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The South and the Northern Tariff
Congressional Globe | 1861 | Senator Thomas Clingman

Posted on 02/26/2003 1:10:37 PM PST by GOPcapitalist

The South and the Northern Tariff - Speech of Senator Thomas Clingman, North Carolina, March 19, 1861 (Congressional Globe 36-2 p. 1476-77)

CLINGMAN: Mr. President, I admire the closing rhetoric of the Senator form Rhode Island (Simmons); but I want to call his attention to one or two questions which I put to him, and which he does not apprehend, but which I think are practical. The Senator attaches very little weight to the imports that go into the seven States that have seceded. He thinks it a matter of very little moment whether those States remain out or in. I endeavored to show him the error; but perhaps too hurriedly for him to apprehend my meaning; and I beg leave to recapitulate, for I think if there is a practical mind on the floor of the Senate, the Senator?s is one, and I want to see how he will get this Government out of the difficulty. I say to him, that I am as yet a representative of the Government of the United States, and shall faithfully represent what I believe to be in its interests, while I stand here. But let us see how this will affect the revenue. There were made last year about four million six hundred thousand bales of cotton. About two hundred thousand bales of it were made in North Carolina, and I suppose about as much in Tennessee, and about the same amount in Arkansas. There were very nearly four million bales of cotton made in the seven States that have seceded, worth fully $200,000,000. Very little of it was consumed in those States ? not more, perhaps, than three or four millions? worth ? and the rice crop exported exceeded that, and Louisiana made, I believe, about twenty millions? worth of sugar. I do not know what the amount of the sugar crop was last year; it has fluctuated; but it must have been at least that; it has sometimes been more. I think it fair, therefore, to assume that those seven States sent out of their limits from two hundred to two hundred and twenty million dollars? worth of produce. They get back a return in some way. It is not to be supposed it was given away. My friend from Texas suggests to me that they got it in wood-screws. No doubt they did get some of them; and they may have been gotten up in the State of Rhode Island, for aught I know. I was about to say that they must have got back $220,000,000 worth of products in some form. A portion of the money ? not very much ? went for horses and mules; and grain and other agricultural products, but much the larger amount of it went for articles that were dutiable. All of them were not actually imported, as many of them came from New England and elsewhere; but they were dutiable articles, and, but for the duties would have been furnished at a lower rate from abroad. I take it, therefore, that off the dutiable articles there must be twenty or thirty million ? certainly twenty million ? of revenue that would, in the ordinary course, be collected off those States with the tariff which we had last year.

Now, it is idle for the honorable Senator to tell me that the importations at Charleston and Savannah were small. I know that the merchants have gone from those cities to New York, and bought goods there; that goods are imported into New York are bought there, and then are sent down and deposited at Charleston, New Orleans, and other places. But, in point of fact, here is an enormously large consumption of dutiable articles, from one hundred to one hundred and fifty million. These people make their own provisions mainly, and cotton to sell, and do very little in the way of manufactures. Their manufactured goods came from the United States, or from foreign countries. I put the question to the honorable Senator, how much duty does he think this Government is going to lose by the secession of those States, supposing, of course, that they do not pay us any duties; for if New England goods are to pay the same duty with those of Old England, and Belgium, and France, we all know that the New England goods will be excluded, unless they make up their minds to sell much cheaper than they have been heretofore doing? I was curious, the year before last, in going through Europe, to ascertain, as well as I could, the value of labor and the prices of articles, and I was astonished at the rate at which goods may be purchased all over the continent, compared with similar articles here. The reasons they are not furnished as cheap here, is partly due to the circuitous trade. For example: houses in England purchase up articles in Belgium, France, Germany, and even Italy, and make a handsome profit; they then send them to New York, and handsome profits are made there by the wholesale dealers and, finally, they get down south, and in this way they are very high; but the tariff has also operated very largely. That Senator knows, as well as I do, and everybody knows, that if there be direct trade with Europe by these States; if goods are not to go around through New York, and not to pay duties ? and you may be sure they will not go there under his tariff, for nobody will pay a duty of fifty or seventy-five per cent. on what he imports, when he can send the goods to another port for fifteen or nineteen per cent. ? the result will be, that these States certainly will pay this Government no duties at all.

