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of the Fourth of July
MAKING SENSE OF THE FOURTH OF JULY
By Pauline
Maier
Pauline Maier is William Rand Kenan, Jr.,
Professor of American History at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. This article is adapted
from her book AMERICAN SCRIPTURE: MAKING THE
DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE, published by Knopf
on July 4,1997.
This article has been cleared for republication
in English and in translation by USIS and the
press outside the United States; it may also
be carried over the Internet. Credit to the
author and the following note must appear on
the title page of any reprint.
Copyright ; 1997 American Heritage, Inc. All rights reserved.
"
Reprinted from AMERICAN HERITAGE, August 7, 1997.) John Adams thought Americans
would commemorate their Independence Day on the second of July. Future generations,
he confidently predicted, would remember July 2, 1776, as "the most memorable
Epocha, in the History of America" and celebrate it as their "Day
of Deliverance by solemn Acts of Devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be
solemnized with Pomp and Parade, with Shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells,
Bonfires and
Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other from this Time
forward forever more."
His proposal, however odd it seems today,
was perfectly reasonable when he made it
in a letter to his wife, Abigail. On the
previous day, July 2, 1776,
the Second Continental Congress had finally resolved "That these United
Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States, that they
are absolved from all allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political
connection between them and the State of Great Britain is, and ought to be,
totally dissolved." The thought that Americans might instead commemorate
July 4, the day Congress adopted a "declaration on Independency" that
he had helped prepare, did not apparently occur to Adams in 1776. The Declaration
of Independence was one of those congressional statements that he later described
as "dress and ornament rather than Body, Soul, or Substance," a
way of announcing to the world the fact of American independence, which was
for
Adams the thing worth celebrating.
In fact, holding our great national festival
on the Fourth makes no sense at all-unless
we are actually celebrating not just independence
but the
Declaration of Independence. And the declaration we celebrate, what Abraham
Lincoln called "the
charter of our liberties," is a document whose meaning and function
today are different from what they were in 1776. In short, during the nineteenth
century the Declaration of Independence became not just a way of announcing
and justifying the end of Britain's power over the Thirteen Colonies and
the
emergence of the United States as an independent nation but a statement of
principles to guide stable, established governments. Indeed, it came to usurp
in fact if not in law a role that Americans normally delegated to bills of
rights. How did that happen? And why?
According to notes kept by Thomas Jefferson,
the Second Continental Congress did not
discuss the resolution on independence
when it was first proposed
by Virginia's Richard Henry Lee, on Friday, June 7, 1776, because it
was "obliged
to attend at that time to some other business." However, on the eighth,
Congress resolved itself into a Committee of the Whole and "passed that
day & Monday the 10th in debating on the subject." By then all
contenders admitted that it had become impossible for the colonies ever again
to be united with Britain. The issue was one of timing.
John and Samuel Adams, along with others
such as Virginia's George Wythe, wanted
Congress to declare independence right
away and start
negotiating
foreign alliances
and forming a more lasting confederation (which Lee also proposed).
Others, including Pennsylvania's James Wilson, Edward Rutledge of
South Carolina,
and Robert R. Livingston of New York, argued for delay. They noted
that the delegates
of several colonies, including Maryland, Pennsylvania, Delaware,
New Jersey, and New York, had not been "impowered" by their home governments
to vote for independence. If a vote was taken immediately, those delegates
would have to "retire" from Congress, and their states might secede
from the union, which would seriously weaken the Americans' chance of realizing
their independence. In the past, they said, members of Congress had followed
the "wise & proper" policy of putting off major decisions "till
the voice of the people drove us into it," since "they were our power, & without
them our declarations could not be carried into effect." Moreover, opinion
on independence in the critical middle colonies was "fast ripening &
in a short time," they predicted, the people there would "join
in the general voice of America."
Congress decided to give the laggard colonies time and so delayed
its decision for three weeks. But it also appointed a Committee of
Five
to draft a declaration
of independence so that such a document could be issued quickly once
Lee's motion passed. The committee's members included Jefferson,
Livingston, John Adams, Roger Sherman of Connecticut, and Pennsylvania's
Benjamin
Franklin.
The drafting committee met, decided what the declaration should say
and how
it would be organized, then asked Jefferson to prepare a draft.
Meanwhile, Adams -- who did more to win Congress's
consent to independence than any other
delegate -- worked feverishly to bring
popular pressure
on the governments of recalcitrant colonies so they would change
the instructions issued to their congressional delegates. By June
28, when
the Committee
of
Five submitted to Congress a draft declaration, only Maryland and
New York had failed to allow their delegates to vote for independence.
That night
Maryland fell into line.
