PERSONAL SECURITY, PERSONAL LIBERTY, AND "THE CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS": VISIONS OF THE FRAMERS OF THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT
Stephen P. Halbrook*
This article originally appeared, in a longer version, in Volume 5 of the Seton Hall Constitutional Law Journal, and is reprinted with permission.
I. Introduction
The same two-thirds of Congress that proposed the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution also adopted the Freedmen's Bureau Act, which protected the "full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings concerning personal liberty, personal security, and . . . estate . . . , including the constitutional right to bear arms . . . ." The great unresolved question is whether the Fourteenth Amendment, which protects an individual's rights to personal security and personal liberty from State violation, incorporates the Second Amendment, which declares that "the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed."
In three cases decided in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, the United States Supreme Court stated in dicta that the First, Second, and Fourth Amendments do not directly limit state action, but the Court did not rule on whether the Fourteenth Amendment prohibited state violations of the rights therein declared. Since then, the Supreme Court has held that most Bill of Rights' freedoms are incorporated into the Fourteenth Amendment. The Court, however, has failed to decide whether the Second Amendment is correspondingly incorporated, despite the specific declaration of two-thirds of Congress in the Freedmen's Bureau Act.
The first local and state prohibitions in American history on firearms possession by the citizenry at large, the Morton Grove, Illinois handgun ban and California's prohibition on "assault weapons" (primarily repeating rifles), were upheld by the United States Courts of Appeals for the Seventh and Ninth Circuits respectively in 1982 and 1992. Both opinions rejected any reliance on the intent of the framers of the Fourteenth Amendment and interpreted Supreme Court precedent to reject incorporating the right to keep and bear arms into that amendment.
Previous studies document, primarily through floor speeches, that the framers of the Fourteenth Amendment intended to protect Bill of Rights freedoms in general and the right to keep and bear arms in particular. Critics, however, have argued that speeches by individual framers of the Fourteenth Amendment are insufficient to demonstrate a consensus to incorporate the Bill of Rights.
The position that the Second Amendment protects individual rights and deters governmental tyranny is undergoing a contemporary revival. In addition, the pertinence of the right to keep and bear arms for defense by African Americans has been analyzed. Nonetheless, no study exists concerning the significance, for purposes of whether the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits state infringement of the right to keep and bear arms, of the Freedmen's Bureau Act's declaration that the rights to personal security and personal liberty include the "constitutional right to bear arms."
The purpose of this article is to trace the adoption of, and to investigate the interrelationship between, the Fourteenth Amendment and the Freedmen's Bureau Act, focusing particularly on the right to keep and bear arms. This will entail analyzing the Civil Rights Act of 1866 and other relevant proceedings in the Thirty-Ninth Congress. This study concludes with an overview of the concepts of both personal liberty and security as recognized in the Freedmen's Bureau Act and the Fourteenth Amendment.
The sources for this article include the texts of, and debates on, constitutional amendments and statutory enactments as both have proceeded through Congress. Moreover, the secret journal of the Joint Committee of Fifteen on Reconstruction, which drafted the Fourteenth Amendment, also will be examined, and occasional references will be made to press reports. Furthermore, executive communications concerning conditions in the South and the role of the Freedmen's Bureau will be scrutinized. In a unique methodology for Fourteenth Amendment history, the public proceedings before the Joint Committee of Fifteen on Reconstruction will be interwoven with the Congressional debates.
This article utilizes the above sources in a chronological fashion to demonstrate the continuous process of the adoption of the Freedmen's Bureau Act, the Civil Rights Act, and the Fourteenth Amendment. These developments did not take place in isolation, but were closely intermingled. By following the legislative developments as they occurred, one obtains a rich sense of the reasons for adoption and anticipated application of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Although this Article concentrates on the right to keep and bear arms, it also includes a comprehensive analysis pertinent to the general topic of incorporating all the other Bill of Rights guarantees into the Fourteenth Amendment. The arms' guarantee may be the cutting edge of what it means to take civil rights seriously, but its history supplies a broader context to the question of whether a political society insures liberty to all without regard to race or previous condition of servitude.
II. That No Freedman Shall Keep Or Carry Firearms:
The Black Codes As Badges Of Slavery
Antebellum commentators, both moderate and abolitionist, interpreted the Second Amendment as a guarantee of an individual's right to keep and bear arms, free from both state and federal infringement. This right, however, was not guaranteed to everyone. One did not have to look hard to discover state "statutes relating to the carrying of arms by negroes and slaves" and to an "act to prevent free people of color from carrying firearms." This discriminatory application of the Second Amendment exemplified the need for a further constitutional guarantee to clarify and protect the rights of all persons, regardless of race.
