Paul Finkelman.
Slavery and the Founders: Race and Liberty in the Age of Jefferson.
Armonk, N.Y. and London: M.E. Sharpe, 1996. xi + 228 pp. Notes,
bibliography, index. $55.00 (cloth), ISBN 1-563-24591-4 ISBN
1-563-24590-6; $19.95 (paper), ISBN .
Reviewed by:
Lester G. Lindley, Nova Southeastern University.
Published by:
H-Law
(July, 1996)
Slavery, the
Constitution, and the Union
Virtually every American loves the Constitution, but more
often than not their love for it is inversely proportional to their
knowledge of it--and all too many love it dearly. In his volume,
Slavery and the Founders: Race and Liberty in the Age of Jefferson,
Paul Finkelman provides a fine antidote for a portion of that ignorance.
His is a well-reasoned, extensively researched, and eminently readable
account of slavery in the 1787 Constitution and its legal status in the
new nation's early years. According to Finkelman, the writing and
ratifying of the Constitution were conditioned on slavery's protection.
Agreeing with the Garrisonians, he contends that the Constitution was a
"slaveholder's compact" (p. ix). He also argues that the 1787 Northwest
Ordinance and the 1793 Fugitive Slave Act reflected the intellectual and
moral environment that produced the proslavery Constitution. Finally, he
contends that the proslavery constitutional and legal system faithfully
registered Thomas Jefferson's notions about slavery.
Finkelman analyzes the Constitution's direct and indirect
protection of slavery in supporting his argument that the Philadelphia
conclave accorded it an exalted status. Proslavery delegates won slavery's
protection in good part by linking it with representation, through the
three-fifths clause of Article I, Section 2. From the nation's beginning
slavery enjoyed enhanced power in the House of Representatives, which
translated into a comparably enlarged power in the Electoral College,
without which Jefferson would have lost the election of 1800. Additional
direct protections include the prohibition against ending the
international slave trade before 1808; the fugitive slave clause; the
"direct tax" clause, which assured that slaves could be taxed at only
three-fifths the rate of whites; and the Article V provision that
prohibited slave importation and tax clause amendments before 1808.
Ironically, the new frame of government, designed to replace the virtually
unamendable Articles of Confederation, had but one unamendable feature,
which went to slavery's protection.
In addition to the Constitution's direct protections,
Finkelman also found thirteen indirect protections, such as requiring
three-fourths of the states to amend the Constitution, a provision that
gave slave states a "perpetual veto over any constitutional changes" (p.
5), and the "full faith and credit" clause, which required free states to
recognize and honor slave-state law. He contends that slaveholders won
without giving major concessions to anti-slavery delegates, except for the
"dirty compromise" (p. 22), by which Southerners agreed to allow
commercial acts by a simple majority instead of a two-thirds vote in
exchange for clauses protecting the slave trade and prohibiting an export
tax. Other than this compromise and sporadic, disjointed verbal attacks on
the institution, slavery's defenders won its protection with relative ease
from the Framers.
In the same year that the Framers wrote the Constitution,
Congress, which continued meeting under the Articles of Confederation,
passed the Northwest Ordinance, which prohibited slavery north of the Ohio
River and east of the Mississippi. On first blush the Ordinance was
antislavery, but Finkelman argues that it had little negative impact on
slavery until the 1830s and 1840s. The Ordinance passed with broad support
from Southerners, who believed that it "actually fortified slavery" (p.
36). The same clause that prohibited slavery included a fugitive slave
clause, the first recognition by the national government that masters had
a right to recover slaves who absconded to Northern free states. In
addition, the absence of an enforcement clause in the antislavery
provision and Congress's lack of will to implement the Ordinance made it
ineffectual.
In careful case studies of the measure's impact in Indiana
and Illinois, Finkelman shows that quasi-slavery persisted in the
Northwest into the 1830s and 1840s. Congressional indifference to black
servitude, demands for labor to promote economic development, arguments
that diffusion of slavery foretold slavery's eventual demise, and the
migration of slaveowners into the Northwest conspired to assure that the
Ordinance had no immediate impact. The territorial assemblies of Indiana
and Illinois adopted laws, based in part on Southern slave codes, that
assured slavery's persistence. Legislation in both territories protected
and nurtured "bondage and de facto slavery" (p. 71). Eventually, both
ended slavery, but well after statehood: Indiana effectively by the 1830s,
forty years after the Ordinance; Illinois in 1848 in the state's second
constitution.
