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+Project Gutenberg's The Day of the Confederacy, by Nathaniel W. Stephenson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Day of the Confederacy
+ A Chronicle of the Embattled South, Volume 30 In The
+ Chronicles Of America Series
+
+Author: Nathaniel W. Stephenson
+
+Editor: Allen Johnson
+
+Posting Date: January 26, 2009 [EBook #3035]
+Release Date: January, 2002
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DAY OF THE CONFEDERACY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by The James J. Kelly Library of St. Gregory's
+University, and Alev Akman
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DAY OF THE CONFEDERACY,
+
+A CHRONICLE OF THE EMBATTLED SOUTH
+
+By Nathaniel W. Stephenson
+
+Volume 30 In The Chronicles of America Series
+
+
+New Haven: Yale University Press
+
+Toronto: Glasgow, Brook & Co.
+
+London: Humphrey Milford, Oxford University Press
+
+1919
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ I. THE SECESSION MOVEMENT
+
+ II. THE DAVIS GOVERNMENT
+
+ III. THE FALL OF KING COTTON
+
+ IV. THE REACTION AGAINST RICHMOND
+
+ V. THE CRITICAL YEAR
+
+ VI. LIFE IN THE CONFEDERACY
+
+ VII. THE TURNING OF THE TIDE
+
+ VIII. A GAME OF CHANCE
+
+ IX. DESPERATE REMEDIES
+
+ X. DISINTEGRATION
+
+ XI. AN ATTEMPTED REVOLUTION
+
+ XII. THE LAST WORD
+
+ BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
+
+
+
+
+THE DAY OF THE CONFEDERACY
+
+
+
+Chapter I. The Secession Movement
+
+The secession movement had three distinct stages. The first, beginning
+with the news that Lincoln was elected, closed with the news, sent
+broadcast over the South from Charleston, that Federal troops had taken
+possession of Fort Sumter on the night of the 28th of December. During
+this period the likelihood of secession was the topic of discussion
+in the lower South. What to do in case the lower South seceded was the
+question which perplexed the upper South. In this period no State
+north of South Carolina contemplated taking the initiative. In the
+Southeastern and Gulf States immediate action of some sort was expected.
+Whether it would be secession or some other new course was not certain
+on the day of Lincoln's election. Various States earlier in the year had
+provided for conventions of their people in the event of a Republican
+victory. The first to assemble was the convention of South Carolina,
+which organized at Columbia, on December 17, 1860. Two weeks earlier
+Congress had met. Northerners and Southerners had at once joined issue
+on their relation in the Union. The House had appointed its committee
+of thirty-three to consider the condition of the country. So unpromising
+indeed from the Southern point of view had been the early discussions
+of this committee that a conference of Southern members of Congress
+had sent out their famous address To Our Constituents: "The argument is
+exhausted. All hope of relief in the Union... is extinguished, and we
+trust the South will not be deceived by appearances or the pretense
+of new guarantees. In our judgment the Republicans are resolute in the
+purpose to grant nothing that will or ought to satisfy the South. We
+are satisfied the honor, safety, and independence of the Southern people
+require the organization of a Southern Confederacy--a result to be
+obtained only by separate state secession." Among the signers of this
+address were the two statesmen who had in native talent no superiors
+at Washington--Judah P. Benjamin of Louisiana and Jefferson Davis of
+Mississippi.
+
+The appeal To Our Constituents was not the only assurance of support
+tendered to the convention of South Carolina. To represent them at
+this convention the governors of Alabama and Mississippi had appointed
+delegates. Mr. Hooker of Mississippi and Mr. Elmore of Alabama made
+addresses before the convention on the night of the 17th of December.
+Both reiterated views which during two days of lobbying they had
+disseminated in Columbia "on all proper occasions." Their argument,
+summed up in Elmore's report to Governor Moore of Alabama, was "that
+the only course to unite the Southern States in any plan of cooperation
+which could promise safety was for South Carolina to take the lead and
+secede at once without delay or hesitation... that the only effective
+plan of cooperation must ensue after one State had seceded and presented
+the issue when the plain question would be presented to the other
+Southern States whether they would stand by the seceding State engaged
+in a common cause or abandon her to the fate of coercion by the arms of
+the Government of the United States."
+
+Ten years before, in the unsuccessful secession movement of 1850 and
+1851, Andrew Pickens Butler, perhaps the ablest South Carolinian then
+living, strove to arrest the movement by exactly the opposite argument.
+Though desiring secession, he threw all his weight against it because
+the rest of the South was averse. He charged his opponents, whose leader
+was Robert Barnwell Rhett, with aiming to place the other Southern
+States "in such circumstances that, having a common destiny, they would
+be compelled to be involved in a common sacrifice." He protested that
+"to force a sovereign State to take a position against its consent is
+to make of it a reluctant associate.... Both interest and honor must
+require the Southern States to take council together."
+
+That acute thinker was now in his grave. The bold enthusiast whom
+he defeated in 1851 had now no opponent that was his match. No great
+personality resisted the fiery advocates from Alabama and Mississippi.
+Their advice was accepted. On December 20, 1860, the cause that ten
+years before had failed was successful. The convention, having adjourned
+from Columbia to Charleston, passed an ordinance of secession.
+
+Meanwhile, in Georgia, at a hundred meetings, the secession issue was
+being hotly discussed. But there was not yet any certainty which way the
+scale would turn. An invitation from South Carolina to join in a general
+Southern convention had been declined by the Governor in November.
+Governor Brown has left an account ascribing the comparative coolness
+and deliberation of the hour to the prevailing impression that President
+Buchanan had pledged himself not to alter the military status at
+Charleston. In an interview between South Carolina representatives and
+the President, the Carolinians understood that such a pledge was given.
+"It was generally understood by the country," says Governor Brown, "that
+such an agreement... had been entered Into... and that Governor Floyd
+of Virginia, then Secretary of War, had expressed his determination
+to resign his position in the Cabinet in case of the refusal of the
+President to carry out the agreement in good faith. The resignation of
+Governor Floyd was therefore naturally looked upon, should it occur,
+as a signal given to the South that reinforcements were to be sent to
+Charleston and that the coercive policy had been adopted by the Federal
+Government."
+
+While the "canvass in Georgia for members of the State convention was
+progressing with much interest on both sides," there came suddenly the
+news that Anderson had transferred his garrison from Fort Moultrie to
+the island fortress of Sumter. That same day commissioners from South
+Carolina, newly arrived at Washington, sought in vain to persuade the
+President to order Anderson back to Moultrie. The Secretary of War made
+the subject an issue before the Cabinet. Unable to carry his point, two
+days later he resigned. *
+
+
+ * The President had already asked for Floyd's resignation
+ because of financial irregularities, and Floyd was shrewd
+ enough to use Anderson's coup as an excuse for resigning.
+ See Rhodes, "History of the United States," vol. II pp. 225,
+ 236 (note).
+
+
+The Georgia Governor, who had not hitherto been in the front rank of
+the aggressives, now struck a great blow. Senator Toombs had telegraphed
+from Washington that Fort Pulaski, guarding the Savannah River, was "in
+danger." The Governor had reached the same conclusion. He mustered the
+state militia and seized Fort Pulaski. Early in the morning on January
+3,1861, the fort was occupied by Georgia troops. Shortly afterward,
+Brown wrote to a commissioner sent by the Governor of Alabama to confer
+with him: "While many of our most patriotic and intelligent citizens in
+both States have doubted the propriety of immediate secession, I feel
+quite confident that recent events have dispelled those doubts from
+the minds of most men who have, till within the past few days, honestly
+sustained them." The first stage of the secession movement was at an
+end; the second had begun.
+
+A belief that Washington had entered upon a policy of aggression swept
+the lower South. The state conventions assembling about this time passed
+ordinances of secession--Mississippi, January 9; Florida, January 10;
+Alabama, January 11; Georgia, January 19; Louisiana, January 26; Texas,
+February 1. But this result was not achieved without considerable
+opposition. In Georgia the Unionists put up a stout fight. The issue
+was not upon the right to secede--virtually no one denied the right--but
+upon the wisdom of invoking the right. Stephens, gloomy and pessimistic,
+led the opposition. Toombs came down from Washington to take part with
+the secessionists. From South Carolina and Alabama, both ceaselessly
+active for secession, commissioners appeared to lobby at Milledgeville,
+as commissioners of Alabama and Mississippi had lobbied at Columbia.
+Besides the out-and-out Unionists, there were those who wanted to
+temporize, to threaten the North, and to wait for developments. The
+motion on which these men and the Unionists made their last stand
+together went against them 164 to 133. Then at last came the square
+question: Shall we secede? Even on this question, the minority
+was dangerously large. Though the temporizers came over to the
+secessionists, and with them came Stephens, there was still a minority
+of 89 irreconcilables against the majority numbering 208.
+
+"My allegiance," said Stephens afterwards, "was, as I considered it, not
+due to the United States, or to the people of the United States, but to
+Georgia, in her sovereign capacity. Georgia had never parted with her
+right to demand the ultimate allegiance of her citizens."
+
+The attempt in Georgia to restrain impetuosity and advance with
+deliberation was paralleled in Alabama, where also the aggressives
+were determined not to permit delay. In the Alabama convention, the
+conservatives brought forward a plan for a general Southern convention
+to be held at Nashville in February. It was rejected by a vote of 54
+to 45. An attempt to delay secession until after the 4th of March was
+defeated by the same vote.
+
+The determination of the radicals to precipitate the issue received
+interesting criticism from the Governor of Texas, old Sam Houston. To a
+commissioner from Alabama who was sent out to preach the cause in Texas
+the Governor wrote, in substance, that since Alabama would not wait to
+consult the people of Texas he saw nothing to discuss at that time, and
+he went on to say:
+
+Recognizing as I do the fact that the sectional tendencies of the Black
+Republican party call for determined constitutional resistance at the
+hands of the united South, I also feel that the million and a half of
+noble-hearted, conservative men who have stood by the South, even to
+this hour, deserve some sympathy and support. Although we have lost the
+day, we have to recollect that our conservative Northern friends cast
+over a quarter of a million more votes against the Black Republicans
+than we of the entire South. I cannot declare myself ready to desert
+them as well as our Southern brethren of the border (and such, I
+believe, will be the sentiment of Texas) until at least one firm attempt
+has been made to preserve our constitutional rights within the Union.
+
+Nevertheless, Houston was not able to control his State. Delegates from
+Texas attended the later sessions of a general Congress of the seceding
+States which, on the invitation of Alabama, met at Montgomery on the 4th
+of February. A contemporary document of singular interest today is the
+series of resolutions adopted by the Legislature of North Carolina,
+setting forth that, as the State was a member of the Federal Union, it
+could not accept the invitation of Alabama but should send delegates
+for the purpose of persuading the South to effect a readjustment on the
+basis of the Crittenden Compromise as modified by the Legislature of
+Virginia. The commissioners were sent, were graciously received, were
+accorded seats in the Congress, but they exerted no influence on the
+course of its action.
+
+The Congress speedily organized a provisional Government for the
+Confederate States of America. The Constitution of the United States,
+rather hastily reconsidered, became with a few inevitable alterations
+the Constitution of the Confederacy. * Davis was unanimously elected
+President; Stephens, Vice-President. Provision was made for raising an
+army. Commissioners were dispatched to Washington to negotiate a treaty
+with the United States; other commissioners were sent to Virginia to
+attempt to withdraw that great commonwealth from the Union.
+
+
+ * To the observer of a later age this document appears a
+ thing of haste. Like the framers of the Constitution of
+ 1787, who omitted from their document some principles which
+ they took for granted, the framers of 1861 left unstated
+ their most distinctive views. The basal idea upon which the
+ revolution proceeded, the right of secession, is not to be
+ found in the new Constitution. Though the preamble declares
+ that the States are acting in their sovereign and
+ independent character, the new Confederation is declared
+ "permanent." In the body of the document are provisions
+ similar to those in the Federal Constitution enabling a
+ majority of two-thirds of the States to amend at their
+ pleasure, thus imposing their will upon the minority. With
+ three notable exceptions the new Constitution, subsequent to
+ the preamble, does little more than restate the Constitution
+ of 1787 rearranged so as to include those basal principles
+ of the English law added to the earlier Constitution by the
+ first eight amendments. The three exceptions are the
+ prohibitions (1) of the payment of bounties, (2) of the
+ levying of duties to promote any one form of industry, and
+ (3) of appropriations for internal improvements. Here was a
+ monument to the battle over these matters in the Federal
+ Congress. As to the mechanism of the new Government it was
+ the same as the old except for a few changes of detail. The
+ presidential term was lengthened to six years and the
+ President was forbidden to succeed himself. The President
+ was given the power to veto items in appropriation bills.
+ The African slave-trade was prohibited.
+
+
+The upper South was thus placed in a painful situation. Its sympathies
+were with the seceding States. Most of its people felt also that if
+coercion was attempted, the issue would become for Virginia and North
+Carolina, no less than for South Carolina and Alabama, simply a matter
+of self-preservation. As early as January, in the exciting days when
+Floyd's resignation was being interpreted as a call to arms, the
+Virginia Legislature had resolved that it would not consent to the
+coercion of a seceding State. In May the Speaker of the North Carolina
+Legislature assured a commissioner from Georgia that North Carolina
+would never consent to the movement of troops "from or across" the State
+to attack a seceding State. But neither Virginia nor North Carolina
+in this second stage of the movement wanted to secede. They wanted to
+preserve the Union, but along with the Union they wanted the principle
+of local autonomy. It was a period of tense anxiety in those States of
+the upper South. The frame of mind of the men who loved the Union but
+who loved equally their own States and were firm for local autonomy is
+summed up in a letter in which Mrs. Robert E. Lee describes the anguish
+of her husband as he confronted the possibility of a divided country.
+
+The real tragedy of the time lay in the failure of the advocates of
+these two great principles--each so necessary to a far-flung democratic
+country in a world of great powers!--the failure to coordinate them
+so as to insure freedom at home and strength abroad. The principle for
+which Lincoln stood has saved Americans in the Great War from playing
+such a trembling part as that of Holland. The principle which seemed
+to Lee even more essential, which did not perish at Appomattox but
+was transformed and not destroyed, is what has kept us from becoming a
+western Prussia. And yet if only it had been possible to coordinate the
+two without the price of war! It was not possible because of the stored
+up bitterness of a quarter century of recrimination. But Virginia made
+a last desperate attempt to preserve the Union by calling the Peace
+Convention. It assembled at Washington the day the Confederate Congress
+met at Montgomery. Though twenty-one States sent delegates, it was no
+more able to effect a working scheme of compromise than was the House
+committee of thirty-three or the Senate committee of thirteen, both of
+which had striven, had failed, and had gone their ways to a place in the
+great company of historic futilities.
+
+And so the Peace Convention came and went, and there was no consolation
+for the troubled men of the upper South who did not want to secede but
+were resolved not to abandon local autonomy. Virginia was the key to the
+situation. If Virginia could be forced into secession, the rest of the
+upper South would inevitably follow. Therefore a Virginia hothead, Roger
+A. Pryor, being in Charleston in those wavering days, poured out his
+heart in fiery words, urging a Charleston crowd to precipitate war, in
+the certainty that Virginia would then have to come to their aid. When
+at last Sumter was fired upon and Lincoln called for volunteers, the
+second stage of the secession movement ended in a thunderclap. The third
+period was occupied by the second group of secessions: Virginia on the
+17th of April, North Carolina and Arkansas during May, Tennessee early
+in June.
+
+Sumter was the turning-point. The boom of the first cannon trained on
+the island fortress deserves all the rhetoric it has inspired. Who was
+immediately responsible for that firing which was destiny? Ultimate
+responsibility is not upon any person. War had to be. If Sumter had not
+been the starting-point, some other would have been found. Nevertheless
+the question of immediate responsibility, of whose word it was that
+served as the signal to begin, has produced an historic controversy.
+
+When it was known at Charleston that Lincoln would attempt to provision
+the fort, the South Carolina authorities referred the matter to
+the Confederate authorities. The Cabinet, in a fateful session at
+Montgomery, hesitated--drawn between the wish to keep their hold upon
+the moderates of the North, who were trying to stave off war, and the
+desire to precipitate Virginia into the lists. Toombs, Secretary of
+State in the new Government, wavered; then seemed to find his resolution
+and came out strong against a demand for surrender. "It is suicide,
+murder, and will lose us every friend at the North.... It is
+unnecessary; it puts us in the wrong; it is fatal," said he. But the
+Cabinet and the President decided to take the risk. To General Pierre
+Beauregard, recently placed in command of the militia assembled at
+Charleston, word was sent to demand the surrender of Fort Sumter.
+
+On Thursday, the 7th of April, besides his instructions from
+Montgomery, Beauregard was in receipt of a telegram from the Confederate
+commissioners at Washington, repeating newspaper statements that the
+Federal relief expedition intended to land a force "which will overcome
+all opposition." There seems no doubt that Beauregard did not believe
+that the expedition was intended merely to provision Sumter. Probably
+every one in Charleston thought that the Federal authorities were trying
+to deceive them, that Lincoln's promise not to do more than provision
+Sumter was a mere blind. Fearfulness that delay might render Sumter
+impregnable lay back of Beauregard's formal demand, on the 11th of
+April, for the surrender of the fort. Anderson refused but "made some
+verbal observations" to the aides who brought him the demand. In effect
+he said that lack of supplies would compel him to surrender by the
+fifteenth. When this information was taken back to the city, eager
+crowds were in the streets of Charleston discussing the report that a
+bombardment would soon begin. But the afternoon passed; night fell; and
+nothing was done. On the beautiful terrace along the sea known as East
+Battery, people congregated, watching the silent fortress whose brick
+walls rose sheer from the midst of the harbor. The early hours of the
+night went by and as midnight approached and still there was no flash
+from either the fortress or the shore batteries which threatened it, the
+crowds broke up.
+
+Meanwhile there was anxious consultation at the hotel where Beauregard
+had fixed his headquarters. Pilots came in from the sea to report to the
+General that a Federal vessel had appeared off the mouth of the harbor.
+This news may well explain the hasty dispatch of a second expedition to
+Sumter in the middle of the night. At half after one, Friday morning,
+four young men, aides of Beauregard, entered the fort. Anderson repeated
+his refusal to surrender at once but admitted that he would have to
+surrender within three days. Thereupon the aides held a council of war.
+They decided that the reply was unsatisfactory and wrote out a brief
+note which they handed to Anderson informing him that the Confederates
+would open "fire upon Fort Sumter in one hour from this time." The note
+was dated 3:20 A.M. The aides then proceeded to Fort Johnston on the
+south side of the harbor and gave the order to fire.
+
+The council of the aides at Sumter is the dramatic detail that has
+caught the imagination of historians and has led them, at least in some
+cases, to yield to a literary temptation. It is so dramatic--that
+scene of the four young men holding in their hands, during a moment
+of absolute destiny, the fate of a people; four young men, in the
+irresponsible ardor of youth, refusing to wait three days and forcing
+war at the instant! It is so dramatic that one cannot judge harshly
+the artistic temper which is unable to reject it. But is the incident
+historic? Did the four young men come to Sumter without definite
+instructions? Was their conference really anything more than a careful
+comparing of notes to make sure they were doing what they were intended
+to do? Is not the real clue to the event a message from Beauregard to
+the Secretary of War telling of his interview with the pilots? *
+
+
+ * A chief authority for the dramatic version of the council
+ of the aides is that fiery Virginian, Roger A. Pryor. He and
+ another accompanied the official messengers, the signers of
+ the note to Anderson, James Chestnut and Stephen Lee. Years
+ afterwards Pryor told the story of the council in a way to
+ establish its dramatic significance. But would there be
+ anything strange if a veteran survivor, looking back to his
+ youth, as all of us do through more or less of mirage
+ yielded to the unconscious artist that is in us all and
+ dramatized this event unaware?
+
+
+Dawn was breaking gray, with a faint rain in the air, when the first
+boom of the cannon awakened the city. Other detonations followed in
+quick succession. Shells rose into the night from both sides of the
+harbor and from floating batteries. How lightly Charleston slept that
+night may be inferred from the accounts in the newspapers. "At the
+report of the first gun," says the Courier, "the city was nearly emptied
+of its inhabitants who crowded the Battery and the wharves to witness
+the conflict."
+
+The East Battery and the lower harbor of the lovely city of Charleston
+have been preserved almost without alteration. What they are today they
+were in the breaking dawn on April 12, 1861. Business has gone up the
+rivers between which Charleston lies and has left the point of the
+city's peninsula, where East Battery looks outward to the Atlantic,
+in its perfect charm. There large houses, pillared, with high piazzas,
+stand apart one from another among gardens. With few exceptions they
+were built before the middle of the century and all, with one exception,
+show the classical taste of those days. The mariner, entering the
+spacious inner sea that is Charleston Harbor, sights this row of stately
+mansions even before he crosses the bar seven miles distant. Holding
+straight onward up into the land he heads first for the famous little
+island where, nowadays, in their halo of thrilling recollection, the
+walls of Sumter, rising sheer from the bosom of the water, drowse idle.
+Close under the lee of Sumter, the incoming steersman brings his ship
+about and chooses, probably, the eastward of two huge tentacles of the
+sea between which lies the city's long but narrow peninsula. To the
+steersman it shows a skyline serrated by steeples, fronted by sea,
+flanked southward by sea, backgrounded by an estuary, and looped about
+by a sickle of wooded islands. This same scene, so far as city and
+nature go, was beheld by the crowds that swarmed East Battery, a
+flagstone marine parade along the seaward side of the boulevard that
+faces Sumter; that filled the windows and even the housetops; that
+watched the bombardment with the eagerness of an audience in an
+amphitheater; that applauded every telling shot with clapping of hands
+and waving of shawls and handkerchiefs. The fort lay distant from
+them about three miles, but only some fifteen hundred yards from Fort
+Johnston on one side and about a mile from Fort Moultrie on the other.
+From both of these latter, the cannon of those days were equal to the
+task of harassing Sumter. Early in the morning of the 12th of April,
+though not until broad day had come, did Anderson make reply. All that
+day, at first under heavily rolling cloud and later through curiously
+misty sunshine, the fire and counterfire continued. "The enthusiasm and
+fearlessness of the spectators," says the Charleston Mercury, "knew no
+bounds." Reckless observers even put out in small boats and roamed about
+the harbor almost under the guns of the fort. Outside the bar, vessels
+of the relieving squadron were now visible, and to these Anderson
+signaled for aid. They made an attempt to reach the fort, but only part
+of the squadron had arrived; and the vessels necessary to raise the
+siege were not there. The attempt ended in failure. When night came, a
+string of rowboats each carrying a huge torch kept watch along the bar
+to guard against surprise from the sea.
+
+On that Friday night the harbor was swept by storm. But in spite of
+torrents of rain East Battery and the rooftops were thronged. "The wind
+was inshore and the booming was startlingly distinct." At the height
+of the bombardment, the sky above Sumter seemed to be filled with the
+flashes of bursting shells. But during this wild night Sumter itself was
+both dark and silent. Its casements did not have adequate lamps and
+the guns could not be used except by day. When morning broke, clear and
+bright after the night's storm, the duel was resumed.
+
+The walls of Sumter were now crumbling. At eight o'clock Saturday
+morning the barracks took fire. Soon after it was perceived from
+the shore that the flag was down. Beauregard at once sent offers of
+assistance. With Sumter in flames above his head, Anderson replied that
+he had not surrendered; he declined assistance; and he hauled up his
+flag. Later in the day the flagstaff was shot in two and again the flag
+fell, and again it was raised. Flames had been kindled anew by red-hot
+shot, and now the magazine was in danger. Quantities of powder were
+thrown into the sea. Still the rain of red-hot shot continued. About
+noon, Saturday, says the Courier, "flames burst out from every quarter
+of Sumter and poured from many of its portholes... the wind was from the
+west driving the smoke across the fort into the embrasures where the
+gunners were at work." Nevertheless, "as if served with a new impulse,"
+the guns of Sumter redoubled their fire. But it was not in human
+endurance to keep on in the midst of the burning fort. This splendid
+last effort was short. At a quarter after one, Anderson ceased firing
+and raised a white flag. Negotiations followed ending in terms of
+surrender--Anderson to be allowed to remove his garrison to the fleet
+lying idle beyond the bar and to salute the flag of the United States
+before taking it down. The bombardment had lasted thirty-two hours
+without a death on either side. The evacuation of the fort was to take
+place next day.
+
+The afternoon of Sunday, the 14th of April, was a gala day in the
+harbor of Charleston. The sunlight slanted across the roofs of the city,
+sparkled upon the sea. Deep and rich the harbor always looks in the
+spring sunshine on bright afternoons. The filmy atmosphere of these
+latitudes, at that time of year, makes the sky above the darkling,
+afternoon sea a pale but luminous turquoise. There is a wonderful soft
+strength in the peaceful brightness of the sun. In such an atmosphere
+the harbor was flecked with brilliantly decked craft of every
+description, all in a flutter of flags and carrying a host of passengers
+in gala dress. The city swarmed across the water to witness the ceremony
+of evacuation. Wherry men did a thriving business carrying passengers to
+the fort.
+
+Anderson withdrew from Sumter shortly after two o'clock amid a salute of
+fifty guns. The Confederates took possession. At half after four a new
+flag was raised above the battered and fire-swept walls.
+
+
+
+Chapter II. The Davis Government
+
+It has never been explained why Jefferson Davis was chosen President
+of the Confederacy. He did not seek the office and did not wish it.
