Posted on 03/05/2008 11:23:56 AM PST by Sub-Driver
Letters Suggest Lincoln Wanted to Buy Slaves for $400 Apiece in 'Gradual Emancipation'
Wednesday, March 05, 2008
AP
ROCHESTER, N.Y. Barely a year into the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln suggested buying slaves for $400 apiece under a "gradual emancipation" plan that would bring peace at less cost than several months of hostilities.
The proposal was outlined in one of 72 letters penned by Lincoln that ended up in the University of Rochester's archives. The correspondence was digitally scanned and posted online along with easier-to-read transcriptions.
Accompanying them are 215 letters sent to Lincoln by dozens of fellow political and military leaders. They include letters from Vice President Andrew Johnson and Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, who both succeeded Lincoln in the presidency in the 12 years after his assassination in 1865.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
Losing a war sucks, man.
The line between servitude and slavery was fine indeed for black indentured servants, particularly since white servants rarely served more than 7 years and rarely after the age of twenty-one.
Benjamin Silliman, officer of the American Colonization Society, offers one example of how the "gradual emancipation" law was put into effect.
More at:
yaleslavery.org
This article doesn't really say. It mentions he was trying to end the war which was costing up to $2 million per day, but how ending slavery in non-Confederate states would accomplish that isn't mentioned.
I'm trying to recall what I've read previously. My guess would be that if the states in question went along, he could show the Confederate states a workable plan that might bring them to the table. I believe Lincoln was willing to try almost anything to reduce the suffering. 'Almost' is the operative word.
Well he finally did end the suffering by giving Grant and Sherman the go-ahead to "press the issue".
Reminds me of that Firesign Theater sketch with Lincoln waking up after a hard night drinking.
“I freed the WHAT???”
Yep! It took awhile for him to find the military leaders he needed. And that opens up a whole 'nuther discussion about what would have happened had Robert E. Lee not resigned his commission and stayed with the Union.
I am descended from several slaveholders through various branches of my family. It has occurred to me in the past that my family invested a great deal of money in a practice that was completely legal, and that money was lost to them with no remuneration.
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LOL. Are you suggesting that your family got no return for their investment? I’m sorry, but that’s a crock.
We're all real broken up about your family's loss.
I still think Wesley Clark Ashley Wilkes er... George McClellan would have wasted a lot of good opportunities to end it sooner rather than later. ;-)
He certainly did waste opportunities. And your comparison to Wesley Clark is a good one. McClellan was a great organizer, but no fighter (the Peninsula Campaign for example). And I believe the people recognized that during the 1864 Presidential election. Not to say that was the only reason Lincoln was re-elected.
We could also end the war on poverty by giving all the poverted $1 million each for less than what it’s cost so far.
“Lincoln put forth a number of proposals both before the war, and after it began, trying to limit the carnage and the effects of succession.”
Is that why he allowed Grant and Sherman free reign?
He could have simply let the South secede and let the endeavor succeed or fail. Unfortunately all the money the South provided the North couldn’t be allowed to just evaporate.
Catch and release variant...
Not if he had closed the ports of entry at the same time.
I don’t know if it’s true or not but I’d read that Lincoln was re-elected largely because of the military vote. Now this always sort of confused me because I’d read that “Little Mac” was extremely popular with his troops. On the other hand, by the time McClellan had been replaced and he was running on a platform or negotiated surrender, he might not have been quite as popular.
Lincoln issue the proclamation to score points with the British. He calculated that if he framed the war as being about slavery, the British would not openly support the South.
Legal and moral are not the same. Anyone who engaged in the practice deserved the economic losses incurred by Emancipation.
I usually lurk here and don’t often have a question that has not been asked by others. But your comment begs the question: Are you upset that your ancestors did not get compensated? And what is your opinion of slavery in the United States?
FWIW, I live in Illinois and get agitated whenever I end up behind a pickup with the glass tinted with a confederate flag. Our state motto is land of Lincoln. I just read a wonderful 9 volume account of the civil war. The details from that period were new to me, as my prior education merely scratched the surface on the issues of that day. But I do recall that Lincoln wanted to compensate slave holders for their loss of property. IIRC that was the gist of his solution while he was running for president. His election in November 1860 was the deciding factor in the south forming the confederacy. Between the time he was elected and took office, the Confederate States of America was formed. The south rejected the idea of compensation before hostilities broke out. It can be argued that they turned their back on the rule of law.
McClellan and the democratic party of the day are just like Wesley clark and the democrats of today. McClellan ran for office against lincoln as the candidate of the democratic party. He was running on a platform that there should have been negotiations with the South. What would our country look like if he had won? How would that affect another disgruntled region like New England? Let alone what would that mean for the western expansion of the US. The democrats of the day wanted to cut and run. Interesting to see history repeat itself.
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