Received: from relay2.UU.NET by css.itd.umich.edu (5.65/2.2) id AA10312; Thu, 26 Nov 92 20:49:06 -0500 Received: from uunet.uu.net (via LOCALHOST.UU.NET) by relay2.UU.NET with SMTP (5.61/UUNET-internet-primary) id AA27315; Thu, 26 Nov 92 20:49:12 -0500 Received: from ccs.UUCP by uunet.uu.net with UUCP/RMAIL (queueing-rmail) id 204830.13905; Thu, 26 Nov 1992 20:48:30 EST Received: by ccs.covici.com (UUPC/extended 1.11v); Thu, 26 Nov 1992 20:37:35 est Date: Thu, 26 Nov 1992 20:37:27 est From: "John Covici" Message-Id: <2b157be0.ccs@ccs.covici.com> Organization: Covici Computer Systems Reply-To: "John Covici" To: uunet!css.itd.umich.edu!pauls@uunet.UU.NET Subject: Why The British Had to Kill Abraham Lincoln: part 1 Status: RO WHY THE BRITISH HAD TO KILL ABRAHAM LINCOLN Part I by Rochelle Ascher The year was 1860. Abraham Lincoln had just been elected President of the United States. Of 303 possible electoral votes, Lincoln had received only 180; of the popular vote, he received 1.8 million votes, while his three opponents together received 2.8 million votes. In 15 states, Lincoln received no electoral votes. In ten states, he received not a single popular vote, largely because the southern states refused to put him on the ballot. In the four months before his inauguration, South Carolina, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and Louisiana had seceded from the Union. Other southern states were to secede in rapid order. By the time Lincoln entered office in March of 1861, the Civil War was only weeks away. The Buchanan administration which Lincoln succeeded was entirely treasonous--in fact indistinguishable from the Supreme Council of the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry (which became synonymous with the Confederacy). By 1860, these anti-Union radicals operated directly from the White House, led by former Attorney General Caleb Cushing, a lawyer for the Boston opium cartel. Both Howell Cobb, secretary of the treasury--and the most powerful member of the cabinet--and Vice President John C. Breckinridge, were Sovereign Grand Inspector Generals and active members of the Scottish Rite. These Freemasonic traitors had been working actively for months to disarm the northern federal arsenals and equip the southern rebel states. Citizens demonstrated throughout northern cities, as tons of military hardware were stolen and shipped south for an attack against the United States. The situation facing Lincoln upon inauguration was the worst the United States had ever faced. The British had installed a series of traitorous Presidents who had all but dismantled the U.S. economy. Jackson, Tyler, Polk, Pierce, and Buchanan had destroyed the basic institutions of the U.S. economy, moving control out of the hands of the Whig industrialists and bankers, and into the hands of British financiers working through the banking houses of Boston and New York. This led to a series of bank failures and depressions. In 1857, the U.S. economy went bust. Business came to a standstill. Hunger was widespread. The Treasury was bankrupt: Congress had not been paid. In his {Shall We Have Peace?}, Henry C. Carey, one of Lincoln's closest collaborators and economic advisers, described the situation in this way: ``Had it been possible on the 4th of March, 1861, to take a bird's-eye view of the whole Union, the phenomena presenting themselves for examination would have been as follows: ``@sb^Millions of men and women would have been seen who were wholly or partially unemployed, because of the inability to find persons able and willing to pay for service. ``@sb^Hundreds of thousands of workmen, farmers and shopkeepers would have been seen holding articles of various kinds for which no purchasers could be found. ``@sb^Tens of thousands of country traders would have been seen poring over their books seeking, but vainly seeking, to discover in what direction they might look for obtaining the means with which to discharge their city debts. ``@sb^Thousands of city traders would have been seen endeavoring to discover how they might obtain the means with which to pay their notes. ``@sb^Thousands of mills, factories, furnaces, and workshops large and small, would have been seen standing idle while surrounded by persons who desired to be employed; and ``@sb^Tens of thousands of bank, factory and railroad proprietors would have been seen despairing of obtaining dividends by means of which they might be enabled to go to market. ``High above all these would have been seen a National Treasury wholly empty, and to all appearance little likely ever again to be filled.'' Thaddeus Stevens, who became one of the strongest proponents of Reconstruction following the Civil War, also described the state of the economy in the period right before the war began, in a speech March 18, 1858 in the U.S. House of Representatives entitled ``State Governments Republican in Form'': ``It became evident that Mr. Buchanan was to be the last of Southern Presidents, and his Cabinet being almost wholly devoted to the interests of slavery, set themselves boldly at work to weaken the North and strengthen the South. They transferred most of the best weapons of war from the North, where they were manufactured, to the