Democracy Reborn: The Fourteenth Amendment and the Fight for Equal Rights in Post-Civil War America

Democracy Reborn: The Fourteenth Amendment and the Fight for Equal Rights in Post-Civil War America

by Garrett Epps
Democracy Reborn: The Fourteenth Amendment and the Fight for Equal Rights in Post-Civil War America

Democracy Reborn: The Fourteenth Amendment and the Fight for Equal Rights in Post-Civil War America

by Garrett Epps

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Overview

"Engaging . . . With a novelist's eye for biographical detail, Epps has written an . . . enthralling book."—David W. Blight, Chicago Tribune

The last battle of the Civil War wasn't fought at Appomattox by dashing generals or young soldiers but by middle-aged men in frock coats. Yet it was war all the same—a desperate struggle for the soul and future of the new American Republic that was rising from the ashes of Civil War. It was the battle that planted the seeds of democracy, under the bland heading "Amendment XIV." Scholars call it the "Second Constitution." Over time, the Fourteenth Amendment—which at last provided African Americans with full citizenship and prohibited any state from denying any citizen due process and equal protection under the law—changed almost every detail of our public life.

Democracy Reborn tells the story of this desperate struggle, from the halls of Congress to the bloody streets of Memphis and New Orleans. Both a novelist and a constitutional scholar, Garrett Epps unfolds a powerful story against a panoramic portrait of America on the verge of a new era.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780805086638
Publisher: Holt, Henry & Company, Inc.
Publication date: 09/04/2007
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 352
Sales rank: 638,625
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Garrett Epps is the author of The Shad Treatment and The Floating Island: A Tale of Washington. He is Orlando John and Marian H. Hollis Professor at the University of Oregon School of Law where he teaches constitutional law and a special course in creative writing for law students. Epps writes fiction and poetry as well as nonfiction, and has translated or adapted literature into English from both Spanish and Italian. He has two children, Daniel and Maggie.

Read an Excerpt

Democracy Reborn

The Fourteenth Amendment and the Fight for Equal Rights in Post-Civil War America
By Epps, Garrett

Henry Holt and Co.

Copyright © 2006 Epps, Garrett
All right reserved.

ISBN: 080507130X


Prologue

Philadelphia 1787: Red Sky at Morning

From his vantage point in Paris, Thomas Jefferson had hailed the makeup of the Constitutional Convention of 1787 in characteristic hyperbole. "It really is an assembly of demi-gods," he wrote to John Adams.

Perhaps. But by August 1787, the demigods were feeling tired and distinctly mortal. Since May 25, they had spent day after day in the small assembly room of the Pennsylvania statehouse, dressed in wool and broadcloth finery amid the humid swelter of Philadelphia--the new nation's cosmopolis, to be sure, but still in summer something of a fever port. To make the room even hotter, they had barred the windows, lest the revolutionary plan they were hatching--to scrap the entire American political system and replace it with a powerful national government--leak out before their work was completed. Day after day, they had marched through agonizing problems. Would the new government have no executive, multiple executives, or only one? That dilemma was solved by creating a powerful presidency custom-tailored for the convention's presiding officer, George Washington. Would there be a new system offederal courts? That one they finessed, by creating a Supreme Court and leaving the question of lower courts to the discretion of future Congresses. How would the new Congress be selected? The large and small states had compromised on this, creating a House apportioned by population and a Senate in which each state would be equal. Who could veto laws passed by Congress? They lodged this power solely in the president, just as the British reposed it in their king. What powers would Congress have? Nationalist delegates like James Madison wanted the Constitution to state that Congress would have the power to "legislate in all cases to which the separate States are incompetent, or in which the harmony of the United States may be interrupted by the exercise of individual Legislation [and] to negate all laws passed by the several States." But delegates jealous of the powers of the states had forced a retreat, giving Congress a set of enumerated powers that were designed to keep it out of local matters.

What we know about what went on in that small hot room is mostly revealed in handwritten notes taken by Madison, the strongest advocate of a powerful new national government. Many delegates took lengthy leaves of absence during the summer, drawn away by their own business affairs or the deliberations of the Continental Congress, meeting in New York. Not Madison. Day after day this earnest, brilliant little man was in his seat, scribbling in his odd abbreviated style what each delegate had to say about each part of the proposed new government. Night after night, while other delegates relaxed amid the pleasures of a city known for fine wine, sophisticated conversation, and beautiful women, Madison stayed at his desk, revising his notes and reviewing the historical record of federal republics, beginning with the Amphictionic League of ancient Greece and moving forward to the contemporaneous Dutch Republic. Madison's gifts to the new country include the plan of both the Constitution and the Bill of Rights; but even set against those triumphs, his handwritten notes represent an important legacy to the future.