Following the Civil War, the slave codes began to reappear in the form of the black codes and limited the access of blacks to land, to arms, and to the courts. The origins of these codes are exemplified in a letter from E.G. Baker, a Mississippi planter, to members of the state legislature on October 22, 1865, warning of a possible negro insurrection: "It is well known here that our negroes through the country are well equipped with fire arms, muskets, double barrel, shot guns & pistols, Ä & furthermore, it would be well if they are free to prohibit the use of fire arms until they had proved themselves to be good citizens in their altered state." Forwarding a copy of the letter to the Union commander in Northern Mississippi, Governor Benjamin G. Humphreys stated that "unless some measures are taken to disarm [the freedmen] a collision between the races may be speedily looked for."
The result of such views was the prototypical 1865 Mississippi statute entitled "Act to Regulate the Relation of Master and Apprentice Relative to Freedmen, Free Negroes, and Mulattoes." In addition to prohibiting seditious speeches and preaching by freedmen without a license, the Act prohibited blacks from keeping or carrying firearms.
Two weeks after the above Act passed, Calvin Holly, a black Private assigned to the Freedmen's Bureau in Mississippi, wrote to Bureau Commissioner Howard, relating an article in the Vicksburg Journal. The article described an incident involving blacks with a gun and noted that "they [were] forbidden not to have any more but did not heed." Furthermore, the article asserted that "[t]he Rebels are going about in many places through the State and robbing the colored people of arms, money and all they have and in many places killing." Holly continued that "[t]hey talk of taking the arms away from [colored] people and arresting them and put them on farms next month and if they go at that I think there will be trouble and in all probability a great many lives lost."
When the Thirty-Ninth Congress convened in December of 1865, the first significant event from the perspective of the constitutional developments to follow was the formation of the House Select Committee on Freedmen, to which would be referred all matters concerning freedmen and which would report by bill or otherwise, and the Judiciary Committees of the Senate and the House. Shortly after the Committee on Freedmen was appointed John A. Bingham of Ohio introduced a joint resolution to amend the Constitution "to empower Congress to pass all necessary and proper laws to secure to all persons in their rights, life, liberty, and property . . . ." This would become, of course, the Fourteenth Amendment.
There was also appointed a Joint Committee of Fifteen to investigate the condition of the southern states. This committee would hear testimony on the violation of freedmen's rights and draft and report the Fourteenth Amendment.
The enactment of the black code provisions, as the following study shows, prompted initiation of civil rights' legislation that culminated in the proposal of the Fourteenth Amendment. Among the first pieces of proposed legislation, Senate Bill No. 9 introduced on December 13, 1865 by Senator Henry Wilson of Massachusetts declared as void all laws or other state action in the southern states infringing on the civil rights and immunities of persons due to race, color, descent, or prior condition of slavery or involuntary servitude. Senator Wilson led the debate on this the first substantive discussion on civil rights in the 39th Congress. Senator Wilson deplored the disarming of blacks and other enforcement of the black codes.
Senator Wilson grounded the bill in the federal military power, rather than in the Thirteenth Amendment, which abolished slavery. Senator Edgar Cowan of Pennsylvania wanted to secure "the natural rights of all people," but maintained that a constitutional amendment was necessary. Also, Senator John Sherman of Ohio also wanted "to give to the freedmen of the Southern States ample protection in all their natural rights." Senator Sherman, however, argued that legislation "should be in clear and precise language, naming and detailing precisely the rights that these men shall be secured in, so that in the [s]outhern [s]tates there shall be hereafter no dispute or controversy."
On December 13, the House took its first action on a civil rights issue. Representative John W. Farnsworth of Illinois moved to refer to the Joint Committee of Fifteen a resolution protecting freedmen in "their inalienable rights," and to "secure to the colored soldiers of the Union their equal rights and privileges as citizens of the United States." John W. Chandler, a Democrat from New York, opposed the motion because the term "the people of the United States," as used in the Constitution, meant only whites. Subsequently the resolution was referred to the Committee.
Meanwhile, the House members to serve on the Joint Committee were appointed. On December 18, 1865, the House resolved that the Committee consider legislation securing freedmen in the southern states "the political and civil rights of other citizens of the United States."
The next day, Senator Trumbull gave notice that he would introduce a bill enabling the Freedmen's Bureau "to secure freedom to all persons in the United States, and protect every individual in the full enjoyment of the rights of person and property and furnish him with means for their vindication." The bill would be justified under the then pending Thirteenth Amendment, which prohibited slavery and empowered Congress to enforce the prohibition.
