m , \ ? j*/ *, >*' V . * .1 ' " ., v -" ;: THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES THE LIFE AND SERVICES -OF- EX-GOVERNOR CHARLES JONES JENI 1 BY CHARLES COLCOCK JONES, Jr., LL.D. ATLANTA.QA.: JAS. P. HARRISON & Co., PRINTERS AMD BINDERS. 1884. THE LIFE AND SERVICES P-bram CHARLES JONES JENKINS. A MEMORIAL ADDRESS Delivered before the General Assembly of Georgia, in the Hall of the House of Representa- tives, at the Capitol, in Atlanta, on the 23d of July, 1883: BY CHARLES C: V JONES, Jr., LL.D. ARDU1S FIDELIS. ATLANTA, GEORGIA : JAS. P. HARRISON- & Co., PRINTERS AND PCBLISHERS 1884. Resolved by the Senate, the House of Representatives concurring that the thanks of the General Assembly be tendered to the Hon G' J. Jones, Jr., for the learned, able, and eloquent address delivered efore the General Assembly on the occasion of the Memorial Exer- cises in honor of Ex-Govenror Charles J. Jenkins. Resolved, further, that five hundred copies of the address be printed for distribution among the members. JAMES S. BOYNTON, President of the Senate. W.M. AUGUSTUS HARRIS, Secretary of the Senate. W. R. RANKIN, Pro.tem. Speaker of the House of Representatives. M. A. IIARDIN, Clerk of the House of Representatives. 550660 Ho. I 8 7 I -07 MEMORIAL ADDRESS. Mr. President, Gentlemen of the General Assembly of Georgia, Ladies, and Fellow-citizens : The characters and acts of those who influenced the cur- rent of public events, were complimented with positions of trust and honor, maintained an exalted standard of excel- lence in the community in which they resided, and promot- the mental, moral, and matriaj development of their age State, are eminently.; werfny gf narration. Meet it is that exhibitions of superior virtue, marked intelligence and unusual endowments^oiil^notfe forgotten. A live- ly remembrance and a faithful record of them will be deemed a matter of simple justice to those whose sphere of ife was embellished by their display, will be regarded as a loyal acknowledgment from contemporaries who shared their confidence, were elevated by their companionship, and were witnesses of their nobleness, and will constitute an abiding ensample for the guidance and the emulation of coming generations. Great men are the glory of the Purity, honesty, courage, fidelity and patriotism e cardinal traits, and that life is precious which was dir- mfied by a constant and illustrious manifestation of them" I ecuharly grateful is the retrospect, most pleasincr the recollection, when the virtues of which we speak were ap- parent in our own times; when the exalted manhood and excellences we register appertain to our immediate annals. 6 I. [ft Life and Services of Hon. C. J. Jenkins. profession to which he had given his allegiance was rapid and satisfactory. Within the entire circle of the profession no more capable instructor could have been found. The pupil, too, was loyal to the last degree. While Mr. Jenkins was thus pursuing his law studies in Savannah, Judge Berrien was elected to a seat in the Sen- ate of the United States and departed for Washington. Having completed the prescribed course of reading, Mr. Jenkins was called to the Bar in Screven county, Georgia, in April, 1826. His examination was had before Judge William Schley. A month afterwards he opened a law- office in Sandersville, Washington county, where he con- tinued to reside and to practice his profession until his removal to Augusta in April, 1829. Washington county was then a fine agricultural region. Many wealthy planters there abode. In association with the adjacent territory, Sandersville afforded an excellent field for a young lawyer. Improving his opportunities Mr. Jenkins soon acquired honorable fame at the bar, and se- cured a valuable clientage in his circuit. In this he was materially assisted by his friend, the Hon. Absalom H. Chappell, who, having built up an extensive practice at San- dersville, was about changing his residence to Forsyth. He very kindly turned over to Mr. Jenkins his pending causes and unfinished business, and recommended his clients, when- ever in need of legal aid, to secure the services of his young friend. State politics, to use a common expression, were then run- ning high, and the Troup and Clarke parties were vigorously arrayed against each other, Mr. Jenkins allied himself with the Troup party and manifested a lively interest in the issues of the day. Much given to calm reflection, with a maturity of judg- ment beyond his years, a careful and conscientious stu. dent, scrupulous in the discharge of the obligations devolv- ing upon him, possessing a liberal education and an ever Life and Services of Hon. C. J. Jenkins. 9 present thirst for knowledge, bold and intelligent in the expression of his convictions, and yet tolerant of the opin- ions of others, public spirited, courteous and affable in his intercourse, a ready and effective speaker, persuasive, logical, and eloquent, and with a character pure and deci- ded in all the elements which unite in the formation of true Christian manhood, Mr. Jenkins, upon the threshold of his professional and public life, commanded the respect and esteem of the community in which he dwelt, and ex- hibited those exalted traits which in after years remained unchanged, winning for him the confidence, the regard, and the honor of his fellow men. With a view to enlarging the sphere of his professional employment, Mr. Jenkins removed to the city of Augusta in April, 1829, and there established his law-office. He continued, however, to ride his old circuit and retained, in the main, the clients he had gained during his residence in Sandersville. At the very first election at which, under the laws of Georgia, he was entitled to vote, upon