MONTGOMERY, April 29, 1861
GENTLEMEN OF THE CONGRESS:
[p3]
It is my pleasing duty to announce to you that the Constitution
framed for the establishment of a permanent Government for the
Confederate States has been ratified by conventions in each of
those States to which it was referred. To inaugurate the Government
in its full proportions and upon its own substantial basis of
the popular will, it only remains that it should be held for the
designation of the officers to administer it. There is every reason
to believe that at no distant day other States, identified in
political principles and community of interests with those which
you represent, will join this Confederacy, giving to its typical
constellation increased splendor, to its Government of free, equal,
and sovereign States a wider sphere of usefulness, and to the
friends of constitutional liberty a greater security for its harmonious
and perpetual existence. It was not, however, for the purpose
of making this announcement that I have deemed it my duty to convoke
you at an earlier day than that fixed by yourselves for your meeting.
The declaration of war made against this Confederacy by Abraham
Lincoln, the President of the United States, in his proclamation
issued on the 15th day of the present month, rendered it necessary,
in my judgment, that you should convene at the earliest practicable
moment to devise the measures necessary for the defense of the
country. The occasion is indeed an extraordinary one. It justifies
me in a brief review of the relations heretofore existing between
us and the States which now unite in warfare against us and in a
succinct statement of the events which have resulted in this warfare,
to the end that mankind may pass intelligent and impartial judgment
on its motives and objects. During the war waged against Great
Britain by her colonies on this continent a common danger impelled
them to a close alliance and to the formation of a Confederation,
by the terms of which the colonies, styling themselves States,
entered "severally into a firm league of friendship
with each other for their common defense, the security of their liberties,
and their mutual and general welfare, binding themselves to assist
each other against all force offered to or attacks made upon them,
or any of them, on account of religion, sovereignty, trade, or
any other pretense, whatever." In order to guard against
any misconstruction of their compact the several States made explicit
declaration in a distinct article -- that "each State
retains its sovereignty, freedom, and independence, and
every power, jurisdiction, and right which is not by this Confederation
expressly delegated to the United States in Congress assembled."
[p4]
Under this contract of alliance, the war of the Revolution was
successfully waged, and resulted in the treaty of peace with Great
Britain in 1783, by the terms of which the several States were
each by name recognized to be independent. The Articles
of Confederation contained a clause whereby all alterations were
prohibited unless confirmed by the Legislatures of every State
after being agreed to by the Congress; and in obedience to this
provision, under the resolution of Congress of the 21st of February,
1787, the several States appointed delegates who attended a convention
"for the sole and express purpose of revising the
Articles of Confederation and reporting to Congress and the several
Legislatures such alterations and provisions therein as shall,
when agreed to in Congress and confirmed by the States,
render the Federal Constitution adequate to the exigencies of
Government and the preservation of the Union." It was by
the delegates chosen by the several States under the resolution
just quoted that the Constitution of the United States was framed
in 1787 and submitted to the several States for ratification,
as shown by the seventh article, which is in these words: "The
ratification of the conventions of nine States shall be
sufficient for the establishment of this Constitution between
the States so ratifying the same." I have italicized
certain words made in the quotations just made for the purpose
of attracting attention to the singular and marked caution with
which the States endeavored in every possible form to exclude
the idea that the separate and independent sovereignty of each
State was merged into one common government and nation, and the
earnest desire they evinced to impress on the Constitution its
true character -- that of a compact between independent States.
The Constitution of 1787, having, however, omitted the clause already
recited from the Articles of Confederation, which provided in
explicit terms that each State retained its sovereignty
and independence, some alarm was felt in the States, when invited
to ratify the Constitution, lest this omission should be construed
into an abandonment of their cherished principle, and they refused
to be satisfied until amendments were added to the Constitution
placing beyond any pretense of doubt the reservation by the States
of all their sovereign rights and powers not expressly delegated
to the United States by the Constitution.
[p5]
Strange, indeed, it must appear to the impartial observer, but
it is none the less true that all these carefully worded clauses
proved unavailing to prevent the rise and growth in the Northern
States of a political school which has persistently claimed that
the government thus formed was not a compact between States,
but was in effect a national government, set up above
and over the States. An organization created by the States
to secure the blessings of liberty and independence against foreign
aggression, has been gradually perverted into a machine for their
control of their domestic affairs. The creature
has been exalted above its creators; the principals
have been made subordinate to the agent appointed by themselves.
