Jefferson Davis' Remarks on Henry Clay's Resolutions
Senate Chamber, U.S. Capitol, January 29, 1850
Mr. DAVIS, of Mississippi. I do not rise to continue the discussion,
but, as it has been made an historical question as to what the position
of the Senate was twelve years ago, and as with great regret I see this,
the conservative branch of the Government, tending towards that
fanaticism which seems to prevail with the majority in the United
States, I wish to read from the journals of that date the resolutions
then adopted, and to show that they went further than the honorable
Senator from Kentucky has stated. I take it for granted, from the date
to which the honorable Senator has alluded, he means the resolutions
introduced by the honorable Senator from South Carolina, [Mr. CALHOUN,]
not now in his seat, and to which the Senator from Kentucky proposed
certain amendments. Of the resolutions introduced by the Senator from
South Carolina, I will read the fifth in the series, that to which the
honorable Senator from Kentucky must have alluded. It is in these words:
"Resolved, That the intermeddling of any State, or
States, or their citizens, to abolish slavery in the District, or any of
the Territories, on the ground or under the pretext that it is immoral
or sinful, or the passage of any act or measure of Congress with that
view, would be a direct and dangerous attack on the institutions of all
the slave-holding States."
Such is the general form of the proposition. It was variously modified,
but never, in my opinion, improved. On the 27th, the fifth resolution
being again under consideration, Mr. Clay, of Kentucky, moved to amend
the amendment by striking out all after the word "resolved," and insert:
"That the interference, by the citizens of any of the
States, with a view to the abolition of slavery in this District, is
endangering the rights and security of the people of the District; and
that any act or measure of Congress designed to abolish slavery in this
District would be a violation of the faith implied in the cessions by
the States of Virginia and Maryland; a just cause of alarm to the people
of the slaveholding States, and have a direct and inevitable tendency
to disturb and endanger the Union.
"And, resolved, That it would be highly inexpedient to abolish
slavery within any district of country set apart for the Indian tribes,
where it now exists, or in Florida, the only Territory of the United
States in which it now exists, because of the serious alarm and just
apprehensions which would be thereby excited in the States sustaining
that domestic institution; because the people of that Territory have not
asked it to be done, and, when admitted into the Union, will be
exclusively entitled to decide that question for themselves; because it
would be in violation of the stipulations of the treaty between the
United States and Spain, of the 22d of February, 1819; and also because
it would be in violation of a solemn compromise, made at a memorable and
critical period in the history of this country, by which, whilst
slavery was prohibited north, it was admitted south, of the line of
thirty-six degrees and thirty minutes north latitude."
But this resolution was not finally adopted. Upon the motion of Mr.
BUCHANAN to amend said amendment, by striking out the second clause
thereof, commencing with the word "resolved," it was determined in the
affirmative, and finally the resolution which here follows was submitted
in place of the second clause:
"That the interference, by the citizens of any of the
States, with a view to the abolition of slavery in this District, is
endangering the rights and security of the people of the district; and
that any act or measure of Congress, designed to abolish slavery in this
District, would be a violation of the faith implied in the cessions by
the States of Virginia and Maryland; a just cause of alarm to the people
of the slaveholding States, and have a direct and inevitable tendency
to disturb and endanger the Union."
This was the form in which the resolutions was finally adopted, passing
by a vote of thirty-six to eight. Here, then, was fully and broadly
asserted the danger resulting from the interference in the question of
slavery in the District of Columbia, as trenching upon the rights of the
slaveholding States. Twelve years only have elapsed, yet this brief
period has swept away even the remembrance of principles then deemed
sacred and necessary to secure the safety of the Union. Now an honorable
and distinguished Senator, to whom the country has been induced to look
for something that would heal the existing dissensions, instead of
raising new barriers against encroachment, dashes down those heretofore
erected and augments the existing danger. A representative from one of
the slaveholding States raises his voice for the first time in disregard
of this admitted right. Nor, Mr. President,
did he stop here. The boundary of a State, with which we have no more
right to interfere than with the boundary of the State of Kentucky, is
encroached upon. The United States, sir, as the agent for Texas, had a
right to settle the question of boundary between Texas and Mexico. Texas
was not annexed as territory, but was admitted as a State, and at the
period of her admission her boundaries were established by her Congress.
She, by the terms of annexation, gave to the United States the right to
define her boundary by treaty with Mexico; but the United States, in
the treaty made with Mexico subsequent to the war with that country,
received from Mexico not merely a cession of the territory that was
claimed by Texas, but much which lay beyond the asserted limits. Shall
we, then, act simply as the agent of Texas in the settlement of this
question of boundary, take from the principal for whom we act that
territory which belongs to her, to which we asserted her title against
Mexico, and appropriate it to ourselves? Why, sir, it would be a
violation of justice and of a principle of law which is so plain that it
does not require one to have been bred to the profession of law to
understand it. The principle I refer to is, that an agent cannot take
for his own benefit anything resulting from the matter in controversy,
after having acquired it as belonging to the principal for whom he acts.
