this was contrary to the Republican doctrine that all should be equal before the law.®* The debate in the House was of a nature very similar to that in the Senate. It was asserted by an opponent of the measure that it placed the regulation of the civil relations of each State under the control of the Federal Govern- ment ; that the States were to act only as the agents or in- struments to enforce the federal will, and that almost the en- tire civil and criminal jurisprudence of the States was placed under the control of Congress. He also declared that it was not necessary, in considering the proposition, to examine the question as to what relations the citizens of the States ought to sustain to each other, but that the only question raised by it, was whether it would be better to give the Fed- eral Government the power asked for by the Amendment, or to leave it where it then was, with the States. He thought it should be the object of all to narrow the grounds of con- troversy between the States, but that just the opposite would be accomplished by the proposed Amendment, since sub- jecting the affairs of each State to the control of Congress would enlarge the field of controversy. He then cited the second section of the Civil Rights Bill as an illustration of the manner in which Congress would exercise its power to regulate the affairs of the States, and added : " Under this section the executive, the legislative, and judicial officers of a State m^y be convicted and punished as criminals. All are subjected to the supreme law of the Congressional will, which is exercised alike in determining the construction of state laws as well as in prescribing the punishment of those who execute them."®* Mr. Kurtz, an opponent of the Amendment, believed that the first clause would give suf- frage to negroes, but whether this clause would ipso facto "* Ibid., p. 84. " Lawful equality must everywhere be freely sanc- tified throughout this land or we perish. If he (the negro) fills our pulpits, our school-houses, our academies, our colleges, and our Senate Chambers, I bid him God speed." ** Ibid., p. 41. 184 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. confer that right might be a question, he said, but that it was quite certain that the first section, taken together as a whole, would give Congress the power, by simple statute, to confer it. It was pointed out that nowhere in the Constitution or in the proposed Amendment was there a catalogue or enumer- ation of the " privileges and immunities " of citizens which the States were prohibited from abridging by the second clause of section one. Mr. Kurtz then asked : " In case of dispute, where exists the authority to define these ' privileges and immunities ' ?" The answer was to be found in the fifth section, he declared, which undoubtedly conferred the power upon Congress, and that under that section Congress could also " impose penalties upon all who, under the authority of any pretended state law, should deny or abridge these privi- leges and immunities." A law of Congress, therefore, he asserted, declaring that suffrage was a privilege, would be constitutional. He furthermore opposed the Amendment, because, by it, all the legal barriers theretofore existing be- tween the white and black races would be removed, and that opportunities and inducements would be given for the asso- ciation and commingling of the races on such terms of equality as would " naturally result in the gradual, but cer- tain, blending of the two races into one mixed race or people." ^' Mr. Mann, an advocate of the Amendment, said that it would enable the Federal Government to accomplish the ob- ject for which the founders of the Republic declared that all governments were established, namely, to protect all its citi- zens in their rights of life, liberty, and property.®* Two Democrats thought that it would confer suffrage on the negroes and make them the political and social equals of the whites.®'^ A Republican thought that it was necessary to adopt the Amendment to secure peace and freedom, includ- ing the freedom of speech.®^ Still another supporter of the « Ibid., p. 52. ■* Ibid., p. 48. "^ Ibid., pp. 54, 60. ^ Ibid., p. 55. The Amendment Before the States. 185 Amendment declared that it was proposed to write the Civil Rights Bill in the Constitution and to put the inalienable rights enunciated in the Declaration of Independence in the organic law.®® Mr. Deise, a Democrat, asserted that it was a question of centralization, and that the rights of the first section were already safeguarded in better form by every State of the Union unless it was intended to confer suffrage on the negroes. In reference to the fifth section he said that a similar provision of the Thirteenth Amendment had been made the pretext of unlimited appropriations for bureaus and the passage of the Civil Rights Bill. " Appropriate leg- islation " was the invention of Sumner, he declared, and cov- ered a vast deal of ground and involved the expenditure of great sums of money. He was, therefore, opposed to any more " appropriate legislation."®" Another Democrat, Mr. Chalfant, sanctioned all that had been said in regard to the danger of the first section, though he regarded the fourth section as harmless. This section had, however, he declared, been used to draw attention away from the important sections, and he predicted that the people would later be astonished at what had been accom- plished.®^ Mr. Jones, also an opponent of the Amendment, took the position that it should be considered only as to its effect upon Pennsylvania. This was a somewhat narrow position, but it was evidently the view really taken by most of the States, especially in regard to the second section. Mr. Jones de- clared that the first two clauses of section one deprived Penn- sylvania of all legislative power and conferred it upon Con- gress, and that consequently there would be little necessity of having a Legislature for the State if it were adopted. By the last clause of that section, he continued, the State would not be allowed to be the judge of its own laws, even in " Ibid., p. 60. °» Ibid., p. 68. " Ibid., p. 82. 1 86 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. criminal proceedings, since it gave the Federal Courts the power to determine whether a man was imprisoned unjustly or whether he was deprived of his life, liberty, or property without due process of law. He also contended that the rights and prerogatives of the State would be surrendered to the Federal Government without receiving anything in re- turn for that surrender. Congress would, moreover, have the power to enforce the Amendment by appropriate legisla- tion and itself to determine what was " appropriate legis- lation." He concluded by saying that Pennsylvania would lose one representative under the second section unless suf- frage was given to the negroes.®^ The speeches of many of the Republicans did not bear upon the Amendment itself, but were confined to declarations that it was a light punishment for traitors and rebels, that the national debt must be made secure, that the rebel debt should not be paid, and that rebels and copperheads must not be permitted to get control of the Government. The de- bates were sufficient, however, to show that the intention and purpose of the Amendment were understood to confer addi- tional powers upon Congress and to authorize such measures ag the Civil Rights Bill. /^ The Amendment found little opposition in Michigan, be- ing ratified by the Senate January 15, 1867, by the almost unanimous vote of 25 to i.** On the next day, without any reference to a committee, the Senate resolution was agreed to by the House by a vote of yy to 15."* Several petitions were presented to the General Assembly of Massachusetts against the adoption of the Amendment, but notwithstanding this as well as the fact that the Commit- tee on Federal Relations recommended that it be referred to the next General Assembly, the Amendment was ratified by the House March 15, 1867, the minority report (Republican also) being substituted for that of the majority by a vote of ■"Ibid., p. 97. ^ ■-'^- ■■, "Mich. Senate Journal, 1867, p. 125. J •*Mich. House Journal, 1867, p. 181. The Amendment Before the States. 187 120 to 22.°'* The Amendment was then adopted by a vote "of 120 to 20,^^ The majority report of the Committee, except so much of It as related to the postponement of the Amendment, was adopted. The reason for the postponement desired by the majority of the Committee was due to the second section, whichjit was claimed, conceded the right of the Southern States to disfranchise the negroes, and that Massachusetts would lose by it on account of her educational and tax quali- fications for suffrage.®'^ / The Committee, in it/ report, stated that the first section was already in the Constitution and was to be found in the second and fourth sections of Article Four, and in the First, Second, Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Amendments. If these provisions were fairly construed, said the Committee, they would secure everything which the first section attempted to do. After quoting these provisions, the report continues : " Nearly every one of the Amendments to the Constitu- tion grew out of a jealousy for the rights of the people, and is in the direction, more or less, of a guarantee of human rights. " It seems difficult to conceive how the provisions above quoted, taken in connection with the whole tenor of the in- strument, could have been put into clearer language, and, upon any fair rule of interpretation, these provisions cover the whole ground of section one of the proposed Amend- ment." The first clause of the section was considered unnecessary^ by the Committee in view of the opinion of Attorney Gen-, eral Bates that negroes were already citizens. It was also declared that legal authorities were not agreed as to what constituted state citizenship apart from federal citizenship, and that that part of the Amendment " and of the State wherein they reside " would be of no effect anyway, since °* Mass. House Journal, 1867, p. 207. ^ McPherson, Reconstruction, p. 194. ■"Ibid., p. 202, and Legislative Documents of the House (Mass.), 1867, Doc. No. 149. 1 88 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. none of the provisions of the Amendment were to apply to persons as citizens of a State. While the last clause of the section was not in the Con- stitution in the same words, the Committee said that the de- nial of equal protection of the laws " would be a flagrant perversion of the guarantees of personal rights which we have quoted." In answer to the general argument that such denial had existed notwithstanding those guarantees, the Committee replied that this would be possible under the Amendment. The Committee then concluded that the Amendment was mere surplusage at best, and mischievous in that it was an admission, " either that the same guaran- tees do not exist in the present Constitution, or that if they are there, they have been disregarded, and, by long usage or acquiescence, this disregard has hardened into constitu- tional right; and no security can be given that similar guarantees will not be disregarded hereafter." ^^ This report is entirely different from any other that we have found, for it was made by Republicans, and cannot, therefore, be said to be partisan in the s^nse that the same statements made by Democrats were. It is also valuable from the fact that it shows that the Senate of Massachusetts, in adopting it, accepted the statements made in it that the first section was but a reiteration of the guarantees enum- erated in the Amendments. The Senate ratified the Amend- ment March 20, 1867, the vote being 27 to 6.^^ Governor Bullock, had on January 4, in his message to the General Assembly, declared that the first section was to secure to all citizens civil equality before the law and to protect them from any state legislation which abridged their privileges or deprived them of life, liberty, or property with- out due legal process. He also said that it was adopted by Congress to give certain and enduring effect to the Civil Rights Bill, and that whatever reasons there were for the enactment of that bill, were doubly applicable to the incor- "Ibid., Doc. No. 149. " McPherson, Reconstruction, p. 194, Mass. Senate Journal not printed according to card catalogue of Library of Congress. The Amendment Before the States. 189 poration of its provisions into the fundamental law of the country. Its reaffirmation in this form was necessary, he continued, to the end that neither the executive nor judicial power, nor the local authorities, might render inoperative the deliberate verdict of the people, " that no one should be denied of their privileges and immunities."^**" /'At the third session of the Legislature of Nebraska, which ''had but recently become a State, the Amendment was rati- fied by the House on June 10, 1867, the vote being 26 to '^ The Senate rejected the motion to submit the ques- tion to the people, and adopted the resolution by a vote of 8 Thus within a year from the time the Amendment was submitted to the States, twenty-two had ratified it, being more than three fourths of the so-called " loyal States." These were not regarded as sufficient, however, by the great ma- jority of the people. There followed quite a long interval before another State gave its sanction to the Amendment, for not until the spring of 1868 did Iowa ratify the Amend- ment. The lower House of the General Assembly of that State ratified it January 27, 1868, the day on which the reso- lution proposing it was introduced, by a vote of 68 to 12.^°^ The Senate agreed to this resolution, apparently without any debate, on March 9, the vote being 34 to 9.^"* Nearly two years had gone by since the Amendment had been submitted and the assent of the necessary three fourths was still wanting. Thus far not a single State of the section which would be most affected by the Amendment had given its assent to it, with the exception of Tennessee. And in the case of Tennessee it may be said that it had been ratified against the will of the people of that Statq/ The other States almost unanimously rejected it. Within this time Ohio had withdrawn her assent, thereby giving rise for the first time "•Legislative Documents of the Senate (Mass.), 1867, Doc. No. I, p. 67. ^ Nebraska House Journal, 1867, p. 148. ^'"Neb. Senate Journal, 1867, pp. 163, 174. "* la. House Journal, 1868, p. 132. ^Ta. Senate Journal, 1868, p. 264. 190 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. to the question whether a State could withdraw its ratifica- tion of the Amendment before three fourths of the States had ratified it. New Jersey soon followed the example set by Ohio, while Oregon did likewise the following fall. The border States of Maryland, Delaware and Kentucky had also rejected the Amendment. ^ — [n the spring of 1868, however, the array of the solid South was broken, Arkansas being the first to ratify. In order to preserve the continuity of the narrative, the rejec- tion of the Amendment by the border and Southern States will be considered after we have given an account of the ification by those States^ Arkansas was the only State which ratified £He~Ame»4— ment by a unanimous vote in both Houses. The vote in the Senate April 6, 1868, was 23 to o, while that in the House a week later was 56 to 0.^°° The Legislature of Florida, which assembled June 8, T868, lost no time in giving its assent to the Amendment, for both Houses passed resolutions to that effect the next day; in the House by a vote of 23 to 6 ; ^°'^ in the Senate by a vote of 10 to 3.^°^ An extra session of the North Carolina Leg- islature was called by Governor Holden. The members of the Legislature were elected under an order of General Canby, who had charge of the Military District of North and South Carolina. The North Carolina Assembly acted with the same promptness that was shown in Florida, for it met July I, 1868, and on the' next day both Houses ratified the Amendment. The vote in the Senate was 34 to 2 ;^°^ in the House 82 to 19,^°* Louisiana and South Carolina followed soon after, both ratifying it July 9, 1868. In South Caro- lina, the vote in the Senate, July 8, 1868, was 23 to 5,"° while that in the House the next day was 108 to 12.^" In ^"^ McPherson, Reconstruction, p. 353^ ^"•Fla. House Journal, 1868, p. 9. '""Fla. Senate Journal, 1868, p. 8. N. C. Senate Journal, 1868, p. 15. N. C. House Journal, 1868, p. 15. S. C. Senate Journal, 1868, p. 12. S. C. House Journal, 1868, p. 50. IM The Amendment Before the States. 191 the Senate of Louisiana the vote was 22 to 11, July 9.^" Alabama was added to the list of the ratifying States four days later, while Georgia on the 21st of the same month, was the last State to ratify before the final proclamation of the Secretary of State, announcing that the Amendment had been ratified. Both Houses of the Georgia Assembly ratified the Amendment on the same day, the vote in the House being 89 to 71,^^^ while that in the Senate was not given. The States of Virginia, Mississippi and Texas ratified it after it had been declared a part of the Constitution. In Virginia, the vote in the Senate October 7, 1869,"* was 34 to 4; and in the House next day, 126 to 6,^^" Mississppi ratified it Jan- uary 17, 1870, by a vote of 23 to 2 in the Senate, and 87 to 6 in the House."^ Texas ratified it February 18, 1870.^^^ Texas was the first to reject, as well as the last to ratify, tiie Amendment. The House Committee on Federal Rela- tions reported adversely as to the Amendment, October 13, 1866. In their report, the Committee declared that the first "*La. Senate Journal, 1868, p. 21. "•Ga. House Journal, 1868, p. 50. "*Va. Senate Journal, 1869, p. 27. ""Va. House Journal, 1869, p. 37. "' Gamer, Reconstruction in Miss., p. 271. "* Documentary History of the Constitution, vol. II, pp. 779-793. Secretary Seward, in his conditional proclamation of July 20, 1868, after enumerating the States whose Legislatures had ratified the Amendment, stated that it had also " been ratified by newly constituted and newly established bodies avowing themselves to be, and acting as Legislatures respectively of the States of Arkansas, Florida, North Carolina, Louisiana, South Carolina, and Alabama." It was also stated in the proclamation that the Legislatures of Ohio and New Jersay had passed resolutions withdrawing their consent, but that if the resolutions of these States " ratifying the aforesaid Amendment are to be deemed as remaining of full force and eflfect, notwithstanding the subsequent resolutions of the Legis- latures of those States which purport to withdraw the consent of the said States from such ratification, then the aforesaid Amend- ment has been ratified in the manner hereinbefore mentioned and so has become valid to all intents and purposes as a part of the Constitution of the United States." On the next day Congress passed a resolution declaring that the Amendment had been ratified. Secretary Seward then issued the final categorical proclamation, July 28, 1868, declaring the Amend- ment a part of the Constitution. 192 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. section would take away from the States a right which they had possessed since 1776, — -the right to determine what should constitute their own citizenship. The object of this, it was asserted, was to confer citizenship upon the negroes who would thereby be entitled to all the "privileges and immunities " of white citizens, among which were suffrage, participation in jury service, bearing arms in militia and others which did not need enumeration. The negroes were excluded from these privileges by law in most of the orig- inal free States, said the Committee, and in all of them by immemorial usage. There was scarcely any limitation to the powers sought to be conferred upon the Federal Government by the first section, continued the report, since Congress might declare almost anything, even mis- cegenation to be a privilege or immunity of a citizen of the United States, which would thereupon immediately attach to every citizen in every State. On the same day that this report was made the House rejected the Amend- ment by a vote of 70 to 5.^^^ The Senate Committee on Federal Relations made a report very similar to that made in the House. The Amendment only received one vote in the Senate, the vote being 27 to i against ratification.^^* Governor Jenkins, of Georgia, an old-line whig, opposed the Amendment in his message. His objection to the first section was that it centralized power in the Legislative Department of the Government by giving Congress the right to settle definitely the question of citizenship in the States. He declared that under the fifth section Congress would contend that it was the proper judge of what con- stituted " appropriate legislation," so that no vestige of hope would remain for the Southern people " if this Amend- ment were adopted." "<> The House rejected it by a vote "I Texas House Journal, 1866, pp. 578-584. ^ Texas Senate Journal, 1866, p. 471. ""Charleston Courier, November 7, 1866. The Amendment Before the States. 193 of 147 to 2/2^ and the S enate un animously (38 to o), on ^TSTovember 9, 1866."^ JprJtrnoT Walker, of Florida, on November 14, 1866, "P niitted the Amendment to the Legislature with a mes- * "^ge advising its rejection. The first and fifth sections, he declared, conferred upon Congress the power of legislating about everything that touched " the citizenship, life, liberty, or property of every individual " in the country, and made the existence of the Government of the States of no further usey/" It is in fact," he continued, " a measure of consoli- dation entirely changing the form of the Government." The Amendment gave to Congress all the powers which had previously been exercised, he said, by the States over the affairs of individuals. He also pointed out that to vote for the Amendment would be to vote for the destruction of the Government of the State, since it would disfranchise the most capable men of the State.^^' The House Committee on Federal Relations took about the same position as that taken by the Governor, for in its report, November 23, it was stated that the first and last sections practically an- nulled the authority of the States in regard to the rights of citizenship. It was also the opinion of the committee that the elective franchise and the right to serve as jurors would be considered privileges. Congress would also have the power, under the Amendment, said the committee, to annul state laws affecting the life, liberty and property of the people whenever it " should deem them subject to the ob- jections therein specified." Since the Amendment would affect the general interests of all the people of the Union, the committee was unable to see how any State could vol- untarily invest Congress with such extraordinary power, the whole tendency of which was to the consolidation of ^ Georgia House Journal, 1866, p. 68. "* Georgia Senate Journal, 1866, p. 72. "'Florida Senate Journal, 1866, p. 8. 13 194 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. the Government. Moreover, the sections were objected to as being couched in language that was too " general and questionable." "* The Amendment was rejected unani- mously (49 to o) by the House, December i, 1866.^"^ The Senate Committee was equally as emphatic as that of the House, for in its report, December 3, it was declared that the States would cease to exist as bodies politic from the moment the Amendment was engrafted upon the Con- stitution, since Congress would be endowed by it with all the powers which had belonged to the States prior to that time. A great central power at Washington would thus be created, it was asserted. Under the first section alone Congress could subvert and change the whole economy of the State, said the report, whether the people of that State approved it or not, for it was appalling to think what power might be seized and exercised under the head of " appro- priate legislation." The Committee was also unwilling to surrender the right of the State to determine who should exercise the right of franchise within its limits.^^* The Senate unanimously (20 to o) concurred in the House resolution the same day that its Committee made this (L.^ report.^" |- i^ The message of Governor Patton, of Alabama, November ■/ 2, 1866, was very similar in substance to that of Governor "Walker. In this message he advised against the ratifica- tion of the Amendment on the ground that the first section was of vast, if not dangerous, import, for by it the judicial powers of the General Government would be greatly en- hanced, overshadowing and weakening the authority and influence of the state courts. It might also be possible, he said, to reduce the latter to a nullity, since the Federal Courts would be given complete and unlimited jurisdiction over "^^ Florida House Journal, 1866, p. 76. "* Ibid.j p. ISO. '^' Florida Senate Journal, 1866, p. 102. ^ Ibid., p. III. The Amendment Before the States. 195 every conceivable case that might arise, civil or criminal, however important or trivial.^^* On December 6, however, he sent another message advis- ing the ratification of the Amendment as a matter of neces- sity and expediency. He stated that it was evident that the majority in Congress was determined " to enforce at all hazards its own terms of restoration," though he added that his views as to the merits of the Amendment had not changed in the least. He also stated that the views given in his first message were based on principle, but that they should look at their true condition and ratify the Amend- ment in order to be restored to the Union.^^* This message created considerable excitement and there were chances of favorable action, it was stated, until the receipt of ex- Governor Parson's telegram the next morning. This is somewhat doubtful, since it was said that the press of the State was almost a unit against Governor Patton's last position,^^^ It was stated in the telegram that President Johnson was still the friend of the South and on no account should the Amendment be ratified. December 7, the day after the receipt of the message, the Amendment was re- fected by an almost unanimous vote, 66 to 8 in the House, and 28 to 3 in the Senate J An eflfort was made in the House to have the question Submitted to the people, but this was defeated by a vote of 49 to 24.^^^ Efforts were made in January to reconsider the vote on the Amendment. Mr. Parsons wired the President asking ^ To quote his language : " It matters not what might be the character of his case. It might be civil, or criminal. It might be a simple action of debt, or a suit in trover; it might be an in- dictment for assault and battery, for larceny, for burglary, for arson, or for murder. It would be all the same. Upon a simple complaint that his rights, either of person or property, had been infringed, it would be the bounden duty of the tribunal to which he made his application, to hear and determine his case." — Alabama House Journal, 1866, p. 213. "" Annual Cyclopaedia, 1866, p. 12. '** McPherson, Scrap-book, " Fourteenth Amendment," pp. 55-60. ^** Ala. House Journal, 1866, pp. 210, 213, and Senate Journal, p. 183. tr 196 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. what to do. The President replied that there could be no ood in doing this, and the matter was dropped.