Evasion of the Ordinance protected slavery's interests; the
1793 Fugitive Slave Act supplemented that protection. In the only detailed
consideration of the act in book form, Finkelman argues that the measure
was "one of the first fruits of the proslavery Constitution" (p. 80). He
notes that the act issued from an attempt to protect free blacks from
kidnapping. Ironically, however, it probably improved the chances of such
kidnappings. The Bill of Rights, with its limitations on federal power and
procedural protections, had become part of the Constitution in 1791, yet
the act did not honor the amendments' requirements for fair trials and due
process. Equally ironic, the measure expanded federal power, probably
beyond what the Constitution actually sanctioned. The fugitive slave
clause did not delegate power to Congress; it was in the only section of
Article IV that did not grant power to the national government. States'
rights Southerners, who might oppose the Federalists' use of national
power on economic issues, effectively used that power to protect and
preserve slavery. Most slave owners and slave traders were Jeffersonians,
but whatever their constitutional scruples on other matters, they wanted
broad national powers to protect slavery. The Constitution was conditioned
on protecting slavery; perhaps it was only logical that the same condition
be imposed on its interpretation. Such an interpretation, Finkelman
concludes, "made the Constitution even more proslavery than it perhaps
was" (p. 81).
In addition to arguing that slavery was central to the
nation's founding, he also asserts that it created a "tension between the
professed ideals of America, as stated in the Declaration of Independence,
and the reality of early national America" (p. ix). No one reflected that
tension better than Thomas Jefferson. In spite of the ideals that he
expressed in the Declaration, Jefferson was a slaveholder--simply a
slaveholder--with general slaveholder values. Rhetorically, Finkelman
notes, Jefferson hated slavery, but that hatred was based on several
factors which demonstrated Jefferson's inability to transcend class and
race or to honor the principles of his Declaration. He hated slavery
because he despised blacks; they were, Jefferson believed, of a different
order from whites. "Race, more than their status as slaves, doomed blacks
to permanent inequality" (p. 108). He hated slavery because it brought
Africans to the nation and made them permanent residents. He hated slavery
because of its impact on whites, not because of what it did to blacks.
Above all, for one who affirmed independence to be the
ultimate political and social value and one who celebrated the yeoman
farmer for his independence, Jefferson hated slavery because it made him
dependent on his slaves; dedicating his life to independence, he lived a
life of dependency. Finkelman argues that Jefferson could not continue his
"extravagant life-style" without slaves (p. 107). The natural rights of
slaves had to be subordinated to his grand style of living, his
unrestrained spending habits and his compulsively acquisitive character.
He contends that historians have misconstrued one of Jefferson's more
famous quotes about slavery: "[W]e have the wolf by the ear, and we can
neither hold him, nor safely let him go. Justice is in one scale, and
self-preservation in the other." The quote, Finkelman argues, did not
reflect fears of a slave revolt. The self-preservation to which Jefferson
alluded went to his way of life, premised as it was on slavery. The "wolf"
he was holding was probably "the wolf of gluttony and greed" (p. 150).
The Declaration and Constitution had powerful antislavery
potential and, given his status in the new nation's history, Jefferson
could have energized that potential. Finkelman contends that the test for
Jefferson's views on slavery should not be whether he was better "than the
worst of his generation but whether he was the leader of the best," not
whether he embodied the values of southern planters, but whether he
transcended his economic and sectional interests. In both cases, Finkelman
concludes that "Jefferson fails the test" (p. 105). Indeed, he argues,
Jefferson was behind his time. He sold slaves and broke up families to
preserve his high-living style and to pay his debts; after a shopping
spree in France, he sold eighty-five slaves (p. 150). Morally, Finkelman
implies, he was also a laggard. For all the debate about Jefferson's
relationship with Sally Hemings, his half-sister-in-law, scholars have
missed a more critical issue than whether Hemings bore him children: "for
most of his adult life, Jefferson enslaved a generation of people--Sally
Hemings and her siblings--who were his in-laws." This causes Finkelman to
wonder whether it mattered "[f]or the sake of character...whether
Jefferson enslaved his own children or merely his blood relatives and his
wife's blood relatives" (p. 142).
