USA > Iowa > Tama County > History of Tama County, Iowa, together with sketches of their towns, villages and townships, educational, civil, military and political history, portraits of prominent persons, and biographies of representative citizens > Part 20
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6. That the repeal of the Missouri Compro- mise, and the refusal of the slave power to abide by the principles on which that repeal was pro- fessedly based, make the national domain the battle ground between freedom and slavery; and while Republicans stand on a national hasis, and will ever manifest and maintain a national spirit, they will shrink from no conflict and shirk no responsibility on this issue.
7. That the slave power, the present national administration and its adherents, having violated
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this policy, and the principles on which it is based, by a disregard of the law and its own profession, by encroachments upon the State and personal rights, and by breaking solemn covenants of the country, make the issue whether freedom shall be limited to the free States, or slavery to the slave States, and make that issue absorbing and paramount.
Resolved, That the firm, consistent, and patriotic course pursued by the Republican members of the present Congress, during the arduous protracted struggle for the speakership, meets with our cordial approval, and we recog- nize in Hon. N. P. Banks a statesman of mature abilities, a Republican of reliable character; and we hail his election as a proud triumph of those great principles of human liberty upon which the American government was founded.
The Democratic convention met at Iowa City, June 26, 1856, and adopted a plat- form and made the following nominations: Secretary of State, Geo. Snyder; Anditor, Jas. Pollard; Treasurer, George Paul; At- torney-General, James Baker. The follow- ing is the platform:
Resolved, That the Democracy of Iowa receive with joy, and ratify with confidence, the nom- inations of James Buchanan and John G. Breck- enridge.
2. That the platform of Democratic principles laid down by the Cincinnati convention mects our hearty concurrence, and that it is such a one as is worthy of the only National party in exist- ence.
On motion of Col. Martin, of Scott, the following resolution was unanimously adopted:
Resolved, That freedom and equal rights are the basis of Democracy, and that no measure or principle not embracing or recognizing these is any part or parcel of the Democratic creed; that Democracy is equality against privilege, freedom against aristocracy, liberty against licentious- ness, strict construction against latitudinarian interpretations of the constitution, law and order
against anarchy and violence, and the peace, bar- mony, prosperity and perpetuity of our glorious Union to the end of time.
The entire Republican ticket was elected. Sells, for Secretary of State, received 40,- 687 votes and Snyder 32,920.
There were three elections in 1857-the first in April, for Superintendent of Public Instruction, Register of Land Office and Des Moines River Commissioner; the sec ond in August, for the purpose of a vote on the new constitution; the third in Octo- ber, for Governor and Lieutenant Gov- ernor. The Democrats nominated the following ticket: Superintendent Public Instruction, Maturin L. Fisher; Register, Theodore S. Parvin; DesMoines River Commissioner, Gideon Bailey; Governor, Benj. M. Samuels; Lieutenant-Governor, Geo. Gillaspie.
The Republicans nominated the follow- ing ticket: Superintendent Public In- struction, L. A. Bugbee; Register, W. H. Holmes; Des Moines River Commissioner. HI F. Manning; Governor, Ralph P. Lowe; Lieutenant-Governor, Oran Faville.
The following Republican platform was adopted:
United in a common resolve to maintain right against wrong, and believing in the determina- tion of a virtuous and intelligent people to sus- tain justice, we declare:
1. That governments are instituted among men to secure the inalienable rights of life, lib- erty and the pursuit of happiness.
2. That the mission of the Republican party is to maintain the liberties of the people, the sovereignty of the States and the perpetuity of the Union.
3 That under the constitution, and by right, freedom alone is national.
4. That the Federal Government being one of limited powers, derived wholly from the con-
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stitution, its agent- should construe those powers strictly, and never exercise a doubtful authority, always inexpedient and dangerous.
5. That if this Jeffersonism and early policy were carried out, the Federal Government would relieve itself of all responsibility for the exist- ence of slavery, which Republicanism insists it should, and means it shall do, and that regard- ing slavery in the States as a local institution, beyond our reach, and above our authority, but recognizingit as of vital concern to the nation, we still oppose its spread, and demand that all national territory shall be free.
