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This
letter makes it clear that Jefferson Davis, while still a sitting
United States Senator (he would not resign his seat until over a week
after writing this letter), was willing to collude in the crisis
launched by South Carolina's secession, in favor of South
Carolina. This is hardly surprising, given Davis's well-known
views, but it does not speak well of his integrity.
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Washington, D. C, Governor F. W. Pickens, My dear sir: A serious and
sudden attack of neuralgia has prevented me from fulfilling my promise to
communicate more fully by mail than could safely be done by telegraph. I need hardly say to you that a request for a
conference on questions of defense had to me the force of a command; it,
however, found me under a proposition from the Governor of Mississippi, to send
me as a commissioner to Virginia, and another to employ me in the organization
of the State militia. But more than all,
I was endeavoring to secure the defeat of the nomination of a foreign collector
for the port of Charleston, and at that time it was deemed possible that in the
Senate we could arrest all hostile legislation such as might be designed either
for the immediate or future coercion of the South. It now appears that we shall lack one or two
votes to effect the legislative object just mentioned, and it was decided last
evening, in a conference which I was notable to attend, that the Senators of
the seceded States should promptly withdraw upon the telegraphic information
already received. I am still confined to
my bed, but hope soon to be up again, and, at as early a day as practicable, to
see you. I cannot place any confidence
in the adherence of the administration to a fixed line of policy. The general tendency is to hostile measures,
and against these it is needful for you to prepare. I take it for granted that the time allowed
to the garrison of Fort Sumter has been diligently employed by yourselves, so
that before you could be driven out of your earthworks you will be able to
capture the fort which commands them. I
have not sufficiently learned your policy in relation to the garrison at Fort
Sumter, to understand whether the expectation is to compel them to capitulate
for want of supplies, or whether it is only to prevent the transmission of
reports and the receipt of orders. To
shut them up with a view to starve them into submission would create a
sympathetic action much greater than any which could be obtained on the present
issue. I doubt very much the loyalty of
the garrison, and it has occurred to me that if they could receive no
reinforcements—and I suppose you sufficiently command the entrance to the
harbor to prevent it—that there could be no danger of the freest intercourse
between the garrison and the city. We
have to-day news of the approach of a mixed commission from Fort Sumter and
Charleston, but nothing further than the bare fact. We are probably soon to be involved in that
fiercest of human strifes, a civil war.
The temper of the Black Republicans is not to give us our rights in the
Union, or allow us to go peaceably out of it.
If we had no other cause, this would be enough to justify secession, at
whatever hazard. When I am better I will
write again, if I do not soon see you. Very sincerely
yours, Jefferson Davis. |
Back to Civil War Chronologies (Main page) Back to Chronology of the Fort Sumter Crisis Source: Crawford, Genesis of the Civil War, pp. 263--64. Date added to website: January 8, 2025. |