Legislative Message of Governor Isham Harris to the Tennessee Assembly 7 January 1861
EXECUTIVE OFFICE
Nashville, January 7, 1861
GENTLEMEN OF THE SENATE AND HOUSE
OF REPRESENTATIVES :
The ninth section of the third article of the Constitution,
provides that, on extraordinary occasions, the Governor may convene the General Assembly. Believing the emergency
contemplated, to exist at this time I have called you together. In welcoming you to the capitol of the State,
I can but regret the gloomy auspices under which we meet. Grave and momentous issues have arisen, which, to an
unprecedented degree, agitate the public mind and imperil the perpetuity of the Government.
The systematic, wanton, and long continued agitation of the slavery question, with the actual and threatened
aggressions of the Northern States and a portion of their people, upon the well-defined constitutional rights of the
Southern citizen; the rapid growth and increase, in all the elements of power, of a purely sectional party, whose bond
of union is uncompromising hostility to the rights and institutions of the fifteen Southern States, have produced a
crisis in the affairs of the country, unparalleled in the history of the past, resulting already in the withdrawal
from the Confederacy of one of the sovereignties which composed it, while others are rapidly preparing to move in the
same direction. Fully appreciating the importance of the duties which devolve upon you, fraught, as your action must
be, with consequences of the highest possible importance to the people of Tennessee; knowing that, as a great
Commonwealth, our own beloved State is alike interested with her sisters, who have resorted, and are preparing to
resort, to this fearful alternative, I have called you together for the purpose of calm and dispassionate
deliberation, earnestly trusting, as the chosen representatives of a free and enlightened people, that you
will, at this critical juncture of our affairs, prove yourselves equal to the occasion which has called for
the exercise of your talent and patriotism. A brief review of the history of the past is necessary
to a proper understanding of the issues presented for your consideration.
Previous to the adoption
of the Federal Constitution, each State was a separate and independent Government-a complete sovereignty within
itself --and in the compact of union, each reserved all the rights and powers incident to sovereignty, except such
as were expressly delegated by the Constitution to the General Government, or such as were clearly incident,
and necessary, to the exercise of some expressly delegated power. The Constitution distinctly recognizes property
in slaves--makes it the duty of the States to deliver the fugitive to his owner, but contains no grant of power
to the Federal Government to interfere with this species of property, except the power coupled with the
duty, common to all civil Governments, to protect the rights of property, as well as those of life and
liberty, of the citizen, which clearly appears from the exposition given to that instrument by the Supreme
Court of the United States in the case of Dred Scott vs. Sanford. In delivering the opinion of the Court,
Chief Justice Taney said: Now, as we have already said in an earlier part of this opinion
upon a different point, the right of property in a slave is distinctly and expressly affirmed in the
Constitution.
And no word can be found in the Constitution which gives Congress a greater power over slave property, or
which entitles property of that kind to less protection than property of any other description. The only power
conferred, is the power coupled with the duty, of guarding and protecting the owner in his
rights.
This decision of the highest judicial tribunal, known to our Government,
settles the question, beyond the possibility of doubt, that slave property rests upon the same basis, and is
entitled to the same protection, as every other description of property; that the General Government has no
power to circumscribe or confine it within any given
boundary; to determine where it shall, or shall not exist, or in any manner to impair its value. And certainly it
will
not be contended, in this enlightened age, that any member of the Confederacy can exercise higher powers, in this
respect, beyond the limits of its own boundary, than those delegated to the General Government.