6. That the repeal of the Missouri compro- mise, and the refusal of the slave power to abide by the principle on which that repeal was pro. fessedly based, made the national domain the battle ground between freedom and slavery, and while Republicans stand on a national basis, and maintain a national spirit, they will shirk Do responsibility on this issne.
7. That the slave power-the present national administration and its adherents having violated this policy, and the principles ou which it is based, by a disregard of law and its own pro- fessions, by an invasion of the State and per- sonal rights, and by breaking solemn covenants, has forced upon the country the issue whether freedom shall be limited to the free States or slavery to the slave States, and makes that issue absorbing and paramount.
Resolved, That the recent opinion of the Su- preme Court of the United States, in the Dred Scott case, is the most alarming of those bold innovations upon the rights of the free States which have marked the administration of the government for years past, as sectional and disloyal to the spirit of our free institutions. We regard it as virtually revolutionizing the judicial action of the government, if tolerated; by giving to s'avery a national instead of a local character; opening free States and free Terri- tories for its diffusion; reducing to the condi- tion of chattels those who are recognized by the constitution as men, belying the sentiments of the Declaration of Independence, and casting reproach upon the action of those who, amid
toil and peril, laid deep the formation of the Union.
2 That the National Administration has brought disgrace upon the country by so long tolerating the demoralizing and heaven-defying practices of Brigham Young and his followers in Utah. The er:barrassment experienced by the present administration in reaching and cor- recting the evil, is mainly attributed to the doc- trine embodied in the Kansas Nebraska Bill, and the retention of the U. S. soldiery in Kansas to overawe unoffending men, instead of sending tbem to Utah, where the authority of the gen- eral government is brazenly defied, is bumili- ating evidence of perversion of the powers of the national government.
3. That we invite the affiliation and co-opera- tion of freemen of all parties, however differing from us in other respects, in support of the principles herein declared, and believing that the spirit of our institutions as well as the con- stitution of our country, guarantee liberty of conscience and equality of rights among citi- zens, we oppose all legislation impairing their security.
4. That we congratulate the people of Iowa upon the new constitution, for many reasons, but most of all in view of the fact that it enables them to provide for themselves a sound currency, and places the annual election in October instead of August, thus consulting the convenience of an agricultural population. .
5. That it is a deliberate conviction of this convention, that the next Legislature should provide a system of banking that will secure to the State a circulating medium, redeemable at all times, within its limits, in gold and silver; and we will support for State officers and the Legis- lature such, and such only, as are avowedly qualified favorable to this result.
6. That the administration of Governor Grimes deserves and receives our warmest en- dorsement, and that the thanks of all who love the character and prosperity of the State, are due to him, as well as to the Legislature, for their efforts to bring to justice a dishonorable public servant, defeat speculation, and prevent
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the squandering of the fund consecrated to the education of the children of the State.
7. That in the nominees for Governor and Licutanant-Governor we recognize men capable and honest, and every way worthy the support of the Republican party of this State.
The Democrats adopted the following platform :
As to national policy-
1. That we have undiminished confidence in the present administration. That the policy adopted is eminently wise and proper, and should command the support and approval of every rational man.
2 That the opposition to President Buchanan is now composed of the fire eaters of the South and the Black Republicans of the North, who are vieing with each other in abusing the admin- istration and Democratic party. We therefore place them in the same category, and brand them as a united opposition, and will treat them alike as factionists, disunionists and ene- mies of the Democracy and the country.
3. Thit we will maintain and preserve the Constitution of the United States, with all its checks and balances, and that treaties made by the President and Senate, laws passed by Congress under the Constitution, and decisions made by the Supreme Court of the United Stutes, are equally binding on the people, and must be maintained in order to preserve the country from anarchy, and that it is the duty of every citizen to sustain these departments of government against the assaults of bigots, fanat- ies and traitors.
