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            <mods:title>Speech of John R. French, esq., of Chowan County: on the question of suffrage, delivered in the Constitutional Convention of North-Carolina, February 18th, 1868</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>Speech of John R. French, esq., of Chowan County: on the question of suffrage, delivered in the Constitutional Convention of North-Carolina, February 18th, 1868. 8 p. 23cm.  Includes: Remarks of John R. French, of Chowan County, in constitutional convention, on the question of property qualification, February 13th, 1868 (p. 7-8). Date approximated.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">JK4190 .F74 1868</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:topic>African Americans</mods:topic>
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          <dc:title>Speech of John R. French, esq., of Chowan County: on the question of suffrage, delivered in the Constitutional Convention of North-Carolina, February 18th, 1868</dc:title>
          <dc:description>Speech of John R. French, esq., of Chowan County: on the question of suffrage, delivered in the Constitutional Convention of North-Carolina, February 18th, 1868. 8 p. 23cm.  Includes: Remarks of John R. French, of Chowan County, in constitutional convention, on the question of property qualification, February 13th, 1868 (p. 7-8). Date approximated.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>North Carolina. Constitutional Convention, 1868</dc:subject>
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                <head>SPEECH</head>
                <head>OF</head>
                <head>JOHN R. FRENCH, ESQ,</head>
                <head>OF</head>
                <head>CHOWAN COUNTY,</head>
                <head>ON THE</head>
                <head>QUESTION OF SUFFRAGE,</head>
                <head>DELIVERED IN THE</head>
                <head>CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION OF NORTH-CAROLINA,</head>
                <head>FEBRUARY 18th, 1868.</head>
                <p>It will be noticed, Mr. President, that our Committee
        were a good deal divided in opinion on the important
        questions submitted to them, and that we have made several
        Reports. I agree with the majority in recommending that the
        Ballot be free to all citizens—and while all know
        that the Howard Amendment, (which must be-come a law of the
        land before we can return to the Union,) renders certain
        citizens ineligible to office, differing from the majority,
        I would not try to blink this fact out of sight, but would
        have it clearly set forth in the Constitution, that men who
        went into the Rebellion in violation of solemn oaths to
        support the Federal Constitution, cannot have the
        opportunity in North-Carolina of repeating the treachery. I
        would have the law stand at the portal of the Constitution,
        like the Angel who with flaming sword guarded the entrance
        to Paradise. Every time they read the Constitution of the
        State, I would have these men reminded of their lost
        condition, peradventure the frequent reminder may work
        repentance. Neither can I agree with the minority, who,
        agreeing with me in both these positions, would also demand
        a system of Registration, and a Test Oath for every voter.
        Registration is expensive and troublesome, and it seems to
        me not necessary in North-Carolina, while Test Oaths are
        of</p>
                <p>offensive and out of place in a Republican government.
        And especially can I not agree with that other minority of
        your Committee who recommend Suffrage for all the men
        lately engaged in Rebellion, and its denial to more than
        70,000 of the Loyal citizens of the State.</p>
                <p>And here permit me to call your attention, Sir, to a
        statement which recently appeared in one of the newspapers,
        so-called, of this city, in regard to this Report of the
        Suffrage Committee. The Editor, claiming to have this
        Report before him, with his characteristic candor towards
        his political opponents, and that tender regard for the
        truth which deems the article too sacred a thing for
        ordinary use, asserted that in my minority report I
        recommended the withholding of the right of Suffrage from
        all rebels Now it this Reverend Ananias had not seen the
        report he had no right to state its positions—if he
        had, he knew he was making a statement directly the
        opposite of the fact. And the Editor goes on with the same
        Reverend good-manners and like truthfulness to intimate
        that there is some question as to my right to a seat in
        this body.</p>
                <p>In view of what has transpired in the State of Alabama,
        since the report now before us was made to the Convention,
        at the proper time I</p>
                <pb facs="00010356_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <head>2 Speech of John R. French</head>
                <p>shall move to add another to the classes ineligible to
        office, namely:</p>
                <p>All who by bribes, threats, or intimidation at-tempt to
        prevent others from the free exercise of the elective
        franchise.</p>
                <p>After War comes Peace. And "Peace hath its victories no
        lees renowned than War" The victories of Good-wilt,
        subduing Hate; of Forgiveness conquering Malice; the
        victories of that broad catholic charity which harmonizes
        all discords. These are the duties and labors which come in
        with Peace. But Peace hath, also, its lessons to
        remember—the lessons learned of War, and learned at.