+He dreamed of high military command. As a study in the irony of fate,
+Davis's career is made to the hand of the dramatist. An instinctive
+soldier, he was driven by circumstances three times to renounce the
+profession of arms for a less congenial civilian life. His final
+renunciation, which proved to be of the nature of tragedy, was his
+acceptance of the office of President. Indeed, why the office was given
+to him seems a mystery. Rhett was a more logical candidate. And when
+Rhett, early in the lobbying at Montgomery, was set aside as too much of
+a radical, Toombs seemed for a time the certain choice of the majority.
+The change to Davis came suddenly at the last moment. It was puzzling at
+the time; it is puzzling still.
+
+Rhett, though doubtless bitterly disappointed, bore himself with the
+savoir faire of a great gentleman. At the inauguration, it was on
+Rhett's arm that Davis leaned as he entered the hall of the Confederate
+Congress. The night before, in a public address, Yancey had said that
+the man and the hour were met. The story of the Confederacy is filled
+with dramatic moments, but to the thoughtful observer few are more
+dramatic than the conjunction of these three men in the inauguration of
+the Confederate President. Beneath a surface of apparent unanimity they
+carried, like concealed weapons, points of view that were in deadly
+antagonism. This antagonism had not revealed itself hitherto. It was
+destined to reveal itself almost immediately. It went so deep and spread
+so far that unless we understand it, the Confederate story will be
+unintelligible.
+
+A strange fatality destined all three of these great men to despair.
+Yancey, who was perhaps most directly answerable of the three for the
+existence of the Confederacy, lost influence almost from the moment
+when his dream became established. Davis was partly responsible, for he
+promptly sent him out of the country on the bootless English mission.
+Thereafter, until his death in 1863, Yancey was a waning, overshadowed
+figure, steadily lapsing into the background. It may be that those
+critics are right who say he was only an agitator. The day of the
+mere agitator was gone. Yancey passed rapidly into futile but bitter
+antagonism to Davis. In this attitude he was soon to be matched by
+Rhett.
+
+The discontent of the Rhett faction because their leader was not given
+the portfolio of the State Department found immediate voice. But the
+conclusion drawn by some that Rhett's subsequent course sprang from
+personal vindictiveness is trifling. He was too large a personality,
+too well defined an intellect, to be thus explained. Very probably Davis
+made his first great blunder in failing to propitiate the Rhett faction.
+And yet few things are more certain than that the two men, the two
+factions which they symbolized, could not have formed a permanent
+alliance. Had Rhett entered the Cabinet he could not have remained in
+it consistently for any considerable time. The measures in which,
+presently, the Administration showed its hand were measures in which
+Rhett could not acquiesce. From the start he was predestined to his
+eventual position--the great, unavailing genius of the opposition.
+
+As to the comparative ignoring of these leaders of secession by the
+Government which secession had created, it is often said that the
+explanation is to be found in a generous as well as politic desire
+to put in office the moderates and even the conservatives. Davis,
+relatively, was a moderate. Stephens was a conservative. Many of the
+most pronounced opponents of secession were given places in the
+public service. Toombs, who received the portfolio of State, though a
+secessionist, was conspicuously a moderate when compared with Rhett and
+Yancey. The adroit Benjamin, who became Attorney-General, had few points
+in common with the great extremists of Alabama and South Carolina.
+
+However, the dictum that the personnel of the new Government was a
+triumph for conservatism over radicalism signifies little. There was
+a division among Southerners which scarcely any of them had realized
+except briefly in the premature battle over secession in 1851. It was
+the division between those who were conscious of the region as a whole
+and those who were not. Explain it as you will, there was a moment just
+after the secession movement succeeded when the South seemed to realize
+itself as a whole, when it turned intuitively to those men who, as time
+was to demonstrate, shared this realization. For the moment it turned
+away from those others, however great their part in secession, who
+lacked this sense of unity.
+
+At this point, geography becomes essential. The South fell,
+institutionally, into two grand divisions: one, with an old and firmly
+established social order, where consciousness of the locality went back
+to remote times; another, newly settled, where conditions were still
+fluid, where that sense of the sacredness of local institutions had not
+yet formed.
+
+A typical community of the first-named class was South Carolina. Her
+people had to a remarkable degree been rendered state-conscious
+partly by their geographical neighbors, and partly by their long and
+illustrious history, which had been interwoven with great European
+interests during the colonial era and with great national interests
+under the Republic. It is possible also that the Huguenots, though
+few in numbers, had exercised upon the State a subtle and pervasive
+influence through their intellectual power and their Latin sense for
+institutions.
+
+In South Carolina, too, a wealthy leisure class with a passion for
+affairs had cultivated enthusiastically that fine art which is the pride
+of all aristocratic societies, the service of the State as a profession
+high and exclusive, free from vulgar taint. In South Carolina all things
+conspired to uphold and strengthen the sense of the State as an object
+of veneration, as something over and above the mere social order, as the
+sacred embodiment of the ideals of the community. Thus it is fair to
+say that what has animated the heroic little countries of the Old World
+Switzerland and Serbia and ever-glorious Belgium--with their passion to
+remain themselves, animated South Carolina in 1861. Just as Serbia was
+willing to fight to the death rather than merge her identity in the
+mosaic of the Austrian Empire, so this little American community saw
+nothing of happiness in any future that did not secure its virtual
+independence.
+
+Typical of the newer order in the South was the community that formed
+the President of the Confederacy. In the history of Mississippi previous
+to the war there are six great names--Jacob Thompson, John A. Quitman,
+Henry S. Foote, Robert J. Walker, Sergeant S. Prentiss, and Jefferson
+Davis. Not one of them was born in the State. Thompson was born in
+North Carolina; Quitman in New York; Foote in Virginia; Walker in
+Pennsylvania; Prentiss in Maine; Davis in Kentucky. In 1861 the State
+was but forty-four years old, younger than its most illustrious sons--if
+the paradox may be permitted. How could they think of it as an entity
+existing in itself, antedating not only themselves but their traditions,
+circumscribing them with its all-embracing, indisputable reality? These
+men spoke the language of state rights. It is true that in politics,
+combating the North, they used the political philosophy taught them by
+South Carolina. But it was a mental weapon in political debate; it was
+not for them an emotional fact.
+
+And yet these men of the Southwest had an ideal of their own as vivid
+and as binding as the state ideal of the men of the eastern coast.
+Though half their leaders were born in the North, the people themselves
+were overwhelmingly Southern. From all the older States, all round the
+huge crescent which swung around from Kentucky coastwise to Florida,
+immigration in the twenties and thirties had poured into Mississippi.
+Consequently the new community presented a composite picture of the
+whole South, and like all composite pictures it emphasized only the
+factors common to all its parts. What all the South had in common, what
+made a man a Southerner in the general sense--in distinction from a
+Northerner on the one hand, or a Virginian, Carolinian, Georgian, on
+the other--could have been observed with clearness in Mississippi, just
+before the war, as nowhere else. Therefore, the fulfillment of the ideal
+of Southern life in general terms was the vision of things hoped for by
+the new men of the Southwest. The features of that vision were common
+to them all--country life, broad acres, generous hospitality, an
+aristocratic system. The temperaments of these men were sufficiently
+buoyant to enable them to apprehend this ideal even before it had
+materialized. Their romantic minds could see the gold at the end of
+the rainbow. Theirs was not the pride of administering a well-ordered,
+inherited system, but the joy of building a new system, in their minds
+wholly elastic, to be sure, but still inspired by that old system.
+
+What may be called the sense of Southern nationality as opposed to the
+sense of state rights, strictly speaking, distinguished this brilliant
+young community of the Southwest. In that community Davis spent the
+years that appear to have been the most impressionable of his life.
+Belonging to a "new" family just emerging into wealth, he began life
+as a West Pointer and saw gallant service as a youth on the frontier;
+resigned from the army to pursue a romantic attachment; came home
+to lead the life of a wealthy planter and receive the impress of
+Mississippi; made his entry into politics, still a soldier at heart,
+with the philosophy of state rights on his lips, but in his heart that
+sense of the Southern people as a new nation, which needed only the
+occasion to make it the relentless enemy of the rights of the individual
+Southern States. Add together the instinctive military point of view
+and this Southern nationalism that even in 1861 had scarcely revealed
+itself; join with these a fearless and haughty spirit, proud to the
+verge of arrogance, but perfectly devoted, perfectly sincere; and you
+have the main lines of the political character of Davis when he became
+President. It may be that as he went forward in his great undertaking,
+as antagonisms developed, as Rhett and others turned against him, Davis
+hardened. He lost whatever comprehension he once had of the Rhett type.
+Seeking to weld into one irresistible unit all the military power of the
+South, he became at last in the eyes of his opponents a monster, while
+to him, more and more positively, the others became mere dreamers.
+
+It took about a year for this irrepressible conflict within the
+Confederacy to reveal itself. During the twelve months following Davis's
+election as provisional President, he dominated the situation, though
+the Charleston Mercury, the Rhett organ, found opportunities to be
+sharply critical of the President. He assembled armies; he initiated
+heroic efforts to make up for the handicap of the South in the
+manufacture of munitions and succeeded in starting a number of munition
+plants; though powerless to prevent the establishment of the blockade,
+he was able during that first year to keep in touch with Europe, to
+start out Confederate privateers upon the high seas, and to import a
+considerable quantity of arms and supplies. At the close of the year the
+Confederate armies were approaching general efficiency, for all their
+enormous handicap, almost if not quite as rapidly as were the Union
+armies. And the one great event of the year on land, the first battle of
+Manassas, or Bull Run, was a signal Confederate victory.
+
+To be sure Davis was severely criticized in some quarters for not
+adopting an aggressive policy. The Confederate Government, whether
+wisely or foolishly, had not taken the people into its confidence and
+the lack of munitions was not generally appreciated. The easy popular
+cries were all sounded: "We are standing still!" "The country is being
+invaded!" "The President is a do-nothing!" From the coast regions
+especially, where the blockade was felt in all its severity, the outcry
+was loud.
+
+Nevertheless, the South in the main was content with the Administration
+during most of the first year. In November, when the general elections
+were held, Davis was chosen without opposition as the first regular
+Confederate President for six years, and Stephens became the
+Vice-President. The election was followed by an important change in the
+Southern Cabinet. Benjamin became Secretary of War, in succession to
+the first War Secretary, Leroy P. Walker. Toombs had already left the
+Confederate Cabinet. Complaining that Davis degraded him to the level of
+a mere clerk, he had withdrawn the previous July. His successor in the
+State Department was R. M. T. Hunter of Virginia, who remained in office
+until February, 1862, when his removal to the Confederate Senate opened
+the way for a further advancement of Benjamin.
+
+Richmond, which had been designated as the capital soon after the
+secession of Virginia, was the scene of the inauguration, on February
+22, 1862. Although the weather proved bleak and rainy, an immense crowd
+gathered around the Washington monument, in Capitol Square, to listen
+to the inaugural address. By this time the confidence in the Government,
+which was felt generally at the time of the election, had suffered
+a shock. Foreign affairs were not progressing satisfactorily. Though
+England had accorded to the Confederacy the status of a belligerent,
+this was poor consolation for her refusal to make full recognition of
+the new Government as an independent power. Dread of internal distress
+was increasing. Gold commanded a premium of fifty percent. Disorder was
+a feature of the life in the cities. It was known that several recent
+military events had been victories for the Federals. A rumor was
+abroad that some great disaster had taken place in Tennessee. The crowd
+listened anxiously to hear the rumor denied by the President. But it
+was not denied. The tense listeners noted two sentences which formed an
+admission that the situation was grave: "A million men, it is estimated,
+are now standing in hostile array and waging war along a frontier
+of thousands of miles. Battles have been fought, sieges have been
+conducted, and although the contest is not ended, and the tide for the
+moment is against us, the final result in our favor is not doubtful."
+
+Behind these carefully guarded words lay serious alarm, not only with
+regard to the operations at the front but as to the composition of
+the army. It had been raised under various laws and its portions were
+subject to conflicting classifications; it was partly a group of state
+armies, partly a single Confederate army. None of its members had
+enlisted for long terms. Many enlistments would expire early in 1862.
+The fears of the Confederate Administration with regard to this matter,
+together with its alarm about the events at the front, were expressed by
+Davis in a frank message to the Southern Congress, three days later. "I
+have hoped," said he, "for several days to receive official reports
+in relation to our discomfiture at Roanoke Island and the fall of Fort
+Donelson. They have not yet reached Me.... The hope is still
+entertained that our reported losses at Fort Donelson have been greatly
+exaggerated...." He went on to condemn the policy of enlistments for
+short terms, "against which," said he, "I have steadily contended"; and
+he enlarged upon the danger that even patriotic men, who intended to
+reenlist, might go home to put their affairs in order and that thus, at
+a critical moment, the army might be seriously reduced. The accompanying
+report of the Confederate Secretary of War showed a total in the army of
+340,250 men. This was an inadequate force with which to meet the great
+hosts which were being organized against it in the North. To permit the
+slightest reduction of the army at that moment seemed to the Southern
+President suicidal.
+
+But Davis waited some time longer before proposing to the Confederate
+Congress the adoption of conscription. Meanwhile, the details of
+two great reverses, the loss of Roanoke Island and the loss of Fort
+Donelson, became generally known. Apprehension gathered strength.
+Newspapers began to discuss conscription as something inevitable.
+At last, on March 28, 1862, Davis sent a message to the Confederate
+Congress advising the conscription of all white males between the ages
+of eighteen and thirty-five. For this suggestion Congress was ripe,
+and the first Conscription Act of the Confederacy was signed by the
+President on the 16th of April. The age of eligibility was fixed as
+Davis had advised; the term of service was to be three years; every one
+then in service was to be retained in service during three years from
+the date of his original enlistment.
+
+This statute may be thought of as a great victory on the part of the
+Administration. It was the climax of a policy of centralization in the
+military establishment to which Davis had committed himself by the veto,
+in January, of "A bill to authorize the Secretary of War to receive into
+the service of the Confederate States a regiment of volunteers for the
+protection of the frontier of Texas." This regiment was to be under the
+control of the Governor of the State. In refusing to accept such troops,
+Davis laid down the main proposition upon which he stood as military
+executive to the end of the war, a proposition which immediately set
+debate raging: "Unity and cooperation by the troops of all the States
+are indispensable to success, and I must view with regret this as well
+as all other indications of a purpose to divide the power of States
+by dividing the means to be employed in efforts to carry on separate
+operations."
+
+In these military measures of the early months of 1862 Davis's purpose
+became clear. He was bent upon instituting a strong government, able to
+push the war through, and careless of the niceties of constitutional law
+or of the exact prerogatives of the States. His position was expressed
+in the course of the year by a Virginia newspaper: "It will be time
+enough to distract the councils of the State about imaginary violations
+of constitutional law by the supreme government when our independence is
+achieved, established, and acknowledged. It will not be until then that
+the sovereignty of the States will be a reality." But there were many
+Southerners who could not accept this point of view. The Mercury was
+sharply critical of the veto of the Texas Regiment Bill. In the interval
+between the Texas veto and the passing of the Conscription Act, the
+state convention of North Carolina demanded the return of North Carolina
+volunteers for the defense of their own State. No sooner was the
+Conscription Act passed than its constitutionality was attacked. As
+the Confederacy had no Supreme Court, the question came up before state
+courts. One after another, several state supreme courts pronounced the
+act constitutional and in most of the States the constitutional issue
+was gradually allowed to lapse.
+
+Nevertheless, Davis had opened Pandora's box. The clash between State
+and Confederate authority had begun. An opposition party began to form.
+In this first stage of its definite existence, the opposition made an
+interesting attempt to control the Cabinet. Secretary Benjamin, though
+greatly trusted by the President, seems never to have been a popular
+minister. Congress attempted to load upon Benjamin the blame for Roanoke
+Island and Fort Donelson. In the House a motion was introduced to
+the effect that Benjamin had "not the confidence of the people of the
+Confederate States nor of the army... and that we most respectfully
+request his retirement" from the office of Secretary of War. Friends
+of the Administration tabled the motion. Davis extricated his friend by
+taking advantage of Hunter's retirement and promoting Benjamin to the
+State Department. A month later a congressional committee appointed
+to investigate the affair of Roanoke Island exonerated the officer
+in command and laid the blame on his superiors, including "the late
+Secretary of War."
+
+With Benjamin safe in the Department of State, with the majority in the
+Confederate Congress still fairly manageable, with the Conscription
+Act in force, Davis seemed to be strong enough in the spring of 1862
+to ignore the gathering opposition. And yet there was another measure,
+second only in the President's eyes to the Conscription Act, that was to
+breed trouble. This was the first of the series of acts empowering him
+to suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus. Under this act
+he was permitted to set up martial law in any district threatened with
+invasion. The cause of this drastic measure was the confusion and the
+general demoralization that existed wherever the close approach of
+the enemy created a situation too complex for the ordinary civil
+authorities. Davis made use of the power thus given to him and
+proclaimed martial law in Richmond, in Norfolk, in parts of South
+Carolina, and elsewhere. It was on Richmond that the hand of the
+Administration fell heaviest. The capital was the center of a great
+camp; its sudden and vast increase in population bad been the signal for
+all the criminal class near and far to hurry thither in the hope of a
+new field of spoliation; to deal with this immense human congestion, the
+local police were powerless; every variety of abominable contrivance to
+entrap and debauch men for a price was in brazen operation. The first
+care of the Government under the new law was the cleansing of the
+capital. General John H. Winder, appointed military governor, did the
+job with thoroughness. He closed the barrooms, disarmed the populace,
+and for the time at least swept the city clean of criminals. The
+Administration also made certain political arrests, and even imprisoned
+some extreme opponents of the Government for "offenses not enumerated
+and not cognizable under the regular process of law." Such arrests gave
+the enemies of the Administration another handle against it. As we shall
+see later, the use that Davis made of martial law was distorted by a
+thousand fault-finders and was made the basis of the charge that the
+President was aiming at absolute power.
+
+At the moment, however, Davis was master of the situation. The six
+months following April 1, 1862, were doubtless, from his own point of
+view, the most satisfactory part of his career as Confederate President.
+These months were indeed filled with peril. There was a time when
+McClellan's advance up the Peninsula appeared so threatening that the
+archives of the Government were packed on railway cars prepared for
+immediate removal should evacuation be necessary. There were the other
+great disasters during that year, including the loss of New Orleans. The
+President himself experienced a profound personal sorrow in the death
+of his friend, Albert Sidney Johnston, in the bloody fight at Shiloh. It
+was in the midst of this time that tried men's souls that the Richmond
+Examiner achieved an unenvied immortality for one of its articles on
+the Administration. At a moment when nothing should have been said to
+discredit in any way the struggling Government, it described Davis as
+weak with fear telling his beads in a corner of St. Paul's Church. This
+paper, along with the Charleston Mercury, led the Opposition. Throughout
+Confederate history these two, which were very ably edited, did the
+thinking for the enemies of Davis. We shall meet them time and again.
+
+A true picture of Davis would have shown the President resolute and
+resourceful, at perhaps the height of his powers. He recruited and
+supplied the armies; he fortified Richmond; he sustained the great
+captain whom he had placed in command while McClellan was at the gates.
+When the tide had turned and the Army of the Potomac sullenly withdrew,
+baffled, there occurred the one brief space in Confederate history that
+was pure sunshine. In this period took place the splendid victory of
+Second Manassas. The strong military policy of the Administration
+had given the Confederacy powerful armies. Lee had inspired them with
+victory. This period of buoyant hope culminated in the great offensive
+design which followed Second Manassas. It was known that the Northern
+people, or a large part of them, had suffered a reaction; the tide
+was setting strong against the Lincoln Government; in the autumn, the
+Northern elections would be held. To influence those elections and at
+the same time to drive the Northern armies back into their own section;
+to draw Maryland and Kentucky into the Confederate States; to fall upon
+the invaders in the Southwest and recover the lower Mississippi--to
+accomplish all these results was the confident expectation of the
+President and his advisers as they planned their great triple offensive
+in August, 1862. Lee was to invade Maryland; Bragg was to invade
+Kentucky; Van Dorn was to break the hold of the Federals in the
+Southwest. If there is one moment that is to be considered the climax
+of Davis's career, the high-water mark of Confederate hope, it was the
+moment of joyous expectation when the triple offensive was launched,
+when Lee's army, on a brilliant autumn day, crossed the Potomac, singing
+"Maryland, my Maryland".
+
+
+
+Chapter III. The Fall Of King Cotton
+
+While the Confederate Executive was building up its military
+establishment, the Treasury was struggling with the problem of
+paying for it. The problem was destined to become insoluble. From the
+vantage-point of a later time we can now see that nothing could have
+provided a solution short of appropriation and mobilization of the whole
+industrial power of the country along with the whole military power--a
+conscription of wealth of every kind together with conscription of men.
+But in 1862 such an idea was too advanced for any group of Americans.
+Nor, in that year, was there as yet any certain evidence that the
+Treasury was facing an impossible situation. Its endeavors were taken
+lightly--at first, almost gaily-because of the profound illusion which
+permeated Southern thought that Cotton was King. Obviously, if the
+Southern ports could be kept open and cotton could continue to go to
+market, the Confederate financial problem was not serious. When Davis,
+soon after his first inauguration, sent Yancey, Rost, and Mann as
+commissioners to Europe to press the claims of the Confederacy for
+recognition, very few Southerners had any doubt that the blockade,
+would be short-lived. "Cotton is King" was the answer that silenced all
+questions. Without American cotton the English mills would have to shut
+down; the operatives would starve; famine and discontent would between
+them force the British ministry to intervene in American affairs. There
+were, indeed, a few far-sighted men who perceived that this confidence
+was ill-based and that cotton, though it was a power in the financial
+world, was not the commercial king. The majority of the population,
+however, had to learn this truth from keen experience.
+
+Several events of 1861 for a time seemed to confirm this illusion. The
+Queen's proclamation in the spring, giving the Confederacy the status of
+a belligerent, and, in the autumn, the demand by the British Government
+for the surrender of the commissioners, Mason and Slidell, who had been
+taken from a British packet by a Union cruiser--both these events seemed
+to indicate active British sympathy. In England, to be sure, Yancey
+became disillusioned. He saw that the international situation was not so
+simple as it seemed; that while the South had powerful friends abroad,
+it also had powerful foes; that the British anti-slavery party was
+a more formidable enemy than he had expected it to be; and that
+intervention was not a foregone conclusion. The task of an unrecognized
+ambassador being too annoying for him, Yancey was relieved at his own
+request and Mason was sent out to take his place. A singular little
+incident like a dismal prophecy occurred as Yancey was on his way home.
+He passed through Havana early in 1862, when the news of the surrender
+of Fort Donelson had begun to stagger the hopes and impair the prestige
+of the Confederates. By the advice of the Confederate agent in Cuba,
+Yancey did not call on the Spanish Governor but sent him word that
+"delicacy alone prompted his departure without the gratification of
+a personal interview." The Governor expressed himself as "exceedingly
+grateful for the noble sentiment which prevented" Yancey from causing
+international complications at Havana.
+
+The history of the first year of Confederate foreign affairs is
+interwoven with the history of Confederate finance. During that year the
+South became a great buyer in Europe. Arms, powder, cloth, machinery,
+medicines, ships, a thousand things, had all to be bought abroad. To
+establish the foreign credit of the new Government was the arduous task
+of the Confederate Secretary of the Treasury, Christopher G. Memminger.
+The first great campaign of the war was not fought by armies. It was
+a commercial campaign fought by agents of the Federal and Confederate
+governments and having for its aim the cornering of the munitions market
+in Europe. In this campaign the Federal agents had decisive advantages:
+their credit was never questioned, and their enormous purchases were
+never doubtful ventures for the European sellers. In some cases their
+superior credit enabled them to overbid the Confederate agents and to
+appropriate large contracts which the Confederates had negotiated but
+which they could not hold because of the precariousness of their credit.
+And yet, all things considered, the Confederate agents made a good
+showing. In the report of the Secretary of War in February, 1862, the
+number of rifles contracted for abroad was put at 91,000, of which
+15,000 had been delivered. The chief reliance of the Confederate
+Treasury for its purchases abroad was at first the specie in the
+Southern branch of the United States Mint and in Southern banks. The
+former the Confederacy seized and converted to its own use. Of the
+latter it lured into its own hands a very large proportion by what is
+commonly called "the fifteen million loan"--an issue of eight percent
+bonds authorized in February, 1861. Most of this specie seems to have
+been taken out of the country by the purchase of European commodities. A
+little, to be sure, remained, for there was some gold still at home when
+the Confederacy fell. But the sum was small.
+
+In addition to this loan Memminger also persuaded Congress on August 19,
+1861, to lay a direct tax--the "war tax," as it was called--of one-half
+of one per cent on all property except Confederate bonds and money. As
+required by the Constitution this tax was apportioned among the States,
+but if it assumed its assessment before April 1, 1862, each State was to
+have a reduction of ten per cent. As there was a general aversion to
+the idea of Confederate taxation and a general faith in loans, what the
+States did, as a rule, was to assume their assessment, agree to pay it
+into the Treasury, and then issue bonds to raise the necessary funds,
+thus converting the war tax into a loan.
+
+The Confederate, like the Union, Treasury did not have the courage to
+force the issue upon taxation and leaned throughout the war largely upon
+loans. It also had recourse to the perilous device of paper money, the
+gold value of which was not guaranteed. Beginning in March, 1861, it
+issued under successive laws great quantities of paper notes, some of
+them interest bearing, some not. It used these notes in payment of its
+domestic obligations. The purchasing value of the notes soon started
+on a disastrous downward course, and in 1864 the gold dollar was worth
+thirty paper dollars. The Confederate Government thus became involved in
+a problem of self-preservation that was but half solved by the system of
+tithes and impressment which we shall encounter later. The depreciation
+of these notes left governmental clerks without adequate salaries and
+soldiers without the means of providing for their families. During most
+of the war, women and other noncombatants had to support the families or
+else rely upon local charity organized by state or county boards.
