Emancipating
Slaves, Enslaving Free Men, Jeffrey Rogers Hummel.
Hummel describes the state of the military at the start of
the American Civil War. It is an
enjoyable read for the most part, providing even a few laugh-out-loud moments.
Hummel starts with a bang:
Unlike most European and Latin
American governments, the United States did not maintain a peacetime standing
army large enough to suppress domestic insurrection.
At the start of the war with Mexico in 1846, the Mexican
army was four times larger than that of the US.
At the conclusion of the war, the US reduced its wartime forces by over
two-thirds, down to 16,000 regulars.
More than one-third of the regular army’s officers were
southerners. In other words, at the
start of the Civil War, both armies – north and south – basically were starting
from scratch.
In both cases, the foundation for
this unprecedented mobilization was the volunteer militia.
State militias had been the backbone of the military in the
US, such as it was. This system entailed
the universal obligation of all males to defend their communities. After the War of 1812, these state militias
came under sustained criticism:
Radical Jacksonians condemned
militia fines as falling unfairly upon laborers and the poor, while mandatory
training increasingly bore the brunt of an effective campaign of ridicule and
civil disobedience.
“Ridicule and civil disobedience”; this is getting good.
Abraham Lincoln, during a speech in 1852 recalled how the
required “militia trainings” had been “laughed to death.”
At the head of the local militia
parade, “on horse-back, figured our old friend Gordon Abrams, with a pine wood
sword, about nine feet long, and a paste board cocked hat, from front to rear
about the length of an ox yoke, and very much the shape of one turned bottom
upwards; and with spurs having rowels as large as the bottom of a teacup, and
shanks a foot and a half long.”
I don’t know the meaning of all of the references, however Mr.
Abrams sounds more like a circus clown than a military man.
Even better were the “rules and regulations” that Lincoln’s
militia unit adopted:
“…no man is to wear more than five
pounds of cod-fish for epaulets, or more than thirty yards of bologna sausages
for a sash; and no two men are to dress alike, and if any two should dress
alike the one that dresses most alike is to be fined.”
The one that dresses most
alike? I don’t even know how this would
work…or look. Sausages? Once again, clowns.
The unit even had militia flags,
with mottoes such as “We’ll fight till we run, and we’ll run till we die.”
Such ridicule and frivolity served a wonderful purpose: the
compulsory features of the common militia had disappeared.
Delaware was the first state to
repeal some of its militia fines in 1816.
Massachusetts abolished all compulsory militia service in 1840, followed
by six other northern states within the next decade. In several states the fines were no longer
enforced or became nominal. The mandatory
training days dropped in frequency and degenerated into more social than
military events.
The South maintained compulsory militia duty on the books;
Hummel speculates this was due to the slave patrols.
While the compulsory state militias were in decline,
voluntary militias sprung up in replacement; the growth was significant after
the War of 1812:
Three hundred [volunteer units]
sprang up in California between 1849 and 1856.
In the District of Columbia, one out of every twenty-nine people was a
member of one or another volunteer company…Even throughout the South, the
volunteer militia almost completely supplanted the common militia.
After the War of 1812 and before the Civil War, the American
militia transformed from compulsion to volunteerism. The Mexican War was fought exclusively with
volunteer enlistees, with no recourse to a compulsory draft.
An additional feature:
This volunteer system left
responsibility for organizing, recruiting, and often equipping soldiers to
state or local governments, or even
private citizens. (Emphasis added)
At the start of hostilities between North and South, each
side called for hundreds of thousands of volunteers. These quotas were quickly filled; the South –
with one-third the white population compared to the population of the North –
filled two-thirds as many volunteers as did the North. The South even turned away 200,000 volunteers
because it could not arm, cloth or feed them.
This voluntary and enthusiastic nature of the combatants did
not last long – executions and cruel punishments for desertion took their toll;
that the anticipated quick victory (anticipated by volunteers on both sides)
did not materialize. Within one year,
both sides suffered from a drying up of volunteers.
In April 1862, the Rebel legislature authorized a national conscription
for the South. In July of the same year,
the North enacted a new national militia law – if quotas were not met by the
various state governments, the national government would step in to act. There was no formal Federal draft in the
North until March of 1863. In both the
North and South, conscription provided the minority of the military population.
Summary
The Civil War drastically changed the nature of government
in the United States. One example is
provided in this story of the nature of the military: from voluntary state
militias to national conscription and Federal armies.
Perhaps the roots of the current military empire can be
found here.
"""Perhaps the roots of the current military empire can be found here.""'
ReplyDeleteYes but because the US was tired of war after the Civil War and since many of the politicians had served in militia units the militia was weakened but not destroyed
The Spanish/American War weakened the militia even more since militia did not perform that well but on the other hand militia are not designed to be used in Imperial Wars of conquest and especially occupation. Which is why the founders liked militias
World War 1 was the final knife into the old militia system when the US Army ignored the old militia units and instead created a whole new organization based on Square Divisions" which were huge 30,000 man four regiment units. The Square Divisions proved to be a big failure because they were too big to command but it did manage to destroy the old militia units organization.
Tasty piece,thank you.
ReplyDeleteWhen the Powers That Be saddle too much horse someday.
(not "if" "but when" it suits there purpose) Are the kids going to go to Canada?Mexico? grandmas basement?
I remember the S.S. looking for me back in 84
to sign up for draft.
Kept putting it off.Too much parting,and hippie lettuce
smoking to be bothered to want to do it. There are priorities?!
That ,and ......" !@#$'em!!"
They would drop by and tale my room mate. Please explain to him all Gov-CO benefits that I would be jeopardizing ,and jail.
What are they going to do to the poor bastards today when
"Your call of country needs you"???
Thanks, good read.
ReplyDelete