JACKSON,
January 10, 1861. HIS
EXCELLENCY JOHN J.
PETTUS, Sir:--I
have the honor to report to you, that in execution of the trust reposed
in me
by your Excellency, as Commissioner to the State of Maryland under the
act of
the Legislature of this State at its recent session, I visited the
State of
Maryland without delay after receiving my commission at your hands. I
visited the Executive of that State, who had before my appointment,
come to the
determination not to convoke the Legislature of his State; and I also
addressed
him in writing desiring to be informed whether in the present emergency
of
public affairs, he would call together the Legislature. In my personal
interview with him, I respectfuly,
but earnestly
urged many considerations which appeared to demand an assemblage of the
Legislature; but he replied insisting that the emergency did not demand
or justify
such action; and in reply to my written communication, he addressed me
the
letter which I herewith transmit, stating his views upon the subject
and his
determination not to call together the Legislature, under the
circumstances
then existing. I
was not surprised at this, as I was aware at the time the commission
was
tendered to me by your Excellency, that the Executive of Maryland, had
taken
his position not to convoke the Legislature; and therefore, in
accepting the
commission, I stated to your Excellency that I was not hopeful of doing
any
good to the cause of Southern rights through the direct action of the
Executive
of that State; but that I hoped to make known to the people there, the
views
entertained by this State in relation to our rights and duties in
common with
all the Southern States; and in order to do so, that I should address
the
people upon the subject. Accordingly after visiting the Executive, I
visited
several parts of the State, and made addresses to the people, setting
forth, in
my feeble manner, the views and position of this State, and inviting
the
co-operation of the people of that State. I
am very happy to believe and to be able to say, that the people of
Maryland are
in heart and in interest with the State of Mississippi,
and that they
will ultimately be with us in political union. A large number of the
most
eminent men of the State agree with us in principle; and the true
course of the
South, as we regard it here, is gaining strength and force every day.
The
peculiar local situation of the State--having a long line of a
non-slaveholding
State to which she is exposed, and having the Federal Capital within
her
limits--now operates to restrain speedy action in support of the course
which
we, of this State, deem the proper one in the emergency; and to this
may be
added the persistent refusal of the Executive, against all petitions,
remonstrances and protestations, to allow the people to express their
will, by
the only mode in which it can be formally done--a course which
suppresses for
the time the sentiment of the people and paralizes
their action. But from the cordial reception that sound doctrine met at
the
hands of that gallant and patriotic old State in the address I made
them, which
follows the reply of the Governor to my communication, and in my
personal
communications with them, I doubt not that, as soon as she shall be
relieved
of, or is aroused to bid defiance to, the Executive contingency which
now paralizes their efforts and their
will, she will wheel
into the line of the Southern Confederacy, and add the old "Maryland
line" to the fortunes and destiny where her rights, her principles and
her
interest find a congenial home. The Revolutionary spark has touched
their
hearts and will never be extinguished until it accomplishes now what it
achieved in the day of its original glory, the establishment of her
rights and
her honor, by a re-union with the Southern States whose feelings and
interests
are identical with her own. I
have the honor to
remain with
high respect, Your Excellency's obedient servant,
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Back to Causes of the Civil War (Main page) Back to the Secession Commissioners Back to the "splash page" for Commissioner Handy Source: UNC Documenting the American South; see also the Journal of the House of the State of Mississippi, 1861, pp. 63--64. Date added to website: June 28, 2024 Back to the top of the page. |