War Between the States Sesquicentennial—Virginia Seeks Peace
From: bernhard1848@att.net
No initiatives for peaceful compromise, nor peaceful and practical solution to African slavery were forthcoming from Lincoln or the Republican party. Their policy since Lincoln’s election was steadfast resistance to any measures that would resolve the sectional differences. Congress was by February 1861 dominated by Northern interests after the departure of several Southern States, and had free reign over legislation which would avert war between Americans.
Bernhard Thuersam, Director
Cape Fear Historical Institute
www.cfhi.net
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The War Between the States Sesquicentennial:
Virginia Seeks Peace as Radicals Seek War:
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These resolutions provided for the appointment of [former President] John Tyler as commissioner to the President of the United States and Judge John Robertson commissioner to the seceded States. They were instructed respectively to request the President….and the authorities of the seceded States to abstain, pending the action of the proposed peace convention, from “all acts calculated to produce a collision of arms between the States and the Government of the United States.”
Congress, however, paid on attention to the Virginia resolutions. In neither House were they printed or referred to a committee. They were soon allowed to lie on a table unnoticed.
Tyler left Washington on January 29 with the expectation of returning for the Peace Convention…On the day before leaving, he sent another letter to President Buchanan [which] expressed appreciation for the courtesies that had been shown him and pleasure of hearing the President’s message read in the Senate. He spoke of a rumor to the effect that at Fortress Monroe the cannon had been put on the land side and pointed inland.
His comment on this report was “that when Virginia is making every possible effort to redeem and save the Union, it is seemingly ungenerous to have cannon leveled at her bosom.” To this letter Buchanan sent a very courteous reply, stating that he would inquire into the rumors with reference to Fortress Monroe.”
(John Tyler, Champion of the Old South, Oliver Perry Chitwood, American Historical Association, 1939, pp. 436-438)