South, where they could readily be seized. They plunged the nation into a heavy debt in time of peace. When the Treasury was bare of cash they robbed it of millions of bonds, and whatever else they could lay hands on. They fastened upon us an incipient free-trade system, which impaired our revenues, paralyzed our national industry, and compelled the exportation of our immense production of gold. They have reduce our Navy to an unserviceable condition, or dispersed it to the farthest oceans. Our little Army was on the Pacific coast, sequestered in Utah, or defending the Southern States from their own Indians.'' A major threat of assassination loomed even before Lincoln was inaugurated. First, an assassination plot in Baltimore was uncovered, requiring the President to be hidden on a train which secretly brought him to Washington. Upon his arrival, as he was preparing to assume office, the armed Knights of the Golden Circle were preparing to kill the new President and seize the capital. General Winfield Scott, commander of the U.S. military, had moved the headquarters of the U.S. Army out of Washington, D.C. when the traitorous Franklin Pierce had been elected in 1852. Scott deployed thousands of troops, bomb experts, and special police to every conceivable vantage point for a likely assassin. Earlier, Scott had prevented secessionists from disrupting the counting of the electoral ballots in Washington. The Republic Threatened The most telling description of the situation the country faced following Lincoln's election, is clear from an interchange between Lincoln himself, and one of his closest friends, Judge Gillespie, in the days before the inauguration. As late nineteenth-century muckracker and historian Ida Tarbell reports it, ``He sat with his head lying upon his arms, which were folded over the back of his chair, as I have often seen him sit on our travels after an exciting day in court. Suddenly he roused himself. `Gillespie,' said he, `I would willingly take out of my life a period in years equal to the two months which intervene between now and my inauguration to take the oath of office now.' `Why?' I asked. `Because every hour adds to the difficulties I am called upon to meet, and the present administration does nothing to check the tendency toward dissolution. I, who have been called to meet this awful responsibility, am compelled to remain here, doing nothing to avert it or lessen its force when it comes to me.' ``I said that the condition of which he spoke was such as had never risen before, and that it might lead to the amendment of such an obvious defect in the federal Constitution. `It is not of myself I complain,' he said, with more bitterness than I ever heard him speak, before, or after. `But every day adds to the difficulty of the situation, and makes the outlook more gloomy. Secession is being fostered rather than repressed, and if the doctrine meets with a general acceptance in the border States, it will be a great blow to the government.' ``Our talk then turned upon the possibility of avoiding a war. `It is only possible,' said Mr. Lincoln, `upon the consent of this government to the erection of a foreign slave government out of the present slave States. I see the duty devolving upon me. {I have read, upon my knees, the story of Gethsemane, where the Son of God prayed in vain that the cup of bitterness might pass from him. I am in the Garden of Gethsemane now, and my cup of bitterness is full and overflowing....'} ``I then told him that as Christ's prayer was not answered and his crucifixion had redeemed the great part of the world from paganism to Christianity, so the sacrifice demanded of him might be a great beneficence. Little did I then think how prophetic were my words to be, or what a great sacrifice he was called to make.'' [emphasis added] This was far more than a fight between North and South--between slave states and free states. As Henry Carey details in his {The Slave Trade: Foreign and Domestic,} slavery never existed without free trade, nor free trade without slave labor. What was literally at stake was the continued existence of the only nation in the world that had successfully defeated (even if only partially) the British system of free trade and established a republic based on natural law and American System economics. For this, the British crown had never forgiven the Americans, and became increasingly embittered toward the young republic from the time of Cornwallis's surrender at Yorktown. In his book {Treason in America,} Anton Chaitkin details the 30-year plot by the British-backed and inspired Freemasons to dismantle the American System and replace it with the British system of slavery and free trade. Suffice it here to say the conflict represented the crucial turning point in world history to determine the future possibility of any successful opposition to the British system anywhere in the world. So when Lincoln referred to the Garden of Gethsemane, he was most accurate. Pressure to Compromise Massive pressure was mounted on Lincoln to compromise with the secessionists. Not only was the new President faced with bankruptcy, secession, and British-backed intrigue, upon inauguration he met unabashed treason from within his own