The War of the Rebellion:
a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. ;
Series 1 - Volume 52 (Part II), Pages 582-592.
[Jan. 2, 1864]
Maj. Gen. Patrick Cleburne (Library of Congress) |
Commanding General,
The Corps, Division, Brigade, and Regimental Commanders of the Army of Tennessee
The Corps, Division, Brigade, and Regimental Commanders of the Army of Tennessee
General: Moved by the exigency in which our country is now placed we take
the liberty of laying before you, unofficially, our views on the present state
of affairs. The subject is so grave, and our views so new, we feel it a
duty both to you and the cause that before going further we should submit them
for your judgment and receive your suggestions in regard to them. We
therefore respectfully ask you to give us an expression of your views in the
premises. We have now been fighting for nearly three years, have spilled
much of our best blood, and lost, consumed, or thrown to the flames an amount
of property equal in value to the specie currency of the world. Through
some lack in our system the fruits of our struggles and sacrifices have
invariably slipped away from us and left us nothing but long lists of dead and
mangled. Instead of standing defiantly on the borders of our territory or
harassing those of the enemy, we are hemmed in to-day into less than two-thirds
of it, and still the enemy menacingly confronts us at every point with superior
forces. Our soldiers can see no end to this state of affairs except
in our own exhaustion; hence, instead of rising to the occasion, they are
sinking into a fatal apathy, growing weary of hardships and slaughters which
promise no results. In this state of things it is easy to understand why there
is a growing belief that some black catastrophe is not far ahead of us, and
that unless some extraordinary change is soon made in our condition we must
overtake it. The consequences of this condition are showing themselves
more plainly every day; restlessness of morals spreading everywhere,
manifesting itself in the army in a growing disregard for private rights;
desertion spreading to a class of soldiers it never dared to tamper with
before; military commissions sinking in the estimation of the soldier; our
supplies failing; our firesides in ruins. If this state continues much
longer we must be subjugated. Every man should endeavor to understand the
meaning of subjugation before it is too late. We can give but a faint
idea when we say it means the loss of all we now hold most sacred — slaves and
all other personal property, lands, homesteads, liberty, justice, safety,
pride, manhood. It means that the history of this heroic struggle will be
written by the enemy; that our youth will be trained by Northern school
teachers; will learn from Northern school books their version of the war; will
be impressed by all the influences of history and education to regard our
gallant dead as traitors, our maimed veterans as fit objects for
derision. It means the crushing of Southern manhood, the hatred of our
former slaves, who will, on a spy system, be our secret police. The
conqueror's policy is to divide the conquered into factions and stir up
animosity among them, and in training an army of negroes the North no doubt
holds this thought in perspective. We can see three great causes
operating to destroy us: First, the inferiority of our armies to those of
the enemy in point of numbers; second, the poverty of our single source of
supply in comparison with his several sources; third, the fact that slavery,
from being one of our chief sources of strength at the commencement of the war,
has now become, in a military point of view, one of our chief sources of
weakness.
The enemy already opposes us at every point with superior numbers, and is
endeavoring to make the preponderance irresistible. President Davis, in
his recent message, says the enemy "has recently ordered a large
conscription and made a subsequent call for volunteers, to be followed, if
ineffectual by a still further draft." In addition, the
President of the United States announces that "he has already in training
an army of 100,000 negroes as good as any troops," and every fresh raid he
makes and new slice of territory he wrests from us will add to this force.Every
soldier in our army already knows and feels our numerical inferiority to the
enemy. Want of men in the field has prevented him from reaping the fruits of
his victories, and has prevented him from having the furlough he expected after
the last reorganization, and when he turns from the wasting armies in the field
to look at the source of supply, he finds nothing in the prospect to encourage
him. Our single source of supply is that portion of our white men fit for
duty and not now in the ranks. The enemy has three sources of
supply: First, his own motley population; secondly, our slaves; and
thirdly, Europeans whose hearts are fired into a crusade against us by fictitious
pictures of the atrocities of slavery, and who meet no hindrance from their
Governments in such enterprise, because these Governments are equally
antagonistic to the institution. In touching the third cause, the fact
that slavery has become a military weakness, we may rouse prejudice and
passion, but the time has come when it would be madness not to look at our
danger from every point of view, and to probe it to the
bottom. Apart from the assistance that home and foreign prejudice
against slavery has given to the North, slavery is a source of great strength
to the enemy in a purely military point of view, by supplying him with an army
from our granaries; but it is our most vulnerable point, a continued
embarrassment, and in some respects an insidious weakness. Wherever
slavery is once seriously disturbed, whether by the actual presence or the
approach of the enemy, or even by a cavalry raid, the whites can no longer with
safety to their property openly sympathize with our cause. The fear of
their slaves is continually haunting them, and from silence and apprehension
many of these soon learn to wish the war stopped on any terms. The next
stage is to take the oath to save property, and they become dead to us, if not
open enemies. To prevent raids we are forced to scatter our forces,
and are not free to move and strike like the enemy; his vulnerable points are
carefully selected and fortified depots. Ours are found in every point
where there is a slave to set free. All along the lines slavery is
comparatively valueless to us for labor, but of great and increasing worth to
the enemy for information. It is an omnipresent spy system,
pointing out our valuable men to the enemy, revealing our positions, purposes,
and resources, and yet acting so safely and secretly that there is no
means to guard against it. Even in the heart of our country, where our
hold upon this secret espionage is firmest, it waits but the opening fire of
the enemy's battle line to wake it, like a torpid serpent, into venomous activity.