The States entered the Union upon terms of perfect political equality, each delegating certain powers to the
General
Government, but neither deterring any power to the other to interfere with its reserved rights or domestic affairs;
hence, there is no power on earth which can rightfully determine whether slavery shall or shall not exist within
the limits of any State, except the people thereof acting in their highest sovereign capacity. The
attempt of the Northern people, through the instrumentality of the Federal Government--their State governments,
and emigrant aid societies--to confine this species of property within the limits of the present Southern
States--to impair its value by constant agitation and refusal to deliver up the fugitive--to appropriate the whole
of the Territories, which are the common property all the people of all the States, to the Southern man who is
unwilling to live under a government which, may by law recognize the free negroe as his equal; and in
fine, to put the question where the Northern mind will rest in the belief of its ultimate extinction is
justly regarded by the people of the Southern States as a gross and palpable violation of the spirit and
obvious meaning of the compact of Union--an impertinent intermeddling with their domestic affairs, destructive
of fraternal feeling, ordinary comity, and well defined rights. As slavery receded from the North,
it was followed by the most violent and fanatical opposition. At first the anti-slavery cloud, which now
overshadows the nation, was no larger than a mans hand. Most of you can remember, with vivid distinctness,
those days of brotherhood, when throughout the whole North, the abolitionist was justly regarded as an enemy of
his country. Weak, diminutive and contemptible as was this part in the purer days of the Republic, it has now
grown to colossal proportions, and its recent rapid strides to power, have given it possession of the present
House of Representatives, and elected one of its leaders to the Presidency of the United States; and in the
progress of events, the Senate and Supreme Court must also soon pass into the hands of this party--a party upon
whose revolutionary banner is inscribed, No more slave States, no more slave Territory, no return of the
fugitive to his master--an irrepressible conflict between the Free and Slave States;
and whether it, be long or short, peaceful or bloody, the struggle shall go on, until the sun shall not
rise upon a master or set upon a slave. Nor is this all; it seeks to appropriate to itself,
and to exclude the slaveholder from the territory acquired by the common blood and treasure of all the States.
It has, through the instrumentality of Emigrant Aid Societies, under State patronage, flooded the Territories
with its minions, armed with Sharps rifles and bowie knives, seeking thus to accomplish, by intimidation,
violence and murder what it could not do by constitutional legislation. It demanded, and from our love
of peace and devotion to the Union, unfortunately extorted in 1819-20, a concession which excluded the
South from about half the territory acquired from France. It demanded, and again received, as a
peace offering in 1845, all of that part of Texas, North of 36° 30' North latitude, if at any time the
interest of the people thereof shall require a division of her territory. It would submit to
nothing less than a compromise in 1850, by which it dismembered that State, and remanded to territorial
condition a considerable portion of its territory South of 36° 30'. It excluded, by the
same Compromise, the Southern people from California, whose mineral wealth, fertility of soil, and
salubrity of climate, is not surpassed on earth, by prematurely forcing her into the Union under a Constitution,
conceived in fraud by a set of adventurers, in the total absence of any law authorizing the formation of a
Constitution, fixing the qualification of voters, regulating the time, place, or manner of electing delegates,
or the time or place of the meeting of such Convention. Yet all these irregular and unauthorized proceedings
were sanctified by the fact that the Constitution prohibited slavery, and forever closed the doors of that rich
and desirable territory against the Southern people. And while the Southern mind was still burning under a
humiliating sense of this wrong, it refused to admit Kansas into the Union upon a Constitution, framed by
authority of Congress, and by delegates elected in conformity to law, upon the ground that slavery was
recognized and protected. It claims the constitutional right to abolish slavery in the District
of Columbia, the forts, arsenals, dock-yards and other places ceded to the United States, within the limits
of slaveholding States. It proposes a prohibition of the slave trade between the States, thereby
crowding the slaves together and preventing their exit South, until they become unprofitable to an extent
that will force the owner finally to abandon them in self-defense. It has, by the deliberate
Legislative enactments of a large majority of the Northern States, openly and flagrantly nullified
that clause of the Constitution which provides that- No person held to service or labor in one State
under the laws thereof, escaping into
service or labor, but shall be delivered up on claim of the party to whom such service or another, shall, in
consequence of any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such labor may be due.