+
+Long before all the evils of paper money were experienced, the North,
+with great swiftness, concentrated its naval forces so as to dominate
+the Southern ports which had trade relations with Europe. The shipping
+ports were at once congested with cotton to the great embarrassment of
+merchants and planters. Partly to relieve them, the Confederate Congress
+instituted in May, 1861, what is known today as "the hundred million
+loan." It was the first of a series of "produce loans." The Treasury was
+authorized to issue eight percent bonds, to fall due in twenty
+years, and to sell them for specie or to exchange them for produce or
+manufactured articles. In the course of the remaining months of 1861
+there were exchanged for these bonds great quantities of produce
+including some 400,000 bales of cotton.
+
+In spite of the distress of the planters, however, the illusion of King
+Cotton's power does not seem to have been seriously impaired during
+1861. In fact, strange as it now seems, the frame of mind of the leaders
+appears to have been proof, that year, against alarm over the blockade.
+For two reasons, the Confederacy regarded the blockade at first as a
+blessing in disguise. It was counted on to act as a protective tariff
+in stimulating manufactures; and at the same time the South expected
+interruption of the flow of cotton towards Europe to make England feel
+her dependence upon the Confederacy. In this way there would be exerted
+an economic coercion which would compel intervention. Such reasoning
+lay behind a law passed in May forbidding the export of cotton except
+through the seaports of the Confederacy. Similar laws were enacted by
+the States. During the summer, many cotton factors joined in advising
+the planters to hold their cotton until the blockade broke down. In the
+autumn, the Governor of Louisiana forbade the export of cotton from New
+Orleans. So unshakeable was the illusion in 1861, that King Cotton had
+England in his grip! The illusion died hard. Throughout 1862, and even
+in 1863, the newspapers published appeals to the planters to give up
+growing cotton for a time, and even to destroy what they had, so as to
+coerce the obdurate Englishmen.
+
+Meanwhile, Mason had been accorded by the British upper classes that
+generous welcome which they have always extended to the representative,
+of a people fighting gallantly against odds. During the hopeful days of
+1862--that Golden Age of Confederacy--Mason, though not recognized by
+the English Government, was shown every kindness by leading members of
+the aristocracy, who visited him in London and received him at their
+houses in the country. It was during this period of buoyant hope that
+the Alabama was allowed to go to sea from Liverpool in July, 1862. At
+the same time Mason heard his hosts express undisguised admiration for
+the valor of the soldiers serving under Jackson and Lee. Whether he
+formed any true impression of the other side of British idealism, its
+resolute opposition to slavery, may be questioned. There seems little
+doubt that he did not perceive the turning of the tide of English public
+opinion, in the autumn of 1862, following the Emancipation Proclamation
+and the great reverses of September and October--Antietam-Sharpsburg,
+Perryville, Corinth--the backflow of all three of the Confederate
+offensives.
+
+The cotton famine in England, where perhaps a million people were in
+actual want through the shutting down of cotton mills, seemed to Mason
+to be "looming up in fearful proportions." "The public mind," he wrote
+home in November, 1862, "is very much disturbed by the prospect for the
+winter; and I am not without hope that it will produce its effects on
+the councils of the government." Yet it was the uprising of the British
+working people in favor of the North that contributed to defeat the one
+important attempt to intervene in American affairs. Napoleon III
+had made an offer of mediation which was rejected by the Washington
+Government early the next year. England and Russia had both declined to
+participate in Napoleon's scheme, and their refusal marks the beginning
+of the end of the reign of King Cotton.
+
+At Paris, Slidell was even more hopeful than Mason. He had won over
+Emile Erlanger, that great banker who was deep in the confidence of
+Napoleon. So cordial became the relations between the two that it
+involved their families and led at last to the marriage of Erlanger's
+son with Slidell's daughter. Whether owing to Slidell's eloquence,
+or from secret knowledge of the Emperor's designs, or from his own
+audacity, Erlanger toward the close of 1862 made a proposal that is one
+of the most daring schemes of financial plunging yet recorded. If the
+Confederate Government would issue to him bonds secured by cotton,
+Erlanger would underwrite the bonds, put the proceeds of their sale to
+the credit of the Confederate agents, and wait for the cotton until
+it could run the blockade or until peace should be declared. The
+Confederate Government after some hesitation accepted his plan and
+issued fifteen millions of "Erlanger bonds," bearing seven percent, and
+put them on sale at Paris, London. Amsterdam, and Frankfort.
+
+As a purchaser of these bonds was to be given cotton eventually at a
+valuation of sixpence a pound, and as cotton was then selling in
+England for nearly two shillings; the bold gamble caught the fancy of
+speculators. There was a rush to take up the bonds and to pay the first
+installment. But before the second installment became due a mysterious
+change in the market took place and the price of the bonds fell. Holders
+became alarmed and some even proposed to forfeit their bonds rather
+than pay on May 1, 1863, the next installment of fifteen percent of the
+purchase money. Thereupon Mason undertook to "bull" the market. Agents
+of the United States Government were supposed to be at the bottom of the
+drop in the bonds. To defeat their schemes the Confederate agents bought
+back large amounts in bonds intending to resell. The result was the
+expenditure of some six million dollars with practically no effect on
+the market. These "Erlanger bonds" sold slowly through 1863 and even
+in 1864, and netted a considerable amount to the foreign agents of the
+Confederacy.
+
+The comparative failure of the Erlanger loan marks the downfall of King
+Cotton. He was an exploded superstition. He was unable, despite the
+cotton famine, to coerce the English workingmen into siding with a
+country which they regarded, because of its support of slavery, as
+inimical to their interests. At home, the Government confessed the
+powerlessness of King Cotton by a change of its attitude toward export.
+During the latter part of the war, the Government secured the meager
+funds at its disposal abroad by rushing cotton in swift ships through
+the blockade. So important did this traffic become that the Confederacy
+passed stringent laws to keep the control in its own hands. One more
+cause of friction between the Confederate and the State authorities was
+thus developed: the Confederate navigation laws prevented the States
+from running the blockade on their own account.
+
+The effects of the blockade were felt at the ends of the earth. India
+became an exporter of cotton. Egypt also entered the competition. That
+singular dreamer, Ismail Pasha, whose reign made Egypt briefly an exotic
+nation, neither eastern nor western, found one of his opportunities in
+the American War and the failure of the cotton supply.
+
+
+
+Chapter IV. The Reaction Against Richmond
+
+A popular revulsion of feeling preceded and followed the great period of
+Confederate history--these six months of Titanic effort which embraced
+between March and September, 1862, splendid success along with
+catastrophes. But there was a marked difference between the two tides of
+popular emotion. The wave of alarm which swept over the South after
+the surrender of Fort Donelson was quickly translated into such a high
+passion for battle that the march of events until the day of Antietam
+resounded like an epic. The failure of the triple offensive which closed
+this period was followed in very many minds by the appearance of a new
+temper, often as valiant as the old but far more grim and deeply seamed
+with distrust. And how is this distrust, of which the Confederate
+Administration was the object, to be accounted for?
+
+Various answers to this question were made at the time. The laws of
+the spring of 1862 were attacked as unconstitutional. Davis was held
+responsible for them and also for the slow equipment of the army.
+Because the Confederate Congress conducted much of its business in
+secret session, the President was charged with a love of mystery and an
+unwillingness to take the people into his confidence. Arrests under
+the law suspending the writ of habeas corpus were made the texts for
+harangues on liberty. The right of freedom of speech was dragged in
+when General Van Dorn, in the Southwest, threatened with suppression
+any newspaper that published anything which might impair confidence in
+a commanding officer. How could he have dared to do this, was the cry,
+unless the President was behind him? And when General Bragg assumed a
+similar attitude toward the press, the same cry was raised. Throughout
+the summer of victories, even while the thrilling stories of Seven
+Pines, the Peninsula, Second Manassas, were sounding like trumpets,
+these mutterings of discontent formed an ominous accompaniment.
+
+Yancey, speaking of the disturbed temper of the time, attributed it to
+the general lack of information on the part of Southern people as to
+what the Confederate Government was doing. His proposed remedy was an
+end of the censorship which that Government was attempting to maintain,
+the abandonment of the secret sessions of its Congress, and the taking
+of the people into its full confidence. Now a Senator from Alabama, he
+attempted, at the opening of the congressional session in the autumn
+of 1862, to abolish secret sessions, but in his efforts he was not
+successful.
+
+There seems little doubt that the Confederate Government had blundered
+in being too secretive. Even from Congress, much information was
+withheld. A curious incident has preserved what appeared to the military
+mind the justification of this reticence. The Secretary of War refused
+to comply with a request for information, holding that he could not do
+so "without disclosing the strength of our armies to many persons of
+subordinate position whose secrecy cannot be relied upon." "I beg leave
+to remind you," said he, "of a report made in response to a similar one
+from the Federal Congress, communicated to them in secret session, and
+now a part of our archives."
+
+How much the country was in the dark with regard to some vital matters
+is revealed by an attack on the Confederate Administration which was
+made by the Charleston Mercury, in February. The Southern Government was
+accused of unpardonable slowness in sending agents to Europe to purchase
+munitions. In point of fact, the Confederate Government had been more
+prompt than the Union Government in rushing agents abroad. But the
+country was not permitted to know this. Though the Courier was a
+government organ in Charleston, it did not meet the charges of the
+Mercury by disclosing the facts about the arduous attempts of the
+Confederate Government to secure arms in Europe. The reply of the
+Courier to the Mercury, though spirited, was all in general terms. "To
+shake confidence in Jefferson Davis," said the Courier, "is... to
+bring 'hideous ruin and combustion' down upon our dearest hopes and
+interests." It made "Mr. Davis and his defensive policy" objects of all
+admiration; called Davis "our Moses." It was deeply indignant because it
+had been "reliably informed that men of high official position among
+us" were "calling for a General Convention of the Confederate States
+to depose him and set up a military Dictator in his place." The Mercury
+retorted that, as to the plot against "our Moses," there was no evidence
+of its existence except the Courier's assertion. Nevertheless, it
+considered Davis "an incubus to the cause." The controversy between the
+Mercury and the Courier at Charleston was paralleled at Richmond by the
+constant bickering between the government organ, the Enquirer, and
+the Examiner, which shares with the Mercury the first place among the
+newspapers hostile to Davis. *
+
+
+ * The Confederate Government did not misapprehend the
+ attitude of the intellectual opposition. Its foreign organ,
+ The Index, published in London, characterized the leading
+ Southern papers for the enlightenment of the British public.
+ While the Enquirer and the Courier were singled out as the
+ great champions of the Confederate Government, the Examiner
+ and the Mercury were portrayed as its arch enemies. The
+ Examiner was called the "Ishmael of the Southern press." The
+ Mercury was described as "almost rabid on the subject of
+ state rights."
+
+
+Associated with the Examiner was a vigorous writer having considerable
+power of the old-fashioned, furious sort, ever ready to foam at the
+mouth. If he had had more restraint and less credulity, Edward A.
+Pollard might have become a master of the art of vituperation. Lacking
+these qualities, he never rose far above mediocrity. But his fury was
+so determined and his prejudice so invincible that his writings have
+something of the power of conviction which fanaticism wields. In
+midsummer, 1862, Pollard published a book entitled The First Year of
+the War, which was commended by his allies in Charleston as showing
+no "tendency toward unfairness of statement" and as expressing views
+"mainly in accordance with popular opinion."
+
+This book, while affecting to be an historical review, was skillfully
+designed to discredit the Confederate Administration. Almost every
+disaster, every fault of its management was traceable more or less
+directly to Davis. Kentucky had been occupied by the Federal army
+because of the "dull expectation" in which the Confederate Government
+had stood aside waiting for things somehow to right themselves. The
+Southern Congress had been criminally slow in coming to conscription,
+contenting itself with an army of 400,000 men that existed "on paper."
+"The most distressing abuses were visible in the ill-regulated hygiene
+of our camps." According to this book, the Confederate Administration
+was solely to blame for the loss of Roanoke Island. In calling that
+disaster "deeply humiliating," as he did in a message to Congress,
+Davis was trying to shield his favorite Benjamin at the cost of gallant
+soldiers who had been sacrificed through his incapacity. Davis's
+promotion of Benjamin to the State Department was an act of "ungracious
+and reckless defiance of popular sentiment." The President was "not the
+man to consult the sentiment and wisdom of the people; he desired to
+signalize the infallibility of his own intellect in every measure of
+the revolution and to identify, from motives of vanity, his own personal
+genius with every event and detail of the remarkable period of history
+in which he had been called upon to act. This imperious conceit seemed
+to swallow up every other idea in his mind." The generals "fretted
+under this pragmatism" of one whose "vanity" directed the war "from his
+cushioned seat in Richmond" by means of the one formula, "the defensive
+policy."
+
+One of Pollard's chief accusations against the Confederate Government
+was its failure to enforce the conscription law. His paper, the
+Examiner, as well as the Mercury, supported Davis in the policy of
+conscription, but both did their best, first, to rob him of the
+credit for it and, secondly, to make his conduct of the policy appear
+inefficient. Pollard claimed for the Examiner the credit of having
+originated the policy of conscription; the Mercury claimed it for Rhett.
+
+In other words, an aggressive war party led by the Examiner and the
+Mercury had been formed in those early days when the Confederate
+Government appeared to be standing wholly on the defensive, and when it
+had failed to confide to the people the extenuating circumstance that
+lack of arms compelled it to stand still whether it would or no. And
+yet, after this Government had changed its policy and had taken up in
+the summer of 1862 an offensive policy, this party--or faction, or what
+you will--continued its career of opposition. That the secretive habit
+of the Confederate Government helped cement the opposition cannot be
+doubted. It is also likely that this opposition gave a vent to certain
+jealous spirits who had missed the first place in leadership.
+
+Furthermore, the issue of state sovereignty had been raised. In
+Georgia a movement had begun which was distinctly different from the
+Virginia-Carolina movement of opposition, a movement for which Rhett
+and Pollard had scarcely more than disdainful tolerance, and not always
+that. This parallel opposition found vent, as did the other, in a
+political pamphlet. On the subject of conscription Davis and the
+Governor of Georgia--that same Joseph E. Brown who had seized Fort
+Pulaski in the previous year--exchanged a rancorous correspondence.
+Their letters were published in a pamphlet of which Pollard said
+scornfully that it was hawked about in every city of the South. Brown,
+taking alarm at the power given the Confederate Government by the
+Conscription Act, eventually defined his position, and that of a large
+following, in the extreme words: "No act of the Government of the United
+States prior to the secession of Georgia struck a blow at constitutional
+liberty so fell as has been stricken by the conscript acts."
+
+There were other elements of discontent which were taking form as early
+as the autumn of 1862 but which were not yet clearly defined. But the
+two obvious sources of internal criticism just described were enough
+to disquiet the most resolute administration. When the triple offensive
+broke down, when the ebb-tide began, there was already everything that
+was needed to precipitate a political crisis. And now the question
+arises whether the Confederate Administration had itself to blame. Had
+Davis proved inadequate in his great undertaking?
+
+The one undeniable mistake of the Government previous to the autumn of
+1862 was its excessive secrecy. As to the other mistakes attributed to
+it at the time, there is good reason to call them misfortunes. Today
+we can see that the financial situation, the cotton situation, the
+relations with Europe, the problem of equipping the armies, were all to
+a considerable degree beyond the control of the Confederate Government.
+If there is anything to be added to its mistaken secrecy as a definite
+cause of irritation, it must be found in the general tone given to its
+actions by its chief directors. And here there is something to be said.
+
+With all his high qualities of integrity, courage, faithfulness, and
+zeal, Davis lacked that insight into human life which marks the genius
+of the supreme executive. He was not an artist in the use of men. He had
+not that artistic sense of his medium which distinguishes the
+statesman from the bureaucrat. In fact, he had a dangerous bent toward
+bureaucracy. As Reuben Davis said of him, "Gifted with some of the
+highest attributes of a statesman, he lacked the pliancy which enables a
+man to adapt his measures to the crisis." Furthermore, he lacked humor;
+there was no safety-valve to his intense nature; and he was a man
+of delicate health. Mrs. Davis, describing the effects which nervous
+dyspepsia and neuralgia had upon him, says he would come home from
+his office "fasting, a mere mass of throbbing nerves, and perfectly
+exhausted." And it cannot be denied that his mind was dogmatic. Here
+are dangerous lines for the character of a leader of revolution--the
+bureaucratic tendency, something of rigidity, lack of humor, physical
+wretchedness, dogmatism. Taken together, they go far toward explaining
+his failure in judging men, his irritable confidence in himself.
+
+It is no slight detail of a man's career to be placed side by side with
+a genius of the first rank without knowing it. But Davis does not seem
+ever to have appreciated that the man commanding in the Seven Days'
+Battles was one of the world's supreme characters. The relation between
+Davis and Lee was always cordial, and it brought out Davis's character
+in its best light. Nevertheless, so rooted was Davis's faith in his own
+abilities that he was capable of saying, at a moment of acutest anxiety,
+"If I could take one wing and Lee the other, I think we could between
+us wrest a victory from those people." And yet, his military experience
+embraced only the minor actions of a young officer on the Indian
+frontier and the gallant conduct of a subordinate in the Mexican War. He
+had never executed a great military design. His desire for the military
+life was, after all, his only ground for ranking himself with the victor
+of Second Manassas. Davis was also unfortunate in lacking the power
+to overcome men and sweep them along with him--the power Lee showed
+so conspicuously. Nor was Davis averse to sharp reproof of the highest
+officials when he thought them in the wrong. He once wrote to Joseph
+E. Johnston that a letter of his contained "arguments and statements
+utterly unfounded" and "insinuations as unfounded as they were
+unbecoming."
+
+Davis was not always wise in his choice of men. His confidence in
+Bragg, who was long his chief military adviser, is not sustained by
+the military critics of a later age. His Cabinet, though not the
+contemptible body caricatured by the malice of Pollard, was not equal
+to the occasion. Of the three men who held the office of Secretary of
+State, Toombs and Hunter had little if any qualification for such a
+post, while the third, Benjamin, is the sphinx of Confederate history.
+
+In a way, Judah P. Benjamin is one of the most interesting men in
+American politics. By descent a Jew, born in the West Indies, he spent
+his boyhood mainly at Charleston and his college days at Yale. He went
+to New Orleans to begin his illustrious career as a lawyer, and from
+Louisiana entered politics. The facile keenness of his intellect is
+beyond dispute. He had the Jewish clarity of thought, the wonderful
+Jewish detachment in matters of pure mind. But he was also an American
+of the middle of the century. His quick and responsive nature--a
+nature that enemies might call simulative--caught and reflected the
+characteristics of that singular and highly rhetorical age. He lives in
+tradition as the man of the constant smile, and yet there is no one in
+history whose state papers contain passages of fiercer violence in days
+of tension. How much of his violence was genuine, how much was a manner
+of speaking, his biographers have not had the courage to determine. Like
+so many American biographers they have avoided the awkward questions and
+have glanced over, as lightly as possible, the persistent attempts of
+Congress to drive him from office.
+
+Nothing could shake the resolution of Davis to retain Benjamin in the
+Cabinet. Among Davis's loftiest qualities was his sense of personal
+loyalty. Once he had given his confidence, no amount of opposition
+could shake his will but served rather to harden him. When Benjamin as
+Secretary of War passed under a cloud, Davis led him forth resplendent
+as Secretary of State. Whether he was wise in doing so, whether the
+opposition was not justified in its distrust of Benjamin, is still an
+open question. What is certain is that both these able men, even before
+the crisis that arose in the autumn of 1862, had rendered themselves and
+their Government widely unpopular. It must never be forgotten that Davis
+entered office without the backing of any definite faction. He was a
+"dark horse," a compromise candidate. To build up a stanch following, to
+create enthusiasm for his Administration, was a prime necessity of
+his first year as President. Yet he seems not to have realized this
+necessity. Boldly, firmly, dogmatically, he gave his whole thought and
+his entire energy to organizing the Government in such a way that it
+could do its work efficiently. And therein may have been the proverbial
+rift within the lute. To Davis statecraft was too much a thing of
+methods and measures, too little a thing of men and passions.
+
+During the autumn of 1862 and the following winter the disputes over
+the conduct of the war began to subside and two other themes became
+prominent: the sovereignty of the States, which appeared to be menaced
+by the Government, and the personality of Davis, whom malcontents
+regarded as a possible despot. Contrary to tradition, the first note
+of alarm over state rights was not struck by its great apostle Rhett,
+although the note was sounded in South Carolina in the early autumn.
+There existed in this State at that time an extra assembly called the
+"Convention," which had been organized in 1860 for the general purpose
+of seeing the State through the "revolution." In the Convention,
+in September, 1862, the question of a contest with the Confederate
+Government on the subject of a state army was definitely raised. It was
+proposed to organize a state army and to instruct the Legislature
+to "take effectual measures to prevent the agents of the Confederate
+Government from raising troops in South Carolina except by voluntary
+enlistment or by applying to the Executive of the State to call out the
+militia as by law organized, or some part of it to be mustered into the
+Confederate service." This proposal brought about a sharp debate
+upon the Confederate Government and its military policy. Rhett made a
+remarkable address, which should of itself quiet forever the old
+tale that he was animated in his opposition solely by the pique of
+a disappointed candidate for the presidency. Though as sharp as ever
+against the Government and though agreeing wholly with the spirit of
+the state army plan, he took the ground that circumstances at the moment
+rendered the organization of such an army inopportune. A year earlier he
+would have strongly supported the plan. In fact, in opposition to Davis
+he had at that time, he said, urged an obligatory army which the States
+should be required to raise. The Confederate Administration, however,
+had defeated his scheme. Since then the situation had changed and had
+become so serious that now there was no choice but to submit to military
+necessity. He regarded the general conscription law as "absolutely
+necessary to save" the Confederacy "from utter devastation if not final
+subjugation. Right or wrong, the policy of the Administration had left
+us no other alternative...."
+
+The dominant attitude in South Carolina in the autumn of 1862 is in
+strong contrast, because of its firm grasp upon fact, with the attitude
+of the Brown faction in Georgia. An extended history of the Confederate
+movement--one of those vast histories that delight the recluse and scare
+away the man of the world--would labor to build up images of what might
+be called the personalities of the four States that continued from
+the beginning to the end parts of the effective Confederate
+system--Virginia, the two Carolinas, and Georgia. We are prone to forget
+that the Confederacy was practically divided into separate units as
+early as the capture of New Orleans by Farragut, but a great history of
+the time would have a special and thrilling story of the conduct of the
+detached western unit, the isolated world of Louisiana, Arkansas, and
+Texas--the "Department of the Trans-Mississippi"--cut off from the main
+body of the Confederacy and hemmed in between the Federal army and
+the deep sea. Another group of States--Tennessee, Mississippi,
+Alabama--became so soon, and remained so long, a debatable land, on
+which the two armies fought, that they also had scant opportunity for
+genuine political life. Florida, small and exposed, was absorbed in its
+gallant achievement of furnishing to the armies a number of soldiers
+larger than its voting population.
+
+Thus, after the loss of New Orleans, one thing with another operated
+to confine the area of full political life to Virginia and her three
+neighbors to the South. And yet even among these States there was no
+political solidarity or unanimity of opinion, for the differences in
+their past experience, social structure, and economic conditions made
+for distinct points of view. In South Carolina, particularly, the
+prevailing view was that of experienced, disillusioned men who realized
+from the start that secession had burnt their bridges, and that now they
+must win the fight or change the whole current of their lives. In the
+midst of the extraordinary conditions of war, they never talked as if
+their problems were the problems of peace. Brown, on the other hand,
+had but one way of reasoning--if we are to call it reasoning--and, with
+Hannibal at the gates, talked as if the control of the situation were
+still in his own hands.
+
+While South Carolina, so grimly conscious of the reality of war and
+the danger of internal discord, held off from the issue of state
+sovereignty, the Brown faction in Georgia blithely pressed it home. A
+bill for extending the conscription age which was heartily advocated
+by the Mercury was as heartily condemned by Brown. To the President he
+wrote announcing his continued opposition to a law which he declared
+"encroaches upon the reserved rights of the State and strikes down
+her sovereignty at a single blow." Though the Supreme Court of Georgia
+pronounced the conscription acts constitutional, the Governor and his
+faction did not cease to condemn them. Linton Stephens, as well as his
+famous kinsman, took up the cudgels. In a speech before the Georgia
+Legislature, in November, Linton Stephens borrowed almost exactly the
+Governor's phraseology in denying the necessity for conscription, and
+this continued to be the note of their faction throughout the war.
+"Conscription checks enthusiasm," was ever their cry; "we are invincible
+under a system of volunteering, we are lost with conscription."
+
+Meanwhile the military authorities looked facts in the face and had a
+different tale to tell. They complained that in various parts of the
+country, especially in the mountain districts, they were unable to
+obtain men. Lee reported that his army melted away before his eye and
+asked for an increase of authority to compel stragglers to return. At
+the same time Brown was quarreling with the Administration as to who
+should name the officers of the Georgia troops. Zebulon B. Vance, the
+newly elected Governor of North Carolina and an anti-Davis man, said
+to the Legislature: "It is mortifying to find entire brigades of North
+Carolina soldiers commanded by strangers, and in many cases our own
+brave and war-worn colonels are made to give place to colonels from
+distant States." In addition to such indications of discontent a vast
+mass of evidence makes plain the opposition to conscription toward the
+close of 1862 and the looseness of various parts of the military system.