Even so, when the Committee of the Whole
again took up Lee's resolution, on July
1, only nine colonies voted in favor (the
four New England
states, New
Jersey, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, and Georgia). South
Carolina and Pennsylvania opposed the proposition, Delaware's
two delegates
split, and New
York's abstained because their twelvemonth-old instructions precluded
them from approving anything that impeded reconciliation with
the mother country.
Edward Rutledge now asked that Congress put off its decision
until the next day, since he thought that
the South Carolina delegation
would then
vote
in favor "for the sake of unanimity." When Congress took its final tally
on July 2, the nine affirmative votes of the day before had grown to twelve:
Not only South Carolina voted in favor, but so did Delaware-the arrival of
Caesar Rodney broke the tie in that delegation's vote-and Pennsylvania. Only
New York held out. Then on July 9 it, too, allowed its delegates to add their
approval to that of delegates from the other twelve colonies, lamenting still
the "cruel necessity" that made independence "unavoidable."
Once independence had been adopted, Congress again formed itself
into a Committee of the Whole. It then spent the better part
of two days
editing the draft
declaration submitted by its Committee of Five, rewriting or
chopping off
large sections
of text. Finally, on July 4, Congress approved the revised Declaration
and ordered it to be printed and sent to the several states and
to the commanding
officers of the Continental Army. By formally announcing and
justifying the end of British rule, that document, as letters
from Congress's
president, John Hancock, explained, laid "the Ground & Foundation" of American
self-government. As a result, it had to be proclaimed not only before American
troops in the hope that it would inspire them to fight more ardently for what
was now the cause of both liberty and national independence but throughout
the country, and "in such a Manner, that the People may be universally
informed of it."
Not until four days later did a committee
of Congress-not Congress itself-get around
to sending a copy of the Declaration to
its
emissary in Paris,
Silas Deane, with orders to present it to the court of France
and send copies
to "the
other Courts of Europe." Unfortunately the original letter was lost, and
the next failed to reach Deane until November, when news of American independence
had circulated for months. To make matters worse, it arrived with only a brief
note from the committee and in an envelope that lacked a seal, an unfortunately
slipshod way, complained Deane, to announce the arrival of the United States
among the powers of the earth to "old and powerfull states." Despite
the Declaration's reference to the "opinions of mankind," it was
obviously meant first and foremost for a home audience.
As copies of the Declaration spread through
the states and were publicly read at town
meetings, religious services, court
days,
or wherever
else people assembled,
Americans marked the occasion with appropriate rituals. They
lit great bonfires, "illuminated" their
windows with candles, fired guns, rang bells, tore down and destroyed the symbols
of monarchy on public buildings, churches, or tavern signs, and "fixed
up" on the walls of their homes broadside or newspaper copies of the
Declaration of Independence.
But what exactly were they celebrating? The
news, not the vehicle that brought it;
independence and the assumption
of self-government,
not
the document
that announced Congress's decision to break with Britain.
Considering how revered
a position the Declaration of Independence later won in
the minds and hearts of the people, Americans'
disregard for
it in the
first years
of the new
nation verges on the unbelievable. One colonial newspaper
dismissed the Declaration's extensive charges against the
king as just
another "recapitulation of
injuries," one, it seems, in a series, and not particularly remarkable
compared with earlier "catalogues of grievances." Citations of the
Declaration were usually drawn from its final paragraph, which said that the
united colonies "are and of Right ought to be Free and Independent states" and
were "Absolved of all Allegiance to the British Crown" -words from
the Lee resolution that Congress had inserted into the committee draft. Independence
was new; the rest of the Declaration seemed all too familiar to Americans,
a restatement of what they and their representatives had already said time
and again.
The adoption of independence was, however,
from the beginning confused with its declaration.
Differences in the meaning
of the word declare
contribute¢1⁄2?the
confusion. Before the Declaration of Independence was issued -- while, in fact,
Congress was still editing Jefferson's draft -- Pennsylvania newspapers announced
that on July 2 the Continental Congress had "declared the United Colonies
Free and Independent States," by which it meant simply that it had officially
accepted that status. Newspapers in other colonies repeated the story. In later
years the "Anniversary of the United States of America" came to be
celebrated on the date Congress had approved the Declaration of Independence.
That began, it seems, by accident. In 1777 no member of Congress thought of
marking the anniversary of independence at all until July 3, when it was too
late to honor July 2. As a result, the celebration took place on the Fourth,
and that became the tradition. At least one delegate spoke of "celebrating
the Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence," but over the next
few years references to the anniversary of independence and of the Declaration
seem to have been virtually interchangeable.