This
provision of the Constitution has been spurned and trampled under foot by these higher law
nullifiers. It is utterly powerless for good, since all attempts to enforce the fugitive slave law under
it are made a felony in some of these States, a high misdemeanor in others, and punishable in all by heavy
fines and imprisonment. The distempered public opinion of these localities having risen above the Constitution
and all other law, planting itself upon the anarchical doctrines of the higher law, with impunity
defies the Government, tramples upon our rights, and plunders the Southern citizen.
It has, through
the Governor of Ohio, as openly nullified that part of the Constitution which provides that-A person
charged in any State with treason, felony, or other crime, who shall flee from justice and be found in another
State, shall, on demand of the executive authority of the State from which he fled, be delivered up, to be
removed to the State having jurisdiction of the crime.
In discharge of official duty,
I had occasion, within the past year, to demand of the Governor of Ohio a person charged in the
State (of Tennessee) with the crime of slave stealing, who had fled from justice, and was found
in the State of Ohio. The Governor refused to issue his warrant for the arrest and delivery of the
fugitive, and in answer to a letter of inquiry which I addressed to him, said: The crime of negro
stealing not being known to either the common law or the criminal code of Ohio, it is not of that class of
crimes contemplated by the Federal Constitution, for the commission of which I am authorized, as the
executive of Ohio, to surrender a fugitive from the justice of a sister State, and hence I declined to
issue a warrant, &c.; thus deliberately nullifying and setting at defiance the clause of the Constitution
above quoted, as well as the act of Congress of February 12th, 1793, and grossly
violating the ordinary comity
existing between separate and independent nations, much less the comity which should exist between sister States
of the same great Confederacy; the correspondence connected with which is herewith transmitted.
It has, through the executive authority of other States, denied extradition of murderers and marauders.
It obtained its own compromise in the Constitution to continue the importation of slaves, and now sets up a law,
higher than the Constitution, to destroy this property imported and sold to us by their fathers.
It has caused the murder of owners in pursuit of their fugitive slaves, and shielded the murderers from punishment.
It has, upon many occasions, sent its emissaries into the Southern States to corrupt our slaves; induce them to
run off, or excite them to insurrection. It has run off slave property by means of the underground
railroad, amounting in value to millions of dollars, and thus made the tenure by which slaves are held in the
border States so precarious as to materially impair their value.
It has, by its John Brown and Montgomery
raids, invaded sovereign States and murdered peaceable citizens.
It has justified and exalted to the
highest honors of admiration, the horrid murders, arsons, and rapine of the John Brown raid, and has canonized the
felons as saints and martyrs.
It has burned the towns, poisoned the cattle, and conspired with the
slaves to depopulate Northern Texas.
It has, through certain leaders, proclaimed to the slaves the terrible
motto, Alarm to the sleep, fire to the dwellings, poison to the food and water of slaveholders.
It has repudiated and denounced the decision of the Supreme Court.
It has assailed our rights as
guarantied by the plainest provisions of the Constitution, from the floor of each house of Congress, the pulpit,
the hustings, the school-room, their State Legislatures, and through the public press, dividing and disrupting
churches, political parties, and civil governments.
It has, in the person of the President elect,
asserted the equality of the black with the white race.
These are some of the wrongs against which
we have remonstrated for more than a quarter of a century, hoping, but in vain, for their redress, until some
of our sister States, in utter despair of obtaining justice at the hands of these lawless confederates, have resolved
to sever the ties which have bound them together, and maintain those rights out of the Union, which have been the
object of constant attack and encroachment within it.
No one will assert that the Southern States
or people have, at any time, failed to perform, fully and in good faith, all of the duties which the Constitution
devolves upon them.
Nor will it be pretended that they have, at any time, encroached or attempted
aggression upon the rights of a Northern sister State. The Government was for many years under the control of
Southern statesmen, but in originating and perfecting measures of policy, be it said to the perpetual honor of
the South, she has never attempted to encroach upon a single constitutional right of the North. The journals of
Congress will not show even the introduction of a single proposition, by any Southern Representative, calculated
to impair her rights in property, injure her trade, or wound her sensibilities. Nor have they at any time demanded
at the hands of the Federal Government, or Northern States, more than their well-defined rights under the
Constitution. So far from it, they have tolerated these wrongs, from a feeling of loyalty and devotion to
the Union, with a degree of patience and forbearance unparalleled in the history of a brave and free people.