        such cost that they should never be forgotten, but handed
        down from generation to generation. Lessons written on the
        black sky of night, by the glare of burning towns; uttered
        in the shrieks of houseless and homeless women and little
        children; written like the raked letters of the blind
        child's alphabet, in the long lines of your soldier's
        Cemeteries, and by the lonely graves of" unknown soldiers"
        scattered all over the laud; written in the armless sleeves
        which pass you upon the streets; written in the
        uneffaceable sorrows of the widow and the orphan. Are, Sir,
        written in undying remembrance in the heart of every lover
        of Liberty and Free Government the world over, who looked
        on with fearful forebodings as he saw the Great. Republic
        of the earth, the hope of Freedom everywhere, struggling in
        the death-clutch of its own fostered, trusted, but
        traitor-sons.</p>
                <p>No, Sir, no, Sir, while ready to yield all the amenities
        of Peace—glad to rebuild waste places —let is
        never forget the great lesson of this war. With the
        majority of your Committee, I am ready to open the
        Ballot-box to every citizen, that the majority of the
        people in all things may, rule. Such is the requirement of
        a Republican government. So much is due to Peace, and
        necessary for Harmony, and in accordance as I believe with
        political wisdom. And such is the wish, I am glad to say,
        of the constituency, that I have the honor to represent in
        this Convention of the People. I represent, Sir, a black
        constituency; black, but comely. Comely in the humility
        with which they, recently Slaves, now Freemen of the
        Republic, bear their new honors; comely in the fidelity
        with which they discharge their new ditties; comely In the
        for-giving spirit with which they would veil the past, and
        in the charity with which they would humbly share their
        rights with all classes of the people. Filled with
        gratitude for the great blessings which have come to them,
        in their hearts there is no room left for thought of
        revenge or Punishment for other. But while they would
        ex-tend the elective franchise to all citizens, remembering
        that the great mass of the people of North-Carolina who
        were implicated in the late Rebellion were forced into it
        by circumstances that they could not well control, still
        they are not ready to see the control and direction of the
        Stale, its positions of trust and honor, pass into the
        keeping of those treacherous instigators of this treason,
        who, despite the confidence of their fellow-citizens, and
        their own solemn oaths, lifted perjured hands to tear down
        this Temple of Law and Freedom, which their fathers had
        reared, and they sworn to protect. Not quite ready, Sir,
        for that folly, for that treachery to the sacred interests
        now entrusted to us.</p>
                <p>When you have arrested the midnight incendiary who would
        fire your house, and torn his torch from him, will you set
        him at large again, and return to him his implements of
        destruction, that he may creep back and complete his
        hellish work, wrap your home in flames, where sleep your
        wife and babes? These men whom we pro-pose to exclude from
        office, are not the petty incendiaries who would burn your
        house or mine, but the men who would set torch to every
        home in the State, the gigantic villains who attempted to
        lire the Temple of Freedom, where slept in confiding trust
        the Hopes of the world.</p>
                <p>Call out from their retreats, and back from their exile,
        these betrayers of your trust, the men who tore down the
        Flag of your fathers and trampled it in the dust as a vile
        thing; who hunted you to the swamps and to the mountains,
        and dragged your sons to ignoble slaughter; made widows of
        your women and orphans of your children, filling your whole
        State with want and sorrow; call back such monsters of
        treachery and evil, and again make them your Governors and
        Senators and Representatives, your trusted officials ? The
        proposition is monstrous and suicidal, and can never
        receive the sanction of this Convention of the Loyal people
        of the State. The mutineers who would sciatic the old ship,
        and send her ignominiously to the bottom—are they the
        men again to walk tier quarter-deck? Forbid it Heaven! And
        the very earth will cry out against such wickedness, for
        the, bones of your martyred dead, stirred to indignation at
        such forgetfulness of the treachery which robbed them of
        their young lives, would rattle upon their coffin lids in
        rebuke of the supporters of such a proposition. Aye, Sir,
        if the spirits of the sainted dead may revisit the scenes
        of their earthly interest—if the statesmen and the
        fathers, the wise and patient builders of your foundations,
        and the patriotic and self-sacrificing defenders of your
        earlier and better days, arc hovering about this hall,
        watching with rapt interest the decisions of the hour, upon
        which</p>
                <pb facs="00010356_tn_0002" n="3" />
                <head>On the Question of Suffrage. 3</head>
                <p>hang the destinies of the State and of her million of
        people. Oh! if they could speak, how earnestly would they
        pray us to keep the State from the treacherous hands of its
        once betrayers. Not for Vengeance. Not for Punishment. But
        for Protection. The Past demands guarantees of the
        Future.</p>
                <p>We cannot forget the past, and its great lesson. The men
        who dragged North-Carolina from the Union, despite the
        wishes of a majority of her people, and joined hands with
        those who fired upon an unarmed vessel bearing food to a
        famishing garrison ; starved defenceless Prisoners at
        Salisbury and at Andersonville until the laud was fall of
        living skeletons; sent infected clothing into Newbern and
        Beaufort, until thousands of your people died of the
        terrible Fever; manta-cited the Negroes at Plymouth and
        hung the white men at Kinston : cannot escape the moral
        pollution which attaches to such baseness. And these
        pollutions kill, and kill down through the ages. Who can
        afford now to be a descendant of a Tory of the Revolution?