The people of the Southern States, whose almost exclusive occupation
was agriculture, early perceived a tendency in the Northern States
to render the common government subservient to their own purposes
by imposing burdens on commerce as a protection to their manufacturing
and shipping interests. Long and angry controversies grew out
of these attempts, often successful, to benefit one section of
the country at the expense of the other. And the danger of disruption
arising from this cause was enhanced by the fact that the Northern
population was increasing, by immigration and other causes, in
a greater ratio than the population of the South. By degrees,
as the Northern States gained preponderance in the National Congress,
self-interest taught their people to yield to ready assent to
any plausible advocacy of their right as a majority to govern
the minority without control. They learned to listen with impatience
to the suggestion of any constitutional impediment to the exercise
of their will, and so utterly have the principles of the Constitution
been corrupted in the Northern mind that, in the inaugural address
delivered by President Lincoln in March last, he asserts as an
axiom, which he plainly deems to be undeniable, that the theory
of the Constitution requires that in all cases the majority shall
govern; and in another memorable instance the same Chief Magistrate
did not hesitate to liken the relations between a State and the
United States to those which exist between a county and the State
in which it is situated and by which it was created. This is the
lamentable and fundamental error on which rests the policy that
has culminated in his declaration of war against these Confederate
States. In addition to the long-continued and deep-seated resentment
felt by the Southern States at the persistent abuse of the powers
they had delegated to the Congress, for the purpose of enriching
the manufacturing and shipping classes of the North at the expense
of the South, there has existed for nearly half a century another
subject of discord, involving interests of such transcendent magnitude
as at all times to create the apprehension in the minds of many
devoted lovers of the Union that its permanence was impossible.
When the several States delegated certain powers to the United
States Congress, a large portion of the laboring population consisted
of African slaves imported into the colonies by the mother country.
In twelve out of the thirteen States negro slavery existed, and
the right of property in slaves was protected by law. This property
was recognized in the Constitution, and provision was made against
its loss by the escape of the slave. The increase in the number
of slaves by further importation from Africa was also secured
by a clause forbidding Congress to prohibit the slave-trade anterior
to a certain date, and in no clause can there be found any delegation
of power to the Congress authorizing it in any manner to legislate
to the prejudice, detriment, or discouragement of the owners of
that species of property, or excluding it from the protection
of the Government.
[p6]
The climate and soil of the Northern States soon proved unpropitious
to the continuance of slave labor, whilst the converse was the
case at the South. Under the unrestricted free intercourse between
the two sections, the Northern States consulted their own interests
by selling their slaves to the South and prohibiting slavery within
their limits. The South were willing purchasers of a property
suitable to their wants, and paid the price of the acquisition
without harboring a suspicion that their quiet possession was
to be disturbed by those who were inhibited not only by want of
constitutional authority, but by good faith as vendors, from disquieting
a title emanating from themselves. As soon, however, as the Northern
States that prohibited African slavery within their limits had
reached a number sufficient to give their representation a controlling
voice in the Congress, a persistent and organized system of hostile
measures against the rights of the owners of slaves in the Southern
States was inaugurated and gradually extended. A continuous series
of measures was devised and prosecuted for the purpose of rendering
insecure the tenure of property in slaves. Fanatical organizations,
supplied with money by voluntary subscriptions, were assiduously
engaged in exciting amongst the slaves a spirit of discontent
and revolt; means were furnished for their escape from their owners,
and agents secretly employed to entice them to abscond; the constitutional
provision for their rendition to their owners was first evaded,
then openly denounced as a violation of conscientious obligation
and religious duty; men were taught that it was a merit to elude,
disobey, and violently oppose the execution of the laws enacted
to secure the performance of the promise contained in the constitutional
compact; owners of slaves were mobbed and even murdered in open
day solely for applying to a magistrate for the arrest of a fugitive
slave; the dogmas of these voluntary organizations soon obtained
control of the Legislatures of many of the Northern States, and
laws were passed providing for the punishment, by ruinous fines
and long-continued imprisonment in jails and penitentiaries, of
citizens of the Southern States who should dare ask aid of the
officers of the law for the recovery of their property. Emboldened
by success, the theater of agitation and aggression against the
clearly expressed constitutional rights of the Southern States
was transferred to the Congress; Senators and Representatives
were sent to the common councils of the Nation, whose chief title
to this distinction consisted in the display of a spirit of ultra
fanaticism, and whose business was not "to promote the general
welfare or insure domestic tranquillity," but to awaken the
bitterest hatred against the citizens of the sister States by
violent denunciation of their institutions; the transaction of
public affairs was impeded by repeated efforts to usurp powers
not delegated by the Constitution, for the purpose of impairing
the security of property in slaves, and reducing those States
which held slaves to a condition of inferiority. Finally a great
party was organized for the purpose of obtaining the administration
of the Government, with the avowed object of using its power for
the total exclusion of the slave States from all participation
in the benefits of the public domain acquired by all States in
common, whether by conquest or purchase; of surrounding them
entirely by States in which slavery should be prohibited; of thus
rendering the property in slaves so insecure as to be comparatively
worthless, and thereby annihilating in effect property worth thousands
of millions of dollars. This party, thus organized, succeeded
in the month of November last in the election of its candidate
for the Presidency of the United States.