Accounts of the events at Philadelphia on
July 4, 1777, say quite a bit about the
music played by a band of Hessian
soldiers
who
had been
captured
at the
Battle of Trenton the previous December, and the "splended illumination" of
houses, but little about the Declaration. Thereafter, in the late 1770s and
1780s, the Fourth of July was not regularly celebrated; indeed, the holiday
seems to have declined in popularity once the Revolutionary War ended. When
it was remembered, however, festivities seldom, if ever-to judge by newspaper
accounts-involved a public reading of the Declaration of Independence. It
was as if that document had done its work in carrying news of independence
to the
people, and it neither needed nor deserved further commemoration. No mention
was made of Thomas Jefferson's role in composing the document, since that
was not yet public knowledge, and no suggestion appeared that the Declaration
itself
was, as posterity would have it, unusually eloquent or powerful.
In fact, one of the very few public comments
on the document's literary qualities came
in a Virginia newspaper's
account
of a 1777 speech
by John Wilkes, an
English radical and a long-time supporter of the
Americans, in the House of Commons. Wilkes
set out to answer a
fellow member
of Parliament
who
had attacked
the Declaration of Independence as "a wretched composition, very ill written,
drawn up with a view to captivate the people." Curiously, Wilkes seemed
to agree with that description. The purpose of the document, he said, was indeed
to captivate the American people, who were not much impressed by "the
polished periods, the harmonious, happy expressions, with all the grace, ease,
and elegance of a beautiful diction" that Englishmen valued. What they
liked was "manly, nervous sense . . . even in the most awkward and uncouth
dress of language."
All that began to change in the 1790s, when,
in the midst of bitter partisan conflict,
the modern understanding
and reputation
of the
Declaration of Independence first emerged. Until
that time celebrations of the
Fourth
were controlled
by nationalists who found a home in the Federalist
party,
and their earlier inattention
to the Declaration hardened into a rigid hostility
after 1790. The document's anti-British character
was an embarrassment
to Federalists who sought
economic
and diplomatic rapprochement with Britain. The
language of equality and rights in the
Declaration was different
from
that
of the
Declaration of the Rights
of Man issued by the French National Assembly in
1789, but it still seemed
too "French" for the comfort of Federalists, who, after the execution
of Louis XVI and the onset of the Terror, lost whatever sympathy for the
French Revolution they had once felt. Moreover, they understandably found
it best
to say as little as possible about a fundamental American text that had been
drafted by a leader of the opposing Republican party.
It was, then, the Republicans who began to
celebrate the Declaration of Independence
as a "deathless instrument" written by "the immortal Jefferson." The
Republicans saw themselves as the defenders of the American Republic of 1776
against subversion by pro-British "monarchists," and they hoped that
by recalling the causes of independence, they would make their countrymen wary
of further dealings with Great Britain. They were also delighted to identify
the founding principles of the American Revolution with those of America's
sister republic in France. At their Fourth of July celebrations, Republicans
read the Declaration of Independence, and their newspapers reprinted it. Moreover,
in their hands the attention that had at first focused on the last part of
the Declaration shifted toward its opening paragraphs and the "self-evident
truths" they stated. The Declaration, as a Republican newspaper said on
July 7, 1792, was not to be celebrated merely "as affecting the separation
of one country from the jurisdiction of another"; it had an enduring significance
for established governments because it provided a "definition of the
rights of man, and the end of civil government."
The Federalists responded that Jefferson
had not written the Declaration alone.
The drafting
committee-including
John Adams,
a Federalist-had
also contributed
to its creation. And Jefferson's role as "the scribe who penned the declaration" had
not been so distinguished as his followers suggested. Federalists rediscovered
similarities between the Declaration and Locke's Second Treatise of Government
that Richard Henry Lee had noticed long before and used them to argue that
even the "small part of that memorable instrument" that could be
attributed to Jefferson "he stole from Locke's Essays." But after
the War of 1812, the Federalist party slipped from sight, and with it, efforts
to disparage the Declaration of Independence.
When a new party system formed in the late
1820s and 1830s, both Whigs and Jacksonians
claimed
descent from
Jefferson
and his
party and so
accepted the
old Republican position on the Declaration
and Jefferson's glorious role in its creation.
By
then, too, a new
generation of Americans
had come
of age and
made preservation of the nation's revolutionary
history its particular mission. Its efforts,
and its reverential
attitude
toward the
revolutionaries and their
works, also helped establish the Declaration
of Independence as an important icon of American
identity.
The change came suddenly. As late as January
1817 John Adams said that his country had
no interest
in its
past. "I see no disposition to celebrate
or remember, or even Curiosity to enquire into the Characters, Actions, or
Events of the Revolution," he wrote the artist John Trumbull. But a
little more than a month later Congress commissioned Trumbull to produce
four large
paintings commemorating the Revolution, which were to hang in the rotunda
of the new American Capitol. For Trumbull, the most important of the series,
and
the one to which he first turned, was the Declaration of Independence. He
based that work on a smaller painting he had done between 1786 and 1793 that
showed
the drafting committee presenting its work to Congress. When the new twelve-by-eighteen-foot
canvas was completed in 1818, Trumbull exhibited it to large crowds in Boston,
Philadelphia, and Baltimore before delivering it to Washington; indeed, The
Declaration of Independence was the most popular of all the paintings Trumbull
did for the Capitol.
