DESIGNS OF RADICALISM. hostile legislation, in order that all the slaves might be carried to the extreme Southern States, where slavery was more profitable. This collecting of all the slaves in the Gulf States, would, with their natural increase, have given, in ten or fifteen years, a black population in them of not less than six millions. In this way, when emancipation should take place, it would leave the blacks in a much greater preponderance than they even now are. The New England radicals did not, at that time, either expect or desire the immediate abolition of slavery, but wished an accumulation of blacks in the Gulf States, before this should occur. The war, however, came on and caused the immediate abolition of slavery, as a necessity in order to secure success. In this respect, their well laid plans were disconcerted, but they did not falter in their purposes. Their object ever since has been to place the Southern States in such a condition that the white people, now residing in them, would be compelled to leave their homes and abandon the country to the blacks. A systematic persecution of the white race of the South, constant and unceasing efforts to ruin and degrade them —to deprive them of their property and their political rights, and at the same time to place all the political power in the country in the hands of their former slaves, without any training or previous preparation for the proper exercise of those privileges —all show a studied effort to drive the white people out of the Gulf States and to place those States under the control of the blacks. The whites are, to a great extent, disfranchised, and all the black males, over the age of twenty-one, enfranchised. The radicals know very well, with the examples of Hayti and Jamaica before them, that the white people of the Northern States and from Europe will not emigrate to any country while it is under the control and management of ignorant blacks. In the Northern States, where there are but few blacks, the whites will not allow them political privileges, and if they will not do so in their own States how can they be expected to immigrate to States where the negroes not only vote but where they will have the supremacy? The New England radicals know that under their plan of reconstruction there will be no immigration of white people to the South, and they do not intend there shall be any if they can prevent it. Their object is to collect all the blacks in the extreme Southern or Gulf States and at the same time to force all the whites to move from the South and settle in'the North. This will be the effect of their reconstruction policy, and they so intend. Mlen do not usually act without motives. Let us now inquire what motives can induce such action on their part. Other measures which they have adopted show what motives are controlling them. The N'ew England Radical politicians are the representatives of wealthy capitalists and manufacturers, and adopt the policy which they consider most conducive to their interests. These men desire a dense population in the Northern States in order 533
Designs of Radicalism [pp. 532-537]
Debow's review, Agricultural, commercial, industrial progress and resources. / Volume 4, Issue 6
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- Historical Justice to the South - General G. Manigault - pp. 497-520
- The Rocky Mountains - Josiah Copley - pp. 520-530
- Memories of the War. From Mr. De Bow's Unpublished Papers - Mr. De Bow - pp. 530-532
- Designs of Radicalism - pp. 532-537
- Southern Immigration—Brazil and British Honduras - Charles A. Pilsbury - pp. 537-545
- Modern Discoveries: Shall we have another Deluge? - Nicholas A. Knox - pp. 545-557
- The Return of Good Feeling - Geo. Fitzhugh - pp. 557-562
- Cotton Supply, Demand, Etc. - Jno. C. Delavique - pp. 562-571
- Department of Commerce - pp. 571-575
- Department of Immigration and Labor - pp. 575-580
- Department of Miscellany - pp. 581-588
- Department of International Improvement - pp. 588-594
- Editorial Notes and Clippings - pp. 595-600
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"Designs of Radicalism [pp. 532-537]." In the digital collection Making of America Journal Articles. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/acg1336.2-04.006. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 24, 2025.