        The man who has become an enemy of his country, his race,
        or of human liberty, taints his own and taints his child's
        blood, with a virus terrible as the mark of Cain, the
        leprosy of Naaman, and the worms of Herod.</p>
                <p>And neither you nor I, Sir, nor any other man, can
        afford to belong, or approach near to, that band of men who
        planned and wrought for their country's murder. Already the
        scorn of the nations—a scorn which the centuries
        shall augment forever as they go slowly by—has traced
        the black, deep, ineffaceable dead line around that band of
        criminals, whose meant guilt was to perpetually overthrow
        Liberty amongst men, and to found government upon the
        enslavement and chattelization of the souls of God's poor.
        Guided by the common conscience of the civilized world, and
        cut by that inexorable pen of iron and point of diamond,
        with which history engraves the imperishable decrees of the
        ages, that fatal dead line has been drawn to stand forever.
        Out from its fearful enclosure none will ever go and be
        politically alive, and into it none will ever pass, and not
        be dead.</p>
                <p>I care not how exalted may have been the man's previous
        character. I care not how high he may have towered in the
        respect and affection of the people. He may have graced the
        highest chair of the State, and honored by his wisdom and
        his virtues the Nation's Senate and the President's
        Cabinet, and in the opening days of these troubles been the
        hope of his people. Yet, if' he forgets all this and goes
        in with these conspirators to preside in their
        conclaves—he passes from among living men. And how
        sad to see young men, full of manly sentiment and spirit,
        the dew of youth still fresh and beautiful upon their young
        brows, sliding all these noble and generous impulses, and
        joining themselves to the dead.</p>
                <p>The appalling events of the War, which these men
        contrived, its causeless origin, its strange Cruelties, the
        fiendish malignity of its prosecution. the four years of
        its relentless struggle for the destruction of the nation,
        are all too fresh in your agonized hearts to permit their
        force being hightened by any recital of which speech is
        capable. As a crime against liberty, this rebellion stands
        in history unmatched. As a conspiracy through thirty years,
        it is wholly without a parallel or proximate. As a crime
        against all free government, it stands alone in its
        detested pre-eminence. To erect an empire of slavery upon
        its country's ruin, it laughed to scorn all the restraints
        of religion, government and law. It took command in the
        nation's armies, that it might betray and surrender them.
        If accepted of its government's nurture so that it. might
        fatally stab the breast from which the nurture was drawn.
        It grasped the position of ministers oh' State so that the
        power these gave might ensure them ability, at a blow, to
        destroy the State. They obtained elections to Congress to
        the end that in the Congress they might cut off from the
        nation all means of life. They took the oath to support the
        Constitution so that they might get. an opportunity to
        destroy it; and in the nation's council chamber, where they
        swore to study the nation's safety, they literally invented
        and sent out the plans of its death. Will you permit such
        men again to administer your government—at least
        until they shall have repented of this great crime and
        brought forth fruits meet for repentance?</p>
                <p>By extending Suffrage to all, but closing all places of
        trust against those, who have violated former oaths of
        allegiance, as is my recommendation in the report before
        you, I would have this Convention stand in harmony with the
        action of Congress—for right or wrong, to its
        decision must we bow. To the sword has the appeal lawn
        made—and the conquering power, as of right, dictates
        the terms. Why are men wasting their breath in discussing
        questions which the sword has settled. The Rebellion
        represented the powerful ideas of the superiority of the
        white race over the black; of the greater fitness of an
        aristocratic class than a working class to govern; of the
        material aggrandisement and pecuniary profit of slavery; of
        the sovereignty of each State; of the dread and supposed
        danger of setting free four millions of untutored slaves,
        and giving them rights approximating those of their late
        masters; and of a Christianity and code of</p>
                <pb facs="00010356_tn_0003" n="4" />
                <head>4 Speech of John R. French</head>
                <p>morale and ethics in which these ideas were assumed to
        be sound, and in the light of which the freeing a slave was
        on par with stealing a horse, and general emancipation was
        deemed to be whole-sale "massacre. And for these ideas
        their champions fought through four bloody years, and with
        a pertinacity, and a courage, and a spirit of sacrifice
        that the world has never seen excelled. But they failed.