[p7]
In the meantime, under the mild and genial climate of the Southern
States and the increasing care and attention for the well-being
and comfort of the laboring class, dictated alike by interest
and humanity, the African slaves had augmented in number from
about 600,000, at the date of the adoption of the constitutional
compact, to upward of 4,000,000. In moral and social condition
they had been elevated from brutal savages into docile, intelligent,
and civilized agricultural laborers, and supplied not only with
bodily comforts but with careful religious instruction. Under
the supervision of a superior race their labor had been so directed
as not only to allow a gradual and marked amelioration of their
own condition, but to convert hundreds of thousands of square
miles to of the wilderness into cultivated lands covered with
a prosperous people; towns and cities had sprung into existence,
and had rapidly increased in wealth and population under the social
system of the South; the white population of the Southern slave-holding
States had augmented from about 1,250,000 at the date of the adoption
of the Constitution to more than 8,500,000 in 1860; and the productions
of the South in cotton, rice, sugar, and tobacco, for the full
development and continuance of which the labor of African slaves
was and is indispensable, had swollen to an amount which formed
nearly three-fourths of the exports of the whole United States
and had become absolutely necessary to the wants of civilized
man. With interests of such overwhelming magnitude imperiled,
the people of the Southern States were driven by the conduct of
the North to the adoption of some course of action to avert the
danger with which they were openly menaced. With this view the
Legislatures of the several States invited the people to select
delegates to conventions to be held for the purpose of determining
for themselves what measures were best adapted to meet so alarming
a crisis in their history. Here it may be proper to observe that
from a period as early as 1798 there had existed in all
of the States of the Union a party almost uninterruptedly in the
majority based upon the creed that each State was, in the last
resort, the sole judge as well of its wrongs as of the mode and
measure of redress. Indeed, it is obvious that under the law of
nations this principle is an axiom as applied to the relations
of independent sovereign States, such as those which had united
themselves under the constitutional compact. The Democratic party
of the United States repeated, in its successful canvass in 1856,
the declaration made in numerous previous political contests,
that it would "faithfully abide by and uphold the principles
laid down in the Kentucky and Virginia resolutions of 1798, and
in the report of Mr. Madison to the Virginia Legislature in 1799;
and that it adopts those principles as constituting one of the
main foundations of its political creed." The principles
thus emphatically announced embrace that to which I have already
adverted -- the right of each State to judge of and redress the
wrongs of which it complains. These principles were maintained
by overwhelming majorities of the people of all the States of the
Union at different elections, especially in the elections of Mr.
Jefferson in 1805, Mr. Madison in 1809, and Mr. Pierce in 1852.
In the exercise of a right so ancient, so well established, and
so necessary for self-preservation, the people of the Confederate
States, in their conventions, determined that the wrongs which
they had suffered and the evils with which they were menaced required
that they should revoke the delegation of powers to the Federal
Government which they had ratified in their several conventions.
They consequently passed ordinances resuming all their rights
as sovereign and independent States and dissolved their connection
with the other States of the Union.
