Thomas Jackson Signature

Passionate Abolitionist and
Witness to the American Civil War

THE ENTIRE COLLECTION


Article_1871-04-06

TJ And Greely

Times and Dispatch 

Thursday, April 6, 1871.

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 THOMAS JACKSON VS HORACE GREELEY

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In Tuesday’s New York Tribune appears a communication from our staunch to Republican friend and townsman Thomas Jackson, Esq.,  which is headed “A Case for the Exercise of Patience.” Its vigorously expressed, though unpalatable statements evoked extended comments from the Tribune, in which Mr. Greeley renews, with some show of ill humor, his advocacy of General Amnesty for the unrepentant rebels of the South. In the latter half of his communication, Mr. Jackson says with a good deal of truth and force:

“The Tribune says that the Southern ex-Rebels have murdered five or ten thousand of our innocent friends since over innocent friends since the Rebellion was crushed and not one of the murderers has been punished for his crime. Is it reasonable that we should grant full amnesty to these daring villains, take them back to citizenship with all this guilt and blood upon them, and restore all the rights and franchises they have forfeited by the crimes, lest they should murder many thousands more of our unoffending fellow-citizens, because a Republican Government is too weak, too cowardly, or too corrupt to protect its people and punish criminals? 

There may have been many believers in such a doctrine at Algiers, along the coast of Barbary, 100 years ago; It may be believed in by Greek brigands and the American democracy now; but I hope such is not the sentiment of loyal and intelligent Americans of the present day. 

Pass a Full Amnesty bill, and the cowardly assassin Yerger, who murdered a meritorious United States officer on the public street at noon day, may come to Washington as a member of Congress. and thank chief justice Chase, President Grant and the politicians for his escape from the gallows he most justly merited. The Emperor ofRussia willingly and peaceably freed five times as many slaves as war compelled us to emancipate, and forced their former owners to sell them land on long credit at fair price, that they might have their own Homesteads, and he protects them from wrong. American democracy, now it thinks the danger over, is willing to see all our Freedmen re-enslaved or exterminated. Such is the difference between Russian despotism and American democracy.”

To which the Tribune responds by saying’’ our correspondent labors under evident confusion of mind in regards to the facts which he would state if he clearly understood them,” and then artfully continues his answer in the following language.

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“We entirely agree with our correspondent that the Ku-Klux outrages at the South afford no reason whatever– none in the world –for Universal Amnesty. On the contrary, they present a very formidable obstacle to the granting of such Amnesty. We were for Amnesty long before they were heard of, and shall be to the end – not because of those outrages, but in spite of them. But we agree also with both senators from South Carolina and the majority of the Republicans in Congress from the south that the persistent exclusion from office of the most eminent Southerners, because of that part in the Rebellion has a mischievous, disturbing irritating tendency and that a General Amnesty for offenses now more than five years bygone would deprive the Ku-Klux of the most potent means of fermenting disaffection and inciting outrage. The existing proscription while it does no good, is made the pretext and excuse for a great deal of harm.

We have favored no Amnesty whatever for crimes committed since the surrender and parole of the Rebel armies. No one has proposed have any. When, therefore, Mr. Jacksonasserts that Amnesty would it anyway profit the murder of Col. Crane “on the public street at noonday”, he simply betrays his lamentable ignorance of the matter he discusses. We regard it as a great public misfortune the perpetrators of such crimes during peace are an able to confound their homicides with those committed in the prosecution of Civil War.

“Mr. Jackson ought to know that his notions have always been current quote “at Algiers “ and along the coast of Barbary.” Or rude and cruel tribes have glorified in them ideas are relatively modern, and are confined to people at least a civilized is himself.

We close with the general proposition: If we are ever to see the violence and outrage now rife at the South, repressed and punished we must overlook and grant oblivion to the offenses committed in the civil war which ceased nearly six years ago.”

The situation in the South is dismal and gloomy in the extreme, partaking much of the character of that barbarism which existed during the dark days of slavery. It fitly recalls the era of bowie knives, thumbscrews, whipping-posts, the inhuman severance forever of family ties up on the auction block, and the unholy contamination by illicit intercourse of master and slave. In diabolism it overshadows the gross inhumanities of those days. 

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It is an organized insurgency of cowardly rebels who go masked under the cover of darkness, to whip innocent women and children, lay waste their homes, and murder, in cold blood, husbands fathers and brothers – for what? Because of any crime that they have committed against the laws of their country or against society?  No but simply and solely because they are Union men. And yet we find Mr. Greeley not only willing, but anxious for the rehabilitation of these murderous gangs – these outlaws that are now convulsing Southern society by the infamous deeds of violence; he would have them in our halls of legislation to legalize, by their vote, their damnable crimes, and invest the terrorism of the South with an hundred fold more dread and horror of the now exists there. In the language of the Philadelphia Press “the Union men of the South are at this hour in the peculiar keeping of the nation. Their safety and protection is a debt not only of justice, but of honor. 

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We have done little if in enfranchising the black man we’ve only given up to murder and violence the white man and woman. The flag that makes one free must make all free. We raised that flag, and on us devolves for all time the duty of keeping its folds flying and making them a protection, and not a snare. Emphatically for those Southern loyalists, we are our brothers’ keepers, and their blood will be demanded of us. Let us therefore have an enforcement bill that shall make life, limb and property safe, and the National colors respected on every foot of Southern soil, 

And let it be passed with a vote so decided that before the laws arms shall be silent.”

When Ku-Klux shall cease their murders of innocent men, women and children; when the Union men of the South are fully protected from lawlessness and outrage when Southern society shall be restored to order and harmony, when the rebels relent in their hatred of loyal men, when they begin to show signs of repentance; when they learn to appreciate the motives of a Government to whose magnanimity they are indebted for immunity from a traitor’s death; in short when they become loyal to the government of the United States– then, and not till then, should these men to be reinstated to their former rights under the issuance of a General Amnesty.

It is a shortsighted policy which would thus grant new powers to men who are rebels at heart, devils by nature, and murderers by practice. From Mr. Greeley however, there can be a little else expected in view of the fact that, at the outbreak of hostilities he admitted the right of Secession, an opinion which he consistently supplemented by voluntarily becoming the principal bondman of Jeff Davis at the close of the war.

Ambassadors’ Notes

This letter is best read after the New York Tribune article which provoked it.

The Reading Times and Dispatch was in general sympathetic to Thomas Jackson but the New York Tribune article also stimulated the competing Reading Eagle to provide its own editorial which also come out on April 6th 1871 but blasted off against Thomas Jackson in the most sarcastic and personal terms.

The three articles together say a lot about the controversial news of the day,  the polarized stances of competitive newspapers and the vehemence of expression common at the time.
For example:
“It is a shortsighted policy which would thus grant new powers to men who are rebels at heart, devils by nature, and murderers by practice.”