Cabinet. In fact, Lincoln's orders to respond to the firing upon Fort Sumter were countermanded by his own secretary of state, William Seward. Seward's original advice to Lincoln was that he must not reinforce Sumter, but let the extremist southerners secede--they would surely come back to the Union in a few years! When Lincoln decided to send reinforcements to Sumter, Seward began a series of meetings with agents of the South Carolina secessionists whom he assured, directly contrary to Lincoln's policy, that their steady preparations for aggression would not be resisted! When Lincoln arranged for a squadron of gunships and troop ships to be sent to reinforce Sumter, Seward secretly arranged for the gunships to be diverted to Florida. When Lincoln found out, he ordered Seward to reverse his interference. Seward stalled long enough so that the gunships were already streaming southward, and the commander, mistakenly believing that he was going to Florida on Lincoln's orders, refused to turn back on Seward's mid-course directive. President Lincoln had been prevented from crushing the insurrection while secession was still confined to the deep South. Still advised to compromise by the majority of his cabinet, criticized for taking the view that the rebellion was the work of a small minority of conspirators rather than the broad expression of sectional sentiment, Lincoln acted as he was never expected to act. He immediately called for 75,000 volunteers to put down the attempted coup d'etat. For the next four years, Lincoln invoked the full powers of the presidency. The Civil War created the emergency conditions for President Lincoln and his Whig advisers to carry out the most sweeping reorganization of the economy on the basis of American System principles since the founding of the country. The fact is that Lincoln faced treason, insurrection, and bankrputcy within the first days of taking office, and yet within four years not only smashed the British-run insurrection, but created the greatest industrial giant the world had ever seen, is the clearest testimony to the success of the American System of Political-Economy. While fighting a war in which he led an army that had over the course of the war, 3 million men at arms (out of a total Northern population of 22 million), and in which more than half a million men died, Lincoln: @sb^organized a militia on a uniform basis; @sb^built and equipped the largest army in the world; @sb^reorganized the judicial system; @sb^launched the steel industry; @sb^created a continental railroad system; @sb^institutionalized scientific agriculture, by methods including the Homestead Act, which provided free western lands for farmers, the establishment of the Department of Agriculture, and government promotion of a new era of farm machinery and cheap tools; @sb^established a system of free higher education throughout the U.S.--the Land Grant College System; @sb^pursued a policy of massive immigration to increase the population as quickly as possible; @sb^provided major government support to all branches of science, through the U.S. Coast Survey and the National Academy of Sciences; @sb^organized the Bureau of Mines; @sb^organized governments in the Western territories; @sb^and, of course, abolished slavery, freeing {4 million slaves.} This was accomplished by the reinstitution of the American System. The breathtaking economic development program which Lincoln designed not only saved the nation and won the war, but remained in effect long enough after his assassination for the United States to become the world's greatest industrial power, and remain so for more than a century to come. The American System Lincoln's American System economic program: @sb^created a national banking system; @sb^reestablished national control over banking, with cheap credit directed for productive purposes; @sb^created a national currency for the first time in nearly 25 years (the greenback--$450 million worth); @sb^increased government spending by 600 percent (to $300 million per year); @sb^implemented the highest protective tariff in U.S. history (the Morrill Tariff); @sb^promoted standardized and mass production nationwide; and @sb^increased labor productivity by 50-70 percent. In March of 1860, on the eve of the Republican convention which nominated Lincoln to the presidency, Henry Carey, in his pamphlet {Financial Crises, their Causes and Effects} (1859), spelled out clearly the differences between the British and American systems of economics, and Great Britain's plan to recolonize the United States: ``The men who made the Revolution did so, because they were tired of a system the essence of which was found in Lord Chatham's declaration, that the colonists should not be permitted to make for themselves `even as much as a single hobnail.' They were sensible of the exhaustive character of a policy that compelled them to make all their exchanges in a single market, thereby enriching their foreign masters while ruining themselves. Against this system they needed protection, and therefore did they make the Revolution--seeking political independence as a means of obtaining industrial and commercial independence. To render that protection really effective, they formed