+
+It was a moment of intense excitement and of nervous strain. The country
+was unhappy, for it had lost faith in the Government at Richmond. The
+blockade was producing its effect. European intervention was receding
+into the distance. One of the characteristics of the editorials and
+speeches of this period is a rising tide of bitterness against England.
+Napoleon's proposal in November to mediate, though it came to naught,
+somewhat revived the hope of an eventual recognition of the Confederacy
+but did not restore buoyancy to the people of the South. The
+Emancipation Proclamation, though scoffed at as a cry of impotence, none
+the less increased the general sense of crisis.
+
+Worst of all, because of its immediate effect upon the temper of the
+time, food was very scarce and prices had risen to indefensible heights.
+The army was short of shoes. In the newspapers, as winter came on, were
+to be found touching descriptions of Lee's soldiers standing barefoot in
+the snow. A flippant comment of Benjamin's, that the shoes had probably
+been traded for whiskey, did not tend to improve matters. Even though
+short of supplies themselves, the people as a whole eagerly subscribed
+to buy shoes for the army.
+
+There was widespread and heartless speculation in the supplies.
+Months previous the Courier had made this ominous editorial remark:
+"Speculators and monopolists seem determined to force the people
+everywhere to the full exercise of all the remedies allowed by law." In
+August, 1862, the Governor of Florida wrote to the Florida delegation at
+Richmond urging them to take steps to meet the "nefarious smuggling"
+of speculators who charged extortionate prices. In September, he wrote
+again begging for legislation to compel millers, tanners, and saltmakers
+to offer their products at reasonable rates. As these men were exempt
+from military duty because their labor was held to be a public
+service, feeling against them ran high. Governor Vance proposed a state
+convention to regulate prices for North Carolina and by proclamation
+forbade the export of provisions in order to prevent the seeking of
+exorbitant prices in other markets. Davis wrote to various Governors
+urging them to obtain state legislation to reduce extortion in the food
+business. In the provisioning of the army the Confederate Government had
+recourse to impressment and the arbitrary fixing of prices. Though the
+Attorney-General held this action to be constitutional, it led to sharp
+contentions; and at length a Virginia court granted an injunction to a
+speculator who had been paid by the Government for flour less than it
+had cost him.
+
+In an attempt to straighten out this tangled situation, the Confederate
+Government began, late, in 1862, by appointing as its new Secretary of
+War, * James A. Seddon of Virginia--at that time high in popular
+favor. The Mercury hailed his advent with transparent relief, for no
+appointment could have seemed to it more promising. Indeed, as the
+new year (1863) opened the Mercury was in better humor with the
+Administration than perhaps at any other time during the war. To
+the President's message it gave praise that was almost cordial. This
+amicable temper was short-lived, however, and three months later the
+heavens had clouded.
+
+
+ * There were in all six Secretaries of War: Leroy P. Walker,
+ until September 16, 1861; Judah P. Benjamin, until March 18,
+ 1862; George W. Randolph, until November 17, 1868; Gustavus
+ W. Smith (temporarily), until November 21, 1862; James A.
+ Seddon, until February 6, 1865; General John C.
+ Breckinridge, again, for the Government had entered upon a
+ course that consolidated the opposition in anger and
+ distrust.
+
+
+Early in 1863 the Confederate Government presented to the country a
+program in which the main features were three. Of these the two which
+did not rouse immediate hostility in the party of the Examiner and the
+Mercury were the Impressment Act of March, 1863 (amended by successive
+acts), and the act known as the Tax in Kind, which was approved the
+following month. Though the Impressment Act subsequently made vast
+trouble for the Government, at the time of its passage its beneficial
+effects were not denied. To it was attributed by the Richmond Whig the
+rapid fall of prices in April, 1863. Corn went down at Richmond from $12
+and $10 a bushel to $4.20, and flour dropped in North Carolina from $45
+a barrel to $25. Under this act commissioners were appointed in each
+State jointly by the Confederate President and the Governor with the
+duty of fixing prices for government transactions and of publishing
+every two months an official schedule of the prices to be paid by the
+Government for the supplies which it impressed.
+
+The new Tax Act attempted to provide revenues which should not be paid
+in depreciated currency. With no bullion to speak of, the Confederate
+Congress could not establish a circulating medium with even an
+approximation to constant value. Realizing this situation, Memminger had
+advised falling back on the ancient system of tithes and the support
+of the Government by direct contributions of produce. After licensing a
+great number of occupations and laying a property tax and an income tax,
+the new law demanded a tenth of the produce of all farmers. On this
+law the Mercury pronounced a benediction in an editorial on The Fall of
+Prices, which it attributed to "the healthy influence of the tax bill
+which has just become law." *
+
+
+ * The fall of prices was attributed by others to a funding
+ act,--one of several passed by the Confederate Congress--
+ which, in March, 1863, aimed by various devices to contract
+ the volume of the currency. It was very generally condemned,
+ and it anticipated the yet more drastic measure, the Funding
+ Act of 1864, which will be described later.
+
+
+Had these two measures been the whole program of the Government, the
+congressional session of the spring of 1863 would have had a different
+significance in Confederate history. But there was a third measure
+that provoked a new attack on the Government. The gracious words of the
+Mercury on the tax in kind came as an interlude in the midst of a bitter
+controversy. An editorial of the 12th of March headed "A Despotism over
+the Confederate States Proposed in Congress" amounted to a declaration
+of war. From this time forward the opposition and the Government drew
+steadily further and further apart and their antagonism grew steadily
+more relentless.
+
+What caused this irrevocable breach was a bill introduced into the House
+by Ethelbert Barksdale of Mississippi, an old friend of President Davis.
+This bill would have invested the President with authority to
+suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus in any part of the
+Confederacy, whenever in his judgment such suspension was desirable.
+The first act suspending the privilege of habeas corpus had long
+since expired and applied only to such regions as were threatened with
+invasion. It had served usefully under martial law in cleansing Richmond
+of its rogues, and also had been in force at Charleston. The Mercury had
+approved it and had exhorted its readers to take the matter sensibly as
+an inevitable detail of war. Between that act and the act now proposed
+the Mercury saw no similarity. Upon the merits of the question it fought
+a furious journalistic duel with the Enquirer, the government organ at
+Richmond, which insisted that President Davis would not abuse his power.
+The Mercury replied that if he "were a second Washington, or an angel
+upon earth, the degradation such a surrender of our rights implies would
+still be abhorrent to every freeman." In retort the Enquirer pointed
+out that a similar law had been enacted by another Congress with no bad
+results. And in point of fact the Enquirer was right, for in October,
+1862, after the expiration of the first act suspending the privilege
+of the writ of habeas corpus, Congress passed a second giving to the
+President the immense power which was now claimed for him again. This
+second act was in force several months. Then the Mercury made the
+astounding declaration that it had never heard of the second act, and
+thereupon proceeded to attack the secrecy of the Administration with
+renewed vigor.
+
+On this issue of reviving the expired second Habeas Corpus Act, a
+battle royal was fought in the Confederate Congress. The forces of
+the Administration defended the new measure on the ground that various
+regions were openly seditious and that conscription could not be
+enforced without it. This argument gave a new text for the cry of
+"despotism." The congressional leader of the opposition was Henry S.
+Foote, once the rival of Davis in Mississippi and now a citizen of
+Tennessee. Fierce, vindictive, sometimes convincing, always shrewd, he
+was a powerful leader of the rough and ready, buccaneering sort. Under
+his guidance the debate was diverted into a rancorous discussion of the
+conduct of the general's in the execution of martial law. Foote pulled
+out all the stops in the organ of political rhetoric and went in for a
+chant royal of righteous indignation. The main object of this attack was
+General Hindman and his doings in Arkansas. Those were still the days of
+pamphleteering. Though General Albert Pike had written a severe pamphlet
+condemning Hindman, to this pamphlet the Confederate Government had shut
+its eyes. Foote, however, flourished it in the face of the House. He
+thundered forth his belief that Hindman was worse even than the man most
+detested in the South, than "beast Butler himself, for the latter is
+only charged with persecuting and oppressing the avowed enemies of his
+Government, while Hindman, if guilty as charged, has practised cruelties
+unnumbered" on his people. Other representatives spoke in the same vein.
+Baldwin of Virginia told harrowing tales of martial law in that State.
+Barksdale attempted to retaliate, sarcastically reminding him of a
+recent scene of riot and disorder which proved that martial law, in
+any effective form, did not exist in Virginia. He alluded to a riot,
+ostensibly for bread, in which an Amazonian woman had led a mob to the
+pillaging of the Richmond jewelry shops, a riot which Davis himself had
+quelled by meeting the rioters and threatening to fire upon them. But
+sarcasm proved powerless against Foote. His climax was a lurid tale of
+a soldier who while marching past his own house heard that his wife was
+dying, who left the ranks for a last word with her, and who on rejoining
+the command, "hoping to get permission to bury her," was shot as a
+deserter. And there was no one on the Government benches to anticipate
+Kipling and cry out "flat art!" Resolutions condemning martial law were
+passed by a vote of 45 to 27.
+
+Two weeks later the Mercury preached a burial sermon over the Barksdale
+Bill, which had now been rejected by the House. Congress was about to
+adjourn, and before it reassembled elections for the next House would
+be held. "The measure is dead for the present," said the Mercury, "but
+power is ever restive and prone to accumulate power; and if the war
+continues, other efforts will doubtless be made to make the President
+a Dictator. Let the people keep their eyes steadily fixed on their
+representatives with respect to this vital matter; and should the effort
+again be made to suspend the Habeas Corpus Act, demand that a recorded
+vote should show those who shall strike down their liberties."
+
+
+
+Chapter V. The Critical Year
+
+The great military events of the year 1863 have pushed out of men's
+memories the less dramatic but scarcely less important civil events. To
+begin with, in this year two of the greatest personalities in the South
+passed from the political stage: in the summer Yancey died; and in the
+autumn, Rhett went into retirement.
+
+The ever malicious Pollard insists that Yancey's death was due
+ultimately to a personal encounter with a Senator from Georgia on
+the floor of the Senate. The curious may find the discreditable story
+embalmed in the secret journal of the Senate, where are the various
+motions designed to keep the incident from the knowledge of the world.
+Whether it really caused Yancey's death is another question. However,
+the moment of his passing has dramatic significance. Just as the battle
+over conscription was fully begun, when the fear that the Confederate
+Government had arrayed itself against the rights of the States had
+definitely taken shape, when this dread had been reenforced by the alarm
+over the suspension of habeas corpus, the great pioneer of the secession
+movement went to his grave, despairing of the country he had failed to
+lead. His death occurred in the same month as the Battle of Gettysburg,
+at the very time when the Confederacy was dividing against itself.
+
+The withdrawal of Rhett from active life was an incident of the
+congressional elections. He had consented to stand for Congress in the
+Third District of South Carolina but was defeated. The full explanation
+of the vote is still to be made plain; it seems clear, however, that
+South Carolina at this time knew its own mind quite positively. Five
+of the six representatives returned to the Second Congress, including
+Rhett's opponent, Lewis M. Ayer, had sat in the First Congress. The
+subsequent history of the South Carolina delegation and of the State
+Government shows that by 1863 South Carolina had become, broadly
+speaking, on almost all issues an anti-Davis State. And yet the largest
+personality and probably the ablest mind in the State was rejected as
+a candidate for Congress. No character in American history is a finer
+challenge to the biographer than this powerful figure of Rhett, who in
+1861 at the supreme crisis of his life seemed the master of his world
+and yet in every lesser crisis was a comparative failure. As in Yancey,
+so in Rhett, there was something that fitted him to one great moment but
+did not fit him to others. There can be little doubt that his defeat
+at the polls of his own district deeply mortified him. He withdrew from
+politics, and though he doubtless, through the editorship of one of
+his sons, inspired the continued opposition of the Mercury to the
+Government, Rhett himself hardly reappears in Confederate history except
+for a single occasion during the debate a year later upon the burning
+question of arming the slaves.
+
+The year was marked by very bitter attacks upon President Davis on
+the part of the opposition press. The Mercury revived the issue of the
+conduct of the war which had for some time been overshadowed by other
+issues. In the spring, to be sure, things had begun to look brighter,
+and Chancellorsville had raised Lee's reputation to its zenith. The
+disasters of the summer, Gettysburg and Vicksburg, were for a time
+minimized by the Government and do not appear to have caused the alarm
+which their strategic importance might well have created. But when in
+the latter days of July the facts became generally known, the Mercury
+arraigned the President's conduct of the war as "a vast complication of
+incompetence and folly"; it condemned the whole scheme of the Northern
+invasion and maintained that Lee should have stood on the defensive
+while twenty or thirty thousand men were sent to the relief of
+Vicksburg. These two ideas it bitterly reiterated and in August went
+so far as to quote Macaulay's famous passage on Parliament's dread of a
+decisive victory over Charles and to apply it to Davis in unrestrained
+language that reminds one of Pollard.
+
+Equally unrestrained were the attacks upon other items of the policy of
+the Confederate Government. The Impressment Law began to be a target.
+Farmers who were compelled to accept the prices fixed by the impressment
+commissioners cried out that they were being ruined. Men of the stamp of
+Toombs came to their assistance with railing accusations such as
+this: "I have heard it said that we should not sacrifice liberty
+to independence, but I tell you, my countrymen, that the two
+are inseparable.... If we lose our liberty we shall lose our
+independence.... I would rather see the whole country the cemetery of
+freedom than the habitation of slaves." Protests which poured in upon
+the Government insisted that the power to impress supplies did not carry
+with it the power to fix prices. Worthy men, ridden by the traditional
+ideas of political science and unable to modify these in the light of
+the present emergency, wailed out their despair over the "usurpation" of
+Richmond.
+
+The tax in kind was denounced in the same vein. The licensing provisions
+of this law and its income tax did not satisfy the popular imagination.
+These provisions concerned the classes that could borrow. The classes
+that could not borrow, that had no resources but their crops, felt that
+they were being driven to the wall. The bitter saying went around that
+it was "a rich man's war and a poor man's fight." As land and slaves
+were not directly taxed, the popular discontent appeared to have ground
+for its anger. Furthermore, it must never be forgotten that this was the
+first general tax that the poor people of the South were ever conscious
+of paying. To people who knew the tax-gatherer as little more than a
+mythical being, he suddenly appeared like a malevolent creature who
+swept off ruthlessly the tenth of their produce. It is not strange
+that an intemperate reaction against the planters and their leadership
+followed. The illusion spread that they were not doing their share of
+the fighting; and as rich men were permitted to hire substitutes to
+represent them in the army, this really baseless report was easily
+propped up in the public mind with what appeared to be reason.
+
+In North Carolina, where the peasant farmer was a larger political
+factor than in any other State, this feeling against the Confederate
+Government because of the tax in kind was most dangerous. In the course
+of the summer, while the military fortunes of the Confederacy were
+toppling at Vicksburg and Gettysburg, the North Carolina farmers in
+a panic of self-preservation held numerous meetings of protest and
+denunciation. They expressed their thoughtless terror in resolutions
+asserting that the action of Congress "in secret session, without
+consulting with their constituents at home, taking from the hard
+laborers of the Confederacy one-tenth of the people's living, instead of
+taking back their own currency in tax, is unjust and tyrannical." Other
+resolutions called the tax "unconstitutional, anti-republican, and
+oppressive"; and still others pledged the farmers "to resist to the
+bitter end any such monarchical tax."
+
+A leader of the discontented in North Carolina was found in W. W.
+Holden, the editor of the Raleigh Progress, who before the war had
+attempted to be spokesman for the men of small property by advocating
+taxes on slaves and similar measures. He proposed as the conclusion of
+the whole matter the opening of negotiations for peace. We shall see
+later how deep-seated was this singular delusion that peace could be had
+for the asking. In 1863, however, many men in North Carolina took up the
+suggestion with delight. Jonathan Worth wrote in his diary, on hearing
+that the influential North Carolina Standard had come out for peace:
+"I still abhor, as I always did, this accursed war and the wicked men,
+North and South, who inaugurated it. The whole country at the North and
+the South is a great military despotism." With such discontent in the
+air, the elections in North Carolina drew near. The feeling was intense
+and riots occurred. Newspaper offices were demolished--among them
+Holden's, to destroy which a detachment of passing soldiers converted
+itself into a mob. In the western counties deserters from the army,
+combined in bands, were joined by other deserters from Tennessee, and
+terrorized the countryside. Governor Vance, alarmed at the progress
+which this disorder was making, issued a proclamation imploring his
+rebellious countrymen to conduct in a peaceable manner their campaign
+for the repeal of obnoxious laws.
+
+The measure of political unrest in North Carolina was indicated in the
+autumn when a new delegation to Congress was chosen. Of the ten who
+composed it, eight were new men. Though they did not stand for a clearly
+defined program, they represented on the whole anti-Davis tendencies.
+The Confederate Administration had failed to carry the day in the
+North Carolina elections; and in Georgia there were even more sweeping
+evidences of unrest. Of the ten representatives chosen for the Second
+Congress nine had not sat in the First, and Georgia now was in the main
+frankly anti-Davis. There had been set up at Richmond a new organ of
+the Government called the Sentinel, which was more entirely under the
+presidential shadow than even the Enquirer and the Courier. Speaking
+of the elections, the Sentinel deplored the "upheaval of political
+elements" revealed by the defeat of so many tried representatives whose
+constituents had not returned them to the Second Congress.
+
+What was Davis doing while the ground was thus being cut from under
+his feet? For one thing he gave his endorsement to the formation
+of "Confederate Societies" whose members bound themselves to take
+Confederate money as legal tender. He wrote a letter to one such society
+in Mississippi, praising it for attempting "by common consent to bring
+down the prices of all articles to the standard of the soldiers' wages"
+and adding that the passion of speculation had "seduced citizens of all
+classes from a determined prosecution of the war to an effort to amass
+money." The Sentinel advocated the establishment of a law fixing maximum
+prices. The discussion of this proposal seems to make plain the raison
+d'etre for the existence of the Sentinel. Even such stanch government
+organs as the Enquirer and the Courier shied at the idea, but the
+Mercury denounced it vigorously, giving long extracts from Thiers,
+and discussed the mistakes, of the French Revolution with its "law of
+maximum."
+
+Davis, however, did not take an active part in the political campaign,
+nor did the other members of the Government. It was not because of any
+notion that the President should not leave the capital that Davis did
+not visit the disaffected regions of North Carolina when the startled
+populace winced under its first experience with taxation. Three times
+during his Administration Davis left Richmond on extended journeys: late
+in 1862, when Vicksburg had become a chief concern of the Government, he
+went as far afield as Mississippi in order to get entirely in touch with
+the military situation in those parts; in the month of October, 1863,
+when there was another moment of intense military anxiety, Davis again
+visited the front; and of a third journey which he undertook in 1864,
+we shall hear in time. It is to be noted that each of these journeys was
+prompted by a military motive; and here, possibly, we get an explanation
+of his inadequacy as a statesman. He could not lay aside his interest in
+military affairs for the supremely important concerns of civil office;
+and he failed to understand how to ingratiate his Administration by
+personal appeals to popular imagination.
+
+In October, 1863,--the very month in which his old rival Rhett suffered
+his final defeat,--Davis undertook a journey because Bragg, after his
+great victory at Chickamauga, appeared to be letting slip a golden
+opportunity, and because there were reports of dissension among Bragg's
+officers and of general confusion in his army. After he had, as he
+thought, restored harmony in the camp, Davis turned southward on a tour
+of appeal and inspiration. He went as far as Mobile, and returning bent
+his course through Charleston, where, at the beginning of November, less
+than two weeks after Rhett's defeat, Davis was received with all due
+formalities. Members of the Rhett family were among those who formally
+received the President at the railway station. There was a parade of
+welcome, an official reception, a speech by the President from the steps
+of the city hall, and much applause by friends of the Administration.
+But certain ominous signs were not lacking. The Mercury, for example,
+tucked away in an obscure column its account of the event, while its
+rival, the Courier, made the President's visit the feature of the day.
+
+Davis returned to Richmond, early in November, to throw himself again
+with his whole soul into problems that were chiefly military. He did
+not realize that the crisis had come and gone and that he had failed
+to grasp the significance of the internal political situation. The
+Government had failed to carry the elections and to secure a working
+majority in Congress. Never again was it to have behind it a firm and
+confident support, The unity of the secession movement had passed away.
+Thereafter the Government was always to be regarded with suspicion
+by the extreme believers in state sovereignty and by those who
+were sullenly convinced that the burdens of the war were unfairly
+distributed. And there were not wanting men who were ready to construe
+each emergency measure as a step toward a coup d'etat.
+
+
+
+Chapter VI. Life In The Confederacy
+
+When the fortunes of the Confederacy in both camp and council began to
+ebb, the life of the Southern people had already profoundly changed.
+The gallant, delightful, carefree life of the planter class had been
+undermined by a war which was eating away its foundations. Economic no
+less than political forces were taking from the planter that ideal of
+individual liberty as dear to his heart as it had been, ages before, to
+his feudal prototype. One of the most important details of the changing
+situation had been the relation of the Government to slavery. The
+history of the Confederacy had opened with a clash between the
+extreme advocates of slavery--the slavery-at-any-price men--and the
+Administration. The Confederate Congress had passed a bill ostensibly
+to make effective the clause in its constitution prohibiting the
+African slave-trade. The quick eye of Davis had detected in it a mode of
+evasion, for cargoes of captured slaves were to be confiscated and sold
+at public auction. The President had exposed this adroit subterfuge in
+his message vetoing the bill, and the slavery-at-any-price men had
+not sufficient influence in Congress to override the veto, though they
+muttered against it in the public press.
+
+The slavery-at-any-price men did not again conspicuously show their
+hands until three years later when the Administration included
+emancipation in its policy. The ultimate policy of emancipation was
+forced upon the Government by many considerations but more particularly
+by the difficulty of securing labor for military purposes. In a country
+where the supply of fighting men was limited and the workers were a
+class apart, the Government had to employ the only available laborers
+or confess its inability to meet the industrial demands of war. But the
+available laborers were slaves. How could their services be secured? By
+purchase? Or by conscription? Or by temporary impressment?
+
+Though Davis and his advisers were prepared to face all the hazards
+involved in the purchase or confiscation of slaves, the traditional
+Southern temper instantly recoiled from the suggestion. A Government
+possessed of great numbers of slaves, whether bought or appropriated,
+would have in its hands a gigantic power, perhaps for industrial
+competition with private owners, perhaps even for organized military
+control. Besides, the Government might at any moment by emancipating
+its slaves upset the labor system of the country. Furthermore, the
+opportunities for favoritism in the management of state-owned slaves
+were beyond calculation. Considerations such as these therefore explain
+the watchful jealousy of the planters toward the Government whenever it
+proposed to acquire property in slaves.
+
+It is essential not to attribute this social-political dread of
+government ownership of slaves merely to the clutch of a wealthy class
+on its property. Too many observers, strangely enough, see the latter
+motive to the exclusion of the former. Davis himself was not, it would
+seem, free from this confusion. He insisted that neither slaves nor
+land were taxed by the Confederacy, and between the lines he seems
+to attribute to the planter class the familiar selfishness of massed
+capital. He forgot that the tax in kind was combined with an income tax.
+In theory, at least, the slave and the land--even non-farming land--were
+taxed. However, the dread of a slave-owning Government prevented any
+effective plan for supplying the army with labor except through the
+temporary impressment of slaves who were eventually to be returned to
+their owners. The policy of emancipation had to wait.
+
+Bound up in the labor question was the question of the control of slaves
+during the war. In the old days when there were plenty of white men in
+the countryside, the roads were carefully patrolled at night, and
+no slave ventured to go at large unless fully prepared to prove his
+identity. But with the coming of war the comparative smallness of the
+fighting population made it likely from the first that the countryside
+everywhere would be stripped of its white guardians. In that event, who
+would be left to control the slaves? Early in the war a slave police
+was provided for by exempting from military duty overseers in the
+ratio approximately of one white to twenty slaves. But the marvelous
+faithfulness of the slaves, who nowhere attempted to revolt, made these
+precautions unnecessary. Later laws exempted one overseer on every
+plantation of fifteen slaves, not so much to perform patrol duty as to
+increase the productivity of plantation labor.
+
+This "Fifteen Slave" Law was one of many instances that were caught up
+by the men of small property as evidence that the Government favored the
+rich. A much less defensible law, and one which was bitterly attacked
+for the same reason, was the unfortunate measure permitting the hiring
+of substitutes by men drafted into the army. Eventually, the clamor
+against this law caused its repeal, but before that time it had worked
+untold harm as apparent evidence of "a rich man's war and a poor man's
+fight." Extravagant stories of the avoidance of military duty by the
+ruling class, though in the main they were mere fairy tales, changed the
+whole atmosphere of Southern life. The old glad confidence uniting
+the planter class with the bulk of the people had been impaired.
+Misapprehension appeared on both sides. Too much has been said lately,
+however, in justification of the poorer classes who were thus wakened
+suddenly to a distrust of the aristocracy; and too little has been
+said of the proud recoil of the aristocracy in the face of a sudden,
+credulous perversion of its motives--a perversion inspired by the
+pinching of the shoe, and yet a shoe that pinched one class as hard as
+it did another. It is as unfair to charge the planter with selfishness
+in opposing the appropriation of slaves as it is to make the same charge
+against the small farmers for resisting tithes. In face of the record,
+the planter comes off somewhat the better of the two; but it must be
+remembered that he had the better education, the larger mental horizon.
