| Note: Dr. Stephen Duncan was a citizen of Natchez
but owned considerable land holdings in Issaquena County. Mary was the
wife of his son, Henry P. Duncan. Henry and Mary P. Duncan lived in Issaquena
County. For more information about the Duncan family, refer to the Dr. Stephen Duncan biography on this site.
Natchez.
August 25th
1863
My Dear Mary
I trouble you with a line on the subject of our affairs, hoping that
you may be able to communicate the substance to some person or persons
having influence with the U. S. Govmt.-- In the first place -- allow me
to say I have no cause of complaint against President Lincoln's Proclamation
as a War Measure. All Goverments must possess the right & the power
of self-preservation, -- & to use all means & measures calculated
to secure this end. The President, therefore, had the right to proclaim
freedom to the slaves -- if he deemed the exercise of the right necessary
& essential to the suppression of the Rebellion -- but -- I think there
is just ground of complaint against its indiscriminate application to friends
as well as enemies & it is unfortuneately too true that its injurious
effects are felt certainly by three friends (& probably five) where
two enemies suffer. This is hard because the friends were powerless against
the numbers opposed to them. It is further hard -- because the Confiscation
Act is less [incessing?] in its destruction. It discriminates, & only
operates on those found in actual rebellion with officers or soldiers in
the Rebel ranks or those holding civil offices under the Rebel Govmt. If
possible -- this great grievance should be remedied. It furnishes a strong
argument against the U. S. Govmt -- which the secessionists do not fail
to use, -- & use freely. Why would not the President allow the Army
officers commanding districts -- to exercise a sound discretion in bringing
the Proclamation to bear on the inhabitants of their respective districts?
But again -- there is a strong & daily increasing desire to return
to the Union, -- under a pledge to the adoption of a gradual system of
emancipation. Efforts are now making to bring this about.-- Already the
converts are numerous -- very numerous, & among those -- too -- most
actively engaged on the secession side. All that is now wanting to give
success to this movement is some official assurance that the rights of
property holders (of any description) will be recognized on our return
to the Union with the pledge on our part that immediately thereon a system
of gradual emancipation shall be adopted by our State Legislature -- on
just & equitable terms (without compensation in money, but liberal
terms as to time.) Can the Govmt ask more than this? Could the people of
the Northern & Western States desire more? Would it not be infinitely
(& to all intents & purposes) better for them than Emancipation
under the Proclamation? The people of the U. S. Govmt cannot be benefitted
by the total & sudden prostration of our productive powers! by the
extinction of our entire prosperity. If we are to live again under one
Union & one Govmt -- we must live in mutual dependence on each other.
Taxes for the payment of the Govmt debt cannot be collected from a people
utterly ruined. The sudden emancipation of our slaves would so reduce the
value of the lands -- that the fee simple would not sell for as much as
could & would be collected from the people when in the enjoyment of
their rights as slaveholders. But -- is it not important to bring back
as speedily as possible the States of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas,
& Tennessee? How long after would it be before Alabama, Georgia, Florida,
& North Carolina would follow the example? I cannot think otherwise
than that the Govmt of the U. S. ought at once (& without a months
delay) to invite the people of these States to return to the Union. It
wants but some assurance that they will be treated as the Prodigal Son
(so beautifully illustrated in the Scriptures) & they will gladly manifest
their penitence if they can be assured that their acknowledgment will not
be spurned & scorned:
(signed) Stephen Duncan.
Source:
Stephen Duncan to Mary Duncan, August 25, 1863 . Transcribed and annotated
by the Lincoln Studies Center, Knox College, Galesburg, Illinois. Available
at Abraham Lincoln Papers at the Library of Congress, Manuscript Division
(Washington, D.C.: American Memory Project, [2000-02]), http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/alhtml/alhome.html,
accessed [22 May 2004].
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