| Lincoln's
1856 Speech in Bronson Park
The following is the text of a speech given by Abraham Lincoln in
Bronson Park on 27 August 1856.
He was invited to speak here by Hezekiah Wells. The Kalamazoo Gazette
reported the rally, but the text of the speech appeared in the
Detroit Daily Advertiser. The Michigan historical marker that
stands at the southwest corner of the park marks the spot and the
occasion.
Fellow countrymen:
Under the Constitution of the United States another Presidential contest approaches us.
All over this land – that portion, at least, of which I know much – the people are
assembling to consider the proper course to be adopted by them. One of the first
considerations is to learn what the people differ about. If we ascertain what we differ
about, we shall be better able to decide.
The question of slavery, at the present day, should not only be the greatest question, but
very nearly the sole question. Our opponents, however, prefer that this should not be the
case. To get at this question, I will occupy your attention but a single moment.
The question is simply this: Shall slavery be into new territories, or not? This is the
naked question. If we should support Fremont successfully in this, it may be charged
that we will not be content with restricting slavery in the new territories. If we should
charge that James Buchanan, by his platform, is bound to extend slavery into the
territories, and that he is in favor of its being thus spread, we should be puzzled to prove
it. We believe it, nevertheless.
By taking the issue as I present it, whether it shall be permitted as an issue, is made up
between the parties. Each takes his own stand. This is the question: Shall the
Government of the United States prohibit slavery in the [territories of the] United States?
We have been in the habit of deploring the fact that slavery exists among us. We have
ever deplored it. Our forefathers did, and they declared, as we have done in later years,
the blame rested upon the mother government of Great Britain. We constantly condemn
Great Britain for not preventing slavery from coming amongst us. She would not
interfere to prevent it, and so individuals were able to introduce the institution without
opposition. I have alluded to this, to ask you if this is not exactly the policy of Buchanan
and his friends, to place this government in the attitude then occupied by the government
of Great Britain – placing the nation in the position to authorize the territories to reproach
it, for refusing to allow them to hold slaves.
I would like to ask your attention, any gentlemen to tell me when the people of Kansas
are going to decide. When are they to do it? I asked that question two years ago – when,
and how are [they] to do it? Not many weeks ago, our new Senator from Illinois (Mr.
Trumbull), asked Douglas how it could be done. Douglas is a great man – at keeping
from answering questions he don't want to answer. He would not answer. He said it was
a question for the Supreme Court to decide. In the North, his friends argue that the
people can decide at any time.
The Southerners [Democrats] say there is no power in the people, whatever. We know
that from the time white people have been allowed in the territory they have brought
slaves with them. Suppose the people come up to vote as freely, and with as perfect
protection as we could do it here. Will they be at liberty to vote their sentiments? If they
can, then all that has ever been said about our provincial ancestors is untrue, and they
could have done so, also. We know our Southern friends say that the General
Government cannot interfere. They could as truly say, "It is amongst us – we cannot get
rid of it."
But I am afraid I waste too much time on this point. I take it as an illustration of the
principle, that slaves are admitted to the territories. And, while I am speaking of Kansas,
how will that operate? Can men vote truly? We will suppose that there are ten men who
go into Kansas to settle. Nine of these are opposed to slavery. One has ten slaves. The
slaveholder is a good man in other respects; he is a good neighbor, and being a wealthy
man, he is enabled to do the others many neighborly kindnesses. They like the man,
although they don't like the system by which he holds his fellowmen in bondage. And
here, let me say, that in intellectual and physical structure, our Southern brethren do not
differ from us. They are, like us, subject to passions, and it is only their odious institution
of slavery, that makes the breach between us.
These ten men of whom I was speaking, live together three or four years; they intermarry;
their family ties are strengthened. And who wonders that in time, the people learn to look
upon slavery with complacency? This is the way in which slavery is planted, and gains
so firm a foothold. I think this is a strong card that the Nebraska party have played, and
won upon, in this game.
I suppose that this crowd are opposed to the admission of slavery into Kansas, yet it is
true that in all crowds there are some who differ from the majority. I want to ask the
Buchanan men, who are against the spread of slavery, if there be any present, why not
vote for the man who is against it? I understand that Mr. Fillmore's position is precisely
like Buchanan's. I understand that, by the Nebraska bill, a door has been opened for the
spread of slavery in [to] the territories. Examine, if you please, and see if they have ever
done any such thing as try to shut the door.