+
+The Confederacy had long recognized women of all classes as the most
+dauntless defenders of the cause. The women of the upper classes passed
+without a tremor from a life of smiling ease to a life of extreme
+hardship. One day, their horizon was without a cloud; another day,
+their husbands and fathers had gone to the front. Their luxuries had
+disappeared, and they were reduced to plain hard living, toiling in a
+thousand ways to find provision and clothing, not only for their own
+children but for the poorer families of soldiers. The women of the poor
+throughout the South deserve similar honor. Though the physical shock
+of the change may not have been so great, they had to face the same deep
+realities--hunger and want, anxiety over the absent soldiers, solicitude
+for children, grief for the dead. One of the pathetic aspects of
+Confederate life was the household composed of several families, all
+women and children, huddled together without a man or even a half-grown
+lad to be their link with the mill and the market. In those regions
+where there were few slaves and the exemption of overseers did not
+operate, such households were numerous.
+
+The great privations which people endured during the Confederacy have
+passed into familiar tradition. They are to be traced mainly to three
+causes: to the blockade, to the inadequate system of transportation, and
+to the heartlessness of speculators. The blockade was the real destroyer
+of the South. Besides ruining the whole policy based on King Cotton,
+besides impeding to a vast extent the inflow of munitions from Europe,
+it also deprived Southern life of numerous articles which were hard
+to relinquish--not only such luxuries as tea and coffee, but also
+such utter necessities as medicines. And though the native herbs
+were diligently studied, though the Government established medical
+laboratories with results that were not inconsiderable, the shortage of
+medicines remained throughout the war a distressing feature of Southern
+life. The Tredegar Iron Works at Richmond and a foundry at Selma,
+Alabama, were the only mills in the South capable of casting the heavy
+ordnance necessary for military purposes. And the demand for powder
+mills and gun factories to provide for the needs of the army was
+scarcely greater than the demand for cotton mills and commercial
+foundries to supply the wants of the civil population. The Government
+worked without ceasing to keep pace with the requirements of the
+situation, and, in view of the immense difficulties which it had to
+face, it was fairly successful in supplying the needs of the army.
+Powder was provided by the Niter and Mining Bureau; lead for Confederate
+bullets was collected from many sources--even from the window-weights of
+the houses; iron was brought from the mines of Alabama; guns came from
+newly built factories; and machines and tools were part of the precious
+freight of the blockade-runners. Though the poorly equipped mills turned
+a portion of the cotton crop into textiles, and though everything that
+was possible was done to meet the needs of the people, the supply of
+manufactures was sadly inadequate. The universal shortage was betrayed
+by the limitation of the size of most newspapers to a single sheet, and
+the desperate situation clearly and completely revealed by the way in
+which, as a last resort, the Confederates were compelled to repair their
+railroads by pulling up the rails of one road in order to repair another
+that the necessities of war rendered indispensable.
+
+The railway system, if such it can be called, was one of the weaknesses
+of the Confederacy. Before the war the South had not felt the need of
+elaborate interior communication, for its commerce in the main went
+seaward, and thence to New England or to Europe. Hitherto the railway
+lines had seen no reason for merging their local character in extensive
+combinations. Owners of short lines were inclined by tradition to resist
+even the imperative necessities of war and their stubborn conservatism
+was frequently encouraged by the shortsighted parochialism of the towns.
+The same pitiful narrowness that led the peasant farmer to threaten
+rebellion against the tax in kind led his counterpart in the towns to
+oppose the War Department in its efforts to establish through railroad
+lines because they threatened to impair local business interests. A
+striking instance of this disinclination towards cooperation is the
+action of Petersburg. Two railroads terminated at this point but did not
+connect, and it was an ardent desire of the military authorities to
+link the two and convert them into one. The town, however, unable to
+see beyond its boundaries and resolute in its determination to save its
+transfer business, successfully obstructed the needs of the army. *
+
+
+ * See an article on "The Confederate Government and the
+ Railroads" in the "American Historical Review," July, 1917,
+ by Charles W. Ramsdell.
+
+
+As a result of this lack of efficient organization an immense congestion
+resulted all along the railroads. Whether this, rather than a failure in
+supply, explains the approach of famine in the latter part of the war,
+it is today very difficult to determine. In numerous state papers of the
+time, the assertion was reiterated that the yield of food was abundant
+and that the scarcity of food at many places, including the cities and
+the battle fronts, was due to defects in transportation. Certain it is
+that the progress of supplies from one point to another was intolerably
+slow.
+
+All this want of coordination facilitated speculation. We shall see
+hereafter how merciless this speculation became and we shall even hear
+of profits on food rising to more than four hundred per cent. However,
+the oft-quoted prices of the later years--when, for instance, a pair
+of shoes cost a hundred dollars--signify little, for they rested on an
+inflated currency. None the less they inspired the witticism that one
+should take money to market in a basket and bring provisions home in
+one's pocketbook. Endless stories could be told of speculators hoarding
+food and watching unmoved the sufferings of a famished people. Said
+Bishop Pierce, in a sermon before the General Assembly of Georgia,
+on Fast Day, in March, 1863: "Restlessness and discontent prevail....
+Extortion, pitiless extortion is making havoc in the land. We are
+devouring each other. Avarice with full barns puts the bounties of
+Providence under bolts and bars, waiting with eager longings for higher
+prices.... The greed of gain... stalks among us unabashed by the heroic
+sacrifice of our women or the gallant deeds of our soldiers. Speculation
+in salt and bread and meat runs riot in defiance of the thunders of
+the pulpit, and executive interference and the horrors of threatened
+famine." In 1864, the Government found that quantities of grain paid in
+under the tax as new-grown were mildewed. It was grain of the previous
+year which speculators had held too long and now palmed off on the
+Government to supply the army.
+
+Amid these desperate conditions the fate of soldiers' families became
+everywhere, a tragedy. Unless the soldier was a land-owner his family
+was all but helpless. With a depreciated currency and exaggerated
+prices, his pay, whatever his rank, was too little to count in providing
+for his dependents. Local charity, dealt out by state and county boards,
+by relief associations, and by the generosity of neighbors, formed the
+barrier between his family and starvation. The landless soldier, with
+a family at home in desperate straits, is too often overlooked when
+unimaginative people heap up the statistics of "desertion" in the latter
+half of the war.
+
+It was in this period, too, that amid the terrible shrinkage of the
+defensive lines "refugeeing" became a feature of Southern life. From
+the districts over which the waves of war rolled back and forth helpless
+families--women, children, slaves--found precarious safety together with
+great hardship by withdrawing to remote places which invasion was little
+likely to reach. An Odyssey of hard travel, often by night and half
+secret, is part of the war tradition of thousands of Southern families.
+And here, as always, the heroic women, smiling, indomitable, are the
+center of the picture. Their flight to preserve the children was no
+small test of courage. Almost invariably they had to traverse desolate
+country, with few attendants, through forests, and across rivers, where
+the arm of the law was now powerless to protect them. Outlaws, defiant
+of the authorities both civil and military,--ruthless men of whom we
+shall hear again,--roved those great unoccupied spaces so characteristic
+of the Southern countryside. Many a family legend preserves still the
+sense of breathless caution, of pilgrimage in the night-time intently
+silent for fear of these masterless men. When the remote rendezvous had
+been reached, there a colony of refugees drew together in a steadfast
+despair, unprotected by their own fighting men. What strange sad pages
+in the history of American valor were filled by these women outwardly
+calm, their children romping after butterflies in a glory of sunshine,
+while horrid tales drifted in of deeds done by the masterless men in
+the forest just beyond the horizon, and far off on the soul's horizon
+fathers, husbands, brothers, held grimly the lines of last defense!
+
+
+
+Chapter VII. The Turning Of The Tide
+
+The buoyancy of the Southern temper withstood the shock of Gettysburg
+and was not overcome by the fall of Vicksburg. Of the far-reaching
+significance of the latter catastrophe in particular there was little
+immediate recognition. Even Seddon, the Secretary of War, in November,
+reported that "the communication with the Trans-Mississippi, while
+rendered somewhat precarious and insecure, is found by no means cut off
+or even seriously endangered." His report was the same sort of thing
+as those announcements of "strategic retreats" with which the world has
+since become familiar. He even went so far as to argue that on the whole
+the South had gained rather than lost; that the control of the river was
+of no real value to the North; that the loss of Vicksburg "has on our
+side liberated for general operations in the field a large army, while
+it requires the enemy to maintain cooped up, inactive, in positions
+insalubrious to their soldiers, considerable detachments of their
+forces."
+
+Seddon attempted to reverse the facts, to show that the importance of
+the Mississippi in commerce was a Northern not a Southern concern.
+He threw light upon the tactics of the time by his description of the
+future action of Confederate sharpshooters who were to terrorize such
+commercial crews as might attempt to navigate the river; he also told
+how light batteries might move swiftly along the banks and, at
+points commanding the channel, rain on the passing steamer unheralded
+destruction. He was silent upon the really serious matter, the patrol
+of the river by Federal gunboats which rendered commerce with the
+Trans-Mississippi all but impossible.
+
+This report, dated the 26th of November, gives a roseate view of the war
+in Tennessee and enlarges upon that dreadful battle of Chickamauga which
+"ranks as one of the grandest victories of the war." But even as the
+report was signed, Bragg was in full retreat after his great disaster
+at Chattanooga. On the 30th of November the Administration at Richmond
+received from him a dispatch that closed with these words: "I deem it
+due to the cause and to myself to ask for relief from command and an
+investigation into the causes of the defeat." In the middle of December,
+Joseph E. Johnston was appointed to succeed him.
+
+Whatever had been the illusions of the Government, they were now at an
+end. There was no denying that the war had entered a new stage and that
+the odds were grimly against the South. Davis recognized the gravity
+of the situation, and in his message to Congress in December, 1863, he
+admitted that the Trans-Mississippi was practically isolated. This was
+indeed a great catastrophe, for hereafter neither men nor supplies could
+be drawn from the far Southwest. Furthermore, the Confederacy had now
+lost its former precious advantage of using Mexico as a means of secret
+trade with Europe.
+
+These distressing events of the four months between Vicksburg and
+Chattanooga established also the semi-isolation of the middle region of
+the lower South. The two States of Mississippi and Alabama entered upon
+the most desperate chapter of their history. Neither in nor out of the
+Confederacy, neither protected by the Confederate lines nor policed by
+the enemy, they were subject at once to the full rigor of the financial
+and military demands of the Administration of Richmond and to the
+full ruthlessness of plundering raids from the North. Nowhere can the
+contrast between the warfare of that day and the best methods of our
+own time be observed more clearly than in this unhappy region. At the
+opening of 1864 the effective Confederate lines drew an irregular
+zigzag across the map from a point in northern Georgia not far below
+Chattanooga to Mobile. Though small Confederate commands still operated
+bravely west of this line, the whole of Mississippi and a large part of
+Alabama were beyond aid from Richmond. But the average man did not
+grasp the situation. When a region is dominated by mobile armies the
+appearance of things to the civilian is deceptive. Because the powerful
+Federal armies of the Southwest, at the opening of 1864, were massed at
+strategic points from Tennessee to the Gulf, and were not extended along
+an obvious trench line, every brave civilian would still keep up his
+hope and would still insist that the middle Gulf country was far
+from subjugation, that its defense against the invader had not become
+hopeless.
+
+Under such conditions, when the Government at Richmond called upon the
+men of the Southwest to regard themselves as mere sources of supply,
+human and otherwise, mere feeders to a theater of war that did not
+include their homes, it was altogether natural that they should resent
+the demand. All the tragic confusion that was destined in the course of
+the fateful year 1864 to paralyze the Government at Richmond was already
+apparent in the middle Gulf country when the year began. Chief among
+these was the inability of the State and Confederate Governments to
+cooperate adequately in the business of conscription. The two powers
+were determined rivals struggling each to seize the major part of the
+manhood of the community. While Richmond, looking on the situation with
+the eye of pure strategy, wished to draw together the full man-power
+of the South in one great unit, the local authorities were bent on
+retaining a large part of it for home defense.
+
+In the Alabama newspapers of the latter half of 1863 strange incidents
+are to be found throwing light on the administrative duel. The writ of
+habeas corpus, as was so often the case in Confederate history, was the
+bone of contention. We have seen that the second statute empowering the
+President to proclaim martial law and to suspend the operation of the
+writ had expired by limitation in February, 1863. The Alabama courts
+were theoretically in full operation, but while the law was in force the
+military authorities had acquired a habit of arbitrary control. Though
+warned from Richmond in general orders that they must not take unto
+themselves a power vested in the President alone, they continued their
+previous course of action. It thereupon became necessary to issue
+further general orders annulling "all proclamations of martial law
+by general officers and others" not invested by law with adequate
+authority.
+
+Neither general orders nor the expiration of the statute, however,
+seemed able to put an end to the interference with the local courts on
+the part of local commanders. The evil apparently grew during 1863. A
+picturesque instance is recorded with extreme fullness by the Southern
+Advertiser in the autumn of the year. In the minutely circumstantial
+account, we catch glimpses of one Rhodes moving heaven and earth to
+prove himself exempt from military service. After Rhodes is enrolled by
+the officers of the local military rendezvous, the sheriff attempts to
+turn the tables by arresting the Colonel in command. The soldiers rush
+to defend their Colonel, who is ill in bed at a house some distance
+away. The judge who had issued the writ is hot with anger at this
+military interference in civil affairs. Thereupon the soldiers seize
+him, but later, recognizing for some unexplained reason the majesty of
+the civil law, they release him. And the hot-tempered incident closes
+with the Colonel's determination to carry the case to the Supreme Court
+of the State.
+
+The much harassed people of Alabama had still other causes of complaint
+during this same year. Again the newspapers illumine the situation. In
+the troubled autumn, Joseph Wheeler swept across the northern counties
+of Alabama and in a daring ride, with Federal cavalry hot on his trail,
+reached safety beyond the Tennessee River. Here his pursuers turned back
+and, as their horses had been broken by the swiftness of the pursuit,
+returning slowly, they "gleaned the country" to replace their supplies.
+Incidentally they pounced upon the town of Huntsville. "Their
+appearance here," writes a local correspondent, "was so sudden and... the
+contradictory reports of their whereabouts" had been so baffling
+that the townspeople had found no time to secrete things. The whole
+neighborhood was swept clean of cattle and almost clean of provision.
+"We have not enough left," the report continues, "to haul and plow
+with... and milch cows are non est." Including "Stanley's big raid in
+July," this was the twenty-first raid which Huntsville had endured that
+year. The report closes with a bitter denunciation of the people of
+southern Alabama who as yet do not know what war means, who are accused
+of complete hardness of heart towards their suffering fellow-countrymen
+and of caring only to make money out of war prices.
+
+When Davis sent his message to the Southern Congress at the opening of
+the session of 1864, the desperate plight of the middle Gulf country was
+at once a warning and a menace to the Government. If the conditions of
+that debatable land should extend eastward, there could be little doubt
+that the day of the Confederacy was nearing its close. To remedy the
+situation west of the main Confederate line, to prevent the growth of a
+similar condition east of it, Davis urged Congress to revive the statute
+permitting martial law and the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus.
+The President told Congress that in parts of the Confederacy "public
+meetings have been held, in some of which a treasonable design is masked
+by a pretense of devotion of state sovereignty, and in others is openly
+avowed... a strong suspicion is entertained that secret leagues and
+associations are being formed. In certain localities men of no mean
+position do not hesitate to avow their disloyalty and hostility to our
+cause, and their advocacy of peace on the terms of submission and the
+abolition of slavery."
+
+This suspicion on the part of the Confederate Government that it was
+being opposed by organized secret societies takes us back to debatable
+land and to the previous year. The Bureau of Conscription submitted to
+the Secretary of War a report from its Alabama branch relative to "a
+sworn secret organization known to exist and believed to have for its
+object the encouragement of desertion, the protection of deserters from
+arrest, resistance to conscription, and perhaps other designs of a still
+more dangerous character." To the operations of this insidious foe were
+attributed the shifting of the vote in the Alabama elections, the defeat
+of certain candidates favored by the Government, and the return in their
+stead of new men "not publicly known." The suspicions of the Government
+were destined to further verification in the course of 1864 by the
+unearthing of a treasonable secret society in southwestern Virginia, the
+members of which were "bound to each other for the prosecution of their
+nefarious designs by the most solemn oaths. They were under obligation
+to encourage desertions from the army, and to pass and harbor all
+deserters, escaped prisoners, or spies; to give information to the enemy
+of the movements of our troops, of exposed or weakened positions, of
+inviting opportunities of attack, and to guide and assist the enemy
+either in advance or retreat." This society bore the grandiloquent name
+"Heroes of America" and had extended its operations into Tennessee and
+North Carolina.
+
+In the course of the year further evidence was collected which satisfied
+the secret service of the existence of a mysterious and nameless society
+which had ramifications throughout Tennessee, Alabama, and Georgia. A
+detective who joined this "Peace Society," as it was called, for
+the purpose of betraying its secrets, had marvelous tales to tell of
+confidential information given to him by members, of how Missionary
+Ridge had been lost and Vicksburg had surrendered through the
+machinations of this society. *
+
+
+ * What classes were represented in these organizations it is
+ difficult if not impossible to determine. They seem to have
+ been involved in the singular "peace movement" which is yet
+ to be considered. This fact gives a possible clue to the
+ problem of their membership. A suspiciously large number of
+ the "peace" men were original anti-secessionists, and though
+ many, perhaps most, of these who opposed secession became
+ loyal servants of the Confederacy, historians may have
+ jumped too quickly to the assumption that the sincerity of
+ all of these men was above reproach.
+
+
+In spite of its repugnance to the suspension of the writ of habeas
+corpus, Congress was so impressed by the gravity of the situation that
+early in 1864 it passed another act "to suspend the privilege of the
+writ of habeas corpus in certain cases." This was not quite the same
+as that sweeping act of 1862 which had set the Mercury irrevocably in
+opposition. Though this act of 1864 gave the President the power to
+order the arrest of any person suspected of treasonable practices, and
+though it released military officers from all obligation to obey the
+order of any civil court to surrender a prisoner charged with treason,
+the new legislation carefully defined a list of cases in which alone
+this power could be lawfully used. This was the last act of the sort
+passed by the Confederate Congress, and when it expired by limitation
+ninety days after the next meeting of Congress it was not renewed.
+
+With regard to the administration of the army, Congress can hardly be
+said to have met the President more than half way. The age of military
+service was lowered to seventeen and was raised to fifty. But the
+President was not given--though he had asked for it--general control
+over exemptions. Certain groups, such as ministers, editors, physicians,
+were in the main exempted; one overseer was exempted on each plantation
+where there were fifteen slaves, provided he gave bond to sell to the
+Government at official prices each year one hundred pounds of either
+beef or bacon for each slave employed and provided he would sell all his
+surplus produce either to the Government or to the families of soldiers.
+Certain civil servants of the Confederacy were also exempted as well as
+those whom the governors of States should "certify to be necessary for
+the proper administration of the State Government." The President
+was authorized to detail for nonmilitary service any members of
+the Confederate forces "when in his judgment, justice, equity, and
+necessity, require such details."
+
+This statute retained two features that had already given rise to much
+friction, and that were destined to be the cause of much more. It was
+still within the power of state governors to impede conscription
+very seriously. By certifying that a man was necessary to the civil
+administration of a State, a Governor could place him beyond the legal
+reach of the conscripting officers. This provision was a concession to
+those who looked on Davis's request for authority over exemption as the
+first step toward absolutism. On the other hand the statute allowed
+the President a free hand in the scarcely less important matter of
+"details." Among the imperative problems of the Confederacy, where the
+whole male population was needed in the public service, was the most
+economical separation of the two groups, the fighters and the producers.
+On the one hand there was the constant demand for recruits to fill up
+the wasted armies; on the other, the need for workers to keep the shops
+going and to secure the harvest. The two interests were never fully
+coordinated. Under the act of 1864, no farmer, mechanic, tradesman,
+between the ages of seventeen and fifty, if fit for military service,
+could remain at his work except as a "detail" under orders of the
+President: he might be called to the colors at a moment's notice. We
+shall see, presently, how the revoking of details, toward the end
+of what may truly be called the terrible year, was one of the major
+incidents of Confederate history.
+
+Together with the new conscription act, the President approved on
+February 17, 1864, a reenactment of the tax in kind, with some slight
+concessions to the convenience of the farmers. The President's appeal
+for a law directly taxing slaves and land had been ignored by Congress,
+but another of his suggestions had been incorporated in the Funding Act.
+The state of the currency was now so grave that Davis attributed to it
+all the evils growing out of the attempts to enforce impressment. As the
+value of the paper dollar had by this time shrunk to six cents in
+specie and the volume of Confederate paper was upward of seven hundred
+millions, Congress undertook to reduce the volume and raise the value
+by compelling holders of notes to exchange them for bonds. By way of
+driving the note-holders to consent to the exchange, provision was made
+for the speedy taxation of notes for one-third their face value.
+
+Such were the main items of the government program for 1864. Armed with
+this, Davis braced himself for the great task of making head against the
+enemies that now surrounded the Confederacy. It is an axiom of military
+science that when one combatant possesses the interior line, the other
+can offset this advantage only by exerting coincident pressure all
+round, thus preventing him from shifting his forces from one front
+to another. On this principle, the Northern strategists had at last
+completed their gigantic plan for a general envelopment of the whole
+Confederate defense both by land and sea. Grant opened operations by
+crossing the Rapidan and telegraphing Sherman to advance into Georgia.
+
+The stern events of the spring of 1864 form such a famous page in
+military history that the sober civil story of those months appears by
+comparison lame and impotent. Nevertheless, the Confederate Government
+during those months was at least equal to its chief obligation: it
+supplied and recruited the armies. With Grant checked at Cold Harbor, in
+June, and Sherman still unable to pierce the western line, the hopes of
+the Confederates were high.
+
+In the North there was corresponding gloom. This was the moment when
+all Northern opponents of the war drew together in their last attempt to
+shatter the Lincoln Government and make peace with the Confederacy. The
+value to the Southern cause of this Northern movement for peace at
+any price was keenly appreciated at Richmond. Trusted agents of the
+Confederacy were even then in Canada working deftly to influence
+Northern sentiment. The negotiations with those Northern secret
+societies which befriended the South belong properly in the story of
+Northern politics and the presidential election of 1864. They were
+skillfully conducted chiefly by Jacob Thompson and C. C. Clay. The
+reports of these agents throughout the spring and summer were all
+hopeful and told of "many intelligent men from the United States" who
+sought them out in Canada for political consultations. They discussed
+"our true friends from the Chicago (Democratic) convention" and
+even gave names of those who, they were assured, would have seats in
+McClellan's Cabinet. They were really not well informed upon Northern
+affairs, and even after the tide had turned against the Democrats
+in September, they were still priding themselves on their diplomatic
+achievement, still confident they had helped organize a great political
+power, had "given a stronger impetus to the peace party of the North
+than all other causes combined, and had greatly reduced the strength of
+the war party."
+
+While Clay and Thompson built their house of cards in Canada, the
+Richmond Government bent anxious eyes on the western battlefront.
+Sherman, though repulsed in his one frontal attack at Kenesaw Mountain,
+had steadily worked his way by the left flank of the Confederate army,
+until in early July he was within six miles of Atlanta. All the lower
+South was a-tremble with apprehension. Deputations were sent to Richmond
+imploring the removal of Johnston from the western command. What had he
+done since his appointment in December but retreat? Such was the tenor
+of public opinion. "It is all very well to talk of Fabian policy," said
+one of his detractors long afterward, "and now we can see we were
+rash to say the least. But at the time, all of us went wrong together.
+Everybody clamored for Johnston's removal." Johnston and Davis were not
+friends; but the President hesitated long before acting. And yet, with
+each day, political as well as military necessity grew more imperative.
+Both at Washington and Richmond the effect that the fighting in Georgia
+had on Northern opinion was seen to be of the first importance. Sherman
+was staking everything to break the Confederate line and take Atlanta.
+He knew that a great victory would have incalculable effect on the
+Northern election. Davis knew equally well that the defeat of Sherman
+would greatly encourage the peace party in the North. But he had no
+general of undoubted genius whom he could put in Johnston's place.
+However, the necessity for a bold stroke was so undeniable, and
+Johnston appeared so resolute to continue his Fabian policy, that Davis
+reluctantly took a desperate chance and superseded him by Hood.
+
+During August, though the Democratic convention at Chicago drew up
+its platform favoring peace at any price, the anxiety of the Southern
+President did not abate his activities. The safety of the western line
+was now his absorbing concern. And in mid-August that line was turned,
+in a way, by Farragut's capture of Mobile Bay. As the month closed,
+Sherman, despite the furious blows delivered by Hood, was plainly
+getting the upper hand. North and South, men watched that tremendous
+duel with the feeling that the foundations of things were rocking. At
+last, on the 2d of September, Sherman, victorious, entered Atlanta.
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII. A Game Of Chance
+
+With dramatic completeness in the summer and autumn of 1864, the
+foundations of the Confederate hope one after another gave way. Among
+the causes of this catastrophe was the failure of the second great
+attempt on the part of the Confederacy to secure recognition abroad.
+The subject takes us back to the latter days of 1862, when the center
+of gravity in foreign affairs had shifted from London to Paris. Napoleon
+III, at the height of his strange career, playing half a dozen dubious
+games at once, took up a new pastime and played at intrigue with
+the Confederacy. In October he accorded a most gracious interview to
+Slidell. He remarked that his sympathies were entirely with the South
+but added that, if he acted alone, England might trip him up. He spoke
+of his scheme for joint intervention by England, France, and Russia.