Soon copies of the document were being published
and sold briskly, which perhaps was what
inspired Secretary
of State
John Quincy
Adams to have
an exact facsimile
of the Declaration, the only one ever produced,
made in 1823. Congress had it distributed
throughout the
country. Books
also started to
appear: the collected
biographies of those who signed the Declaration
in nine volumes by Joseph M. Sanderson
(1823-27) or
one volume
by Charles
A. Goodrich (1831), full
biographies
of individual revolutionaries that were
often written by
descendants who used family papers, and
collections of revolutionary documents
edited by
such notable
figures as Hezekiah Niles, Jared Sparks,
and Peter Force.
Postwar efforts to preserve the memories
and records of the Revolution were undertaken
in
a mood of
near panic. Many
documents remained
in private hands,
where they were gradually separated from
one another and
lost. Even worse, many revolutionaries
had died, taking with them
precious memories
that
were gone forever. The presence of living
remnants of the revolutionary generation
seemed so important in preserving its
tradition that Americans watched anxiously
as their
numbers declined.
These attitudes
first appeared
in the decade before
1826, the fiftieth anniversary of independence,
but they persisted on into the Civil
War. In 1864 the
Reverend Elias Brewster
Hillard noted
that only
seven of those who had fought in the
Revolutionary War
still survived, and he hurried to interview
and photograph those "venerable and now sacred
men" for the benefit of posterity. "The present is the last generation
that will be connected by living link with the great period in which our national
independence was achieved," he wrote in the introduction to his book The
Last Men of the Revolution. "Our own are the last eyes that will look
on men who looked on Washington; our ears the last that will hear the living
voices of those who heard his words. Henceforth the American Revolution will
be known among men by the silent record of history alone."
Most of the men Hillard interviewed had
played modest roles in the Revolution.
In the early
1820s, however,
John Adams
and Thomas
Jefferson
were still
alive, and as the only surviving members
of the committee that had drafted the
Declaration of Independence, they attracted
an extraordinary
outpouring of attention. Pilgrims, invited
and
uninvited, flocked
particularly to Monticello,
hoping to catch
a glimpse of the author of the Declaration
and making nuisances of themselves. One
woman, it
is said, even
smashed a window
to
get a
better view of
the old man. As a eulogist noted after
the deaths of both Adams and Jefferson
on, miraculously,
July 4, 1826, the world had not waited
for death
to "sanctify" their
names. Even while they remained alive, their homes became "shrines" to
which lovers of liberty and admirers of genius flocked "from
every land."
Adams, in truth, was miffed by Jefferson's
celebrity as the penman of Independence.
The drafting of
the Declaration of
Independence,
he thought,
had assumed
an exaggerated importance. Jefferson
perhaps agreed; he,
too, cautioned a correspondent
against giving too much emphasis to "mere composition." The Declaration,
he said, had not and had not been meant to be an original or novel creation;
his assignment had been to produce "an
expression of the American mind, and
to give that expression the proper tone
and spirit called for by the
occasion."
Jefferson, however, played an important
role in rescuing the Declaration from
obscurity and making
it a defining
event of
the revolutionary "heroic
age." It was he who first suggested that the young John Trumbull paint
The Declaration of Independence. And Trumbull's first sketch of his famous
painting shares a piece of drawing paper with a sketch by Jefferson, executed
in Paris sometime in 1786, of the assembly room in the Old Pennsylvania State
House, now known as Independence Hall. Trumbull's painting of the scene carefully
followed Jefferson's sketch, which unfortunately included architectural inaccuracies,
as Trumbull later learned to his dismay.
Jefferson also spent hour after hour
answering, in longhand, letters that
he said numbered
1,267 in
1820, many of
which asked questions
about the
Declaration
and its creation. Unfortunately,
his responses, like the sketch he made
for Trumbull, were
inaccurate in many details.
Even
his account
of the
drafting
process, retold in an important letter
to James Madison
of 1823 that has been accepted by
one authority after another, conflicts
with
a note he
sent Benjamin
Franklin in June 1776. Jefferson
forgot, in short, how substantial
a role other members of the drafting
committee had played in framing the
Declaration
and
adjusting its text before it was
submitted to Congress.