^^^ Governor Worth, of North Carolina, on November 20, 1866, submitted the Amendment to the General Assembly with a strong message against its ratification. He held that it had not been proposed by a Congress composed as provided by the Constitution, and that on that account alone, no State could, with dignity, ratify it. He also pointed out the heterogeneous character of the Amendment, declaring that it was the first attempt to use omnibus legislation in changing the fundamental law. It was also stated in the message that if the fifth section was but a reaffirmation of what was already in the Constitution, as was claimed by some, it was mere surplusage ; but if it was intended to enlarge and amplify the various powers " which would be reasonably im- plied from the sections which precede it, and to give to Con- gress a peculiar authority over the subjects " embraced in those sections, then it was " mischievous and dangerous." The great value of the American system of government was due to the fact, said the Governor, that a municipal code was provided under the jurisdiction of each State for trial, by a jury of the county or neighborhood where the parties resided, of all controversies as to life, liberty, or property with the exception of the very limited field of federal jurisdiction. This was to be done anyway, he continued, by the Amend- ment, since Congress would become the protector of those rights and the "guarantor of equal protection of the laws." Moreover, Congress would be empowered to provide, by appropriate legislation, a system of rights and remedies which could only be administered in the Federal Courts, there- by transferring to the few points in the State where such Courts are held the most common and familiar offices of jus- tice, and to judges and other officers who hold their commis- sions, not from the people themselves, but from the President and Senate of the United States. "The States, as by so much," he added, " are to cease to be self-governing com- "^The Trial of the President, Supplement to the Congressional Globe. The Amendment Before the States. 197 munities, as heretofore, and tresspasses against the person, assault and battery, false imprisonments, and the like, where only our citizens are parties, must be regulated by the Con- gress of the Nation and adjudged only in its Courts." He was unable to believe, he said, that the deliberate judgment of the people of any State would approve of the innovation to be wrought by the Amendment, and as anxious as he was to see the Union restored, there was nothing in the Amendment calculated to perpetuate that Union, but that its tendency was rather to perpetuate sectional alienation and estrangement.^^^ On November 22, a joint Committee was proposed, to which the Amendment was referred. Four days later Mr. Logan, of Rutherford County, offered a resolution in the House for the ratification of the Amendment, but it was re- ferred to the joint committee on that subject by a vote of 92 to 16,^^* thus showing the fate which awaited the Amend- ment itself. The Committee had the Amendment under consideration for two weeks, making their report, which was a very strong one, on December 6, 1866. The Committee agreed with the Governor as to the unwisdom of embracing so many Amend- ments in one. In reference to the question whether the Amendment had been proposed constitutionally, it was pointed out that North Carolina and her sister States had been repeatedly recognized " as States in the Union " by all the Departments of the Gov- ernment, both during and since the war. Several instances were cited to show this. They were also recognized as States, said the Committee, by the submission of the Amend- ment to them for ratification. The Committee then proceeded to show that if the assent of those States was necessary to make the ratification valid, it was equally necessary to render the proposal of it valid. The Amendment was objected to on the ground that it con- tained provisions of temporary interests merely, and that only provisions made for all times should be incorporated into the "*N. C. House Journal, 1866-67, PP- 24-30. "* Ibid., p. 81. 198 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. Constitution. The privileges and immunities which the States were prohibited from abridging or denying were left in doubt, declared the Committee, since it was not stated whether they consisted only of those which were then sup- posed to exist or whether they included all others which the Federal Government might thereafter declare to belong to citizens. The latter construction was the more natural, con- tinued the report, and was the one which Congress could in- sist upon as being both correct and consistent with the lan- guage used. With this construction, what limit was there, it was asked, to the power of the Federal Government to in- terfere with the internal affairs of the States. " And what becomes of the right of a State to regulate its domestic con- cerns in its own way? Whatever restrictions any State might think proper, for the general good, to impose upon any one or all its citizens, upon a declaration by the Federal Government that such restrictions were an abridgment of the privileges and immunities of the citizens of the Union, such state laws would at once be annulled. For instance, the laws of North Carolina forbid the inter-marriage of white persons and negroes. But if this Amendment be ratified, the government of the United States could declare that this law abridged the privileges of citizens, and must not be enforced ; and miscegenation would thereupon be legalized in this Com- monwealth. Grant that such action on the part of the gov- ernment would not be probable, still it is possible ; and its bare possibility sufficiently exemplifies the boundlessness of the powers which the Amendment would confer on the Fed- eral Government." Under the original Constitution, says the report, the muni- cipal aflfairs and the personal and property interests of the citizens were left to the States, but this was all changed by the Amendment, for the Federal Government would be authorized to come between a State and its citizens in almost all conceivable cases. It would be empowered " to supervise and interfere, with the ordinary administration of justice in the state courts, and to provide tribunals, — ^as has to some extent been already done in the Civil Rights Bill, to which The Amendment Before the States. 199 an unsuccessful litigant, or a criminal convicted in the courts of the State, can make complaint that justice and the equal protection of the laws have been denied him, and however groundless may be his complaint, can obtain a rehearing of his cause. The tendency of all this is to break down and bring into contempt the judicial tribunals of the States, and ultimately to transfer the administration of justice both in criminal and civil causes, to Courts of federal jurisdiction, is too manifest to require illustration." In reference to the third section, the Committee said: "What her [North Carolina] people have done, they have done in obedience to her own behests. Must she now punish them for obeying her own commands? If penalties have been incurred, and punishments must be inflicted, is it magnanimous, is it reasonable, nay, is it honorable, to re- quire us to become our own executioners? Must we, as a State, be regarded as unfit for fraternal association with our fellow citizens of other States, until after we shall have sac- rificed our manhood and banished our honor? Surely not. North Carolina feels that she is still one of the daughters of the great family. Wayward and wilful, perhaps, she has been ; but honor and virtue still are hers. If her errors have been great, her sufferings have been greater. Like a stricken mother, she now stands leaning in silent grief over the bloody graves of her slain children. The mementos of former glory lie in ruins around her. The majesty of sorrow sits en- throned on her brow. Proud of her sons who have died for her, she cherishes, in her heart of hearts, the loving children who were ready to die for her, and she loves them with a mother's warm affection. Can she be expected to repudiate them? No! it would be the act of an unnatural mother. She can never consent to it. Never! " It was stated in the report that it was impossible to con- ceive how wide the door was opened by the last section for the interference of Congress " with subjects hitherto re- garded beyond its range." One of the most serious evils of the Amendment was declared to consist in the vast addition, made in so many ways, to the power of the General Gov- t 200 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. ernment There had already developed, said the Committee, the tendency towards centralization and consolidation, which had been greatly increased by the defeat of the States which had always been the advocates of State Rights ; and that even without new constitutional grants of authority, the Federal Government was no longer what it once was, but was now a mighty giant which threatened " to swallow up the States, and to concentrate all power and dignity in itself." This centralizing tendency, continues the report, should be checked rather than fostered, and that the " American people ought not, by new grants of power, to seem to authorize the con- tinual exercise of extraordinary prerogatives, undreamed of in the purer and happier days of the Republic." It was the opinion of the Committee that the ratification of the Amendment would not facilitate the restoration of the State, and moreover, that no humiliation or degradation could be deeper than yielding to intimidation and ratifying, through fear, a measure which it disapproved. Only one member of the Committee refused to sign the report, and his reason for doing so was based on the belief that, in view of all the circumstances, it would be to the interest of the State to ratify the Amendment.^^® The Amendment was rejected, December 13, by a vote of 45 to I in the Senate, Mr. Harris, of Rutherford, casting the only vote in favor of the Amendment.^^" The House rejected it by a vote of 93 to lo.^^'^ The report of the joint Committee of North Carolina is valuable, not only from the fact that it is the longest and most exhaustive made by any Southern State, but also be- cause it gives the principal objections which induced those •^States to reject the Amendment with such unanimity. Governor Murphy, of Arkansas, had recommended the rat- ification of the Amendment, and a resolution to do this in order " to calm the troubled waters of our political atmos- phere " was introduced December 10, 1866.^^^ This resolu- ""N. C. Senate Journal, 1866-67, PP- 91-105. "•Ibid., p. 138. *" N. C. House Journal, 1866-67, p. 183. ""Annual Cyclopaedia, 1866, p. 27. J The Amendment Before the States. 201 tion was referred to the Committee on Federal Relations. On the same day the Senate Committee reported adversely as to the ratification of the Amendment. 'The report vi^s^Sf"^"^ based on the following grounds : 1. The Amendment had not been constitutionally proposed,! nearly one third of the States being excluded from all partici- pation in it. 2. It had not been submitted to the Pres ident fo r his ap- mil II J I II .._L_i -^-.^«— *"— — ~ provalT / r 3. " The great and enormous power sought to be con- ferred on Congress, under the Amendment which gives that body authority to enforce by appropriate legislation the pro- vision of the first article of said Amendment, in efifect, takes away from the States all control over all the people in their local and their domestic concerns, and virtually abolishes the State." 4. The second section, whether intended so or not, gave the power to bring about negro suffrage, with or without the consent of the States. 5. The third section would disfranchise many of the best and wisest men of the State. The Committee thought it preferable to bear their " troubles, trials and deprivations, and even wrongs, in dig- nified silence," rather than to commit an act of disgrace, if not annihilation, such as would result in the adoption of this Amendment by the Legislature.^^^ This report was adopted December 15, by a vote of 24 to i."° ''"^he House Committee reported against ratification De- cember 17, stating as its reasons for doing so, that the Hrst section made negroes citizens and prohibited the States from abridging any of their privileges as citizens of the United States. The report also declared that Congress would be empowered to define what rights they should en- joy, and to elevate them by legislative enactment to a polit- ical equality with the whites. " It also transfers to Con- '^Ark. Senate Journal, 1866, p. 259. "•Ibid., p. 262. >' ^ 202 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. gress," continued the Committee, " jurisdiction of the local and internal affairs of the States, virtually destroying the independence of their courts and centralizing their reserve powers in the Federal Government." The report was adopted tl;g„§ame day by a vote of 68 to 2.^*^ '. "" Governor Orr, in his message to the General Assembly of South Carolina, November 27, 1866, recommended the rejec- tion of the Amendment. It, in his opinion, gave Congress the absolute right of determining who should be citizens of the States, who should exercise the elective franchise, and^ who should /enjoy the rights, privileges and immunities of citizenship./' By it, he continued, the representatives of Ore- gon or Cafifornia, or of any State, would be given the power to declare what should be the measure of citizenship in South Carolina or any other State, and this he declared to be an evil, since the citizens of the States were more likely to exercise this power judiciously and intelligently than non-residents who knew nothing of the people, their necessities, resources, etc. " With this Amendment, incorporated in the Constitu- tion," he declared, " does not the Federal Government cease to be one of ' limited powers ' in all of the essential qualities which constitute such a form of government.""^ About a week before this message was sent, ex-Governor Perry of the same State, in an open letter to the editor of the New York Herald^*^ asserted that the last section of the Amendment destroyed all the rights of the States and cen- tralized all power in Congress, and that this was done, not openly, but covertly and insidiously. The Amendment was rejected in the House, December 20, by a vote of 95 to i. The Senate concurred in the resolu- ^■tion rejecting it, but the vote was not given.^tl-—— — ^ Governor Pierpont, of Virginia, advised the ratification of the Amendment in order to improve the condition of the people, but the Legislature did not follow his advice. The. ^^Ark. House Journal, 1866, pp. 288-91. *" S. C. House Journal, 1866, p. 34. '"November 22, 1866. ^"S. C. House Journal, 1866, p. 284, and Senate Journal, p. 230. The Amendment Before the States, 203 Amendment was rejected by both Houses January 9, 1867, the vote in the Senate being 27 to o; in the House 74 to i.^*' ""Governor Humphreys, of Mississippi, characterized it, in his message, as an insulting outrage to many of their wor- .thiest men, and as "such a gross usurpation of the rights of the States and such a centraHzation of power in the Fed- eral Government " that the mere reading of it was sufficient to cause its rejection.^F Ex-Governor Sharkey, who was Senator-elect from the same State, in a letter from Wash- ington, September 17, 1866, to Governor Humphreys, called attention to the fact that the Amendment did not enumerate the privileges and immunities for which Congress might provide by the last section. He also suggested that Con- gress might confer privileges on one class to the exclusion of another class, or might even assume absolute control over all the people and the domestic concerns of a State, but stated that any State which had so little self-respect as to adopt it deserved no better fate. To him, however, the fifth section was the Trojan horse of mischief, since it could be construed to empower Congress to do whatever it desired to do. He then cited a similar provision attached to the 13th Amendment, under which Congress held that it had power to pass the Freedman's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills. Congress had interpreted the second section of that Amend- ment, he said, just as he, when Governor of Mississippi, had admonished many members of the Legislature that it would be. He, therefore, thought they should profit by the expe- rience which had been furnished them by the same pro- vi^n in the Thirteenth Amendment.^*'^ /' The Amendment was unanimously rejected by both Houses, / in the House, January 25, 1867, 88 to o, and in the Senate, C January 30, 27 to o.^*® \_-fe^touisiana, just as in Arkansas and Virginia, the Gov- ernor advised the ratification of the Amendment but, as in ^^'Va. House Journal, 1866-67, p. 108, and Senate Journal, p. loi. *** Annual Cyclopaedia, 1866, p. 521. "''Atlanta Intelligencer, October 5, and N. Y. Herald, October 6, 1866. "' McPherson, Reconstruction, p. 194. f 204 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. those two instan(:es, the advice was not heeded. The Gov- ernor did not advise its ratification as a matter of expediency, but because he regarded it just and proper, ^though he thought the States should be required to grant the negroes equal political rights. A -joint resolution jrejecting the Amendment was almost immediately introduced in the Sen- 'ate, to which both Houses agreed without a dissenting vote, the Senate February 5, and the House the next day.^1® Thus, within less than eight months after the Amendment » had been submitted by Congress, every one of the so-called disloyal States, except Tennessee, had rejected the Amend- ment, three of them unanimously, and the others almost so. Of the three border States which rejected the Amendment, Kentucky comes first. There was apparently no debate in either House, the Amendment being rejected by both on January 8, 1867. The, vote in the House was 67 to 2y, and in the Senate 24 to g.^y Xlelawace, one of the three States that never ratified the Thirteenth Amendment, also has the distinction of being one of the three States which rejected and never afterwards ratified the Fourteenth Amendment. In his message to the Legislature, Governor Saulsbury said that the people had spoken so emphatically against ratification he felt sure that it would be rejected.^^^ The Committee in the House re- ported against ratification February 6, 1867, and this report was adopted by a vote of 15 to 6. The Senate concurred next day by a vote of 6 to 3.^" Maryland followed Delaware the next month, both Houses rejecting the Amendment, March 23, by a vote of 47 to 10 in the House, and 13 to 4 in the Senate.^^^ The joint Committee on Federal Relations, declared, in their report March 19, that the proposition, which the States were called upon to ratify, would strip the States of powers most vital to their safety and freedom, and even to ** Ibid., p. 194, and Annual Cyclopaedia, 1866, p. 452. "•Ky. House Journal, 1867. p. 60, and Senate Journal, p. 62. "*Del. Senate Journal, 1867, p. 26. *" Ibid., p. 176, and House Journal, p. 223. ""Md. House Journal, 1867, p. 1141, and Senate Journal, p. 808. The Amendment Before the States. 205 their continued existence in any useful way, and would bestow those powers upon the Federal Government. Before giving assent to such a proposition, the Committee thought it should be considered in all its aspects and consequences, Maryland's geographical position, her commercial relations with all parts of the Union, as well as her patriotic desire for the welfare and happiness of the whole country and her desire for the speedy restoration of friendly relations between the States, would, said the Committee induce her to make every possible sacrifice to secure the great objects of the Constitution, namely, " To establish justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, etc." The Committee, however, was unable to see anything in the proposed Amendment which tended in that direction. In order to understand the nature and the objects of the Amendment, they went into the history of it, and examined the grounds upon which its ratification was urged. The report of the Reconstruction Committee was gone into quite at length, after which the Committee said that the report showed that the avowed purpose was to punish the Southern States and people for the future peace and safety of the country. Two incongruities in the proposition were pointed out: first, that while the demand for conferring additional power upon the Federal Govern- ment was presented in the report of the Reconstruction Committee, as if made upon the Confederate States only, it was in fact made upon all the States, since it would be binding on all if ratified; secondly, that while it would greatly diminish the power of the Southern States in the House of Representatives it would at the same time reduce that of Maryland and other States which stood loyally by the Government. The Committee also reached the conclu- sion that the Amendment had not been properly proposed — eleven States being forcibly excluded from all participation in Congress. It was pointed out that there was no thought of compulsory representation in the Constitution and cer- tainly, continued the report, none of forcible exclusion. The same Congress which excluded the Southern Senators and 2o6 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. Representatives had recognized their state governments as legally accepting the ratification of the Thirteenth Amend- ment by their Legislatures, while at the same time claiming and exercising the power to pass the Civil Rights Bill and Freedman's Bureau Bill in virtue of that Amendment. The fact that the Amendment had not been properly proposed was of itself an insuperable obstacle to its ratification by Maryland, but the Committee stated that if this fact were otherwise, the State could not voluntarily assent to any of the propositions of the Amendment. Allusion was made to the danger of rashly disturbing the admirable adjustment of the balance of powers between the Federal and state govern- ments, while the passions of men were highly excited, thus rendering them blind to, and reckless of, consequences. The Fathers " guarded against the danger of consolidation. That now is the rock upon which our ship of State is in imminent danger of being totally wrecked " declares the report. The object and eflfect of the first clause of section one was to give Congress, it was asserted, instead of the States, the right to determine who should be deemed citizens of the States, and what residence should be necessary to constitute citizenship. All the provisions of the Amendment, it was stated, " must be read in the light of the fifth section, and of the interpretation already given by Congress to the same language in the Thirteenth Amendment." To provide for the protection and regulation of life, liberty and property was declared to be " the sole and exclusive right of every State," and the proposition to invest Congress with the power of supervision, interference and control over state legislation in regard to those questions was virtually to empower Congress to abolish the state governments. In regard to the second section, the Committee said that it would abridge a right of the States theretofore unques- tioned. It was a well known fact, it was stated, that the representation of the South would be constitutionally en- larged by the emancipation of the slaves, but that even then that section would be in such a hopeless minority, that it The Amendment Before the States. 207 would be difficult to imagine a higher compliment or tribute than was paid by the Reconstruction Committee to the moral power and intellectual prowess of Southern Representatives in the expression of the fear and danger that they would control Congress if admitted without diminished power. The third section was objected to on the ground that it was ex post facto, and the fourth, on the ground that it would inspire apprehension rather than confidence, in regard to the public debt, and that compensation should be made for the slaves of Maryland.^^* Governor Swann, in his message January 4, 1867, said that it could not have escaped notice that the five distinct propositions of the Amendment embodied more than their language would seem to convey. The last clause, he de- clared, which gave Congress power to enforce the other propositions " by appropriate legislation," might leave the Southern and border States at the mercy of a mere congres- sional majority, which might become dangerous to the liberties of the people in times of high party excitement and sectional alienation.^^^ L California is the only State that neither rejected nor rati- J^^ fied the Amendment. The House Committee on Federal *^ Relations recommended, March 4, 1866, that it be not rati- fied while the Senate Committee, March 20, reported in favor of ratification,^^* but no vote seems to have been taken by either House. This was no doubt due to the facX^ that the House was Democratic and the Senate Republican, _so that it was useless to vote. * This somewhat extended examination of the action and views of the different States in regard to the Amendment leaves but little doubt as to the views generally held regard- ing its object and purpose. To be sure, the members of several of the Legislatures were elected prior to the sub- mission of the Amendment and on an entirely different '"Laws of Maryland, 1867, pp. 879-911, also Doc. MM., House Journal and Documents, 1867. "' Md. House Journal and Documents, 1867, Doc. A., p. 21. "•Cal. House Journal, 1867-68, p. 611, and Senate Journal, p. 676. 2o8 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. issue, so that their action may be said not to represent the will of the people, but the command of political leaders. This contention might be well founded in some instances, but when viewed in the light of the elections which were soon to follow, it should have little weight, for the Radicals swept the country in the elections of 1866 in almost every State north of Mason and Dixon's line, often with increased majorities. It may be properly said, however, that if the question of the ratification or rejection of the Amendment had been presented to the people by itself, the result might have been quite dififerent. The question the people had to decide or to determine in the election was not a simple, but a complicated one. The first section, the most important of all, was largely lost sight of in the general excitement. Furthermore, the people were not in a frame of mind to consider any ques- tion calmly and deliberately, and it was certainly a most inopportune time to secure the sober judgment of the people in changing the fundamental law of the country. It may cause surprise that the people and the States were willing to increase the power of the Central Government to the extent contemplated by the framers of the Amend- ment, but it does not seem so strange when we consider the circumstances. The people were made to feel and believe that the preservation of the Union was again at stake,* that— if the Amendment was not adopted, the " Rebels " would soon be in control of the Government at Washington ; that the national debt would be repudiated ; that the Rebel debt . would be assumed; that the slaves would be paid for; that treason would be glorified ; and that loyalty would be made odious. Many of the people held government bonds and notes, and, to insure their payment, voted for the Amend- ment; others thoroughly hated the South, and, to weaken the power of that section, supported it; others still wanted to perpetuate their party and saw the opportunity to do this by incorporating the Amendment in the Constitution; while many no doubt were sincere in their devotion to the Union and were willing to do anything for its preservation, The Amendment Before the States. 