[p8]
Having done this, they proceeded to form a new compact amongst
themselves by new articles of confederation, which have been also
ratified by the conventions of the several States with an approach
to unanimity far exceeding that of the conventions which adopted
the Constitution of 1787. They have organized their new Government
in all its departments; the functions of the executive, legislative,
and judicial magistrates are performed in accordance with the
will of the people, as displayed not merely in a cheerful acquiescence,
but in the enthusiastic support of the Government thus established
by themselves; and but for the interference of the Government
of the United States in this legitimate exercise of the right
of a people to self-government, peace, happiness, and prosperity
would now smile on our land. That peace is ardently desired by
this Government and people has been manifested in every possible
form. Scarce had you assembled in February last when, prior even
to the inauguration of the Chief Magistrate you had elected, you
passed a resolution expressive of your desire for the appointment
of commissioners to be sent to the Government of the United States
"for the purpose of negotiating friendly relations between
that Government and the Confederate States of America, and for
the settlement of all questions of disagreement between the two
Governments upon principles of right, justice, equity, and good
faith." It was my pleasure as well as my duty to co-operate
with you in this work of peace. Indeed, in my address to you on
taking the oath of office, and before receiving from you the communication
of this resolution, I had said "as a necessity, not a choice,
we have resorted to the remedy of separation, and henceforth our
energies must be directed to the conduct of our own affairs and
the perpetuity of the Confederacy which we have formed. If a just
perception of mutual interests shall permit us peaceably to pursue
our separate political career my most earnest desire will have
been fulfilled." It was in furtherance of these accordant
views of the Congress and the Executive that I made choice of
three discreet, able, and distinguished citizens, who repaired
to Washington. Aided by their cordial co-operation and that of
the Secretary of State, every effort compatible with self-respect
and the dignity of the Confederacy was exhausted before I allowed
myself to yield to the conviction that the Government of the United
States was determined to attempt the conquest of this people and
that our cherished hopes of peace were unattainable.
[p9]
On the arrival of our commissioners in Washington on the 5th of
March they postponed, at the suggestion of a friendly intermediary,
doing more than giving in formal notice of their arrival. This was
done with a view to afford time to the President, who had just
been inaugurated, for the discharge of other pressing official
duties in the organization of his Administration before engaging
his attention in the object of their mission. It was not until
the 12th of the month that they officially addressed the Secretary
of State, informing him of the purpose of their arrival, and stating,
in the language of their instructions, their wish "to make
to the Government of the United States overtures for the opening
of negotiations, assuring the Government of the United States
that the President, Congress, and people of the Confederate States
earnestly desire a peaceful solution of these great questions;
that it is neither their interest nor their wish to make any demand
which is not founded on strictest justice, nor do any act to injure
their late confederates."
[p10]
To this communication no formal reply was received until the 8th
of April. During the interval the commissioners had consented
to waive all questions of form. With the firm resolve to avoid
war if possible, they went so far even as to hold during that
long period unofficial intercourse through an intermediary, whose
high position and character inspired the hope of success, and
through whom constant assurances were received from the Government
of the United States of peaceful intentions; of the determination
to evacuate Fort Sumter; and further, that no measure changing
the existing status prejudicially to the Confederate States, especially
at Fort Pickens, was in contemplation, but that in the event of
any change of intention on the subject, notice would be given
to the commissioners. The crooked paths of diplomacy can scarcely
furnish an example so wanting in courtesy, in candor, and directness
as was the course of the United States Government toward our commissioners
in Washington. For proof of this I refer to the annexed documents
marked __, taken in connection with further facts, which I now
proceed to relate.
[p11]
Early in April the attention of the whole country, as well as
that of our commissioners, was attracted to extraordinary preparations
for an extensive naval and military expedition in New York and
other Northern ports. These preparations commenced in secrecy,
for an expedition whose destination was concealed, only became
known when nearly completed, and on the 5th, 6th, and 7th of April,
transports and vessels of war with troops, munitions, and military
supplies sailed from Northern ports bound southward. Alarmed by
so extraordinary a demonstration, the commissioners requested
the delivery of an answer to their official communication of the
12th of March, and thereupon received on the 8th of April a reply,
dated on the 15th of the previous month, from which it appears
that during the whole interval, whilst the commissioners were
receiving assurances calculated to inspire hope of the success
of their mission, the Secretary of State and the President of
the United States had already determined to hold no intercourse
with them whatever; to refuse even to listen to any proposals
they had to make, and had profited by the delay created by their
own assurances in order to prepare secretly the means for effective
hostile operations. That these assurances were given has been
virtually confessed by the Government of the United States by
its sending a messenger to Charleston to give notice of its purpose
to use force if opposed in its intention of supplying Fort Sumter.
No more striking proof of the absence of good faith in the conduct
of the Government of the United States toward this Confederacy
can be required than is contained in the circumstances which accompanied
this notice. According to the usual course of navigation the vessels
composing the expedition designed for the relief of Fort Sumter might
be expected to reach Charleston Harbor on the 9th of April. Yet,
with our commissioners actually in Washington, detained under
assurances that notice should be given of any military movement,
the notice was not addressed to them, but a messenger was
sent to Charleston to give the notice to the Governor of South
Carolina, and the notice was so given at a late hour on the 8th
of April, the eve of the very day on which the fleet might be
expected to arrive.
