SIR: I have the honor to inclose a memorial presented by a committee of the citizens of Liberty County, in this State, a community noted for their respectability and worth. The subject presented, I would respectfully submit, is one that demands the early notice of the Congress when it shall reassemble, and the instructions of the War Department (in accordance with such legislation as may be adopted) for the government of military commanders. The evil and danger alluded to may grow into frightful proportions unless checked, but the responsibility of life and death, so liable to be abused, is obviously too
great to be intrusted to the hand of every officer whose duties may
bring him face to face with this question. It is likely to become one
of portentous magnitude if the war continues, and I do not see how
it can be properly dealt with except by the supreme legislature of
tile country. I deem the action of Congress in this regard as needful
for the protection of military commanders as for their guidance.
I have the honor to be, sir, very respectfully, your obedient servant,
Brigadier-General MERCER,
Meanwhile the counties along the seaboard will become exhausted
of the slave population, which should be retained as far as possible
for the raising of provisions and supplies for our forces on the coast.
In the absence of penalties of such a nature as to insure respect and
dread, the temptations which are spread before the negroes are very
strong, and when we consider their condition, their ignorance and
credulity, and love of change, must prove in too many cases decidedly
successful. No effectual check being interposed to their escape, the
desire increases among them in proportion to the extent of its successful gratification, and will spread inland until it will draw negroes from counties far in the interior of the State, and negroes will congregate from every quarter in the counties immediately bordering on the sea and become a lawless set of runaways, corrupting the negroes
that remain faithful, depredating on property of all kinds, and resorting, it may be, to deeds of violence, which demonstrates that the
whole State is interested in the effort to stop this evil; and already
have negroes from Middle Georgia made their escape to the sea-board
counties, and through Savannah itself to the enemy.
After consulting the laws of the State we can discover none that
meet the case and allow of that prompt execution of a befitting penalty which its urgency demands. The infliction of capital punishment is now confined to the superior court, and any indictment before that court would involve incarceration of the negroes for
months, with the prospect of postponement of trial, long litigation,
large expense, and doubtful conviction; and, moreover, should the
negroes be caught escaping in any numbers, there would not be room
in all our jails to receive them. The civil law, therefore, as it now
stands cannot come to our protection.
Can we And protection under military law? This is the question
we submit to the general in command. Under military law the
severest penalties are prescribed for furnishing the enemy with aid
and comfort and for acting as spies and traitors, all which the negroes
can do as effectually as white men, as facts prove, end as we have
already suggested. There can be but little doubt that if negroes are
detected in the act of exciting their fellow-slaves to escape or of
taking them off, or of returning after having gone to the enemy to
induce and aid others to escape, they may in each of these cases be
summarily punished under military authority. But may not the case
of negroes taken in the act of absconding singly or in parties, without being directly incited so to do by one or more others, be also summarily dealt with by military authority. Were our white population to act in the same way, would it not be necessary to make a
summary example of them, in order to cure the evil or put it under
some salutary control? If it be argued that in case of the negroes it
would be hard to mete out a similar punishment under similar circumstances, because of their ignorance, pliability, credulity, desire
of change, the absence of the political ties of allegiance, and the
peculiar status of the race, it may be replied that the negroes constitute a part of the body politic in fact, and should be made to know
their duty; that they are perfectly aware that the act which they
commit is one of rebellion against the power and authority of their
owners and the Government under which they live. They are perfectly
aware that they go over to the protection and aid of the enemy who
are on tile coast for the purpose of killing their owners and of destroying their property; and they know, further, that if they themselves
are found with the enemy that they will be treated as the enemy,
namely, shot and destroyed.
To apprehend such transgressors, to confine and punish them
privately by owners, or publicly by the citizens of the county by confinement and whipping, and then return them to the plantations, will not abate the evil, for the disaffected will not thereby be reformed, but will remain a leaven of corruption in the mass and stand ready to make any other attempts that may promise success. It is, indeed, a monstrous evil that we suffer. Our negroes are property, the agricultural class of the Confederacy, upon whose order and continuance so much depends--may go off (inflicting a greet pecuniary loss, both private and public) to the enemy, convey any amount
of valuable information, and aid him by building his fortifications,
by raising supplies for his armies, by enlisting as soldiers, by acting
as spies and as guides and pilots to his expeditions on lend and
water, and bringing in the foe upon us to kill and devastate; and
yet, if we catch them in the act of going to the enemy we are powerless for the infliction of any punishment adequate to their crime and
adequate to All them with salutary fear of its commission. Surely
some remedy should be applied, and that speedily, for the protection
of the country aside from all other considerations. A few executions
of leading transgressors among them by hanging or shooting would
dissipate the ignorance which may be supposed to possess their
minds, and which may be pleaded in arrest of judgment.