In view of the state of affairs what does our country propose to
do? In the words of President Davis "no effort must be spared to add
largely to our effective force as promptly as possible. The sources of
supply are to be found in restoring to the army all who are improperly absent,
putting an end to substitution, modifying the exemption law, restricting
details, and placing in the ranks such of the able-bodied men now employed as
wagoners, nurses, cooks, and other employe[e]s, as are doing service for which
the negroes may be found competent." Most of the men improperly
absent, together with many of the exempts and men having substitutes, are now
without the Confederate lines and cannot be calculated on. If all the
exempts capable of bearing arms were enrolled, it will give us the boys below
eighteen, the men above forty-five, and those persons who are left at home to
meet the wants of the country and the army, but this modification of the
exemption law will remove from the fields and manufactories most of the skill
that directed agricultural and mechanical labor, and, as stated by the
President, "details will have to be made to meet the wants of the
country," thus sending many of the men to be derived from this source back
to their homes again. Independently of this, experience proves that
striplings and men above conscript age break down and swell the sick lists more
than they do the ranks. The portion now in our lines of the class who
have substitutes is not on the whole a hopeful element, for the motives that
created it must have been stronger than patriotism, and these motives added to
what many of them will call breach of faith, will cause some to be not
forthcoming, and others to be unwilling and discontented soldiers. The
remaining sources mentioned by the President have been so closely pruned in the
Army of Tennessee that they will be found not to yield largely. The
supply from all these sources, together with what we now have in the field,
will exhaust the white race, and though it should greatly exceed expectations
and put us on an equality with the enemy, or even give us temporary advantages,
still we have no reserve to meet unexpected disaster or to supply a protracted
struggle. Like past years, 1864 will diminish our ranks by the casualties
of war, and what source of repair is there left us? We therefore see in
the recommendations of the President only a temporary expedient, which at the
best will leave us twelve months hence in the same predicament we are in
now. The President attempts to meet only one of the depressing
causes mentioned; for the other two he has proposed no remedy. They
remain to generate lack of confidence in our final success, and to keep us
moving down hill as heretofore. Adequately to meet the- causes which are
now threatening ruin to our country, we propose, in addition to a modification
of the President's plans, that we retain in service for the war all troops now
in service, and that we immediately commence training a large reserve of the
most courageous of our slaves, and further that we guarantee freedom within a
reasonable time to every slave in the South who shall remain true to the
Confederacy in this war. As between the loss of independence and the
loss of slavery, we assume that every patriot will freely give up the latter —
give up the negro slave rather than be a slave himself. If we are correct
in this assumption it only remains to show how this great national sacrifice
is, in all human probabilities, to change the current of success and sweep the
invader from our country.
Our country has already some friends in England and France, and there are
strong motives to induce these nations to recognize and assist us, but they
cannot assist us without helping slavery, and to do this would be in conflict
with their policy for the last quarter of a century. England has paid
hundreds of millions to emancipate her West India slaves and break up the
slave-trade. Could she now consistently spend her treasure to reinstate
slavery in this country? But this barrier once removed, the sympathy and
the interests of these and other nations will accord with our own, and we may
expect from them both moral support and material aid. One thing is certain, as
soon as the great sacrifice to independence is made and known in foreign
countries there will be a complete change of front in our favor of the
sympathies of the world. This measure will deprive the North of the moral
and material aid which it now derives from the bitter prejudices with which
foreigners view the institution, and its war, if continued, will henceforth be
so despicable in their eyes that the source of recruiting will be dried
up. It will leave the enemy's negro army no motive to fight for, and will
exhaust the source from which it has been recruited. The idea that it is
their special mission to war against slavery has held growing sway over the
Northern people for many years, and has at length ripened into an armed and
bloody crusade against it. This baleful superstition has so far supplied
them with a courage and constancy not their own. It is the most powerful
and honestly entertained plank in their war platform. Knock this away and
what is left? A bloody ambition for more territory, a pretended
veneration for the Union, which one of their own most distinguished orators
(Doctor Beecher in his Liverpool speech) openly avowed was only used as a
stimulus to stir up the anti-slavery crusade, and lastly the poisonous and
selfish interests which are the fungus growth of the war itself. Mankind
may fancy it a great duty to destroy slavery, but what interest can mankind
have in upholding this remainder of the Northern war platform? Their
interests and feelings will be diametrically opposed to it. The
measure we propose will strike dead all John Brown fanaticism, and will compel
the enemy to draw off altogether or in the eyes of the world to swallow the
Declaration of Independence without the sauce and disguise of
philanthropy. This delusion of fanaticism at an end, thousands of
Northern people will have leisure to look at home and to see the gulf of
despotism into which they themselves are rushing.