[p12]
That this maneuver failed in its purpose was not the fault of
those who contrived it. A heavy tempest delayed the arrival of
the expedition and gave time to the commander of our forces at
Charleston to ask and receive the instructions of this Government.
Even then, under all the provocation incident to the contemptuous
refusal to listen to our commissioners, and the tortuous course
of the Government of the United States, I was sincerely anxious
to avoid the effusion of blood, and directed a proposal to be
made to the commander of Fort Sumter, who had avowed himself to
be nearly out of provisions, that we would abstain from directing
our fire on Fort Sumter if he would promise not to open fire on
our forces unless first attacked. This proposal was refused and
the conclusion was reached that the design of the United States
was to place the besieging force at Charleston between the simultaneous
fire of the fleet and the fort. There remained, therefore, no alternative
but to direct that the fort should at once be reduced. This order
was executed by General Beauregard with the skill and success,
which were naturally to be expected from the well-known character
of that gallant officer; and although the bombardment lasted but
thirty-three hours our flag did not wave over its battered walls
until after the appearance of the hostile fleet off Charleston.
Fortunately, not a life was lost on our side and we were gratified
in being spared the necessity of a useless effusion of blood,
by the prudent caution of the officers who commanded the fleet
in abstaining from the evidently futile effort to enter the harbor
for the relief of Major Anderson.
[p13]
I refer to the report of the Secretary of War, and the papers
which accompany it, for further details of this brilliant affair.
In this connection I cannot refrain from a well-deserved tribute
to the noble State, the eminent soldierly qualities of whose people
were so conspicuously displayed in the port of Charleston. For
months they had been irritated by the spectacle of a fortress
held within their principal harbor as a standing menace against
their peace and independence. Built in part with their own money,
its custody confided with their own consent to an agent who held
no power over them other than such as they had themselves delegated
for their own benefit, intended to be used by that agent for their
own protection against foreign attack, they saw it held with persistent
tenacity as a means of offense against them by the very Government
which they had established for their protection. They had beleaguered
it for months, felt entire confidence in their power to capture
it, yet yielded to the requirements of discipline, curbed their
impatience, submitted without complaint to the unaccustomed hardships,
labors, and privations of a protracted siege; and when at length
their patience was rewarded by the signal for attack, and success
had crowned their steady and gallant conduct, even in the very
moment of triumph they evinced a chivalrous regard for the feelings
of the brave but unfortunate officer who had been compelled to
lower his flag. All manifestations of exultation were checked
in his presence. Their commanding general, with their cordial
approval and the consent of his Government, refrained from imposing
any terms that could wound the sensibilities of the commander
of the fort. He was permitted to retire with the honors of war,
to salute his flag, to depart freely with all his command, and
was escorted to the vessel in which he embarked with the highest
marks of respect from those against whom his guns had been so
recently directed.
[p14]
Not only does every event connected with the siege reflect the
highest honor on South Carolina, but the forbearance of her people
and of this Government from making any harsh use of a victory
obtained under circumstances of such peculiar provocation attest
to the fullest extent the absence of any purpose beyond securing
their own tranquillity and the sincere desire to avoid the calamities
of war. Scarcely had the President of the United States received
intelligence of the failure of the scheme which he had devised
for the re-enforcement of Fort Sumter, when he issued the declaration
of war against this Confederacy which has prompted me to convoke
you. In this extraordinary production that high functionary affects
total ignorance of the existence of an independent Government,
which, possessing the entire and enthusiastic devotion of its
people, is exercising its functions without question over seven
sovereign States, over more than 5,000,000 of people, and over
a territory whose area exceeds over half a million of square miles.
He terms sovereign States "combinations too powerful to be
suppressed by the ordinary course of judicial proceedings or by
the powers vested in the marshals by law." He calls for an
army of 75,000 men to act as a posse comitatus in aid of the process
of the courts of justice in States where no courts exist whose
mandates and decrees are not cheerfully obeyed and respected by
a willing people. He avows that "the first service
to be assigned to the forces called out" will be not to execute
the process of courts, but to capture forts and strongholds situated
within the admitted limits of this Confederacy and garrisoned
by its troops; and declares that "this effort" is intended
"to maintain the perpetuity of popular government."