It is true that Fillmore tickles a few of his friends with the notion that he is not the cause
of the door being opened. Well; it brings him into this position: he tries to get both sides,
one by denouncing those who opened the door, and the other by hinting that he doesn't
care a fig for its being open. If he were President, he would have one side or the other –
he would either restrict slavery or not. Of course it would be so. There could be no
middle way.
You who hate slavery and love freedom, why not, as Fillmore and Buchanan are on the
same ground, vote for Fremont? Why not vote for the man who takes your side of the
question? "Well," says Buchanan, "it is none of our business." But is it not our
business? There are several reasons why I think it is our business. But let us see how it
is. Others have urged these reasons before, but they are still of use. By our Constitution
we are represented in Congress in proportion to our numbers, and in counting the
numbers that give us our representatives, three slaves are counted as 2 people. The State
of Maine has six representatives in the lower house of Congress. In strength South
Carolina is equal to her. But stop! Maine has twice as many white people, and 32,000 to
boot! And is that fair? I don't complain of it. This regulation was put in force when the
exigencies of the times demanded it, and could not have been avoided. Now, one man in
South Carolina is the same as two men here.
Maine should have twice as many men in Congress as South Carolina. It is a fact that
any man in South Carolina has more influence and power in Congress today than any two
now before me. The same thing is true of all slave States, though it may not be in the
same proportion. It is a truth that cannot be denied, that in all the free States no white
man is the equal of the white man of the slave States. But this is in the
Constitution, and we must stand up to it. The question, then, is, "Have we no interest as to whether the
white man of the North shall be the equal of the white man of the South?"
Once when I used this argument in the presence of Douglas, he answered that in the
North the black man was counted as a full man, and had an equal vote with the white,
while at the South they were counted at but three-fifths. And Douglas, when he had
made this reply, doubtless thought he had forever silenced the objection.
Have we no interest in the free Territories of the United States – that they should be kept
open for the homes of free white people? As our Northern States are growing more and
more in wealth and population, we are continually in want of an outlet, through which it
may pass out to enrich our country. In this we have an interest – a deep and abiding
interest. There is another thing, and that is the mature knowledge we have – the greatest
interest of all. It is the doctrine, that the people are driven from the maxims of our free
Government, that despises the spirit which for eighty years has celebrated the anniversary
of our national independence.
We are a great empire. We are eighty years old. We stand at once the wonder and
admiration of the whole world, and we must enquire what it is that has given us so much
prosperity, and we shall understand that to give up that one thing, would be to give up
all future prosperity. This cause is that every man can make himself. It has been said
that such a race of prosperity has been run nowhere else. We find a people on the
Northeast, who have a different government from ours, being ruled by a Queen. Turning
to the South, we see a people who, while they boast of being free, keep their fellow
beings in bondage. Compare our Free States with either, shall we say here that we have
no interest in keeping that principle alive? Shall we say, "Let it be"? No – we have an
interest in the maintenance of the principles of the Government, and without this interest,
it is worth nothing.
I have noticed in Southern newspapers, particularly the Richmond Enquirer, the Southern
view of the Free States. They insist that slavery has a right to spread. They defend it on
principle. They insist that their slaves are far better off than Northern freemen. What a
mistaken view do these men have of Northern laborers! They think that men are always
to remain laborers here – but there is no such class. The man who labored for another
last year, this year labors for himself, and next year he will hire others to labor for him.
These men don't understand when they think in this manner of Northern free labor.
When these reasons can be introduced, tell me not that we have no interest in keeping the
territories free for the settlement of free laborers.
I pass, then, from this question. I think we have an ever growing interest in maintaining
the free institutions of our country.
It is said that our party is a sectional party. It has been said in high quarters that if
Fremont and Dayton were elected the Union would be dissolved. I believe it [that the
South does so think]! I believe it! It is a shameful thing that the subject is talked of so
much. Did we not have a Southern President and Vice-President at one time? And yet
the Union has not been dissolved. Why, at this very moment, there is a Northern
President and Vice-President. Pierce and King were elected, and King died without ever
taking his seat. The Senate elected a Northern man from their own numbers, to perform
the duties of the Vice-President. He resigned his seat, however, as soon as he got the job
of making a slave State out of Kansas. Was not that a great mistake?