a more perfect union, whose first Congress gave us, as its first law, an act for the protection of manufactures. Washington and his secretaries, Hamilton and Jefferson, approved this course of action, and in doing so were followed by all of Washington's successors, down to General Jackson. For half a century, from 1783 to 1833, such was the general tendency of our commercial policy, and therefore was it that, notwithstanding the plunder of our merchants under British Orders in Council and French Decrees, and notwithstanding interferences with commerce by embargo and non-intercourse laws, there occurred in that long period, in time of peace, no single financial revulsion, involving suspension by our banks, or stoppage of payment by the government. In all that period, there was, consequently, a general tendency towards harmony between the North and the South, in reference to the vexed question of slavery--both Virginia and Maryland having, in 1832, showed themselves almost prepared for abolition. Had the existing commercial policy been maintained, the years that since have passed would have been marked by daily growth of harmony, and of confidence in the utility and permanence of our Union. ``Such, unhappily, was not to be the case. Even at that moment South Carolina was preparing to assume that entire control of our commercial policy which, with the exception of a single presidential term [John Quincy Adams], she has since maintained--{thereby forcing the Union back to that colonial system, emancipation from which had been the primary object of the men who made the Revolution....} ``Forgetting all the lessons they [the Founding Fathers] had taught, we have now so long been following in the direction indicated by our British free trade `friends' ... that already are they congratulating themselves upon the approaching dissolution of the Union--and the entire reestablishment of British influence over this northern portion of the continent....'' Abraham Lincoln defeated the British and restored the American System--``the primary object of the men who made the Revolution.'' It was because of this that the British assassinated Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln's Early Years Contrary to most historical accounts, the American System policy as adopted by Abraham Lincoln did not come out of the blue. >From 1830, when, at the age of 21, Lincoln made his first election day speech on ``internal improvements,'' until his assassination April 14, 1865, Lincoln's entire life was dedicated to the American System of the Founding Fathers. And contrary to the view of most historians, he was not an enigma, a loner, someone who emerged with these ideas out of nowhere; he was a {product of and a critical part of a faction of American System Whigs totally committed to reestablishing the American System and destroying the British System of slavery and free trade.} A brief look at Lincoln's early years makes this factional fight quite clear. In 1830, Lincoln made his first election day speech. While not a candidate himself, he announced his policy to be that of the American System and his mentor Henry Clay: ``My politics are short and sweet, like the old woman's dance. I am in favor of a national bank. I am in favor of the internal improvements system and a high protective tariff.'' [Lincoln, {Collected Works.}] The battle between British free trade and the American System reached a {punctum saliens} in the 1832 presidential contest between Andrew Jackson and Henry Clay. This was also the year that Lincoln made his first bid for public office--to the State Legislature of Illinois. In 1832, not only was there the infamous ``Nullification Crisis,'' but in that same year, Jackson vetoed the recharter of the the Bank of the United States, and the next year withdrew U.S. government funds from the bank. The Nullification Crisis occurred when South Carolina threatened to secede from the Union--not over slavery, but in opposition to the protective tariff. Henry Carey's father, Mathew Carey, a leading collaborator of Benjamin Franklin, circulated his pamphlet titled {The Crisis--Appeal to the Good Sense of the Nation Against the Spirit of Resistance and Dissolution of the U.S.} Congress did drastically lower the tariff--the Compromise Tariff of 1833 was passed under southern blackmail threatening a civil war--virtually eliminating all protection for American manufactures. Lincoln lost his first bid for office; Henry Clay lost the presidential election. And Andrew Jackson delivered the greatest coup d'etat to the American System in the nation's history by destroying the Bank of the United States. At that time, the Bank held close to one-third of all bank deposits in the country and made one-fifth of all bank loans. Millions of dollars of the government's money were on deposit as well. The bank's charter did not run out until 1836, but Clay, knowing Jackson's hatred of the bank, successfully pushed Congress to vote an early recharter in 1832. Jackson vetoed the recharter and, on his orders, government deposits were withdrawn and placed in state banks. Stripped of its business with the government, the Bank of the United States was little more than an empty shell by the time its