209 and, believing the Amendment necessary for this, voted for it. With all these various and heterogeneous elements at work, there is really nothing to cause surprise that the Amendment was overwhelmingly ratified by the popular vote. Moreover, there can hardly be any doubt but that the action of some of the radical, hot-headed men in the South contributed to swell the Radical majority in the North. The Memphis riots, the riot at New Orleans, and the attitude of many in speeches and acts — all tended to increase the flame at the North, while everything was seized upon by the Radical politicians to show that the South was ^till rebellious and disloyal, that the negroes would be re- enslaved, and that the Union would be destroyed if the Democrats were once permitted to get control of the Gov- ernment. One has only to read the speeches made during the campaign to see that the effort of most of the political orators was to arouse the passions of the people, to in- crease their prejudices and hatred, to appeal to selfish mo- tives, and to clothe all these appeals in terms of rights and justice. If there is any surprise it should be that the ma- jority was not larger than it really was. As in all questions of this kind, the great mass of the people never really comprehended the meaning and purpose of the Amendment, and of those who did, many chose what they considered the lesser of two supposed evils — preferring to have the Government in the hands of the Radicals with the Amendment than in the hands of the Democrats without the Amendment. For the question was so presented as to make it practically impossible to reject the Amendment and still keep the Government in control of the Radicals, since the Legislatures, which were to act on the Amendment, would, in many instances, elect United States Senators as well. In the concluding chapter we shall give the interpreta- tion given the Amendment by Congress. 14 CHAPTER V. Congressional Interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Having given a historical resume of the origin and development of the Fourteenth Amendment, its passage by Congress Ahe attitude of the press and the people towards it.'' and its final ratification by the States, it now devolves upon us to give the interpretation which Congress gave to it after it had been proclaimed a part of the fundamental law of the land. This interpretation is shown in the de- bates on the bills which were presented for its enforcement and in the legislation which was actually enacted into law. J Congress, which was in session at that time, adjourned a few days later without making any attempt to pass a law looking to its enforcement. Mr. Broomall, of Pennsylvania, had introduced a bill, July, 1867, to secure equal political and civil rights to all citizens regardless of race or color. It was not considered, however, until the eighteenth of March, 1868, when it was debated quite at length. Its purpose was not to enforce the Fourteenth Amendment, since it had not yet been de- clared a part of the Constitution, but to guarantee a re- publican form of Government to every State. But at the time the debate took place, March 18, 1868, many of the Radicals thought the Amendment had been ratified by all the States necessary to make it a part of the fundamental law. This was the position taken by Mr. Thaddeus Stevens and he stated that until that Amendment had be- come a part of the Constitution, there was nothing in that instrument to warrant the passage of such a bill by Con- gress. By that Amendment Congress was given the power, in his opinion, to regulate the suffrage in every State of 210 Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 211 the Union.^ Mr. Stevens was the only one of thc^e who spoke who specifically made the Fourteenth Amendment the authority for passing such a bill, the others finding it in the original Constitution. Two Republicans (Messrs. Spalding and Lawrence) declared that the bill could find no sanction in the Constitution, and that two thirds of their colleagues held the same views. One of them (Mr. Spalding) stated that such a bill, if passed, would be the death knell of their party in the presidential election the following fall.^ The bill was not brought before the House again, its defeat being evident. When Congress reassembled, December 7, 1868, a bill was introduced by Mr. Boutwell on that day declaring who might vote for electors for President and Vice-President and Rep- resentatives in Congress. This bill was referred to the Com- mittee on the Judiciary, of which Mr. Boutwell was a mem- ber, and a substitute was reported for it by the Committee on January 11, 1869. The Committee, at the same time, re- ported a joint resolution proposing an Amendment to the Constitution, which became, in substance, the Fifteenth Amendment. It may seem strange that the same Commit- tee which reported a bill declaring that " No State shall abridge or deny the right of any citizen of the United States to vote for electors of President and Vice-President of the United States or of Representatives in Congress, or for members of the Legislature of the State in which he may reside, by reason of race, color, or previous condition of slavery; and any provisions in the laws or constitution of any State inconsistent with this section are hereby declared to be null and void," should at the same time bring a resolu- tion for amending the Constitution of the United States to secure practically the same thing. If Congress already had the power to regulate suffrage, what need of an Amendment? This seems a reasonable question and the action of the Com- mittee appears, at first sight, contradictory and inconsistent, but however contradictory, their action was not inconsistent ^ Globe, 40th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 1966-67. ^Ibid., pp. 1971 and 1973. 212 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. jyithJthe past history of their party. It has already been shown in the earHer pages of this study that the very men who passed the Civil Rights Bill submitted the Fourteenth Amendment, the first section of which practically incor- porates that bill. The Fortieth Congress was thus following the precedent set by its predecessor. The same arguments were used in this instance as in that of the Civil Rights Bill. The second and third sections of the bill were remedial and punitive — their purpose being to enforce the first section which we have given above. The fourth section was to en- force the third section of the Fourteenth Amendment, and was punitive in its nature. By this section any one violating section three of said Amendment was to be imprisoned at hard labor for two years, being subject to indictment within ten years after committing the act. By the fifth and last sec- tion of the bill, exclusive jurisdiction of all offences against the act was to be given to the District Courts of the United States. The first section is the only one which we shall consider, since it is the only section of any importance in connection with the Amendment under consideration. Mr. Boutwell, while discussing the bill, stated that he thought Congress had broader powers than those set forth in the first section, but that it was his belief that the objects desired could be obtained by that section, and so not advisable or desirable to enact legislation not necessary to secure those objects, or the object, he might have said, for negro suffrage was the thing desired. He based the power of Congress to pass this bill either in the second and fourth sections of the first article, or the fourth section of the fourth article of the Constitution. He relied more, however, upon the Fourteenth Amendment, declaring that if there were doubts in the minds of any as to the power of Congress to legislate on this subject, those doubts must disappear, in his opinion, upon an analysis of that Amendment. ' He contended that the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment inhibited the States from depriving citizens of those rights which were derived directly from the States as well as those derived directly from the United Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 213 States. In other words, he maintained that the privileges and immunities which the States were prohibited from de- priving any citizen of were not only the privileges which they had as citizens of the United States, but also those which belonged to them by virtue of being citizens of the ^States. His interpretation of the Amendment was thus opposed to that given by the Supreme Court in the Slaugh- ter House CasesTj He declared that the inhibition upon the States in the first section was a comprehensive one — apply- ing to all or to nobody. His theory was not that the States could not extend or limit the rights and privileges of its citizens as such, but that if they did, the provisions should apply to all alike, A State might pass a law that no one of a certain age should go to school, should sell goods, carry weapons, etc., but the law must apply to all alike. Having developed his theory or interpretation of the Amendment to this point, he next considered the question whether suffrage was one of the privileges of a citizen. He quoted at length from a decision by the Supreme Court of Kentucky to show that no one was a citizen in the true sense of the word unless he enjoyed the highest privileges of citi- zenship. If one man, contended Mr. Boutwell, had the right to vote for certain officers in any State, then every man hav- ing like qualifications of education or property had the same right, since if this were denied to any one, he would be de- nied the enjoyment of equal privileges to which he was en- titled by the Constitution. The power of Congress to pass ^ / such legislation as he proposed in the bill was to be found ■ in the fifth section of Article Fourteen. He stated that Con- gress had unlimited power under that Article to legislate for the purpose of securing to citizens of the United States privileges and immunities of citizens of any one of the States — to see to it that the States did not discriminate against _ any class of citizens. In answer to the question why it was not stated in the Amendment that States could not discrimi- nate among their own citizens in regard to suffrage, he re- plied : " It was not necessary. The Article provides, as it stands, that there can be no discrimination by the States 214 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. among the citizens of the United States, who are as well citi- zens of the several States and entitled equally to the privi- leges of citizens." He denied in toto the doctrine that the second section was a concession or admission that the States had the right to abridge or deny to a citizen the right of suf- frage. It was but a political penalty for doing what the first section declared no State had the right to do. Congress, when the Fourteenth Amendment was submitted, was acting at a time when many of the States were doing what the first section declared they had no right to do. According to Mr. Boutwell, a penalty was provided to prevent any State from taking advantage of this wrong in case Congress should not exercise the power conferred upon it by the fifth section of the Amendment. Congress was now called upon to exer- cise that power in order to remedy this evil — this wrong which the States had been committing. He pointed out the anomaly of our Government, if this power to legislate in re- gard to suffrage be denied Congress, in that there would be citizens eligible for the office of President, etc., and yet were not voters. He denied that a State could lawfully deny or abridge the right to vote, and added : " We knew there were some States in which the wrong existed. It might require time before Congress could exercise its powers under the fifth section, and the country meant to say that while this state of things continued — a state of things unjust and con- trary to the Constitution — the States should not have the benefit of their wrong doing." He gave as one reason for the submission of a constitu- tional Amendment, at the same time advocating the bill he had introduced, that there was nothing in the Constitution to prevent the United States from denying or abridging the right of citizens to vote, as the Fourteenth Amendment was but a limitation upon the States. The proposed Amendment would place a like limitation upon the United States. He also stated that if the Constitutional Amendment be sub- mitted alone — without the bill, that it would in a certain sense be an admission that the power for which he was then con- tending was wanting. An argument similar to that used for Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 215 incorporating the Civil Rights Bill in the Fourteenth Amend- ment was that some future Congress could repeal a mere law and that it was better to have it in the Constitution. One of his principal arguments for the passage of the bill was that the colored voters would be a potent factor in securing the adoption of the proposed Amendment. This was a political argument of course, and showed to what extent the political leaders of that time were willing to go to maintain their power. He recited the number which would be added in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Kentucky, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, New York and others.^ This rather extended analysis of Mr. Boutwell's speech seems warranted from the fact that it was made within six months after the final proclamation of Secretary Seward announcing the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment. It was also the first exposition or interpretation given in Con- gress to that Amendment after its ratification. Furthermore, Mr. Boutwell had been a member of that famous Reconstruc- tion Committee which had proposed that Amendment, and speaking so soon afterwards, his statements should be given more weight than the ordinary speeches, for he evidently knew the secret motives which prompted the Committee in submitting the Amendment. Mr. Knott followed Mr. Boutwell with a speech in which he undertook to demonstrate that the third section of the Amendment, which was to be enforced by the fourth section of the bill under consideration, could only apply to insurrec- tions which might take place in the future. His entire speech was devoted to this topic, and so is not of any great importance to us. His main contention was that no matter what Congress intended, this intention could be of no effect if the language used in the measure was clear and compre- hensible, as this was.* Another speech delivered in regard to this bill was that by Mr. Eldridge, of Wisconsin. He declared that the bill and joint resolution were but steps toward centralization ' Globe, 40th Cong., 3d Sess., pp. S55-6i. * Ibid., pp. 561-66. 2i6 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. and consolidation, evincing a premeditated design to con- centrate all power in the Federal Government. He con- tended that the second section of the Amendment recog- nized the right of the States to regulate the suffrage and said that was the view taken at the time, and the one strongly set forth by Thaddeus Stevens. " It was under- stood to be optional with the States to grant this right of suffrage to its negroes or have its representation in Con- gress proportionately reduced." "^ Mr. Shanks declared his purpose to support the bill and the proposed Amendment, but without making any argu- ment as to constitutional right to pass such a bill." He was followed by Mr. McKee, who, as a member of the pre- ceding Congress, voted for the Fourteenth Amendment, declared that the right of Congress to legislate on the ques- tion of suffrage was unquestionable since the passage of that Amendment.'^ Mr. Beck, of Kentucky, had preceded these last two gentlemen with a rather long speech, the most important part of which was an effort to show that it was never claimed while the Amendment was before Con- gress that it would give the power now claimed for it, but that it was denied by Trumbull and others that it could do so. Mr. Cullom thought a State had no right to disfranchise a citizen on account of race or color, but was not sure that the Fourteenth Amendment was clear enough on this point.*/ Mr. Kerr denied the right of Congress to pass the bill, holding that suffrage was not one of the privileges of citizenship.*/' Mr. Miller, a Republican, held that the Fourteenth Amendment did not authorize the bill and that it was not contemplated to confer such power at the time it was pro- posed.^<> Mr. Shellabarger, while not specifically saying ' Ibid., pp. 642-45. • Ibid., p. 692. '^Ibid., pp. 694-96. •Ibid., p. 651. •Ibid., pp. 653-58. Ibid., Appendix, p. 92. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 217 so, seemed to think that the bill was constitutional.^^ Mr. Broomall was in favor of the bill, evidently thinking it constitutional.^^ Mr. Loughbridge also thought that the States did not possess the power to deny to any class of citizens the suffrage on account of race or color, but ad- mitted that he thought the majority of the people believed such power was in the States.^* Mr. Higby declared that the language of the first section of the Amendment was so comprehensive that it seemed to include every right per- taining to citizenship, but that the second section implied that States might deny or abridge the right to vote.^ With the exception of this right, he would hold that all other rights were conferred by the Amendment.^* The bill was not discussed after January 29, 1869, the resolution proposing what practically became the Fifteenth Amendment having passed the House January 30. From the fact that the bill was not pressed for definite and final action, one might conclude that it was realized by the lead- ers that it could not pass, but the effort to pass it, as well as the expressions made in regard to it, together with the fact that the Committee on the Judiciary reported such a bill, are significant. Mr. Stewart had, prior to this, December 14, 1868, in- troduced a resolution (S. R. 6yy) to enforce the third sec- tion of the Fourteenth Amendment. A month later, Jan- uary 14, 1869, Mr. Sumner introduced a bill (S. R. yyy) to the same effect. Mr. Buckalew, speaking of the resolu- tion introduced by Mr Stewart, admitted that Congress had the power to pass it under the Amendment, but thought the proper course to enforce the section was through the Civil tribunals.^"* Neither of the above resolutions was debated nor does the Senate appear to have taken any further steps. No real effort seems to have been made during the first session of the Forty-first Congress, and this was probably " Ibid., p. 98. "Ibid., p. 102. "Ibid., p. 199. "Ibid., p. 294. "Globe, 40th Cong., 3d Sess., p. 1490. 21 8 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. due to the fact that it was a special session and very short. Two bills were introduced in the House, however, for the purpose of enforcing the third section of the Amendment (March 24 and 25, 1869), but neither of these bills was considered. Two bills were also introduced into the Sen- ate to the same effect, but no action was taken. Several bills were introduced at the next session of Con- gress which met December, 1869. Mr. Spence introduced a bill (S. R. No. 293), December 7, 1869, to amend the Civil Rights Bill, but this was indefinitely postponed, Feb- ruary 2, 1870, on the recommendation of the Judiciary Com- mittee. Two bills were introduced as supplementary to the Civil Rights Bill— one by Mr. Sawyer (S. R. No. 718), March 28, 1870; the other by Mr. Sumner (S. R. No. 916), May 13, 1870. The one submitted by Mr. Sumner is of considerable importance, being practically the same as the bill which became law in 1875. It was reported adversely at this session, however, and indefinitely postponed July 7.. 1870. Mr. Rice submitted a resolution that the Committee on Judiciary inquire into the effect of the Fourteenth Amendment upon the Indians to determine whether they were citizens (March 15, 1870). There were also bills in the House to similar effect; one being introduced January 17, 1870, to enforce the Amend- ments and another March 14, following, to amend the Civil Rights Bill of 1866. It was also at this session that the House passed a resolution introduced by Mr. Bingham making it a criminal offence for anyone to attempt to repeal the ratification of an Amendment after three fourths of the States had ratified it. The penalty for a violation of it was a fine of not less than $2,000 nor more than $10,000 and imprisonment of not less than one year nor more than ten years. This bill was passed July 7, 1870, by a vote of 130 to 54,^* but was pigeon-holed by the Senate Judiciary Committee. The fact that these resolutions were introduced shows that there existed a feeling not only that Congress should "Globe, 41st Cong., 2d Sess., p. 5357. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 219 enact legislation for the enforcement of the Amendment, but that it had the power to do so. No action was taken on any of the above bills at this session, though we shall now consider one which was debated and finally became law. Mr. Bingham submitted a resolution (H. R. 1293) Feb- ruary 21, 1870, to enforce the rights of citizens of the United States to vote, probably under the Fifteenth Amend; ment, though it was not at the time a part of the Constitu- tion. It was reported back from the Committee on the Judiciary, March 9, 1870, with an Amendment in the nature of a substitute. It was not brought before the House for consideration until May 16, following, when it was passed, without debate, under a suspension of the rules by a vote of 131 to 44.^'^ As passed by the House, the bill only dealt with "the question of suffrage, and so must have been for the purpose of enforcing the Fifteenth Amendment. On the same day that the above bill was passed by the House^'the Senate began the consideration of a bill intro- duced by Mr. Edmunds in April (S. R. No. 810), and hav- ing the same object in view as that of the House bill. The Senate bill was amended by Mr. Stewart for the purpose of enforcing the third section of the Fourteenth Amendment and for securing to all persons the equal protection of the laws. One of the amendments offered by Mr. Stewart was the first section of the Civil Rights Bill of 1866. In fact the Civil Rights Bill of 1866 was to be reenacted.^^ Mr. Vickers, a senator from Maryland, declared that Congress had no power to legislate under the Fifteenth Amendment until some State had denied or abridged the right after that Amendment had been ratified, and since no State had done so, there was no occasion for Congress to act.^' Mr. Thurman was also of the same opinion.'^"' The Senate bill consisted of twelve sections, and was a bill of pains and penalties, while the amendments offered by Mr. Ibid., p. 3504. " Ibid., p. 3480. " Ibid., p. 3481. * Ibid., p. 3485. 220 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. Stewart added five more sections, not counting the nine sections of the Civil Rights Bill which were not repeated. Mr. Stockton thought Congress was only given the power to pass laws enforcing the Amendments when it was"" neces- sary,* i. e., when they were violated.^^ / Mr. Sherman de- clared that both of the Amendments had been violated in several States, and especially the Fourteenth. He said there might be some plausibility in the construction of the Courts of California as to the Fifteenth Amendment, by implying that before it should be enforced in the Courts some legislation should be passed by Congress.^^ If that be true of the Fifteenth, it would also be true of the Four- teenth Amendment. Mr. Schurz said the express provisions affixed to the Amendments giving Congress power to enforce them were put there because it was known that those Amendments would have to be enforced against the prejudices and habits of the people.^' Mr. Pool said that the word " deny " as used in both the Fourteetith and Fifteenth Amendments included acts of omission ^ well as of commission. A State could not, ac- , cording to his view, deny by omission, by failure to prevent J ' its own citizens from depriving any of their fellow citizens of the rights secured by those Amendments. If a State failed, to carry into effect the provisions of the Civil Rights Bill to secure the citizens in their rights, then the fifth section would be called into operation. No legislation, he continued, could prevent a State from passing a law, but it could reach the individuals of the State for enforcing the law. Laws of Congress act upon citizens, not upon States, he contended, and Congress could enact legislation for the enforcement of the Amendments, but such legislation would be applica- ble to the individuals who violated or attempted to violate them, for Congress had no power to legislate against ^ Ibid., p. 3567. ^'Ibid., p. 3568. "^ Ibid., p. 3608. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 221 States, it mattered not whether the individuals were acting as officers or not.^* Mr. Howard considered the Fourteenth by far the most important Amendment to the Constitution, and declared, May 19, 1870, that he was still of the opinion expressed in the Report of the Reconstruction Committee.^^ He said the intention and purpose of Congress in submitting the Fif-i teenth Amendment was to secure to the colored man, by / proper legislation, the right to vote, and not merely to con- fine its operation to legislation by way of prohibition uponj the United States and the States. If it is to be given that narrow construction, it will be stripped, he declared, almost entirely of that remedial and protective justice which was in the minds of its authors when it was proposed.