Jefferson Davis' Speech Recommending John C. Calhoun
State Democratic Convention
Jackson, Mississippi, January 8, 1844
Though instructed by the delegation from Warren to cast the vote of
our county, in this convention, for Mr. [Martin] Van Buren, as the
presidential candidate, I hope I will be excused for availing myself of
the nomination of Mr. Calhoun, to express some of my opinions, as an
individual, in relation to the comparative claims these gentlemen have
upon us. I would here premise, that I wish nothing which I may say to be
referred to a willingness to depreciate the high, just, and often-
acknowledged claims of Mr. Van Buren; a democrat who long and severely
tried, has never been found wanting--a democrat, than whom there is none
I have more implicit confidence--none to whom I would more freely
confide in times of difficulty, of danger, and of personal temptation,
the safe keeping of the constitution; and in proof of the correctness of
this opinion, I will refer to but a single instance: When the
"independent treasury" was opposed by a prejudice so fixed and
wide-spread among our people, that it was apparent if one had risen from
the dead to bear testimony to its merits, he would not have been
believed, still did Mr. Van Buren give it his open, decided and
unwavering support. Surely it will not now be contended by those who
attribute to him so much political shrewdness as to attach to him the
name of magician, that he was ignorant of the danger to which an
adherence to this measure exposed his political fortune. Upon us,
however, it forces itself as conclusive evidence, that he valued truth
and the good of his country above power and place, and the conscientious
discharge of his duty above personal advancement.
Mr. President, it is not my purpose to attempt an eulogy of Mr.
Calhoun. I should be inadequate to the task, and should deem the labor
superfluous in the hand of the most able--a long public life of virtue
and intelligence, of active and patriotic devotion to the best interest
of his country, having shed around his name a halo which it is not in
the power of language to brighten. Neither, sir, is it my intention to
review the political principles of that great statesman; for in
comparing him with Mr. Van Buren, I find no exception to that proud and
generally just boast of the democracy, that the principles of our party
are the same throughout the Union. The points of my preference for Mr.
Calhoun will be merely indicated to you; because, resting as they do
upon basis so well understood by you, any elucidation of them is
uncalled for. First, I will mention "free trade," by which is meant, as I
understand it, the most liberal principles of commerce, and from which
we may anticipate as a consequence, the freest exchange of the products
of different soils and climates, the largest amount of comforts for a
given amount of labor. Again, as incident to the freest national
intercourse, we may expect the extension of amicable relations, until
our canvass winged doves shall bear us across every sea, olive branches
from every land. In addressing Mississippians, who rely upon a foreign
market for the disposal of their products, an argument in support of
unrestricted commerce is surely unnecessary, and I will close the
consideration of this point by saying I consider Mr. Calhoun is
exponent.
The annexation of the republic of Texas to our Union, is another
point of vital importance to the south, and demanding, by every
consideration, prompt action. Daily are we becoming relatively weaker,
and with equal step is the advance of that fanatical spirit which has
for years been battering in breach the defences with which the federal
constitution surrounds our institutions.
Would Mr. Calhoun have less zeal than one less intimately connected
with the South, or would he support this measure with less ability? I
would answer not less but more. The ardent, able and honest support
which he gives to all measures having his entire approbation, enables
him more successfully than any one I have ever known, to combat
prejudice and error; and I would add that among the many I have known
who had enjoyed his intercourse, I recollect not one who had not imbibed
some of his opinions.
Again, I believe that Mr. Calhoun could reduce the various divisions
of the executive department at Washington, to such order, and introduce a
system of such prompt accountability, by the various agents, that
defalcation could seldom reach that point which would result in loss to
the government. That he possesses this ability, I conceive to be
demonstrated by his administration of the War Department; considered, I
believe, of the various departments, that which is most difficult and
complex in its disbursements. He found it in great confusion--he reduced
it to an organization so perfect, that it has received but slight
modifications down to the present time, and has been that department
which has afforded but few examples of unfaithful depositories of the
public money.
With the experience he acquired then, and the knowledge he has
acquired since, may we not expect all that I claim for him on this
point?
I will, Mr. President, tax the patience of the Convention, with but
one point more, and that is one nearly affecting us: it is the defence
of the Southern Atlantic and Gulf coasts. We have been treated
ungenerously and unjustly, in that the majority has, through a long
course of years, refused to us, the minority, that protection which it
was the duty of the Federal Government to give us. Having made such
appropriations for the benefit of other portions of the Union, inability
has not been the cause of this failure in duty towards us--a failure
which is aggravated by the recollection, that throughout the whole
period of our federal existence, we have contributed, as consumers, to
the revenue, in a higher ratio than that of our representation in the
halls of legislation, (by the number of our unrepresented slave
population,) and therefore our claim to a share of those appropriations
to which we are all entitled, is something stronger than our
representative rate. Sir, if we institute a comparison as to the
importance, in a national point of view, between the objects for which
we require appropriations and those for which we have been neglected,
still do we find nothing to justify the treatment we have received.
Whilst the northern harbors and cities have been surveyed, and as far as
the ability of the treasury would allow, fortified--whilst navy yards
have been erected along the northern coast--whilst surveys have been
made of the sinuosities of our northern lakes, sometimes where it
required the perspective eye of the engineer to see a harbor, and
millions expended year after year, for these joint purposes, there stand
the cape and keys of Florida unprotected, though by them flows the
whole commerce of the south and west; and though they overlook the
straits through which, in peace or war, is the only maritime
communication between the different portions of our Union, and around
which sweeps a wide curve of circumvallation, extending from the Oronoko
to the banks of the Bahama, from various points of which, within signal
distance, frown the batteries of Great Britain.
Looking further westward, which brings us nearer home--here, upon our
own coast, lie, wholly unprotected, the islands upon which the British
fleet found a safe anchorage and harbor; where British troops debarked
for the attack on New Orleans, an event which, though it brought glory
to the American arms, and made this day an American festival, does not
the less enforce itself as a warning on our government, and should have
proved a sufficient reason to all who loved their country more than
sectional interest, to have guarded against the recurrence of such
contingency.
Mr. President, the South has a delicate and daily increasing interest
in the navy. She needs her own sons in the navy to represent that
interest; she therefore needs in her own waters navy yards, and
squadrons at home, on her own waters, to develop the nautical feeling of
our youth. A survey made of the Tortugas, by the recommendation of that
great man who directed the glorious event to which I but just now
alluded, as connected with the day on which we are assembled, exhibits a
harbor admirably adapted to the purposes of a navy yard. At Pensacola,
we have another favorable point, so recognized by our government, in
building a dock, and giving it the name of "navy yard;" and they both
have this great advantage over any northern harbor, they are convenient
to "live oak," our most important ship timber.
Sir, I will not detain the Convention farther, than to urge upon
their consideration the necessity we have for a Southern President, to
advance these measures. The South has borne long; let her be true to
herself, that justice may be done.
From The Papers of Jefferson Davis, Volume 2, pp. 68-119. Transcribed from the Natchez (Miss.) Free Trader, January 24, 1844.