charter officially ran out in 1836. Jackson's withdrawal of funds from the National Bank may well have been the greatest single act of treason in U.S. history. The bank's destruction meant that the country had no national currency. There was no funding for internal improvements, no dirigist direction of credit. Private banks were completely unregulated, and began to charge exorbitant interest rates. Any hope that Clay and the Whigs had for industrializing the South, as the way to end slavery and avoid civil war, were dashed. The 89 state banks which received the U.S. government's deposits (which Lincoln and Clay called Jackson's ``pet banks''), were {unsound} to say the least. The Bank of the United States could no longer stop state banks from issuing notes. (Prior to this, the Bank of the United States could present notes for large sums to an issuing state bank and demand payment in gold. This kept the banks from issuing too much unsecured money.) Wild banks sprang up everywhere, issuing large numbers of notes with no specie (gold reserve) to back them up. Between 1830 and 1836, the amount lent by state banks rose from $137 million to $475 million! These loans touched off wild speculation, especially in land. Government land sales doubled, and then doubled again in a single year. People paid the U.S. Treasury for land with the worthless paper money of the wildest banks--who lent it out over and over again. Then, in an attempt to stop the wild speculation that he himself had caused, Jackson pushed through the ``Specie Circular''--which stipulated that the Treasury would only accept gold as payment for the public lands. The sale of public lands collapsed. There were runs on all the banks as people vainly attempted to turn their bank notes into gold. Dozens of banks went under overnight. The surviving banks refused to renew old loans or make new ones. Businesses failed. Thousands were thrown out of work. Riots by the unemployed swept Philadelphia and New York. Farm prices collapsed by over 50 percent. John Jacob Astor had formed the National Bank of New York to replace the Bank of the United States--and placed James Gallatin at its head. Gallatin, the son of Albert Gallatin, who as Jefferson and Madison's treasury secretary almost singlehandedly destroyed the Hamiltonian system, organized the ``Free Trade Movement'' with British support. By 1837, the Free Trade Movement had achieved nearly all of its objectives. The Bank of the United States was permanently closed, and American industry was left completely unprotected, both by the reduced tariff and a worldwide credit collapse initiated by Bank of England credit restrictions. While civil war was temporarily postponed, the Compromise Tariff and destruction of the bank assured the Civil War would begin in deadly earnest in 1861. Carey accused the ``British Secret Service'' of being behind the nullifiers. The Fight for Internal Improvements When Jackson closed the Bank, he also stopped federal support for road, canal, and railway construction, putting the brakes on pioneer settlement of the West. But American Whigs fought to continue the internal improvements construction policy with the action of state governments to replace the missing federal support. Lincoln led this fight from the age of 24 as a state legislator in Illinois. As the leader of the famous group of Whig legislators from Sangamon County, the ``Long Nine,'' (so-called because all were over six feet tall), he sought to turn the mud- and ice-bound Midwest into the new industrial center of the continent, beginning with the construction of railways and canals to crisscross Illinois. The ``Illinois Improvement Program'' or as it came to be known simply as Lincoln called it, ``The System,'' centered on two major projects: construction of the Illinois-Michigan canal, and a 3,000-mile railroad system. The canal between the Chicago and Illinois River would link Lake Michigan with the Mississippi River. This would complete the longtime ``grand design'' of the republican faction for an unbroken water line of communications between the East Coast and the Mississippi Basin via the Hudson River and the Great Lakes: The other man-made link in this system was the recently completed Erie Canal. Together, they would radically change the course of American history by opening the Midwest to rapid settlement and industrialization. The growth of manufacturing in Illinois, because of the state's exceptional transportation facilities, was the most rapid and remarkable in the industrial history of the United States. In 1835, when the town of Chicago was incorporated, there were 150 inhabitants, whose main livelihood was trading with the Indians. In that year, 70 bushels of wheat were shipped out of that struggling little town. In 1836, major excavations for the canal began. By 1850, two years after the canal's completion, Chicago exploded to nearly 30,000 people, becoming the 18th-largest city in the United States, and was shipping out 2 million bushels of wheat a year! And it was not just Chicago. When Lincoln came into the legislature in 1834, there were barely 2,000 people living in the entire northern part of the state, from Peoria to the Wisconsin state line. By 1855, there were 