But it does not stop there. Merchants from my own State go down to Charleston, and lay in their goods. This Government, as things now stand, is not going to get any revenue from them. If goods are imported at Charleston at ten, or fifteen, or nineteen per cent. duty, whatever is paid will go into the coffers of the confederate States, and merchants will go down from my State and buy their goods there; and thus you lose a great portion of the North Carolina trade. It will be the same with Tennessee; it will be the same with the Mississippi valley. Now, what revenue are we going to get to support our Government under th epresent condition of things? The honorable Senator is very adroit in parrying questions. I asked him, when he spoke of the free list, if the manufacturers were willing that their chemicals, their dye stuffs, and coarse wool, that has been admitted free, should be taxed; and he replied, ?They are willing to have tea and coffee taxed.?

SIMMONS: The Senator will pardon me. I said, if we wanted money I would tax them, whether they were willing or not.

CLINGMAN: Exactly; but when pressed on that point, he turns it off on the tea and coffee. But, sir, we are legislating here for the United States ? all of us who are here, except by friend from Texas, who is kind enough to stay with us and help us legislate, until he gets official notice of the ordinance of his State. I thank him for his kindness. I think he is doing us a favor to stay here and help the wheels along. It needs the help of Hercules and the wagoner both to get us out of the mud. I want to know of honorable Senators on the other side of the Chamber how this Government is going to support its revenue next year. I think, if you have no custom-house between Louisiana and the Upper Mississippi, merchants up there will come down and buy their goods at New Orleans. If they learn that at New York they can buy goods under a tariff of fifty or seventy-five per cent., and that they can biy them at New Orleans under a tariff of only one third that, they will go down to New Orleans; and the result will be that we shall get very little revenue under the existing system. We may bandy witticisms; we may show our adroitness in debate; but this is a question which we have to look at practically. One of two things must be done: either you must prevent imports into those States, which I do not think you can do ? and I do not suppose there is a Senator on this floor who believes that, under the existing laws, the President has authority to do it ? or you must call Congress together, and invest him with some authority. If you do not do that, you must establish a line of custom houses on the border.

Is it not better for us to meet this question frankly on its merits? My apprehension, as I have already expressed it, is that the Administration intend, (I hope I may be deceived) as soon as they can collect the force to have a war, to begin; and then call Congress suddenly together, and say, ?The honor of the country is concerned; the flag is insulted. You must come up and vote men and money.? That is, I suppose, to be its policy; not to call Congress together just now. There are two reasons, perhaps, for that. In the first place, it would be like a note of alarm down south; and, in the next place, if you call Congress together, and deliberately submit it to them whether they will go to war with the confederate States or not, I do not believe they would agree to do it. Of course, I do not know what is the temper of gentlemen on the other side; but, though they will have a large majority in the next Congress, I take it for granted from what little I have heard, that it will be difficult to get a bill through Congress for the war before the war begins; but it is a different thing after fighting begins at the forts.

The Senator himself says they are going to enforce the laws and carry them out everywhere. I cannot tell what he means. In one part of his speech, I understood him to say that he was willing to let the seceded States alone; but towards the close of it, he spoke of enforcing the laws, and collecting the revenue everywhere. There is a very wide difference between these lines of policy. If you intend to let the confederate States stand where they now do, and collect their own revenues, and possess the forts, we shall get nothing, or very little, under the existing system. If on the other hand, you intend to resort to coercive measures, and to oblige them to pay duties under our tariff, which they do not admit that they are liable to pay, and to take back the forts, we shall be precipitated into war; and then, I suppose, we shall have a proclamation calling Congress together, and demanding that the honor of the United States shall be maintained, and that men and money shall be voted. I would rather the country should ace into this matter.

