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yellowthornoftexas

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The post-war Jefferson Davis: The famous trial that never was:

When the War Between the States ended, the victorious Northerners viewed Jefferson Davis, as the former President of the Confederate States of America, much differently than others who had served the Confederacy.

For example, when Robert E. Lee surrendered to U.S. Grant at Appomattox Court House, the meeting between the two generals was amicable. Lee was received and treated with courtesy as a senior officer. The terms were so apparently lenient, with Grant conceding to Lee's requests on behalf of his soldiers, the surrender was referred to as "a gentleman's agreement."

However, even after signing a loyalty oath, Lee and other former Confederate Army officers and members of the CSA government were later disenfranchised and treated as second-class citizens. But in the eyes of the northern public, Jefferson Davis was set apart for still a different kind of treatment.

On May 10, 1865, about a mile from the town of Irwinville, Georgia, Federal troops captured Davis. With his arrest on that spring morning, his government ceased to exist. His wife, Varina, and their children were sent to Savannah, where she was kept under virtual house arrest and forbidden to leave the city. Because the soldiers, carpetbaggers and Union supporters treated the Davis children so badly, Varina arranged for them to go to Canada along with her mother.

Davis had been taken back to Virginia and imprisoned in Fort Monroe, where he would stay for the next two years. At first, he was bound in leg irons. Guards watched him around the clock but were not permitted to speak to him. He was allowed no visitors; a light burned in his cell day and night; and his only reading material was a Bible. His treatment was a clear violation of the Bill of Rights.

Many Northern Congressmen and newspapers were nothing short of vicious in their public attacks of Davis. They wanted to see him tried for treason and hanged. In one article, and in one very long sentence, the New York Times referred to Davis by every insulting comment and offensive name that was fit to print. Rhetoric far outran legal reasoning.

But if Davis was in an unusual legal predicament, so was the United States government. The dilemma faced by Washington was how to handle the Davis case. The government under Lincoln had created its own major obstacles by spending four years proclaiming that secessionists were "traitors and conspirators." The U.S. military had silenced opposition to the administration by closing down newspapers that dared challenge the party line or to make the slightest suggestion that secession might be legal. Thousands of Northerners had been jailed for exercising their First Amendment rights, and those thousands had friends with long memories in the Northern bar.

Northern lawyers were angry for having their clients locked in prison with no civil rights as guaranteed by the Constitution; having civilians tried by military courts for non-existent crimes; having a government that ignored the Supreme Court, setting itself above the constitutional plan of checks and balances. They didn't like having to beg the president for justice for clients convicted by phony courts-martial or locked up for long periods without any trial. Under Lincoln, the U.S. government had become tyrannical, and certainly anything but a free and constitutional society.

The best lawyers of the day were willing to volunteer to defend Jefferson Davis, because they were angry at the way Lincoln's government had trampled the Bill of Rights and the Constitution for four years. Even those who didn't believe in secession were repulsed by the conduct of the Republican administration and the U.S. military.

Charles O'Connor of New York, one of the most famous trial lawyers of the era and a man of great stature in the legal profession, volunteered to be Davis's counsel. Salmon P. Chase, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, would be the trial judge.

But interesting things began to happen, and the government's dilemma became even worse. University of Virginia Law Professor, Albert Bledsoe, published a book, "Is Davis a Traitor?" Bledsoe methodically took apart the case against secession, delivering a solid blow to the prosecutors and dampening their zeal to try Davis. Prosecutors actually began to look for a way to avoid trying him without vindicating the South.

Then another method was decided on for prosecution. The attorney general would bring in outside, independent counsel, as we have seen in modern times, such as in Watergate or the Clinton scandals. The government needed someone of great standing in the legal community to be the lead prosecutor. It chose John J. Clifford. But after reviewing the case, Clifford withdrew citing "grave doubts" about the validity of the case. The government could "end up having fought a successful war, only to have it declared unlawful by a Virginia jury," where Davis's "crime" was alleged to have been committed.

President Johnson, Lincoln's successor, thought the easiest way out would be to pardon Davis, as he had pardoned many other Confederates. But Davis refused, saying, "To ask for a pardon would be a confession of guilt." He wanted a trial to have the issue of secession decided by a court of law — where it should have been decided to begin with — instead of on battlefields. Most Southerners wanted the same.

Northerners either forgot or were unaware of a great secessionist tradition in America. Southerners were not alone in their view that each state had the right to determine its own destiny in the Union. The procedure for joining the Union also applied to withdrawing from the Union.

