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by Jack McMillan, Ph.D.
The
American educational system continues perpetuating a myth regarding the
War for Southern
Independence (often
mistakenly called "The Civil War", a misnomer). Teachers using
government- mandated, Northern-produced texts inform students the conflict
centered solely on slavery, with Abraham Lincoln "The Great
Emancipator" sending Union troops to "make men free".
Nothing could be more untrue. We realize the wisdom in the adages that
history-books are written by the victors and that truth is war's first
casualty. Like other complex human activities, wars often have a number of
underlying causes. In this article, I shall provide the reader with an
overview of the primary causi belli of the War for Southern Independence,
the issue of tariffs.
Far
from being a mundane topic, taxation has been at the heart of the American
political spirit. The original 13 American colonies formally dissolved
ties with the British Empire due to the issue of taxation without
representation. Penned by that great Virginian Thomas Jefferson, The
Declaration of Independence stands out as this nation's first Article of
Secession. In it, the colonies' grievances are listed. Amongst the litany
of injustices committed by King George III, Jefferson mentions " For
imposing Taxes upon us without our Consent." This split over taxation
is a recurring theme in American history.
The
precursor to Southern secession in fact occurred 30 years before the
hostilities of 1861-1865. In
1828 and again in 1832, Congress passed tariffs legislation benefiting
northern mercantile interests but injuring the South's agricultural
economy. Heavy protectionist tariffs gave northern manufacturers an
advantage by decreasing foreign competition, but forced the South to pay
the bulk of federal taxes, as the South was a net exporter of raw goods
and a net importer of manufactured products. These "Tariffs of
Abominations" led Senator John C. Calhoun to declare the law unjust
and a convention was held in South Carolina to nullify the federal tariff
law. President Andrew Jackson threatened to send troops to enforce the
tariff, but eventually the Compromise of 1833 was reached and taxes were
lowered over a four-year period. As Professor Charles Adams states in his
book For Good and Evil: The Impact of Taxes on the Course of Civilization,
" … the South paid about three-quarters of all federal taxes, most
of which were spent in the North."
The
election of 1860 was perhaps the most contentious in American history. The
Democratic Party
split with the northern faction voting for Stephen Douglass, the southern
faction for John Breckinridge. Additionally the Constitutional Unionist
Party (the renamed Whig Party) ran John Bell as a candidate and carried
three states (Tennessee, Kentucky, and Virginia). Lincoln won with a mere
39% of the popular and not a single electoral vote from the South. As
Salomon DeRothschild, a visitor to America at the time writes, " This
state of affairs could have continued … if the two divisions, South and
North, of the Democratic party had not split at the last electoral
convention. Since each of them carried a different dandidate, they
surrendered power to a third thief, Lincoln, the Republican choice."
The
secession of Southern States began with South Carolina, where tax issues
had been at the
forefront 30 years earlier. Contrary to what is now taught, slavery was
not the primary issue. While it is unfortunate slavery existed, the blame
cannot placed solely on the South; slavery existed in the North as well
(it is interesting to note Delaware, a Northern slave state, refused to
ratify the 13th Amendment abolishing the institution). Further, New
England slavers from their homeports in Massachusetts and New York brought
slaves to America in the first place!
With
the election of Lincoln, the South realized northern manufacturers and
bankers would have their puppet in the White House. Again Professor Adams
states, "...Lincoln was supported in his bid for the presidency by
the rich industrialists of the North. He was their man and he had long
been their lawyer … No sooner had Congress assembled in 1861 than the
high tariff was passed into law and signed by Lincoln. The Morrill Tariff,
as it was called, was the highest tariff in U.S. history." Adams also
notes, " Secession by the South was a reaction against Lincoln's
high-tax policy. In 1861 the slave issue was not critical ... The leaders
of the South believed secession would attract trade to Charleston,
Savannah, and new Orleans, replacing Boston, New York, and Philadelphia as
the chief trading ports of America, primarily because of low taxes."
Note the Confederacy lowered taxes! To the charge often leveled that the
newly formed Confederacy started the hostilities, Adams correctly points
out " … with the import taxes, he (Lincoln) was threatening. Fort
Sumter was at the entrance to the Charleston Harbor, filled with federal
troops to support U.S. Customs officers. It wasn't too difficult for angry
South Carolinians to fire the first shot." Again, Rothschild writing
to his cousin in London in 1861 notes, " I'll come back later to the
"slavery" question, which was the first pretext for secession,
but which was just a pretext and is now secondary. The true reason which
impelled the Southern states to secede is the question of tariffs."
Lincoln's
election guaranteed a return of past disastrous policies and forced the
Southern States to
secede. Writers of the day confirm this. In Great Britain, many
intellectuals and political leaders saw Lincoln's War for exactly what it
was - a dispute over taxation. Charles Dickens writes, "The Northern
onslaught upon slavery was no more than a piece of specious humbug
designed to conceal its desire for economic control of the Southern
States." Dickens goes on to say " … Union means so many
millions a year lost to the South; secession means the loss of the same
millions to the North. The love of money is the root of this as of many
other evils … The quarrel between the North and South is, as it stands,
solely a fiscal quarrel." Let us quote a passage from The Northern
British Review, Edinburgh, 1862, " ... All Northern products are now
protected: and the Morrill Tariff is a very masterpiece of folly and
injustice. No wonder then that the citizens of the seceding States should
feel for half a century they have sacrificed to enhance the powers and
profits of the North; and should conclude, after much futile remonstrance,
that only in secession could they hope to find redress."
I shall
conclude this article with a passage written by John Reagan, Postmaster
General of the
Confederacy. " You are not content with the vast millions of tribute
we pay you annually under the operation of our revenue laws, our
navigation laws, your fishing bounties, and by making your people our
manufacturers, our merchants, our shippers. You are not satisfied with the
vast tribute we pay you to build up your great cities, your railroads, and
your canals. You are not satisfied with the millions of tribute we have
been paying you on account of the balance of exchange, which you hold
against us. You are not satisfied that we of the South are almost reduced
to the condition of overseers of northern capitalists. You are not
satisfied with all this; but you must wage a relentless crusade against
our rights."
Jack
McMillan lives with his wife and daughter in Hawaii, where he received his
PhD. in Geology and Geophysics from the University of Hawaii -Manoa.
The Knoxville, Tennessee native is a member of the League of the South and
the Southern Party.
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