Indeed, in old age Jefferson found
enormous consolation in the fact
that he was,
as he ordered inscribed
on his tomb, "Author of the Declaration of
American Independence." More than anything else he had done, that role
came to justify his life. It saved him from a despair that he suffered at the
time of the Missouri crisis, when everything the Revolution had accomplished
seemed to him in jeopardy, and that was later fed by problems at the University
of Virginia, his own deteriorating health, and personal financial troubles
so severe that he feared the loss of his beloved home, Monticello (those troubles,
incidentally, virtually precluded him from freeing more than a handful of slaves
at his death). The Declaration, as he told Madison, was "the fundamental
act of union of these States," a document that should be recalled "to
cherish the principles of the instrument in the bosoms of our own citizens." Again
in 1824 he interpreted the government's re-publication of the Declaration as "a
pledge of adhesion to its principles and of a sacred determination to maintain
and perpetuate them," which he described as a "holy purpose."
But just which principles did he
mean? Those in the Declaration's
second paragraph,
which
he understood
exactly as they
had been understood in 1776-as
an assertion primarily of the
right of revolution.
Jefferson composed
the long sentence
beginning "We hold these truths to be self-evident" in a well-known
eighteenth-century rhetorical style by which one phrase was piled on another
and the meaning of the whole became clear only at the end. The sequence ended
with an assertion of the "Right of the People to alter or to abolish" any
government that failed to secure their inalienable rights and to institute
a new form of government more likely "to effect their Safety and Happiness." That
was the right Americans were exercising in July 1776, and it seemed no less
relevant in the 1820s, when revolutionary movements were sweeping through Europe
and Latin America. The American example would be, as Jefferson said in the
last letter of his life, a "signal arousing men to burst the chains
under which monkish ignorance and superstition had persuaded them to bind
themselves,
and to assume the blessings and security of self-government."
Others, however, emphasized the
opening phrases of the sentence
that began
the Declaration's
second paragraph, particularly "the memorable assertion,
that `all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with
certain unalienable rights, and that to secure these rights, governments are
instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed."'
That passage, the eulogist John Sergeant said at Philadelphia in July 1826,
was the "text of the revolution," the "ruling vital principle" that
had inspired the men of the 1770s, who "looked forward through succeeding
generations, and saw stamped upon all their institutions, the great principles
set forth in the Declaration of Independence." In Hallowell, Maine, another
eulogist, Peleg Sprague, similarly described the Declaration of Independence
as an assertion "by a whole people, of . . . the native equality of
the human race, as the true foundation of all political, of all human institutions."
And so an interpretation of
the declaration that had emerged
in the 1790s became
ever more widely
repeated.
The equality
that Sergeant
and Sprague
emphasized
was not, however, asserted
for
the first time in the Declaration
of
Independence. Even before
Congress
published
its Declaration,
one revolutionary
document
after another had associated
equality with a new American
republic and
suggested enough
different
meanings of
that term-equal
rights, equal
access to office,
equal voting power-to keep
Americans busy sorting them
out and fighting
over in- egalitarian practices
far into
the future. Jefferson, in fact,
adapted those most remembered
opening lines
of the
Declaration's second paragraph
from a draft Declaration of
Rights
for Virginia, written by George
Mason and revised
by a committee of the Virginia
convention, which appeared
in the Pennsylvania Gazette
on June
12, 1776, the day after the
Committee of Five was appointed
and perhaps the day it first
met. Whether
on his own inspiration or under
instructions from
the
committee, Jefferson began
with the Mason
draft,
which he gradually
tightened into a more compressed
and eloquent statement. He
took,
for example,
Mason's
statement that "all men are born equally free and independant," rewrote
it to say they were "created equal & independent," and then cut
out the "& independent."
Jefferson was not alone in
adapting the Mason text for
his purposes.
The Virginia
convention
revised
the Mason
draft
before enacting
Virginia's Declaration of
Rights, which said that all
men were "by nature" equally free and
independent. Several other states -- including Pennsylvania (1776), Vermont
(1777), Massachusetts (1780), and New Hampshire (1784) -- remained closer to
Mason's wording, including in their state bill of rights the assertions that
men were "born free and equal" or "born equally free and independent." Unlike
the Declaration of Independence, moreover, the state bills or "declarations" of
rights became (after an initial
period of confusion) legally
binding. Americans' first efforts
to work out the meaning of
the equality written into their
founding documents therefore
occurred on the state level.