As to State policy-
1. That we will preserve and maintain the institutions of this State in a just relation and harmony toward the general government, and we repudiate and condemn any effort that has been made, or may be made, which asserts the right or remotely tends to bring our State into collision orconflict with the general government.
2. That the conflict of the Black Republican party, acting through their Representatives in passing a law authorizing the Negroes and In-
dians to become witnesses against the citizens of this State, was an unjustifiable innovation upon the laws of the State, passed without ne- cessity, and the first step towards a system to equalize the black and white races.
3. The late Constitutional Convention, com- posed of a large majority of Black Republican members, openly advocated the equality of the black and white people, and unanimously recom mended, through an appendage to the constitu- tion, that the word "white" be stricken from that instrument; we, therefore, feel free to charge upon that party the design and purpose of abolitionizing the people of this State, and ; lacing the negro upon an equality with the white man.
4. That t !. " National Democracy of Iowa rc- gard the new constitution just adopted by the people, in many of its features, as essentially anti-Democratic, unjust, and containing prin- ciples that tend to subvert the distinction be- tween the black and white races; and looking to «quality between them.
We, therefore, now proclaim open and undis- guised hostility to each and every action and part of said instrument which contains these ob- noxious provisions, and we here raise the stand- ard of opposition and reform, and call upon every true patriot in the State to carry these questions to the ballot-box, and to elect officers for government of the State who will take every honorable measure to reform and amend said constitution.
5. That the laws of the last Legislature ap- portioning the State into Representative distriels and the adoption of that law by the late Black Republican Constitutional Convention, by which the majority of the members of the General Assembly are given to a minority of the people, and many thousands of our citizens are virtually disfranchised, was a tyrannical and flagitious outrage,-a violation of every principle of a Republican Government,-and demands the severest rebuke from the people; that we recog- nize in these proceedings a manifest conspiracy against the rights of the majority, and a wanton violation of the principles of our Republican form of Government.
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6. Th it the refusal of the late Constitutional Convention to allow the constitution to become the supreme law of the land, when sanctioned and adopted by a majority of the people, and postponing the taking effect of portions of the same for more than two years after its adoption, which was avowedly done to withhold politieal power from the people, and retain it in the hands of already condemned officers, is an insult and an outrage upon the people, and deserving our condemnation.
7. That the Democracy of the State of Iowa take this method of expressing their gratitude and confidence in the Hon George W. Jones, our Democratic Senator, and the Hon. A. Hall, late Democratic Representative, for their faitb- ful adherence to Democratic principles, and their untiring vigilance for the welfare of our young and promising State.
Fisher was elected Superintendent over Buzbee by 505 majority; Manning over Baily, for Commissioner, by 315; Lowe over Samuels, for Governor, by 2,149.
The campaign of 1858 was opened by the Republicans, meeting in convention at Iowa City, June 17, and adopting the fol- lowing platform:
WHEREAS, We, the representatives of the Republicans of Iowa, being again permitted to assemble in State Convention, deem this a fitting occasion to briefly express our views of national and State policy, and to affirm our adhesion to the principles of constitutional liberty, for which we have been long and earnestly con- tending. We believe this Republic specially ordained by the blood and treasure of our fore- fathers for the free homes of the mechanic, the operative and the farmer, and we, their descend- ents, are determined it shall be preserved and administered for our common welfare; and that the great problem of the ability of the people to govern themselves shall be clearly solved in the onward progress and prosperity of our Republi- can constitution; manifesting to the nations of this earth that the free spirit of this nation is unconquered and unconquerable; therefore,
Resolved, That the principles laid down in the Philadelphia platform, adopted on June 17, 1856, are founded upon the Constitution of the United States, are consonant with the teachings of Christianity, and are most heartily endorsed by the convention.
2. That in the contest now waging hetween freedom and slavery. our sympathies are wholly and strongly with the former -- that we have no truce to offer, no mercy to ask, that with us the Watchword is victory or death.
3. That the effort made to extend the area of slave territory on this continent, by the Demo- cratie party, is contrary to the spirit of the age and the genius of our institutions.