        They appealed to the sword—and its arbitration was
        against them.</p>
                <p>A political party in the land cherishing opposite
        sentiments, on all these questions, rose into such majestic
        strength that it prevailed in every Northern State, has
        ruled the destinies of the Union for seven years,
        overthrown opposing institutions by decrees as
        revolutionary of antecedent conditions as were ever issued
        by Czar or Emperor, and enforced their changes by armies as
        powerful as were swayed by an Alexander, Ceazar, or
        Napoleon, and is now reconstructing the Union on a basis of
        Universal Suffrage, which secures the ascendancy of its
        ideas, ultimately, not merely in the transient politics but
        in the fundamental Constitution and laws of the lately
        rebellious States. Never before in the world's history has
        there been so sublime a vindication of the power of an idea
        to mould parties, revolutionize governments, raise and mass
        armies, overthrow institutions, and change our great
        struggle was, on both sides, a war of the social destiny of
        races. In the fullest sense ideas.</p>
                <p>The triumphant idea was the idea proclaimed by Petal,
        the apostle of Jesus Christ, when standing in the midst of
        Mars Hill. One of the Ceasars ears then ruled with
        undisputed sway. All about the Apostle stood temple and
        statue, the glories of Grecian art. Wealth and culture aid
        patrician blood swayed society, and man as man was of so
        little account that the Roman master chopped his slave into
        minced meat for food for his petted fish. But Paul, brave
        old Apostle, in the midst of their pride and oppression pro
        claimed that of One Blood were made all the Nations. The
        proud Athenians laughed at Paul as a babbler, as a
        "radical." But that truth uttered eighteen hundred years
        ago, has been working among the Nations ever
        since—and will work on until not a tyrant nor an
        oppressor shall remain to curse this green earth, end man
        everywhere lift unfettered hands in adoration of the God
        v-ho made him, and upon his brow stamped His own image.</p>
                <p>In a debate in this Convention, the other duty, a
        gentleman arose and attempted to cast ridicule upon the
        immortal declaration of our fathers that all men are
        created equal, and asserted that its grand assertion of the
        equality of human rights was a " flaunting lie." The
        Declaration of Independence, sir, it seems necessary to
        tell some gentlemen, was not a declaration of social
        privileges, or of intellectual status, or a treatise upon
        natural history, but a declaration of political rights; and
        when it declared that all men are created equal, it uttered
        a political truth which lies at the foundation of all
        Republican government—the rock on which is founded
        all personal and civil freedom. A truth, sir, that despite
        the attacks of the gentleman from Washington, will stand to
        the last syllable of time, I tell gentle-men that it is
        alike in vain that they attack either that grand central
        idea of the Declaration, or the character of its immortal
        author. Charges of falsehood and demagoguery and
        irreligion, re-bound harmless from the spotless fame of
        Thomas Jefferson, as small shot from the turret of a
        Monitor. There were giants in those days—yet, in a
        clear conception of the fundamental principles of free
        government Thomas Jefferson towered above them all.
        Jefferson and Adams and Franklin and Sherman and
        Livingston, were the committee who reported the
        Declaration. These, "Liars!" "Humbugs!" "Demagogues!" Ah, I
        these men ask no defence. They command the homage of all
        men who love Liberty. Their fame has passed into the
        keeping of History, and she will guard it well. High on her
        roll of honor has she inscribed all their names—a
        galaxy of patriots and statesmen more glorious than any
        galaxy that gems the dome of night. Dipping her impartial
        pencil in the sunlight, in the clear blue, highest of them
        all, she has written the name of the Scholar, Statesman and
        Philosopher, Thomas Jefferson.</p>
                <p>It was this doctrine of the equality of political
        rights, emblazoned upon their banners which won for our
        fathers the sympathies of the world, and carried them
        victoriously through their seven years war. Its bold
        ennunciation shook: every throne in Europe,--and will yet
        topple every one of them to the ground. It is the
        cornerstone of our political government. Reject it, and
        there is nothing for you to build upon this side of kingly
        prerogative. And the Republicanism which brands it is an
        imposture and a humbug, is itself the baldest of all
        impositions.</p>
                <p>But we are told that this is a "white man's government."