Rhetorically, Jefferson insisted that future generations
must end slavery and vindicate the hopes of the Declaration of
Independence and the Constitution for liberty. Unfortunately, however,
instead of nurturing their potential for liberating slaves, Jefferson
committed treason to the very cause that he ardently advocated for whites.
Slavery must end, he thought, but only on the condition of "expatriation"
of the slaves (p. 128). It was not simply slavery that Jefferson found so
repugnant, but race. The one, a temporary status created by law, could be
ended; the other, a reflection of a sub-human or nearly sub-human species,
could not be. The "all" men in the Declaration meant "only white men;" in
his scale of values blacks had no legitimate place in the nation's future.
If slavery trumped the Constitution, race trumped the future that
Jefferson envisioned. Instead of being a prophetic voice for extending
benefits of the Revolution to slaves, by word and deed he became "the
intellectual godfather of the racist pseudoscience of the American school
of anthropology" (p. 110).
Finkelman's work has a compelling ring of plausibility,
even truth, when placed in its larger historical context. Edmund S. Morgan
demonstrated that before colonial America moved "toward the republic," it
had already moved from slavery "toward racism." He noted that race-based
slavery made it safer to preach equality, because slaves could not become
part of a leveling mob. He continued, "This is not to say that a belief in
republican equality had to rest on slavery, but only that in Virginia (and
probably in other southern colonies) it did."
[1] And
in its move "toward the republic," to use Morgan's phrase, Gordon S. Wood
observed that "No political conception was more important to Americans in
the entire Revolutionary era than representation."[2]
Strategically,
slaveowners probably could not have done better than using the
three-fifths clause to link their race-based institution with the key
political ideal of the Revolution. Central to the Revolutionary movement
against England as early as the 1765 Stamp Act controversy, representation
was yoked by slaveowners to protecting and preserving slavery in the
Constitution. In the 1760s Americans linked representation to liberty;
twenty years later, they joined it to slavery, an unholy alliance that
continued into the Civil War era. And just as slavery trumped the
Constitution in 1787, it threatened to trump the Constitution's "more
perfect Union" in 1860-61.
Referring to the concentration of slaves "in the southern
part" of the Union in his second inaugural, Abraham Lincoln noted that
"these slaves constituted a peculiar and powerful interest." "Peculiar"
implies something unique, distinctive, out of the ordinary or particular.
However peculiar slavery became in the last few decades before the Civil
War, it had long been a "powerful interest," to use Lincoln's phrase, but
was far from being peculiar. Echoing the notion of its peculiarity,
Kenneth M. Stampp described slavery as The Peculiar Institution in
his classic 1956 work. But in spite of the "peculiarity" that developed in
the second quarter of the nineteenth century, slavery's power threatened
the Union like nothing before or since. It is very difficult, if not
impossible, to explain how a sectional, peculiar institution could have so
seriously imperiled the Union without having had a determining, if tragic
role, in shaping that Union from its beginning. Finkelman's book focuses
on slavery's shaping power--but lack of peculiarity--at the Constitutional
Convention.
Race-based slavery was a fatal flaw in the 1787 document;
that flaw was so inextricably ingrained in the Constitution that it took
the terrible scourge of war and major constitutional amendments to remove
it. "[A]ll knew that this interest was somehow the cause of the war,"
Lincoln affirmed in his second inaugural. Likewise, all who wanted to
remove the war's cause and the Constitution's corruption knew that
amendments to correct the flaws of 1787 had to become part of the
Constitution. If slavery began about 1660 and ended, at least officially,
in the 1860s, Finkelman provides a powerful and poignant perspective on
slavery's terrible career at its midpoint in the nation's experience. In
addition, he provides a sharp focus from which to examine slavery's larger
impact in American history and to consider the role of the nation's most
famous revolutionary leader, Thomas Jefferson.