Those notes spark many feelings in Americans today. There is exhilaration and pride, to be sure. These fifty-five men, who came from states with radically different interests and wildly divergent social systems, were patient, practical, and often eloquent. They were willing to listen to those who differed with them and to change their most profound ideas if the arguments on the other side seemed good--or the disagreement so profound that it might threaten the convention with failure.

The debates, however, also spark dismay and even shame. The demigods did not see how inequality of wealth and status, of sex and race, would poison the new republic they were building. A reader feels compassion, too, for men who were racing against chaos in the new country to build a structure for a future they could only dimly foresee. And finally, from time to time, there is puzzlement. Because amid the true debate--the cut and thrust of brilliant minds with differing views--there were repeated moments of reticence, when important questions about the future were floated by one speaker or another, only to fall dead without any response in the still dusty air of the hall. Such a moment came on September 12, after the convention had, with great labor, produced an all-but-final draft of the document to be adopted. Without warning, George Mason of Virginia (who would eventually refuse to sign the Constitution because he viewed it as a blueprint for "monarchy, or a tyrannical aristocracy") popped up to suggest that the convention should now produce a Bill of Rights. "It would give great quiet to the people," Madison records Mason saying, "and with the aid of the State declarations, a bill might be prepared in a few hours."

Like marathon runners hearing that the finish line might be moved a couple of miles farther back, the convention received this idea in sullen silence. Not a single state delegation voted to proceed with drafting a Bill of Rights. It was a mistake; the lack of a Bill of Rights outraged many Americans, and came close to dooming the new Constitution to rejection.

But of all the lost voices of Philadelphia 1787, the one that should most haunt modern ears is that of Gouverneur Morris of New York, who rose on August 8 to say what many of the delegates knew in their heart, but deeply wished not to acknowledge or discuss.

Crowded as the delegates were in the small meeting room in the East Wing, there was something huge in it with them--an ill omen that no one truly wanted to acknowledge. As Philadelphia spring turned to summer, most of those present had come to realize that the infant republic carried within it the seeds of its own destruction, flaws that might strangle the child in the cradle, or destroy it years or even decades later.

When the delegates gathered, they had expected friction between the large powerful states like Virginia and New York on the one hand and the small states like New Jersey and Georgia on the other. That divide surfaced quickly and shaped the schemes for electing Congress and the president. But another less expected division appeared in Philadelphia--one that never went away again. On June 30, Madison noted that "the States were divided into different interests not by their difference of size, but by other circumstances; the most material of which resulted partly from climate, but principally from their having or not having slaves. These two causes concurred in forming the great division of interests in the U[nited] States. It did not lie between the large & small States; it lay between the Northern and the Southern. . . ."

The divide was not as simple as we might imagine today. There was no gulf between "slave states" and "free states" because in 1787 there was only one free state--Massachusetts, where a court decision had effectively throttled the institution in 1783. (Vermont, which had abolished slavery in 1777, was still an independent republic and would not join the Union until 1791.) There were slaves in all the other states--twenty thousand of them in New York alone. But there was a difference between North and South--the difference of climate Madison referred to. Slavery in the North was an embarrassment; worse than that, it was unprofitable. But in the plantations of the South, soil and rainfall favored the cultivation of cash crops for sale abroad--tobacco, rice, indigo and, more recently, cotton. Those crops could only be grown profitably with slave labor, and the planters who ruled the Southern states found that embarrassment lessened as profits increased. They were wed to slavery and zealous to protect it from any new government created in Philadelphia. The men sent by the South--led by Charles Pinckney and his cousin, General Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, both of South Carolina--wanted a federal government that would have no power over slavery. More than that, the new government must be pledged to protect slavery as well. "S[outh] Carolina & Georgia cannot do without slaves," General Pinckney explained to the convention. Over and over during the weary months of constitution-making, the Southerners made their position clear: if they did not get protection and support for slave property, the South would not join the new Republic and the convention's program would fail.

The prospect of disunion was terrifying to all the delegates, Northern and Southern. Gouverneur Morris on July 5 had set out starkly what he saw as the stakes; they were not just national survival but perhaps the very lives of those present and their families. Disunion meant civil war and blood running in the streets. "This country must be united. If persuasion does not unite it, the sword will," he warned. "The scenes of horror attending civil commotion cannot be described, and the conclusion of them will be worse than the term of their continuance. The stronger party will then make traitors of the weaker; and the Gallows & Halter will finish the work of the sword."