He concludes by commanding "the persons composing the combinations
aforesaid," to wit, the 5,000,000 of inhabitants of these States,
"to retire peaceably to their respective abodes within twenty
days." Apparently contradictory as are the terms of this
singular document, one point is unmistakably evident. The President
of the United States called for an army of 75,000 men, whose first
service was to be to capture our forts. It was a plain declaration
of war which I was not at liberty to disregard because of my knowledge
that under the Constitution of the United States the President
was usurping a power granted exclusively to the Congress. He is
the sole organ of communication between that country and foreign
powers. The law of nations did not permit me to question the authority
of the Executive of a foreign nation to declare war against this
Confederacy. Although I might have refrained from taking active
measures for our defense, if the States of the Union had all imitated
the action of Virginia, North Carolina, Arkansas, Kentucky, Tennessee,
and Missouri, by denouncing the call for troops as an unconstitutional
usurpation of power to which they refused to respond, I was not
at liberty to disregard the fact that many of the States seemed
quite content to submit to the exercise of the power assumed by
the President of the United States, and were actively engaged
in levying troops to be used for the purpose indicated in the
proclamation. Deprived of the aid of Congress at the moment I was
under the necessity of confining my action to a call on the States
for volunteers for the common defense, in accordance with the
authority you had confided to me before your adjournment. I deemed
it proper, further, to issue proclamation inviting application
from persons disposed to aid our defense in private armed vessels
on the high seas, to the end that preparations might be made for
the immediate issue of letters of marque and reprisal which you
alone, under the Constitution, have power to grant. I entertain
no doubt you will concur with me in the opinion that in the absence
of a fleet of public vessels it will be eminently expedient to
supply their place by private armed vessels, so happily styled
by the publicists of the United States "the militia of the
sea," and so often and justly relied on by them as an efficient
and admirable instrument of defense warfare. I earnestly recommend
the immediate passage of a law authorizing me to accept the numerous
proposals already received. I cannot close this review of the
acts of the Government of the United States without referring
to a proclamation issued by their President, under date of the
19th instant, in which, after declaring that an insurrection has
broken out in this Confederacy against the Government of the United
States, he announces a blockade of all the ports of these States,
and threatens to punish as pirates all persons who shall molest
any vessel of the United States under letters of marque issued
by this Government. Notwithstanding the authenticity of this proclamation
you will concur with me that it is hard to believe it could have
emanated from a President of the United States. Its announcement
of a mere paper blockade is so manifestly a violation of the law
of nations that it would seem incredible that it could have been
issued by authority; but conceding this to be the case so far
as the Executive is concerned, it will be difficult to satisfy
the people of these States that their late confederates will sanction
its declarations -- will determine to ignore the usages of civilized
nations, and will inaugurate a war of extermination on both sides
by treating as pirates open enemies acting under the authority
of commissions issued by an organized government. If such proclamation
was issued it could only have been published under the sudden
influence of passion, and we may rest assured mankind will be
spared the horrors of the conflict it seems to invite.
[p15]
For the details of the administration of the different Departments
I refer to the reports of the Secretaries, which accompany this
message.
[p16]
The State Department has furnished the necessary instructions
for three commissioners who have been sent to England, France,
Russia, and Belgium since your adjournment to ask our recognition
as a member of the family of nations, and to make with each of
those powers treaties of amity and commerce. Further steps will
be taken to enter into like negotiations with the other European
powers, in pursuance of your resolutions passed at the last session.
Sufficient time has not yet elapsed since the departure of these
commissioners for the receipt of any intelligence from them. As
I deem it desirable that commissioners or other diplomatic agents
should also be sent at an early period to the independent American
powers south of our Confederacy, with all of whom it is our interest
and earnest wish to maintain the most cordial and friendly relations,
I suggest the expediency of making the necessary appropriations
for that purpose. Having been officially notified by the public
authorities of the State of Virginia that she had withdrawn from
the Union and desired to maintain the closest political relations
with us which it was possible at this time to establish, I commissioned
the Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, Vice-President of the Confederate
States, to represent this Government at Richmond. I am happy to
inform you that he has concluded a convention with the State of
Virginia by which that honored Commonwealth, so long and justly
distinguished among her sister States, and so dear to the hearts
of thousands of her children in the Confederate States, has united
her power and her fortunes with ours and become one of us. This
convention, together with the ordinance of Virginia adopting the
Provisional Constitution of the Confederacy, will be laid before
you for your constitutional action. I have satisfactory assurances
from other of our late confederates that they are on the point
of adopting similar measures, and I cannot doubt that ere you
shall have been many weeks in session the whole of the slave-holding
States of the late Union will respond to the call of honor and
affection, and by uniting their fortunes with ours promote our
common interests and secure our common safety.