^® Mr. Williams objected to the Senate bill, saying that it was first a bill to enforce the Fifteenth Amendment, upon which Mr. Stewart had filed a bill to enforce the Fourteenth Amendment, and another to protect citizens in the enjoy- ment of their civil rights. Mr. Stewart seemed to desire the incorporation of the Civil Rights Bill in order to secure protection to the Chinese aliens who were coming to this country, and the power to see that they had the equal pro-J tection of the laws conferred by the Fourteenth Amend- ' ^lent.^" Mr. Morton said that if the construction put upon the Fifteenth Amendment by some was correct, the second sec- tion was a nullity, for their argument was that if a state law violated the Fifteenth Amendment, it was void. He de- clared that the second section was put there for the purpose of enabling Congress to carry out the Amendment and that it was not to be left to state legislation. Mr. Thurman said the bill had been amended in so many respects that no one knew what it was, but the Senate refused to commit the bill to the Judiciary Committee or to lay it on the table and have it printed. The bill was characterized *'Ibid., pp. 3611-13. " Ibid., p. 3614. * Ibid., p. 3655. " Ibid., p. 3658. 222 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. as a " conglomeration of incongruities,"^^ and it must be said that the characterization was not altogether improper, for as finally passed, it consisted of 21 sections, but it also included the Civil Rights Bill of 1866, which would make about thirty-two sections in all. After an all night session, the bill was passed about seven o'clock on the morning of the twenty-first day of May, 1870, by a vote of forty-three to eight.^® y^ The House non-concurred in the amendments made by the Senate (the Senate bill had been moved by way of amendment as substitute for House bill) and asked for a conference. The Conference Committee made a few minor changes, and added two sections, making twenty-three sec- tions, which with the Civil Rights Bill, made a total of thirty-four sections. Mr. Hamilton of Maryland s'aid that, if the doctrines and principles involved in the bill were sound. Congress possessed the power, under the Fourteenth Amendment, to legislate upon all the subjects of life, liberty and property, and that, taken with the other prohibitions of the Constitution, com- prehended every right of person or property, thus giving Congress the arbitrament of every right of the citizen and of the State. He denied, however, that the denial of a cer- tain power to a State thereby conferred upon Congress the power over the subject-matter of such denial.^" He thought the framers of the Fifteenth Amendment intended, by its peculiar phraseology, by implication in its construction, for the Federal Government to take control of elections in the States, but he did not think they accomplished their purpose. Mr. Fowler held that the remedy under the Fifteenth Amendment was judicial, though he admitted that Congress no doubt intended to confer legislative power upon itself by the second section.^^ /' Mr. Swann, of Maryland, stated that he foresaw, when /the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted with the fifth sec- " Ibid, p. 3688. '"Ibid, p. 3690. Z Ibid., Appendix, pp. 353-55. Ibid., Appendix, p. 421. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 223 tion in it, all that was contained in the bill before the House in regard to the assumed power of Congress to regulate and control suffrage within the States, " This clause," he con- , / tinued, " was so vague and indefinite that it bore upon its r face the evidence of the stupendous usurpation which it was ' designed to perpetrate." He stated that only one and one half hours were allowed Democrats for discussion./^ Mr. Casserly, while discussing this bill, said that he did not think any one regarded the Civil Rights Bill as valid or Constitutional, and that it was already obsolete. He also stated that both Amendments were of the same character, and that if the powers claimed under the Fifteenth Amend- ment were applied to the Fourteenth Amendment, Congress could take to itself, under pretence of enforcing that Amend- ment, the entire criminal and civil jurisdiction of the States as regards offences against life, liberty, and property.^^ He, however, denied the power of Congress to do so in both cases, Mr. Carpenter, of Wisconsin, seemed to think that the Fourteenth Amendment authorized the passage of the Sen- ate bill.3* The report of the Conference Committee was agreed to in the Senate, May 25, 1870, by a vote of forty-eight to eleven;^"* in the House, May 27, by a vote of 133 to 58,^® The bill as passed by the Houses was signed by the President May 31, 1870, and so became a law, and was, therefore, the first law for the enforcement of the Fourteenth and Fif- teenth Amendments, While it was more for the enforce- ment of the Fifteenth Amendment, it is of importance in a consideration of the Fourteenth Amendment since it shows that Congress acted on the theory that the last section of the Amendment conferred upon it the power to enforce the Amendment, and if this was true of the Fifteenth Amend- ment, it was equally true of the Fourteenth, "Ibid., Appendix, p. 431. ^ Ibid., Appendix, pp. 470 and 473. ** Ibid., Appendix, p. 473. =• Ibid., p. 3809. " Ibid., p. ^" 224 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. Section eighteen of the bill declared that the Civil Rights Bill of 1866 was thereby reenacted — no doubt to give valid- ity to it, though it is strange that no reference was made as to this purpose. At the third session of the forty-first Congress, efforts were made as during the other sessions, to secure legislation look- ing to the enforcement of the Amendments, and especially of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth. The Judiciary Committee seems to have been hostile to most of the bills introduced, for nearly every one that was reported back, was either ad- versely reported or indefinitely postponed. The resolution (S. R. No. 715) introduced by Mr. Sawyer at the previous session was so reported and indefinitely postponed early in the session.'^ A like fate awaited the bill introduced by Mr. Pool (S. R. No. 871), this bill being to enforce the Fourteenth Amend- ment and to secure the rights, privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States.^^ These bills had been intro- duced at the previous session but others were submitted at this time. Mr. Sawyer presented a resolution (S. R. No. 1223) January 18, 1871, for the purpose of protecting citi- zens against violations of their civil and political rights.^® Not in the least deterred by the adverse report as to his resolution of the previous session, Mr. Sumner again intro- duced his supplementary Civil Rights Bill, January 20, 1871. This was reported adversely February 15, 1871, the report being made by Mr. Trumbull.*'' Bills were also introduced at this session to amend the Act of May 31, 1870, and one of these was passed. It consisted of nineteen sections and was to amend section twenty of the Act of 1870, and related to elections, to securing the right of suffrage, and the purity of the ballot box, as its advocates claimed, though Mr. Lawrence, of Ohio, declared that the second clause of section one. Article Fourteen, authorized "4ist Cong., 3d Sess., p. 219. " Ibid., p. 366. » Ibid., p. 569. " Ibid., pp. 619 and 1263. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 225 the bill.*^ The House passed the bill, February 15, 1871, after a four hour debate by a vote of 144 to 64.*^ The Senate debated it quite at length, passing it February 24, or rather at 1.30 A. M. of the 25th, by a vote of 39 to 10.*' The President gave his approval February 28, the bill thus becoming a part of the Act of May 31, 1870. It thus appears that the Fortieth and Forty-first Con- gresses, while not really enacting much legislation for the en- forcement of the Fourteenth Amendment, showed that they held a general belief that they posessed the power. This is shown by the number of bills introduced for that pur- pose, by the bills which were enacted into laws, and by the declaration of members on the floors of Congress. It is also true that the right of Congress to enact affirmative legislation in these instances were denied, but these declara- tions came from the minority generally, and so from those who had opposed the Amendments from the beginning. If there be any doubt as to whether Congress believed it possessed such power, that doubt is removed by the study of the debates of, and laws enacted by, the Forty-second Con- gress. We are no longer obliged to draw conclusions or in- ferences as to this from the nature of bills or resolutions in- troduced, for here we have unmistakable evidence — plain dec- larations by members of Congress, many of whom had taken part in the enactment of the Fourteenth Amendment. In fact, some of the principal participants in securing the adop- tion of that Amendment, were members of the Forty-second Congress and were largely instrumental in the enactment of laws for its enforcement. On the third day of the session, March 9, 1871, Mr. Sum- ner again brought forward his bill (S. R. No. 99), known as the supplementary Civil Rights Bill, and to avoid another adverse report, it was not referred to any committee.** On March 22, following, he moved it as an amendment to Mr. " Ibid., p. 1276. " Ibid., p. 1285. « Ibid., p. 1655. " Cong. Rec, 42d Cong., ist Sess., p. 21. 15 226 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. Anthony's resolution limiting or restricting the business of the session, but it was rejected.*^ The bill was referred to the Judiciary Committee on the last day of the session, April 20. March i6, Mr. Frelinghuysen introduced a bill more fully to enforce the Fourteenth Amendment. A bill was introduced in the House to protect loyal citizens in the South in their rights, persons, lil^erty, and property, and one to secure the equal protection of the laws within the several States. There appears, however, to have been no intention on the part of the House to enact any law for the enforcement of the Amendments, since on five different occasions it voted to adjourn by large majorities. On motion of Mr. Dawes, March 4, 1871, the House voted to adjourn sine die by vote of 147 to 23 ; on the 13th of March, a similar motion by him was passed by a vote of 124 to 67; on the 15th, a similar motion by Mr. Wheeler was adopted by a vote of 118 to 76; on the 20th, a similar motion was carried by vote of 121 to 55 ; and on the 23d, a like motion by Mr. Farnsworth passed by a vote of 113 to 68." On the 23d of March, and after the motion of Mr. Farns- worth for final adjournment had passed, a message was re- ceived from President Grant which changed the whole aspect of affairs. In this short message he recommended that such legislation be enacted as would effectually secure life, liberty, and property, and the enforcement of law in all parts of the United States. He gave no evidence to show that such legis- lation was necessary, merely saying that life and property were insecure in some States and that the carrying of the mails and the collection of the revenues were dangerous. He also stated that it might be expedient to provide that such legislation as might be enacted should expire at the end of the next session of Congress. This last statement seems to give some weight to the charges of the opposition that the legislation was to be for political purposes. The message was referred on the same day to a select "Ibid., p. 225. ** Ibid., Appendix, p. 258. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 227 Committee, of which Mr. Shellabarger was appointed chair- man. Five days later, March 28, he reported from the Com- mittee a bill to enforce the Fourteenth Amendment. The bill consisted of five sections, the first of which made any person, who, under color of any law, statute, custom, or regu- lation of any State, should deprive any one of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution of the United States, liable to the party injured in any action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress, such proceeding to be prosecuted in the Federal Courts. The same rights of appeal and remedies provided for in the Civil Rights Bill of 1866 were to be applicable in such cases. The second section provided that if two or more persons conspire or combine together to do any act in violation of the above mentioned rights or privileges, which act, if com- mitted within a place under the sole and exclusive jurisdic- tion of the United States, would, under the laws of the United States, constitute the crime of either murder, man- slaughter, mayhem, robbery, assault and battery, perjury, subornation of perjury, criminal obstruction of legal proc- ess, or resistance of officers in discharge of official duty, arson, or larceny, and if one or more of the parties to the conspiracy or combination do any act to effect the object thereof, all the parties to the conspiracy or combination shall be deemed guilty of a felony, and on conviction, be liable to a penalty of not more than $10,000, or to impris- onment for not more than ten years, or both, at the discre- tion of the Court; but in case of murder, the penalty to be death. The third section provided that where any portion or class of people were deprived, by insurrection, domestic violence, or combinations, of any of the rights or privileges secured by the bill, and the constituted authorities of the State should fail to protect them in these rights, either by inability, neglect, or refusal, and should fail or neglect to apply to the President for aid, such facts to be deemed a denial by the State of the equal protection of the laws, to which they were entitled under the Fourteenth Amendment. 228 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. It was declared to be the duty of the President in such cases to employ the militia or land and naval forces of the United States as he might deem necessary. The fourth section stated what should be considered rebellion, and authorized the President to suspend the writ of habeas corpus and to declare and enforce martial law,*^ It will be seen by the brief digest of the bill given above, that Congress was to enter upon an almost entirely new field of legislation, and this was admitted by Mr. Shella- barger in his opening speech, Mr. Shellabarger said that the first section of the proposed bill was modeled upon the second section of the Civil Rights Bill of 1866, the only difference being that this one provided for civil remedy where the bill of 1866 provided for criminal proceeding. The authority for passing the bill, he asserted, was the same as that for passing the second section of the Civil Rights Bill, but much greater in this case since the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment was more explicit and more complete than the Thirteenth Amendment which was claimed as authority for passing the bill of 1866. He claimed that the Civil Rights Bill was constitutional, having been so decided by the Su- preme Courts of at least three States and had also been de- clared constitutional by Justice Swayne of the United States Supreme Court in a case under review before the United States Circuit Court of the district of Kentucky. His contention was that the Fourteenth Amendment gave Congress power to protect and defend, by direct, affirmative legislation, those privileges and immunities which were in their nature fundamental. Equality of legislation was secured by the second clause of section one of the Amend- ment, he declared, and that this meant that the law on its face should apply equally to all. The last clause secured equality of protection. The two clauses, placed in juxtaposi- tion, gave Congress the power to see to it that the States should equally protect, under equal laws, all persons within their jurisdiction.** *'Ibid., p. 317. ** Ibid., Appendix, pp. 67-71. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 229 Mr. Kerr, who followed Mr. Shellabarger, denied that the Fourteenth Amendment authorized such bills as the one be- fore the House. He claimed that the privileges and immuni- ties spoken of in that Amendment were those which belonged to citizens of the United States, and not those of citizens of the States. The privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States belonged to all such citizens alike ; to man and woman, to adult and infant, to black and white, to sane and insane. The Fifth Amendment was inserted in the Four- teenth Amendment in order to make it apply to the States, and out of abundant caution only. He further held that the first section of the Amendment would be Better enforced by its own vigor and by judicial decisions than by Con- gressional legislation. He thought the bill neither author- ized nor expedient.*^ Mr. Stoughton, speaking of the bill the day it was introduced, said that the authority conferred upon Congress by the fifth section of Article Fourteen, was subject to no restrictions or limitations ; that it was for Con- gress in its discretion to determine what was appropriate legislation, and that its decision would be binding upon every other department of the Government.^" Mr. Hoar, of Massachusetts, said that it had sometimes been suggested that the Fourteenth Amendment aimed at un- lawful acts by the state authorities, but he thought the last clause of the first section was evidence that this was not the case, since it would have been unnecessary if that was all that was intended. He held that a refusal on the part of the officers to extend the protection provided for by the first sec- tion, e. g., if the jurors as a rule refused to do justice where the rights of a particular class of citizens were concerned and the State afforded no remedy, it was as much a denial of the equal protection of the law as if the State had enacted a statute that no verdict should be rendered in favor of that class of citizens."*^ Mr. Beck declared that the bill was brought forward to ** Ibid., Appendix, pp. 46-50. " Ibid., p. 322. " Ibid., p. 334. 230 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. divert the attention of the people from the charges of cor- ruption, class legislation, extravagance, etc., by the cry of Ku Klux and murder.^^ Mr. Farnsworth, speaking of the bill, declared that if there was sanction in the Fourteenth Amendment for the / United States to punish offences against the persons of / citizens of any State, there was equal sanction for Con- ^- gress to legislate as to their property also. He consid- ered the history of the first section of the Amendment, and denied that the Amendment reported by Mr. Bingham, from the Committee on Reconstruction, February, 1866, was incorporated into that section, as was claimed by Mr. Bingham. He quoted from the speeches of Messrs. Hale, Hotchkiss, Davis and Conkling made at that time against it to show the opposition on the part of Republicans and their view of what its effect would be. He also quoted Senator Stewart as saying incidentally of it, since it was never considered in the Senate, that there was " another proposition of the Committee of Fifteen, which, if passed, will obviate the necessity of passing this, and obviate the necessity of any further Constitutional Amendment, and I think obviate the necessity of any more state Legislatures or conventions." He cited the fact that the Amendment, as proposed by Mr. Bingham in February, was postponed and never afterwards called up. Mr. Bingham here inter- jected that he himself had made the motion to postpone and that it was not called up from the fact that it was put in another form. Mr. Farnsworth then quoted from the speech of Mr. Stevens, when he reported the Amendment, April 30, 1866, the first section of which, with the excep- tion of the first clause, was exactly the same as now in the Fourteenth Amendment, to show that its purpose was to correct unjust and partial legislation discriminating against the negro. He declared that they all knew, and especially those of them who were members of Congress when the Amendment was proposed, that it was proposed on account of the unjust and discriminating legislation of the Southern "Ibid., p. 355. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 231 States. He gave it as his opinion that no Democrat had charged at the time, as an argument against it, that it would confer such power as was now attempted to be exercised, but Mr. Garfield interrupted him to say that Mr. Shankling, of Kentucky, and Mr. Rogers, of New Jersey, had stated that it would have the effect of breaking down the barriers of state law and state authority. It was stated that Sena- tors Hendricks, Doolittle, Davis, of Kentucky, and others who spoke against the Amendment, never claimed that it would confer upon Congress power to legislate in the man- ner now proposed. Senator Johnson, of Maryland, had opposed the second clause on the ground that he did not know what would be its effect. Mr. Farnsworth admitted that he had voted for the Civil Rights Bill of 1866, but stated that many things had been done by Congress which could not be defended if done in peace, and added : " We passed laws, Mr, Speaker, and the country knows it, which we did not like to let go to the Supreme Court for adjudication. And I am telling no tales out of school. Since the adoption of this [Four- teenth] Amendment, because of scruples in regard to the constitutionality of the Civil Rights Bill we have reenacted it." He thought, however, there was no need for overstep- ping constitutional bounds at this time. He also denied that the fifth section of that Amendment gave authority for the bill, since he regarded the first section a " law unto itself," which could be executed by the Courts. The only legislation, in his opinion, that Congress could do was to enforce the provisions of the Constitution upon the laws of the States. He thought the question presented by the bill was whether the States should be obliterated and all power concentrated in the Central Government.^^ Mr. Bingham, who drafted the first section of the Four- teenth Amendment with the exception of the first clause, followed Mr. Farnsworth with a very able speech. Prob- ably more weight should be given the utterances of Mr. Bingham as to the interpretation of that section than to "Ibid., Appendix, pp. 1 14-17. 232 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. those of any other, and we shall, therefore, give consider- able attention to what he said on this occasion. It was his belief that the last three Amendments conferred powers upon Congress never before granted and that, under them. Congress could enact laws for the protection of the rights of citizens both as against the States and the individuals in the States. Referring to the question of Mr. Farnsworth as to why- he had changed the form of the Amendment which he re- ported in February to that of the first section of the Four- teenth Amendment, he replied that he would answer it and answer it truthfully. He stated that he had framed the Article as reported in February, and the first section of Article Fourteen, letter for letter and syllable for syllable, save the clause defining citizenship. He said that the sec- tion as it now stood in the Fourteenth Amendment was more comprehensive than it was in the form first presented in February, 1866; that it embraced all and more than did the first proposition. The fifth section gave the grant of power, and it was full and complete. He then gave in full the Amendment as reported in February, 1866, and referred to the fact that the motion to lay it on the table, which was a test vote on its merits, failed — ^the motion being lost by a vote of no to 41; that he had consented to and voted for the motion to postpone its further consideration until the second Tuesday of April ; that afterwards, in the joint Committee on Reconstruction, he had introduced the section as it now stood in the Con- stitution. The last clause of that section meant, he de- clared, that no State should deny to any one the equal pro- tection of the Constitution of the United States, or any of the rights which it guaranteed to all men, nor should it (the State) deny to anyone any right secured to him by the laws and treaties of the United States or of such State. The first section was declared to be as comprehensive as " We will sell to no man, will not deny or delay to any man right or justice" of the Magna Charta. Mr. Bingham also quoted from a speech of Mr. Farnsworth in advocacy of Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 233 the Amendment when it was before Congress to show that the latter must have thought that it could be enforced. He then proceeded to explain why he had changed the form of the Amendment as first introduced in February. He had taken counsel of Marshall in the hope that " the Amendment might be so framed that in all the hereafter it might be accepted by the historian of the American Con- stitution and her Magna Charta ' as the keystone of Amer- ican liberty.' " The decision of Marshall in Barron vs. the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore (7 Peters, p. 250)- induced him, he declared, to attempt to impose new limita- tions upon the power of the States by a constitutional Amendment. In this case the City had taken private prop- erty for public use, without compensation, and there was no redress for the wrong in the Supreme Court of the United States, since this Court held that the first eight Amendments were r^ limitations*^u]^on the power of the United States. Somewhat later, the same Court ruled that the Amendments did not extend to the States. This was in the Lessee of Livingstone vs. Moore et al. (7 Peters, p. 552). He (Bing- ham) said that Jefferson had properly described the first eight Amendments as the American Bill of Rights. He then mentioned the principal rights secured to the people by those Amendments, but only secured as against the United States and not against the States. Mr. Bingham then stated that, while reexamining the case of Barron, after his struggle with Congress in Febru- ary, he had noted and apprehended as never before, certain words ysed by Marshall in that decision. He quoted the following words used by Marshall in reference to the first eight Amendments : " Had the f ramers of these Amend- ments intended them to be limitations on the powers of the state governments, they would have imitated the framers of the original Constitution, and have expressed that inten- tion." He said he acted upon that suggestion and imitated the framers of the original Constitution. Just as they had said " No State shall emit bills of credit, pass any bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law impairing the obliga- 234 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. tions of contracts," so had he said, in the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment that " No State shall make or enforce any law," etc., imitating them to the letter. He then added: "I hope the gentleman (Mr. Farnsworth) now knows why I changed the form of the Amendment of February, 1866." He said that the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States, as contradistinguished from citizens of the States, were chiefly defined in the first eight Amend- ments, and in order to show the scope and meaning of the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment, he