+Then he asked why we had not created a navy. Slidell snapped at the
+bait. He said that the Confederates would be glad to build ships
+in France, that "if the Emperor would give only some kind of verbal
+assurance that the police would not observe too closely when we wished
+to put on guns and men we would gladly avail ourselves of it." To this,
+the imperial trickster replied, "Why could you not have them built as
+for the Italian Government? I do not think it would be difficult but
+will consult the Minister of Marine about it."
+
+Slidell left the Emperor's presence confident that things would happen.
+And they did. First came Napoleon's proposal of intervention, which was
+declined before the end of the year by England and Russia. Then came
+his futile overtures to the Government at Washington, his offer of
+mediation--which was rejected early in 1863. But Slidell remained
+confident that something else would happen. And in this expectation also
+he was not disappointed. The Emperor was deeply involved in Mexico
+and was busily intriguing throughout Europe. This was the time when
+Erlanger, standing high in the favor of the Emperor, made his gambler's
+proposal to the Confederate authorities about cotton. Another of the
+Emperor's friends now enters the play. On January 7, 1863, M. Arman,
+of Bordeaux, "the largest shipbuilder in France," had called on the
+Confederate commissioner: M. Arman would be happy to build ironclad
+ships for the Confederacy, and as to paying for them, cotton bonds might
+do the trick.
+
+No wonder Slidell was elated, so much so that he seems to have given
+little heed to the Emperor's sinister intimation that the whole affair
+must be subterranean. But the wily Bonaparte had not forgotten that six
+months earlier he had issued a decree of neutrality forbidding Frenchmen
+to take commissions from either belligerent "for the armament of vessels
+of war or to accept letters of marque, or to cooperate in any way
+whatsoever in the equipment or arming of any vessel of war or corsair of
+either belligerent." He did not intend to abandon publicly this cautious
+attitude--at least, not for the present. And while Slidell at Paris
+was completely taken in, the cooler head of A. Dudley Mann, Confederate
+commissioner at Brussels, saw what an international quicksand was
+the favor of Napoleon. It was about this time that Napoleon, having
+dispatched General Forey with a fresh army to Mexico, wrote the famous
+letter which gave notice to the world of what he was about. Mann wrote
+home in alarm that the Emperor might be expected to attempt recovering
+Mexico's ancient areas including Texas. Slidell saw in the Forey
+letter only "views... which will not be gratifying to the Washington
+Government."
+
+The adroit Arman, acting on hints from high officers of the Government,
+applied for permission to build and arm ships of war, alleging that he
+intended to send them to the Pacific and sell them to either China or
+Japan. To such a laudable expression of commercial enterprise, one of
+his fellows in the imperial ring, equipped with proper authority under
+Bonaparte, hastened to give official approbation, and Erlanger
+came forward by way of financial backer. There were conferences of
+Confederate agents; contracts were signed; plans were agreed upon; and
+the work was begun.
+
+There was no more hopeful man in the Confederate service than Slidell
+when, in the full flush of pride after Chancellorsville, he appealed
+to the Emperor to cease waiting on other powers and recognize the
+Confederacy. Napoleon accorded another gracious interview but still
+insisted that it was impossible for him to act alone. He said that
+he was "more fully convinced than ever of the propriety of a general
+recognition by the European powers of the Confederate States but that
+the commerce of France and the interests of the Mexican expedition would
+be jeopardized by a rupture with the United States" and unless England
+would stand by him he dared not risk such an eventuality. In point of
+fact, he was like a speculator who is "hedging" on the stock exchange,
+both buying and selling, and trying to make up his mind on which cast to
+stake his fortune. At the same time he threw out once more the sinister
+caution about the ships. He said that the ships might be built in France
+but that their destination must be concealed.
+
+That Napoleon's choice just then, if England had supported him, would
+have been recognition of the Confederacy, cannot be doubted. The tangle
+of intrigue which he called his foreign policy was not encouraging. He
+was deeply involved in Italian politics, where the daring of Garibaldi
+had reopened the struggle between clericals and liberals. In France
+itself the struggle between parties was keen. Here, as in the American
+imbroglio, he found it hard to decide with which party to break. The
+chimerical scheme of a Latin empire in Mexico was his spectacular device
+to catch the imagination, and incidentally the pocketbook, of everybody.
+But in order to carry out this enterprise he must be able to avert or
+withstand the certain hostility of the United States. Therefore, as he
+told Slidell, "no other power than England possessed a sufficient navy"
+to pull his chestnuts out of the fire. The moment was auspicious, for
+there was a revival of the "Southern party" in England. The sailing of
+the Alabama from Liverpool during the previous summer had encouraged
+the Confederate agents and their British friends to undertake further
+shipbuilding.
+
+While M. Arman was at work in France, the Laird Brothers were at work
+in England and their dockyards contained two ironclad rams supposed to
+outclass any vessels of the United States navy. Though every effort had
+been made to keep secret the ultimate destination of these rams, the
+vigilance of the United States minister, reinforced by the zeal of
+the "Northern party," detected strong circumstantial evidence pointing
+toward a Confederate contract with the Lairds. A popular agitation
+ensued along with demands upon the Government to investigate. To mask
+the purposes of the Lairds, Captain James Bullock, the able special
+agent of the Confederate navy, was forced to fall lack upon the same
+tactics that were being used across the Channel, and to sell the rams,
+on paper, to a firm in France. Neither he nor Slidell yet appreciated
+what a doubtful refuge was the shadow of Napoleon's wing.
+
+Nevertheless the British Government, by this time practically alined
+with the North, continued its search for the real owner of the Laird
+rams. The "Southern party," however, had not quite given up hope, and
+the agitation to prevent the sailing of the rams was a keen spur to its
+flagging zeal. Furthermore the prestige of Lee never was higher than it
+was in June, 1863, when the news of Chancellorsville was still fresh and
+resounding in every mind. It had given new life to the Confederate hope:
+Lee would take Washington before the end of the summer; the Laird rams
+would go to sea; the Union would be driven to the wall. So reasoned
+the ardent friends of the South. But one thing was lacking--a European
+alliance. What a time for England to intervene!
+
+While Slidell was talking with the Emperor, he had in his pocket a
+letter from J. A. Roebuck, an English politician who wished to force
+the issue in the House of Commons. As a preliminary to moving the
+recognition of the Confederacy, he wanted authority to deny a rumor
+going the rounds in London, to the effect that Napoleon had taken
+position against intervention. Napoleon, when he had seen the letter,
+began a negotiation of some sort with this politician. It is needless to
+enter into the complications that ensued, the subsequent recriminations,
+and the question as to just what Napoleon promised at this time and how
+many of his promises he broke. He was a diplomat of the old school,
+the school of lying as a fine art. He permitted Roebuck to come over to
+Paris for an audience, and Roebuck went away with the impression that
+Napoleon could be relied upon to back up a new movement for recognition.
+When, however, Roebuck brought the matter before the Commons at the
+end of the month and encountered an opposition from the Government that
+seemed to imply an understanding with Napoleon which was different from
+his own, he withdrew his motion (in July). Once more the scale turned
+against the Confederacy, and Gettysburg was supplemented by the seizure
+of the Laird rams by the British authorities. These events explain the
+bitter turn given to Confederate feeling toward England in the latter
+part of 1863. On the 4th of August Benjamin wrote to Mason that "the
+perusal of the recent debates in 'Parliament satisfies the President"
+that Mason's "continued residence in London is neither conducive to
+the interests nor consistent with the dignity of this government," and
+directed him to withdraw to Paris.
+
+Confederate feeling, as it cooled toward England, warmed toward France.
+Napoleon's Mexican scheme, including the offer of a ready-made imperial
+crown to Maximilian, the brother of the Emperor of Austria, was fully
+understood at Richmond; and with Napoleon's need of an American ally,
+Southern hope revived. It was further strengthened by a pamphlet which
+was translated and distributed in the South as a newspaper article
+under the title France, Mexico, and the Confederate States. The reputed
+author, Michel Chevalier, was an imperial senator, another member of the
+Napoleon ring, and highly trusted by his shifty master. The pamphlet,
+which emphasized the importance of Southern independence as a condition
+of Napoleon's "beneficent aims" in Mexico, was held to have been
+inspired, and the imperial denial was regarded as a mere matter of form.
+
+What appeared to be significant of the temper of the Imperial Government
+was a decree of a French court in the case of certain merchants who
+sought to recover insurance on wine dispatched to America and destroyed
+in a ship taken by the Alabama. Their plea was that they were insured
+against loss by "pirates." The court dismissed their suit and assessed
+costs against them. Further evidence of Napoleon's favor was the
+permission given to the Confederate cruiser Florida to repair at Brest
+and even to make use of the imperial dockyard. The very general faith in
+Napoleon's promises was expressed by Davis in his message to Congress
+in December: "Although preferring our own government and institutions
+to those of other countries, we can have no disposition to contest the
+exercise by them of the same right of self-government which we assert
+for ourselves. If the Mexican people prefer a monarchy to a republic,
+it is our plain duty cheerfully to acquiesce in their decision and
+to evince a sincere and friendly interest in their prosperity.... The
+Emperor of the French has solemnly disclaimed any purpose to impose
+on Mexico a form of government not acceptable to the nation...." In
+January, 1864, hope of recognition through support of Napoleon's Mexican
+policy moved the Confederate Congress to adopt resolutions providing for
+a Minister to the Mexican Empire and giving him instructions with regard
+to a presumptive treaty. To the new post Davis appointed General William
+Preston.
+
+But what, while hope was springing high in America, was taking place in
+France? So far as the world could say, there was little if anything to
+disturb the Confederates; and yet, on the horizon, a cloud the size of
+a man's hand had appeared. M. Arman had turned to another member of the
+Legislative Assembly, a sound Bonapartist like himself, M. Voruz, of
+Nantes, to whom he had sublet a part of the Confederate contract. The
+truth about the ships and their destination thus became part of the
+archives of the Voruz firm. No phase of Napoleonic intrigue could go
+very far without encountering dishonesty, and to the confidential
+clerk of M. Voruz there occurred the bright idea of doing something
+for himself with this valuable diplomatic information. One fine day
+the clerk was missing and with him certain papers. Then there ensued a
+period of months during which the firm and their employers could only
+conjecture the full extent of their loss.
+
+In reality, from the Confederate point of view, everything was lost.
+Again the episode becomes too complex to be followed in detail. Suffice
+it to say that the papers were sold to the United States; that the
+secret was exposed; that the United States made a determined assault
+upon the Imperial Government. In the midst of this entanglement, Slidell
+lost his head, for hope deferred when apparently within reach of its end
+is a dangerous councilor of state. In his extreme anxiety, Slidell sent
+to the Emperor a note the blunt rashness of which the writer could not
+have appreciated. Saying that he feared the Emperor's subordinates
+might play into the hands of Washington, he threw his fat in the fire by
+speaking of the ships as "now being constructed at Bordeaux and Nantes
+for the government of the Confederate States" and virtually claimed of
+Napoleon a promise to let them go to sea. Three days later the Minister
+of Foreign Affairs took him sharply to task because of this note,
+reminding him that "what had passed with the Emperor was confidential"
+and dropping the significant hint that France could not be forced into
+war by "indirection." According to Slidell's version of the interview
+"the Minister's tone changed completely" when Slidell replied with "a
+detailed history of the affair showing that the idea originated with the
+Emperor." Perhaps the Minister knew more than he chose to betray. From
+this hour the game was up. Napoleon's purpose all along seems to have
+been quite plain. He meant to help the South to win by itself, and,
+after it had won, to use it for his own advantage. So precarious was
+his position in Europe that he dared not risk an American war without
+England's aid, and England had cast the die. In this way, secrecy was
+the condition necessary to continued building of the ships. Now that
+the secret was out, Napoleon began to shift his ground. He sounded the
+Washington Government and found it suspiciously equivocal as to Mexico.
+To silence the French republicans, to whom the American minister had
+supplied information about the ships, Napoleon tried at first muzzling
+the press. But as late as February, 1864, he was still carrying water on
+both shoulders. His Minister of Marine notified the builders that they
+must get the ships out of France, unarmed, under fictitious sale to
+some neutral country. The next month, reports which the Confederate
+commissioners sent home became distinctly alarming. Mann wrote from
+Brussels: "Napoleon has enjoined upon Maximilian to hold no official
+relations with our commissioners in Mexico." Shortly after this Slidell
+received a shock that was the beginning of the end: Maximilian, on
+passing through Paris on his way to Mexico, refused to receive him.
+
+The Mexican project was now being condemned by all classes in France.
+Nevertheless, the Government was trying to float a Mexican loan, and
+it is hardly fanciful to think that on this loan the last hope of the
+Confederacy turned. Despite the popular attitude toward Mexico, the loan
+was going well when the House of Representatives of the United States
+dealt the Confederacy a staggering blow. It passed unanimous resolutions
+in the most grim terms, denouncing the substitution of monarchical
+for republican government in Mexico under European auspices. When this
+action was reported in France, the Mexican loan collapsed.
+
+Napoleon's Italian policy was now moving rapidly toward the crisis
+which it reached during the following summer when he surrendered to the
+opposition and promised to withdraw the French troops from Rome. In May,
+when the loan collapsed, there was nothing for it but to throw over his
+dear friends of the Confederacy. Presently he had summoned Arman before
+him, "rated him severely," and ordered him to make bona fide sales of
+the ships to neutral powers. The Minister of Marine professed surprise
+and indignation at Arman's trifling with the neutrality of the Imperial
+Government. And that practically was the end of the episode.
+
+Equally complete was the breakdown of the Confederate negotiations with
+Mexico. General Preston was refused recognition. In those fierce days of
+July when the fate of Atlanta was in the balance, the pride and despair
+of the Confederate Government flared up in a haughty letter to Preston
+reminding him that "it had never been the intention of this Government
+to offer any arguments to the new Government of Mexico... nor to place
+itself in any attitude other than that of complete equality," and
+directing him to make no further overtures to the Mexican Emperor.
+
+And then came the debacle in Georgia. On that same 20th of September
+when Benjamin poured out in a letter to Slidell his stored-up bitterness
+denouncing Napoleon, Davis, feeling the last crisis was upon him, left
+Richmond to join the army in Georgia. His frame of mind he had already
+expressed when he said, "We have no friends abroad."
+
+
+
+Chapter IX. Desperate Remedies
+
+The loss of Atlanta was the signal for another conflict of authority
+within the Confederacy. Georgia was now in the condition in which
+Alabama had found herself in the previous year. A great mobile army
+of invaders lay encamped on her soil. And yet there was still a state
+Government established at the capital. Inevitably the man who thought
+of the situation from the point of view of what we should now call the
+general staff, and the man who thought of it from the point of view of
+a citizen of the invaded State, suffered each an intensification of
+feeling, and each became determined to solve the problem in his own way.
+The President of the Confederacy and the Governor of Georgia represented
+these incompatible points of view.
+
+The Governor, Joseph E. Brown, is one of the puzzling figures of
+Confederate history. We have already encountered him as a dogged
+opponent of the Administration. With the whole fabric of Southern life
+toppling about his ears, Brown argued, quibbled, evaded, and became a
+rallying-point of disaffection. That more eminent Georgian, Howell
+Cobb, applied to him very severe language, and they became engaged in a
+controversy over that provision of the Conscription Act which exempted
+state officials from military service. While the Governor of Virginia
+was refusing certificates of exemption to the minor civil officers
+such as justices of the peace, Brown by proclamation promised his
+"protection" to the most insignificant civil servants. "Will even your
+Excellency," demanded Cobb, "certify that in any county of Georgia
+twenty justices of the peace and an equal number of constables are
+necessary for the proper administration of the state government?"
+The Bureau of Conscription estimated that Brown kept out of the army
+approximately 8000 eligible men. The truth seems to be that neither
+by education nor heredity was this Governor equipped to conceive large
+ideas. He never seemed conscious of the war as a whole, or of the
+Confederacy as a whole. To defend Georgia and, if that could not be
+done, to make peace for Georgia--such in the mind of Brown was the
+aim of the war. His restless jealousy of the Administration finds its
+explanation in his fear that it would denude his State of men. The
+seriousness of Governor Brown's opposition became apparent within a week
+of the fall of Atlanta. Among Hood's forces were some 10,000 Georgia
+militia. Brown notified Hood that these troops had been called out
+solely with a view to the defense of Atlanta, that since Atlanta had
+been lost they must now be permitted "to return to their homes and
+look for a time after important interests," and that therefore he did
+"withdraw said organizations" from Hood's command. In other words, Brown
+was afraid that they might be taken out of the State. By proclamation
+he therefore gave the militia a furlough of thirty days. Previous to
+the issue of this proclamation, Seddon had written to Brown making
+requisition for his 10,000 militia to assist in a pending campaign
+against Sherman. Two days after his proclamation had appeared, Brown, in
+a voluminous letter full of blustering rhetoric and abounding in sneers
+at the President, demanded immediate reinforcements by order of the
+President and threatened that, if they were not sent, he would recall
+the Georgia troops from the army of Lee and would command "all the sons
+of Georgia to return to their own State and within their own limits to
+rally round her glorious flag."
+
+So threatening was the situation in Georgia that Davis attempted to take
+it into his own hands. In a grim frame of mind he left Richmond for
+the front. The resulting military arrangements do not of course belong
+strictly to the subject matter of this volume; but the brief tour of
+speechmaking which Davis made in Georgia and the interior of South
+Carolina must be noticed; for his purpose seems to have been to put the
+military point of view squarely before the people. He meant them to
+see how the soldier looked at the situation, ignoring all demands of
+locality, of affiliation, of hardship, and considering only how to meet
+and beat the enemy. In his tense mood he was not always fortunate in his
+expressions. At Augusta, for example, he described Beauregard, whom he
+had recently placed in general command over Georgia and South Carolina,
+as one who would do whatever the President told him to do. But this idea
+of military self-effacement was not happily worded, and the enemies of
+Davis seized on his phraseology as further evidence of his instinctive
+autocracy. The Mercury compared him to the Emperor of Russia and
+declared the tactless remark to be "as insulting to General Beauregard
+as it is false and presumptuous in the President."
+
+Meanwhile Beauregard was negotiating with Brown. Though they came to an
+understanding about the disposition of the militia, Brown still tried
+to keep control of the state troops. When Sherman was burning Atlanta
+preparatory to the March to the Sea, Brown addressed to the Secretary of
+War another interminable epistle, denouncing the Confederate authorities
+and asserting his willingness to fight both the South and the North if
+they did not both cease invading his rights. But the people of Georgia
+were better balanced than their Governor. Under the leadership of such
+men as Cobb they rose to the occasion and did their part in what proved
+a vain attempt to conduct a "people's war." Their delegation at Richmond
+sent out a stirring appeal assuring them that Davis was doing for them
+all it was possible to do. "Let every man fly to arms," said the
+appeal. "Remove your negroes, horses, cattle, and provisions from before
+Sherman's army, and burn what you cannot carry. Burn all bridges and
+block up the roads in his route. Assail the invader in front, flank, and
+rear, by night and by day. Let him have no rest."
+
+
+The Richmond Government was unable to detach any considerable force
+from the northern front. Its contribution to the forces in Georgia was
+accomplished by such pathetic means as a general order calling to the
+colors all soldiers furloughed or in hospital, "except those unable to
+travel"; by revoking all exemptions to farmers, planters, and mechanics,
+except munitions workers; and by placing one-fifth of the ordnance and
+mining bureau in the battle service.
+
+All the world knows how futile were these endeavors to stop the
+whirlwind of desolation that was Sherman's march. He spent his Christmas
+Day in Savannah. Then the center of gravity shifted from Georgia to
+South Carolina. Throughout the two desperate months that closed 1864 the
+authorities of South Carolina had vainly sought for help from Richmond.
+Twice the Governor made official request for the return to South
+Carolina of some of her own troops who were at the front in Virginia.
+Davis first evaded and then refused the request. Lee had informed him
+that if the forces on the northern front were reduced, the evacuation of
+Richmond would become inevitable.
+
+The South Carolina Government, in December, 1864, seems to have
+concluded that the State must save itself. A State Conscription Act was
+passed placing all white males between the ages of sixteen and sixty at
+the disposal of the state authorities for emergency duty. An Exemption
+Act set forth a long list of persons who should not be liable to
+conscription by the Confederate Government. Still a third act regulated
+the impressment of slaves for work on fortifications so as to enable the
+state authorities to hold a check upon the Confederate authorities. The
+significance of the three statutes was interpreted by a South Carolina
+soldier, General John S. Preston, in a letter to the Secretary of War
+that was a wail of despair. "This legislation is an explicit declaration
+that this State does not intend to contribute another soldier or slave
+to the public defense, except on such terms its may be dictated by her
+authorities. The example will speedily be followed by North Carolina
+and Georgia, the Executives of those States having already assumed the
+position."
+
+The division between the two parties in South Carolina had now become
+bitter. To Preston the men behind the State Exemption Act appeared
+as "designing knaves." The Mercury, on the other hand, was never more
+relentless toward Davis than in the winter of 1864-1865. However, none
+or almost none of the anti-Davis men in South Carolina made the least
+suggestion of giving up the struggle. To fight to the end but also to
+act as a check upon the central Government--as the new Governor, Andrew
+G. Magrath, said in his inaugural address in December, 1864,--was
+the aim of the dominant party in South Carolina. How far the State
+Government and the Confederate Government had drifted apart is shown by
+two comments which were made in January, 1865. Lee complained that the
+South Carolina regiments, "much reduced by hard service," were not being
+recruited up to their proper strength because of the measures adopted
+in the southeastern States to retain conscripts at home. About the same
+date the Mercury arraigned Davis for leaving South Carolina defenseless
+in the face of Sherman's coming offensive, and asked whether Davis
+intended to surrender the Confederacy.
+
+And in the midst of this critical period, the labor problem pushed to
+the fore again. The revocation of industrial details, necessary as it
+was, had put almost the whole male population--in theory, at least--in
+the general Confederate army. How far-reaching was the effect of this
+order may be judged from the experience of the Columbia and Augusta
+Railroad Company. This road was building through the interior of the
+State a new line which was rendered imperatively necessary by Sherman's
+seizure of the lines terminating at Savannah. The effect of the
+revocation order on the work in progress was described by the president
+of the road in a letter to the Secretary of War:
+
+"In July and August I made a fair beginning and by October we had about
+600 hands. General Order No. 77 took off many of our contractors and
+hands. We still had increased the number of hands to about 400 when
+Sherman started from Atlanta. The military authorities of Augusta took
+about 300 of them to fortify that city. These contractors being from
+Georgia returned with their slaves to their homes after being discharged
+at Augusta. We still have between 500 and 600 hands at work and are
+adding to the force every week.
+
+"The great difficulty has been in getting contractors exempt or
+definitely detailed since Order No. 77. I have not exceeded eight or
+nine contractors now detailed. The rest are exempt from other causes or
+over age."
+
+It was against such a background of economic confusion that Magrath
+wrote to the Governor of North Carolina making a revolutionary proposal.
+Virtually admitting that the Confederacy had been shattered, and knowing
+the disposition of those in authority to see only the military aspects
+of any given situation, he prophesied two things: that the generals
+would soon attempt to withdraw Lee's army south of Virginia, and that
+the Virginia troops in that army would refuse to go. "It is natural
+under the circumstances," said he, "that they would not." He would
+prepare for this emergency by an agreement among the Southeastern and
+Gulf States to act together irrespective of Richmond, and would thus
+weld the military power of these States into "a compact and organized
+mass."
+
+Governor Vance, with unconscious subtlety, etched a portrait of his own
+mind when he replied that the crisis demanded "particularly the skill of
+the politician perhaps more than that of the great general." He adroitly
+evaded saying what he really thought of the situation but he made two
+explicit counter-proposals. He suggested that a demand should be made
+for the restoration of General Johnston and for the appointment of
+General Lee to "full and absolute command of all the forces of the
+Confederacy." On the day on which Vance wrote to Magrath, the Mercury
+lifted up its voice and cried out for a Lee to take charge of the
+Government and save the Confederacy. About the same time Cobb wrote
+to Davis in the most friendly way, warning him that he had scarcely
+a supporter left in Georgia, and that, in view of the great popular
+reaction in favor of Johnston, concessions to the opposition were an
+imperative necessity. "By accident," said he, "I have become possessed
+of the facts in connection with the proposed action of the Governors of
+certain States." He disavowed any sympathy with the movement but warned
+Davis that it was a serious menace.
+
+Two other intrigues added to the general political confusion. One of
+these, the "Peace Movement," will be considered in the next chapter. The
+other was closely connected with the alleged conspiracy to depose Davis
+and set up Lee as dictator. If the traditional story, accepted by
+able historians, may be believed, William C. Rives, of the Confederate
+Congress, carried in January, 1865, to Lee from a congressional cabal
+an invitation to accept the role of Cromwell. The greatest difficulty in
+the way of accepting the tradition is the extreme improbability that any
+one who knew anything of Lee would have been so foolish as to make such
+a proposal. Needless to add, the tradition includes Lee's refusal to
+overturn the Government. There can be no doubt, however, that all the
+enemies of Davis in Congress and out of it, in the opening months of
+1865, made a determined series of attacks upon his Administration. Nor
+can there be any doubt that the popular faith in Lee was used as their
+trump card. To that end, a bill was introduced to create the office of
+commanding general of the Confederate armies. The bill was generally
+applauded, and every one assumed that the new office was to be given
+to Lee. On the day after the bill had passed the Senate the Virginia
+Legislature resolved that the appointment of General Lee to supreme
+command would "reanimate the spirit of the armies as well as the people
+of the several States and... inspire increased confidence in the final
+success of the cause." When the bill was sent to the President, it was
+accompanied by a resolution asking him to restore Johnston. While Davis
+was considering this bill, the Virginia delegation in the House, headed
+by the Speaker, Thomas S. Bocock, waited upon the President, informed
+him what was really wanted was a change of Cabinet, and told him
+that three-fourths of the House would support a resolution of want of
+confidence in the Cabinet. The next day Bocock repeated the demand in a
+note which Davis described as a "warning if not a threat."