I shall not detain the Senate with a discussion about the tariff. I take it that we understand it, and I presume that the intelligent minds of the country understand its situation, and how much we shall get under it. The Senator form Rhode Island alluded to a remark which the Senator from New Hampshire made, that Rome lasted seven hundred years, and that, therefore, this Government must last seven hundred years; and he gave us some witty remarks about the sun not going down before breakfast. Mr. President, it is unfortunate that these analogies do not always run out; they will not hold good. I have read that Methuselah lived until he was more than nine hundred years of age. If a man who was something above ninety were told by his physicians that he was in very great danger of dying, that his constitution was worn out, and disease was preying on him, if he were to refer to the case of Methuselah, and say, ?I have not lived one tenth as long as he did; and, according to his life, I am now just before the breakfast of life,? it might be a very satisfactory argument, perhaps, to the man who used it, but I doubt whether anybody else would be consoled by it; I doubt very much whether his physicians would leave him under the idea that he had certainly eight hundred years to live. I am very much afraid that my friend from Rhode Island, when he rests on this declaration of the Senator from New Hampshire is resting on an unsubstantial basis, when he assumed that this Government must, of necessity, live as long as the Roman republic, and that the comparison of the sun does not hold good. However, I see the Senator from New Hampshire near me, and as he understands these things so much better than I do, I yield the floor.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: civilwar; lincoln; tariff
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To: ggekko
In point of fact the Southern secession did cause a Northern financial crisis with North American and European trade sinking dramatically.

And yet President Lincoln could say in 1864:

"Our resources are unexhausted, and are as we think, inexhaustible."

Lee's army was on half rations.

Walt

101 posted on 02/27/2003 5:43:28 AM PST by WhiskeyPapa (Be copy now to men of grosser blood and teach them how to war!)
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To: WhiskeyPapa
Lincoln solved the financial crisis by printing "Greenbacks" out of thin air. The foreign exchange value of the Dollar sunk to 30% of its pre-war value.

What was the confederate dollar worth by the end of 1864?

102 posted on 02/27/2003 6:11:49 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: WhiskeyPapa
Lincoln solved the financial crisis by printing "Greenbacks" out of thin air. The foreign exchange value of the Dollar sunk to 30% of its pre-war value.

What was the confederate dollar worth by the end of 1864?

103 posted on 02/27/2003 6:11:50 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: Ditto
Any recommendations?
104 posted on 02/27/2003 6:20:59 AM PST by Cacophonous (I Corinthians 16:13-14)
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To: Ditto
Any recommendations?
105 posted on 02/27/2003 6:20:59 AM PST by Cacophonous (I Corinthians 16:13-14)
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To: WhiskeyPapa
So it's OK to violate the Constitution a little, but not a lot? Where is the line?
106 posted on 02/27/2003 6:24:11 AM PST by Cacophonous (I Corinthians 16:13-14)
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To: Cacophonous
So it's OK to violate the Constitution a little, but not a lot? Where is the line?

Lincoln didn't violate the Constitution.

"Lincoln, with his usual incisiveness, put his finger on the debate that inevitably surrounds issues of civil liberties in wartime. If the country itself is in mortal danger, must we enforce every provision safeguarding individual liberties even though to do so will endanger the very government which is created by the Constitution? The question of whether only Congress may suspend it has never been authoritatively answered to this day, but the Lincoln administration proceeded to arrest and detain persons suspected of disloyal activities, including the mayor of Baltimore and the chief of police."

--Chief Justice William Rehenquist, November, 1999

"The President was not out to trample on the First Amendment. He was not out to crush his political opposition. He suspended the writ of Habeas Corpus in response to perceived military threats to the Union. After he, and later Congress, removed that Constitutional safeguard, the Lincoln Administration did not use its power selfishly or arbitrarily. It arrested only those people who actively supported the Confederate war machine--people like Merryman, who recruited troops to march south. And when people walked this fine line between political dissent and treason, as Vallandigham did, Lincoln tried to err on the side of free speech...