That thought harkens back to an editorial by the Cincinnati (Ohio) Daily Inquirer, in the summer of 1861, after the "traitor" label was let loose by the North: "The Republican papers are great on treason. . . . It is treason to circulate petitions for a compromise or peaceful readjustment of our national troubles . . . to question the constitutional powers of the President to increase the standing army without authority of law . . . to object to squads of military visiting private houses, and to make search and seizures. . . to question the infallibility of the President, and treason not to concur with him. . . It is treason to talk of hard times; to say that the war might have been avoided. It is treason to be truthful and faithful to the Constitution."

A year after John Clifford withdrew, the government appointed another special counsel, Richard Dana of Boston, who had written the novel, "Two Years Before the Mast." But after reviewing the evidence, he agreed with Clifford; the case was a loser. Dana argued that "a conviction will settle nothing in law or national practice not now settled…as a rule of law by war." Dana observed that the right to secede from the Union had not been settled by civilized means but by military power and the destruction of much life and property in the South. The North should accept its uncivilized victory, however dirty its hands might be, and not expose the fruits of its carnage to scrutiny by a peaceful court of law.

Now, over two years after Davis's imprisonment and grand jury indictments for treason, the stage was set for the great public trial of the century. Davis had been released from prison on a $100,000 bond, supported by none other than Horace Greeley, the leading abolitionist writer in the North and a former Lincoln supporter. Greeley and a host of others were outraged at the treatment Davis had received, being locked up in a dungeon for more than two years with no speedy trial.

Since two famous special counsels had told the government its case was a loser, finally, none other than the Chief Justice, in a quirk of Constitutional manipulation, devised an idea to avoid a trial without vindicating the South. His amazing solution was little short of genius.

The Fourteenth Amendment had been adopted, which provided that anyone who had engaged in insurrection against the United States and had at one time taken an oath of allegiance (which Davis had done as a U.S. Senator) could not hold public office. The Bill of Rights prevents double jeopardy, so Davis, who had already been punished once by the Fourteenth Amendment in not being permitted to hold public office, couldn't be tried and punished again for treason.

Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase secretly passed along his clever argument to Davis's counsel, Charles O'Connor, who then made the motion to dismiss. The Court took the motion under consideration, passing the matter on to the Supreme Court for determination.

In late December 1867 while the motion was pending, President Johnson granted amnesty to everyone in the South, including Davis. But the Davis case was still on the docket. In February 1868, at a dinner party attended by the Chief Justice and a government attorney, they agreed that on the following day a motion for non-prosecution would be made that would dismiss the case. A guest overheard the conversation and reported what was on the minds of most Southerners: "I did not consider that he [Davis] was any more guilty of treason than I was, and that a trial should be insisted upon, which could properly only result in a complete vindication of our cause, and of the action of the many thousands who had fought and of the many thousands who had died for what they felt to be right."

And so, the case of United States versus Jefferson Davis came to its end — a case that was to be the trial of the century, a great state trial, perhaps the most significant trial in the history of the nation — that never was.

©April 2006
 
The post-war Jefferson Davis: The famous trial that never was:

When the War Between the States ended, the victorious Northerners viewed Jefferson Davis, as the former President of the Confederate States of America, much differently than others who had served the Confederacy.

For example, when Robert E. Lee surrendered to U.S. Grant at Appomattox Court House, the meeting between the two generals was amicable. Lee was received and treated with courtesy as a senior officer. The terms were so apparently lenient, with Grant conceding to Lee's requests on behalf of his soldiers, the surrender was referred to as "a gentleman's agreement."

However, even after signing a loyalty oath, Lee and other former Confederate Army officers and members of the CSA government were later disenfranchised and treated as second-class citizens. But in the eyes of the northern public, Jefferson Davis was set apart for still a different kind of treatment.

On May 10, 1865, about a mile from the town of Irwinville, Georgia, Federal troops captured Davis. With his arrest on that spring morning, his government ceased to exist. His wife, Varina, and their children were sent to Savannah, where she was kept under virtual house arrest and forbidden to leave the city. Because the soldiers, carpetbaggers and Union supporters treated the Davis children so badly, Varina arranged for them to go to Canada along with her mother.

Davis had been taken back to Virginia and imprisoned in Fort Monroe, where he would stay for the next two years. At first, he was bound in leg irons. Guards watched him around the clock but were not permitted to speak to him. He was allowed no visitors; a light burned in his cell day and night; and his only reading material was a Bible. His treatment was a clear violation of the Bill of Rights.