Moreover, they have quietly submitted to a revenue system which indirectly, but certainly, taxes the products
of slave labor some fifty or sixty millions of dollars annually, to increase the manufacturing profits of those
who have thus persistently and wickedly assailed them. To evade the issue thus forced upon us at this
time, without the fullest security for our rights, is, in my opinion, fatal to the institution of slavery forever.
The time has arrived when the people of the South must prepare either to abandon or to fortify and maintain it.
Abandon it, we cannot, interwoven as it is with our wealth, prosperity, and domestic happiness. We owe it to the
mechanic whose shop is closed, to the multiplied thousands of laborers thrown out of employment, to the trader made
bankrupt by this agitation. We owe it to ourselves, our children, our self-respect and equality in the Government,
to have this question settled permanently and forever upon terms consistent with justice and honor, and which will
give us peace and perfect security for the present and future. Palliatives and opiates, in the character
of legislative compromises, may be applied, affording momentary relief; but there will be no permanent safety,
security, or peace, until Northern prejudice has been eradicated, and the public sentiment of that section
radically changed and nationalized. To attempt the application of effective remedies before this great object
has been accomplished, is like cleansing the stream while the fountain itself is poisoned. The
consequences and immense interests which are involved in the proper solution of the difficulties that surround us,
the deep, lasting, and vital importance of settling them upon principles of justice and equality, demand the most
serious consideration of the whole people, as well as that of the public functionaries of the State. Whilst I
cheerfully submit to your discretion the whole question of our federal relations, having no doubt myself as to the
necessity and propriety of calling a State Convention, yet I respectfully recommend that you provide by law for
submitting to the people of the State the question of Convention or No Convention, and also for the election of
delegates by the people, in the ratio of legislative representation, to meet in State Convention, at the Capitol,
at Nashville, at the earliest day practicable, to take into consideration our federal relations, and determine
what action shall be taken by the State of Tennessee for the security of the rights and the peace of her citizens.
The question of Convention or No Convention, can and should be determined, and the delegates chosen at the same
election, which can be very easily accomplished by heading one set of tickets CONVENTION, and another set NO
CONVENTION. If a majority of the people vote for Convention, then the persons receiving the largest number of votes
in their respective counties and districts, to be commissioned as delegates. This will place the whole
matter in the hands of the people, for them, in their sovereignty, to determine how far their rights have been
violated, the character of redress or guaranty they will demand, or the action they will take for their present
and future security. If there be a remedy for the evils which afflict the country, consistent with the
perpetuity of the Union, it will, in my opinion, be found in such constitutional amendments as will deprive the
fanatical majorities of the North of the power to invade our rights, or impair the security or value of our
property. Clear and well defined as our rights are, under the present Constitution, to participate equally
with the citizens of all other States in the settlement of the common Territories, and to hold our slaves there until
excluded by the formation of a State Constitution, yet every organized Territory will become a field of angry, if not
bloody, strife between the Southern man and the Abolitionist, and we shall see the tragedies of Kansas reenacted in each
of them, as they approach the period of forming their State Constitutions. Plain and unmistakable as is the
duty of each State to deliver up the fugitive slave to his owner, yet the attempt to reclaim is at the peril of the
masters life. These evils can be obviated to a great extent, if not entirely, by the following amendments to
the Constitution:
1st. Establish a line upon the northern boundary of the present Slave States,
and extend it through the Territories to the Pacific Ocean, upon such parallel of latitude as will divide them
equitably between the North-and South, expressly providing that all the territory now owned, or that may be
hereafter acquired North of that line, shall be forever free, and all South of it forever slave.
This will remove the question of existence or nonexistence of slavery in our States and Territories
entirely and forever from the arena of politics. The question being settled by the Constitution,
is no longer open for the politician to ride into position by appealing to fanatical prejudices,
or assailing the rights of his neighbors.
