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The American History Collection > The Papers of Frederick Law Olmsted Digital Edition > Main Series > Volume 2: Slavery and the South > Introductory Material and Text > Chapter VI: European Interlude: 1856 > “How Ruffianism in Washington and Kansas Is Regarded in Europe,” New-York Daily Times, 19 June 1856
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New-York Daily Times, July 10, 1856

HOW RUFFIANISM IN WASHINGTON
AND KANSAS IS REGARDED IN EUROPE

To the Editor of the New-York Times:

Edinburgh, (Scotland)
Thursday, June 19, 1856

The position of an American traveling in Europe is just now a most unpleasant one. In railway carriages and other public places when he is not known as an American, he is obliged to hear language applied to his country which it is difficult to allow to pass in silence, and yet which he cannot deny to be just. The most that he can do is to repudiate the disgrace for himself personally, and his section or his State. And this he finds exceedingly difficult to do satisfactorily. Every American citizen is part sovereign of his country, and responsible for the actions of its Government. Every American citizen is and feels himself in a peculiar sense a foreign Minister of his country, a representative [382page icon] of its sovereign. When civilization is outraged in the Senate of his country, can he refuse to explain or defend the stigma attaching to himself thereby?

In society, when one is known to be an American, the studied avoidance of reference to his country is more expressive than the strongest denunciation of the barbarism that has lately reigned in its high places.

One is met by men whom he has formerly known as admirers and lovers of his country and its Government, with expressions of sadness and disappointment. “I have lately been compelled to admit,” said one of the founders of the Reform Club, but a man of too liberal views to be ranked among the present Whigs, to me, “I have lately been compelled to admit that the experiment of extreme liberalism in America has failed. In its material results merely it has succeeded wonderfully, but its effects on society are evidently the reverse of favorable to the progress of civilization and Christianity. Even your legislators are murderers and ruffians of the worst stamp; your Government plots civil war, and encourages robbery and piracy in order to give strength and stability to an institution in itself barbarous, and which has in all nations heretofore lost ground just as fast as Christianity and civilization have advanced. Your law system, admirable and superior in many respects to ours, as it is, is apparently powerless to punish crime of the most heinous character, when the guilty parties are men of station and wealth.”

It is useless to reply to such allegations that it is but to part of our country they apply. Foreigners cannot understand our nice distinctions between local and federal responsibility. Besides, Washington and Kansas are federally and not locally self-governed. All is charged to the Republican system.

Rarely do we find a friend who is willing to understand late events as favorably to our political principles as the editor of the North British Daily Mail, a leading Scotch newspaper, who thus reflects upon them:

To those who admire the political institutions of the United States, the free and enterprising spirit of the citizens of the Republic, their noble self-taxation (exceeding in amount all other public burdens) for purposes of education alone, whilst we even in Scotland are grumbling in our miserly hearts at the proposal of a penny per pound, the respectability secured to labor, the boundless means of industrial development, and the various characteristics in which the political and social condition of that great nation is superior to our own, there is something inexpressibly painful and disappointing in the present state of its affairs and future prospects. We refer not, to its irritated and hostile relations to ourselves; these are probably but the temporary result of internal maladies, that are far more worthy of consideration. What a scene of anarchy, of outrage, of bitterness, and division, is presented in the interior of the Republic! The protection afforded to noon-day murder in the capital, the introduction of Lynch law into the Senate House, the intolerance of free discussion, the deadly broils between an Anti-Slavery and a Pro-Slavery Party in Kansas, and an infamous war of extermination waged against unoffending Indians in Oregon, present such a [383page icon] combination of elements as can only remind one of “the beginning of the end.” Whilst empty and heedless stump orators are boasting of the glorious position of the Federal Republic, it is treading over the crust of a volcano; whilst they are reveling in brilliant visions of future destiny, it is advancing rapidly to the brink of a precipice. Whatever may be the fortune or the fate of the United States in their national capacity, one cannot but observe and regret at least the practical predominance of a spirit which is totally at variance with the principles of their Constitution and with ideas which we well know to prevail in American society. A man is shot in one of the hotels of Washington with impunity, because he is only a poor Irishman; others are hunted and killed like wolves, because they are only Indians; a Senator is felled with a bludgeon in the Senate House, because he is only a friend of negroes; and a town is destroyed, and a whole Territory given over to organized violence, because they are only inhabited by some citizens who wish to found a Free State! Where, in such acts, is any trace of that freedom, equality and humanity, which form the basis of the Republic, and ought to be its chief glory? The most wretched despotism that has sprung from the dregs of Spanish rule in the New World could do nothing worse than is now being done in the United States; and when a great nation thus departs from its fundamental principles, common sense as well as all history assure us that either a speedy reaction must set in, or that the political system must fall into ruin and dissolution.

At the root of all this disorder in the United States is the question of Slavery. Mr. Herbert, the murderer of the Irish waiter, is protected and screened by the Southern party, because killing a slave or a low Irishman is in their opinion no murder. Mr. Sumner was beaten with a club by Mr. Brooks because he made a speech in support of Freedom and against Slavery. The town of Lawrence is destroyed because it is inhabited by a “Free-State” Party. The present civil war in Kansas has its origin entirely in the breach of the Missouri compromise at the instigation of the Slave States. The grand object of the struggle is to convert Kansas into a Slave Territory, not by fair votes, but by violence, by dragoons and cannon, and by ruffianism. And it is important to observe that of these proceedings of the Pro-Slavery Party Mr. President Pierce is the strenuous abettor and supporter. The Democratic Party finds it necessary to identify itself with all the vilest outrages of the “nigger-drivers.” Even Mr. Buchanan, to whom the Northerners looked for greater impartiality and dignity of mind than have been displayed by other Democratic candidates for the Presidential chair, has adopted, since his return to the States, all the demands of the slave interest.

On the Continent, I assure you, that Republicanism has lost prestige most seriously from the events to which I allude. The German and French Republicans meet an American with melancholy or scornful and averted faces. “The Austrian Government has been guilty of no greater or meaner crime,” said one, “than your Government in its method of extending Slavery, if we may believe the newspaper accounts of the recent movements in Kansas.” It is true. The Austrian tyranny works secretly, but straightforwardly and with avowed purpose. The American, with false pretences of impartiality, connives at and encourages measures which naturally and inevitably lead on to the ruin or [384page icon] murder of those whom it has chosen to make its enemies, and, then, indirectly, shields from justice and apologizes for the murderous banditti it has employed.

Yeoman.