In his 1963 volume, Jefferson and Civil Liberties: The
Darker Side, Leonard Levy challenged the then-prevailing notion about
Jefferson's legacy to freedom and liberty. Finkelman challenges that
legacy at an even deeper level than did Levy. He notes that Jefferson's
admirers "would like him to be one of us--an opponent of slavery," but he
was not (p. 138). Most of Jefferson's biographers have tried to shape
Jefferson into an antislavery liberal, ignoring or fudging evidence to the
contrary. He observes that critics of Levy's Darker Side work
rejected his conclusions because such verdicts did not "bolster their
modern political agendas" (p. 143). Very likely Finkelman's assessment of
Jefferson will also be challenged on grounds of being presentist
revisionism. Finkelman, however, rightly rejects that notion in his
concluding chapter, a brilliant essay on Jefferson, historians, and myths.
He examines Jefferson's ideas about race and slavery, not by modern
notions, but "on his terms" (p. 145, emphasis in the original).
By raising the issue of presentism, Finkelman puts in sharp
relief history's fundamental question: does history matter? Perhaps
understandably, he insists that it does. However, he is cautious about how
history might be used. He notes that James Parton, Jefferson's first
professional biographer, wrote that "If Jefferson was wrong, America is
wrong. If America is right, Jefferson was right," and observes that "The
historian who questions Jefferson, it would seem, implicitly questions
America" (p. 143). Acceptance of this logic presents the nation with a
daunting challenge that probably could never be satisfactorily met. At the
conclusion of his analysis of the way that revolutionary Virginians linked
racism with republican ideology, Edmund Morgan raised a haunting question:
"Is America still colonial Virginia writ large? More than a century after
Appomattox the question lingers."[3]
If Parton's logic controls, it forces one of several
conclusions. First, accepting Parton's presumption that Jefferson was
right, it reinforces the inclination of most of Jefferson's modern
biographers to shape Jefferson into a late-twentieth-century, antislavery
liberal. However, with the evidence that Finkelman presents, such an image
can at best be a gross distortion of the historical record. It would
transform Jefferson into a reverse modern doughface. A "doughface" in
pre-Civil War America was a northern man whose contours had been shaped by
proslavery principles, so a reverse doughface would be a southern man with
antislavery sentiments. Bingo! Jefferson fits the picture and gives a
usable past. On another occasion, using the same tactic, he becomes the
Revolutionary precursor to the National Association of Manufacturers. But
if such is the case, history is little more than using the past, indeed,
inventing the past, for present needs.
Second, Parton's logic and presumption that Jefferson was
right, if applied to Finkelman's analysis of Jefferson's principles, force
a troubling, haunting answer to Morgan's question: there would be no
escaping the assertion that America is still colonial Virginia writ large.
They carry an even more haunting implication: not only is the nation
colonial Virginia writ large, but there is not much anyone can do about
it. If Jefferson was right, and if Finkelman's analysis of his attitudes
about race and slavery are correct, then Jefferson was not only the
intellectual vanguard of the pseudoscientific proslavery argument of the
pre-Civil War era, but he was also the prophet for late-twentieth-century
racism in the United States. If such is the case, either history must be
the new "dismal science" or both Jefferson and America are wrong.
But Finkelman insists that a third option exists. Scholars
have created "a mythical man--someone who in [Merrill] Peterson's words
went up to Mount Olympus." After creating the Jeffersonian myth, they
"further burdened him with an image that carries with it our conception of
the United States" (p. 167). But as Levy did in 1963, Finkelman does in
1996: he argues that it is time to look at Jefferson as an important
Revolutionary leader, a person with virtues and faults. From this
perspective, Jefferson's views on race "are embarrassing, not just by the
standards of our age but by the standards of his own age" (p. 165).
However, though Jefferson failed to join the best of his generation to end
slavery and challenge racism, it is possible to see his virtues and the
power of his ideas "because we will see them in the context of his own
humanity" (p. 167).