gave these Amendments in full. The principal rights secured to the citizens by the first eight Amendments were these: free- dom of religion, of speech, and of the press; the right peaceably to assemble, and to petition for redress of griev- ances; the right to keep and bear arms; the inviolability of their homes in times of peace, in that no soldier s|;iould be quartered in any house without the consent of the owner ; their persons, houses, papers, and effects secured against unreasonable searches and seizures ; not to be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law; to have trial by jury ; to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusations that might be made against them, and to be confronted with the witnesses against them; excessive bail not to be required, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted. After giving the Amendments in full, Mr. Bingham said : " These eight Articles I have shown never were limitations upon the power of the States, until made so by the Four- /teenth Amendment. The words of that Amendment, 'no / State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge / the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United ■ States,' are an express prohibition upon every State of the , Union, which may be enforced under existing laws of Con- V gress, and such other laws for their better enforcement as "^XCpngress may make." He then referred to Mr. Shellabarger's reference to the Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 235 decision in the case of Corfield vs. Coryell (4 Wash. Cir. Ct. Rep'ts, p. 380), but said other and different privileges and immunities than these were secured by the Fourteenth Amendment, since this Amendment declared that no State should abridge the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States, and that these privileges and immunities were defined in the first eight Amendments. Before the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, it was in the power of the States to deny to any citizens the right of trial by jury, and that it was done, he declared. Before that the States could and did, he asserted, abridge the freedom of the press. But since the ratification of that Amendment the States could not do these things nor could they send men to the penitentiary for teaching an Indian to read the Bible , as had been done in Georgia. / Under the amended Constitution Congress had the power, he asserted, to provide against the denial of rights by the States, whether the denial was in the form of acts of omis- ^ sion or of commission. He said that citizens had been de- nied trial by jury, had been deprived of property without compensation, had been restricted in the freedom of the press and of speech, and in the rights of conscience, and they had no remedy, but that Congress could, under the Fourteenth Amendment, provide by law against such abuses and such denials as these whether committed by individuals or by States. He said the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fif- teenth Amendments were all negative, but that nevertheless new limitations were imposed upon the States by them, while, with each of them, there was coupled the grant of power to enforce them. He referred to the Enforcement Act of May preceding to show that Congress believed it had the pow^r to enforce those Amendments, since an Act to enforce one of them made it possible to pass an Act to enforce the others. He declared that, by virtue of these Amendments, Congress could provide by law that no man should be tried for a criminal offence in any state court without a fair and impartial trial by jury, but said Congress did not possess that power before these Amendments be- 236 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. came a part of the Constitution, Congress could also pro- vide that no one should be deprived of his property without compensation. This was also true with regard to the free- dom of speech, the freedom of the press, the right peace- ably to assemble, etc., since they were of the rights of citi- zens of the United States defined in the Constitution and guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment, which Con- gress was empowered to enforce^/ If Congress should en- act penal laws for the protection of these rights, those vio- lating them would have to answer for the crime, and not the States, he asserted, since the United States punished men, not States, for a violation of its laws.^* The most important and valuable part of his speech, we take it, was that giving the reason for his changing the form of the Amendment as reported in February to that of the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment — making it negative instead of affirmative. Of course this includes his statement of what he intended to accomplish by that section, what rights and privileges he thought he was putting be- yond the power of the States to deny or abridge, and what limitations he intended to put upon the States as well as what powers were being conferred upon Congress by the first section of that Amendment. His statement that the first eight Amendments were made applicable to the States but corroborates that made by Senator Howard when the Amendment was before the Senate in May, 1866, and which statement no one questioned at the time. Mr. Storm, of Pennsylvania, said that little attention was given to the first section when the Amendment was before the House, because the attention of the country was called to the question of changing the basis of representation. He furthermore declared that if the views now announced by those advocating the bill had been uttered when the Amend- ment was before Congress, it would never have been ratified, and added : " If the monstrous doctrine now set up as resulting from the provisions of that Fourteenth Amend- "Ibid., Appendix, pp. 83-85. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 237 ment had ever been hinted at that Amendment would have received an emphatic rejection at the hands of the people." He also stated that the first section was but a reenactment of the Civil Rights Bill through superabundant caution.**' Mr. Storm seems to have stated the question fairly, and no doubt he was right in saying that had the people been in- formed of what was intended by the Amendment, they would have rejected it. But it is equally true that there were state- ments made by men in Congress at the time to show some- thing of what was really meant by it, but these statements seem to have been lost sight of on account of the more stir- ring and exciting political questions of the time. Mr. Lowe, of Kansas, said if the first section could only serve to abrogate or nullify the acts or legislation of the States, then it was of little practical use, since the laws of the States might be all right, yet the people be deprived of their rights. He maintained that it was the intention, taking the first and fifth sections together, to enable Congress to secure to citizens by Federal legislation the rights guaranteed.'^' Mr. Rice, of Illinois, held that the first section was only a limitation upon the States, and not a grant of power to Congress/ He criticised the bill on the ground that it gave no classification or enumeration of the rights and privileges sought to be protected by it. He stated that it could not be shown that there was a denial of the equal protection of the laws by the Constitution or laws of any State, and if there should be, such laws or provisions of the Constitution would be void, and that the remedy would be found in the courts, not in Congress."*^ Mr. Biggs, of Delaware, quoted the New York Evening Post, a Republican paper, as saying that the bill was uncon- stitutional, and if enforced, would overthrow our whole sys- toh of Government, and create a centralized despotism."** . "Ibid., Appendix, p. 87. " Ibid, p. 375- ■" Ibid., p. 396. '* Ibid., p. 417. 238 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. Messrs. Bright, of Tennessee, and McHenry, of Kentucky, held views similar to those of Mr. Rice.^^ Mr. Madison, in the forty-fifth number of the Federalist, says : " The powers reserved to the several States will extend to all the objects which, in the ordinary course of affairs, concern the lives, liberties, and properties of the people, and the internal order, improvement, and prosperity of the State." Mr. Bingham quoted this passage from the Federalist in the debate on his February Amendment, says Mr. Garfield, and said : " These words of Madison are very significant. The fact is that Congress has never, by official enactment in all the past, attempted to enforce these rights of the people in any State of the Union." (39th Cong., p. 1093.) He is also quoted as saying that Congress did not possess the power at that time to enforce the citizens' right to life, lib- erty, and property in South Carolina after her state govern- ment should be recognized and her constitutional relations restored. Mr. Garfield also quoted Bingham's speech on Civil Rights Bill, March 9, 1866, to the same eifect (p. 1291). The speeches of Shellabarger and Delano on this same bill (pp. 1291-94 and appendix, p. 158) were quoted to show that Congress did not possess the power to legislate in regard to life, liberty, and property. This was before the Fourteenth Amendment had become a part of the Constitution, and Mr. Garfield stated that the last three Amendments had enlarged the functions of Congress to some extent. In discussing the first section of Article Fourteen of the Amendment, Mr. Garfield stated that it should be borne in mind that the debate on the pending bill would become his- torical, since it would be the earliest legislative construction given to that clause of the Amendment. " Not only the words which we put into law, but what shall be said here in the way of defining and interpreting the meaning of the clause, may go far to settle its interpretation and its value to the country hereafter." Mr Garfield then proceeded to give a brief account of the history of the first section, quot- " Ibid., pp 420 and 429. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 239 ing from the speeches of Messrs. Higby, Hale, Hotchkiss, Conkling and Bingham on the Amendment proposed by Bingham in February to show the character of the Amend- ment. Mr. Higby favored it, whereas Messrs. Hale, Hotch- kiss and Conkling opposed it. He stated that the first reso- lution was a plain, unambiguous proposition to empower Congress to legislate directly upon all citizens in regard to life, liberty and property. Mr. Garfield said it became evi- dent, both to the members of the Senate and of the House, after this debate, that it could not command a two thirds vote of Congress, and that it was virtually withdrawn on this account. He also gave a brief account of the first sec- tion as introduced April 30, 1866, declaring that the inter- pretation given to it by Mr. Stevens was followed by almost every Republican who spoke on the measure, and that it was generally with scarcely an exception, spoken of as a limita- tion of the powers of the States to legislate unequally as to life and property. He said that no Republican had made any objection to this section similar to those made against the former resolution, but that many had expressed their regret that it was not sufficiently strong. He quoted from Bing- ham's speech to show that the latter thought that the State would have to deny the privileges or immunities of citizens before Congress would have the power to act. He further asserted that it would not be denied, as a mat- ter of history, that the first section of the Fourteenth Amend- ment received many Republican votes that the resolution of February could not have received. He then proceeded to compare the two, placing them in juxtaposition, and declared that the rejected one would have granted the power to Congress to legislate directly for the protection of life, liberty, and property within the States, whereas the one adopted exerted its force directly upon the States, placing limitations upon them, and enabling Congress to enforce those limitations. They gave Congress plenary power over these subjects to the exclusion of the States, whereas the other merely limited, but did not oust, the juris- diction of the States. Unless both the history and the Ian- 240 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. giiage of the clauses, he continued, be ignored, the force and effect of the rejected clause could not be given to the section as it stands in the Constitution; and Mr. Shellabarger had done this. Mr. Garfield considered the last clause of the first section of the Amendment as the most valuable of the section. He said it did not require the laws of the States to be perfect, but whether unwise or unjust, they must be equal in their provisions. Speaking of the bill for the enforcement of the Amend- ment, he declared that its first section was wise and salutary, and clearly within the power of Congress. Furthermore, that if the state laws were just and equal on their face, but were not enforced, either by neglect or refusal, then Congress could, by virtue of the last clause of section one of the Four- teenth Amendment, provide for doing justice to those who were thus denied the equal protection of the laws. His ob- jection was to the second section of the bill, and he stated that if it were so amended as not to assert the power of i Congress to take jurisdiction until the equal protection was denied, and not, in any way, to assume the original jurisdic- tion of the rights of private persons and of property within the States, he would heartily support it. He was not opposed to a proper bill, he declared, but felt -bound to enter his pro- test against a dangerous and unwarranted interpretation of the recent Amendments. Mr. Shellabarger inquired how the Enforcement Act of May, 1870, could be regarded as consti- tutional under his interpretation of the Amendment, since the Fifteenth Amendment was also a negation upon the power of the States. To this Mr. Garfield replied that the provision in the old Constitution in regard to election of Representatives, together with the Fifteenth Amendment, authorized it.''** It seems that this reply was hardly sufficient, and one feels that Mr. Shellabarger's veiled suggestion of the illogical position of Mr. Garfield, after having voted for the Enforcement Act of 1870, was perfectly warranted. Mr. Cox, of New York, took the position that the Amend- ment had to do only with the actions of the States, and since "Ibid., Appendix, pp. 150-54. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 241 no State had abridged the privileges of citizens, the bill was not a proper one."^ Mr. Coburn, of Indiana, held that affirmative action or legislation on the part of the State was not necessary to authorize the bill, since the failure of the State to see to it that every one was protected in his rights was just as flagrant as a positive denial of protection.*'^ Mr. Holman, of Indiana, maintained that the fifth section of the Fourteenth Amendment had reference only to the sec- ond and third sections of that Amendment, and did not apply at all to the first section. He also contended that if the limi- tations or denials of the power of the States in the first sec- tion were to be construed as conferring legislative power on Congress, then there was no limit to the power of Congress in respect to the domestic afifairs of the States. This was also manifest, he said, from the fact that the advocates of the bill did not seem to recognize any such limit and had not attempted to define the limit or boundary between federal and state jurisdiction.^^ Mr. Golladay, of Tennessee, took a position similar to that of Mr. Holman in regard to the effect and application of the fifth section, and declared that, if the powers claimed in debate were once conceded to Con- gress, there would be no further need of state constitutions, the Central Government becoming supreme in every imagin- able case, from the pettiest police regulation to the loftiest questions of state.^* Mr. Dawes, of Massachusetts, who was a member of Con- gress when the Fourteenth Amendment was submitted to the States, said that the rights, privileges, and immunities sought to be protected by the bill were those which were found in the original Constitution, and in the Amendments, including the Thirteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, thus making the first section of Article Fourteen include all these rights and privi- leges. He enumerated the rights secured by the first eight Amendments and by the last three Amendments, thus leav- " Ibid., p. 455. «* Ibid., p. 459- ''Ibid., Appendix, pp. 259-60. "Ibid., Appendix, p. 160. 16 242 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. ing no room for doubt as to what he meant. He maintained that Congress had the power to guard, protect and enforce all the rights which he had enumerated, and that this could be done, either by giving any citizen, whose rights or privi- leges were denied or abridged, a civil remedy in the Federal Court for any damage sustained; or by the indictment and punishment of any offender who should " invade, trench upon, or otherwise impair any right, privilege, or immunity of any citizen." *° Mr. Wilson, of Indiana, held almost the same view as that of Mr. Dawes regarding the power of Congress to secure the rights and privileges of citizens; saying that the last clause of the first section of Article Fourteen was equiva- lent to " no State shall fail or refuse to provide for the equal protection of the laws to all persons within its jurisdiction." He also held that Congress was made the exclusive judge as to the necessity for congressional legislation. The substance of his views are as follows : 1. The last clause of section one meant that equal protec- tion should be provided. 2. The failure to enact proper laws or to enforce them was a denial of such equal protection. 3. Congress possessed the power to enact laws to secure equal protection where such was the case. 4. Congress was the sole judge as to the necessity of leg- islation as well as to the remedies necessary to be applied.®* Mr. T)mer, of Indiana, said that the obligation imposed on Congress to see that equal protection was not denied to any one was all the justification he wanted for supporting the bill.®^ Mr. Lansing, of New York, believed the grants of power given by the recent constitutional Amendment were in vain unless Congress could carry them into effect by appro- priate legislation.^^ Mr. Willard, of Vermont, held that the Amendment was intended only to secure an equality of rights " Ibid., pp. 475-77. * Ibid, pp. 481-83. " Ibid., p. 487. * Ibid., p. 487. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 243 and immunities, and that only a denial of that equality could be made punishable by United States laws, though he be- lieved that anything secured to citizens by that Amendment could be enforced by the laws of the United States. He admitted that the difference between himself and some of the others was as to the meaning of the Amendment, and not as to the power which might be used to enforce it. He consid- ered the rights and privileges mentioned in the case of Cor- field vs. Coryell and those enumerated in the Civil Rights Bill of 1866 to be those of citizens of the United States, and so could be secured by Congress. He did not think the Amendment accomplished very much, however, and stated that the Fourteenth Amendment did not modify or change the previous Constitution in any way.^^ Mr. Burchard, of Illinois, said he believed the law of May, 1870, secured all the rights and privileges secured by the Constitution, but was willing to vote for a bill to give them greater efficiency if those enactments — the bill of 1870 and Civil Rights Bill of 1866 which was reenacted by section eighteen of the Act of 1870 — were not sufficient. He held that the clause of the Amendment defining citizenship did not enlarge the rights and privileges belonging to citizens, but merely increased the number of those who might enjoy them. He stated that some of these privileges and immu- nities were enumerated in the Civil Rights Bill passed by the same Congress which proposed the Amendment. He did not see how the application of the first eight Amend- ments to the States could be held to confer upon the Fed- eral Courts the right to punish for murder or other offenses against life and person. He held that the deprivation of any of the rights or the denial of the equal protection of the laws must be by the State through its officers, nor was it ever enjoined on the State, in his opinion, to provide protection, but that it should not discriminate in its protec- tion, either by the legislative, executive, or judicial depart- ments. He said the debates on the Amendment showed that it was not intended to confer on Congress the power " Ibid., Appendix, pp. 188-89. 244 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. to pass affirmative legislation to enforce its provision upon private individuals. He thought, however, that the Gen- eral Government had the power to punish state officers who willfully and wrongfully made or enforced unconstitutional laws of the State or who neglected the duties enforced upon them by the Constitution of the United States. He even thought that the attempts of individuals to prevent such officers from performing their duties could be pun- ished by the United States.'^" Mr. Poland, of Vermont, who was a member of the Senate when the Amendment was proposed, said he did not believe it gave Congress the power to go into the States and legislate for the punishment of ordinary offences against persons and property, this power being left with the States, and that even if the States should fail to punish a crime committed within its borders. Congress could not provide a law for punishing it. But he held that if a State denied the equal protection of the laws, or if proper laws were not enforced, or if any one attempted to prevent the officers from carrying out the laws, then Congress could provide for the punishment of such an offence. He approved of Mr. Farnsworth's general propo- sition in regard to the powers of Congress under the Consti- tution.'^^ He, however, as well as Messrs. Farnsworth, Gar- field and others, who contended that Congress did not have the power to enact affirmative legislation applicable to indi- viduals, must have thought that the bill did not do this, for they voted for it. In fact Mr. Garfield's objection was not to the first section, but to the second, and, as it was amended in some respects, he supported it.'^^ The bill, after a debate of nine days, on four of which evening sessions were held, passed the House, April 6, 1871, by a strict party vote of one hundred and eighteen ^to ninety-one, with only eighteen not voting. Of the one " Ibid., Appendix, pp. 313-15. "Ibid., p. 514. Ibid., p. 518. The Democrats had voted, July 11, 1870, and again at this session, said Mr. Shellabarger, that the Fourteenth Amendment was not a part of the Constitution. Thirty-two had so voted in 1870, and seventy-five in 1871. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 245 hundred and eighteen voting for the bill, fifteen, some of whom were the strongest men in the Republican party, had been members of Congress when the Fourteenth Amendment was proposed, Messrs. Dawes, Bingham, Shel- labarger and Garfield being among the number. Mr. Blaine was speaker, and so did not vote, though no doubt he was in favor of the bill. Two others who were members of the Thirty-ninth Congress were absent, but were prob- ably in favor of the bill.^^ The Senate had been debating a resolution introduced by Mr. Sherman, directing the Committee on the Judiciary to report a bill for the suppression of violence in the South, and in an indirect way the question of the power of Con- gress to enact such legislation was involved. Speaking on this topic, April 3, 1871, Senator Blair, of Maryland, said that the Fourteenth Amendment as claimed by its advocates at the time it was proposed did not confer citizenship, but merely defined it as it had existed from the beginning. He cited the debates which took place on it to show that the purpose of the first section was to prevent the repeal of the Civil Rights Bill of 1866, and that both the Civil Rights Bill and the Fourteenth Amendment were directed against discriminating state laws. He maintained that the claim of those who advocated the proposed action was in efifect that the Amendment had abolished the state governments, permitting them to subsist by sufferance only.'^* Mr. Morton, of Indiana, speaking the next day on the same subject, declared that the last clause of the first sec- tion made a failure to secure the equal protection of the laws equivalent to a denial, whether this failure was willful or merely the result of inability, and was, in fact, the same as if it read : " Every person in the United States shall be entitled to the equal protection of the laws." It was thus an affirmative provision by its nature, and not simply a negative on the power of the States. He said that the Government could act only upon individuals, and not upon '^Ibid., p. 522. "Ibid., Appendix, p. 117. 246 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. States, so that any legislation that Congress might enact must operate upon individuals. This principle was recog- nized by Congress, he continued, in the act passed the year previous for the enforcement of the Fifteenth Amendment, and since the Fourteenth Amendment was in form similar to the Fifteenth, the same principle applied here/° Mr, Frelinghuysen, of New Jersey, declared that the change wrought in the fundamental law by the Fourteenth Amendment was a most important one, and that there was danger, if its words were followed, that the change would be carried too far for the real interests of the country. He declared that it secured much more than " equality " be- tween whites and blacks, and quoted from the decision of the Circuit Court of the United States for the district of Louisiana, June, 1870 (i Abbott, p. 338, Slaughter House Cases) to show that the Court held that the privileges and immunities of all citizens should be absolutely unabridged and unimpaired. The Court said that the main object may have been to remedy one particular phase of social and political wrong, but that it bore a broader meaning and reached social evils never before prohibited by constitu- tional enactment, and that it was to be presumed that people knew what they were doing when they gave their imprimatur to it, and meant to decree what had, in fact, been decreed. Mr. Frelinghuysen regarded the " pursuit of happiness " as the most comprehensive privilege of the citizen. He said the privileges and immunities of Ameri- can citizens were to be found in the Declaration of Inde- pendence, and that they were further defined in Corfield vs. Coryell. He, like Mr. Morton, said that the United States could deal only with individuals and not with States, and so could deal only with offenders who violated these privileges, and not with the States or their officials, to com- pel proper legislation or enforcement. He did not think it expedient to carry the enforcement of the Amendment to the extent of making the criminal code of the United States include all offenses that affect life, liberty and property, "Ibid., Appendix, p. 251. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 247 since this would make it too comprehensive, though he thought that it would be constitutional to do so, but not expedient or proper at that timeJ^ Mr. Pratt, of Indiana, regarded the Bill of 1866 as a proper one under the Thirteenth Amendment, . and held that the means employed to effect the deprivation of the rights secured by the bill, might in law be an assault and battery, or mere misdemeanors ordinarily punishable exclu- sively in the state courts, but they became . offenses against the United States if they related to the class of persons referred to in the Amendment and whose rights were in- tended to be secured by the Civil Rights Bill. He held also that the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment were more than limitations upon the States, but that they were positive guarantees by the United States that the privileges and immunities referred to therein as well as the equal protec- tion of the laws should be enjoyed. He said that any legis- lation that was necessary to secure the enjoyment of the civil and political rights secured by the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, without let, hindrance, or molesta- tion, was constitutional and that the specific power to legis- late was granted. He declared that the negroes could not only contract, hold property, sue, give evidence, sit upon juries, but were eligible to every office, judicial, legislative, or executive, subject to no disability except such as crime imposes. He held views similar to those expressed by Messrs. Morton and Frelinghuysen as to whom the legisla- tion of Congress should apply. He cited the act of May, 1870, as a precedent.'^'^ The bill as passed by the House was referred to the Judiciary Committee of the Senate, Friday, April 7, 1871, and reported back the Monday following, but not consid- ered until the next day, April 11. Mr. Stockton, of New Jersey, took the position that the Enforcement Bill was unconstitutional in that Congress could not authorize the President or any one to deprive a person of life, liberty, "Ibid., pp. 499-501. "Ibid., pp. S04-6. 248 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. or property without due process of law, or put him twice in jeopardy for the same offense. The Fourteenth Amend- ment did not authorize the violation of the absolute and express restrictions contained in the Constitution, he de- clared, because it prohibited the States from doing what Congress had always been prohibited from doing. The construction of the Amendment necessary to make the En- forcement Bill constitutional, he continued, would be that because no State could deny any of the privileges of citi- zens, Congress might; "or, in other words, the denial of the power to a State confers it on Congress." The general statements made in his speech are sufficient, it seems, to warrant the statement that he thought the Amendment had made the first eight Amendments applicable to the States — or at least the Fifth Amendment. In referring to the lat- ter, he said: "It is manifestly absurd to call this a grant of power to the States. This was a prohibition to the United States, as the Fourteenth Amendment is to the States, and the power to enforce was a matter of course." In closing, he said : " Mr. President, I lay my hands on this Bill of Rights, and, in the name of my constituents, I * do claim, demand, and insist upon all and singular the premises as their undoubted rights and liberties ' ; the true, ancient and indubitable rights of the people of this country." ''^ Mr. Trumbull, discussing the bill, maintained that the Amendment had not extended the rights and privileges of citizenship one iota, and that the National Government was not founded for the purpose of protecting the individual in his rights of person and property. At this point, Mr. Carpenter, of Wisconsin, interjected that he understood that the Fourteenth Amendment had wrought that very , change, and that it was " now put in that aspect and does , protect them." To this Mr. Trumbull replied : " Then it would be an annihilation entirely of the States. Such is not the Fourteenth Amendment. The States were, and are now, the depositories of the rights of the individual "Ibid., pp. 572-74- Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 249 against encroachment." He had no objection, he declared, to a law which would protect a person against " any laws that deprive him of life, liberty, or property, except by the judgment of his peers or the law of the land." ''^. The bill passed the Senate, with amendments, on April 14, 1 87 1, by a vote of forty-five to nineteen,^" Trumbull and Schurz voting with the Democrats. The final vote in the House, April 19, was ninety-three to seventy-four, with sixty-three absentees,^^ while in the Senate it was thirty- six to thirteen with twenty-one absentees.*^ — ._ ^ , --^ The action of the special session of the Forty-second Con- gress on the above measure is very important as to the interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment by the legis- lative department, and special weight must be given to the declarations of those who were members of Congress when that Amendment was proposed. Mr. Garfield's statement that the interpretation put upon that Amendment by Con- gress would become historical and of great importance in determining its future interpretation and value to the coun- try has not been accepted by the Courts, but he was correct so far as the historical and political student is concerned, for the debates on this bill furnish the best evidence and material, except the debates on the Amendment itself, as to what was really intended by the Amendment. While this bill did not go to the extent to which Mr. Sumner and others would have liked, nevertheless it involved the impor- tant and fundamental fact that Congress thought and de- clared, both by the debates and by the bill itself, that it was given affirmative power of legislation by the Fourteenth Amendment. Without this principle, the later Civil Rights Bill would never have been passed, and although the latter went further in declaring some of the specific rights and immunities, the principle was the same, and so far as con- stitutional power is concerned, there was no difference. This was the status of affairs when Congress assembled ™ Ibid., pp. =^76-79. *" Ibid., p. 709. " Ibid., p. 808. *» Ibid., p. 831. 250 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. for its regular session in December, 1871. Mr. Sumner had been waiting for an opportunity to get his Civil Rights Bill before the Senate, and when the Amnesty Bill, which passed the House, was before the Senate, he moved it as an amendment to that bill December 20, 1871. This was the same bill which had been adversely reported in 1870 and 1 87 1. He maintained that hotels, public conveyances and schools were legal institutions, and should be opened equally to all. The first section of his amendment to the Amnesty Bill provided that all, without distinction of race, color, or previous condition of servitude, should be entitled to an equal and impartial enjoyment of any accommodation or privilege furnished by common carriers, innkeepers, owners, managers, or lessees of theaters or the places of public amusement, public school officials (the schools being either supported or authorized by law), trustees and officers of churches, cemetery associations, and benevolent institu- tions, incorporated by national or state authority. The next section provided penalties for the violation of the above section, the one aggrieved to receive $500, and the one offending also to be subject to a fine of not less than $500 nor more than $1,000, and imprisoned not less than thirty days nor more than one year. The third section made sections three, four, five, seven and ten, of the Civil Rights Bill of April 9, 1866, a part of this bill. The fourth section provided that no one should be disqualified from jury service in any court by reason of race, color, or pre- vious condition of servitude. Any official who should ex- clude or fail to summon any person for that reason was made subject to a fine of not less than $1,000 nor more than $5,000. The bill also provided that every law, statute, regulation, or custom which was inconsistent with it or which discriminated in any way by the use of the word "white," was thereby repealed and annulled.*' Speaking of this amendment of Mr. Sumner's the next day, Mr. Sawyer, one of the Senators from South Carolina, stated that as long as the Constitution remained as it then " Cong. Record, 42d Cong., 2d Sess., p. 244. [ Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 251 was, every citizen was entitled to the same rights and privi- leges as every other citizen. He did not approve, however, of the bill being tacked on to the Amnesty Bill.^* He re- asserted his position when the measure was again before the Senate after the holidays, on January 22, 1872, stating that Sumner's bill was for securing more thoroughly to the negroes their constitutional rights.®'' Mr. Thurman, one of the most prominent members of the minority and later Vice-President of the United States, declared that the bill was unconstitutional from the fact that th(e States had neither made nor enforced any law depriving any one of their privileges, and that Congress could not act until a State had done one or the other.*^ Only a week before this time, January 15, 1872, Mr. Sumner had stated that this bill was on the same footing as the Civil Rights Bill, being but the complement of that bill. Without this complementary bill, the former was im- perfect, he declared.®^ Mr. Morton, in reply to his colleague, Mr. Thurman, took the position that the bill was constitutional. He pointed out, furthermore, that Mr. Thurman had not denied that the privileges enumerated in the bill belonged to citizens of the United States, but only that Congress was powerless to interfere unless a State had attempted by legislation, or by the enforcement of some principle of the common law, to deny to some one the exercise and enjoyment of those privi- leges. In reply to this, Mr. Thurman contended that the Federal Government could not interfere at all until the de- nial or abridgment of the privilege had taken place. He said, however, that Congress might pass a law in anticipation of such denial or abridgment, but that it would remain wholly suspended in its operation until the case provided for in the Constitution had happened. Mr. Morton said that by the tacit admission that the privileges stated in the bill were privileges of citizens of the United States as such, Mr. "Ibid., p. 273. « Ibid., p. 488. " Ibid., p. 496. " Ibid., p. 383. 252 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. Thurman had given up his whole argument. Continuing his argument he added : " If the Constitution of the United States confers a right, the enforcement or protection of that right belongs to the Government of the United States. Will that position be denied? The Senator (Mr. Thurman) will not deny that wherever there is a right, a privilege, or an immunity that flows from the Constitution of the United States, it is within the province of the Government of the United States to protect the enjoyment of that right. If the things intended to be secured by this bill flow from United States citizenship, if a man has them because he is a citizen of the United States, from that fact and from that principle of law, then it follows that the protection of those privileges belongs to the Government of the United States. The con- clusion cannot be resisted for a moment." Mr. Morton furthermore said that Mr. Thurman seemed to be imbued with the idea that the Fourteenth Amendment had given new privileges and immunities to citizens of the United States, which was not the case, for it merely declared who should be citizens, and that no State should abridge or deny the privileges or immunities of citizens which had existed be- fore. Mr, Thurman thought that the proper way was for the case to be brought before the Courts when any one claimed that he was deprived of some privilege or immunity, since the Courts were empowered to declare null and void any law or act which was in violation of the Constitution. If Congress had authority to legislate on any subject that affected the privileges, immunities, life, liberty, or property of citizens, continued Mr. Thurman, then all local self-gov- ernment was at an end, since the Federal Government would swallow up the state governments, and added : " I protest against any such interpretation."^^ y^ Mr. Lot M. Morrill, of Maine, who, it will be remembered, was charged with violating his pledge at the time Mr. Stock- ton, of New Jersey, was unseated in order to secure the passage of the Civil Rights Bill over the President's veto, opposed the bill on the ground that the Federal Government "Ibid., pp. 524-27. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 253 had no right to take cognizance of matters of education, worship, amusement, recreation, etc., which entered so essen- tially into the private life of the peoplejy " I maintain," he declared, " that the bill of the Senator from Massachusetts clearly and manifestly undertakes to regulate these personal, social, religious, domiciliary rights of the people of the States; that it is without warrant in the Constitution." These matters belonged exclusively to the States was his opinion.*® On the same day, but after Mr. Sumner had replied to his speech, Mr. Morrill said that the Judiciary Committee had reported the bill adversely on constitutional grounds, but modified this when Mr. Edmunds stated that his understanding was that it was because it was deemed unnecessary. No written report was made, and Senators may have voted against it, for different reasons according to the statement of Mr. Edmunds.^" Mr. Carpenter, of Wisconsin, one of the ablest men in the Senate, declared that he doubted whether Congress could legislate as to churches, being prohibited from doing so by the First Amendment. He was also of the opinion that Congress could not legislate as to jurors in state courts, but that the Federal Courts could not refuse to receive negro jurors on account of race or color. The significant part of his speech, however, is the following declaration : " There is no provision of the Constitution, that I am aware of, except in the Fourteenth Amendment, which prevents a State from passing a law that no colored citizen shall be ad- mitted to practice law, or be allowed to preach the gospel, or to teach in the schools, or to embark in any other honorable vocation or pursuit of life. Up to the adoption of that Amendment, it was in the power of the States, subject only to their own Constitutions to say what persons should par- ticipate in the various pursuits of life." He also took the position that negroes could not legally be excluded from the common schools supported by public taxation, and ap- °* Ibid., Appendix, pp. 1-5. " Ibid., p. 731- 254 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. proved the main purposes of Sumner's bill with the excep- tions noted above .®^ Mr. Davis, of Kentucky, one of the bitterest opponents of the. Radicals, and himself an extremist, admitted Mr. Carpenter's statement as to permitting negroes to practice law, etc., but held that the proper remedy was to be found in the Courts. He held of course that Sumner's bill was unconstitutional.'^ Mr. Norwood, of Georgia, on February 5, 1872, declared that section five of the bill would repeal all laws of the States which discriminated as between the races, and that Sumner, who had been professor of law and in the Senate for twenty years, knew the force and effect of the words in that section. As to the effect of the bill, he said: "It is nothing more nor less than this : that in any and every State where there is a statute or a law, whether it be statute or not, which inhibits marriages between whites and blacks, this sec- tion strikes that statute or that law to the ground. Every such statute on those books [of the State] , from the time this bill, if constitutional, is passed, will cease to be in force ; it will be absolutely void by reason of the predominance of acts of Congress over any state legislation. Can there be any doubt of this? I have read this clause carefully; I have called the attention of several Senators to this provision, and I have met with no one yet who does not agree with me that the effect of passing this law would abolish every state law which inhibits marriage between whites and blacks." ^^ Mr. Norwood, however, did not think the bill constitutional, but raised this objection to it anyway. Mr. Sumner at no time contradicted the statement made by Mr. Norwood as to the effect of his bill on the marriage laws of the States. Mr. Mortop, of Indiana, thought that section four of Mr. Sumner's bill, which had been omitted in the substitute offered by Mr. Carpenter, was a proper subject for legislation liy Congress. He admitted that the States had the right to •^Ibid., pp. 760-63. " Ibid., p. 764. " Ibid., p. 819. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 255 fix the general qualifications for jurors, but denied that they could, under the Fourteenth Amendment, exclude any one from the jury on account of race or color. He placed the right to be a juror on the same ground as that to be a wit- ness. Mr. Carpenter regarded the right to be a juror as a political right, and not an inherent privilege like testify- ing, for if it were, then women could be jurors since they were allowed to be witnesses. He stated, however, that he would vote for the section although believing it unconsti- tutional.''* Mr. Thurman, to whom reference has already been made, practically said, February 6, 1872, that the privileges and immunities of which citizens of the United States could not be deprived were to be found in the Constitution. He then enumerated those in the original Constitution, such as habeas corpus, bill of attainder, etc., after which he quoted the first eight Amendments as recognizing the other rights and privi- leges which belonged to citizens. He declared that the power of the Government was commensurate with the rights of the citizens of the United States, and that the Gov- ernment had the power to protect those rights in the mode provided by the Constitution, namely, by the judicial power. He said there was no provision in the Constitution which gave any one a right to sit on a jury in a state court, nor was there any power there to compel all children to attend the same school, since there could be separate schools for the races or sexes.®"* The significant thing in his speech was, what was the virtual statement that the first eight Amend- ments were made applicable to the States by the Fourteenth Amendment. This was the first direct, or what may be con- sidered a direct, statement of that belief by one of the minority. Mr. Sherman, who usually took a very active part and whose influence was great, thought that the rights enumerated in Mr. Sumner's Bill were to be found in the common law and in the Constitution. He took issue with Mr. Morrill, who had declared that the Fourteenth Amend- **Ibid., pp. 820-26. "Ibid., Appendix, pp. 25-7. 256 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. ment had not enlarged the scope of the old Constitution. Even the first Amendments to the Constitution did not con- tain all the rights of citizens, declared Mr. Sherman, for the common law was the great reservoir of those rights. All those rights, found in the Constitution and in the common law, were guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment, was his contention. To prevent any one from going to common schools, from visiting an inn, from enjoying the rights of a common carrier, etc., was in his opinion, an abridgment of his rights as secured by section one of Article Fourteen. He answered the statement of Mr. Morrill that the Four teenth Amendment was but a reiteration of section two o Article Four of the Constitution by saying that the old pro- vision could not be enforced, while section five of Article, Fourteen expressly gave the power to enforce it. Mr. Sher- man also held that the right of trial by jury was a right which could not be taken away, since the adoption of that Amendment.®® In other words, he thought that the first eight Amendments were made binding on the States by the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. It may be re- marked here that Mr. Sherman had taken an active part when that Amendment was before Congress. . ' Mr. Morton stated, shortly after Mr. Thurman's speech, that " protection," as used in the last clause of the first sec- tion of Article Fourteen, meant or was equivalent to the equal " benefit of the law," and that it was intended to pro- mote equality in the States and referred to the laws of the States. The object of the Amendment was, he declared, " to strike at all class legislation — to provide that laws must be general in their effects.""^ " Ibid., pp. 843-45. Mr. Carpenter reminded Mr. Sherman that the right to trial by jury as g^uaranteed by the Fifth Amendment ap- plied only to Federal Courts, but Mr. Sherman replied : " Yes, sir ; the right to be tried by an impartial jury is one of the privileges included in the Fourteenth Amendment; and no State can deprive any one by a state law of this impartial trial by jury. . . . What- ever distinctions were drawn before the adoption of the recent Amendments, here is this last voice of the public will which we are bound to obey, which declares that every man shall have the pro- tection of this immunity and privilege." " Ibid., p. 847. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 257 Mr. Ferry, of Connecticut, opposed the bill because he thought it would be fatal to the Amnesty Bill, to which it had been offered as an amendment, and which he was very anxious to have passed. He seemed to doubt its constitu- tionality, however, and was opposed to it for other reasons, for, in his judgment, it struck " down the very bulwarks of civil rights throughout the whole country. It t kes away the foundation principle upon which our Federal system rests by striking at the principle of local self-government the most vital blow that it has received since the foundation of the Government."®^ Mr. Norwood, of Georgia, called Mr. Sumner's attention to the effect of his bill on laws which inhibited the marriage of persons of different races. Mr. Sumner admitted that it would annul those laws and all laws which discriminated on account of color, such laws being offshoots of slavery, and not proper to remain.®* Mr. Ferry reiterated his objections to the bill, February 8, declaring that it was " fatal to the rights of the people of the States as citizens of the States," and that it tended " directly to consolidate all authority in this nation into one imperial government." Upon the theory that it was necessary to give all citizens the equal protection of the laws and to secure them in the right of life, liberty and property, he declared that Congress could " go into every city, town, borough and hamlet in the United States and enact ordinary police laws, and put a Federal officer to keep guard over the streets."^"** Mr. Edmunds, of Vermont, who had entered the Senate as the successor of Mr. Foote, in time to hear the debate on the Fourteenth Amendment, and to vote for it, took the position that the Amendment had been adopted for a purpose, and that this purpose was to broaden in some way the national rights of citizens. He asked those who opposed the inter- •* Ibid., p. 870. * Ibid., p. 872. "^ Ibid., pp. 892-93. 17 258 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. pretation of the Amendment as given by advocates of the bill to tell why it had been adopted."^ The vote on Mr. Sumner's bill, as an amendment to the Amnesty Bill, was twenty-eight to twenty-eight, February 9. The Vice-President voted for it, thus attaching the amend- ment to tlie bill. The Amnesty Bill as thus amended did not secure the requisite two thirds, the vote being thirty-three to / nineteen.^"^ When another Amnesty Bill was before the Senate in the May following, Mr. Sumner came forward with his bill as an amendment. ; Mr. Sherman, speaking on the subject, May 8, 1872, stated that the amendment offered by Mr. Sumner did not assert or affirm a right which the negroes did not already possess, but that it merely gave additional remedy. The rights were given by the Constitution, and especially by the Fourteenth Amendment, but were denied in many localities, ""* Ibid., pp. 899-900. Among other things he said : " Why, sir, if the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution was adopted for a purpose, and our friends on the other side have always asserted that it was, and they thought a very improper purpose, one which would almost, if not quite, justify a resort to arms to repel it certainly contained in it something that made an advance upon the old Constitution as it respects the equality of the rights of citizens. It was not mere waste-paper ; it was not even ' the sounding and glittering generality' that the Declaration of Independence is said to be; but it was a charter of rights, which was to secure to citizens that equality of protection under the law, that equality of right and privilege which belongs to citizenship in its truest and highest sense." After referring to the Civil Rights Bill of 1866, he asked: "What have we done since? Will any one rise in his place and say that in the place of that, we have taken the pains by a solemn act of three fourths of the States to adopt the Fourteenth Amendment without any reason for it, without any occasion for it, without its being in fact as it was intentionally designed, calcu- lated and effective to accomplish a change in the National Consti- tution, and to broaden in some degree and in some way the national rights of citizens, and to protect to some extent and under some power the rights which citizens ought to be protected in? No man can deny it. What, then, is it that we have done? If we have not by the Fourteenth Amendment accomplished something in declaring that the privileges and immunities of citizens shall be sacred every- where, and the national power shall protect them, what have we done? If it is not a privilege and immunity of a citizen, being otherwise equal and otherwise qualified, to stand on an equality irrespective of color, what is a privilege and immunity of citizen- ship upon which you can stand?" "* Ibid., pp. 919-29. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 259 he declared. He referred to the decision of the Supreme ■'Court of Ohio, which had been made a day or two before in which the law of Ohio providing for separate schools was held to be constitutional. He thought the Court was right, but he did not say that negroes could be kept out of the schools for the whites, since, he said, separate schools might be had in the South as a matter of convenience and assented to by both races.