(A voice: "He didn't mean that!")
Then why didn't he speak what he did mean? Why did he not speak what he ought to have spoken? That was the very thing. He
should have spoken manly, and we should then have known where to have found him. It
is said we expect to elect Fremont by Northern votes. Certainly we do not think the
South will elect him. But let us ask the question differently. Does not Buchanan expect
to be elected by Southern votes? Fillmore, however, will go out of this contest the most
national man we have. He has no prospect of having a single vote on either side of
Mason and Dixon's line, to trouble his poor soul about. (Laughter and cheers)
We believe it is right that slavery should not be tolerated in the new territories, yet we
cannot get support for this doctrine, except in one part of the country. Slavery is looked
upon by men in the light of dollars and cents. The estimated worth of the slaves at the
South is $1,000,000,000, and in a very few years if the institution shall be admitted into
the new territories, they will have increased fifty percent in value.
Our adversaries charge Fremont with being an abolitionist. When pressed to show proof,
they frankly confess that they can show no such thing. They run off upon the assertion
that his supporters are abolitionists. But this they have never attempted to prove. I know
of no word in the language that has been used so much as that one, "abolitionist", having
no definition. It has no meaning unless taken as designated as a person who is abolishing
something. If that be its signification, the supporters of Fremont are not abolitionists.
In Kansas all who come there are perfectly free to regulate their own social relations.
There has never been a man there who was an abolitionist – for what was there to be
abolished? People there had perfect freedom to express what they wished on the subject,
when the Nebraska bill was first passed.
Our friends in the South, who support Buchanan, have five disunion men to one at the
North. This disunion is a sectional question. Who is to blame for it? Are we? I don't
care how you express it.
This government is sought to be put on a new track. Slavery is to be made a ruling
element in our government. The question can be avoided in but two ways. By the one,
we must submit, and allow slavery to triumph, or, by the other, we must triumph over the
black demon. We have chosen the latter manner. If you of the North wish to get rid of
this question, you must decide between these two ways – submit and vote for Buchanan,
submit and vote that slavery is a just and good thing, and immediately get rid of the
question; or unite with us, and help to triumph. We would all like to have the question
done away with, but we cannot submit.
They tell us that we are in company with men who have long been known as
abolitionists. What care we how many may feel disposed to labor for our cause? Why do
not you, Buchanan men, come in and use your influence to make our party respectable?
(Laughter.)
How is the dissolution of the Union to be consummated? They tell us that the Union is in
danger. Who will divide it? Is it those who make the charge? Are they themselves the
persons who wish to see the result? A majority will never dissolve the Union. Can a
minority do it?
When this Nebraska bill was first introduced into Congress, the sense of the Democratic
party was outraged. That party has ever prided itself, that it was the friend of individual,
universal freedom. It was that principle upon which they carried their measures. When
the Kansas scheme was conceived, it was natural that this respect and sense should have
been outraged.
Now I make this appeal to the Democratic citizens here. Don't you find yourself making
arguments in support of these measures, which you never would have made before? Did
you ever do it before this Nebraska bill compelled you to do it? If you answer this in the
affirmative, see how a whole party has been turned away from their love of liberty!
And now, my Democratic friends, come forward. Throw off these things, and come to
the rescue of the great principle of equality. Don't interfere with anything in the
Constitution. That must be maintained, for it is the only safeguard of our liberties. And
not to Democrats alone do I make this appeal, but to all who love these great and true
principles. Come, and keep coming! Strike, and strike again! So sure as God lives, the
victory shall be yours.
(Great Cheering)
|
For further information, we suggest
these sources:
|
H 308
L73 |
Lincoln's
Kalamazoo Address Against Extending Slavery, Also his Life by
Joseph J. Lewis, Both Annotated by Thomas I.Starr.
Detroit Fine Book Circle, 1941. |
| |
"Lincoln and Local History: It's a Gas for This
Film-Making Anesthesiologist," Encore, January 1994,
page 22. |
Video
921 L |
George, Tom M. Abraham
Lincoln in Michigan: [Abraham Lincoln's Fremont rally speech].
Forgotten Films, 1999. |
Page launched May 2006.
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