        That is the vulgar appeal to prejudice whereby the
        fomenters of all the troubles now oppressing the, South
        hope to reinstate them-selves in power and patronage. The
        grand hailing cry of distress which the Democratic Party
        sends forth to the ignorance and blind prejudice of the
        land, hoping, that in the festering purlieus of the cities
        and in the Egyptian districts of the country, when neither
        the School-master with his</p>
                <pb facs="00010356_tn_0003" n="5" />
                <head>On the Question of Suffrage. 5</head>
                <p>Primer nor the Preacher with his Testament has found his
        way, there may be found enough of these elements, it
        vigorously organized, to again give them the public
        control. "A white man's Government.”</p>
                <p>Does that grand charter of your government and your
        liberties, your Constitution, begin: We the white people of
        the United States, in order to form a more perfect Union,
        establish justice, in-sure domestic Tranquility, provide
        for the common defence, promote the general welfare, and
        secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our
        posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for
        the white people of the United States of America? Does your
        Declaration of Independence declare among its
        self—evident truths that all white men are created
        equal, and endowed with certain unalienable rights? Do
        gentlemen forget that when the national Constitution was
        adopted, that in every State of the old thirteen, eve South
        Carolina, which was always an exception to any wholesome
        rule, the tree colored man voted? And in a Stale where they
        voted at will so lately as in North-Carolina, this cry of
        "a white man's government" is too great an imposition upon
        our intelligence. What have political rights to do with the
        color of a man's face, or the quality of the coat upon his
        back? His rights pertain to him as a man—and have
        nothing to do with the accidents of his birth, the weight
        of his purse, or the extent of his mental culture.</p>
                <p>Men argue with great absurdity that by recognizing
        another citizen's right to approach the Ballot box, they
        recognize the fellow's intellectual, moral and social
        equality. That if he has a right to vote—a voice in
        the laws which are to tax and govern him—he therefore
        has a right. to a seat in every parlor of the, land, and to
        the hand of every man's daughter in marriage! The
        way-faring man though a fool, it seems to me, can-not fail
        to see the absurdity of such an argument. Men who all their
        days have been familiar with colored people in all the
        relations of society, who drew the sustenance of their
        earliest life from colored breasts, would try to make us
        believe that they are shocked at the idea, now in their
        manhood of depositing their ballots in the same box with
        colored men.</p>
                <p>According to the best testimony the present population
        of the earth, embracing Caucasians, Mongolians, Malaya,
        Africans and Americans, is about thirteen handled millions,
        of whom only three hundred and seventy-five millions are
        "white men," or about one fourth, so that in claiming
        exclusive rights for white men, you de-grade nearly three
        quarters of the Human family, made in the image of God, and
        declared to be of one blood, while you sanction a caste
        offensive to religion and an oligarchy inconsistent with
        republican government. It is an assumption false in
        religion, false in statesmanship, and false in economy.