175,000 people living in dozens of new towns along the canal. In 1836, Lincoln made internal improvements the major issue of his re-election campaign. The destruction of the bank by Jackson had caused great problems. All had seen the Erie Canal completed in 1825, and its construction debts paid off 11 years later. At that time, the mood of the country was in favor of a commitment to internal improvements--when Michigan entered the Union in 1837 its constitution {required} internal improvements. Lincoln moved to the forefront of the state's fight. In 1837, Illinois passed an Omnibus Bill ($10 million)--for two trunk railroads, the Illinois Central and the Northern Cross, quartering the state north to south and east to west, with six spurs connecting the largest towns, and investments in roads and rivers. This was in addition to the $8.5 million to complete the Illinois-Michigan canal. As Whig leader of the House, Lincoln wrote most of the internal improvement legislation. He supported the establishment of a state bank, but only because of the destruction of the National Bank. The National Bank Jackson's withdrawal of funds from the National Bank brought on the worst depression the nation had ever seen. All federal support for internal improvements collapsed. The canal did limp along, largely because of Lincoln's efforts to secure private funding by Nicholas Biddle and others. (Biddle had been head of the Second Bank of the United States.) But without federal support, the ``System'' was stalled. By 1839, when the depression hit full force, there was growing popular opposition to spending any more money on internal improvements. All work ceased on the canal in 1842--not to begin again until 1846. Lincoln attacked Jackson's destruction of the Bank of the United States as the source of the collapse. In 1837, Lincoln wrote his first political pamphlet on banking in response to the crisis. The national Whig leadership was greatly impressed by his defense of the National Bank, and printed the pamphlet in full for national circulation. It was reprinted in all of the Whig press, including the {National Intelligencer,} the most important Whig newspaper in the country. During Lincoln's last years in the legislature (he was re-elected in 1836, but due to his pro-bank stance, came in last in 1840), his views of American System economics came to be voiced chiefly on the presidential campaign trail. In 1839-40, the idea of a national bank was under attack--the British organized a populist movement against ``big bankers''--and many blamed the crisis of 1837 not on Jackson's withdrawal of the funds from the bank, but on greedy bankers. A lot of what Lincoln had fought for in Illinois was compromised or abandoned, but he stuck to his views. In the election of 1840, the Whigs wanted to throw all discussion of the issues out the window, hoping to win on the basis of the depression alone. Lincoln refused to go along. Lincoln supported William Henry Harrison, his party's nominee, but also decided to {stake a full year's campaigning on the question of national banking}. His first clashes came in the late fall of 1839--in debates with free-trade proponent Stephen Douglas and others. In his key campaign speech on the National Bank, Lincoln said: ``We do not pretend that the National Bank can establish and maintain a sound and uniform state of currency in the country {in spite of} the national government; but we do say, that it has established and maintained such a currency, and can do so again, {by the aid} of that government; and we further say, {that no duty is more imperative on that government than the duty it owes to the people, of furnishing them a sound and uniform currency}.''[Lincoln, {Collected Works.}] Lincoln compared the functioning of a national bank to Van Buren's proposed ``independent Treasury'' or ``Sub-Treasury.'' Van Buren's proposal went one step beyond Jackson's destruction of the bank to propose that the government handle its funds solely through its own officers as an ``independent Treasury.'' This was considered so outrageous that Congress voted it down three times. Lincoln first argued that the existence of a National Bank is guaranteed under the U.S. Constitution. This was critical, given Jackson's statement about ``the dangerous power wielded by the Bank of the United States and its {repugnance} to our Constitution.'' Lincoln quoted the Founding Fathers: ``... a majority of the Revolutionary patriarchs, whoever acted officially upon the question commencing with General Washington and embracing General Jackson, the larger number of the Signers of the Declaration and the framers of the Constitution, who were in the Congress of 1791 have decided upon their oaths that such a bank is constitutional.'' He then argued that the real purpose of the Van Buren ``independent Treasury'' was to contract the amount of currency in circulation and force collection of revenue in specie--denying the population the use of a national currency. Lincoln then documented that, during the entire period of time in which the Bank of the U.S. existed, the country prospered: ``If before, or after that period, derangement occurred in the currency, it proves nothing. The Bank could not be expected