Many Northern Congressmen and newspapers were nothing short of vicious in their public attacks of Davis. They wanted to see him tried for treason and hanged. In one article, and in one very long sentence, the New York Times referred to Davis by every insulting comment and offensive name that was fit to print. Rhetoric far outran legal reasoning.

But if Davis was in an unusual legal predicament, so was the United States government. The dilemma faced by Washington was how to handle the Davis case. The government under Lincoln had created its own major obstacles by spending four years proclaiming that secessionists were "traitors and conspirators." The U.S. military had silenced opposition to the administration by closing down newspapers that dared challenge the party line or to make the slightest suggestion that secession might be legal. Thousands of Northerners had been jailed for exercising their First Amendment rights, and those thousands had friends with long memories in the Northern bar.

Northern lawyers were angry for having their clients locked in prison with no civil rights as guaranteed by the Constitution; having civilians tried by military courts for non-existent crimes; having a government that ignored the Supreme Court, setting itself above the constitutional plan of checks and balances. They didn't like having to beg the president for justice for clients convicted by phony courts-martial or locked up for long periods without any trial. Under Lincoln, the U.S. government had become tyrannical, and certainly anything but a free and constitutional society.

The best lawyers of the day were willing to volunteer to defend Jefferson Davis, because they were angry at the way Lincoln's government had trampled the Bill of Rights and the Constitution for four years. Even those who didn't believe in secession were repulsed by the conduct of the Republican administration and the U.S. military.

Charles O'Connor of New York, one of the most famous trial lawyers of the era and a man of great stature in the legal profession, volunteered to be Davis's counsel. Salmon P. Chase, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, would be the trial judge.

But interesting things began to happen, and the government's dilemma became even worse. University of Virginia Law Professor, Albert Bledsoe, published a book, "Is Davis a Traitor?" Bledsoe methodically took apart the case against secession, delivering a solid blow to the prosecutors and dampening their zeal to try Davis. Prosecutors actually began to look for a way to avoid trying him without vindicating the South.

Then another method was decided on for prosecution. The attorney general would bring in outside, independent counsel, as we have seen in modern times, such as in Watergate or the Clinton scandals. The government needed someone of great standing in the legal community to be the lead prosecutor. It chose John J. Clifford. But after reviewing the case, Clifford withdrew citing "grave doubts" about the validity of the case. The government could "end up having fought a successful war, only to have it declared unlawful by a Virginia jury," where Davis's "crime" was alleged to have been committed.

President Johnson, Lincoln's successor, thought the easiest way out would be to pardon Davis, as he had pardoned many other Confederates. But Davis refused, saying, "To ask for a pardon would be a confession of guilt." He wanted a trial to have the issue of secession decided by a court of law — where it should have been decided to begin with — instead of on battlefields. Most Southerners wanted the same.

Northerners either forgot or were unaware of a great secessionist tradition in America. Southerners were not alone in their view that each state had the right to determine its own destiny in the Union. The procedure for joining the Union also applied to withdrawing from the Union.

That thought harkens back to an editorial by the Cincinnati (Ohio) Daily Inquirer, in the summer of 1861, after the "traitor" label was let loose by the North: "The Republican papers are great on treason. . . . It is treason to circulate petitions for a compromise or peaceful readjustment of our national troubles . . . to question the constitutional powers of the President to increase the standing army without authority of law . . . to object to squads of military visiting private houses, and to make search and seizures. . . to question the infallibility of the President, and treason not to concur with him. . . It is treason to talk of hard times; to say that the war might have been avoided. It is treason to be truthful and faithful to the Constitution."

A year after John Clifford withdrew, the government appointed another special counsel, Richard Dana of Boston, who had written the novel, "Two Years Before the Mast." But after reviewing the evidence, he agreed with Clifford; the case was a loser. Dana argued that "a conviction will settle nothing in law or national practice not now settled…as a rule of law by war." Dana observed that the right to secede from the Union had not been settled by civilized means but by military power and the destruction of much life and property in the South. The North should accept its uncivilized victory, however dirty its hands might be, and not expose the fruits of its carnage to scrutiny by a peaceful court of law.

Now, over two years after Davis's imprisonment and grand jury indictments for treason, the stage was set for the great public trial of the century. Davis had been released from prison on a $100,000 bond, supported by none other than Horace Greeley, the leading abolitionist writer in the North and a former Lincoln supporter. Greeley and a host of others were outraged at the treatment Davis had received, being locked up in a dungeon for more than two years with no speedy trial.