But Southerners vowed they would risk disunion rather than give up the protections they sought. Northerners believed them; and so, link by link, they forged the multiple chains that would tie slavery to the federal government. Congress could control interstate and foreign commerce, but it would not be allowed to bar the import of slaves until 1808. Northern states were required to return runaway slaves to their Southern masters, even if slavery became illegal in the North. If the Southern states faced a slave revolt, the federal government was required to furnish troops to crush it. Congress could tax imports (which the people of the North depended on) but not exports--the cash crops that fueled the slave economy.

Many of the Northern delegates were embarrassed by the bargain they felt forced to strike. But the discomfort did not break out into the open until the convention tackled the issue of apportionment. The new House of Representatives would be chosen "by the People of the several states." But power in the House was to be distributed according to population. Here the power of the slave states became more than embarrassing; it began to seem onerous. Led by the Pinckneys, Southern delegates at first insisted that every slave be counted in the state's population for apportionment; these human chattels, who could not vote or marry or enter into contracts or testify in court, were nonetheless entitled to representation in Congress--representation that their white masters would supply, gaining power in the federal government as a reward for their maintenance of a slave system. With a great show of magnanimity, the South at last consented to abandon the idea of full representation for its slaves. Instead, it would "compromise" at something called "the federal ratio," which had once been proposed by the Continental Congress for the apportionment of taxes. For each slave, the state would receive credit for three-fifths of a free citizen. As a result, one white voter in the South might have the same power as two or even three in the North.

Nor was that the end of it. Madison had proposed that the people elect the president; but the Southern interests feared being outvoted in those elections, too, and they supported another "compromise"--the president would be chosen by "electors," and each state would have the same number of electors as it had members of Congress. Thus the slaves who boosted Southern power in the House would also give it a heightened voice in the choice of the president as well.

On August 8, the "three-fifths compromise" finally pushed Gouverneur Morris over the edge of parliamentary politeness. Morris had warned the convention of the consequences of disunion, an apocalyptic vision of civil war and summary execution. Now he looked at the alternative--union on Southern terms--and he did not like that much better.

In 1787, Morris was a veteran revolutionary, though still only thirty-five. Born in New York, he had been selected as a delegate to the convention from Pennsylvania, where he had moved only ten years earlier. His figure was unforgettable. Well over six feet tall (his political enemies called him "the Tall Boy"), he was the only delegate who could match the convention's president, George Washington, in physical stature. His appearance was unforgettable, not only because of the good looks that attracted women to him throughout his life, but because a carriage accident had led to the amputation of his left leg seven years earlier. He would hoist himself aloft on a wooden leg and teeter above his colleagues as he spoke. Morris rose often--only Madison and James Wilson of Pennsylvania spoke more often than he did during the deliberations. And when he spoke, the members took notice--though not a few, no doubt, did so with as much disquiet as fascination. Because Morris not only spoke often, he spoke well, and, unlike many more practical politicians, he said what was on his mind.

One recent biographer, Richard Brookhiser, has called Morris "the rake who wrote the Constitution." Rake he was, both as a young man and in the years after Philadelphia, when he scandalized Paris with his affair with Adèle de Flahaut, a married woman who was also the mistress of the Revolutionary diplomat Talleyrand. As for the Constitution, he might better be called its "editor"--true authorship, if it lies anywhere, goes to Madison--but Morris's agile pen smoothed out the final version before adoption, adding, among other things, the felicitous words "We the People of the United States." Morris's constitutional effectiveness stemmed from his politics, which are even more worthy of note than his amours: he was that rarest and most useful of figures, a conservative who genuinely embraced radical change.

During the years before Independence, Morris had repeatedly sought to slow the momentum toward revolution. But once the colonies were in the fight, he single-mindedly pursued victory. He was not a soldier (he was once nominated for a commission in the New York militia, but was repulsed at the idea that his unit would be commanded by a mechanic, far below him in social status). He was, instead, a decisive, even ruthless, man of affairs. Beginning in 1778, he began to work with the Revolution's financier, Robert Morris (no relation), to bring stability to the colonial economy and to raise much-needed funds to pay soldiers and purchase matériel. As a member of the Continental Congress, he spent the terrible winter of 1778 at camp with Washington at Valley Forge. Though his first response was characteristically worldly ("there are no fine Women here," he mournfully wrote a friend), the ordeal of the Continental army convinced him that an army moves on its nation's pocketbook as much as on its stomach; the very survival of the Revolutionary cause depended on convincing the members of the Congress, and the skittish state governments they represented, to tax themselves in order to pay and supply the troops in the field. Morris was one of the first strong advocates of a national currency; he suggested that it take its name from the popular Spanish dollar. In early 1783, when the Continental army threatened Congress with revolt if the troops were not paid, Morris was in the background, endorsing, if not helping plan, the confrontation. He viewed it as the only way to convince the nation to "give to the Government that power without which Government is but a Name."