We do not pray the general in command to issue any order for the
government of the citizens in the matter which, of course, is no part
of his duty, but the promulgation of an order to the military for the
execution of ringleaders who are detected in stirring up the people to
escape, for the execution of all who return, having once escaped,
and for the execution of all who are caught in the act of escaping,
will speedily be known and understood by the entire slave population, end will do away with all excuses of ignorance, and go very far
toward an entire arrest of the evil, while it will enable the citizens to
act effciently in their own sphere whenever circumstances require
them to act at all. In an adjoining county, which has lost some 200,
since the shooting of two detected in the act of escaping not another
attempt has been made, and it has been several weeks since the two
were shot.
As law-abiding men we do not desire committees of vigilance
clothed with plenary powers, nor meetings of the body of our citizens
to take the law into their own hands, however justifiable it may be
under the peculiar circumstances, and therefore, iu the failure of the
civil courts to meet the emergency, we refer the subject to the general in command, believing that he has the power to issue the necessary order to the forces under him covering the whole ground, and
knowing that by so doing he will receive the commendation and cordial support of the intelligent and law-abiding citizens inhabiting the
military department over which he presides.
All which is respectfully submitted by your friends and fellow citizens.
Brigadier-General, Commanding,
Commanding Military District of Georgia, Savannah:
GENERAL: The undersigned, citizens of Liberty County, of the
Fifteenth District, would respectfully present for your consideration
a subject of grave moment, not to themselves only, but to their fellow-
citizens of the Confederate States who occupy not only our territory
immediately bordering on that of the old United States, but the whole
line of our sea-coast from Virginia to Texas. We allude to the escape
of our slaves across the border lines landward, and out to the vessels
of the enemy seaward, and to their being also enticed off by those
who, having made their escape, return for that purpose, and not
infrequently attended by the enemy. The injury inflicted upon the
interests of the citizens of the Confederate States by this now constant
drain is immense. Independent of the forcible seizure of slaves by
the enemy whenever it lies in his power, and to which we now make
no allusion, as the indemnity for this loss will in due time occupy the
attention of our Government from ascertained losses on certain parts
of our coast, we may set down as a low estimate the number of slaves
absconded and enticed off from our sea-board at 20,000, and their
value at from $12,000,000 to $15,000,000, to which loss may be added
the insecurity of the property along our borders and the demoralization of the negroes that remain, which increases with the continuance of the evil, and may finally result in perfect disorganization and rebellion. The absconding negroes hold the position of traitors, since they go over to the enemy and afford him aid and comfort by revealing the condition of the districts and cities from which they come, and
aiding him in erecting fortifications and raising provisions for his support, and now that the United States have allowed their introduction
into their Army and Navy, aiding the enemy by enlisting under his
banners, and increasing his resources in men for our annoyance
and destruction. Negroes occupy the position of spies also, since they
are employed in secret expeditions for obtaining information by transmission of newspapers and by other modes, and act as guides to
expeditions on the land and as pilots to their vessels on the waters of
our inlets and rivers. They have proved of great value thus far to
the coast operations of the enemy, and without their assistance he
could not have accomplished as much for our injury and annoyance
as he has done; and unless some measures shall be adopted to prevent
the escape of the negroes to the enemy, the threat of an army of
trained Africans for the coming fall and winter campaigns may
become a reality.
P. W. FLEMING
E. STACY,
Committee of Citizens of the 16th Dist., Liberty County, Ga.
SOURCE: United States War Department. THE WAR OF THE REBELLION: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Series IV, Volume 2. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1880-1901.
RETURN TO CIVIL WAR INDEX PAGE
Bennie J. McRae, Jr.

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