Shortly thereafter, President Andrew Johnson transmitted to the Senate the report of Major General Carl Schurz, whom President Johnson had sent to tour the South. There followed, in the Senate, a heated discussion on the importance of that report. The widely publicized report, on which Congress placed great credence, reviewed in detail abuses committed against freedmen, including deprivation of the right to keep and bear arms. In addition to other methods that were meant to restore slavery in fact, the report stated that planters advocated "the possession of arms or other dangerous weapons without authority should be punished by fine or imprisonment and the arms forfeited."
Major General Schurz' report brought to the attention of Congress ordinances enacted in Opelousas and in other Louisiana towns, which provided: "No freedman who is not in the military service shall be allowed to carry firearms, or any kind of weapon, without the special permission of his employer, in writing, and approved by the mayor or president of the board of police." Punishment for violating these ordinances was forfeiture of the weapon and either five days imprisonment or a fine of five dollars. The Freedmen's Bureau held that "This ordinance, if enforced, would be slavery in substance" and, thereby, would violate the Emancipation Proclamation.
During the holiday adjournment hearing, the Senate appointments to the Joint Committee finally were made. Meanwhile, S. 9, Senator Wilson's civil rights bill, was continually debated with great animosity between proponents and opponents.
III. Introduction Of The Freedmen's Bureau
And Civil Rights Bills
On January 5, 1866, Senator Trumbull introduced S. 60, a bill to enlarge the powers of the Freedmen's Bureau, and S. 61, the Civil Rights bill. Both bills were then referred to the Judiciary Committee. As this study will show, these bills would become of unprecedented importance in prompting passage of the Fourteenth Amendment and recognition of the right to keep and bear arms. In the House, on January 8, 1866, Representative Eliot introduced a bill to amend the existing law establishing the Freedmen's Bureau, and the bill was referred to the Select Committee on Freedmen.
Thereafter, on January 11, 1866, Senator Trumbull, Chairman of the Committee on the Judiciary, reported out S. 60. and S. 61. The following day, at Senator Trumbull's request, the Senate briefly considered S. 60, the Freedmen's Bureau bill. S. 60 provided for jurisdiction of the Freedmen's Bureau in areas where the Civil War had interrupted the ordinary course of judicial proceedings and:
[W]herein, in consequence of any State or local law, ordinance, police, or other regulation, custom, or prejudice, any of the civil rights or immunities belonging to white persons (including the right to make and enforce contracts, to sue, be parties, and give evidence, to inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold, and convey real and personal property, and to have full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and estate) are refused or denied to negroes, mulattoes, freedmen, refugees, or any other persons, on account of race, color, or any previous condition of slavery or involuntary servitude . . . .
Then Senator Trumbull opened up consideration of S. 61, the Civil Rights bill. S. 61 contained virtually identical language as the above, including the right "to full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and property . . . ."
While the Senate was openly considering the above statutory protection, the Joint Committee, began to examine constitutional amendments to protect the same rights behind closed doors. A subcommittee consisting of Congressmen William Fessenden, Stevens, Jacob Howard, Roscoe Conkling, and Bingham was appointed to consider proposed constitutional amendments.
That same day, the House considered H.R. 1, a bill allowing black suffrage in the District of Columbia. Proponents of H.R. 1 saw suffrage and the right to keep and bear arms as dual protection in a free society.
Through various channels, the public was made aware of the need to provide safeguards for those freedoms in the Bill of Rights, including the Second and Fourth Amendments, on which the States were infringing. Harper's Weekly, for example, informed its readers of Mississippi's prohibition on firearms possession by freedmen and of how the militia enforced it by ransacking houses.
On January 18, 1866, Senator William M. Stewart of Nevada called S. 60 "a practical measure . . . for the benefit of the freedmen, carrying out the constitutional provision to protect him in his civil rights." That same day, Chairman Eliot of the House Select Committee on Freedmen reported H.R. 87, the House version of S. 60.
The following day in the Senate, Senator Thomas A. Hendricks, a Democrat from Indiana, attacked S. 60 in detail. Senator Hendricks feared that § 7 of the bill, guaranteeing civil rights to all, including "the full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and estate," might apply to Indiana. Indiana law did not accord blacks the same civil rights and immunities that were enjoyed by white people, and Indiana prohibited the immigration of blacks into the State. However, Senator Hendricks was aware that his own state's constitution provided that "the people have a right to bear arms for the defense of themselves and the State." As such, Senator Hendricks may have feared that, should the bill pass, blacks would have this right, but the Senator limited his remarks to other racial issues such as interracial marriage.
Senator Trumbull denied that the jurisdiction of the Freedmen's Bureau would apply in Indiana, noting that Indiana had not been in rebellion and that its courts were open. Willard Saulsbury, a Democrat from Delaware, acknowledged that Delaware was the last slave holding state in the United States and exclaimed, "I am one of the last slave holders in America." Senator Trumbull further stated that while Delaware was not a rebellious State, the Freedmen's Bureau would protect freedmen there and, in fact, would do so in any state where they congregated in large numbers. The Freedmen's Bureau's judicial authority under § 7 of the bill, however, would exist only in the rebellious states where the civil tribunals were overthrown.