August 8 displayed Morris's conservative radicalism at its finest. On that day, he moved to rescind the three-fifths compromise and to base representation in Congress only on the number of "free inhabitants" in a state.

Madison meticulously noted Morris's explanation, which cut to the heart of the dilemma confronting the delegates. Morris "never would concur in upholding domestic slavery. It was a nefarious institution. It was the curse of heaven on the States where it prevailed." States that relied on slavery, he said, were poor, unhappy, barren, ignorant, and uneducated, a picture that must have nettled the Pinckneys (and perhaps the slave-owning Madison himself). "Upon what principle is it that the slaves shall be computed in the representation?" Morris asked. That proposal "comes to this: that an inhabitant of Georgia and [South Carolina] who goes to the Coast of Africa, and in defiance of the most sacred laws of humanity tears away his fellow creatures from their dearest connections & damns them to the most cruel bondages, shall have more votes in a Gov[ernment] instituted for protection of the rights of mankind, than the Citizen of P[ennsylvania] or N[ew] Jersey who views with a laudable horror, so nefarious a practice."

This was a fool's bargain, Morris warned. "What is the proposed compensation to the Northern States for a sacrifice of every principle of right, of every impulse of humanity[?] They are to bind themselves to march their militia for the defence of the S[outhern] States; for their defence ag[ainst] those very slaves of whom they complain." Then he said plainly what many delegates must have been thinking: not only did slavery risk calling down God's judgment on those who maintained it, but the institution had now warped the new Constitution almost beyond redemption. "He would sooner submit himself to a tax for paying for all the negroes in the U[nited] States, than saddle posterity with such a Constitution."

Even more than two centuries later, Morris's words are compelling; but after he spoke them, an eerie calm returned. In future years, words such as Morris's would earn Northern leaders challenges to a duel, or blows of the bastinado; but on this occasion the Southern delegates found them unworthy of any but the most dismissive reply. "Mr. [Charles] Pinckney [of South Carolina] considered the fisheries & the Western frontier more burdensome to the U.S. than the slaves," Madison noted. "He thought this could be demonstrated if the occasion were a proper one." Then Morris's motion was put to a vote; it failed ten states to one, and was lost forever.

The problem of slavery and its political power was rarely mentioned again; and on September 10, when Morris sat down at the head of the "committee on stile" to put the Constitution into final form, he did not object to any of the provisions he had excoriated the month before. Between disunion and "the curse of heaven," he, like most other delegates, opted for the curse.

When the delegates finally signed the Constitution on September 17, the aged Benjamin Franklin rose to rejoice in the convention's success. On the back of the president's ceremonial chair in the hall, he pointed out, craftsmen had painted a sun half-hidden by the horizon. "Painters," Franklin said, "had found it difficult to distinguish in their art a rising from a setting sun." But with the adoption of the new draft Constitution, "I have the happiness to know that it is a rising and not a setting Sun."

The old man was right. The Constitution, after much suspense, was ratified, and the United States took its place on the world stage as a full-grown republic, capable of growth, change, and self-defense. But we now know that Franklin's rising sun was ascending into any sailor's nightmare, an angry red morning sky. What historian Leonard Richards called "Morris's Prophecy" proved prescient indeed. The "curse of heaven" troubled the new union from its inception, and the storms came more often and more violently as its history progressed. To most Americans, the Framers of the Constitution are more than demigods. They are "the Founding Fathers." They predicted America's rise to world dominance and political stability; they found the "brilliant solution" that led to "the miracle at Philadelphia"; like Einstein or Prometheus, they "split the atom of sovereignty": like God in the six days of Creation, they brought a new world into being.