In Massachusetts, for example,
several slaves won their
freedom in the 1780s
by arguing
before the
state's
Supreme Judicial
Court that
the provision
in
the state's bill of rights
that all men were born free
and equal
made
slavery unlawful. Later,
in the famous
case of
Commonwealth v. Aves
(1836), Justice
Lemuel Shaw ruled that those
words were
sufficient
to end slavery in Massachusetts,
indeed that it would be
difficult
to find
others "more precisely adapted
to the abolition of negro slavery." White Americans also found the equality
provisions in their state bills of rights useful. In the Virginia constitutional
convention of 1829-30, for example, a delegate from the trans-Appalachian West,
John R. Cooke, cited that "sacred instrument" the Virginia Declaration
of Rights against the state's system of representing all counties equally in
the legislature regardless of their populations and its imposition of a property
qualification for the vote, both of which gave disproportional power to men
in the eastern part of the state. The framers of Virginia's 1776 constitution
allowed those practices to persist despite their violation of the equality
affirmed in the Declaration of Rights, Cooke said, because there were limits
on how much they dared change "in the midst of war." They therefore
left it for posterity to resolve the inconsistency "as soon as leisure
should be afforded them." In the hands of men like Cooke, the Virginia
Declaration of Rights became a practical program of reform to be realized
over time, as the Declaration of Independence would later be for Abraham
Lincoln.
But why, if the states had
legally binding statements
of men's equality,
should
anyone turn to the
Declaration of
Independence?
Because not
all states had
bills of rights, and not
all the bills of rights
that did
exist
included statements
on equality.
Moreover, neither
the federal
Constitution
nor the federal Bill
of Rights asserted men's
natural equality or their
possession
of inalienable rights or
the right of
the
people to reject
or change
their government.
As a result, contenders
in national politics who found
those old
revolutionary principles
useful
had to cite
the Declaration
of
Independence. It was
all they
had.
The sacred stature given
the declaration after
1815 made
it extremely useful
for causes attempting
to
seize the
moral high
ground in
public debate.
Beginning about 1820,
workers, farmers, women's rights
advocates, and other
groups persistently used
the Declaration of
Independence to justify
their quest for equality
and
their opposition to the "tyranny" of factory owners or railroads
or great corporations or the male power structure. It remained, however,
especially easy for the opponents of slavery to cite the Declaration on behalf
of their
cause. Eighteenth-century statements of equality referred to men in a state
of nature, before governments were created, and asserted that no persons
acquired legitimate authority over others without their consent. If so, a
system of
slavery in which men were born the subjects and indeed the property of others
was profoundly wrong. In short, the same principle that denied kings a right
to rule by inheritance alone undercut the right of masters to own slaves
whose status was determined by birth, not consent. The kinship of the Declaration
of Independence with the cause of anti-slavery was understood from the beginning
-- which explains why gradual emancipation acts, such as those in New York
and New Jersey, took effect on July 4 in 1799 and 1804 and why Nat Turner's
rebellion was originally planned for July 4, 1831.
Even in the eighteenth
century, however, assertions
of men's
equal birth provoked
dissent. As slavery
became an increasingly
divisive
issue, denials
that men
were naturally equal
multiplied. Men were
not created equal
in Virginia, John Tyler
insisted
during the
Missouri debates
of
1820: "No, sir, the principle,
although lovely and beautiful, cannot obliterate those distinctions in society
which society itself engenders and gives birth to." Six years later the
acerbic, self-styled Virginia aristocrat John Randolph called the notion of
man's equal creation "a falsehood, and a most pernicious falsehood, even
though I find it in the Declaration of Independence." Man was born in
a state of "perfect helplessness and ignorance" and so was from the
start dependent on others. There was "not a word of truth" in the
notion that men were created equal, repeated South Carolina's John C. Calhoun
in 1848. Men could not survive, much less develop their talents, alone; the
political state, in which some exercised authority and others obeyed, was in
fact man's "natural state," that in which he "is born, lives
and dies." For a long time the "false and dangerous" doctrine
that men were created equal had lain "dormant," but by the late 1840s
Americans had begun "to experience the danger of admitting so great an
error . . . in the declaration of independence," where
it had been inserted
needlessly, Calhoun said,
since separation from
Britain could have been
justified
without it.
Five years later, in
senate debates over
the Kansas-Nebraska
Act,
Indiana's John
Pettit pronounced his
widely quoted statement
that
the supposed "self-evident
truth" of man's equal creation was in fact "a self-evident lie." Ohio's
senator Benjamin Franklin Wade, an outspoken opponent of slavery known for
his vituperative style and intense patriotism, rose to reply. Perhaps Wade's
first and middle names gave him a special bond with the Declaration and its
creators. The "great declaration cost our forefathers too dear," he
said, to be so "lightly thrown away by their children." Without its
inspiring principles the Americans could not have won their independence; for
the revolutionary generation the "great truths" in that "immortal
instrument," the Declaration of Independence, were "worth the sacrifice
of all else on earth, even life itself." How, then, were men equal? Not,
surely, in physical power or intellect. The "good old Declaration" said "that
all men are equal, and have inalienable rights; that is, (they are) equal in
point of right; that no man has a right to trample on another." Where
those rights were wrested from men through force or fraud, justice demanded
that they be "restored without delay."