Senator Trumbull argued that the Thirteenth Amendment, because it abolished slavery, would justify congressional legislation to eradicate the incidents of slavery anywhere. Senator Trumbull continued by stating that "[w]hen slavery was abolished, slave codes in its support were abolished also." Of course, slave codes prohibited the keeping and bearing of arms by slaves. Referring respectively to both the Freedmen's Bureau bill and the Civil Rights bill, Senator Trumbull noted that the former's provisions were temporary, but the latter's were "intended to be permanent, to extend to all parts of the country, and to protect persons of all races in equal civil rights."
In the House, Representative Henry C. Deming of Connecticut introduced a constitutional amendment, similar to that of Representative Bingham's. Representative Deming's amendment stated "[t]hat Congress shall have power to make all laws necessary and proper to secure to all persons in every State equal protection in their rights of life, liberty, and property." This proposed amendment would secure the freedman absolute equality before civil and criminal law, endowing him with "every political right necessary to maintain that equality . . . ."
The following day, the Senate continued debating S. 60. James Guthrie of Kentucky, a Democrat, opposed the extension of the Freedmen Bureau's authority to his State and argued that freedmen in Kentucky had the same civil rights as whites. Samuel C. Pomeroy of Kansas, however, argued that freedmen in Kentucky still could not testify against whites.
On January 20, 1866, the Joint Committee's subcommittee considering drafts of constitutional amendments reported to the Joint Committee an expanded form of Senator Bingham's proposal, which read as follows: "Congress shall have power to make all laws necessary and proper to secure to all citizens of the United States, in every State, the same political rights and privileges; and to all persons in every State equal protection in the enjoyment of life, liberty and property." Thaddeus Stevens proposed, and then withdrew, the definition that "the words 'citizen of the United States' . . . shall be construed to mean all persons born in the United States, or naturalized, excepting Indians."
IV. "Constitutional Protection In Keeping Arms,
In Holding Public Assemblies . . ."
On January 22, 1866, Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts brought to the Senate's attention a resolution passed by a black convention in South Carolina, which asked "that [the freedman] should have the constitutional protection in keeping arms . . . ." The convention, held at Charleston in November 1865, included prominent blacks from South Carolina, several of whom would later be among America's first black congressmen. Agents of the Freedmen's Bureau and pro-Republican newspaper publishers also were among the delegates. The resolution adopted by the delegates complained that South Carolina's black code violated the Second Amendment.
The resolution was then referred to the Joint Committee on Reconstruction. That same day subcommittees of the Joint Committee began to hold hearings. These hearings documented the violation of the freedmen's rights, including the right to keep and bear arms. An analysis of the hearings as they occurred will aid in understanding the legislative process as it unfolded on the floor of Congress.
Beginning with the first witness, Joint Committee members heard about murders and other acts of violence against freedmen in the Southern states. This type of testimony explains why members of Congress focused on the individual right to keep and bear arms for protection against oppression, particularly the deprivation of rights sanctioned by local sheriffs and state militia.
Still on the same day, the Senate debated S. 60, the Freedmen's Bureau bill. Senator Wilson referred to black codes of South Carolina, Mississippi, Louisiana, and other states as codes of laws that practically make the freedman a peon or a serf.
The following day, Senator Willard Saulsbury of Delaware attacked § 7 of S. 60-which included protection of the right "to full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and property"-calling it an invasion of state powers.
Opponents of the bill recognized many of the same fundamental rights as the bill's proponents, but differed as to whether freedmen were entitled to all the rights of citizenship and whether the United States should enforce these rights. Senator Garrett Davis of Kentucky, who sought amendments to the bill, advocated the right to keep and bear arms and other Bill of Rights guarantees with language similar to that used by the Republicans.
Senator Davis did not object to any of the bill's statements of rights, but offered only unrelated amendments. His objections to § 7, made in a speech on January 25, 1866, were largely procedural. Senator Davis decried the fact that § 7 gave the Freedmen's Bureau judicial powers, deprived citizens of the right to trial by jury, and provided for military enforcement.
Senator Trumbull came to the bill's rescue, arguing that such rights are meaningless in places where the civil power is overthrown and the courts are not in operation. Then, a vote was taken, and the Freedmen's Bureau bill passed 37 to 10.
