Had such men held the opposite doctrine, and admitted,
yea, and insisted, as it was their duty to do, that
every question in morals and politics is a legitimate
subject of free discussion—the District
of Columbia would be far less objectionable, as the
seat of our Government. In that case the lamented
Dr. Crandall would not have been seized in the city
of Washington on the suspicion of being an abolitionist,
and thrown into prison, and subjected to distresses
of mind and body, which resulted in his premature
death. Had there been no slavery in the District,
this outrage would not have been committed; and the
murders, chargeable on the bloodiest of all bloody
institutions, would have been one less than they now
are. Talk of the slaveholding District of Columbia
being a suitable locality for the seat of our Government!
Why, Sir, a distinguished member of Congress was threatened
there with an indictment for the
crime of presenting,
or rather of proposing to present, a petition to the
body with which he was connected! Indeed the
occasion of the speech, on which I am now commenting,
was the
impudent protest of inhabitants of
that District against the right of the American people
to petition their own Congress, in relation to matters
of vital importance to the seat of their own Government!
I take occasion here to admit, that I have seen but
references to this protest—not the protest
itself. I presume, that it is not dissimilar,
in its spirit, to the petition presented about the
same time by Mr. Moore in the other House of Congress—his
speech on which, he complains was ungenerously anticipated
by yours on the petition presented by yourself.
As the petition presented by Mr. Moore is short, I
will copy it, that I may say to you with the more
effect—how unfit is the spirit of a slaveholding
people, as illustrated in this petition, to be the
spirit of the people at the seat of a free Government!
[Footnote A: “It (slavery) is a sin and
a curse both to the master and the slave:”—Henry
Clay.]
“To the Senate and House of Representatives
of the United States:
The petition of the undersigned, citizens of the District
of Columbia represents—That they have witnessed
with deep regret the attempts which are making to
disturb the integrity of the Union by a BAND OF
FANATICS, embracing men, women, and children, who cease
not day and night to crowd the tables of your halls
with SEDITIOUS MEMORIALS—and solicit your
honorable bodies that you will, in your wisdom, henceforth
give neither support nor countenance to such UNHALLOWED
ATTEMPTS, but that you will, in the most emphatic
manner, set the seal of your disapprobation upon all
such FOUL AND UNNATURAL EFFORTS, by refusing not only
to READ and REFER, but also to RECEIVE any papers which
either directly or indirectly, or by implication,
aim at any interference with the rights of your petitioners,
or of those of any citizen of any of the States or
Territories of the United States, or of this District
of which we are inhabitants.”