2d. In addition to the fugitive slave clause provide, that when slave has
been demanded of the executive authority of the State to which he has fled, if lie is not delivered, and the owner
permitted to carry him out of the State in peace, that the State so failing to deliver, shall pay to the owner
double the value of such slave, and secure his right of action in the Supreme Court of the United States. This
will secure the return of the slave to his owner, or his value, with a sufficient sum to indemnify him for the
expenses necessarily incident to the recovery.
3d. Provide for the protection of the owner in the peaceable possession of
his slave while in transition, or temporarily sojourning in any of the States of the Confederacy; and in the event
of the slaves escape or being taken from the owner, require the State to return, or account for him as in
case of the furtive.
4th. Expressly prohibit Congress from abolishing slavery in the District of
Columbia, in any dock yard, navy yard, arsenal, or district of any character whatever, within the limits of
any slave State.
5th. That these provisions shall never be changed,
except by the consent of all the slave States.
With these amendments to the Constitution,
I should feel that our rights Were
reasonably secure, not only in theory, but in fact, and should indulge the hope of living in the Union in peace.
Without these, or some other amendments, which promise an equal amount and certainty of security, there is no hope
of peace or security in the government.
If the non-slaveholding States refuse to comply with a demand so
just and reasonable ; refuse to abandon at once and forever their unjust war upon us, our institutions, and our
rights ; refuse, as they have heretofore done, to perform, in good faith, the obligations of the compact of union,
much as we may appreciate the power, prosperity, greatness and glory of this government; deeply as we deplore the
existence of causes which have already driven one State from the Union ; much as we may regret the imperative
necessity which they have wantonly and wickedly forced upon us, every consideration of self-respect require that
we should assert and maintain our equality in the Union, or independence out of it.
In my
opinion, the only mode left us of perpetuating the Union upon the principles of justice and equality, upon which it
was originally established, is by the Southern States, identified as they are in interest, sentiment, and feeling,
and must, in the natural course of events, share a common destiny, uniting in the expression of a fixed and unalterable
resolve, that the rights guaranteed by the Constitution must be respected, and fully and perfectly secured in the
present government, or asserted and maintained in a homogeneous Confederacy of Southern States.
Mere
questions of policy may be very often properly compromised, but there can be no compromise of cardinal and vital
principles; no compromise between right and wrong. Principle must be vindicated, and right triumphant, be the
consequences what they may. To compromise the one, or abandon the other, is not only unmanly and humiliating in
the extreme, but always disastrous in its final results. The South has no power to reunite the scattered
fragments of a violated Constitution and a once glorious government. She is acting on the defensive. She has been
driven to the wall, and can submit to no further aggression. The North, however, can restore the Constitutional
Union of our fathers, by undoing their work of alienation and hate, engendered by thirty years of constant
aggression, and by unlearning the lessons of malignant hostility to the South and her institutions, with which
their press, pulpit, and schools have persistently infected the public mind. Let them do this, and peace
will again establish her court in the midst of this once happy country, and the union of these States be restored
to that spirit of fraternity, equality, and justice, which gave it birth. Let them do this, and the
vitality which has been crushed out of the Constitution may be restored, giving renewed strength and vigor to the
body politic. But can we hope for such results? Two months have already passed, since the development of
facts which make the perpetuity of the Union depend, alone, upon their giving to the South satisfactory guarantees
for her chartered rights. Yet, there has been no proposition at all satisfactory, made by any member of the dominant
and aggressive party of that section. So far from it, their Senators and Representatives in Congress have voted down
and spurned every proposition that looked to the accomplishment of this object, no matter whence emanating ; and the
fact that their constituents have, in no authoritative manner, issued words of rebuke or warning to them, must be
taken as conclusive proof of their acquiescence in the policy. In view of these facts, I cannot close my eyes to
the conclusion that Tennessee will be powerless in any efforts she may make to quell the storm that pervades the
country. The work of alienation and disruption has gone so far, that it will be extremely difficult, if not
impossible, to arrest it; and before our adjournment, in all human probability, the only practical question for
the State to determine will be whether she will unite her fortunes with a Northern or Southern Confederacy; upon
which question, when- presented, I am certain there can be little or no division in sentiment, identified as we
are in every respect with the South. If this calamity shall befall the country, the South will have the