[p17]
In the Treasury Department regulations have been devised and put
into execution for carrying out the policy indicated in your legislation
on the subject of the navigation of the Mississippi River, as
well as for the collection of revenue on the frontier. Free transit
has been secured for vessels and merchandise passing through the
Confederate States; and delay and inconvenience have been avoided
as far as possible, in organizing the revenue service for the
various railways entering our territory. As fast as experience
shall indicate the possibility of improvement in these regulations
no effort will be spared to free commerce from all unnecessary
embarrassments and obstructions. Under your act authorizing a loan,
proposals were issued inviting subscriptions for $5,000,000 and
the call was answered by the prompt subscription of more than
$8,000,000 by our own citizens, and not a single bid was made
under par. The rapid development of the purpose of the President
of the United States to invade our soil, capture our forts, blockade
our ports, and wage war against us induced me to direct that the
entire subscription should be accepted. It will now become necessary
too raise means to a much larger amount to defray the expenses
of maintaining our independence and repelling invasion. I invite
your special attention to this subject, and the financial condition
of the Government, with the suggestion of ways and means for the
supply of the Treasury, will be presented to you in a separate
communication.
[p18]
To the Department of Justice you have confided not only the organization
and supervision of all matters connected with the courts of justice,
but also those connected with patents and with the bureau of public
printing. Since your adjournment all the courts, with the exception
of those of Mississippi and Texas, have been organized by the
appointment of marshals and district attorneys and are now prepared
for the exercise of their functions. In the two States just named
the gentlemen confirmed as judges declined to accept the appointment
and no nominations have yet been made to fill the vacancies. I
refer you to the report of the Attorney-General and concur in
his recommendation for immediate legislation, especially on the
subject of patent rights. Early provision should be made to secure
to the subjects of foreign nations the full enjoyment of their
property in valuable inventions, and to extend to our own citizens
protection, not only for their own inventions, but for such as
may have been assigned to them or may hereafter be assigned by
persons not alien enemies. The Patent-Office business is much
more extensive and important than had been anticipated. The applications
for patents, although confined under the law exclusively to citizens
of our Confederacy, already average seventy per month, showing
the necessity for the prompt organization of a bureau of patents.
[p19]
The Secretary of War in his report and accompanying documents
conveys full information concerning the forces -- regular, volunteer,
and provisional -- raised and called
for under the several acts of Congress -- their organization and
distribution; also an account of the expenditures already made,
and the further estimates for the fiscal year ending the 18th
of February, 1862, rendered necessary by recent events. I refer
to his report also for a full history of the occurrences in Charleston
Harbor prior to and including the bombardment and reduction of
Fort Sumter, and of the measures subsequently taken for the common
defense on receiving the intelligence of the declaration of war
against us, made by the President of the United States. There
are now in the field at Charleston, Pensacola, Forts Morgan, Jackson,
St. Philip, and Pulaski 19,000 men, and 16,000 are now en route
for Virginia. It is proposed to organize and hold in readiness
for instant action, in view of the present exigencies of the country,
an army of 100,000 men. If further force should be needed, the
wisdom and patriotism of Congress will be confidently appealed
to for authority to call into the field additional numbers of
our noble-spirited volunteers who are constantly tendering service
far in excess of our wants.
[p20]
The operations of the Navy Department have been necessarily restricted
by the fact that sufficient time has not yet elapsed for the purchase
or construction of more than a limited number of vessels adapted
to the public service. Two vessels purchased have been named the
Sumter and McRae, and are now being prepared for sea at New Orleans
with all possible dispatch. Contracts have also been made at that
city with two different establishments for the casting of ordnance -- cannon
shot and shell -- with the view to encourage the manufacture of
these articles, so indispensable for our defense, as at many points
within our territory as possible. I call your attention to the
recommendation of the Secretary for the establishment of a magazine
and laboratory for preparation of ordinance stores and the necessary
appropriation for that purpose. Hitherto such stores have usually
been prepared at the navy-yards, and no appropriation was made
at your last session for this object. The Secretary also calls
attention to the fact that no provision has been made for the
payment of invalid pensions to our own citizens. Many of these
persons are advanced in life; they have no means of support, and
by the secession of these States have been deprived of their claim
against the Government of the United States. I recommend the appropriation
of the sum necessary to pay those pensioners, as well as those
of the Army, whose claims can scarcely exceed $70,000 per annum.