Midway through the war, Lincoln predicted that Habeas Corpus would quickly be re-instituted after the war was over. He could not bring himself to believe that Americans would allow the wartime suspension of Habeas Corpus to extend into peacetime, he said, "Any more than I am able to believe that a man could contract so strong an appetite for emetics during temporary illness as to persist in feeding upon them during the remainder of his healthful life." Lincoln died before he could see the writ of habeas corpus restored.

Lincoln asked:

"What constitutes the bulwark of our own liberty and independence? It is not our frowning battlements, our bristling sea coasts, the guns of our war steamers, or the strength of our gallant and disciplined army. These are not our reliance against a resumption of tyranny in our fair land. All of them may be turned against our liberties, without making us stronger or weaker for the struggle. Our reliance is in the love of liberty which God has planted in our bosoms. Our defense is in the preservation of the spirit which prizes liberty as the heritage of all men, in all lands, everywhere. Destroy this spirit, and you have planted the seeds of despotism around our doors. Familiarize yourselves with the chains of bondage, and you are preparing your own limbs to wear them. Accustomed to trample on the rights of those around you, you have lost the genius of your own independence, and become the fit subjects of the first cunning tyrant who rises."

So today, let us heed the wisdom of a man who led our nation to a "new birth of freedom." Let us always be, first and foremost, lovers of liberty."

-- Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, 11/19/96

Lovers of liberty -- like President Lincoln

Walt

107 posted on 02/27/2003 6:30:32 AM PST by WhiskeyPapa (Be copy now to men of grosser blood and teach them how to war!)
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To: Non-Sequitur
Lincoln solved the financial crisis by printing "Greenbacks" out of thin air. The foreign exchange value of the Dollar sunk to 30% of its pre-war value.

What was the confederate dollar worth by the end of 1864?

In Richmond? Five bucks for a stick of firewood, $500 for a barrel of flour.

Walt

108 posted on 02/27/2003 6:32:51 AM PST by WhiskeyPapa (Be copy now to men of grosser blood and teach them how to war!)
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To: WhiskeyPapa
In other words with all that cotton and all that wealth the confederate dollar in 1864 was worth somewhere between zilch point squat and nothing? Makes 30% look pretty damned good to me, what with nothing to export and all.
109 posted on 02/27/2003 6:38:15 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: Cacophonous
So it's OK to violate the Constitution a little, but not a lot? Where is the line?

It has never been ruled that Lincoln violated the Constitution at all. But you should really direct that question to Jeff Davis. There was a reason, I think, why the confederate president was not required to swear an oath to protect and defend the confederate constitution. They had so little respect for it to begin with.

110 posted on 02/27/2003 6:41:23 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: jlogajan
Treason was the southern strategy as they attacked and seized federal fortifications.

They seized "federal fortifications" that were on STATE soil. Have you ever heard of "imminent domain?"

Secessionsts violated the US Constitution by forming a confederacy which is strictly prohibited by the US Constitution.

No where in the Constitution did it forbid secession, in deference to what the Lincoln-lovers want to believe.

The highlight of southern gentlemanly tactics was to shoot Abe Lincoln in the back.

Considering that Lincoln turned his back to the Constitution, where else would he have been shot? (/sarcasm)

111 posted on 02/27/2003 7:20:04 AM PST by A2J (Those who truly understand peace know that its father is war.)
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To: jlogajan
So you've thrown yourself in with an anti-Constitutionalist anarchist.

Wow, that sounds like something King George said about those who wrote the Declaration of Independence.

Deo Vindice!

112 posted on 02/27/2003 7:25:42 AM PST by A2J (Those who truly understand peace know that its father is war.)
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To: Non-Sequitur
In other words with all that cotton and all that wealth the confederate dollar in 1864 was worth somewhere between zilch point squat and nothing? Makes 30% look pretty damned good to me, what with nothing to export and all.