consolation of knowing that she is in no manner responsible for the disaster. The responsibility rests alone upon
the Northern people, who have willfully broken the bond of union, repudiated the obligations and duties which it
imposes, and only cling to its benefits. Yet even in this dark hour of responsibility and peril, let no man
countenance the idea for a moment, that the dissolution of the Federal Union reduces the country to anarchy,
or proves the theory of self government to be a failure. Such conclusions would be not only erroneous but unworthy
of ourselves, and our revolutionary ancestry, while our State governments exist, possessing all the machinery,
perfect and complete, which is necessary to the purposes of civil government, just as they existed before the Union
was formed. The sages and patriots of the revolution, when in the act of severing their connection with the
mother country, and establishing the great cardinal principles of free government, solemnly declared that governments
were instituted among men to secure their rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; deriving their
just powers from the consent of the governed; that whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends,
it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it, and to institute a new government, laying its foundations on such
principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and
happiness. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object, evinces a
design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government,
and to provide new guards for their future security.
Recognizing these great principles, the people
of Tennessee incorporated in their declaration of rights, as a fundamental article of the Constitution of the
State, That government being instituted for the common benefit, the doctrine of non -resistance against
arbitrary power and oppression is absurd, slavish, and destructive of the good and happiness of mankind.
Whatever line of policy may be adopted by the people of Tennessee, with regard to the present Federal relations
of the State, I am sure that the swords of her brave and gallant sons will never be drawn for the purpose of coercing,
subjugating, or holding as a conquered province, any one of her sister States, whose people may declare their
independence of the Federal Government, for the purpose of being relieved from a long train of abuses and
usurpations. To admit the right or policy of coercion, would be untrue to the example of our fathers and the
glorious memories of the past, destructive of those great and fundamental principles of civil liberty, purchased with
their blood ; destructive of State sovereignty and equality; tending to centralization, and thus subject the rights of
the minority to the despotism of an unrestrained majority. Widely as we may differ with some of our sister
Southern States as to the wisdom of their policy; desirous as we may be that whatever action taken in this emergency,
should be taken by the South as a unit; hopeful as we may be of finding some remedy for our grievances consistent with
the perpetuity of the present Confederacy, the question, at last, is one which each member of the Confederacy must
determine for itself, and any attempt on the part of the others to hold, by means of military force, an unwilling
sovereignty as a member of a common Union, must inevitably lead to the worst form of internecine war, and if
successful, result in the establishment of a new and totally different government from the one established by
the Constitution-the Constitutional Union being a Union of consent, and not of force, of peace, and not of
blood-composed of sovereignties, free, and politically equal. But the new and coercive government, while it
would derive its powers to govern a portion of the States from the consent of the
governed would derive the power by which it governed the remainder from the cannon and the sword, and
not from their consent -- a Union, not of equals, but of the victors and the vanquished, pinned together by
the bayonet and congealed in blood. I devoutly trust that a merciful Providence may avert such a
calamity, and believe that there is no respectable portion of our people, whatever may be their differences
of opinion upon other questions, who are so blind to reason, or so lost to patriotism and every sentiment of
civil liberty, as to give countenance to a policy so fatal in its results, and so revolting to every sentiment
of humanity. While I sincerely trust that Tennessee may never be driven to the desperate alternative
of appealing to arms in defense of the rights of her people, I nevertheless deem it proper, in view of the
present excited state of the public mind and unsettled condition of the country, to call your attention to
the fact that, with the exception of a small number of volunteer companies, we have no military organization
in the State, the militia having disorganized immediately after the repeal of the law which required drills
and public parades. Independent of the impending crisis, I regard a thorough re-organization of the militia
as imperatively demanded by every consideration of prudence and safety. I therefore submit the question to
your consideration, with the earnest hope that you will adopt such plan of organization as will secure to the
State at all times, and under all circumstances, an efficient and reliable military force. I am
unable, in the absence of full reports from the clerks of the several counties, to inform you as to the
military strength of the State. Such reports as have been made to this department shall be laid before you.
