Farewell Speech of Senator Slidell of Louisiana, February 4, 1861 |
John
Slidell (1793--1871) was born in New York and graduated from Columbia
in 1810; in 1835 he married Mathilde Deslonde of Louisiana. He
was employed as a diplomat (bt President Polk) prior to the Mexican War
in an unsuccessful effort to settle the boundary dispute without
hostilities. After the Mexican War he was appointed U.S. Senator
by Louisiana and eventually aligned himself with traditional Southern
Democratic interests. He resigned from the Senate on Feb. 4th,
1861, and in November, 1861 embarked on a trans-Atlantic voyage to
represent the Confederacy in France. His ship, the
British-flagged steamer Trent, was intercepted by the USS San Jacinto
and the diplomats (Slidell, and the Virginian James Mason) were
taken to Fort Monroe. The resulting international incident came
close to a serious breach with Great Britain, but was finally resolved
when the two Confederates were released and allowed to continue their
journey to Europe. Slidell was able to secure a loan of $15
million for the Confederacy from the French firm of Erlanger &
Co. He remained in Europe after the war and died in England. |
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Mr. The Secretary read, as follows: "An Ordinance to
dissolve the union between the State of
"We, the people of the State of Louisiana, in convention assembled, do declare and ordain, and it is hereby declared and ordained, that the ordinance passed by us in convention on the 22d day of November, in the year 1811, whereby the Constitution of the United States of America, and the amendments of said Constitution, were adopted, and all laws and ordinances by which the State of Louisiana became a member of the Federal Union, be, and the same are hereby, repealed and abrogated; and that the union now subsisting between Louisiana and other States, under the name of the United States of America,' is hereby dissolved.
"We do further declare and ordain, that the State of Louisiana hereby resumes all rights and powers heretofore delegated to the Government of the United States of America; that her citizens are absolved from all allegiance to said Government; and that she is in full possession and exercise of all those rights of sovereignty which appertain to a free and independent State.
"We do further declare and ordain, that all rights acquired and vested under the Constitution of the United States, or any act of Congress, or treaty, or under any law of this State and not incompatible with this ordinance, shall remain in force and have the same effect as if this ordinance had not been passed.
"The undersigned hereby certifies
that the above ordinance is a true copy of the original ordinance adopted this
day. by the convention of the State of
"Given under my hand and the great
seal of
"[l.
s.] A. MOUTON, President of the
Convention. “J.
Thomas Wheat, Secretary of the Convention." Mr. But, if we do not greatly mistake the prevailing sentiment of the
Southern mind, no attempt will be made to improve the Constitution; we shall
take it such as it is; such as has been found sufficient for our security and
happiness, so long as its true intent and spirit lived in the hearts of a
majority of the people of the free States, and controlled the action not only
of the Federal but of the State Legislatures.
We will adopt all laws not locally inapplicable or incompatible with our
new relations; we will recognize the obligations of all existing treaties—those
respecting the African slave trade included.
We shall be prepared to assume our just proportion of the national debt;
to account for the cost of all the forts and other property of the United
States, which we have been compelled to seize in self-defense, if it should
appear that our share of such expenditure has been greater than in other
sections; and above all, we shall, as well from the dictates of natural justice
and the principles of international law as of political and geographical
affinities and of mutual pecuniary interests, recognize the right of the
inhabitants of the valley of the Mississippi and its tributaries to its free
navigation; we will guarantee to them a free interchange of all agricultural
productions without impost, tax duty, or toll of any kind; the free transit
from foreign countries of every species of merchandise, subject only to such
regulations as may be absolutely necessary for the protection of any revenue
system we may establish, and for purposes of police. As for such States of the We have no idea that you will even attempt to invade our soil with
your armies; but we acknowledge your superiority on the sea, at present, in
some degree accidental, but in the main, natural, and permanent, until we shall
have acquired better ports for our marine.
You may, if you will it, persist in considering us bound to you during
your good pleasure; you may deny the sacred and indefeasible right, we will not
say of secession, but of revolution—ay, of rebellion, if you choose so to call
our action—the right of every people to establish for itself that form of
Government which it may, even in its folly, if such you deem it, consider best
calculated to secure its safety and promote its welfare. You may ignore the principles of our immortal
Declaration of Independence; you may attempt to reduce us to subjection, or you
may, under color of enforcing your laws or collecting your revenue, blockade
our ports. This will be war, and we
shall meet it, with dififerent but equally efficient weapons. We will not permit the consumption or
introduction of any of your manufactures; every sea will swarm with our
volunteer militia of the ocean, with the striped bunting floating over their
heads, for we do not mean to give up that flag without a bloody struggle, it is
ours as much as yours; and although for a time more stars may shine on your
banner, our children, if not we, will rally under a constellation more numerous
and more resplendent than yours. You may
smile at this as an impotent boast, at least for the present, if not for the
future; but if we need ships and men for privateering, we shall be amply
supplied from the same sources as now almost exclusively furnish the means for
carrying on, with such unexampled vigor, the African slave trade — But, pretermitting these remedies, we will pass to another equally
efficacious. Every civilized nation now
is governed in its foreign relations by the rule of recognizing Governments “de facto.” You alone invoke the doctrine
of the “de jure,” or divine right of
lording it over an unwilling people strong enough to maintain their power
within their own limits. How long, think
you, will the great naval powers of But enough, perhaps somewhat too much of this. We desire not to speak to you in terms of
bravado or menace. Let us treat each
other as men, who, determined to break off unpleasant, incompatible, and
unprofitable relations, cease to bandy words, and mutually leave each other to
determine whether their differences shall be decided by blows or by the code
which some of us still recognize as that of honor. We shall do with you as the French guards did
with the English at the battle of Fontenoy.