Abraham Lincoln, a
little known forty-four-year-old
lawyer
in Springfield, Illinois,
who had served one
term
in Congress before
being turned
out of office, read
these debates, was
aroused
as by nothing before,
and began
to pick up
the dropped threads
of his political
career. Like
Wade,
Lincoln idealized
the men of
the American Revolution,
who were for him "a forest of giant oaks," "a
fortress of strength," "iron men." He also shared the deep concern
of his contemporaries as the "silent artillery of time" removed them
and the "living history" they embodied from this world. Before the
1850s, however, Lincoln seems to have had relatively little interest in the
Declaration of Independence. Then, suddenly, that document and its assertion
that all men were created equal became his "ancient faith," the "father
of all moral principles," an "axiom" of free society. He was
provoked by the attacks of men such as Pettit and Calhoun. And he made the
arguments of those who defended the Declaration his own, much as Jefferson
had done with Mason's text, reworking the ideas from speech to speech, pushing
their logc, and eventually, at Gettysburg in 1863, arriving at a simple statement
of profound eloquence. In time his understanding of the Declaration of Independence
would become that of the nation.
Lincoln's position
emerged fully and
powerfully during
his debates
with
Illinois's senator
Stephen Douglas,
a Democrat
who had proposed
the Kansas-Nebraska
Act
and whose seat
Lincoln sought in 1858. They
were an odd
couple, Douglas
and Lincoln, as different
physically
-- at full height
Douglas came
only to Lincoln's
shoulders -- as
they were in style.
Douglas wore well-tailored
clothes; Lincoln's
barely covered
his limbs. Douglas
was in general
the more
polished speaker;
Lincoln sometimes
rambled on, losing
his point
and his
audience, although
he could also,
especially with a
prepared text,
be a powerful orator.
The greatest
difference between
them
was, however, in
the positions they
took
on the
future of
slavery
and the meaning
of the Declaration
of
Independence.
Douglas defended
the Kansas-Nebraska
Act,
which allowed
the people of those
states to permit
slavery within
their borders,
as consistent
with
the revolutionary
heritage. After
all,
in instructing
their delegates
to vote for
independence,
one state after another
had explicitly
retained the
exclusive right of defining
its domestic
institutions. Moreover,
the
Declaration of
Independence
carried no implications
for
slavery, since
its statement
on equality referred
to white men
only. In fact,
Douglas
said, it
simply meant
that American colonists
of
European descent
had
equal rights
with the King's
subjects in
Great Britain.
The signers were
not
thinking of "the negro or . . . savage Indians, or
the Feejee, or the Malay, or any other inferior or degraded race." Otherwise
they would have been honor bound to free their own slaves, which not even
Thomas Jefferson did. The Declaration had only one purpose: to explain and
justify
American independence.
To Lincoln, Douglas's
argument left
only a "mangled ruin" of the
Declaration of Independence, whose "plain, unmistakable language" said "all
men" were created equal. In affirming that government derived its "just
powers from the consent of the governed," the Declaration also said that
no man could rightly govern others without their consent. If, then, "the
negro is a man," was it not a "total destruction of self-government,
to say that he too shall not govern himself?" To govern a man without
his consent was "despotism." Moreover, to confine the Declaration's
significance to the British peoples of 1776 denied its meaning, Lincoln charged,
not only for Douglas's "inferior races" but for the French, Irish,
German, Scandinavian, and other immigrants who had come to America after the
Revolution. For them the promise of equality linked new Americans with the
founding generation; it was an "electric cord" that bound them into
the nation "as though they were blood of the blood, and flesh of the flesh
of the men who wrote that Declaration," and so made one people out of
many. Lincoln believed that the Declaration "contemplated the progressive
improvement in the condition of all men everywhere." If instead it was
only a justification of independence "without the germ, or even the suggestion
of the individual rights of man in it," the document was "of no practical
use now -- mere rubbish -- old wadding left to rot on the battlefield after
the victory is won," an "interesting memorial of the dead past
. . . shorn of its vitality, and practical value."
Like Wade,
Lincoln denied
that the
signers meant
that men
were equal
in "all
respects," including "color, size, intellect, moral developments,
or social capacity." He, too, made sense of the Declaration's assertion
of man's equal creation by eliding it with the next, separate statement on
rights. The signers, he insisted, said men were equal in having "`certain
inalienable rights. . . .' This they said, and this they meant." Like
John Cooke in Virginia three decades before, Lincoln thought the Founders allowed
the persistence of practices at odds with their principles for reasons of necessity:
to establish the Constitution demanded that slavery continue in those original
states that chose to keep it. "We could not secure the good we did if
we grasped for more," but that did not "destroy the principle that
is the charter of our liberties." Nor did it mean that slavery had to
be allowed in states not yet organized in 1776, such as Kansas and Nebraska.