But demigods are not gods, and the Constitution of 1787 was neither divine nor eternal. The compromises the Framers made brought the government into being; but they doomed it as well. The political power the Framers gave to the slave states grew and grew in importance as the eighteenth century turned into the nineteenth. By early in the federal period, many Northerners began to complain that the slave South would, under the new rules, always outvote the free North. Within a few years, they had coined a term to describe the problem. The nation, they said at first hesitantly and then more insistently with each passing year, was not ruled by "we the people." It was ruled by something they called "the slave interest," or "the slavocracy," or, most commonly, "the Slave Power." With its constitutional privileges, the Slave Power ruled Washington, and whether the issue was taxation, war, or westward expansion, this protected interest was able to shape national policy to its will. Because the federal government had limited powers, the slave states were able to impose strict control on their own populations. No voices challenging slavery were permitted, and whoever lost Southern elections, slavery always won. Because the structure of the federal government was built around the three-fifths compromise, the South had congressional and electoral votes to bargain for Northern support. By the 1830s, many Northern voices had begun to suggest that Morris had been right all along--the Union with slavery at its heart was more dangerous to free Northern society than no Union at all.

Then, after years of threats, crises, and cobbled-together compromises, the nation was obliged to fight yet another, far bloodier, revolutionary war. The Constitution of 1787 died at Fort Sumter. And when the guns fell silent in 1865, the Union was still in grave danger.

Those who gathered in Washington after Appomattox knew that victory depended on taming the Slave Power, on making sure it did not survive the death of slavery itself. A few small adjustments would not save the nation. What was needed was a renovation of the Framers' house. That renovation appears today toward the end of the Constitution under the bland heading "Amendment XIV." At more than four hundred words, the Fourteenth Amendment is the longest amendment ever ratified, and it has, over time, changed almost every detail of our national life. Scholars have called it "the second Constitution." This second Constitution was not perfect, to be sure; like the first, it was marred by compromise and expediency, as the first had been. But it did produce--in words Gouverneur Morris wrote into the final text of the Constitution--"a more perfect union" than the old one.

Even though Americans still revere the demigods of 1787, few of us know the names or the stories of the sages of 1865. The leaders whose work is detailed in this book, though, belong in our historical memory alongside Madison, Franklin, and Morris. It is they, not the Philadelphia Framers, who planted democracy's seeds in the Constitution.

Who are the most important of this group? President Andrew Johnson, to begin with, more or less forced constitutional change on the country through his obstinate refusal to acknowledge that the Civil War had changed anything. Johnson's adamant opposition to reform energized his enemies in Congress, who came together to frame the Fourteenth Amendment. Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts, and Representative Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania, spoke for the new constitutional vision that came directly out of American antislavery and abolitionism, and their experience with the Slave Power shaped the amendment's final text, directly and indirectly. Senator William Pitt Fessenden of Maine, a less intense, more intellectual antislavery voice, spoke in the cool, rational tones of Framers like Madison and Morris. Senator Lyman Trumbull of Illinois had already learned how to create constitutional change, as the principal author of the Thirteenth Amendment outlawing slavery. Representative John Armour Bingham of Ohio drew his inspiration from a stubborn, dissenting Presbyterianism; he insisted that America's destiny was to create a republic of equal citizens modeled directly on the kingdom of God.

Not all the important players held political office. The black abolitionist Frederick Douglass was active outside Congress, opposing some of the compromises that white members of Congress thought expedient. The German-American soldier, diplomat, and politician Carl Schurz insisted that the new American republic must include immigrants and their children on equal terms with other Americans. The utopian crusader Robert Dale Owen, American voice of socialism, birth control, divorce, and spiritualism, was a profound ideological force and produced a draft that led directly to the amendment's final text. The feminist leaders Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, who could not vote or serve in Congress, nonetheless shaped the debate about the new meaning of freedom.

These "Re-Framers" were not demigods. Most were practical, sometimes rather prosy men in frock coats who bear an uncomfortable resemblance to politicians in the early twenty-first century. By turns prescient, bold, altruistic, blind, timorous, and self-seeking, they nonetheless saved the nation as surely as did the men of 1787. We live in the house they redesigned.

Copyright© 2006 by Garrett Epps

Continues...

Excerpted from Democracy Reborn by Epps, Garrett Copyright © 2006 by Epps, Garrett. Excerpted by permission.
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Table of Contents


Prologue: Philadelphia 1787: Red Sky at Morning     1
The Brave Tailor     13
Dark Wisdom     39
Turns in the South     65
The Mighty Heart of the World     89
This Good Right Hand     121
Birth of a Nation     142
The Jeweled Word     164
The Ugliest American     184
The Prospect of a Good Long Life     205
Not Among Angels     222
A Union of Truly Democratic States     240
Afterword: The Second Constitution     262
United States Constitution, Amendment XIV     271
Notes     273
Bibliography     297
Acknowledgments     317
Index     321
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