While the above debate was taking place, on January 24, 1866, the Joint Committee considered Senator John Bingham's proposed constitutional amendment. Motions by Senators Jacob Howard and George Boutwell to guarantee suffrage were defeated. A subcommittee, composed of Senators Bingham, Boutwell, and Andrew Rogers, the New Jersey Democrat who led the opposition in the House, was appointed to review the proposal further.
Meanwhile, members of the Joint Committee continued to hear testimony regarding the state militias' repression of freedmen. Committee members, some of whom who would eventually play a key role in adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment, asked questions concerning the keeping and bearing of arms. Later, the Joint Committee considered a draft of the constitutional amendment reported by the subcommittee of Senators Bingham, Boutwell, and Rogers, but no decision was made regarding the draft that day.
On January 29, 1866, the Senate considered S. 61, the civil rights bill. Senator Lyman Trumbull opened the debate by arguing that the bill simply enforced the Thirteenth Amendment. According to Senator Trumbull, black code provisions prohibiting blacks from having firearms violated the Thirteenth Amendment. Senator Trumbull next quoted § 7 of the bill, which referred to the "full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and property." He made two pertinent assumptions: first, that positive rights and equal protection, not just equality, were to be guaranteed, and second, a prohibition on having firearms was a badge of slavery.
Senator Trumbull continued by quoting § 2, Article IV of the Constitution, which provides: "[t]he Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States." The bill, Senator Trumbull stated, would secure "freedom in fact and equality in civil rights to all persons in the United States." James A. McDougall, a Democrat from New York, asked for the meaning of "civil rights," and Trumbull replied that they are those fundamental rights which belong to every free man.
Senator Willard Saulsbury of Delaware led the attack on the bill, feverishly denying its basis in the Thirteenth Amendment. Raising the specter of black suffrage, Senator Saulsbury stated that the bill "gives to these persons [freedmen] every security for the protection of person and property which a white man has," including the ballot and an equal right to have arms. Such an extension, Saulsbury explained, stripped the States of their police power.
The bill guaranteed "full and equal"-not just equal-"benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and property." Senator Trumbull's comments clarify the intent to protect positive rights and not just the promotion of equality, which could include equal slavery for everyone. Based upon the bill's language and Senator Trumbull's logic, the States could not equally disarm the whole population. Senator Edgar Cowan of Pennsylvania made this point during the debates on January 30, 1866, noting that the Thirteenth Amendment's "intention was to make him the opposite of a slave, to make him a freeman." Equality through deprivation of rights, however, was not contemplated.
Later that day, the House considered the Freedmen's Bureau bill. Chairman Eliot of Massachusetts reported to the House the committee substitute for the bill. As an example of the black codes that the bill was designed to nullify, Chairman Eliot quoted the 1865 ordinance of Opelousas, Louisiana, which required freedmen to have a pass, prohibited their residence within the town and their religious and other meetings, and forbade them from carrying arms.
That same day, Major General Clinton Fisk, responding to questions by Congressman Boutwell, told the Joint Committee of the paranoia in the South concerning blacks with firearms. Major General Fisk advocated the need to protect the right of freedmen to keep and bear arms.
The following day, the Joint Committee obtained the report of Brigadier General Charles H. Howard to his brother and head of the Freedmen's Bureau, Major General O. O. Howard. The report, dated December 30, 1865, described how the militia disarmed and oppressed blacks. General Howard concluded the report by recommending the abolition of the Southern State militia.
Senator Jacob M. Howard conducted a great deal, perhaps even most, of the examination of witnesses at the hearings. During this process, Senator Howard asked a Federal Tax Commissioner from Fairfax County, Virginia, about the disposition of whites towards freedmen. The Commissioner responded that Alexandria City authorities attempted to enforce old laws against blacks in regard to carrying firearms. These abuses continued until the Freedman's Bureau was established in Alexandria. The hearings confirmed the need for civil rights legislation in general, and protection of the right of freedmen to have arms in particular. Congress would focus on these goals in the coming weeks.
V. S. 60 Amended To Recognize "The Constitutional
Right Of Bearing Arms"
On February 1, 1866, Senator Benjamin G. Brown of Missouri introduced, and the Senate adopted, a resolution that the Joint Committee consider an amendment to the Constitution, "so as to declare with greater certainty the power of Congress to enforce and determine by appropriate legislation all the guarantees contained in that instrument . . . ." This resolution suggested the intent of what was to become the Fourteenth Amendment to incorporate the Bill of Rights.
The debate on the civil rights bill turned to the issue of whether citizenship would be race-neutral. Some Western Senators wished to exclude Indians, as well as Chinese, from being considered citizens, partly because citizens had a right to bear arms, a right not to be accorded to Indians. The oppression of Native Americans and the seizure of their lands proceeded in earnest. Accordingly, the Senate voted to define all persons born in the United States, without distinction of color, as citizens, "excluding Indians not taxed."