Since two famous special counsels had told the government its case was a loser, finally, none other than the Chief Justice, in a quirk of Constitutional manipulation, devised an idea to avoid a trial without vindicating the South. His amazing solution was little short of genius.

The Fourteenth Amendment had been adopted, which provided that anyone who had engaged in insurrection against the United States and had at one time taken an oath of allegiance (which Davis had done as a U.S. Senator) could not hold public office. The Bill of Rights prevents double jeopardy, so Davis, who had already been punished once by the Fourteenth Amendment in not being permitted to hold public office, couldn't be tried and punished again for treason.

Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase secretly passed along his clever argument to Davis's counsel, Charles O'Connor, who then made the motion to dismiss. The Court took the motion under consideration, passing the matter on to the Supreme Court for determination.

In late December 1867 while the motion was pending, President Johnson granted amnesty to everyone in the South, including Davis. But the Davis case was still on the docket. In February 1868, at a dinner party attended by the Chief Justice and a government attorney, they agreed that on the following day a motion for non-prosecution would be made that would dismiss the case. A guest overheard the conversation and reported what was on the minds of most Southerners: "I did not consider that he [Davis] was any more guilty of treason than I was, and that a trial should be insisted upon, which could properly only result in a complete vindication of our cause, and of the action of the many thousands who had fought and of the many thousands who had died for what they felt to be right."

And so, the case of United States versus Jefferson Davis came to its end — a case that was to be the trial of the century, a great state trial, perhaps the most significant trial in the history of the nation — that never was.

©April 2006
Wow that was powerful. Did the whole double jeopardy thing really happen? I've never heard this before. What an interesting read. I always thought the amnesty ruling is what saved Davis's hide.
 
Double jeopardy means one cannot be tried again for the same offense after being acquitted, or for that matter after being convicted. It does not preclude a person being subjected to other legal actions, for example:

A person convicted or acquitted in a criminal trial may still be sued in a civil trial. It could also happen the other way, although that is less common; a person losing a case in civil court would not preclude him being tried or convicted in criminal court.

A person acquitted in state court may be tried in federal court for violating the victim's civil rights.

A person convicted or a crime may lose his driving privileges in a separate proceeding, or a parolee may have his parole revoked in addition to the penalty for the new crime.
 
1. it is not clear if this is something our wrote or something you copied.
2. The total lack of sources unfortunately makes it pretty worthless.
3. It actually provide all the reasons you need for why he / the south was guilty.

"but Davis refused, saying, "To ask for a pardon would be a confession of guilt." He wanted a trial to have the issue of secession decided by a court of law — where it should have been decided to begin with — instead of on battlefields. "
Yep is should have ben decided peacefully. But instead of going true the legal process of leaving the union... The south decided to do so unilaterally... and after becoming the CSA president he decided to do it by starting a war... by attacking Federal installations all across the south and in the end bombarding a US fort.
So guilty of treason, since he waged war on the US... when still a US citizen.

The procedure for joining the Union also applied to withdrawing from the Union.
The procedure work true congress and likely the same procedure could have been used for leaving the union...
But the south Never even tried it... they did it unilaterally and used force from the start.
So again - Guilty

that said, I think the way he was treated was totally unacceptable... He should have been treated properley as the law say.
 
3. It actually provide all the reasons you need for why he / the south was guilty.

"but Davis refused, saying, "To ask for a pardon would be a confession of guilt." He wanted a trial to have the issue of secession decided by a court of law — where it should have been decided to begin with — instead of on battlefields. "
Yep is should have ben decided peacefully. But instead of going true the legal process of leaving the union... The south decided to do so unilaterally... and after becoming the CSA president he decided to do it by starting a war... by attacking Federal installations all across the south and in the end bombarding a US fort.
So guilty of treason, since he waged war on the US... when still a US citizen.

The procedure for joining the Union also applied to withdrawing from the Union.
The procedure work true congress and likely the same procedure could have been used for leaving the union...
But the south Never even tried it... they did it unilaterally and used force from the start.
So again - Guilty

that said, I think the way he was treated was totally unacceptable... He should have been treated properley as the law say.

Agree entirely that he should have been afforded far more rights granted under the Bill of Rights, though I do also understand the emotion resulting from the prior four+ years. It is tough to fault either side in this case, though I do wonder how it (Davis' situation) would have borne out had Lincoln been around.