this change of county abode, he was elected a member of the Legislature from Richmond county ; a compliment all the more grat- ifying because the nomination for the office was on his part wholly unsolicited. Mr. Charles Carter was the opposing candidate. In 1831 he was elected Attorney General of the State of Georgia and Solicitor of the Middle Circuit. The discharge of the duties appertaining to this responsible position brought hi ji prominently into public notice, and the fidelity and the ability with which he met the obligations incident to his station confirmed and widened the reputation for probity, courage, legal acumen and eloquence which had already been so freely accorded. Before the expiration of his term of office Attorney General Jenkins resigned and became a candidate for the Legislature. He was defeated. The following year he again offered for the same position, and failed of an election at 10 /.,>; tmd Services ,,t /!,>. a J. the hands of the voters of Richmond county. Parties had now become national in their character, and the Democrats were in the majority. Mr. Jenkins was in active sympathy with the Whigs. The tide turning in 1836, he was in that year elected a member from Richmond county of the Lower House of the General Assembly. For each of the five following years was he returned ; but, in 1842, he suffered defeat on account of his connection with, and support of, what was termed the Algerine Law. In 1S41 a memorial, signed by many large tax-payers and influential citizens, was presented to the General Assembly praying the creation of an additional Board of Aldermen for the city of Augusta who should be charged with the administration of the finances of the city. Upon all ques- tions involving the raising and disbursement of municipal moneys that Board was authorized to exercise a ve'to power. In the conduct of the ordinary affairs of the city its mem- bers could utter no voice and exercise no control. They were to be elected by the owners of real estate situated within the corporate limits of Augusta, upon whom the burden of taxation chiefly devolved. There being no op- position^ bill carrying into effect the prayerof the petition readily received legiolative sanction. The Hon. Andrew J. Miller was then the Senator from Richmond, and Mr. Jen- kins a member of the Lower House. No sooner, however, was this legislation generally known and discussed at home, than there arose an adverse clamor which originated with and was principally maintained by the masses who practically had but trifling pecuniary inter- est in the measure. The main objection urged was that a restriction had been placed upon the freedom of the ballot box. A mechanic, by the name of Walker, denounced the act in emphatic terms and led the popular opposition to its enforcement. It was he who gave to ic the name of the Algerine Law, which really possessed neither significance nor relevancy, tave that the epithet was supposed to carry Life and Services of Hon. C. J. Jenkins. 11 with it a suggestion of all that was abhorrent, without war- rant, and distasteful. The act was repealed at the next eeseion of the Legislature. Believing the .'aw to be whole- some in its provisions, Mr. Jenkins refused to bend before the popular will. He was returned to the General Assem- bly in 1843, and was re-elected to the Lower House in 1845, in 1847, and again in 1349. The elections which hitherto had occurred annually were now biennial. In illustration of the esteem in which he was held, and as an t-cknowledgment of his influence in the legislative assemblies of the State, it will be remembered that he was elected Speaker of the House of Representatives in 1840, again in 1843, and a third time in 1815. That he presided with impartiality, dignity, courtesy, and ability, was uni- versally conceded. It would not be an exaggeration to affirm that among the law- makers of Georgia none may be named more conservative in his view?!, more jealous of the public good, more liberal in the support of all measures conducive to the general welfare, or more uncompromising in his opposition to any legislation of questionable repute, than the subject of this Memorial. Instant in season and out of season in his cordial advocacy of educational, indus- trial, moral, and political reforms, the records of the period abound with the proofs of his constant and intelligent de- votion to the best interests of his State and constituents. With an extensive acquaintance, surrounded by warm friends and admirerp, with a well-earned reputation for all that was honest in purpose, chivalrous in conduct, manly in utterance, trustworthy in conception, and attractive in demeanor clear in his apprehension of the right, and potent in his ad/ocacy of the true and the beautiful he was now a central figure in the convocations of the people, alike in social gatherings, i.i deliberative assemblies, in occa- sional concourses, and at the Bar. The association of his name with the affirmative of any proposed measure was an earnest of its genuine merit and an augury of its success. 