Title: Lincoln, Slavery, and Race
1Lincoln, Slavery, and Race
- by John Davenport
- Department of Philosophy
- Fordham University
- davenport_at_fordham.edu
- Feb. 27, 2009
2Two more artist interpretations of Lincoln
entering Richmond onApril 4, 1865 (just a month
after his second inauguration, 5 days before
Appomattox, and10 days before Booth assassinated
him)
3The most important document that Lincoln ever
signed
4Another version of the document(1) What did it
do?(2) Why is it strange, from a legal
standpoint, that Lincoln signed it?(3) What
sort of actions did Lincoln take to get is passed?
5Lincolns role in passage of the 13th Amendment
- In his reconstruction plan, Lincoln makes
acceptance of the Emancipation Proclamation a
condition for the reentry of southern states into
the Union. - Jan. 1864 Senator Henderson of Missouri
(probably at Lincolns behest) introduced the
joint resolution. It passed the Senate by more
than 2/3 majority, April 1864. - But it failed in the House by 93 yea / 65 nay (13
votes short of a 2/3 majority). - March 1864 with the help of his friend Charles
Dana, Lincoln buys off a handful of House members
to secure admission of Nevada as a new state,
thus ensuring enough pro-amendment states to
secure ratification by at least 3/4 of the
states! - May 1864 Lincoln insists that the 13th Amendment
be added to the Republican party platform,
risking alienating voters who opposed
emancipation, and making it harder for him to win
reelection in the doubtful fall season of 1864. - Dec. 6, 1864 After Lincoln wins reelection and
the Republican majority grows in Congress, he
asks the lame-duck House to pass the 13th
Amendment now, before the new Congress is seated
and takes it up again. - On Feb. 1, 1865, the House of Representatives
passesthe 13th Amendment. - December 1865, 13th Amendment declared ratified
by 3/4 of the states.
6From Charles Danas Diary
- He came in and shut the door. 'Dana,' he said,
'I am very anxious about this vote. It was got to
be taken next week. The time is very short. It is
going to be a great deal closer than I wish it
was.' There are plenty of Democrats who will
vote for it,' I replied. 'There is James E.
English, of Connecticut I think he is sure,
isn't he?''Oh, yes he is sure on the merits of
the question. ''Then,' said I, 'there's 'Sunset'
Cox, of Ohio. How is he?''He is sure and
fearless. But there are some others that I am not
clear about. There are three that you can deal
with better than anybody else, perhaps, as you
know them all. I wish you would send for them.'
He told me who they were it isn't necessary to
repeat the names here. One man was from New
Jersey and two from New York. 'What will they be
likely to want?' I asked. 'I don't know,' said
the President 'I don't know. It makes no
difference, though, what they want. here is the
alternative that we carry this vote, or be
compelled to raise another million, and I don't
know how many more, men, and fight no one knows
how long. It is a question of three votes or new
armies. Well, sir,' said I, 'what shall I say
to these gentlemen? ''I don't know,' said he
'but whatever promise you make to them I will
perform.' I sent for the men and saw them one by
one. I found that they were afraid of their party
They said that some fellows in the party would be
down on them. Two of them wanted internal revenue
collector's appointments. 'You shall have it,' I
said. Another one wanted a very important
appointment about the custom house of New York. I
knew the man well whom he wanted to have
appointed. He was a Republican, though a
congressman was a Democrat. I had served with him
in the Republican county committee of New York.
The office was worth perhaps twenty thousand
dollars a year. When the congressman stated the
case, I asked him, 'Do you want that? Yes,
said he. 'Well,' I answered, 'you shall have
it.' I understand, of course,' said he, 'that
you are not saying this on your own
authority?''Oh, no,' said I 'I am saying it on
the authority of the President. Well, these men
voted that Nevada be allowed to form a State
government, and thus they helped secure the vote
which was required. The next October the
President signed the proclamation admitting the
State. In the February following Nevada was one
of the States which ratified the Thirteenth
Amendment, by which slavery was abolished by
constitutional prohibition in all of the United
States. I have always felt that this little piece
of side politics was one of the most judicious,
humane, and wise uses of executive authority that
I have ever witnessed.