to regulate the currency either {before} it got into successful operation, or {after} it was crippled and thrown into death convulsions, by the removal of the deposits from it, and other hostile measures of the Government against it. We do not pretend that a National Bank can establish and maintain a sound and uniform state of currency in the country, in {spite} of the National Government; but we do say, that it has established and maintained such a currency, and can do so again, by the {aid} of that Government; and we further say, that no duty is more imperative on that Government, than the duty it owes the people, of furnishing them a sound and uniform currency.'' Lincoln concluded with an attack on Jackson and Van Buren, saying: ``... there is no parallel between the {``errors''} of the present and the late administrations, and those of former times, and that Mr. Van Buren is wholly out of the line of all precedents.'' [Lincoln, {Collected Works.}] The unique quality of political leadership and morality represented by Lincoln during this campaign is reflected in the following excerpt from one of his most famous speeches from the campaign trail: ``Mr. Lamborn refers to the late elections in the States, and from their results, confidently predicts that every State in the Union will vote for Mr. Van Buren at the next Presidential election. Address {that} argument to {cowards} and to {knaves}; with the {free} and the {brave} it will effect nothing. It {may} be true, if it {must}, let it. Many free countries have lost their liberty, and {ours may} lose hers; but if she shall, be it my proudest plume, not that I was the {last} to desert, but that I {never} deserted her. I know that the great volcano at Washington, aroused and directed by the evil spirit that reigns there, is belching forth a lava of political corruption, in a current broad and deep, which is sweeping with frightful velocity over the whole length and breadth of the land, bidding fair to leave unscathed no green spot or living thing, while on its bosom are riding like demons on the waves of Hell, the imps of that evil spirit, and fiendishly taunting all those who dare resist its destroying course, with the hopelessness of their efforts; and knowing this, I cannot deny that all may be swept away. Broken by it, I, too, may be; bow to it I never will. The {probability} that we may fall in the struggle {ought not} to deter us from the support of a cause we believe to be just; it {shall not} deter me. If I ever feel the soul within me elevate and expand to those dimensions not wholly unworthy of its Almighty Architect, it is when I contemplate the cause of my country, deserted by all the world beside, and I, standing up boldly and alone and hurling defiance at her victorious oppressors. Here, without contemplating consequences, before High Heaven, and in the face of the world, I swear eternal fidelity to the just cause, as I deem it, of the land of my life, my liberty, and my love. And who, that thinks with me, will not fearlessly adopt the oath that I take. Let non faulter [sic], who thinks he is right, and we may succeed. But, if after all, we shall fail, be it so. We still have the proud consolation of saying to our consciences, and to the departed shade of our country's freedom, that the cause approved of our judgment, and adored of our hearts, in disaster, in chains, in torture, in death, we NEVER faultered in defending.'' [Lincoln, {Collected Works.}] Lincoln's arguments made the rounds of the federal papers in his state, and became the ``Whig textbook'' of Illinois. He became editor of {The Old Soldier}, the campaign newspaper of the Illinois Whigs. The paper emphasized economic questions, particularly the Bank of the United States versus the Sub-Treasury. In editorial after editorial, Lincoln argued ``that a new movement for a national bank is absolutely necessary.'' Harrison won the election overwhelmingly--but lost in Illinois, a staunchly Jacksonian state. Lincoln ran {last} on the losing electoral slate. Despite the unpopularity of his stand on the National Bank, Lincoln never wavered. Though it meant a break with the national party leadership, Lincoln stood his ground. As reported by G.S. Boritt, 30 years later, his law partner, in referring back to the 1840 campaign, saw it as a turning point in Lincoln's life. Said Billy Herndon, ``I think it grew and bloomed and developed into beauty, etc., in the year 1840 {exactly}. Mr. Lincoln told me that his ideas of something burst in him in 1840.'' President Harrison appointed as Treasury Secretary Thomas Ewing of Ohio, stepfather of the future Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman, and a coleader of the Whigs with Clay. The program was clear: a new national bank, high tariffs, and internal improvements. Harrison was elected President in November of 1840 and assumed office on March 4, 1841. The very healthy Harrison died one month later, his death first attributed to acute intestinal distress and then variously to ``bilious pleurisy'' and pneumonia. No autopsy was performed on the body. While little is known of the sudden cause of death of President Harrison, the events that follow make clear {cui bono.