Joseph C.
Sitterson, in his 1939 book, The Secession Movement in North Carolina,
makes an interesting claim, that Judah P. Benjamin reportedly wrote North
Carolina’s ordinance of secession.[1]
Sitterson writes that Convention delegate Burton Craige introduced a the
resolution at the request of Governor John W. Ellis. The simple ordinance “repealed
and abrogated the ordinance of 1789 by which North Carolina had ratified the
Constitution of the United States and declared the union between the state of North
Carolina and the other states, under the title of ‘The United States of America’
dissolved.” Is there any truth to this?
Judah P. Benjamin |
At time the
delegates were meeting in Raleigh to considered secession, Benjamin was serving
as the first Confederate attorney general in Montgomery, Alabama.
J.G. de R. Hamilton, in his book Reconstruction in North Carolina, tells us that North Carolina’s ordinance “was prepared by Judah P. Benjamin” and “brought to Raleigh from Montgomery by James Hines, a North Carolinian, and delivered to Gov. Ellis, who asked Burton Craige, the member from his county, to introduce it.”[2] Hamilton does not give a source for this information. Barrett, in his history of North Carolina and the War, leaves out this little piece of information. Just how Benjamin came to draft North Carolina’s ordinance of secession seems to be somewhat of a mystery.
John W. Ellis
Turning to Governor
Ellis’s papers, we find an interesting letter from former United States Senator
Thomas L. Clingman. Writing from Montgomery on May 14, 1861, Clingman tells
Ellis: “I enclose you drafts of Ordinances which I think ought to be adopted at
once by our convention. I got Mr. Benjamin the Attorney General to draw them up
and hope they will be put through on the 20th.”[3]
In Jeffrey’s biography of Clingman, we read that Ellis sent Clingman to
Montgomery after the capture of Fort Sumter. Clingman’s job? To “negotiate
North Carolina’s entrance into the Confederacy.” There is no mention of the
Ordinances.[4] It
is possible that Ellis and Clingman discussed the matter of the Ordinance prior
to Clingman’s departure from Raleigh to Montgomery. At the same time, Clingman
might have taken it upon himself to visit Benjamin and ask for some guidance regarding
the Ordinances, and Benjamin wrote the Ordinances and gave them Clingman who gave
them to Hines who caught a train to Raleigh. This begs another question: who
was James Hines? Was he just a messenger? A quick search has not produced an identity.
And yet another question: did Judah P. Benjamin play a role in any other
Ordinances of Secession passed by the other Southern States?
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