In the House, debate on the Freedmen's Bureau bill, S. 60, began with a procedural ruling that amendments could not yet be offered. Congressman Nathaniel P. Banks, a former governor of Massachusetts and Union General, made known his intent to offer an amendment, so that the Freedmen's Bureau bill would recognize "the civil rights belonging to white persons, including the constitutional right to bear arms . . . ."
The House then returned to debate on the Freedmen's Bureau bill. Representative Ignatius Donnelly of Minnesota, supporting passage of the bill, noted that an amendment offered by Congressman Bingham effectively provided that "Congress shall have power to enforce by appropriate legislation all the guarantees of the Constitution." As such, Congressman Bingham's draft of the Fourteenth Amendment was seen as protecting Bill of Rights' guarantees.
That same day, a witness before the Joint Committee submitted a resolution of Union men from Arkansas, stating in part that the freedman is entitled to all the "absolute rights" of a citizen, including "personal security, personal liberty, and private property." Suffrage, however, was not considered an absolute right.
On February 2, 1866, Senator Davis of Kentucky introduced a substitute for the Civil Rights bill. This substitute declared that any person "who shall subject or cause to be subjected a citizen of the United States to the deprivation of any privilege or immunity in any State to which such citizen is entitled under the Constitution and laws of the United States" shall have an action for damages and that such conduct would be considered a misdemeanor. Senator Davis explained that this compromise would be grounded in the Privileges and Immunities Clause. This suggests that even opponents of the Civil Rights bill were willing to concede that the explicit guarantees of the Bill of Rights should be protected.
Senator Henry Wilson of Massachusetts, for instance, argued the necessity of the Civil Rights bill on the basis that military decrees still were necessary to overturn the black codes. The specific military decree praised by Senator Wilson recognized "the constitutional rights of all loyal and well disposed inhabitants to bear arms" and the same right for ex-Confederates who had taken the amnesty oath.
Decrying "military despotism," Senator Edgar Cowan of Pennsylvania conceded that, by the Thirteenth Amendment, "the slave codes of the several States have been abolished." After further debate, the Civil Rights bill passed the Senate by a vote of thirty-three to twelve.
On February 3, 1866, Representative L.H. Rousseau set forth an interesting view of the scope of S. 60's reference to "all laws and proceedings for the security of person and estate." A Democrat and an opponent of the bill, Representative Rousseau quoted § 7, and then referred to "the security to person and property from unreasonable search, and in various other provisions." Representative Rousseau's reference to unreasonable searches suggests that he considered the Fourth Amendment, and other Bill of Rights provisions, to be encompassed in the "laws and proceedings for the security of person and estate." This consideration would be declared explicitly with reference to the Second Amendment.
On that same day in the Joint Committee, Senator Howard questioned Bureau official J. W. Alvord, who had visited most of the Southern States, regarding whether the freedmen owned arms. Mr. Alvord responded that some kept muskets and shotguns, and used them to hunt.
The Joint Committee met in secret that day to consider the proposed constitutional amendment, S. 60. Senator Bingham offered the following substitute for the subcommittee draft: "Congress shall have power to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper to secure to the citizens of each state all privileges and immunities of citizens in the several states [Art. 4, Sec. 2]; and to all persons in the several States equal protection in the rights of life, liberty and property [5th Amendment]." The substitute was agreed to by a nonpartisan vote of seven to six, with Democrat Andrew Rogers joining Jacob Howard in voting affirmatively. Of course, Senator Rogers then voted against the proposal on the merits.
In the House debate on February 5, 1866, Representative Lawrence S. Trimble of Kentucky, a Democrat, argued that S. 60 was based on military rule and violated the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendments, which the Representative called "inalienable rights of an American freeman." Bill supporters countered that S. 60 would protect rights violated by existing state laws. As Representative Josiah B. Grinnell of Iowa complained, "A white man in Kentucky may keep a gun; if a black man buys a gun he forfeits it and pays a fine of five dollars, if presuming to keep in his possession a musket which he has carried through the war."
Representative Samuel McKee of Kentucky noted that 27,000 black ex-soldiers from Kentucky retained their arms and "would like to have [S. 60] to protect them . . . . As freedmen they must have the civil rights of freemen."
Congressman Thomas Eliot, as instructed by the Select Committee on the Freedmen's Bureau, offered a substitute for S. 60. Congressman Eliot explained his proposed changes, including the following:
The next amendment is in the seventh section, in the eleventh line, after the word "estate," by inserting the words "including the constitutional right to bear arms," so that it will read, "to have full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and estate, including the constitutional right to bear arms."
As noted, Representative Nathaniel Banks had suggested this language four days earlier, although Representative Banks would have placed the term "the constitutional right to bear arms" first in the list of civil rights.