        Show me a creature, with erect countenance looking to
        heaven, made in the image of God, and I will show you a
        man, who, of whatever country or race, whether darkened by
        tropical sun, or blanched by northern cold, is with you a
        child of the Heavenly Father, and equal with you in all the
        rights of human nature. You cannot deny these rights
        without impiety. And so has God linked welfare with duty
        that you cannot deny these rights without peril to the
        State.</p>
                <p>When the nation was in the hour of its direst peril, the
        gallant Gen. Sherman was consulted as to the wisdom of
        arming the negro. "If you place the musket in his hands,
        and he perils his life for the nation," replied the brave
        and true man, "it would be very mean afterwards to withhold
        from the same hands the ballot" And so answers the heart
        and conscience of every man in whose veins flows blood, and
        not water. And he was armed—200,000 black men stepped
        forth to the defence of the nation, and under perils
        unknown to the white soldier. They led the terrible
        assaults at Port Hudson and at Fort Wagner, and with their
        dead bodies filled the trenches at Petersburg and Richmond,
        that the soldiers of the Union might march over to
        victory.</p>
                <p>And now, when in the spirit of the most generous
        forgetfulness, we propose to open the way to the ballot-box
        to all—even the men who lately confronted the nation,
        sword in hand; why they, even they, come forward and object
        to the colored man's suffrage! Was there ever assurance
        like this? But will the friends of the Republic thus spurn
        their faithful ally? History, Sir, will compel us to say
        that it was the black skin that could always be trusted; it
        was the black man who never betrayed; wherever you found a
        negro, there was a soul loyal to the Union and true to our
        country's flag. Never in the annals of history was there
        such an example of universal fidelity and faith. Among the
        twelve Apostles of our Saviour there was a Judas. There was
        a traitor among the Spartan band of Leonidas. Our
        revolutionary army had its Benedict Arnold. The cause of
        Hungary had its Goergey who betrayed it at Villagos. The
        cameo of Henry VI, and Warwich, was lost by the desertion
        of Clarence. Harold, the Saxon, was betrayed by his own
        brother, Tosti. Maximilian had his Lopez; and, in short, as
        far back as history carries us Into the dominions of the
        past, treason has played its part. There was no cause, no
        army, no faith, without its traitors,</p>
                <pb facs="00010356_tn_0004" n="6" />
                <head>6 Speech of John R. French</head>
                <p>until the universal experience of mankind was defied,
        for the first time in history, by the example of the negro
        race. Of four millions of negroes there was not one who
        betrayed the man who came to him with the magic words:</p>
                <p>"I'm a Union soldier, help me, hide Me, save me, my
        colored friend!" Show me a case in history which is equal
        to this, of a whole race of millions of black men and
        women, throughout the land, there was not one who would not
        have risked his own life for the white Union soldier or
        refugee who invoked his protection ; not one to whom it may
        not be said the day of judgment, "I was an hungered, and ye
        gave me meat ; I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink; I was a
        stranger, and ye took me in."</p>
                <p>We hear of a possible war of races, I would give the
        colored man the ballot, as a way where-by we may avoid such
        a war, for the ballot will prove a great peace-maker.
        Plutarch records that the wise man of Athens charmed the
        people by saying that equality causes no war--and "both the
        rich and the poor repeated it." And so master and slave
        will yet enjoy the transforming power of this principle.
        The master will recognize the new citizen. The slave will
        stand with tranquil self-respect in the presence of the
        master. Brute force disappears. Distrust is at an end. The
        master is no longer a tyrant. The freedman is no longer a
        dependant. The ballot comes to him in his depression and
        says, "Use me, and be elevated." It comes to him in his
        passion, and says, "Use me, and do not fight." It comes to
        him in his daily thoughts, filling him with the strength
        and glory of manhood. Reading and writing are of
        inestimable value—but the ballot teaches what these
        cannot teach, and what is of especial importance to the
        freedman, it teaches him to be a man. As physical labor
        stiffens the bones and developes the muscle, so the
        exercise of manly duties developes manly virtues. The
        Conservative mother who, discovering that her child of
        twelve months cannot walk, should for that reason continue
        to keep it in its cradle, may rock it on until it is twenty
        years old, and she would then have but a great baby. It is
        the exercise of our limbs and faculties which brings out
        their powers.</p>
                <p>The ballot is a reconciler, Next after peace is
        reconciliation. Do you wish to see harmony truly prevail in
        North-Carolina, so that industry, society, government,
        civilization may all prosper, and the State wear a crown of
        true greatness? Then give the ballot to all your
        citizens.</p>
                <p>The ballot is a protector, and in the present moment
        this, above all other, is the reason why it should be given
        to the colored man. Let the freedman vote, and he will have
        in himself under the law, a constant, ever-present,
        self-protecting power. When men know that they may be voted
        down, they will know that they must be just, and everything
        is contained in justice. Reconstruction was attempted upon
        the basis of the white vote only—and it was not until
        the evils resulting from the plan began to develop in black
        codes that substantially restored slavery that to the minds