1 - Life and Services of Hon. C. J. Jenkins. In 1836, when the construction of the Western and At- lantic Railroad was under discussion, Mr. Jenkins was num- bered among the warmest supporters of the bill which gave to the State of Georgia this valuable internal improve- ment. During the session of 1849-'50, the Democratic party was in the majority in the Legislature. Two bills were in- troduced, one suggesting changes in the Congressional, and the other modifying the Senatorial Districts. These were Democratic measures conceived with a view to strengthen- ing the party. As the time approached for their passage, it so chanced that many of the Democratic members were absent from Milledgeville. When the first bill was up for final consideration a scheme was devised by some of the Whig members to withdraw from the House and thus leave it without a quorum. Mr. Jenkins was requested to par- ticipate in this movement, inaugurated in the interest of his own party and supported by some of his warmest po- litical friends. He responded that in his judgment guch action was revolutionary and unjustifiable. He declined to countenance the affair, and, through his influence, the con- tern plated action was frustrated. When the Senatorial bill was reached, however, the Whig members did withdraw, with the exception of Mr. Jenkins, who, adhering to his convictions, remained in his seat, despite the earnest entreaties of his friends that he would adopt the course pursued by them. The withdrawal of the Whig members robbed the House of a quorum for the transaction of business, and a dead lock ensued which was broken only after the lapse of several days by the re- turn of absent Democratic members. During this time Mr. Jenkins was the only Whig member of the Elouse in his seat. We recall this incident in illustration of the moral heroism and conscientious adherence to duty dis- played by him, not only on this occasion, but at other times and in ways even more emphatic. With him friendships Life and Sewices of Hon. C. J. Jenkins. 13 were strong and party affiliations not without their admit- ted claims upon his sympathy ; but, above and beyond them all, he recognized his obligations to conscience and duty, and followed, irrespective of consequences, the dic- tates of his calm, unbiased, enlightened judgment. Before the close of this session of the Legislature Mr. Jenkins resigned his seat and returned home. The year eighteen hundred and fifty was filled with po- litical excitement and apprehension. Then were heard the mutterings of that storm which, ten years afterwards, descended like night upon a war-convulsed land. Georgia, in common with her sister Southern States, was greatly agitated upon the question of the acceptance or rejection of the pending Compromise measures. A State Convention was called to consider the emergency and to suggest a remedy for existing grievances. In the election of mem- bers of that Convention Union men were returned by a con- siderable majority. Among that number was Mr. Jenkine, and he it was who reported the resolution?, adopted by the Convention, which have passed into history as the "Geor- gia Platform of 1850." Important as that document is, and memorable as it was in its influence at the time of its adoption, we make no apology for reproducing it now in illustration of the style of composition, thought, and statesmanship of Mr. Jenkins at an epoch of unusual political excitement and peril. " To the end that the position of this State may be clearly apprehended by her Confederates of the South and of the North, and that she may be blameless of all future conse- quences, " Be it resolved by the People of Georgia in Convention assembled, " First : That we hold the American Union secondary in importance only to the rights and principles it was designed to perpetuate. That past associations, present fruition, and 14 l.'.fe and Services of Hon. C. J. Jenkins future prospects will bind us to it so long as it continues to be the safeguard of those rights and principles. "Second : That if the Thirteen Original Parties to the compact, bordering the Atlantic in a narrow belt while their separate interests were in embryo, their peculiar tendencies scarcely developed, their revolutionary trials and triumphs still green in memory, found Union impossible without com- promise, the Thirty-one of this day may well yield somewhat, in the conflict of opinion and policy, to preserve that Union which has extended the sway of Republican Government over a vast wilderness to another ocean, and proportion- ally advanced their civilization and national greatness. " Third : That in this spirit the State of Georgia has ma- turely considered the action of Congress, embracing a series of measures for the admission of California into the Union, the organization of Territorial Governments for Utah and New Mexico, the establishment of a boundary between the latter and the State of Texas, the suppression of the slave- trade in the District of Columbia, and the extradition of fugitive slave.*, and (connected with them) the rejection of propositions to exclude slavery from the Mexican Territories and to abolish it in the District of Columbia; and, whilst she does not wholly approve, will abide by it as a perma- nent adjustment of this sectional controversy. "Four'h : That the State of Georgia, in the judgment of this Convention, will and ought to resist even (as a last re- sort) to a disruption of every tie which binds her to the Union, any future act of Congress abolishing slavery in the District of Columbia without the consent and petition of the slave-holders thereof, or any Act abolishing slavery in places, within the slaveholding States, purchased by the United States for the erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, dock-yards, navy -yards, and other like purposes; or any Act suppressing the slavetrade between slaveholding States ; or any refusal to admit as a State any Territory applying, because of the existence of slavery therein ; or any Act pro- Life and Services of Hon. C. J. Jenkins. 