This was interesting:

"Into the hands of Lincoln and Davis was thrust the destiny of a divided people. Lincoln was the product of the soil, Davis of the study. One had breathed the freedom of nature and could beat express his inner feeling in parables; the other had breathed the air of the cloister, and his soul had grown stiff as the parchment it fed upon. Lincoln was very human, Davis artificial, autocratic and forever standing on the pedestal of his own conceit; a man of little humour who could dictate, but who could not argue or listen and who could not tolerate either help or opposition. Because he relied upon European intervention to scuttle the war, he had no foreign policy outside establishing cotton as king.

Early in the war the Hon. James Mason, Confederate Commissioner in Europe, affirmed that all cotton in that continent would be exhausted by February, 1862, "and that . . . intervention would [then] be inevitable"- yet before the end of 1861 Europe was learning to do without cotton. Davis could not believe that he was wrong; he staked the fortunes of his government and his people on this commodity and lost. On the other hand, Lincoln pinned his faith on what he believed to be the common rights of humanity.

In spite of division he saw one people, and in spite of climate and occupation, one nation. To him the Union was older than any state for it was the Union which had created the States as states.

He saw that whatever happened the nation could not permanently remain divided. His supreme difficulty was to maintain the unity of the North so that he might enforce unity upon the South; whereas Jefferson Davis's ship of state was wrecked on the fundamental principle of his policy that each individual state had the right to control its own destiny, a policy which was incapable of establishing united effort."

--"A Military History of the Western World Vol 3, P. 16 by Major General J.F.C. Fuller

Fuller, along with B.H. Liddel Hart is best known as proponent of the theory of warfare the Germans developed into the operational technique known as Blitzkrieg.

Walt

113 posted on 02/27/2003 7:33:39 AM PST by WhiskeyPapa (Be copy now to men of grosser blood and teach them how to war!)
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To: A2J
Considering that Lincoln turned his back to the Constitution, where else would he have been shot? (/sarcasm)

You can't show in the record that President Lincoln violated the Constitution.

Walt

114 posted on 02/27/2003 7:37:27 AM PST by WhiskeyPapa (Be copy now to men of grosser blood and teach them how to war!)
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To: WhiskeyPapa
A tariff is not a tax.

TARIFF. Customs, duties, toll. or tribute payable upon merchandise to the general government is called tariff

How about the definition of "duty" from Merriam-Webster:

4 : TAX; especially : a tax on imports

115 posted on 02/27/2003 9:06:02 AM PST by rustbucket
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To: WhiskeyPapa
A tariff is not a tax.

TARIFF. Customs, duties, toll. or tribute payable upon merchandise to the general government is called tariff

How about the definition of "duty" from Merriam-Webster:

4 : TAX; especially : a tax on imports

116 posted on 02/27/2003 9:07:10 AM PST by rustbucket
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To: WhiskeyPapa
The south designed itself to hurt itself

Well that's a non-response. Try again, Walt.

117 posted on 02/27/2003 10:17:01 AM PST by GOPcapitalist
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To: WhiskeyPapa
That was a bunch of stupid merchants, or the good senator is blowing smoke.

Do you know that for a fact, Walt? Can you offer evidence of it? If not, then you have no case. Besides, who are you to assert yourself to have a better understanding of southern trade in 1860 than Clingman?

118 posted on 02/27/2003 10:21:13 AM PST by GOPcapitalist
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To: WhiskeyPapa; 4ConservativeJustices; billbears; shuckmaster; stainlessbanner; PeaRidge; ggekko; ...
A tariff is not a tax. - Walt

Check out post 96. He said it again!

119 posted on 02/27/2003 10:23:27 AM PST by GOPcapitalist
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To: WhiskeyPapa; 4ConservativeJustices; billbears; shuckmaster; stainlessbanner; PeaRidge; ggekko; ...
A tariff is not a tax. - Walt

Check out post 96. He said it again!

120 posted on 02/27/2003 10:23:55 AM PST by GOPcapitalist
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