        of the masses of the Union people, the fatal blunder was
        discovered, and the public sentiment began to move forward
        to universal suffrage. But when the white vote organized
        State and City governments that elected none but rebels to
        power, such as Gen. Humphreys, in Mississippi, Mayor Monroe
        in New Orleans, Raphael Semmes in Mobile, and the like; and
        when the ex-rebels, coming together in the Legislatures,
        enacted that no negro should own land or hire a house, thus
        politically breaking up his home, and compelling him to
        work as a menial; when they required him to hire out for a
        year during the first weeks of January, and in default
        allowed him to be sold for a term of years ; when they
        adopted systems of apprenticeship for blacks, which were
        not applied to whites; when they laid taxes upon polls and
        not. upon property, and authorized employers to retain from
        the wages the taxes thus imposed upon the laborers; when
        they provided for the lash and whipping-post for blacks,
        but not for whites; when they excluded colored witnesses
        from courts of justice ; when they organized rebel
        regiments, which surrendered under Lee, en masse, into
        State militia, who disarmed the black troops that conquered
        under Grant; when they revived the fugitive slave law for
        blacks who did not work out their contracts, but nu
        punishment for whites who did not pay the wages due on the
        same contracts; when they reluctantly, and only under
        impudent protests, assented to the repeal of the ordinances
        of secession ; when they drove out Northern emigrants,
        assailed the Freedman's Bureau, burned freedmen's
        School-houses and churches, organized bands of negro-
        killers, and finally culminated these outrages in the
        massacres of Republicans and negroes at Memphis and New
        Orleans; when the Southern courts were deciding the Civil
        Rights bill to be unconstitutional, and Southern State
        Officers were trampling upon its provisions, and defying
        the Congress that enacted it, then the Union sentiment of
        the country fully aroused to the exigencies of the case
        began to move toward reconstruction on the basis of
        universal suffrage—seeing that there was no other way
        given among men whereby this Nation might be saved.</p>
                <p>And Reconstruction upon this basis, is to be a success,
        Sir. Building upon this broad and equitable foundation
        every one of the late insurgent</p>
                <pb facs="00010356_tn_0004" n="7" />
                <head>On the Question of Suffrage. 7</head>
                <p>States will re-establish government and return to the
        Union. The old flag, first unfurled by Washington, at
        Cambridge, is again to be lilted up and float in power from
        the Potomac to the Rio Grande; and the people will hail its
        coming as the return of an old friend, and in its clear
        blue no Star shall be firmer set, or irradiate a more
        patriotic light, than the Star of NORTH CAROLINA.</p>
                <p>Unfurl, bright stripes—shine forth, clear
        stars—swing outward to the breeze</p>
                <p>Go bear your message to the wilds—go tell it on
        the seas,</p>
                <p>That poor men sit within your shade, and rich men in
        their pride</p>
                <p>That beggar-boys and statesmen's sons walk 'neath you,
        side by side;</p>
                <p>You guard the school-house on the green, the church upon
        the hill,</p>
                <p>And fold your precious blessings 'round the cabin by the
        rill,</p>
                <p>While weary hearts from every land beneath the shining
        stun</p>
                <p>Find work, and rest, and home, beneath the Flag of
        Washington.</p>
                <p>And never, never on the earth, however brave they
        be,</p>
                <p>Shall friends or foes bear down this great, proud
        standard of the Free,</p>
                <p>'Though they around its staff may pour red blood in
        rushing waves,</p>
                <p>And build beneath its starry folds great pyramids of
        graves;</p>
                <p>For God looks out, with sleepless eye, upon His
        children's deeds,</p>
                <p>And sees, through all their good and ill, their
        sufferings and their needs;</p>
                <p>And He will watch, and He will keep, 'till human rights
        have won,</p>
                <p>The dear old Flag! the starry Flag! the Flag of
        Washington!</p>
                <p>Science teaches us that that great range of Mountains
        known as the Appalachian Range, which stretches from Canada
        to the Gulf, was the first land in the morning of creation
        lifted above the shoreless sea that surrounded our globe.
        And above all this range, the highest of all, 400 feet
        higher than Mt. Washington, towers in solitary grandeur old
        Black Mountain, of North-Carolina,—its black dome
        undoubtedly the first land lifted from the unsounded
        depths.</p>
                <p>MEN OF NORTH-CAROLINA, to-day, amid these ruins we relay
        the foundations of our Common-wealth. We would build a
        Temple of Freedom, wherein we and our children may dwell in
        Peace and Safety through all the coming generations. Let us
        lay our corner-stone upon principles as broad and enduring
        as the foundations of Black Mountain, that the Dome of our
        fair Temple may rise grandly like his, high in the heavens,
        defiant of all storms, and the admiration of all who love
        Free Government.</p>
                <head>REMARKS OF JOHN R. FRENCH,</head>
                <head>OF CHOWAN COUNTY.</head>
                <p>In Constitutional Convention, on the question of
        Property Qualification. February 13th, 1868.</p>
                <p>Mr. French, of Chowan, remarked that there was truth in
        the observation of the gentleman from Chatham, that laws
        are not so much needed for the protection of the "big bugs"
        as for the poor people. Rich men are able to take care of
        themselves, but it is the poor and the friendless who need
        the defence of the Constitution and the laws of the land.