The agent cannot appropriate to himself rights acquired for his client.
The right of Texas, therefore, to that boundary was made complete by
the treaty of peace, which silenced the only rival claim to the
territory. It was distinctly defined by the acts of her Congress, before
the time of annexation; and I have only to refer to those acts to show
that the boundary of Texas was the Rio Bravo del Norte, from its mouth
to its source. What justice, or even decent regard for fairness, can
there be, now that Texas has acceded to annexation upon certain terms,
to propose a change of boundary in violation of these terms, and by the
power we hold over her as a part of the Union? Can this power extend so
far as to take from her a portion of her territory, or to assert there
is a portion to which she is not entitled?
These constitute with me two great objections to the propositions of
the honorable Senataor [sic] from Kentucky; but, without stating all the
objections that I have, and they are very many, I will merely point out
a few of the prominent points to which I object in the argument of the
Senator. He assumes as facts things which are mere matters of opinion,
and I think of erroneous and injurious opinion. But, deferring the
discussion to another occasion, I desire at present merely to notice the
assertion of the honorable Senator that slavery would never, under any
circumstances, be established in California. This, though stated as a
fact, is but a mere opinion-- an opinion with which I do not accord. It
was to work the gold mines on this continent that the Spaniards first
brought Africans to the country. The European races now engaged in
working the mines of California sink under the burning heat and sudden
changes of the climate, to which the African race are altogether better
adapted. The production of rice, sugar, and cotton is no better adapted
to slave labor than the digging, washing, and quarrying of the gold
mines.
We, sir, have not asked that slavery should be established in
California. We have only asked that there should not be any restriction;
that climate and soil should be left free to establish the institution
or not, as experience should determine. Sir, after the agitation of the
subject within these halls and elsewhere has prevented the introduction
of slavery--by preventing the emigration of slaveholders with their
property--are we now to be told that the question is settled? More than
that: When we have acquired territory over which the Constitution of the
United States is thereby extended, and which the citizens of the United
States have a right to occupy, and to establish therein what laws they
please, in accordance with the principles of the Constitution--in which
they have a right to establish what institutions they please--it is now
claimed that the municipal regulations which previously existed shall
still govern the people, and that a portion of the citizens of the
United States shall thus be precluded from going there with their
property. This rule has, however, in discussion here, only been applied
to the property of slaveholders; as though slaves were the only property
under the laws of Mexico prohibited from entering California. It is to
be remembered that the late Secretary of the Treasury, in a report to
Congress, stated that the Mexican law prohibited the entrance of some
sixty articles of commerce; this was prohibition by law of Congress, and
slavery has never been so prohibited. It never has been prohibited by
the Mexican Congress in California; and the only prohibition ever issued
was that contained in the edict of a usurper, under the specious
pretext that it was necessary, in order to oppose the invasion of the
country by Spain. This decree was recognized by a subsequent Congress,
so far as to pass a law authorizing payment for slaves so liberated. It
was the emancipation of all the slaves in Mexico; an act if you please
of abolition, not one of prohibition; not, whatever construction may be
placed upon it, done in accordance with the forms of law, and
requirements of their consititution. But we have not proposed to inquire
into the legality of the abolition, neither has any southern man asked
that the decree should be repealed, or that those liberated under its
provisions should be returned to slavery. We only claim that there shall
be an equality of immunities and privileges among citizens of all parts
of the United States; that Mexican law shall not be applied so as to
create inequality between citizens, by preventing the immigration of
any.
But, sir, we are called on to receive this as a measure of
compromise! Is a measure in which we of the minority are to receive
nothing, a measure of compromise? I look upon it as but a modest mode of
taking that, the claim to which has been more boldly asserted by
others; and that I may be understood upon this question, and that my
position may go forth to the country in the same columns that convey the
sentiments of the Senator from Kentucky, I here assert that never will I
take less than the Missouri compromise line extended to the Pacific
ocean, with the specific recogniztion of the right to hold slaves in the
territory below that line; and that, before such territories are
admitted into the Union as States, slaves may be taken there from any of
the United States at the option of their owners. I can never consent to
give additional power to a majority to commit further aggressions upon
the minority in this Union; and will never consent to any proposition
which will have such a tendency, without a full guaranty or
counteracting measure is connected with it. I forbear commenting at any
further length upon the propositions embraced in the resolutions at this
time.
Mr. CLAY. I am extremely sorry that this premature, and--allow me to
say--in my opinion unnecessary discussion has taken place. Whenever the
Senator who has just resume his seat chooses to meet me in argument at a
proper time, I pledge myself to show him that there is not the
slightest discrepancy in my course in 1838 and now.