+
+The situation of both President and country was now desperate. The
+program with which the Government had entered so hopefully upon this
+fated year had broken down at almost every point. In addition to the
+military and administrative disasters, the financial and economic
+situation was as bad as possible. So complete was the financial
+breakdown that Secretary Memminger, utterly disheartened, had resigned
+his office, and the Treasury was now administered by a Charleston
+merchant, George A. Trenholm. But the financial chaos was wholly beyond
+his control. The government notes reckoned in gold were worth about
+three cents on the dollar. The Government itself avoided accepting them.
+It even bought up United States currency and used it in transacting the
+business of the army. The extent of the financial collapse was to be
+measured by such incidents as the following which is recounted in a
+report that had passed under Davis's eye only a few weeks before
+the "threat" of Bocock was uttered: "Those holding the four per cent
+certificates complain that the Government as far as possible discredits
+them. Fractions of hundreds cannot be paid with them. I saw a widow
+lady, a few days since, offer to pay her taxes of $1,271.31 with a
+certificate of $1,300. The tax-gatherer refused to give her the change
+of $28.69. She then offered the whole certificate for the taxes. This
+was refused. This apparent injustice touched her far more than the
+amount of the taxes."
+
+A letter addressed to the President from Griffin, Georgia, contained
+this dreary picture:
+
+"Unless something is done and that speedily, there will be thousands
+of the best citizens of the State and heretofore as loyal as any in the
+Confederacy, that will not care one cent which army is victorious in
+Georgia.... Since August last there have been thousands of cavalry
+and wagon trains feeding upon our cornfields and for which our
+quartermasters and officers in command of trains, regiments, battalions,
+companies, and squads, have been giving the farmers receipts, and we
+were all told these receipts would pay our government taxes and tithing;
+and yet not one of them will be taken by our collector.... And yet we
+are threatened with having our lands sold for taxes. Our scrip for
+corn used by our generals will not be taken.... How is it that we have
+certified claims upon our Government, past due ten months, and when we
+enter the quartermaster's office we see placed up conspicuously in large
+letters "no funds." Some of these said quartermasters [who] four years
+ago were not worth the clothes upon their backs, are now large dealers
+in lands, negroes, and real estate."
+
+There was almost universal complaint that government contractors
+were speculating in supplies and that the Impressment Law was used by
+officials to cover their robbery of both the Government and the people.
+Allowing for all the panic of the moment, one is forced to conclude that
+the smoke is too dense not to cover a good deal of fire. In a word,
+at the very time when local patriotism everywhere was drifting into
+opposition to the general military command and when Congress was
+reflecting this widespread loss of confidence, the Government was loudly
+charged with inability to restrain graft. In all these accusations there
+was much injustice. Conditions that the Government was powerless to
+control were cruelly exaggerated, and the motives of the Government were
+falsified. For all this exaggeration and falsification the press was
+largely to blame. Moreover, the press, at least in dangerously
+large proportion, was schooling the people to hold Davis personally
+responsible for all their suffering. General Bragg was informed in a
+letter from a correspondent in Mobile that "men have been taught to look
+upon the President as an inexorably self-willed man who will see the
+country to the devil before giving up an opinion or a purpose." This
+deliberate fostering of an anti-Davis spirit might seem less malicious
+if the fact were not known that many editors detested Davis because of
+his desire to abolish the exemption of editors from conscription.
+Their ignoble course brings to mind one of the few sarcasms recorded of
+Lee--the remark that the great mistake of the South was in making all
+its best military geniuses editors of newspapers. But it must be added
+in all fairness that the great opposition journals, such as the Mercury,
+took up this new issue with the President because they professed to see
+in his attitude toward the press a determination to suppress freedom of
+speech, so obsessed was the opposition with the idea that Davis was
+a monster! Whatever explanations may be offered for the prevalence of
+graft, the impotence of the Government at Richmond contributed to
+the general demoralization. In regions like Georgia and Alabama, the
+Confederacy was now powerless to control its agents. Furthermore,
+in every effort to assume adequate control of the food situation the
+Government met the continuous opposition of two groups of opponents--the
+unscrupulous parasites and the bigots of economic and constitutional
+theory. Of the activities of the first group, one incident is sufficient
+to tell the whole story. At Richmond, in the autumn of 1864, the grocers
+were selling rice at two dollars and a half a pound. It happened that
+the Governor of Virginia was William Smith, one of the strong men of
+the Confederacy who has not had his due from the historians. He saw
+that even under the intolerable conditions of the moment this price was
+shockingly exorbitant. To remedy matters, the Governor took the State of
+Virginia into business, bought rice where it was grown, imported it, and
+sold it in Richmond at fifty cents a pound, with sufficient profit to
+cover all costs of handling.
+
+Nevertheless, when Smith urged the Virginia Legislature to assume
+control of business as a temporary measure, he was at once assailed by
+the second group--those martinets of constitutionalism who would not
+give up their cherished Anglo-Saxon tradition of complete individualism
+in government. The Administration lost some of its staunchest supporters
+the moment its later organ, the Sentinel, began advocating the general
+regulation of prices. With ruin staring them in the face, these devotees
+of tradition could only reiterate their ancient formulas, nail their
+colors to the mast, end go down, satisfied that, if they failed with
+these principles, they would have failed still more terribly without
+them. Confronting the practical question how to prevent speculators from
+charging 400 per cent profit, these men turned grim but did not abandon
+their theory. In the latter part of 1864 they aligned themselves with
+the opposition when the government commissioners of impressment fixed
+an official schedule that boldly and ruthlessly cut under market prices.
+The attitude of many such people was expressed by the Montgomery Mail
+when it said:
+
+"The tendency of the age, the march of the American people, is toward
+monarchy, and unless the tide is stopped we shall reach something worse
+than monarchy.
+
+"Every step we have taken during the past four years has been in the
+direction of military despotism.
+
+"Half our laws are unconstitutional."
+
+Another danger of the hour was the melting away of the Confederate army
+under the very eyes of its commanders. The records showed that there
+were 100,000 absentees. And though the wrathful officials of the Bureau
+of Conscription labeled them all "deserters," the term covered great
+numbers who had gone home to share the sufferings of their families.
+
+Such in brief was the fateful background of the congressional attack
+upon the Administration in January, 1865. Secretary Seddon, himself a
+Virginian, believing that he was the main target of the hostility of
+the Virginia delegation, insisted upon resigning. Davis met this
+determination with firmness, not to say infatuation, and in spite of
+the congressional crisis, exhausted every argument to persuade Seddon
+to remain in office. He denied the right of Congress to control his
+Cabinet, but he was finally constrained to allow Seddon to retire. The
+bitterness inspired by these attempts to coerce the President may be
+gauged by a remark attributed to Mrs. Davis. Speaking of the action
+of Congress in forcing upon him the new plan for a single commanding
+general of all the armies, she is said to have exclaimed, "I think I am
+the proper person to advise Mr. Davis and if I were he, I would die or
+be hung before I would submit to the humiliation."
+
+Nevertheless the President surrendered to Congress. On January 26, 1865,
+he signed the bill creating the office of commanding general and at once
+bestowed the office upon Lee. It must not be supposed, however, that Lee
+himself had the slightest sympathy with the congressional cabal which
+had forced upon the President this reorganization of the army. In
+accepting his new position he pointedly ignored Congress by remarking,
+"I am indebted alone to the kindness of His Excellency, the President,
+for my nomination to this high and arduous office."
+
+The popular clamor for the restoration of Johnston had still to be
+appeased. Disliking Johnston and knowing that the opposition was using
+a popular general as a club with which to beat himself, Davis hesitated
+long but in the end yielded to the inevitable. To make the reappointment
+himself, however, was too humiliating. He left it to the new
+commander-in-chief, who speedily restored Johnston to command.
+
+
+
+Chapter X. Disintegration
+
+While these factions, despite their disagreements, were making valiant
+efforts to carry on the war, other factions were stealthily cutting
+the ground from under them. There were two groups of men ripe for
+disaffection--original Unionists unreconciled to the Confederacy and
+indifferentists conscripted against their will.
+
+History has been unduly silent about these disaffected men. At the
+time so real was the belief in state rights that contemporaries were
+reluctant to admit that any Southerner, once his State had seceded,
+could fail to be loyal to its commands. Nevertheless in considerable
+areas--such, for example, as East Tennessee--the majority remained to
+the end openly for the Union, and there were large regions in the
+South to which until quite recently the eye of the student had not been
+turned. They were like deep shadows under mighty trees on the face of a
+brilliant landscape. When the peasant Unionist who had been forced
+into the army deserted, however, he found in these shadows a nucleus
+of desperate men ready to combine with him in opposition to the local
+authorities.
+
+Thus were formed local bands of free companions who pillaged the
+civilian population. The desperadoes whom the deserters joined have been
+described by Professor Dodd as the "neglected byproducts" of the old
+regime. They were broken white men, or the children of such, of the sort
+that under other circumstances have congregated in the slums of great
+cities. Though the South lacked great cities, nevertheless it had its
+slum--a widespread slum, scattered among its swamps and forests. In
+these fastnesses were the lowest of the poor whites, in whom hatred of
+the dominant whites and vengeful malice against the negro burned like
+slow fires. When almost everywhere the countryside was stripped of its
+fighting men, these wretches emerged from their swamps and forests,
+like the Paris rabble emerging from its dens at the opening of the
+Revolution. But unlike the Frenchmen, they were too sodden to be capable
+of ideas. Like predatory wild beasts they revenged themselves upon the
+society that had cast them off, and with utter heartlessness they
+smote the now defenseless negro. In the old days, with the country well
+policed, the slaves had been protected against their fury, but war now
+changed all. The negro villages--or "streets," as the term was--were
+without arms and without white police within call. They were ravaged
+by these marauders night after night, and negroes were not the only
+victims, for in remote districts even murder of the whites became a
+familiar horror.
+
+The antiwar factions were not necessarily, however, users of
+violence. There were some men who cherished a dream which they labeled
+"reconstruction"; and there were certain others who believed in separate
+state action, still clinging to the illusion that any State had it in
+its power to escape from war by concluding a separate peace with the
+United States.
+
+Yet neither of these illusions made much headway in the States that
+had borne the strain of intellectual leadership. Virginia and South
+Carolina, though seldom seeing things eye to eye and finally drifting in
+opposite directions, put but little faith in either "reconstruction"
+or separate peace. Their leaders had learned the truth about men and
+nations; they knew that life is a grim business; they knew that war had
+unloosed passions that had to spend themselves and that could not be
+talked away.
+
+But there was scattered over the Confederacy a population which lacked
+experience of the world and which included in the main those small
+farmers and semi-peasants who under the old regime were released from
+the burden of taxation and at the same time excluded from the benefits
+of education. Among these people the illusions of the higher classes
+were reflected without the ballast of mentality. Ready to fight on any
+provocation, yet circumscribed by their own natures, not understanding
+life, unable to picture to themselves different types and conditions,
+these people were as prone as children to confuse the world of their own
+desire with the world of fact. When hardship came, when taxation fell
+upon them with a great blow, when the war took a turn that necessitated
+imagination for its understanding and faith for its pursuit, these
+people with childlike simplicity immediately became panic-stricken.
+Like the similar class in the North, they had measureless faith in talk.
+Hence for them, as for Horace Greeley and many another, sprang up the
+notion that if only all their sort could be brought together for talk
+and talk and yet more talk, the Union could be "reconstructed" just as
+it used to be, and the cruel war would end. Before their eyes, as before
+Greeley in 1864, danced the fata morgana of a convention of all the
+States, talking, talking, talking.
+
+The peace illusion centered in North Carolina, where the people were
+as enthusiastic for state sovereignty as were any Southerners. They had
+seceded mainly because they felt that this principle had been attacked.
+Having themselves little if any intention to promote slavery, they
+nevertheless were prompt to resent interference with the system or with
+any other Southern institution. Jonathan Worth said that they looked on
+both abolition and secession as children of the devil, and he put the
+responsibility for the secession of his State wholly upon Lincoln
+and his attempt to coerce the lower South. This attitude was probably
+characteristic of all classes in North Carolina. There also an unusually
+large percentage of men lacked education and knowledge of the world. We
+have seen how the first experience with taxation produced instant and
+violent reaction. The peasant farmers of the western counties and the
+general mass of the people began to distrust the planter class. They
+began asking if their allies, the other States, were controlled by that
+same class which seemed to be crushing them by the exaction of tithes.
+And then the popular cry was raised: Was there after all anything in the
+war for the masses in North Carolina? Had they left the frying-pan for
+the fire? Could they better things by withdrawing from association with
+their present allies and going back alone into the Union? The delusion
+that they could do so whenever they pleased and on the old footing
+seems to have been widespread. One of their catch phrases was "the
+Constitution as it is and the Union as it was." Throughout 1863, when
+the agitation against tithes was growing every day, the "conservatives"
+of North Carolina, as their leaders named them, were drawing together
+in a definite movement for peace. This project came to a head during the
+next year in those grim days when Sherman was before Atlanta. Holden,
+that champion of the opposition to tithes, became a candidate for
+Governor against Vance, who was standing for reelection. Holden stated
+his platform in the organ of his party "If the people of North Carolina
+are for perpetual conscriptions, impressments and seizures to keep up
+a perpetual, devastating and exhausting war, let them vote for Governor
+Vance, for he is for`fighting it out now; but if they believe, from the
+bitter experience of the last three years, that the sword can never
+end it, and are in favor of steps being taken by the State to urge
+negotiations by the general government for an honorable and speedy
+peace, they must vote for Mr. Holden."
+
+As Holden, however, was beaten by a vote that stood about three to one,
+Governor Vance continued in power, but just what he stood for and just
+what his supporters understood to be his policy would be hard to say.
+A year earlier he was for attempting to negotiate peace, but though
+professing to have come over to the war party he was never a cordial
+supporter of the Confederacy. In a hundred ways he played upon the
+strong local distrust of Richmond, and upon the feeling that North
+Carolina was being exploited in the interests of the remainder of the
+South. To cripple the efficiency of Confederate conscription was one of
+his constant aims. Whatever his views of the struggle in which he
+was engaged, they did not include either an appreciation of Southern
+nationalism or the strategist's conception of war. Granted that the
+other States were merely his allies, Vance pursued a course that might
+justly have aroused their suspicion, for so far as he was able he
+devoted the resources of the State wholly to the use of its own
+citizens. The food and the manufactures of North Carolina were to be
+used solely by its own troops, not by troops of the Confederacy raised
+in other States. And yet, subsequent to his reelection, he was not a
+figure in the movement to negotiate peace.
+
+Meanwhile in Georgia, where secession had met with powerful opposition,
+the policies of the Government had produced discontent not only with
+the management of the war but with the war itself. And now Alexander
+H. Stephens becomes, for a season, very nearly the central figure of
+Confederate history. Early in 1864 the new act suspending the writ of
+habeas corpus had aroused the wrath of Georgia, and Stephens had become
+the mouthpiece of the opposition. In an address to the Legislature, he
+condemned in most exaggerated language not only the Habeas Corpus Act
+but also the new Conscription Act. Soon afterward he wrote a long
+letter to Herschel V. Johnson, who, like himself, had been an enemy
+of secession in 1861. He said that if Johnson doubted that the Habeas
+Corpus Act was a blow struck at the very "vitals of liberty," then
+he "would not believe though one were to rise from the dead." In this
+extraordinary letter Stephens went on "most confidentially" to state his
+attitude toward Davis thus "While I do not and never have regarded him
+as a great man or statesman on a large scale, or a man of any marked
+genius, yet I have regarded him as a man of good intentions, weak and
+vacillating, timid, petulant, peevish, obstinate, but not firm. Am
+now beginning to doubt his good intentions.... His whole policy on the
+organization and discipline of the army is perfectly consistent with the
+hypothesis that he is aiming at absolute power."
+
+That a man of Stephens's ability should have dealt in fustian like this
+in the most dreadful moment of Confederate history is a psychological
+problem that is not easily solved. To be sure, Stephens was an extreme
+instance of the martinet of constitutionalism. He reminds us of those
+old-fashioned generals of whom Macaulay said that they preferred to lose
+a battle according to rule than win it by an exception. Such men find
+it easy to transform into a bugaboo any one who appears to them to be
+acting irregularly. Stephens in his own mind had so transformed
+the President. The enormous difficulties and the wholly abnormal
+circumstances which surrounded Davis counted with Stephens for nothing
+at all, and he reasoned about the Administration as if it were operating
+in a vacuum. Having come to this extraordinary position, Stephens passed
+easily into a role that verged upon treason. *
+
+
+ * There can be no question that Stephens never did anything
+ which in his own mind was in the least disloyal. And yet it
+ was Stephens who, in the autumn of 1864, was singled out by
+ artful men as a possible figurehead in the conduct of a
+ separate peace negotiation with Sherman. A critic very
+ hostile to Stephens and his faction might here raise the
+ question as to what was at bottom the motive of Governor
+ Brown, in the autumn of 1864, in withdrawing the Georgia
+ militia from Hood's command. Was there something afoot that
+ has never quite revealed itself on the broad pages of
+ history? As ordinarily told, the story is simply that
+ certain desperate Georgians asked Stephens to be their
+ ambassador to Sherman to discuss terms; that Sherman had
+ given them encouragement; but that Stephens avoided the
+ trap, and so nothing came of it. The recently published
+ correspondence of Toombs, Stephens, and Cobb, however,
+ contains one passage that has rather a startling sound.
+ Brown, writing to Stephens regarding his letter refusing to
+ meet Sherman, says, "It keeps the door open and I think this
+ is wise." At the same time he made a public statement that
+ "Georgia has power to act independently but her faith is
+ pledged by implication to her Southern sisters... will
+ triumph with her Southern sisters or sink with them in
+ common ruin." It is still to be discovered what "door"
+ Stephens was supposed to have kept open. Peace talk was now
+ in the air, and especially was there chatter about
+ reconstruction. The illusionists seemed unable to perceive
+ that the reelection of Lincoln had robbed them of their last
+ card. These dreamers did not even pause to wonder why after
+ the terrible successes of the Federal army in Georgia,
+ Lincoln should be expected to reverse his policy and restore
+ the Union with the Southern States on the old footing. The
+ peace mania also invaded South Carolina and was espoused by
+ one of its Congressmen, Mr. Boyce, but he made few converts
+ among his own people. The Mercury scouted the idea; clear-
+ sighted and disillusioned, it saw the only alternatives to
+ be victory or subjugation. Boyce's argument was that the
+ South had already succumbed to military despotism and would
+ have to endure it forever unless it accepted the terms of
+ the invaders. News of Boyce's attitude called forth vigorous
+ protest from the army before Petersburg, and even went so
+ far afield as New York, where it was discussed in the
+ columns of the Herald.
+
+
+In the midst of the Northern elections, when Davis was hoping great
+things from the anti-Lincoln men, Stephens had said in print that
+he believed Davis really wished the Northern peace party defeated,
+whereupon Davis had written to him demanding reasons for this astounding
+charge. To the letter, which had missed Stephens at his home and had
+followed him late in the year to Richmond, Stephens wrote in the middle
+of December a long reply which is one of the most curious documents
+in American history. He justified himself upon two grounds. One was
+a statement which Davis had made in a speech at Columbia, in October,
+indicating that he was averse to the scheme of certain Northern peace
+men for a convention of all the States. Stephens insisted that such a
+convention would have ended the war and secured the independence of the
+South. Davis cleared himself on this charge by saying that the speech
+at Columbia "was delivered after the publication of McClellan's
+letter avowing his purpose to force reunion by war if we declined
+reconstruction when offered, and therefore warned the people against
+delusive hopes of peace from any other influence than that to be exerted
+by the manifestation of an unconquerable spirit."
+
+As Stephens professed to have independence and not reconstruction for
+his aim, he had missed his mark with this first shot. He fared still
+worse with the second. During the previous spring a Northern soldier
+captured in the southeast had appealed for parole on the ground that he
+was a secret emissary to the President from the peace men of the North.
+Davis, who did not take him seriously, gave orders to have the case
+investigated, but Stephens, whose mentality in this period is so
+curiously overcast, swallowed the prisoner's story without hesitation.
+He and Davis had a considerable amount of correspondence on the subject.
+In the fierce tension of the summer of 1864 the War Department went
+so far as to have the man's character investigated, but the report was
+unsatisfactory. He was not paroled and died in prison. This episode
+Stephens now brought forward as evidence that Davis had frustrated
+an attempt of the Northern peace party to negotiate. Davis contented
+himself with replying, "I make no comment on this."
+
+The next step in the peace intrigue took place at the opening of
+the next year, 1865. Stephens attempted to address the Senate on his
+favorite topic, the wickedness of the suspension of habeas corpus; was
+halted by a point of parliamentary law; and when the Senate sustained
+an appeal from his decision, left the chamber in a pique. Hunter, now
+a Senator, became an envoy to placate him and succeeded in bringing him
+back. Thereupon Stephens poured out his soul in a furious attack upon
+the Administration. He ended by submitting resolutions which were just
+what he might have submitted four years earlier before a gun had been
+fired, so entirely had his mind crystallized in the stress of war! These
+resolutions, besides reasserting the full state rights theory, assumed
+the readiness of the North to make peace and called for a general
+convention of all the States to draw up some new arrangement on a
+confessed state rights basis. More than a month before, Lincoln had been
+reelected on an unequivocal nationalistic platform. And yet Stephens
+continued to believe that the Northerners did not mean what they said
+and that in congregated talking lay the magic which would change the
+world of fact into the world of his own desire.
+
+At this point in the peace intrigue the ambiguous figure of Napoleon the
+Little reappears, though only to pass ghostlike across the back of the
+stage. The determination of Northern leaders to oppose Napoleon had
+suggested to shrewd politicians a possible change of front. That
+singular member of the Confederate Congress, Henry S. Foote, thought
+he saw in the Mexican imbroglio means to bring Lincoln to terms. In
+November he had introduced into the House resolutions which intimated
+that "it might become the true policy of... the Confederate States to
+consent to the yielding of the great principle embodied in the Monroe
+Doctrine." The House referred his resolutions to the Committee on
+Foreign Affairs, and there they slumbered until January.
+
+Meanwhile a Northern politician brought on the specter of Napoleon for
+a different purpose. Early in January, 1865, Francis P. Blair made
+a journey to Richmond and proposed to Davis a plan of reconciliation
+involving the complete abandonment of slavery, the reunion of all the
+States, and an expedition against Mexico in which Davis was to play the
+leading role. Davis cautiously refrained from committing himself, though
+he gave Blair a letter in which he expressed his willingness to enter
+into negotiations for peace between "the two countries." The visit of
+Blair gave new impetus to the peace intrigue. The Confederate House
+Committee on Foreign Affairs reported resolutions favoring an attempt
+to negotiate with the United States so as to "bring into view" the
+possibility of cooperation between the United States and the Confederacy
+to maintain the Monroe Doctrine. The same day saw another singular
+incident. For some reason that has never been divulged Foote determined
+to counterbalance Blair's visit to Richmond by a visit of his own to
+Washington. In attempting to pass through the Confederate lines he was
+arrested by the military authorities. With this fiasco Foote passes from
+the stage of history.
+
+The doings of Blair, however, continued to be a topic of general
+interest throughout January. The military intrigue was now simmering
+down through the creation of the office of commanding general. The
+attempt of the congressional opposition to drive the whole Cabinet from
+office reached a compromise in the single retirement of the Secretary
+of War. Before the end of the month the peace question was the paramount
+one before Congress and the country. Newspapers discussed the movements
+of Blair, apparently with little knowledge, and some of the papers
+asserted hopefully that peace was within reach. Cooler heads, such
+as the majority of the Virginia Legislature, rejected this idea as
+baseless. The Mercury called the peace party the worst enemy of the
+South. Lee was reported by the Richmond correspondent of the Mercury as
+not caring a fig for the peace project. Nevertheless the rumor persisted
+that Blair had offered peace on terms that the Confederacy could
+accept. Late in the month, Davis appointed Stephens, Hunter, and John
+A. Campbell commissioners to confer with the Northern authorities with
+regard to peace.
+
+There followed the famous conference of February 3, 1865, in the cabin
+of a steamer at Hampton Roads, with Seward and Lincoln. The
+Confederate commissioners represented two points of view: that of the
+Administration, unwilling to make peace without independence; and that
+of the infatuated Stephens who clung to the idea that Lincoln did not
+mean what he said, and who now urged "an armistice allowing the States
+to adjust themselves as suited their interests. If it would be to their
+interests to reunite, they would do so." The refusal of Lincoln to
+consider either of these points of view--the refusal so clearly foreseen
+by Davis--put an end to the career of Stephens. He was "hoist with his
+own petard."
+
+The news of the failure of the conference was variously received.
+The Mercury rejoiced because there was now no doubt how things stood.