        And he rejoiced to believe with the gentleman from
        Carteret, that this Convention of the people was fully
        ready on this very day to bury beyond all hope of
        resurrection, so far as North-Carolina is concerned, this
        odious doctrine of freehold and property qualification,
        either in voter, or office-holder. With all respect for the
        gentlemen from whom he differed, it seemed to him that
        these ideas of property and Lee-hold qualification, were in
        conflict with every principle of' Republican government,
        and totally at variance with tile spirit and genius of the
        times, when man's rights are being enlarged, not
        restricted; the privileges of citizenship extended, not
        curtailed. This idea of property qualification was it
        monstrous fallacy which had come down to us from darker
        ages when the rights of men were less known, and far less
        regarded—and it should have been carried to its
        political grave long ago. It was engrafted upon most, if
        not all, the early Constitutions—but the steady
        advance of Republican sentiment</p>
                <pb facs="00010356_tn_0005" n="8" />
                <head>8 Speech of John R. French.</head>
                <p>had wiped the blot from every Constitution of the land,
        save the Constitution of our own State, and those of
        New-Hampshire, South-Carolina and Delaware.</p>
                <p>The gentleman from Orange would demand extra
        qualifications for a Senator; the old idea which our worthy
        fathers borrowed from the aristocratic institutions of the
        mother country. The House of Lords represented the
        Aristocracy of England—the better blood of the
        realm—and so our Senates, it was thought, must
        represent the wealth, the first families of the new States;
        not we, of the "cotton shirts and copperas breeches," but
        the gentlemen of the silk stockings. Hence the aristocratic
        and extremely conservative elements which everywhere grew
        up with Senates, until the people began to talk of the
        House, in contradistinction from the Senate, as the popular
        branch of the government. For one, he would have no
        unpopular branch in our new government, but would make
        Senate and House both popular branches. He had little
        sympathy with the notion that we need a Senate chiefly to
        hold in check the House. That is an idea born of distrust
        of the people—it is the old fallacy that the people
        are incapable of self-government. Formerly in
        North-Carolina to vote for a Senator it required the
        ownership of fifty acres of land, but the amendment of '57
        wiped all that out, and now the venerable and respected
        gentleman from Caswell, fearful of " innovation," would
        have us, like the crab, crawl backwards, not to the 50
        acres of land indeed some worthless swamp Pocasin, but to
        $250 worth of property—it may be three like young
        Jackasses of about that value Here to-day is a man
        penniless, and he cannot vote. To-morrow, by some good
        fortune, he becomes the proud owner of three likely
        jackasses, and can vote for a Senator. Now, Mr. F. would
        submit it to the gentleman from Caswell, whether it is the
        man, or the Jackasses, that does the voting? The gentleman
        would not have the Convention forget that it was building
        for future generations, neither be unmindful of the
        glorious inspirations of the times in which they are
        working. Our fathers wrought according to the light of
        their day, and have entered upon the reward of their honest
        toil. Another future opens before us. Not property, not a
        few families, however old, or however respectable, are to
        rule the North-Carolina of the hereafter—but the free
        and-mighty people—the hardy fishermen of the Sounds
        and the Coast, the unpurchasable ploughers of her fields
        and her vallies, the stout hewers of her forests, the
        delvers in her mines, the husbandman who feeds his flocks
        upon the green slopes of her mountains; these are to be her
        voters and her Legislators. The people are to govern; not
        money, not lands, not families, not jackasses.</p>
                <p>That strange man Swedenburg, in one of his wonderful
        books, tells us that during one of his visits to the
        Spirit-world he 'there met spirits who had been in that
        state 25 years, and yet didn't know that they were dead.
        And so we have men in North-Carolina, who don't seem to
        know what they, politically, and many of their old favorite
        notions, are dead, and that this Convention is called for
        their burial. Mr. F. said his had occasion the other day to
        call attention to those Conservatives of the Plains, the
        Pawnee Braves, who attempted to stop the - progress of that
        grandest "innovation" of the ago, the Pacific Railroad. He
        wished to remind gentlemen that the road was now several
        hundred miles in advance of the point where the attempt was
        made to stop it, and at its terminus for the winter, a
        civilized town had already sprang into existence of more
        than 5,000 inhabitants. the City of Cheyenne. He thought
        gentlemen might gather a lesson from this fact.</p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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