7Passage of the 13th Amendment in the House
8But it went well beyond the 13th Amendment. By
his last months, Lincoln favored suffrage for
black men and near-social equality!
- How did he get to there in 1865, when in 1858
during the Lincoln-Douglas debates he often said
things like the following? - If all earthly power were given to me, I should
not know what to do, as to the existing
institution of slavery in the old south. My
first impulse would be to free all the slaves and
send them to Liberia to their own native land
in Africa (First Joint Debate at Ottawa, Aug.
21, 1858 p.61) - I have no purpose to introduce political and
social equality between the white and black
races (Sixth Joint Debate at Quincy, Oct. 13,
1858 p.284) - I protestagainst the counterfeit logic which
presumes that because I do not want a negro woman
for a slave, I do necessarily want her for a
wife (Chicago, July 10, 1858) -
9Six Take-Home Points about Lincoln, Slavery
Race(useful for AP exams!)
- By todays standards, Lincoln would count as a
racist he was not sure that blacks had
capacities equal to whites on average, or that
the races could live together. This is evident
in his famous debates with Stephen Douglas in the
Illinois campaign for a federal senate seat in
1958. It is also evident in many other writings
and speeches. - Unlike a few more radical abolitionists, he was
not for full social equality, although his views
changed dramatically in the last two years of his
life. (Well ask why). - But Lincoln was personally opposed to slavery
from early youth, and in his speeches always
affirmed that slavery was immoral a violation
of inherent natural rights. By the standards of
the 1850s, that made him highly progressive.
10Six Take-Home Points about Lincoln, Slavery
Race(useful for AP exams!)
- By todays standards, Lincoln would count as a
racist he was not sure that blacks had
capacities equal to whites on average, or that
the races could live together. This is evident
in his famous debates with Stephen Douglas in the
Illinois campaign for a federal senate seat in
1958. It is also evident in many other writings
and speeches. - Unlike a few more radical abolitionists, he was
not for full social equality, although his views
changed dramatically in the last two years of his
life. (Well ask why in a couple slides). - But Lincoln was personally opposed to slavery
from early youth, and in his speeches always
affirmed that slavery was immoral a violation
of inherent natural rights. By the standards of
the 1850s, that made him highly progressive.
11(continued)
- 4. Despite this personal opposition, he
accepted that the US Constitution of 1787
contained a compromise allowing slavery in the
states of the old South. - Two caveats
- (a) Lincoln thought all the main founders
(including Jefferson) intended to prevent the
spread of slavery to new states and thus to allow
it die out gradually. - (b) From 1854 on, he denied any natural
democratic right of peoples to enact slavery
laws. This implied that slavery in the old South,
while constitutional, was undemocratic. - With these two caveats, Lincoln felt bound to
uphold the 1787 Constitution. - Thus it is technically true that Lincoln issued
the final Emancipation Proclamation of Jan. 1,
1863 with the official intention only to aid the
Union war effort the justification for violating
the Constitution was that emancipation of slaves
in areas of the South under insurrection but
not under Union control was necessary to win the
war. - But this often-made point can be misleading,
because by this time, Lincoln was already
convinced that the Constitution had to be changed
to eradicate slavery everywhere in the United
States, forever. By the 13th Amendment, he would
finally resolve the painful conflict between his
own sense of natural right and the basic written
law of his beloved land.
12Giving up on Gradual Compensated Emancipation
Colonization
- Lincoln had tried to avoid the Civil War by
promising not to interfere with slavery in the
established southern states but in 1861 S.