Representative Bingham, whose proposed constitutional amendment was then being secretly debated in the Joint Committee, was a member of the Select Committee on Freedmen, which previously instructed Congressman Eliot to report the above substitute for S. 60. While the House debated other provisions, no one objected to Representative Eliot's proposed amendment to S. 60 explicitly recognizing the right to bear arms.
Arguing for adopting the Freedmen's Bureau bill, Congressman Eliot quoted from a report on Kentucky from Brevet Major General Fisk to General Howard, Commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau. Congressman Eliot complained that civil authorities enforcing state law were seizing firearms from blacks and imposing fines on them.
The following day, a vote was taken in the House on the final passage of S. 60, the Freedmen's Bureau bill. The Select Committee's substitute report by Eliot, including "the constitutional right to bear arms" being termed a "civil right," passed by a vote of one-hundred thirty-six to thirty-three.
The next day, Senator Lyman Trumbull moved that the House amendments to S. 60 be referred to the Senate Committee of the Judiciary. In the Joint Committee, Senator Howard questioned a loyalist from rural Virginia, who testified that no danger existed of either a negro insurrection or a revival of the Confederate rebellion. On February 8, 1866, Senator Ira Harris of New York elicited testimony from a Mississippi judge, which explained that the reason blacks were disarmed was because of an unjustified fear of insurrection.
That same day, Senator Trumbull informed the Senate that the Committee of the Judiciary instructed him to report back S. 60 and to recommend that the Senate concur with the House amendments. Explaining the House amendments, Senator Trumbull noted that the insertion of the term "the constitutional right of bearing arms" did not change the meaning of S. 60. Thus, the authors of the Freedmen's Bureau bill and of the Civil Rights bill believed that the common language of both bills would protect the constitutional right to bear arms.
Once again, opponents objected that S. 60 was based on military rule and denied individuals their right to a jury trial. No one, however, objected to the right to keep and bear arms being acknowledged. The Senate then concurred in the amended S. 60 without a recorded vote. The next day the House approved unrelated Senate amendments. The Freedmen's Bureau bill had reached final passage by the Congress.
VI. From Enforcement Of The Second
Amendment To The Veto Of S. 60
As passed, the Freedmen's Bureau bill provided in § 7 that, in areas where ordinary judicial proceedings were interrupted by the rebellion, the President shall extend military protection to persons whose rights are violated. The protected "civil rights or immunities" were recognized as "including the constitutional right of bearing arms."
On February, 13, 1866, it was announced in both houses of Congress that the Joint Committee had recommended adoption of a constitutional amendment to read as follows:
The Congress shall have power to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper to secure to the citizens of each State all privileges and immunities of citizens in the several States; and to all persons in the several States equal protection in the rights of life, liberty, and property.
This appears to be the first reported draft of what would become § 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment. Same that the Freedmen's Bureau bill had been passed, Congress now could focus its attention on a constitutional provision generalizing those same rights contained in the Freedman's Bureau bill. The Memorial of Citizens of Tennessee, advocated by unionists in control of the state seeking recognition, was referred that day to the Joint Committee. The Joint Committee included in the memorial the texts of various acts passed by the Union legislature, including an exemption (that apparently favored all loyalists and perhaps freedmen) from the state's prohibition on carrying concealed weapons. Meanwhile, witnesses from other states continually paraded before the Joint Committee.
Civil rights were frequently discussed in debates on Reconstruction policy. On February 17, 1866, Representative Burton C. Cook of Illinois, noting the importance of the Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights bills, rhetorically asked the following about the Thirteenth Amendment: "Did this mean only that they [slaves] should no longer be bought and sold like beasts in the shambles, or did it mean that they should have the civil rights of freedmen . . . ?" Congressman Cook then advocated the adoption of further constitutional amendments to secure full justice and equal rights.
Representative William Lawrence of Ohio discussed the need to protect freedmen, quoting verbatim General D.E. Sickles' General Order No. 1, dated January 1, 1866, for the Department of South Carolina. The order included among the "civil rights and immunities" the right to bear arms, negated the state's prohibition on possession of firearms by blacks, and even recognized the right of the conquered to bear arms.
This "most remarkable order," repeatedly printed in the headlines of the Loyal Georgian, a prominent black newspaper of the time, was thought to have been "issued with the knowledge and approbation of the President if not by his direction." The first newspaper issue to print the order editorialized that "all men, without distinction of color, have the right to keep and bear arms to defend their homes, families or themselves."