Put differently, if history is important, at least one
element of that importance has to be the insights that it offers. But if
those insights, or perspectives, are to be valid, it is important that
scholars give heed to the full weight of historical evidence. Precisely
because history seems to offer insights and perspectives on the present,
it becomes a battleground--often a heated one--on what we remember and
what we forget. History creates a common memory that holds individuals and
institutions together and binds them in a common enterprise. "Selective"
forgetting can distort the past as much as creative invention. To question
Jefferson's ideas about slavery and racism is not to question America. To
question Jefferson is to follow the best of the Jeffersonian tradition of
examining institutions, with the hope of preserving the best ones,
reforming others, and rebelling against the rest.
Perhaps no better instruction exists for that daunting task
than using "Experience," a notion that figures prominently in Jefferson's
Declaration of Independence. However, if that experience is
derived--another good Jeffersonian term from the Declaration--from a
contrived past, it would convey misguided perspectives, perhaps as
pernicious in their impact as those derived from abstract reasoning. If
Jefferson has relevance to modern America on race and slavery, it is not
because he stood outside of history by ascending Mt. Olympus, but because
he was a major historical figure who continues to inform the present. Our
image of Jefferson matters but, in insisting on his humanity, "we can
better understand something about ourselves and our country's past" (p.
167).
Rhetorically, Jefferson looked to slavery's end at some
undefined future. Tragically, it was left to Lincoln's generation to begin
ending slavery and to start "bind[ing] up the nation's wounds" that
slavery and racism caused. The scourge of the "terrible war" that Lincoln
memorialized at Gettysburg has passed, but the quest for that "new birth
of freedom" and the realization of the Jeffersonian "proposition that all
men are created equal," remain "unfinished work," to use Lincoln's
memorable phrases. Perhaps that unfinished work is at the heart of any
shared memory and common enterprise for late-twentieth-century Americans.
If it is, then it seems imperative that a precise definition of that work
be carefully limned. History is important to Finkelman--vitally
important--so in writing this volume he assumed that it was an imperative
to be careful and precise.
By some standards, Finkelman's is a slim volume. The text
is only 167 pages, supported by extensive notes and bibliography. More
important, his is a compelling account of the history of slavery and
racism at the nation's founding and of Jefferson's place in that history.
It is written by a discerning scholar who has devoted his professional
career to examining the constitutional and legal dimensions of slavery,
but presented in clear, readable form. Happily, this volume could be used
in survey courses, in period courses on the Revolutionary or the Early
National eras, and in courses on constitutional history. With its many
references to the works of other scholars, it would fit nicely into
courses on historiography and historical method. Graduate students would
profit from its use in their courses, as would law students; indeed,
graduate and law school seminars could be organized around it. It deserves
a wide readership. Anyone who wants to talk intelligently about the
history of slavery and ideas about race in the nation's history should
feel compelled to come to terms with his book. And the publisher, M.E.
Sharpe, is to be congratulated for simultaneously offering the volume in
paper and hardcover formats.
Notes
[1]. Edmund
S. Morgan, American Slavery, American Freedom: The Ordeal of Colonial
Virginia
(New York: W.W. Norton, 1974), pp. 363, 316, 381.
[2}. Gordon
S. Wood, The Creation of the
American Republic,
1776-1787
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1969), p. 164.
[3]. Morgan,
American Slavery, American Freedom, p. 387.
Library of Congress
Call Number: KF4545.S5 F565 1996
Subjects:
* Slavery--Law and legislation--United
States--History
* Slavery--United States--History
Citation: Lester G. Lindley . "Review of Paul Finkelman,
Slavery and the Founders: Race and Liberty in the Age of Jefferson,"
H-Law, H-Net Reviews, July, 1996. URL:
http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=1897846636414.
“These chapters,
consisting of six previously published (but substantially reworked) essays
on the place of slavery in the Constitution and its ratification, the
first fugitive slave law, the passage and implementation of the Northwest
Ordinance, and the career of Thomas Jefferson, constitute a searing
indictment of the hypocrisy of the Founders on slavery and the
self-imposed blinkers of their biographers.”
Robert P. Forbes, review
of Slavery and the Founders: Race and Liberty in the Age of Jefferson,
by Paul Finkelman, The Journal of American History 83 (December
1996): 981-983.