I do not doubt, however, that the militia strength of the State may be safely estimated at one hundred and
twenty thousand men. It is proper, in this connection, that I call your attention to the report of
John Heriges, Keeper of Public Arms, herewith transmitted, showing the number, character, and Condition of the
public arms of the State, and respectfully recommend that you provide for the purchase of such number and
character of arms, for the use of the State, as may be necessary to thoroughly arm an efficient military
force.
I regret that I cannot close this communication with the foregoing recital of facts pertaining to the all
important political crisis of the day. But a comparative failure of crops for two successive years,
with the destruction of commercial confidence, resulting in the suspension of commercial transactions, general
stagnation of trade, and financial embarrassment which pervade the whole country, with its ever attendant evil
of general pecuniary distress, at the beginning of which many of the banks in the State suspended specie payment,
thereby incurring the penalties prescribed by the banking code of the last session. It is asserted,
and I suppose truly, that the condition of the banks was such as not to make suspension necessary on their own
account; that by the adoption of a purely selfish policy, they could have weathered the storm and sustained
themselves, but to have done so they must have cut off all discounts, and enforced the collection of their
debts from the people, which would have increased the general distress. It is also argued, with great
earnestness, by a very large number of the people, that you should pass laws for relief, and in order to
enable the banks to afford the greatest possible assistance to the people until another crop can be made,
that the penalties incurred by the suspension of the banks should be released. While I am
confident in the opinion that the suspension of specie payment by the banks a he banks is wrong in
principle, and tends to depreciate the currency and unsettle the standard of value, I am equally
confident that the policy of relief laws, to which this general pecuniary distress has driven the
public mind, is, to say the least of it, of doubtful policy, and generally injurious in their ultimate
effects upon the community. The idea of freeing a people from pecuniary distress by legislation, is, to
my mind, an impossibility. Yet so universal is the anxiety expressed, and so confident the hope of relief
from the adoption of the policy suggested, that while I cannot concur in the truth of the argument, or
recommend the adoption of the policy, I do not feel at liberty obstinately to stand between the people of
the State and their chosen Representatives, to prevent the adoption of such legislation connected with these
questions as they may think will promote their interest and general welfare. I therefore submit to
your consideration these questions for such action as you in your discretion, may see proper to take with
regard to them. I am aware that there are many questions of a general character with regard to
which the constituents of many of you desire legislation, but having convened you in extraordinary session,
upon what I conceived to be an extraordinary occasion in the history of the country, and feeling the
necessity of prompt and immediate action upon the absorbing questions connected with the political crisis
of the day, I have intentionally avoided submitting any others than those to which I have especially called
attention, trusting that no material interest will suffer by being postponed until the next regular session
of the General Assembly. With the earnest hope that your session may be short and agreeable, and
devoutly trusting that an All Wise Providence may watch over your deliberations, and guide and direct you in
the adoption of such measures as will redound to the general welfare, peace, prosperity, and glory of our State
and country, the questions, fraught as they are with weighty responsibilities and fearfully important consequences,
are respectfully committed to your hands.
ISHAM G. HARRIS
Bibliography
Sources : White, Messages of the Governors of Tennessee, 1857-1869, Tennessee Historical Commission,
1959, pp. 255-269; Public Acts of the State of Tennessee, Passed at the Extra Session of the Thirty-Third General
Assembly, for the Year 1861, Published by Authority. Nashville, Tenn.; E. G. Eastman & Co., Public Printers, Union
and American Office, 1861; (Tennessee State Library and Archives, Nashville).
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