Again like
Cooke,
Lincoln claimed
that the
authors
of the Declaration
understood
its
second
paragraph as setting
a standard
for free
men whose
principles
should
be realized "as fast as circumstances . . . permit." They wanted
that standard to be "familiar to all, and revered by all; constantly looked
to, and constantly labored for, and even though never perfectly attained, constantly
approximated and thereby constantly spreading and deepening its influence,
and augmenting the happiness and value of life to all people of all colors
everywhere." And if, as Calhoun said, American independence could have
been declared without any assertion of human equality and inalienable rights,
that made its inclusion all the more wonderful. "All honor to Jefferson," Lincoln
said in a letter of 1859, "to the man who . . . had the coolness, forecast,
and capacity to introduce into a merely revolutionary document, an abstract
truth, applicable to all men and all times, and to embalm it there," where
it would remain "a rebuke and a stumbling-block to the very harbingers
of re-appearing tyranny and oppression."
Jefferson
and the
members
of the
Second
Continental
Congress
did
not understand
what
they were
doing
in quite that
way on
July
4, 1776.
For them,
it
was enough
for the
Declaration
to be "merely revolutionary." But if Douglas's
history was more accurate, Lincoln's reading of the Declaration was better
suited to the needs of the Republic in the mid-nineteenth century, when the
standard of revolution had passed to Southern secessionists and to radical
abolitionists who also called for disunion. In his hands the Declaration became
first and foremost a living document for an established society, a set of goals
to be realized over time, the dream of "something better, than a mere
change of masters" that explained why "our fathers" fought and
endured until they won the Revolutionary War. In the Civil War, too, Lincoln
told Congress on July 4, 1861, the North fought not only to save the Union
but to preserve a form of government "whose leading object is to elevate
the condition of men-to lift artificial weights from all shoulders-to clear
the paths of laudable pursuit for all." The rebellion it opposed was at
base an effort "to overthrow the principle that all men were created equal." And
so the Union victory at Gettysburg in 1863 became for him a vindication of
that proposition, to which the nation's fathers had committed it in 1776, and
a challenge to complete the "unfinished work" of the Union dead and
bring to "this nation, under God, a new birth of freedom."
Lincoln's
Gettysburg
Address
stated
briefly
and
eloquently
convictions
he
had developed
over
the
previous decade,
convictions
that
on
point after
point
echoed
earlier
Americans:
Republicans
of
the
1790s, the eulogists
Peleg
Sprague
and
John Sergeant
in
1826, John
Cooke
in
the Virginia
convention
a
few
years later,
Benjamin
Wade
in
1853. Some
of
those men
he
knew; others
were
unfamiliar
to
him, but they
had
also struggled
to
understand the practical
implications
of
their
revolutionary
heritage
and
followed the same
logic
to
the same
conclusions.
The
Declaration of
Independence
Lincoln
left
was
not Jefferson's
Declaration,
although
Jefferson
and
other revolutionaries
shared
the
values
Lincoln
and
others stressed:
equality,
human
rights,
government
by
consent. Nor was
Lincoln's
Declaration
of
Independence solely
his
creation. It remained
an "expression
of the American mind," not, of course, what all Americans thought but
what many had come to accept. And its implications continued to evolve after
Lincoln's death. In 1858 he had written a correspondent that the language
of the Declaration of Independence was at odds with slavery but did not require
political and social equality for free black Americans. Few disagreed then.
How many would agree today?
The
Declaration
of
Independence
is
in
fact
a
curious document.
After
the
Civil
War
members
of
Lincoln's
party
tried
to
write
its
principles
into
the
Constitution
by
enacting
the
Thirteenth,
Fourteenth,
and
Fifteenth
Amendments,
which
is
why
issues
of
racial
or
age
or
gender
equality
are
now
so
often
fought
out
in
the
courts.
But
the
Declaration
of
Independence
itself
is
not
and
has
never
been
legally
binding.
Its
power
comes
from
its
capacity
to
inspire
and
move
the
hearts
of
living
Americans,
and
its
meaning
lies
in
what
they
choose
to
make
of
it.
It
has
been
at
once
a
cause of
controversy,
pushing
as
it
does
against
established
habits
and
conventions,
and
a
unifying national
icon,
a
legacy
and
a
new creation
that
binds
the
revolutionaries
to
descendants
who
confronted
and
continue
to
confront
issues
the
Founders
did
not
know
or
failed
to
resolve.
On
Independence
Day,
then,
Americans
celebrate
not
simply
the
birth
of
their
nation
or
the
legacy
of
a
few
great
men.
They
also
commemorate
a
Declaration of
Independence
that
is
their
own
collective
work
now
and
through
time.
And
that,
finally,
makes
sense
of
the
Fourth
of
July.