} The economic policy of the nation was forcibly returned to the British system. Vice President John Tyler of Virginia immediately took over the presidency; he was the first to succeed to the office in this manner. Tyler soon made it clear that he had no intention of carrying out the program of the Whigs or the dead President. When Congress passed the long-awaited bill restoring the Bank of the United States, Tyler vetoed it. A battle soon raged between Henry Clay and Tyler along the lines of the American System policy. The entire cabinet, save Secretary of State Daniel Webster, resigned. The British agent Caleb Cushing, chairman of the House Foreign Relations Committee, organized Congress to sustain the President's veto. The Whigs were unable to muster the two-thirds majority necessary to override. In the mid-1840s, Lincoln was active in the Illinois Whig party, hoping to be the party's congressional candidate. In 1843, as part of the 1844 presidential campaign, a Whig conclave adopted his declaration of principles and appointed him to write an address to the people of the state. Again, his declaration centered on a high protective tariff, internal improvements, and the need to restore the National Bank. He attacked direct taxation and budget-cutting, showing how the tariff was more efficient in increasing revenue. The 1844 presidential campaign was between Clay, the Whig candidate who had led the fight for the American System, and James K. Polk, the Democratic candidate who was one of the worst free-trade traitors to ever run for the U.S. presidency. For the first time, Lincoln himself was not a candidate. While Lincoln remained totally committed to Clay, he felt that Clay had compromised his strong commitment to the American System in an attempt to win the election. Lincoln toured the state again, making the protective tariff, by the spring of 1844, the most important issue of the campaign. This campaign was an all-out battle between British free trade and the American System. Lincoln charged the British with interference in the election, accusing them of supporting Democrat Polk, and flooding the country with money and political tracts against the protective tariff. Their free trade associations spent @bp|100,000 on behalf of Polk. The Liberty Party, a so-called ``anti-slavery'' third party, arguing that Clay was not sufficiently abolitionist, ran their own candidate, James Birney. Between British funding for the pro-slavery Polk, and British backing for the ``anti-slavery'' Birney, Clay was defeated. The election of 1844 left Lincoln dissatisfied with the results--both Clay's conduct, but also, he felt, his own shortcomings. He decided to study economics more rigorously and totally master the tariff question, which he did. In 1846, Lincoln was nominated for the U.S. House of Representatives from the 7th Congressional District of Illinois. The Democrats under Polk were attempting to weaken the tariff and reestablish the independent Sub-Treasury, so Lincoln ran on a protectionist, anti-Sub-Treasury platform. As soon as Polk had come into office, Congress passed two internal improvement bills--and Polk vetoed them both. In response, the newly elected Congressman Lincoln, before going to Washington, organized the 1846 Chicago River and Harbor Convention--the first national convention of its kind devoted to the American System of protective tariffs and internal improvements. Lincoln was one of the few delegates selected to address the 20,000 attendees. And of the 1,016 delegates from Illinois, it was Lincoln who was elected to be a member of the permanent organization established there. In his first address to a national gathering on internal improvements, Lincoln proposed the adoption of a unified national strategy--including the creation of a federal agency for collecting statistical information, which would make possible the selection of the most essential improvement projects. The problem was that no amount of talking would pass internal improvement bills over executive vetoes. That would take defeating the Democrats in the 1848 election. Polk did not merely veto internal impovements. He systematically dismantled the country at the behest of his British backers, adding greatly to the already devastating damage done by Andrew Jackson's dismantling of the Bank of the United States, and by Van Buren's treason. Polk and the Democrats in 1846 passed the Walker Tariff, dramatically lowering the protective tariff, from approximately 35 percent average duties under the Clay Tariff of 1842, to 22.5 percent. In response, Lincoln wrote up all of his research on the need for the protective tariff in a work called {Tariff Notes}. Lincoln's 1847 {Tariff Notes} was virtually identical to the writings of Henry Carey, starting with his earliest work in support of a protective tariff, {Essay on the Rate of Wages} (1835). Lincoln's law partner confirmed that Lincoln assiduously studied all of Carey's writings. Polk also passed the {Independent Treasury Act}--which completed the treason Jackson had begun. {This act prevented the U.S. Government from regulating the affairs of banks--and stipulated that the government had to be treated like any other depositor!} {To be continued.} -- John Covici covici@ccs.covici.com