+Stephens, unwilling to cooperate with the Administration, left the
+capital and went home to Georgia. At Richmond, though the snow lay thick
+on the ground, a great public meeting was held on the 6th of February
+in the precincts of the African Church. Here Davis made an address which
+has been called his greatest and which produced a profound impression.
+A wave of enthusiasm swept over Richmond, and for a moment the President
+appeared once more to be master of the situation. His immense audacity
+carried the people with him when, after showing what might be done by
+more drastic enforcement of the conscription laws, he concluded: "Let us
+then unite our hands and our hearts, lock our shields together, and we
+may well believe that before another summer solstice falls upon us, it
+will be the enemy that will be asking us for conferences and occasions
+in which to make known our demands."
+
+
+
+Chapter XI. An Attempted Revolution
+
+Almost from the moment when the South had declared its independence
+voices had been raised in favor of arming the negroes. The rejection of
+a plan to accomplish this was one of the incidents of Benjamin's tenure
+of the portfolio of the War Department; but it was not until the early
+days of 1864, when the forces of Johnston lay encamped at Dalton,
+Georgia, that the arming of the slaves was seriously discussed by
+a council of officers. Even then the proposal had its determined
+champions, though there were others among Johnston's officers who
+regarded it as "contrary to all true principles of chivalric warfare,"
+and their votes prevailed in the council by a large majority.
+
+From that time forward the question of arming the slaves hung like a
+heavy cloud over all Confederate thought of the war. It was discussed in
+the army and at home around troubled firesides. Letters written from the
+trenches at Petersburg show that it was debated by the soldiers, and the
+intense repugnance which the idea inspired in some minds was shown by
+threats to leave the ranks if the slaves were given arms.
+
+Amid the pressing, obvious issues of 1864, this project hardly appears
+upon the face of the record until it was alluded to in Davis's message
+to Congress in November, 1864, and in the annual report of the Secretary
+of War. The President did not as yet ask for slave soldiers. He did,
+however, ask for the privilege of buying slaves for government use--not
+merely hiring them from their owners as had hitherto been done--and for
+permission, if the Government so desired, to emancipate them at the
+end of their service. The Secretary of War went farther, however, and
+advocated negro soldiers, and he too suggested their emancipation at the
+end of service.
+
+This feeling of the temper of the country, so to speak, produced an
+immediate response. It drew Rhett from his retirement and inspired a
+letter in which he took the Government severely to task for designing
+to remove from state control this matter of fundamental importance.
+Coinciding with the cry for more troops with which to confront Sherman,
+the topic of negro soldiers became at once one of the questions of the
+hour. It helped to focus that violent anti-Davis movement which is
+the conspicuous event of December, 1864, and January, 1865. Those who
+believed the President unscrupulous trembled at the thought of putting
+into his hands a great army of hardy barbarians trained to absolute
+obedience. The prospect of such a weapon held in one firm hand at
+Richmond seemed to those opponents of the President a greater menace to
+their liberties than even the armies of the invaders. It is quite likely
+that distrust of Davis and dread of the use he might make of such a
+weapon was increased by a letter from Benjamin to Frederick A. Porcher
+of Charleston, a supporter of the Government, who had made rash
+suggestions as to the extra-constitutional power that the Administration
+might be justified by circumstances in assuming. Benjamin deprecated
+such suggestions but concluded with the unfortunate remark: "If the
+Constitution is not to be our guide I would prefer to see it suppressed
+by a revolution which should declare a dictatorship during the war,
+after the manner of ancient Rome, leaving to the future the care of
+reestablishing firm and regular government." In the State of Virginia,
+indeed, the revolutionary suggestions of the President's message and
+the Secretary's report were promptly taken up and made the basis of a
+political program, which Governor Smith embodied in his message to the
+Legislature--a document that will eventually take its place among the
+most interesting state papers of the Confederacy. It should be noted
+that the suggestions thrown out in this way by the Administration to
+test public feeling involved three distinct questions: Should the slaves
+be given arms? Should they, if employed as soldiers, be given their
+freedom? Should this revolutionary scheme, if accepted at all, be
+handled by the general Government or left to the several States? On
+the last of the three questions the Governor of Virginia was silent; by
+implication he treated the matter as a concern of the States. Upon the
+first and second questions, however, he was explicit and advised arming
+the slaves. He then added:
+
+"Even if the result were to emancipate our slaves, there is not a man
+who would not cheerfully put the negro into the Army rather than become
+a slave himself to our hated and vindictive foe. It is, then, simply a
+question of time. Has the time arrived when this issue is fairly before
+us?... For my part standing before God and my country, I do not hesitate
+to say that I would arm such portion of our able-bodied slave population
+as may be necessary, and put them in the field, so as to have them ready
+for the spring campaign, even if it resulted in the freedom of those
+thus organized. Will I not employ them to fight the negro force of the
+enemy? Aye, the Yankees themselves, who already boast that they have
+200,000 of our slaves in arms against us. Can we hesitate, can we doubt,
+when the question is, whether the enemy shall use our slaves against us
+or we use them against him; when the question may be between liberty and
+independence on the one hand, or our subjugation and utter ruin on the
+other?"
+
+With their Governor as leader for the Administration, the Virginians
+found this issue the absorbing topic of the hour. And now the great
+figure of Lee takes its rightful place at the very center of Confederate
+history, not only military but civil, for to Lee the Virginia
+politicians turned for advice. * In a letter to a State Senator of
+Virginia who had asked for a public expression of Lee's views because
+"a mountain of prejudices, growing out of our ancient modes of regarding
+the institution of Southern slavery will have to be met and overcome" in
+order to Attain unanimity, Lee discussed both the institution of slavery
+and the situation of the moment. He plainly intimated that slavery
+should be placed under state control; and, assuming such control, be
+considered "the relation of master and slave... the best that can exist
+between the black and white races while intermingled as at present in
+this country." He went on to show, however, that military necessity now
+compelled a revolution in sentiment on this subject, and he came at last
+to this momentous conclusion:
+
+ * Lee now revealed himself in his previously overlooked
+ capacity of statesman. Whether his abilities in this respect
+ equaled his abilities as a soldier need not here be
+ considered; it is said that he himself had no high opinion
+ of them. However, in the advice which he gave at this final
+ moment of crisis, he expressed a definite conception of the
+ articulation of civil forces in such a system as that of the
+ Confederacy. He held that all initiative upon basal matters
+ should remain with the separate States, that the function of
+ the general Government was to administer, not to create
+ conditions, and that the proper power to constrain the State
+ Legislatures was the flexible, extra-legal power of public
+ opinion.
+
+"Should the war continue under existing circumstances, the enemy may in
+course of time penetrate our country and get access to a large part of
+our negro population. It is his avowed policy to convert the able-bodied
+men among them into soldiers, and to emancipate all.... His progress
+will thus add to his numbers, and at the same time destroy slavery in a
+manner most pernicious to the welfare of our people. Their negroes will
+be used to hold them in subjection, leaving the remaining force of the
+enemy free to extend his conquest. Whatever may be the effect of our
+employing negro troops, it cannot be as mischievous as this. If it end
+in subverting slavery it will be accomplished by ourselves, and we can
+devise the means of alleviating the evil consequences to both races. I
+think, therefore, we must decide whether slavery shall be extinguished
+by our enemies and the slaves be used against us, or use them ourselves
+at the risk of the effects which may be produced upon our social
+institutions..."
+
+"The reasons that induce me to recommend the employment of negro troops
+at all render the effect of the measures... upon slavery immaterial, and
+in my opinion the best means of securing the efficiency and fidelity
+of this auxiliary force would be to accompany the measure with a
+well-digested plan of gradual and general emancipation. As that will be
+the result of the continuance of the war, and will certainly occur if
+the enemy succeed, it seems to me most advisable to adopt it at once,
+and thereby obtain all the benefits that will accrue to our cause..."
+
+"I can only say in conclusion, that whatever measures are to be adopted
+should be adopted at once. Every day's delay increases the difficulty.
+Much time will be required to organize and discipline the men, and
+action may be deferred until it is too late."
+
+Lee wrote these words on January 11, 1865. At that time a fresh wave of
+despondency had gone over the South because of Hood's rout at Nashville;
+Congress was debating intermittently the possible arming of the slaves;
+and the newspapers were prophesying that the Administration would
+presently force the issue. It is to be observed that Lee did not advise
+Virginia to wait for Confederate action. He advocated emancipation
+by the State. After all, to both Lee and Smith, Virginia was their
+"country."
+
+During the next sixty days Lee rejected two great opportunities--or,
+if you will, put aside two great temptations. If tradition is to be
+trusted, it was during January that Lee refused to play the role of
+Cromwell by declining to intervene directly in general Confederate
+politics. But there remained open the possibility of his intervention in
+Virginia politics, and the local crisis was in its own way as momentous
+as the general crisis. What if Virginia had accepted the views of Lee
+and insisted upon the immediate arming of the slaves? Virginia, however,
+did not do so; and Lee, having made public his position, refrained from
+further participation. Politically speaking, he maintained a splendid
+isolation at the head of the armies.
+
+Through January and February the Virginia crisis continued undetermined.
+In this period of fateful hesitation, the "mountains of prejudice"
+proved too great to be undermined even by the influence of Lee. When
+at last Virginia enacted a law permitting the arming of her slaves, no
+provision was made for their manumission.
+
+Long before the passage of this act in Virginia, Congress had become
+the center of the controversy. Davis had come to the point where no
+tradition however cherished would stand, in his mind, against the needs
+of the moment. To reinforce the army in great strength was now his
+supreme concern, and he saw but one way to do it. As a last resort
+he was prepared to embrace the bold plan which so many people still
+regarded with horror and which as late as the previous November he
+himself had opposed. He would arm the slaves. On February 10, 1865,
+bills providing for the arming of the slaves were introduced both in the
+House and in the Senate.
+
+On this issue all the forces both of the Government and the opposition
+fought their concluding duel in which were involved all the other basal
+issues that had distracted the country since 1862. Naturally there was
+a bewildering criss-cross of political motives. There were men who,
+like Smith and Lee, would go along with the Government on emancipation,
+provided it was to be carried out by the free will of the States. There
+were others who preferred subjugation to the arming of the slaves; and
+among these there were clashings of motive. Then, too, there were those
+who were willing to arm the slaves but were resolved not to give them
+their freedom.
+
+The debate brings to the front of the political stage the figure of
+R. M. T. Hunter. Hitherto his part has not been conspicuous either as
+Secretary of State or as Senator from Virginia. He now becomes, in the
+words of Davis, "a chief obstacle" to the passage of the Senate bill
+which would have authorized a levy of negro troops and provided for
+their manumission by the War Department with the consent of the State in
+which they should be at the time of the proposed manumission. After
+long discussion, this bill was indefinitely postponed. Meanwhile a very
+different bill had dragged through the House. While it was under debate,
+another appeal was made to Lee. Barksdale, who came as near as any one
+to being the leader of the Administration, sought Lee's aid. Again
+the General urged the enrollment of negro soldiers and their eventual
+manumission, but added this immensely significant proviso:
+
+"I have no doubt that if Congress would authorize their [the negroes']
+reception into service, and empower the President to call upon
+individuals or States for such as they are willing to contribute, with
+the condition of emancipation to all enrolled, a sufficient number
+would be forthcoming to enable us to try the experiment [of determining
+whether the slaves would make good soldiers]. If it proved successful,
+most of the objections to the measure would disappear, and if
+individuals still remained unwilling to send their negroes to the army,
+the force of public opinion in the States would soon bring about such
+legislation as would remove all obstacles. I think the matter should be
+left, as far as possible, to the people and to the States, which
+alone can legislate as the necessities of this particular service may
+require."
+
+The fact that Congress had before it this advice from Lee explains why
+all factions accepted a compromise bill, passed on the 9th of March,
+approved by the President on the 13th of March, and issued to the
+country in a general order on the 23d of March. It empowered the
+President to "ask for and accept from the owners of slaves" the service
+of such number of negroes as he saw fit, and if sufficient number
+were not offered to "call on each State... for her quota of 300,000
+troops... to be raised from such classes of the population, irrespective
+of color, in each State as the proper authorities thereof may
+determine." However, "nothing in this act shall be construed to
+authorize a change in the relation which the said slaves shall bear
+toward their owners, except by consent of the owners and of the States
+in which they may reside and in pursuance of the laws thereof."
+
+The results of this act were negligible. Its failure to offer the
+slave-soldier his freedom was at once seized upon by critics as evidence
+of the futility of the course of the Administration. The sneer went
+round that the negro was to be made to fight for his own captivity.
+Pollard--whose words, however, must be taken with a grain of salt--has
+left this account of recruiting under the new act: "Two companies of
+blacks, organized from some negro vagabonds in Richmond, were allowed to
+give balls at the Libby Prison and were exhibited in fine fresh uniforms
+on Capitol Square as decoys to obtain recruits. But the mass of their
+colored brethren looked on the parade with unenvious eyes, and little
+boys exhibited the early prejudices of race by pelting the fine uniforms
+with mud."
+
+Nevertheless both Davis and Lee busied themselves in the endeavor to
+raise black troops. Governor Smith cooperated with them. And in the
+mind of the President there was no abandonment of the program of
+emancipation, which was now his cardinal policy. Soon after the passage
+of the act, he wrote to Smith: "I am happy to receive your assurance
+of success [in raising black troops], as well as your promise to seek
+legislation to secure unmistakable freedom to the slave who shall enter
+the Army, with a right to return to his old home, when he shall have
+been honorably discharged from military service."
+
+While this final controversy was being fought out in Congress, the
+enthusiasm for the Administration had again ebbed. Its recovery of
+prestige had run a brief course and was gone, and now in the midst of
+the discussion over the negro soldiers' bills, the opposition once
+more attacked the Cabinet, with its old enemy, Benjamin, as the
+target. Resolutions were introduced into the Senate declaring that "the
+retirement of the Honorable Judah P. Benjamin from the State Department
+will be subservient of the public interests"; in the House resolutions
+were offered describing his public utterances as "derogatory to his
+position as a high public functionary of the Confederate Government,
+a reflection on the motives of Congress as a deliberative body, and an
+insult to public opinion."
+
+So Congress wrangled and delayed while the wave of fire that was
+Sherman's advance moved northward through the Carolinas. Columbia had
+gone up in smoke while the Senate debated day after day--fifteen in
+all--what to do with the compromise bill sent up to it from the House.
+It was during this period that a new complication appears to have been
+added to a situation which was already so hopelessly entangled, for this
+was the time when Governor Magrath made a proposal to Governor Vance
+for a league within the Confederacy, giving as his chief reason that
+Virginia's interests were parting company with those of the lower
+South. The same doubt of the upper South appears at various times in the
+Mercury. And through all the tactics of the opposition runs the constant
+effort to discredit Davis. The Mercury scoffed at the agitation for
+negro soldiers as a mad attempt on the part of the Administration to
+remedy its "myriad previous blunders."
+
+In these terrible days, the mind of Davis hardened. He became possessed
+by a lofty and intolerant confidence, an absolute conviction that, in
+spite of all appearances, he was on the threshold of success. We may
+safely ascribe to him in these days that illusory state of mind which
+has characterized some of the greatest of men in their over-strained,
+concluding periods. His extraordinary promises in his later messages,
+a series of vain prophecies beginning with his speech at the African
+Church, remind one of Napoleon after Leipzig refusing the Rhine as a
+boundary. His nerves, too, were all but at the breaking point. He sent
+the Senate a scolding message because of its delay in passing the
+Negro Soldiers' Bill. The Senate answered in a report that was sharply
+critical of his own course. Shortly afterward Congress adjourned
+refusing his request for another suspension of the writ of habeas
+corpus.
+
+Davis had hinted at important matters he hoped soon to be able to submit
+to Congress. What he had in mind was the last, the boldest, stroke of
+this period of desperation. The policy of emancipation he and Benjamin
+had accepted without reserve. They had at last perceived, too late, the
+power of the anti-slavery movement in Europe. Though they had already
+failed to coerce England through cotton and had been played with and
+abandoned by Napoleon, they persisted in thinking that there was still a
+chance for a third chapter in their foreign affairs.
+
+The agitation to arm the slaves, with the promise of freedom, had
+another motive besides the reinforcement of Lee's army: it was intended
+to serve as a basis for negotiations with England and France. To that
+end D. J. Kenner was dispatched to Europe early in 1865. Passing through
+New York in disguise, he carried word of this revolutionary program to
+the Confederate commissioners abroad. A conference at Paris was held by
+Kenner, Mason, and Slidell. Mason, who had gone over to England to sound
+Palmerston with regard to this last Confederate hope, was received on
+the 14th of March. On the previous day, Davis had accepted temporary
+defeat, by signing the compromise bill which omitted emancipation. But
+as there was no cable operating at the time, Mason was not aware of this
+rebuff. In his own words, he "urged upon Lord P. that if the President
+was right in his impression that there was some latent, undisclosed
+obstacle on the part of Great Britain to recognition, it should be
+frankly stated, and we might, if in our power to do so, consent to
+remove it." Palmerston, though his manner was "conciliatory and kind,"
+insisted that there was nothing "underlying" his previous statements,
+and that he could not, in view of the facts then existing, regard the
+Confederacy in the light of an independent power. Mason parted from him
+convinced that "the most ample concessions on our part in the matter
+referred to would have produced no change in the course determined on
+by the British Government with regard to recognition." In a subsequent
+interview with Lord Donoughmore, he was frankly told that the offer of
+emancipation had come too late.
+
+The dispatch in which Mason reported the attitude of the British
+Government never reached the Confederate authorities. It was dated the
+31st of March. Two days later Richmond was evacuated by the Confederate
+Government.
+
+
+
+Chapter XII. The Last Word
+
+The evacuation of Richmond broke the back of the Confederate defense.
+Congress had adjourned. The legislative history of the Confederacy was
+at an end. The executive history still had a few days to run. After
+destroying great quantities of records, the government officials had
+packed the remainder on a long train that conveyed the President and
+what was left of the civil service to Danville. During a few days,
+Danville was the Confederate capital. There, Davis, still unable to
+conceive defeat, issued his pathetic last Address to the People of the
+Confederate States. His mind was crystallized. He was no longer capable
+of judging facts. In as confident tones as ever he promised his people
+that they should yet prevail; he assured Virginians that even if the
+Confederate army should withdraw further south the withdrawal would
+be but temporary, and that "again and again will we return until the
+baffled and exhausted enemy shall abandon in despair his endless and
+impossible task of making slaves of a people resolved to be free."
+
+The surrender at Appomattox on April 9, 1865, compelled another
+migration of the dwindling executive company. General Johnston had not
+yet surrendered. A conference which he had with the President and the
+Cabinet at Greensboro ended in giving him permission to negotiate with
+Sherman. Even then Davis was still bent on keeping up the fight; yet,
+though he believed that Sherman would reject Johnston's overtures, he
+was overtaken at Charlotte on his way South by the crushing news of
+Johnston's surrender. There the executive history of the Confederacy
+came to an end in a final Cabinet meeting. Davis, still blindly resolute
+to continue the struggle, was deeply distressed by the determination
+of his advisers to abandon it. In imminent danger of capture, the
+President's party made its way to Abbeville, where it broke up, and each
+member sought safety as best he could. Davis with a few faithful men
+rode to Irwinsville, Georgia, where, in the early morning of the 10th of
+May, he was surprised and captured. But the history of the Confederacy
+was not quite at an end. The last gunshots were still to be fired far
+away in Texas on the 13th of May. The surrender of the forces of
+the Trans-Mississippi on May 26, 1865, brought the war to a definite
+conclusion.
+
+There remains one incident of these closing days, the significance of
+which was not perceived until long afterward, when it immediately took
+its rightful place among the determining events of American history.
+The unconquerable spirit of the Army of Northern Virginia found its last
+expression in a proposal which was made to Lee by his officers. If he
+would give the word, they would make the war a duel to the death; it
+should drag out in relentless guerrilla struggles; and there should
+be no pacification of the South until the fighting classes had been
+exterminated. Considering what those classes were, considering the
+qualities that could be handed on to their posterity, one realizes that
+this suicide of a whole people, of a noble fighting people, would have
+maimed incalculably the America of the future. But though the heroism of
+this proposal of his men to die on their shields had its stern charm
+for so brave a man as Lee, he refused to consider it. He would not admit
+that he and his people had a right thus to extinguish their power to
+help mold the future, no matter whether it be the future they desired or
+not. The result of battle must be accepted. The Southern spirit must
+not perish, luxuriating blindly in despair, but must find a new form of
+expression, must become part of the new world that was to be, must look
+to a new birth under new conditions. In this spirit he issued to his
+army his last address:
+
+"After four years of arduous service, marked by unsurpassed courage and
+fortitude, the Army of Northern Virginia has been compelled to yield to
+overwhelming numbers and resources. I need not tell the survivors of so
+many hard-fought battles, who have remained steadfast to the last, that
+I have consented to the result from no distrust of them; but feeling
+that valor and devotion could accomplish nothing that could compensate
+for the loss that would have attended the continuation of the contest,
+I determined to avoid the useless sacrifice of those whose past services
+have endeared them to their countrymen.... I bid you an affectionate
+farewell."
+
+How inevitably one calls to mind, in view of the indomitable valor of
+Lee's final decision, those great lines from Tennyson:
+
+ "Tho' much is taken, much abides; and tho'
+ We are not now that strength which in old days
+ Moved earth and heaven; that which we are, we are;
+ One equal temper of heroic hearts,
+ Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will."
+
+
+
+
+BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
+
+There is no adequate history of the Confederacy. It is rumored that a
+distinguished scholar has a great work approaching completion. It is
+also rumored that another scholar, well equipped to do so, will soon
+bring out a monumental life of Davis. But the fact remains that as yet
+we lack a comprehensive review of the Confederate episode set in proper
+perspective. Standard works such as the "History of the United States
+from the Compromise of 1850", by J. F. Rhodes (7 vols., 1893-1908), even
+when otherwise as near a classic as is the work of Mr. Rhodes, treat the
+Confederacy so externally as to have in this respect little value. The
+one searching study of the subject, "The Confederate States of
+America," by J. C. Schwab (1901), though admirable in its way, is wholly
+overshadowed by the point of view of the economist. The same is to be
+said of the article by Professor Schwab in the 11th edition of "The
+Encyclopaedia Britannica."
+
+Two famous discussions of the episode by participants are: "The Rise and
+Fall of the Confederate Government," by the President of the Confederacy
+(2 vols., 1881), and "A Constitutional View of the Late War Between the
+States," by Alexander H. Stephens (2 vols., 1870). Both works, though
+invaluable to the student, are tinged with controversy, each of the
+eminent authors aiming to refute the arguments of political antagonists.
+
+The military history of the time has so overshadowed the civil, in the
+minds of most students, that we are still sadly in need of careful,
+disinterested studies of the great figures of Confederate civil affairs.
+"Jefferson Davis," by William E. Dodd ("American Crisis Biographies,"
+1907), is the standard life of the President, superseding older ones.
+Not so satisfactory in the same series is "Judah P. Benjamin," by Pierce
+Butler (1907), and "Alexander H. Stephens," by Louis Pendleton (1907).
+Older works which are valuable for the material they contain are:
+"Memoir of Jefferson Davis," by his Wife (1890); "The Life and Times of
+Alexander H. Stephens," by R. M. Johnston and W. M. Browne (1878); "The
+Life and Times of William Lowndes Yancey," by J. W. Du Bose (1891);
+"The Life, Times, and Speeches of Joseph E. Brown," by Herbert Fielder
+(1883); "Public Life and Diplomatic Correspondence of James M. Mason,"
+by his Daughter (1903); "The Life and Time of C. G. Memminger," by H. D.
+Capers (1893). The writings of E. A. Pollard cannot be disregarded, but
+must be taken as the violent expression of an extreme partisan. They
+include a "Life of Jefferson Davis" (1869) and "The Lost Cause" (1867).
+A charming series of essays is "Confederate Portraits," by Gamaliel
+Bradford (1914). Among books on special topics that are to be
+recommended are: "The Diplomatic History of the Southern Confederacy"
+by J. M. Callahan (1901); "France and the Confederate Navy," by John
+Bigelow (1888); and "The Secret Service of the Confederate States in
+Europe," by J. D. Bulloch (2 vols., 1884). There is a large number
+of contemporary accounts of life in the Confederacy. Historians have
+generally given excessive attention to "A Rebel War Clerk's Diary at the
+Confederate States Capital," by J. B. Jones (2 vols., 1866) which
+has really neither more nor less value than a Richmond newspaper.
+Conspicuous among writings of this type is the delightful "Diary from
+Dixie," by Mrs. Mary B. Chestnut (1905) and "My Diary, North and South,"
+by W. H. Russell (1861).
+
+The documents of the civil history, so far as they are accessible to the
+general reader, are to be found in the three volumes forming the fourth
+series of the "Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies"
+(128 vols., 1880-1901); the "Journals of the Congress of the Confederate
+States" (8 vols., 1904) and "Messages and Papers of the Confederacy,"
+edited by J. D. Richardson (2 vols., 1905). Four newspapers are of first
+importance: the famous opposition organs, the Richmond Examiner and the
+Charleston Mercury, which should be offset by the two leading organs of
+the Government, the Courier of Charleston and the Enquirer of Richmond.
+The Statutes of the Confederacy have been collected and published;
+most of them are also to be found in the fourth series of the Official
+Records.
+
+Additional bibliographical references will be found appended to the
+articles on the "Confederate States of America," "Secession," and
+"Jefferson Davis," in "The Encyclopaedia Britannica," 11th edition.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Day of the Confederacy, by
+Nathaniel W. Stephenson
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