Frederick Douglass -- Lincoln's Respect
In February 1864 before Douglass would pen his request [that
his son Charles be discharged from the army], he delivered an address at Cooper
Union in Philadelphia that stated his view of the mission of a war, which had
“filled our land with mere stumps of men, ridged our soil with 200,000
rudely-formed graves, and mantled it all over with the shadow of death.” Growing support of the Democratic Party’s
desire to reach a compromise with the Confederacy to end the war had caused
Douglass to reaffirm his position.
I end where I began.
No war but an Abolition war; no peace but an Abolition peace; liberty for all,
chains for none; the black man a soldier in war, a laborer in peace, a voter at
the South as well as at the North, America his permanent home, and all
Americans his fellow countrymen. Such,
fellow-citizens, is my idea for the mission of this war (McFeely 231).
Many Republicans during the early months of 1864 favored
nominating a different man as their Presidential candidate for the upcoming
election. Former senator Salmon P. Chase
and former candidate John C. Fremont were two possibilities. Douglass liked the President personally, but
another man less concerned about the prejudiced sentiment of the populace might
accomplish more. He would not oppose Lincoln ’s
abandonment. In June, however, the Party
did nominate Lincoln ;
now the nation would choose between the cautious, well-intentioned incumbent
and former General George B. McClellan, whom abolitionists feared would
negotiate away Negro emancipation.
During the fall months the war continued to go badly for the
President. General Grant’s campaign
towards Richmond was halted at Petersburg ,
and General Sherman’s invasion of Georgia had apparently been nothing
more than a campaign of skirmish and maneuver.
Now the President himself seemed certain that he would be defeated in
the November election. On August 19 he
met for the second time with Douglass, to discuss and formulate a desperate
plan.
The President wanted to make a strong effort to persuade
slaves within the Confederacy to escape to freedom. Such a mass exodus might help win the war
before McClellan’s inauguration in 1865. The war had to end before McClellan had Presidential power. Otherwise, Lincoln was certain that McClellan, to end
the war, would give the South back its slaves.
Lincoln
wanted Douglass to devise a plan and be the “general agent” to carry it out.
Douglass proposed in a letter dated August 29 that local
agents be recruited at points along the front “most accessible to large bodies
of slaves.” They should be people who
knew the territory. Whether they would
go behind the rebel lines themselves to encourage slaves to run away or advise
such action from a place of safety, Douglass did not mention.
Douglass’s suggestions were never acted upon. In early September General Sherman ’s
forces captured Atlanta ,
and the nation’s resulting jubilation seemed to foretell that Abraham Lincoln
would serve a second term.
After Lincoln ’s
re-election Douglass resumed his lecture schedule, but he managed to be in Washington for the
second inaugural. In fact he was in the
crowd waiting for the opening of the ceremonies when he saw Lincoln touch the Vice-President at his side,
say something and direct the other’s eyes toward Douglass. It would have been cause for a moment of
pride had not Andrew Johnson frowned.
Douglass turned to the colored woman who stood beside him and whispered,
“Whatever Andrew Johnson may be, he certainly is no friend of our race” (Bontemps
244-245).
Douglass decided that he would attend Lincoln ’s reception at the White House later
that day and persuaded the woman standing next to him, Mrs. Thomas J. Dorsey,
to accompany him. No black man had ever before presented himself at such a
function. Douglass felt he had every
right to, considering what the war had been fought for, what black soldiers had
died for, and what he had done personally in behalf of the nation and his race. His appearance would be a test of the
sincerity of the administration not only to bring about emancipation of all
slaves but equality of citizenship.
Together they joined
the procession moving toward the entrance.
At the door two outraged policemen pounced upon Douglass. His arms clamped firmly in their hands, he
heard them explain, with obvious insincerity, that they had been ordered to
admit no Negroes.
… Douglass calmly told
the guards he did not believe they had any such orders. Mr. Lincoln would certainly not approve, he
ventured. When the policemen attempted
to rush him and Mrs. Dorsey into the exit, he decided to be as willful as they
were. He was there to congratulate the
President, not to be tricked and insulted.
Seeing a familiar face in the line, he asked the individual going in if
he would kindly inform Mr. Lincoln that Frederick Douglass was at the
door-detained.
The response came
quickly, and Douglass and Mrs. Dorsey were ushered into the East Room. Towering over the crowd, Lincoln saw and greeted the highly visible
Douglass from a distance. “Here comes my
friend Douglass. I am glad to see
you. I saw you in the crowd today,
listening to my inaugural address. How
did you like it?”
Douglass hedged. He was reluctant to hold up the line. “There are thousands waiting,” he said.
“No. No. You
must stop a little,” Lincoln
insisted. “I want to know what you think
of it.”
Douglass’s voice
trembled. “Mr. Lincoln, that was a
sacred effort.”
“I’m glad you liked
it,” Lincoln
murmured.
By then Douglass and
Mrs. Dorsey were moving along again, but the brief incident had not escaped
notice. The nest day it was widely
discussed. Frederick Douglass at the
Presidential reception. … Lincoln chatting with him
while others waited. But to Douglass it
was simply confirmation of the opinion he had already formed of the
Emancipator’s attitude (Bontemps 245-246).
One month later the President was dead, assassinated by the
half-mad actor, John Wilkes Booth.
Douglass was in Rochester when news of Lincoln ’s death reached
him. He spoke at what may have been the
first memorial service for Lincoln
in any American city. Douglass’s grief
was genuine. One observer, seeing him
walk along Main Street ,
observed, “He had no word of greeting, only a hand pressure for his nearest
friends.” When Mrs. Lincoln sent
Douglass the President’s walking stick, with a note explaining that Lincoln had spoken to her
about sending Douglass some token of his respect, Douglass was doubly grieved
(Bontemps 246-247).
It seemed no one who had championed the cause of the black
man could fill the void left by the Emancipator’s death. Certainly not the new President, Andrew
Johnson. But then Douglass’s despair was
diverted by events that brought a swift end of the war. General Lee surrendered his army to Ulysses
S. Grant at Appomattox , Virginia .
Remnants of Confederate forces elsewhere gave up their arms.
Douglass quickly perceived that the immediate future of his
race would be determined by how the seceded Southern states were readmitted
into the Union . Radical Congressmen demanded that stern
penalties be levied against those who had served the Confederacy. One condition for readmitting the states
would be the enfranchisement of the Negro.
President Johnson, however, favored lenient terms of readmission, and,
Douglass suspected, continued domination of former slaves. Because it would protect his people and
permit them to vote, Douglass was determined that Radical Republican
Congressional reconstruction be enacted.
The war between the states had ended. The struggle to establish equality had not.
Works cited:
Bontempts, Arna, Free
at Last, the Life of Frederick Douglass, New York, Dodd, Mead &
Company, 1971. Print
McFeely, William S. Frederick Douglass. New
York , W. W. Norton & Company, 1991. Print.
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