4. That by the passage of the English swindle for the admission of Kansas into the Union under the infamous Lecompton Constitution, whereby an unjust discrimination is made in favor of slave and against free States in the amount of population required to form a State government, the so-called national Democracy have proven devotion to slavery extension, the ir opposition to the interests of free labor, and their total disregard of the popular will.
5. That the new doctrine of the so-called Democratic party originated by Chief Justice Taney, in the Dred Scott decision, and carry slavery into our national territory, has no foun- dation in the Federal Constitution, is at war with the verities of vur history, civil and judi- cial, and this is calculated to tolerate the en- slaving of our race in all the States.
6. That we view with satisfaction the course of those who, without respect to party feeling. and uninfluenced by the threats and in scorn of the bribes and corrupting influences of the Buchanan administration, boldly, and as free- men fighting for freemen's rights, opposed with all their might the passage of the Lecompton Constitution and the English swindle through Congress, and we trust that among the people there will continue the san.e strong opposition to the encroachments of the slave power, which they have so gallantly manifested before the Dation.
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7. That we look forward ho; efully to that good time, not far distant, when it shall be deemed legitimate, proper and constitutional for this government to extend its protecting care over free labor, the commerce and industrial interests of all the country, instead of bending its whole energies and treasure for the aggrand- izement of a slaveholding aristocracy in one section of the Union.
8. That the corruption which stalks abroad at noonday, porvading every department of the National Government, the gross and shameless use of Presidential power and patronage to in- fluence the action of Congress, the astounding increase in national expenditures in a time of peace and universal financial embarrassment (involving, as it does, » debt of forty-five mil- lions of dollars, and an expenditure of nearly one hundred millions of dollars during a single financial year), bringing upon the government the burning disgrace of bankruptcy and threat- ening the onerous hurthens of direct taxation, demand a solemn, earnest protest from us in behalf of the people of Iowa.
9. That the mismanagement and reekless squandering of the school fund of the State by the late Seperintendent of Public Instruction, and the manner in which this sacred fund has been dealt with in many counties in the State, as developed by the investigation already insti- tuted, under a Republican State administration, demonstrates the wisdom of that thorough ac- countability and scrutiny provided for by the State Legislature.
10. That we, as Republicans, pledge our- selves to use all honorable efforts to promote the administration of the State and general government with strict economy and a just regard to the growing interests of our State and Union.
11. That our State should have that consider- ation from the general government to which her resources, power and future prospects entitle ber, and that we will demand from the general government five per cent. of the proceeds of those lands hitherto entered with land warrants within the State; the improvement of the navi- gation of our great inland seas, and such addi-
tional grants of lands to aid the building of railronds through unoccupied portions of Iowa as will upbuild the population and wealth of our State and the general welfare of our common country.
12. That the members of this convention heartily endorse the candidates nominated to- day for the various offices, and promise their united and zealous support in the ensuing eam- paign, and, if their labors can achieve it, a triumphant election.
13. That the entire Republican delegation in Congress are entitled to the gratitude of the nation for their able and zealous advocacy of true Republican principles; and that our imme- diate Representatives, Messrs. Harlan, Curtis and Davis, have the unqualified approbation of their constituents for the talented and efficient mauner in which they have represented the State of lowa, and especially for the earnest and uncompromising opposition waged by them against the Lecompton English Bill bribe and other tyrannical abuses of the present adminis- tration.
The following ticket was then nomi- nated: Secretary of State, Elijah Sells; Auditor of State, J. W. Cattell; State Treasurer, John W. Jones; Attorney-Gen- eral, S. A. Rice; Register of State Land Office, A. B Miller; Com. of DesMoines River Improvement, Wm. C. Drake.