The measure will at one blow strip the enemy of foreign sympathy and
assistance, and transfer them to the South; it will dry up two of his three
sources of recruiting; it will take from his negro army the only motive it
could have to fight against the South, and will probably cause much of it to
desert over to us; it will deprive his cause of the powerful stimulus of
fanaticism, and will enable him to see the rock on which his so-called friends
are now piloting him. The immediate effect of the emancipation and
enrollment of negroes on the military strength of the South would be: To
enable us to have armies numerically superior to those of the North, and a
reserve of any size we might think necessary; to enable us to take the
offensive, move forward, and forage on the enemy. It would open to us in
prospective another and almost untouched source of supply, and furnish us with
the means of preventing temporary disaster, and carrying on a protracted
struggle. It would instantly remove all the vulnerability, embarrassment,
and inherent weakness which result from slavery. The approach of the
enemy would no longer find every household surrounded by spies; the fear that
sealed the master's lips and the avarice that has, in so many cases, tempted
him practically to desert us would alike be removed. There would be no
recruits awaiting the enemy with open arms, no complete history of every
neighborhood with ready guides, no fear of insurrection in the rear, or
anxieties for the fate of loved ones when our armies moved forward. The
chronic irritation of hope deferred would be joyfully ended with the negro, and
the sympathies of his whole race would be due to his native South. It
would restore confidence in an early termination of the war with all its
inspiring consequences, and even if contrary to all expectations the enemy
should succeed in over-running the South, instead of finding a cheap,
ready-made means of holding it down, he would find a common hatred and thirst
for vengeance, which would break into acts at every favorable opportunity,
would prevent him from settling on our lands, and render the South a very
unprofitable conquest. It would remove forever all selfish taint from our
cause and place independence above every question of property. The very
magnitude of the sacrifice itself, such as no nation has ever voluntarily made
before, would appal [sic] our enemies, destroy his spirit and his finances, and
fill our hearts with a pride and singleness of purpose which would clothe us
with new strength in battle. Apart from all other aspects of the
question, the necessity for more fighting men is upon us. We can only get
a sufficiency by making the negro share the danger and hardships of the
war. If we arm and train him and make him fight for the country in her
hour of dire distress, every consideration of principle and policy demand that
we should set him and his whole race who side with us free. It is a first
principle with mankind that he who offers his life in defense of the State
should receive from her in return his freedom and his happiness, and we believe
in acknowledgment of this principle. The Constitution of the Southern
States has reserved to their respective governments the power to free slaves
for meritorious services to the State. It is politic
besides. For many years, ever since the agitation of the subject of
slavery commenced, the negro has been dreaming of freedom, and his vivid imagination
has surrounded that condition with so many gratifications that it has become
the paradise of his hopes. To attain it he will tempt dangers and
difficulties not exceeded by the bravest soldier in the field. The hope
of freedom is perhaps the only moral incentive that can be applied to him in
his present condition. It would be preposterous then to expect him to
fight against it with any degree of enthusiasm, therefore we must bind him to
our cause by no doubtful bonds; we must leave no possible loop-hole for treachery
to creep in. The slaves are dangerous now, but armed, trained, and
collected in an army they would be a thousand fold more dangerous; therefore
when we make soldiers of them we must make free men of them beyond all
question, and thus enlist their sympathies also. We can do this more
effectually than the North can now do, for we can give the negro not only his
own freedom, but that of his wife and child, and can secure it to him in his
old home. To do this, we must immediately make his marriage and parental
relations sacred in the eyes of the law and forbid their sale. The past
legislation of the South concedes that a large free middle class of negro
blood, between the master and slave, must sooner or later destroy the
institution. If, then, we touch the institution at all, we would do best
to make the most of it, and by emancipating the whole race upon reasonable
terms, and within such reasonable time as will prepare both races for the
change, secure to ourselves all the advantages, and to our enemies all the
disadvantages that can arise, both at home and abroad, from such a
sacrifice. Satisfy the negro that if he faithfully adheres to our
standard during the war he shall receive his freedom and that of his
race. Give him as an earnest of our intentions such immediate immunities
as will impress him with our sincerity and be in keeping with his new
condition, enroll a portion of his class as soldiers of the Confederacy, and we
change the race from a dreaded weakness to a position of strength.