^"^ Mr, Boreman, of West Virginia, opposed the Amendment of Mr. Sumner on grounds of expediency, and not because it was unconstitutional, declaring that he thought it inexpedient to incorporate such propositions into the Federal law.^"* Mr. Blair, of Missouri, an opponent of Mr. Sumner's en- tire bill offered an amendment to permit each city, county, or State to decide, at an election to be held for that purpose, whether it should have mixed or separate schools. This proposition was defeated by a vote of thirty to twenty- three."" Mr. Howe, while denying the contention of Mr. Blair, that the Federal Government was a centralized oligarchy, stated that legislative power, which Congress had not ex- ercised before, had been conferred upon Congress by the last three Amendments, and that one of them (the Four- teenth) gave the authority to pass the Sumner or Civil Rights Bill."« Although the Civil Rights Bill was tacked on to the Amnesty Bill by the casting vote of the President of the Senate, we have already noted that it then received thirty- three affirmative to nineteen negative votes, clearly demon- strating that a great majority thought that it was constitu- tional. Among those who voted for, or advocated the bill, were the following, who had participated in the submission of the Fourteenth Amendment by Congress: Messrs. An- thony, Conkling, Ferry of Michigan, Morrill of Vermont, "^ Ibid., pp. 3192-93. "^ Ibid., p. 3195. "^ Ibid., pp. 3258-62. '"■ Ibid., p. 3259. 26o Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. Pomeroy, Sherman, Sumner, Windom, Wilson, Edmunds, Howe, Nye, Sprague, Stewart and Chandler. It is to be remembered, however, that three of those who were active in the passage of the Amendment opposed the Bill of Sum- ner, viz., Messrs. Trumbull, Carpenter and Morrill, though Mr, Carpenter's only constitutional objection was to that part of the bill relating to the church and jurors. Although the bill was not considered in the House, there was introduced a resolution by Mr. Hereford, of West Virginia, March ii, 1872, to test the sentiment of the House. The resolution declared that it would be contrary to the Constitution and a usurpation of power for Congress to force mixed schools upon the States or to pass any law interfering with churches, public carriers, or innkeepers, such subjects of legislation belonging exclusively to the States. The resolution was defeated by a vote of sixty-one to eighty-four. Among those voting against the resolution were Messrs. Bingham, Dawes, Garfield, Hoar and Poland.^"^ Although the legislation attempted by the Forty-second Congress, and the debates thereon, furnish very important and valuable evidence as to the construction put upon the Fourteenth Amendment by Congress, and especially by those members who had taken part in its enactment, that of the Forty-third Congress is equally, if not more, important. Soon after the assembling of the Forty-third Congress, Mr. Benjamin Butler, of Massachusetts, reported from the House Judiciary Committee, of which he was chairman, the so-called Civil Rights Bill known as H. R. No. 796. / This bill provided that no person or corporation should make any distinction as to the admission or accommodation of any citizen of the United States on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude, to any public inn, place of amusement, or entertainment for which a license was required, stage-coach, railroad, or other public carrier, cemetery, benevolent institution, or public school wholly or '" Ibid., p. 1582. ~ Congressional Interpretation of Amendmefit. 261 partly supported by taxation or by endowment for public use.^°® Speaking of this bill the next day, December 19, 1873, Mr. Butler declared that it gave no rights which did not already exist, and that the laws of the States which attempted to deprive any one of these rights were uncon- ■__stitutional.^°» Mr. Beck, of Kentucky, on the same day quoted the first ten Amendments in full, and added : " These are the rights of a citizen of the United States which the Four- teenth Amendment declares no State shall abridge. The Supreme Court recognizes them, and goes on to enumerate a few others of the same general character in the case I quoted from. They are now secured to white and black alike ; they were not, under the Dred Scott decision, till the Fourteenth Amendment became a part of the Consti- tution." ^^" This is a clear statement as to the effect of the Fourteenth Amendment. Mr. Roger Q. Mills, of Texas, who later represented his State in the Senate, practically agreed with Mr. Beck, of Kentucky, for in a speech, January 5, 1874, he took the position that the Fourteenth Amendment protected the citi- zens only in the rights and privileges which were conferred by the Constitution. These rights, he declared, were funda- mental, fixed and absolute, among which were those found in the first Amendments to the Constitution. Those rights and privileges which were conferrred by the State, and / without which they would not exist, were not fundamental, / he declared, and were not, therefore, included among the rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. The right to go to school was not fundamental, for schools could be closed entirely without abridging the rights of any citizen of the United States, which could not be done if it were a right conferred by the Constitution.^^^ ^^ Forty-third Congress, ist Sess., p. 318. ^" Ibid., p. 340. "» Ibid., p. 343. "* Ibid., pp. 384-85- It seems worth while to quote a part of Mr. Mills' speech. It is as follows: "From the authority of adjudged cases it is clear that the privileges and immunities mentioned in 262 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. The following day Mr. Lawrence, of Ohio, also made a very significant speech on the bill. After stating that it was supplemental to the Civil Rights Bill of 1866, he quoted the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment with the following comment: "The object of this provision is to make all men equal before the law. If a State permits inequality in rights to be created or meted out by citizens or corporations enjoying its protection, it denies the equal protection of the laws." His interpretation of the " equal protection " which was to be secured to every citizen was thus contrary to the restricted meaning which was given to it by those who opposed Federal action as well as to the construction which was later put upon it by the Supreme Court of the United States. His position cannot be better stated than by his own words when he declared : " What the State permits by its sanction, having the power to pro- hibit, it does in effect itself." Whatever objection may be made to the legal soundness of this dictum or to its expe- diency, it cannot be denied that it is a cogent, forceful, and reasonable argument. He contended, and with consider- able show of reason, it would seem, that the word " deny " included omission as well as commission. The State was just as reprehensible, in his opinion, in failing to enforce the Fourteenth Amendment are only such as are conferred by the Constitution itself as the supreme law over all; that they are funda- mental, such as lie beneath the very foundation of Government; that they are fixed and absolute; and any rights, privileges and immunities conferred by the State, and without whose grant they could not be enjoyed, are not fundamental, and upon which its structure is built, neither are they uniform, but their differences are as great as the numbers of the States and as changeable as the laws of the State. The privileges of the Constitution are fixed as the Constitution, which is organic law established to secure fundamental principles. These privileges are, among others, the right to the enjoyment of life, liberty, property, and the pursuit of happiness; the right of peaceable assemblage for all purposes not criminal; freedom of speech, of the press, and of religion; im- munity of one's person, home, and papers against unlawful seizure and search; trial by jury when held to answer for crime; to be informed of the accusation, and confronted with the accusers ; im- munity from excessive bail, excessive fines, and cruel and un- usual punishments, and many others, all of which are recognized and guaranteed in the Constitution." Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 263 or secure equal rights, as in itself denying those rights, for the failure to secure was in itself a denial. He referred to the debates on the Civil Rights Bill of 1866 with frequent quotations, to show the 'doubt felt as to the constitutionality of that bill, both among Democrats and Republicans, and the evident purpose of the Four- teenth Amendment to confer power upon Congress to pass such a bill. He also quoted from the speeches made on that Amendment, among them being Messrs. Stevens, Finck, Broomall, Shanklin, Raymond, Bingham, Poland, Hendricks and others.^^^ After quoting from the speeches made in Congress at the time the Amendment was under consideration, Mr. Lawrence said : " The debates show that these distinct assertions of the powers to be conferred in Congress by the Fourteenth Amendment were not contro- verted. No one ventured to deny them. The debates on the Thirteenth and Fifteenth Amendments are explicit in corroborating this purpose." He also held that it was in- credible to think that Congress, in submitting the Amend- ment, or the people in adopting it, did not clearly and un- mistakably intend to confer upon Congress the power now claimed and to provide an effective remedy for the evils (or supposed evils) which had been so fully and frequently denounced. The fact that Congress had, on April 20, 1871, reenacted the Civil Rights Bill of 1866, had passed the "Enforcement Bills" of 1870 and 1871, and the Ku Klux Act of 1871, many of those voting for some or all of these bills having voted to submit the Amendment, was cited. All this contemporaneous construction of the Amendment, he argued, carried more than persuasive force as to its meaning. He also contended that the bills, to which reference has been made, proceeded upon the idea that if a State omitted or neglected to secure the enforce- ment of equal rights, it denied the equal protection of the law as used in the Fourteenth Amendment.^^^ On the same day Mr. Herndon, of Texas, in speaking "* See chapter II above for a consideration of these speeches. "*Ibid., pp. 412-14, 264 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. of those rights which belong to citizens of the United States as such, enumerated those which are stated in the original Constitution and in the first Amendments to it, and said: " All of these and others not enumerated may be now as- serted by a citizen of the United States, and be secured in them by the whole power of the Government, though such person be not a citizen of any State." ^^* Since he must have been familiar with the decisions of the Courts, it fol- lows that he was of the opinion that one of the effects of the Fourteenth Amendment had been to make the Amend- ments binding on the States. Mr. Atkins, of Tennessee, expressed the same opinion the next day.^^^ /" No action in regard to the bill was taken during this ses- sion of Congress. As an illustration of what the negroes thought of the bill, Mr, Read, of Kentucky, on May 29, 1874, read from the resolutions of a negro meeting in Tennessee approving it, while at the same time denouncing the laws of that State which made it a criminal offense for negroes and whites to intermarry and pledging themselves to raise funds to bring the case of a negro convicted under that law before the Supreme Court of the United States to vindicate the rights of the colored citizens of Tennessee to the civil rights of marriage with whomsoever they may contract and choose." ^^* Mr. Sumner was on hand when the Forty-third Con- gress assembled and succeeded in presenting the first bill, which was his cherished Civil Rights Bill supplementary to the one passed in 1866. This was December i, 1873, and on the next day he moved that the Senate proceed to its consideration, stating that it was so well known that debate would not be necessary.^" Objection was raised to this, and the bill was referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. The bill was in the hands of the Committee "* Ibid., p. 420. "* Ibid., p. 453. m J^il' Appendix, p. 343. Ibid., pp. 2 and 10. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 265 until April 29, 1874, when Mr. Frelinghuysen, of New Jersey, reported it back to the Senate. He asked for a calm, impartial, and non-partisan consideration of the bill. In reference to the bill itself, he declared that if Congress did not have the power to pass it, the people had perpe- trated a blunder amounting to a grim burlesque over which the world might laugh, were it not so serious a blunder. There was but one idea in the bill, he asserted, and that was the " equality of races before the law.'' In considering the inquiry whether it was a denial of equal rights to have separate schools, Mr, Frelinghuysen cited a case which had been decided by the Court of Iowa. That question was directly considered in this case (24 Iowa Reports, p. 263), he said, and the Court had declared that the school direc- tors could not deny a child admission to any particular school on account of race or color, nor could colored chil- dren be required to attend separate schools provided for them. He also cited the case which had been decided in Ohio (21 Ohio Reports, p. 198) in which an adverse de- cision had been given. It was pointed out that the Consti- tutions and laws of the two States were unlike, thus ac- counting for dissimilar decisions, but that these decisions afforded no precedent for the construction of this bill. He based the authority of Congress to pass the bill on the War Amendments, but primarily and specifically on the Four- teenth. Reference was made to the Slaughter House Cases, to show that the Supreme Court thought the object of that Amendment was to prevent the curtailment of the rights of the negroes. Mr. Frelinghuysen admitted, how- ever, that it was not one of the privileges of citizens of the United States to have an education, visit inns, etc., but that it was one of his privileges as such not to be discriminated against on account of his race or color by the law of a State relating to those subjects. He said he did not know whether a citizen had the right to be a juror, but that he could not be discriminated against, and that it was not equal protection of the law to exclude a class as such.^^* '" Ibid., pp. 3451-55. 266 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. Mr. Norwood, of Georgia, followed Mr. Frelinghuysen with a very able speech the next day. He enumerated the privileges which had been created by the original Constitu- tion, after which he gave what he regarded as the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States. Among the latter were those named in the original Constitution, such as immunity from ex post facto laws, but the great majority of them were taken from the Bill of Rights or the early Amendments and the War Amendments. After enumerating all these, he said : " I do not assert that these are the privileges and immunities of a citizen of the United States as distinguished from his rights as a citizen of a State, but I do say that any others, whether few or many, will be found enumerated in the Constitution of the United States. Before the Fourteenth Amendment the first class of privileges and immunities enumerated above belonged to citizens of the State by operation of the Federal Consti- tution." Then followed quotations from the minority opin- ions in the Slaughter House Cases and the report of the Judiciary Committee of the Senate on the petition of Susan B. Anthony and others for the right of suffrage. Mr. Nor- wood maintained that no new privileges were conferred by the Fourteenth Amendment, but that additional guarantees were. Before the adoption of that Amendment, a State might have established a particular religion, he declared, restricted the freedom of speech, or deprived its citizens of any or all of the privileges enumerated in the first eight Amendments, but the Federal Government could not. All this was changed, he continued, for the same inhibition which those Amendments had placed upon the Federal Gov- ernment had been laid upon the States by the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. In other words, he held that the privileges and immunities enumerated in the first eight Amendments had, by the Fourteenth Amendment, been secured to every citizen against denial or abridgment on the part of any State. To quote him again : " And as the first eight Amendments were a prohibition on the Gen- eral Government as to the privileges and immunities of the Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 267 citizens of the States named in those Amendments, so the Fourteenth Amendment was and is a prohibition on the States, forbidding them to abridge the same privileges and immunities." He thought, however, that these privileges could and should be protected and enforced just as obliga- tions of contracts — no punishment on the States, but by appeal to the Federal Courts.^" Mr. Pratt, of Indiana, made the assertion that if the negroes did not possess all the civil and political rights to an equal degree with the whites, the people had failed to ac- complish what they intended by the last three Amendments.^^'^ Mr. Morton, of the same State, maintained that the Amendment secured the general proposition that all men were placed upon the same level of equality as to the enjoy- ment of civil rights, and that the States still retained the power to fix the limitations in regard to suffrage, travel, etc., with the single limitation that these rights must not be made to depend upon a question of race or color. In reply to the suggestion of Senator Saulsbury, of Delaware, he admitted that theoretically, remedy could be had in the Supreme Court of the United States for a violation of this principle. The Court would merely hold the state law un- constitutional, he declared, and there would be no damages nor would there be any penalty for the one who had deprived another of a right or privilege. The framers of the Amend- ment, continued Mr. Morton, and he added that he knew whereof he spoke, did not intend to leave the victim to the roundabout costly, and therefore frequently impossible remedy of appeal, but they intended that a violation of the Amendment should be made a personal and criminal' offense.^2^ In a word, his position was that the rights and privileges enumerated In the bill were secured by the Four- teenth Amendment, but that the bill was necessary to give real effect to that Amendment. Mr. Boutwell, who had been a member of the Reconstruc- "•Ibid., Appendix, pp. 241-44. "* Congressional Record, Forty-third Congress, ist Sess., p. 4183. "*Ibid., Appendix, pp. 359-61. 268 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. tion Committee, and, therefore, in a position to speak au- thoritatively, said that the first clause of the first section, in connection with the fifth section of the Amendment, was sufficient to warrant the bill under discussion. The sub- stance of his argument was that the first clause created both federal and state citizenship even against the will of the States, and that in doing so, it practically fixed the rights and privileges of citizens of the States as such as well as that of citizens of the United States as such. The States, he contended, could not make distinctions among their own citizens, all the rights and privileges of one citizen belong- ing to all citizens of that State, irrespective of race or color. / At this point he said that the Supreme Court had erred int the Slaughter House Cases in deciding that there were two classes of rights — national and state.^^^ Mr. Stockton, of New Jersey, admitted that all citizens were entitled to equal rights and accommodations, but he objected to the bill on the ground that the construction as given by Mr. Sumner, its author, made it mean the " same " rights and accommodations, and not " equal." He thought the negroes entitled to equal rights and privileges, but that this did not necessarily mean that they should be admitted to the same cars or the same schools.^^^ Mr. Howe, of Wisconsin, spoke at some length in advocacy of the bill. His principle contention was that increased powers had been conferred upon the Federal Government by the War Amendments, one of these being the transfer of the control of citizens from the States to the United States. H this had not been accomplished, he declared, it was because the draughtsman who framed the Fourteenth Amendment did not know how to construct a clause which would do it. Referring to the Slaughter House Cases, Mr. Howe stated that he did not believe the decision in that case denied the authority of Congress to pass this bill. As to that part of the decision which states that there are cer- *"Ibid., p. 41 16. ^^ Ibid., p. 4144. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 269 tain privileges which belong to citizens of the United States as such and that certain others belong to them as citizens of the States, he stated that he felt authorized to say that this was not the decision of the Court. It was only a part of the argument by which Justice Miller undertook to defend the judgment of the Court, declared Mr. Howe. Even if it were the decision of the Court, he continued, he believed that the American people would say, as they had said about the Dred Scott decision, that it was not law and could not be law. If the Fourteenth Amendment secured the protec- tion only of such privileges and immunities as pertained to them as citizens of the United States, then it was the idlest piece of verbiage that could possibly be constructed, declared the Wisconsin Senator, for that had ever been the case. It was useless, he contended, to say that this was a privilege, and that was not, in arguing the question of power, for it had nothing whatever to do with it. It was all right to discuss whether it was expedient or inexpedient to clothe this man with this or that privilege, but when the legislative tribunal had spoken, its discretion guided the judgment of every one, and from its decision there was no appeal but to the people.^^* Mr. Stewart, of Nevada, thought the bill inexpedient as tending to retard rather than aid the education of the negroes, though he stated that he believed Congress had the constitutional power to pass it.^^^ Notwithstanding the inexpediency of the bill to his mind, Mr. Stewart voted for it. Mr. Sargent, of California, moved an amendment to the first section of the bill providing that any State or school district might be allowed to have separate schools if equal facilities and opportunities were given. This was defeated by a vote of 26 to 21.^-® Mr. Carpenter stated that he would vote against the bill on the ground that the Federal Government did not have the ^'^ Ibid., pp. 4147-51- "^ Ibid., p. 4167. ""Ibid., p. 4167. 270 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. power to organise or regulate the juries of the States.^^^ The other provisions of the bill he evidently approved. Mr. Sargent also offered an amendment to the effect that all should be entitled to the advantages of the common school system, instead of " the common schools." The purpose of this was to permit the States to have separate schools, as was pointed out by Mr. Edmunds and stated by Mr. Sargent. Mr. Sargent declared that the purpose of the proposed bill was political — to retain the negro vote. His statement should be given more weight when it is remembered that he was a Republican and voted for the bill on its final passage. His amendment was rejected by a vote of 28 to 16.^^^ Mr. Edmunds, of Vermont, spoke briefly just before the final vote was taken, his remarks being called forth by the amendment offered by Mr. Sargent. He took the position that the Fourteenth Amendment secured absolute equality, and not half-equality. If Mr. Sargent's amendment was accepted, he contended, the effect of the bill would be prac- tically nothing, since the States already had separate schools, cars, etc. The Fourteenth Amendment was general and sweeping, he continued, and leveled all distinctions on account of race or color.^^* It will be remembered that Mr. Edmunds became a member of the Senate just four days before the enactment of the Civil Rights Bill over the Presi- dent's veto April 9, 1866. He was present when the Four- teenth Amendment was before the Senate and voted for its submission to the States. The bill passed the Senate at 7 o'clock on the morning of May 23, 1874, after an all night session, the Senate being in continuous session for twenty hours. The vote was 29 to 16 in its favor, Boreman and Carpenter being the only Re- publicans voting against it.^^° Of those voting for the bill, the following had taken part in the enactment of the Four- teenth Amendment: Messrs. Allison, Boutwell, Conkling, "^ Ibid., p. 4166. *^Ibid., pp. 4171-72. '=» Ibid., pp. 4171-75- "" Ibid., p. 4176. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 271 Edmunds, Howe, Morrill of Vermont, Stewart, Washburne and Windom. Messrs. Sherman, Morrill of Maine, An- thony and Chandler were absent. Of these Mr. Morrill was opposed to the bill. Two of these, Messrfe. Boutwell and Conkling-, were members of the Reconstruction Commit- tee, and the fact that those who voted for the Fourteenth Amendment, with the exception of Messrs. Carpenter, who opposed the bill in regard to one point only, and Morrill, of Maine, supported the bill, must be given due weight. It should also be remembered in this connection that Mr. Conkling, who had at first opposed the first section of the Amendment when offered by Mr. Bingham, February 28, 1866, now supported this bill, thereby showing that he accepted Mr. Bingham's idea as to the purpose and effect of that section. After this somewhat detailed account of the persevering efforts of Mr. Sumner in behalf of his Civil Rights Bill, of his repeated rebuffs, and its final enactment by Congress, though not until after his death, there seems to be but one conclusion possible. That conclusion is that all the debates on it, all the opinions expressed for and against it, and especially by those who had been members of the 39th Con- gress, strengthen the conclusion which had been reached in the preceding chapters as to the effect and purpose of the Amendment. Of all the evidence, only a very minor part of it is against this conclusion, and any one who will go through all these debates will be impressed with this fact. Eliminating the fact, for fact it is, that the prime motive of a majority of those who voted for the bill was political, it remains nevertheless that they fully believed they had the power to pass it. The main purpose of the Fourteenth Amendment, must not be lost sight of. Underneath the motive, and of greater importance for the purpose contem- plated in this study, lies the question of power. Had there been no partisanship, the bill would of course not have been passed. It is equally true that it would not have been en- acted had not a majority of Congress thought that the 272 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. Fourteenth Amendment authorized it, and this is the im- portant question. The second session of the 43d Congress met December 7, 1874. On the 1 6th of the same month Mr. Butler, of Massachusetts, reported back, with amendments, the Civil Rights Bill which had been debated to some extent at the first session. This bill was almost identical with the one passed by the Senate at the first session. When it was under consideration February 3, 1875, ^^- Hunton, of Vir- ginia, in opposing it, said the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States were to be found in the Con- stitution. As illustrating these, he quoted the Fourth Amendment which secures persons against unreasonable searches, etc.