Mr. DAVIS, of Mississippi. Now is the time.
Mr. CLAY. I choose not to give way now.
Mr. DAVIS, of Mississippi. The Senator asked me to name my time; and I say now.
[Declining to answer Davis at this time, Clay reviews the argument he
voiced in 1838, that in the cession of land for the District of
Columbia, Virginia and Maryland did not forsee the abolition of slavery,
and that abolition in the District would be "a just cause of alarm" to
all slaveholders. He regrets Davis' wish for a "positive provision" to
admit slavery south of the Missouri Compromise line, concluding that the
Mississippian must realize any such declaration would be "impossible."]
Mr. DAVIS. The Senator from Mississippi knows that.
[Clay declares it would be "much better for the South" if the slavery question remained open on both sides of 36o 30'.]
Mr. DAVIS, of Mississippi. The Senator from Kentucky rose with an
announcement that he wanted to know my time for meeting him in argument,
and I have told him that my time is now. Several times he has regretted
this premature discussion; but pray, sir, who introduced it? The
Senator submitted his resolutions, discussed them seriatim and
then concluded with a set speech. Are we to understand that all this was
done without intending to influence opinion? Was it a mere volley of
blank cartridges that he was firing, in order that he might come up
under cover of the smoke, and make a charge upon us before we saw him?
Why, sir, at the door of any other man might lie the charge of entering
prematurely upon this discussion more properly than at mine. He it was
who began the discussion, and I was the last to engage in it. But he
announces as his conviction, as his determined purpose, to resist the
introduction of slavery into any part of California. Sir, his opinions
may have been very deliberately formed. He may have been all the time
making up those determinations, that he has been preparing these
resolutions; for certainly no language of mine can have produced the
determination of the Senator. I have not proposed to compel slaveholders
to take their slaves to California, nor to revive the African slave
trade. Neither was the construction warranted by my having used the word
upon which he hangs his argument. I did not use the word
"introduction," nor suggest the idea of compulsion. The Senator has set
up his own cob-house, to show how skillfully he could knock it down. It
is no fabric of mine. We maintain that it is the right of the people of
the South to carry this species of property to any portion of the
Territories of the United States; that it rests under the Constitution,
upon the same basis as other property; but, when speaking of a
compromise, it was the ultimatum I announced. It is strange that the
Senator from Kentucky should be so much surprised; it certainly was not a
new question with him, nor with his colleague, with whom, on a former
occasion, a similar proposition originated. It is a partial recognition
of a right we claim to be co- extensive with the Territories of the
United States; but which we are willing, in a spirit of compromise, and
in compliance with the past acquiescence of the States, to restrict by
the parallel of 36o 30' north.
Now, this is conceding a great deal. If the line were established
upon any great principle arising from climate or productions, it would
be different; then the line would not extend upon the same parallel of
latitude. If it were a line of temperature, then, as the isothermal line
bends upward, it would go north of that parallel of latitude. It is out
of respect to the past, and from anxious desire peaceably to adjust a
most vexatious and dangerous question, that we agree to adopt this
abitrary line. And this compromise, upon which most of his fame rests,
originated, under like circumstances, with the Senator who now with such
settled purpose declares his opposition to a fair application of its
principle to the present case. Then all the territory involved, that of
Misouri, was slave territory; the compromise act prohibited slavery in a
part of the territory. Now, according to the position of the Senator,
slavery is excluded from the whole territory of California and New
Mexico. What, then, would the application of the spirit of the Missouri
compromise require? Clearly that in running the line the question should
be put at rest by declaring that below said line slavery should be
permitted. It is common property of the States, and if it be proposed to
make a division of it, fairness and future peace require that the
rights and conditions of each part should be prescribed. Less than this
would but narrow the ground and preserve the controversy. And unless
that compromise was founded in fraud, we expect its application in this
case, where all is disputed, express provisions on both sides of the
line. We cannot agree to leave the question open, especially after what
has been said to-day. It is the effect and not the form which I consider
it my duty to examine. What matters it whether it be under cover of the
acts of the Mexican Government, or by the operation of Congressional
law, that slavery is excluded? The effect is the same, under the rule
the Senator from Kentucky adopts, as would result from an act of
prohibition by the Congress of the United States. I can only say that
whenever the Senator chooses to make his argument, I shall be ready to
meet it.
[William R. King,
urging that the "angry discussion" end, voices his agreement with much
of Clay's position. He states that the South is contending for a
constitutional principle and believes that Davis could not have intended
to say that slavery should be established in the territories, only that
it not be prohibited-- "Do I understand the honorable Senator
correctly?"]
Mr. DAVIS. That the right shall be recognised.
From The Papers of Jefferson Davis, Volume 4, pp. 62-70. Transcribed from the Congressional Globe, 31st Congress, 1st Session, Appendix, pp. 100-101.