Carolina started the war anyway. - In early 1862, he tries to get the South in
general, and the border states in particular, to
accept gradual compensated emancipation a
process that could have taken until 1900! But no
states took up his offer. - In July 1862, the draft Preliminary Emancipation
Proclamation presented only to the cabinet again
asks Congress to fund compensated emancipation in
loyal states. - August 14, 1862 Lincoln receives the first ever
delegation of African-American leaders at the
White House. He asks them to consider separation
of the races by voluntary colonization overseas
(pp.251-52). But only 38,000 of the available
600,000 is ever spent, suggesting that this was
mostly a sop to white fears. - The September 22 Preliminary Emancipation
Proclamation pledges again to ask Congress for
compensated emancipation and voluntary
colonization (p.257), even extending the promise
of compensation to loyal citizens in the old
South (p.260). - Dec. 1, 1962 as promised, Lincoln asks Congress
to adopt a constitutional amendment offering
compensation to slaveowners in states adopting
gradual emancipation process ending before 1900
(p.265). The second article of the proposed
amendment begins with language that anticipates
the wording of the 13th Amendment, but still
promises compensation to loyal slaveowners in the
Confederate States. Congress never seriously
considers this proposal. - August 1863 after the Final Emancipation
Proclamation, Lincoln writes to James Conkling
that all chance for gradual compensated
emancipation is gone. Freedmen and emancipated
slaves are joining the Union Army. He will never
retract his edict.
13 Recruiting poster, 1863
14New Experiences with Black Americans
- The Final Emancipation Proclamation included no
reference to compensated emancipation, and
instead invited black Americans into the armed
forces of the United States (p.272) - After emancipation, in August 1863, Frederick
Douglass met President Lincoln for the first time
in person. He urged Lincoln to offer equal pay to
black soldiers (finally granted by Congress in
June 1864). But most importantly, Douglass felt
received as an equal, and Lincoln was impressed
with him as well. - Since Sept. 1862, black regiments had slowly been
recruited. Thousands were in arms and
demonstrating their courage by the time that
Lincoln met Douglass. The process sped up after
the final Emancipation Proclamation. - In his December 1863 message to Congress, Lincoln
reported almost 100,000 black troops
strengthening the Union forces. - Over 180,000 black soldiers in 163 units
eventually served in the Union army, and many
more in the Navy, which had enlisted freedmen
earlier than the army. - The most famous of their many engagements, the
near-suicidal frontal assault on Fort Wagner,
S.C., has been portrayed in the award-winning
film, Glory. - Given his words in the Gettysburg Address, there
can be no doubt that Lincoln was personally moved
by these sacrifices.
15Colored Army and Navy Units
161863-65 Lincoln moves towards equal civil rights
- By August of 1863, the great victories at
Gettysburg and Vicksburg are passed. Lincoln
believes that God is finally favoring his course
in the war, following the Emancipation
Proclamation. In a letter to his friend Conkling,
he praises black soldiers, condemns white men who
hinder his war effort, and says that Peace does
not appear so distant as it did (p.292). - Lincoln is also shepherding the reconstruction of
Louisiana towards a new state government with a
constitution banning slavery. He writes to his
commanding General Banks in New Orleans,
proposing that the new plan include "education
for young blacks" (p.287). - Nov. 19, 1863 in the Gettysburg Address, Lincoln
vows that the honored dead will not have died
in vain their sacrifices will lead to the
flourishing of democracy across the earth! (the
humbler object of restoring the union isnt even
mentioned) - In his December 1863 message to Congress, Lincoln
notes that black troops now number 100,000 or
more (p.309) and says the whole world stands
indebted to Union soldiers for saving the home
of freedom, disenthralled, regenerated,
perpetuated (p.311). - Jan. 1864 Letter to General Wadsworth saying
that if the South wants general amnesty to former
pro-secession citizens, then they must accept
universal suffrage for all black men in return
(p.313)! - April 11, 1865 returning from his visit to
conquered Richmond, Lincoln gives a public
address from the White House calling for
admission of the reconstructed state of Louisiana
as a free state. He added that he wished it gave
the vote to all former black soldiers and any
black man meeting some unspecified intelligence
test (p.347). For this, John Wilkes Booth is
determined to kill Lincoln. - This is an olive branch to radical republicans
like Thaddeus Stevens who want universal suffrage
and equal protection of the laws from black
Americans (anticipating the 14th and 15th
amendments).
17The Gettysburg Address as most people imagine it
(with a high formal platform)
18The real scene. But wheres Lincoln at this
famous Gettysburg battlefield dedication?
19Hes in the middle of the vast circle around the
small platform, with hat off to the fallen.
20The full picture