Will the slaves fight? The
helots of Sparta stood their masters good stead in battle. In the great
sea fight of Lepanto where the Christians checked forever the spread of
Mohammedanism over Europe, the galley slaves of portions of the fleet were promised
freedom, and called on to fight at a critical moment of the battle. They
fought well, and civilization owes much to those brave galley slaves. The
negro slaves of Saint Domingo, fighting for freedom, defeated their white
masters and the French troops sent against them. The negro slaves of
Jamaica revolted, and under the name of Maroons held the mountains against
their masters for 150 years; and the experience of this war has been so far
that half-trained negroes have fought as bravely as many other half-trained
Yankees. If, contrary to the training of a lifetime, they can be
made to face and fight bravely against their former masters, how much more
probable is it that with the allurement of a higher reward, and led by those
masters, they would submit to discipline and face dangers.
We will briefly notice a few
arguments against this course. It is said Republicanism cannot exist
without the institution. Even were this true, we prefer any form of
government of which the Southern people may have the molding, to one forced
upon us by a conqueror. It is said the white man cannot perform
agricultural labor in the South. The experience of this army during the
heat of summer from Bowling Green, Ky., to Tupelo, Miss., is that the white man
is healthier when doing reasonable work in the open field than at any other
time. It is said an army of negroes cannot be spared from the
fields. A sufficient number of slaves is now administering to luxury
alone to supply the place of all we need, and we believe it would be better to
take half the able-bodied men off a plantation than to take the one master mind
that economically regulated its operations. Leave some of the skill at
home and take some of the muscle to fight with. It is said slaves will
not work after they are freed. We think necessity and a wise legislation
will compel them to labor for a living. It is said it will cause terrible
excitement and some disaffection from our cause. Excitement is far
preferable to the apathy which now exists, and disaffection will not be among
the fighting men. It is said slavery is all we are fighting for, and
if we give it up we give up all. Even if this were true, which we deny,
slavery is not all our enemies are fighting for. It is merely the
pretense to establish sectional superiority and a more centralized form of
government, and to deprive us of our rights and liberties. We have now
briefly proposed a plan which we believe will save our country. It may be
imperfect, but in all human probability it would give us our independence.
No objection ought to outweigh it which is not weightier than
independence. If it is worthy of being put in practice it ought to be
mooted quickly before the people, and urged earnestly by every man who believes
in its efficacy. Negroes will require much training; training will
require much time, and there is danger that this concession to common sense may
come too late.
[signed]
P. R. Cleburne, major-general, commanding division
D. C. Govan, brigadier-general
John E. Murray, colonel, Fifth Arkansas
G. F. Baucum, colonel, Eighth Arkansas
Peter Snyder, lieutenant-colonel, commanding Sixth and Seventh Arkansas
E. Warfield, lieutenant-colonel, Second Arkansas
M. P. Lowrey, brigadier-general
A. B. Hardcastle, colonel, Thirty-second and Forty-fifth Mississippi
F. A. Ashford, major, Sixteenth Alabama
John W. Colquitt, colonel, First Arkansas
Rich. J. Person, major, Third and Fifth Confederate
G. S. Deakins, major, Thirty-fifth and Eighth Tennessee
J. H. Collett, captain, commanding Seventh Texas
J. H. Kelly, brigadier-general, commanding Cavalry Division
D. C. Govan, brigadier-general
John E. Murray, colonel, Fifth Arkansas
G. F. Baucum, colonel, Eighth Arkansas
Peter Snyder, lieutenant-colonel, commanding Sixth and Seventh Arkansas
E. Warfield, lieutenant-colonel, Second Arkansas
M. P. Lowrey, brigadier-general
A. B. Hardcastle, colonel, Thirty-second and Forty-fifth Mississippi
F. A. Ashford, major, Sixteenth Alabama
John W. Colquitt, colonel, First Arkansas
Rich. J. Person, major, Third and Fifth Confederate
G. S. Deakins, major, Thirty-fifth and Eighth Tennessee
J. H. Collett, captain, commanding Seventh Texas
J. H. Kelly, brigadier-general, commanding Cavalry Division
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