In a preliminary skirmish, the French and English guards met face to
face; the English guards courteously saluted their adversaries by taking off
their hats; the French returned the salute with equal courtesy. Lord Hay, of the English guards, cried out,
in a loud voice: “Gentlemen of the French guards, fire.” Count D'Auteroche
replied in the same tone: “Gentlemen, we never fire first.” The English took
them at their word, and did fire first. Being
at close quarters, the effect was very destructive, arid the French were, for a
time, thrown into some disorder; but the fortunes of the day were soon restored
by the skill and courage of Marshal Saxe, and the English, under the Duke of We have often seen it charged that the present movement of the
Southern States is merely the consummation of a fixed purpose, long entertained
by a few intriguers for the selfish object of personal aggrandizement. There never was a greater error —if we were
not about to part, we should say a grosser or more atrocious calumny. Do not deceive yourselves; this is not the
work of political managers, but of the people.
As a general rule, the instincts of the masses, and the sagacity of
those who, in private life, had larger opportunities for observation and
reflection, had satisfied them for the necessity of separation long before
their accustomed party leaders were prepared to avow it. We appeal to every Southern Senator yet
remaining here, whether such be not the case in his own State. Of its truth, we can give no stronger
illustration than the vote in the Nor is the mere election, by the forms of the Constitution, of a
President distasteful to us, the cause, as it is so often and so confidently
asserted, of our action. It is this : we
all consider the election of Mr. While now we have no fears of servile insurrection, even of a partial
character, we know that his inauguration as President of the United States, with
our assent, would have been considered by many of our slaves as the day of
their emancipation; and that the 4th of March would have witnessed, in various
quarters, outbreaks, which, although they would have been promptly suppressed,
would have carried ruin and devastation to many a Southern home, and have cost
the lives of hundreds of the misguided victims of Northern negrophilism. Senators, six States have now severed the links that bound them to a
Union to which we were all attached, as well by many ties of material
well-being as by the inheritance of common glories in the past, and the
well-founded hopes of still more brilliant destinies in the future! Twelve seats are now vacant on this floor. The work is only just begun. It requires no spirit of prophecy to point to
many, many chairs around us that will soon, like ours, be unfilled; and if the
weird sisters of the great dramatic poet could here be conjured up, they would present
to the affrighted vision of those on the other side of the Chamber, who have so
largely contributed to 'the deep damnation of this taking off,” a “glass to
show them many more.” They who have so
foully murdered the Constitution and the Union will find, when too late, like
the Scottish Thane, that, “for Banquo's issue they have filled their minds;” “they
have but placed upon their heads a fruitless crown, and put a barren scepter in
their gripe, no son of theirs succeeding.” In taking leave of the Senate, while we shall carry with us many agreeable recollections of intercourse, social and official, with gentlemen who have differed with us on this, the great question of the age, we would that we could, in fitting language, express the mingled feelings of admiration and regret with which we look back to our associations on this floor with many of our Northern colleagues. They have, one after the other, fallen in their heroic struggle against a blind fanaticism, until now but few—alas! how few—remain to fight the battle of the Constitution. Several even of these will terminate their official career in one short month, and will give place to men holding opinions diametrically opposite, which have recommended them to the suffrages of their States. Had we remained here, the same fate would have awaited, at the next election, the four or five last survivors of that gallant band; but now we shall carry with us at least this one consoling reflection: our departure realizing all their predictions of ill to the Republic, opens a new era of triumph for the Democratic party of the North, and will, we firmly believe, reestablish its lost ascendency in most of the non-slaveholding States. |
Back to Causes of the Civil War (Main page) Back to Congressional Speeches and Commentary Source: Thomas Martin, The Great Parliamentary Battle and Farewell Addresses of the Southern Senators on the Eve of the Civil War, Neale Publ. Co., New York, 1905, pp. 215--224; available on the Internet Archive, here; see also Congressional Globe, 36th Congress, 2nd Session, pp. 720--721. Date added to website: Feb. 14, 2023 |