That said, to play a bit of devil's advocate (I hold no side in this as it isn't a concept I have focused on as yet) - if the Lincoln administration considered the secession to be illegal while simultaneously not considering the seceded states to be their own nation, why didn't Lincoln take the southern states to court? Rather, he too jumped to a final conclusion that courts would not be effective in his initial call for militia on April 15:

Whereas the laws of the United States have been for some time past, and now are opposed, and the execution thereof obstructed, in the States of South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas, by combinations too powerful to be suppressed by the ordinary course of judicial proceedings, or by the powers vested in the Marshals by law,
http://www.historyplace.com/lincoln/proc-1.htm

Did southern states perhaps feel that the circumstances were also "too powerful to be (expressed) by the ordinary course of judicial proceedings" and therein, believing the right of secession to be inherent in the Constitution, follow the course they ultimately did?
 
By the time Lincoln became president it was way to late for involving the courts... the south had been taking over federal property since the end of 1860.
And a court system only work when it got the backing of police and if needed military forces... that in the end got the biggest guns. And that was no longer the case in the effected stats.
 
By the time Lincoln became president it was way to late for involving the courts... the south had been taking over federal property since the end of 1860.
And a court system only work when it got the backing of police and if needed military forces... that in the end got the biggest guns. And that was no longer the case in the effected stats.
Very Andrew Jackson-esque position. :D Since the south, in Lincoln's manner of thinking, was breaking the US Constitution, and he did ultimately create a military force TO work for the court system, he still could have gone to the courts in concert with the military force.
In fact, Lincoln COULDN'T have gone to court until the south was breaking the law, so shouldn't he have gone to court once he got into office to counter the "illegal" taking of federal land?
 
Very Andrew Jackson-esque position. :D Since the south, in Lincoln's manner of thinking, was breaking the US Constitution, and he did ultimately create a military force TO work for the court system, he still could have gone to the courts in concert with the military force.
In fact, Lincoln COULDN'T have gone to court until the south was breaking the law, so shouldn't he have gone to court once he got into office to counter the "illegal" taking of federal land?
Do you really think that Jefferson Davis would have responded to a subpoena?
 
Do you really think that Jefferson Davis would have responded to a subpoena?
Certainly not and from his perspective he would not have had to as he was no longer living under the auspices of the US Constitution. But my primary intent was to point out a bit of the inconsistency, as I see it, of expecting the south to follow the "legal process" and go through the courts as suggested in post #5 and then take no issue with Lincoln not attempting it himself.

Let me preface the following by stating I am open to all sides on this so any position with evidence can convince me. At this point, I believe the south COULD have used the courts, but just as Davis would likely not have responded to a subpoena, one can conclude the south could surmise that any "legal" attempt at secession would have only resulted in a loss in court (see Texas v White). This would have put them in the same position after a legal decision with even less footing than they possessed in late 1860.
I also believe, as you suggested, that Lincoln would have only been wasting his time and resources taking the south to court. However, I do believe it would have had a bit of a positive international appeal showing that he still was following rule of law and that he legally believed the southern states to still be under the rule of law of the United States. This then would also give him additional standing to use military force to squash the "rebellion."
 
Very Andrew Jackson-esque position. :D Since the south, in Lincoln's manner of thinking, was breaking the US Constitution, and he did ultimately create a military force TO work for the court system, he still could have gone to the courts in concert with the military force.
In fact, Lincoln COULDN'T have gone to court until the south was breaking the law, so shouldn't he have gone to court once he got into office to counter the "illegal" taking of federal land?
There where legal ways of of the union... they didn't use them.
By the time Lincoln got into office the federal government had lost all control of SC... and the south had been braking US law for month. Like when armed civilians or state militia take over Federal property...

Sure he could have asked the local authorities to arrest all insurgents in SC... but I do think we can all agree that it would have been a was of time... and would only have made him look week and in no way have done anything to help the situation.
 
At first, he was bound in leg irons. Guards watched him around the clock but were not permitted to speak to him. He was allowed no visitors; a light burned in his cell day and night; and his only reading material was a Bible. His treatment was a clear violation of the Bill of Rights.

Given his poor health and nervous issues, it sounds to me as if someone had hoped he wouldn't live through this kind of treatment!
 
That was probably "their" intent/hope.
"They" had underestimated his willpower. I think although during the war he was so frail, quite often bedridden and depending on Varina "running the machine", when it counted, he withstood. Varina said it had torn her apart to see him in his misery when she was allowed to visit him - but I think he simply would not allow himself to give in and succumb to his mistreatment.
 
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