[p21]
The Postmaster-General has already succeeded in organizing his
Department to such an extent as to be in readiness to assume the
direction of our postal affairs on the occurrence of the contingency
contemplated by the act of March 15, 1861, or even sooner if desired
by Congress. The various books and circulars have been prepared
and measures taken to secure supplies of blanks, postage stamps,
stamped envelopes, mail bags, locks, keys, &c. He presents
a detailed classification and arrangement of his clerical force
and asks for its increase. An auditor of the Treasury for this
Department is necessary, and a plan is submitted for the organization
of his bureau. The great number and magnitude of the accounts
of this Department require an increase of the clerical force in
the accounting branch in the Treasury. The revenues of this Department
are collected and disbursed in modes peculiar to itself, and require
a special bureau to secure a proper accountability in the administration
of its finances. I call your attention to the additional legislation
required for this Department; to the recommendation for changes
in the law fixing the rates of postage on newspapers, periodicals,
and sealed packages of certain kinds, and specially to the recommendation
of the Secretary, in which I concur, that you provide at once for
the assumption by him of the control of our entire postal service.
[p22]
In the military organization of the States provision is made for
brigadier and major generals, but in the Army of the Confederate
States the highest grade is that of brigadier-general. Hence it
will no doubt sometimes occur that where troops of the Confederacy
do duty with the militia, the general selected for the command
and possessed of the views and purposes of this Government will
be superseded by an officer of the militia not having the same
advantages. To avoid this contingency in the least objectionable
manner I recommend that additional rank be given to the general
of the Confederate Army, and concurring in the policy of having
but one grade of generals in the Army of the Confederacy, I recommend
that the law of its organization be amended so that the grade
be that of general. To secure a thorough military education it
is deemed essential that officers should enter upon the study
of their profession at an early period of life and have elementary
instruction in a military school. Until such school shall be established
it is recommended that cadets be appointed and attached to companies
until they shall have attained the age and have acquired the knowledge
to fit them for the duties of lieutenants. I also call your attention
to an omission in the law organizing the Army, in relation to
military chaplains, and recommend that provision be made for their
appointment.
[p23]
In conclusion, I congratulate you on the fact that in every portion
of our country there has been exhibited the most patriotic devotion
to our common cause. Transportation companies have freely tendered
the use of their lines for troops and supplies. The presidents
of the railroads of the Confederacy, in company with others who
control lines of communication with States that we hope soon to
greet as sisters, assembled in convention in this city, and not
only reduced largely the rates heretofore demanded for mail service
and conveyance of troops and munitions, but voluntarily proffered
to receive their compensation, at these reduced rates, in the
bonds of the Confederacy, for the purpose of leaving all the resources
of the Government at its disposal for the common defense. Requisitions
for troops have been met with such alacrity that the numbers tendering
their services have in every instance greatly exceeded the demand.
Men of the highest official and social position are serving as
volunteers in the ranks. The gravity of age and the zeal of youth
rival each other in the desire to be foremost for the public defense;
and though at no other point than the one heretofore noticed have
they been stimulated by the excitement incident to actual engagement
and the hope of distinction for individual achievement, they have
borne what for new troops is the most severe ordeal -- patient toil
and constant vigil, and all the exposure and discomfort of active
service, with a resolution and fortitude such as to command approbation
and justify the highest expectation of their conduct when active
valor shall be required in place of steady endurance. A people
thus united and resolved cannot shrink from any sacrifice which
they may be called on to make, nor can there be a reasonable doubt
of their final success, however long and severe may be the test
of their determination to maintain their birthright of freedom
and equality as a trust which it is their first duty to transmit
undiminished to their posterity. A bounteous Providence cheers
us with the promise of abundant crops. The fields of grain which
will within a few weeks be ready for the sickle give assurance
of the amplest supply of food for man; whilst the corn, cotton,
and other staple productions of our soil afford abundant proof
that up to this period the season has been propitious. We feel
that our cause is just and holy; we protest solemnly in the face
of mankind that we desire peace at any sacrifice save that of
honor and independence; we seek no conquest, no aggrandizement,
no concession of any kind from the States with which we were lately
confederated; all we ask is to be let alone; that those who never
held power over us shall not now attempt our subjugation by arms.
This we will, this we must, resist to the direst extremity. The
moment that this pretension is abandoned the sword will drop from
our grasp, and we shall be ready to enter into treaties of amity
and commerce that cannot but be mutually beneficial. So long as
this pretension is maintained, with a firm reliance on that Divine
Power which covers with its protection the just cause, we will
continue to struggle for our inherent right to freedom, independence,
and self-government.
JEFFERSON DAVIS
Transcribed by Trina S. Rossman and reverse-order proofed by T. Lloyd Benson from Jefferson Davis, "Message on Constitutional Ratification," Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series IV, vol. I, pp. 256-268.