^'^ Mr. Smith, of the same State, though a Republican, opposed the bill, declaring it unconstitutional and inexpedient. The reasoning and decision of Judge Griswold, of the Ohio Supreme Court, were quoted by Mr. Smith. One Gardiner, a negro, had, on the nth of Febru- ary, 1873, purchased a ticket to the dress circle of a theater, but was refused his seat by the ushers with the understand- ing that his money would be returned. Thereupon the negro brought suit against the manager of the theater under the Civil Rights Bill of 1866, but Judge Griswold held that this bill had no application to the case. Gardiner could bring suit, he held, for a breach of contract just as if he were a white man, but every one could use his property as he saw fit so long as he wronged no one nor committed a nuisance. He further declared that the manager could make a rule excluding negroes from the dress circle.^^^ Mr. Finck, of Ohio, in reply to a query from Mr. Hale, of New York, stated that he gave no effect whatever to the fifth section of the Fourteenth Amendment, holding that Congress would have just as much power if it had been omitted. His position in regard to the Amendment was that it was merely a prohibition upon the States, and that it con- ferred no affirmative power upon Congress to go into the ""Cong. Rec, 43d Cong., 2d Sess., Appendix, p. 119. '" Ibid., Appendix, p. 157. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 273 States and regulate the intercourse of their citizens. He quoted from the decision of the Ohio Supreme Court in 1 87 1 (21 Ohio State Reports), in which the Court held that the State had the right to regulate its schools regardless of the Fourteenth Amendment. If the bill before Congress was Constitutional, he asserted, then there was no limit to the power of the Federal Government.^^^ In this last state- ment Mr. Storm, of Pennsylvania, concurred. The latter also referred to the fact that the Judiciary Committee of the Senate had twice reported adversely upon this bill.^^* It must be remarked, however, that no reasons were given for these adverse reports, and that the statement was made in the Senate to this effect, some members of the Committee saying that it was not reported adversely on constitutional grounds. Mr. Hale, of New York, spoke very forcibly and con- vincingly the next day, February 4, in regard to the bill and alluded to the fact that he and Mr, Finck had been members of the Congress which proposed the Fourteenth Amendment. " I remember," he stated, " if the gentleman from Ohio [Mr. Finck] has forgotten it, as he probably may, that it was my fortune, standing alone in my party, to oppose the Fourteenth Amendment by my vote and by my voice, upon the ground, which seemed to me to be one I could not forsake, that it did change the constitutional power of Congress, that it changed the theory of our Gov- ernment, and introduced a range of legislation utterly lack- ing in the old Constitution or in any previous Amendments to it except the Thirteenth. I voted against the Fourteenth Amendment on that ground alone, fully conceding the pro- priety of the provisions of the Article, except the last sec- tion, claiming that that section was to a certain extent a revolution of our form of Government in giving Congress a control of matters which had hitherto been confined ex- clusively to state control. In the position I then took I certainly understood in the Thirty-ninth Congress that my '" Ibid., pp. 947-49. '" Ibid., p. 951. 18 274 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. friend from Ohio, whose opinion on legal and constitutional questions I value highly, fully concurred. I understood that the entire body of his political associates on the other side of the House in that Congress concurred with me." Mr. Hale does not seem to have exaggerated in the least, for the facts bear out his statements. The first ten Amend- ments, in his opinion, merely constituted a Bill of Rights, but there was no provision in the Constitution or in those Amendments which empowered Congress to legislate in regard to prohibitions, restrictions, or rights, and the legislative power was limited to the carrying out of the powers granted. It seems that the clause in regard to the obligation of contracts would be a good illustration of this point. He then cited the fifth section of the Fourteenth Amendment as giving an absolute and unlimited power to enforce the provisions of that Amendment by appropriate legislation. H the doctrine laid down by Chief Justice Marshall in McCulloh vs. Maryland be followed, continued Mr. Hale, there could be no question as to the power of Congress under that Amendment to enact legislation to remedy the great evil against which it proposes to guard. The doctrine of the cases referred to is that within the grant of power Congress could use its own discretion, and Mr. Hale held that, according to this decision, the question of the fitness or desirability of such legislation was for Con- gress alone and not for the Courts. ^^^ Mr. Chittenden, of New York, though a Republican and admitting that the bill was in conformity with the Amend- ments, opposed it because he thought it inexpedient, assert- ing that the North would oppose it if it had the same pro- portion of negroes as the South,"^ Mr. Garfield, of Ohio, advocated the bill in a short speech,^^'' though he had opposed a similar bill at an earlier date. Mr. Cessna, of Pennsylvania, moved the bill which had passed the Senate at the previous session as a substi- "• Ibid., pp. 979-80. "• Ibid., p. 982. "'Ibid., p. 1005. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 275 tute for the House bill, but this was defeated by a vote of 114 to 148.^^^ The Senate bill was more radical. Mr. White, of Alabama, offered a substitute to the effect that separate schools, separate accommodations on railroads, at hotels, etc., might be provided if they were equal in equip- ment and kind for both races. The substitute also pro- vided that no one could be excluded from the jury box on account of color or race. This was rejected by a vote of 91 to 114.^^® The amendment of Mr. Kellogg, striking out all reference to common schools was agreed to, how- ever, by a vote of 128 to 48."'* The bill then passed, Feb- ruary 4, 1875, t)y a vote of 162 to 99, 28 not voting.^** Among those in favor of the bill, the following were also members of the Thirty-ninth Congress: Messrs. Dawes, Garfield, Hale (of New York), Kelley, Lawrence, Poland and Wilson (of Iowa). - — Mr. Thurman, when the bill was before the Senate on February 26, moved to amend section four by striking out " or of any State." He held that Congress had no power to declare who should sit on the jury in state courts, this not being a right of a citizen of the United States as such. He declared that if Congress could do this, there \yas no limit to Federal power and that the States were nothing more than counties. Mr. Thurman also noted the fact that the reverence for States Rights had been fading out of the minds of Senators since he had taken a seat in that body.^*^ His amendment was defeated later by a vote of 40 to 36.^*^ Mr. Boutwell stated that he doubted whether Mr. Thur- man was correct in saying that States Rights had been fading out, but admitted that the power of the States was not what it once was. On this particular point he made the following immistakable declaration : " The Thirteenth, '"Ibid., p. ion. '**Ibid., p. loio. ^"Ibid., p. loio. '"Ibid., p. ion. '"Ibid., pp. 1791-92. '" Ibid., p. 1867. 2/6 Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments did limit the power of the States; they did extend the power of the General Government; and the question we are considering almost continually is the extent to which the power of the States has been limited by these Amendments and the extent to which the power of the General Government has been car- ried by these several Amendments." In regard to the decision in the Slaughter House Cases, he declared that that decision only applied to cases exactly similar to those, and that it was not law for the Senate when considering a question which was diflferent from the one on which the Court had passed. The first privilege of citizens of the United States, he continued, was that they were citizens of the State wherein they resided, and that the chief right of a citizen of a State was that he was the equal before the law of every other citizen of that State. It was this right of being equal before the law which he derived from being a citizen of the United States, and consequently a citizen of the State, which the Federal Government was enabled to see enforced under the Fourteenth Amendment, he declared."* Mr. Edmunds contended that the right to serve on the jury was a civil right on the si^me basis as the right to be a witness.^*' Mr. Thurman pdinted out the inconsistency in the position of the advocatesXof the bill in saying that the States might make discriminations for everything and anything except about race and c6lor. He asked for the provision which empowered Congress to forbid this dis- crimination while permitting discrimination on account of ignorance, property, age, etc. If the principle of the bill be accepted, he continued, then Congress could prescribe the qualifications of jurors by a process of elimination and prohibition.^*® Mr. Carpenter thought the section relating to jurors was unconstitutional, and so voted against the bill."^ '" Ibid., pp. 1792-93- "* Ibid., p. 1866. '" Ibid., pp. 1866-67. '"Ibid., pp. 1861 and 1870. Congressional Interpretation of Amendment. 277 The bill passed the Senate on February 27, 1875, ^y ^ vote of 38 to 26. Among those supporting the bill were the following who were also members of the Thirty-ninth Congress: Messrs. Allison, Anthony (of R. I',), Boutwell, Chandler (of Mich.), Conkling, Cragin (N. H.), Edmunds, Howe, Morrill (Vt.), Sherman, Stewart, Washburne (Mass.), Windom (Minn.), Ramsey (Minn.)."* The President approved the bill on March i. /_The Civil Rights Act of 1875, the principal sections of which were declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court some years later, marks the culmination of the efforts of Congress to enact laws* for the enforcement of the Four- teenth Amendment. The Republicans had been overwhelm- ingly defeated at the election in the fall of 1874 when the proposed Civil Rights Bill had been one of the main issues, and when that party again had the majority in all branches of the Government, it was evidently regarded as unwise to renew the subject. However futile were the efforts of Congress to give vitality to the Amendment as interpreted by itself and_by those who had most to do with its drafting and adoption/ the fact remains that nearly all the evidence goes to suet^n the position of Congress as far as the ques- tion of power and authority is concerned. The evidence given in this chapter but corroborates and strengthens that given in the previous chapters as to the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment, while all that has gone before sustains the position and contentions of those who advo- cated the several measures considered in this chapter. This does not mean that those measures were wise or just, and should have been passed, but it merely means that, according to the purpose and intention of the Amendment as disclosed in the debates in Congress and in the several state Legislatures and in other ways. Congress had the con- stitutional power to enact direct legislation to secure the rights of citizens against violation by individuals as well as by States. Ibid., p. 1870. \J T appendix; The War Amendments. Article XIII. Section i. Neither slavery nor involun- tary servitude, except as a punishment for crime, whereof the person shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. Article XIV. Section i. All persons born or natural- ized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. Section 2. Representatives shall be apportioned among the several States according to their, respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each State, exclud- ing Indians not taxed. But when the right to vote at any election for the choice of Electors for President and Vice- President of the United States, Representatives in Con- gress, the executive or judicial officers of a State, or the members of the Legislature thereof, is denied to any of the male inhabitants of such State, being twenty-one years of age and citizens of the United States, or in any way abridged except for participation in rebellion or other crime, the basis of representation therein shall be reduced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole number of male citizens twenty-one years of age in such State. 278 Appendix. 279 Section 3. No person shall be a Senator or Representa- tive in Congress, or Elector of President or Vice-President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member. of any State Legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may, by a vote of two thirds of each house, remove such disability. Section 4. The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for pay- ment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned. But neither the United States nor any State shall assume or pay any debt or obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for the loss or emancipation of any slave ; but all such debts, obli- gations, and claims shall be held illegal and void. Section 5, Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article. Article XV. Section i. The rights of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States, or by any State, on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. INDEX Alabama, ratified by, 191; re- jected by, I94f. Amendments, see Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments, and Bill of Rights. Amnesty Bill, ch. 5. Arkansas, ratified by, 190; re- port of committee, 200; re- jected by, 201. Atlanta Intelligencer, quoted, 154- Baker, J., remarks by, 93. Baltimore American, quoted, 48, 49. Barnes vs. Browning, cited, 47. Barron vs. Baltimore, cited, 59, 233- Beck, J. M., remarks by, 216, 229f., 261. Benjamin, J. F., remarks by, 104, Bill of Rights (first eight Amendments), to be made applicable to the States, 74, 79, 81, 8s, 86, 94, 142, 151, 187, 233-235, 241, 248, 255, 256, 261, 266, 274. Bingham, John A., remarks by, 30, 35, 56, 58, 65, (>^, 71, 79, 80, 150, 219, 230, 23lflf. Blaine, Jas. G., remarks by, 98, 99f., 129. Blair, Senator, of Maryland, re- marks by, 245, 259. Boreman, Senator, of West Vir- ginia, remarks by, 259. Boutwell, Geo. S., remarks by, 61, 117, 128, 211, 2I2ff., 268, 275f- Boyer, B. M., remarks by, 76. ii6f., 129. Broomall, J. M., remarks by, 29, ^(i, 98, 127. Browning, O. H., letter g^iving exposition of the Amend- ment, 146; editorials on this letter, 144, 147, IS4- Burchard, Mr., of Illinois, re- marks by, 243f. Butler, Benjamin, remarks by, 260, 272. California, Amendment not acted on, 207. Carpenter, Matthew, remarks by, 223, 253, 254, 255, 269, 276. Caucus, Republican, 11, 12, 120, 121. Cessna, Mr., of Pennsylvania, remarks by, 274f. Charleston (S. C) Courier, quoted, 41, 154. Chittenden, Mr., of New York, remarks by, 274. Chronicle (Washingfton), quoted, 143- Cincinnati Commercial, quoted, . . 41, 43, 45, 46, 144, 146. Citizenship, Clause defining, 88- 90, 94; not chief purpose of Fourteenth Amendment, 63, 83. Civil Rights Bill of 1866, discus- sion of, 15, 22-34; outline of, 20; votes on, 25, 35, 38, 39; veto of, 35; passage over veto, 38, 39 ; meaning of, 40, 92; efforts to secure privil- eges under, 46ff. ; cases un- der, 47ff. ; judicial decisions concerning, 49ff. ; constitu- tional, 48; unconstitutional, 50; reenacted, 219, 222-224; see also 218, 272, and the Civil Rights Bill of 1875. Civil Rights Bill of 1875, 2i8ff., 277. Cobum, Mr., of Indiana, re- marks by, 241. Colfax, Speaker, remarks by, 40, 149. 281 282 Index Confederate debt, not to be paid, 133-136. Congress, the Amendment be- fore, SS-139; efforts to en- force the War Amendments, 214-279. See also Civil Rights and Freedm-cn's Bureau Bills. Congressional interpretation of the Amendment, 2ioff. Conkling, Roscoe, remarks by, 59, loi, III, 128, 271. Connecticut, Amendment ratified by, 161. Cook, B. C, remarks by, 26, 137. Corfield vs. Coryell, cited, 85, 181, 23s, 243, 246. Cowan, Edgar, remarks by, 19, 22, 23, 25. Cox, S. S., remarks by, 24of. Cullom, Shelby M., remarks by, 216. Davis, Garrett, remarks by, 15, 18, 24, 38, 136, 254. Davis, T. T., remarks by, 30, 58. Dawes, H. L., remarks by, 241 f. Dawson, J. L., remarks by, 16. Delano, Columbus, remarks by, 29-30, 150. Delaware, rejected by, 204. Doolittle, Jas. R., remarks by, 19, 89, 90, 123, 125. Edmunds, Geo. F., remarks by, 219, 257f., 270, 276. Eldridge, C. A., remarks by, 28, 77, 2iSf. Eliot, T. D., remarks by, yj, 102. Enforcement Bills, 2i8ff. Famsworth, J. F., remarks by, 79, 23of. Federalist, The, quoted, 238. Ferry, Senator, of Connecticut, remarks by, 257. Fessenden, W. P., report of Re- construction Committee by, 71 ; remarks by, 74, 107. Fifteenth Amendment, bills to enforce, 2ioflF. ; text of, 279. Finck, W. E., remarks by, 75, 272. Florida, ratified by, 190; rejected by, I93f. Force, M. F., remarks by, 150. Fourteenth Amendment, section I, 55-97; section 2, 97-127; section 3, 127-133; section 4, 133-136; section 5, 136-139; forms in which proposed, 56, 60, 61, 66, 98, 100, 109, III, 113, 127, 128, 131; debates on, 56-60, 74-93, 97-io6, 137- 139, I 15-126, 129-133, 137- 139 ; before Reconstruction Committee, 60-71, 106-114, 128; votes on in Committee, 62, 66, 67, 68, 109, no. III, 113, 114, 128; votes on in the House, 82, 93, 103, 104, 118, 126, 131, 132, 134; votes on in the Senate, 90, 92, 123, 126, 131, 132; authorship of, 69, 71; purpose of, 32, 33, 56, 64, 69, 81, 94, 96, 127- 133, 137, 139, 140-142, 146, 153-157, 187, 233 (see also the several States, the Bill of Rights, and debates in chapter 5) ; incorporation of Civil Rights Bill, 75, 78, 81, 86, 94, 96, 137, 140, 141, 143, 145, 149, 153, 155, 228, 231, 237, 24s ; to make Bill of Rights binding upon the States, 74, 79, 81, 85, 86, 94, 142, 151, 187, 233, 241, 248, 255, 256, 261, 266, 274; text of, 278; before the people, 140-160; ratified by the States, i6iflF. ; congressional interpretation, 2ioff. ; see also the several States; caucus for ratification of, 208. Freedmen's Bureau Bill of 1866; introduction of, 12; out- lined, 13-14; votes on, 16, 17; debated, 16, 17; vetoed, 17; veto sustained, 19; later reenacted over veto, 19. Frelinghuysen, Senator, of New Jersey, remarks by, 226, 246f., 265. Garfield, Jas. A., remarks by, 75, 116, 129, 238ff., 274. Georgia, ratified by, 191 ; rejected by, I92f. Golladay, Mr., of Tennessee, re- marks by, 241. Index 283 Grimes, J. W., remarks by, 71, 74- Grinnell, J. B., remarks by, 17. Guthrie, James, remarks by, 25, 2,7- Hale, R. S., 57, S8, 273. Hamilton, Senator, of Maryland, remarks by, 222. Harding, A., remarks by, 93, 139. Harris, Ira, remarks by, 128. Henderson, J. B., remarks by, 24, 91 f., I04f., 125. Hendricks, T. A., remarks by, 14, 37, 91, 122, 138, 149. Herald (N. ,Y.), quoted, 40, 41, 141, 145, 147. Herndon, Mr., of Texas, re- marks by, 264. Hill, B. H., letter to New York Herald, 159. Hill, Ralph, remarks by, 28. Hoar, Geo. F., remarks by, 229. Holman, Mr., of Indiana, re- marks by, 241. Hotchkiss, G. W., remarks by, 59- Howard, J. M., remarks by, 23, 84ff., 88, 89, 90, 118, 122, 131, 135, U7, 221. Howe, T. O., remarks by, 91, 259, 268. Hunton, Mr., of Virginia, re- marks by, 272. Illinois, ratified by, 171. Indiana, ratified by, I73ff. Iowa, ratified by, 189. Johnson, President, Veto of Freedmen's Bureau Bill, 17- 18; veto of Civil Rights Bill, 35; telegram advising rejec- tion of. Amendment, 195. Johnson, Reverdy, author of re- port of minority of the Committee, 7^; remarks by, 23, 37, 89, 92, io7f., III. Kansas, ratified by, 172. Kelley, W. D., remarks by, 57, 76, 117. Kentucky, rejected by, 204. Kerr, M. C, remarks by, 16, 30, 216, 229. Lansing, Mr., of New York, re- marks by, 242. Latham, G. L., remarks by, 32, 35. Lawrence, Wm., • remarks by, 112, 262. Livingston vs. Moore, cited, 233. Louisiana, ratified by, 190; re- jected by, 203. Louisville Journal, quoted, 157. Lowe, Mr., of Kansas, remarks by, 237. McCulloh vs. Maryland, cited, 274. McDougal, J. A., remarks by, 25, 38. McKee, Samuel, remarks by, 216. Madison, James, quoted, 238. Maine, ratified by, 172. Marshall, S. M., remarks by, 16. Maryland, rejected by, 204; re- port of Committee, 205ff. Massachusetts, ratified by, i86ff. ; report of Committee of Legislature, i87ff. Memphis Avalanche, quoted, 157. Michigan, ratified by, 186. Miller, G. F., remarks by, 118, 216. Mills, Roger Q., remarks by, 261. Minnesota, ratified by, i75f. Mississippi, ratified by, 191 ; re- jected by, 203. Missouri, ratified by, I72f. Mobile Register, quoted, 45. Montgomery Mail, quoted, 158. Morgan, E. D., remarks by, 19, 38. Morgan, Geo. W., remarks by, 149. Morrill, Lot M., violated pledge to unseat Stockton, 39; re- marks by, 252f. Morton, Senator, of Indiana, re- marks by, 221, 245, 251, 254, *- 256, 267. Moulton, S. W., remarks by, 17. Nashville Union and American, quoted, 157. National Intelligencer, quoted, 41, 44, 46, 152. Neal, Judge Stephen, claim to 284 Index authorship of Amendment, 69, 70. Nebraska, ratified by, 189. Negroes, efforts of, to secure civil rights, 46ff., 264; see also Civil Rights Bill. Nevada, ratified by, 172. New Hampshire, ratified by, i6iff. New Jersey, ratified by, 165; ratification withdrawn, i65ff. New York, ratified by, i68f. Noell, T. E., remarks by, 39. North, Attitude of the, 140-153; see also the several States. North Carolina, ratified by, 190; report of Committee, I96ff. ; rejected by, 200. Norwood, Senator, of Georgia, remarks by, 254, 257, 266. Ohio, ratified by, i69f. ; ratifica- tion withdrawn, i7of. Oregon, ratified by, i67f. ; ratifi- cation withdrawn, 168. Owen, Robert Dale, plan of, 65, 67, 69, 70, 113, 135- Pendleton, Geo. H., remarks by, 150. Pennsylvania, ratified by, I78f. ; amendment debated in, I79ff. Phelps, C. E., remarks by, 35, 83. Philadelphia News, quoted, 158. Picayune (New Orleans), quoted, 158. Pike, F. A., remarks by, 98, 102. Pittsburg Post, quoted, 153. Poland, L. P., remarks by, 91, 123, 244. Pool, Senator, of North Caro- lina, remarks by, 220. Post (New York), quoted, 41, 143. Pratt, Senator, of Indiana, re- marks by, 247, 267. Press, views of the, 140-160. President, see Johnson. Raleigh Sentinel, quoted, 155- 157. Randall, S. J., remarks by, 78, 134, 135- Randall, W. H., 35. Raymond, H. S., remarks by, 29, 39, 77, 130. Read, Mr., of Kentucky, re- marks by, 264. Reconstruction Committee, com- position of, 60; Fourteenth Amendment before, 60-68, 93, III; report of, 71-74. Representatives, clause provid- ing for apportionment of, 97-127. Rhode Island, ratified by, 176. Rice, Mr., of Illinois, remarks by, 237. Rogers, A. J., remarks by, 26, 78. Rousseau, L. H., remarks by, 16, 35- Sargent, Mr., of California, re- marks by, 269, 270. Saulsbury, Willard, remarks by, 22, 25, 38, 90. Sawyer, Senator, of South Caro- lina, remarks by, 251. Schenck, R. C, remarks by, 76, 98, 103. Schurz, Carl, article by, 149; re- marks by, 220. Seward, Secretary, opinion as to Thirteenth Amendment, 26. Shanklin, G. S., remarks by, 76, 129, 135- Sharkey, Governor of Missis- sippi, quoted, 154. Shellabarger, Samuel, remarks by, 32, 2i6f., 228. Sherman, John, remarks by, 120, 124, 149, 220, 245, 255f., 258f. Slaughter House Cases, cited, 246, 265, 266, 268, 276 Smith, G. C., remarks by, 35. Smith, Mr., of Virginia, 272. South, Attitude of the, I54ff. ; see also the several States. South Carolina, ratified by, 190; rejected by, 202. Southern leaders to be dis- qualified from holding office, 127-133. Spalding, R. P., remarks by, 127. Stevens, Thaddeus, remarks by, 12, 38, 56, 60, 69, 70, 74, 75, 98, loi, 103, 104, 107, III, 113, 114, 116, 128, 129, 131, 13s, 210. Stewart, W. M., remarks by, 19, 60, 119, 219, 269. Index 285 Stockton, J. P., remarks by, 36, 38-39, 220, 247f., 268. Storm, Mr., of Pennsylvania, re- marks by, 236f., 273. Sumner, Charles, remarks by, 127, 218, 225, 250, 258, 264. Tennessee, ratified by, i63ff. Texas, ratified by, 191 ; rejected by, 191 f. Thayer, M. R., remarks by, 27, 75, 76, 116, 129. Thirteenth Amendment, views of, 26, 27, 185, 247; text, 278 Thornton, A., remarks by, 17, 28. Thurman, A. G., remarks by, 219, 221, 2Sif., 275, 276. Times (New York), quoted, 41, 43, 49, 147- Tribune (New York), quoted, 41, 147. Trumbull, Lyman, remarks by, 12, 14, 17-19, 21, 24, 37, ^, 148, 248. Tjmer, Mr., of Indiana, remarks by, 242. Van Winkle, remarks by, 22, 25. Vermont, ratified by, 168. Vickers, Senator, of Maryland, remarks by, 319 Vicksburg Herald, quoted, 158. Vicksburg Republican, quoted, 158. Virginia, ratified by, 191 ; re- jected by, 202f. Wade, Benjamin, remarks by, Z7, 88; rebuked, 38 War Amendments, text of, 278f. Westminster, Md., mass meeting at, opposed the Civil Rights Bill, 44- Weston, Geo. W., letter giving exposition of first section, 151- West Virginia, ratified by, 172. Whaley, K. V., remarks by, 39. Whipple, E. P., article by, 149. Willard, Mr., of Vermont, re- marks by, 242! Williams, G. H., remarks by, 90, 114. Wilson, Henry, remarks by, 15, 119, 124, 242. Wilson, Jas. F., remarks by, 25, 32, 34- ^ Wisconsin, ratified by, 178; re- port of minority committee on, i76ff. Woodbridge, F. E., remarks by, 58. World (New York), quoted, 41, 42, 140. *^ OF THE UNIVERSITY OF VITA. Horace Edgar Flack was born at Cuba, Rutherford County, North Carolina, May 14, 1879. He received his elementary education in the public schools of the county and at the Rutherfordton Military Institute. He entered Wake Forest College, North Carolina, in the fall of 1898 and received the degrees of Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts in 1901. He was Principal of the Piedmont Sem- inary, Lincolnton, North Carolina, 1901-02, He entered the Johns Hopkins University in the fall of 1903, where he pursued courses in Political Science, History and Po- litical Economy. He was Fellow in Political Science 1905-06. 286 V ^ _..„,.n..ecirou>aV.on