15 hibiting the introduction of slaves into the Territories of Utah and New Mexico ; or any Act repealing or materially modifying the laws now in force for the recovery of fugi- tive slaves. "Fifth : That it is the deliberate opinion of this Conven- tion that upon the faithful execution of the Fugitive Slave Bill by the proper authorities depends the preservation of our much loved Union." The summer of 1851 was passed by Mr. Jenkins at the North in quest of health and relaxation. While in Charles- ton, South Carolina, on bis journey homeward, he was ad- vised by a daily paper that nominations of candidates for the Legislature had been made in Richmond county aud that his name did not appear upon the ticket. This an- nouncement caused no little surprise, because, prior to his departure from Augusta, he had been assured that he would be returned to the House. Arriving at home he sought an early interview with his intimate friend, Colonel Henry II. Gumming, who informed him that his name was left off the ticket at the request of his friends because they desired to press his claims upon the next General Assembly to a seat in the Senate of the United States. Judge Berrien's term of service was drawing to a close. He had rendered him- self unpopular in Georgia, and the prospect of his re elec- tion seemed more than doubtful. Under the circumstances Mr. Jenkins, in all candor, counseled Judge Berrien to re- tire from the contest ; but, refusing to bo thus persuaded, he declared his intention to maintain his candidacy to the bitter end. This determination was embarrassing to Mr. Jenkins. For Judge Berrien there was no hope of success, and such were the relations existing between these gentle- men that eo long as he remained in the field Mr. Jenkins felt constrained not only to withhold the use of his name in connection with the office of United States Senator from Georgia, but also to exert his active influence in furthering 16 Life and Services of Hon. C. J. Jenkins. the re-election of Senator Berrien. He accordingly went to Milledgeville upon the assembling of the Legislature that he might communicate personally with the members and ascertain what could be accomplished in advancing the interests of Judge Berrien. Immediately upon his arrival he was waited upon by the Hon. Edward Y. Hill, and the Hon. Ilines Holt, both classmates and warm friends of Mr. Jenkins. They were avowed candidates for the office of Senator of the United States, and were then engaged in pressing their respective claims upon the favorable notice of the members of the General Assembly. With a frank- new, cordiality, and generosity quite remarkable, they stated to Mr. Jenkins that hearing his name connected with the Senatorship they sought the earliest opportunity of assuring him that if he was a candidate for that position they would not only at once and cheerfully withdraw in his favor, but unite in promoting his success. At the same time they re- quested an immediate answer, as any delay would prove prejudicial. Thanking them for their great kindness, and explaining to them the situation in which he found himself with regard to the candidacy of Judge Berrien, who still refused to retire from the contest, Mr. Jenkins responded that so long as Senator Berrien remained in the field he could not permit the use of his name in association with the office of Senator. He therefore, under existing circum- stances, felt constrained to say to them he was not and could not be a candidate before the present General Assem- bly for the senatorial office. The Hon. Robert Toombs was also a candidate, but it was intimated and pretty generally understood that he would not have antagonized Mr. Jenkins. The next morning came a letter from Judge Berrien an- nouncing his withdrawal from the contest. Had this intelli- gence been received on the previous day, there is little doubt but that arrangements would have been made which would surely have resulted in the election of Mr. Jenkins to a seat i.3 the Senate of the United States. Life and Services of Hon. C. J. Jenkins. 17 In organizing his Cabinet in 1850, President Fillmore tendered to Mr. Jenkins the portfolio of Secretary of the Interior. In consequence, however, of important profes- sional engagements (among them five retainers for the accused in capital cases) he felt compelled to decline the compliment. In 1853, Mr. Jenkins was. a candidate for the gubernato- rial chair. His opponent in the race was that distinguished and potent Georgian, the Hon. Herschel V. Johnson. The contest, although sharp, was conducted upon a dignified and elevated plane and resulted in the election of Governor Johnson by a majority of only a few hundred. In this can- vass the question of union or disunion formed one of the issues, and was freely discussed ; Mr. Jenkins espousing the tenets and being the representative of the Union Party. -During the session of the convention of 1850, a split had occurred in the Democratic Party in Georgia, and the Hon. Howell Cobb was, in 1851, elected Governor by the Union Party. In the nominating convention of that year Mr. Jenkins was urged to allow the use of his name, but he de- clined in favor of Mr. Cobb, whom he supported with great energy and cordiality. In their joint canvass of the State Governor Johnson was charged with being an avowed secessionist and an advocate of prompt and decided action on the part of Georgia and her sister Southern States, while Mr. Jenkins, on the contrary, was recognized as espousing the sentiments held by the Union Party, and as counseling moderation and further delay. His chances before the people were then somewhat affected and prejudiced by the absurd changes which were rung upon his connection with what was called the Algerine Law, and by the fact that, in 1852, he had been named as a candidate for Vice-President of the United States upon a ticket led by Daniel Webster. In his political views Mr. Jenkins sympathized with the Whig Party, and remained a member of it until it allied itself with the Abolitionist Party of the North. 18 /./A