The Democrats met June 23 at Des Moines, nominated the following ticket and adopted a platform: Secretary of State, Samuel Douglas; Auditor of State, Theodore S. Parvin; Treasurer of State, Samuel H. Lorah; Attorney-General, Jas. S. Elwood; Commissioner Des Moines River Improvement, Charles Baldwin; Register of Land Office, James M. Reid. The following is the platform:
The Democrats of Iowa, through representa- tives in State Convention assembled, proclaim their uualterable devotion and adhesion to the principles embodied iu the resolutions following:
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Resolved, That we adopt, abide by, and will cherish and defend the platform of principles promulgated by the representatives of the De- mocracy of the nation, when assembled in national convention, at Cincinnati, in June, 1856, believing, as we do, that the platform there laid down is broad and strong enough to uphold and sustain every true patriot, and with such only do we desire companionship.
2. That all attempts to engender sectional prejudice and animosities are pregnant with mischief, tend to hinder the progress and devel- opment of our country, and must, if persisted in, Icad to the dismemberment of the uuion of the States and the destruction of the only free government of the world.
3. That the rights of the people should be maintained alike against the encroachment of federal power, the z al of blind partisanism and wiles of uuserupu ous and demagogue politi- cians, and that the office of the Democratic party is to sce these cardinal principals main- tained in their party.
4. That the a,citation of the slavery question tends to weaken the bonds of our nuion by de- stroying toat confidence which should exist between the different States, and begetting sec tional animosities, and that it is the duty of all true patriots to frown upon such attempts, and secure, by all honorable means, the discredit alike of the extremists of the South and North.
5. That the decision of the judicial tribuuals of the State and Federal Government should be respected, must be submitted to, obeyed and carried into effect; and that any attempt to set them at defiance is a step toward anarchy and confusion, tends to impair respect for the gov- ernment, and m rits the unmeasured conder.na- tion of all law-abiding and peaceably disposed citizens.
6. That the outrages recently committed on our shipping by officers of the British Govern- ment demands an immediate and unequivocal denial and apology; that now is an appropriate time to settle finally the question of the rights to visit and serch vessels n the seas, and in the event an apology is refused, the arrogant pre-
tensions of European powers should try the "last resort" of nations, the cannon's mouth, and the world taught the lesson that our flag cannot be degraded, nor our nation insulted with impunity.
7. That the administration of State affairs in Iowa for the last four years, under Republican rule, is of a character to warrant the most rigid investigation by the people, aud that the expo- sure thus far of their speculations, fraud and extravagance calls for the denunciation of all honest men
8. That an empty treasury, extravagant ex- penditures, and the stifling of investigation into corruption, by Republican officials of Iowa, should be sufficient to arouse tax-payers to the enormous outrages perpetrated upon the people's treasury, and absolutely demand a change iu the adm nistration, that the guilty may be brought to punishment, and our State preserved from utter bankruptcy.
9. That the Democracy of Iowa pledge to the people their earnest, persistent and unulterable purpose to reform the State government, aud to bring to condign punishment whoever may be found guilty of criminal default in any of its departments.
The Republicans carried the State by an average majority of 3,000.
The Republicans were again first in the field for the State campaign of 1859. They met in conver.tion, June 22, at Des Moines, and nominated the following ticket: Governor, S. J. Kirkwood; Lieu- tenant-Governor, Nicholas J. Rusch; Su- preme Judges, Ralph P. Lowe, L. J. Stockton, Caleb Baldwin. The platform adopted was as follows:
Possessing an abiding confidence in the intel- ligenee and patriotism of the American people, an unwavering faith in their devotion to the eternal principles of liberty, as they came from the hand and heart of the fathers of the Repub- lic, and invoking the blessing of heaven upon our efforts to maintain them in their purity, we
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commend them most cordially to the sympathy and support of the Republicans of Iowa and of the Nation.
Resolved, That we entertain an abiding confi- dence in the cardinal doctrines contained in the Republican National platform of 1856, and re- affir ming the same, we commend them anew to the discriminating consideration of the people.
2. That the sum of nearly one hundred niil- lion dollars, supposed to be necessary to support the government under rule of the Africanized Democracy, is incompatible with just ideas of a simple, economical Republican government, and the issue of National shinplasters to meet such demand shows the hopeless financial degreda- tion of the present administration.
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