The above statement, taken from a Freedmen's Bureau circular, was also printed numerous times in the Loyal Georgian. The Loyal Georgian was not a stranger to the right to bear arms issue; in fact "From the first days of freedom, the right to bear arms was defended in black newspapers . . . ." The proposal of the first draft of the Fourteenth Amendment came at about the same time as the publication of the above issue of the Loyal Georgian, which followed the congressional debates carefully. The freedmen audience of such newspapers must have concluded that the then proposed amendment would further protect their right to keep and bear arms, as well as their right to many other liberties.
In the Joint Committee on February 17, 1866, Representative George S. Boutwell of Massachusetts asked an Arkansas State official whether any danger of negro insurrection existed if blacks were treated properly. The official replied: "No sir, but if they are told that they have no rights which white men are bound to respect, and if federal bayonets are turned against them, they will secrete arms for the purpose of defending themselves."
In the Senate on February 19, 1866, Senator Henry Wilson of Massachusetts introduced S.R. 32, a joint resolution to disband the militia forces in most southern states. Senator Wilson quoted detailed accounts of the militias' disarming of and other abuses of blacks, including a report of Brevet General Howard that had been submitted to the Joint Committee. Senator Willard Saulsbury of Delaware opposed sending the joint resolution to the Committee on Military Affairs and the Militia, arguing that the power of Congress under Article I, § 8 to organize, arm, and discipline the militia did not include the power to disarm the state militia.
Senator Wilson responded that ex-Confederates traveled the country, "searching houses, disarming people, [and] committing outrages of every kind . . . ." Senator Wilson concluded: "Congress has power to disarm ruffians or traitors, or men who are committing outrages against law or the rights of men on our common humanity." The resolution then was referred to the Committee on Military Affairs and the Militia.
Both Senator Wilson and Senator Saulsbury upheld the peaceful citizen's right to keep and bear arms, but disagreed over: (1) who in the South were the aggressors and, consequently, would lose this and other rights; and (2) who were citizens. Senator Wilson had previously complained about Mississippi's firearms prohibition law, which applied only to blacks. Although Senator Saulsbury had opposed the Civil Rights bill because it would prohibit states from disarming free negroes, the Senator now invoked the Second Amendment to protect the right of "the whole white population" not only to be armed, but also to organize and operate as militia.
A few days later, Senator Wilson reported his bill to disband the southern state militia. The bill, however, was not considered further until the next session, where it passed in a form that did not create any infringement of the individual's right to keep and bear arms. Those who supported civil rights and adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment believed that the individual's right to keep and bear arms was far more important than the power of a state to maintain a militia.
At this point in time, members of Congress were startled to learn that President Andrew Johnson vetoed the Freedmen's Bureau bill. The veto message was read in the Senate just minutes after the debate on Senator Wilson's bill to disband militia. President Johnson's primary objections were that the Freedmen's Bureau bill relied heavily on military rule and violated the right to trial by jury. President Johnson, however, did not object to the civil suit provision in § 7, nor did the President object to its recognition of protection for the constitutional right to bear arms. Reading the President's veto message caused such an uproar that the Senate galleries had to be cleared.
Meanwhile, in the Joint Committee, Representative Boutwell of Massachusetts elicited further testimony concerning how the Union Constitutional Convention in Arkansas recognized the civil rights of freedmen, with the notable exceptions of bearing arms and suffrage. The Arkansas Constitution declared the right to keep and bears arms only for the "free white men."
On February 20, 1866, the Senate debated the veto of the Freedmen's Bureau bill. Next, Senator Garrett Davis made an impassioned speech on the bill's unconstitutionality. Senator Lyman Trumbull expressed great surprise at the veto, noting that the bill's purpose was to protect constitutional rights. Again Senator Trumbull detailed the oppression of the freedmen and appealed to Congress to use its power under the Thirteenth Amendment to stamp out the incidents of slavery by passing the bill.
Next, the proponents of S. 60 sought to override the President's veto but failed by a vote of thirty to eighteen, just two votes shy of the necessary two-thirds. Thus any need for a House override vote became moot.
The veto was the first disagreement between President Johnson and the Congress, and began a saga that culminated in the unsuccessful attempt to impeach the President. Republican newspapers, both Radical and Conservative, regretted the veto and almost unanimously supported the principles of the Freedmen's Bureau bill. At least one state legislature, Wisconsin, praised Congress for passing the bill and decried the veto.
Nevertheless, it was business as usual in the Joint Committee. Senator Howard interrogated Major General Alfred H. Terry, who was in command at Richmond, Virginia. Major General Terry explained that he refused the demand of state officials to disarm blacks. Responding to questions by Representative E.B. Washburne of Illinois, Lieutenant Colonel H.S. Hall, and officials with the Freedmen's Bureau, told how Texas Governor Hamilton authorized armed patrols to suppress an alleged negro insurrection resulting in robberies committed against blacks. The next day, February 21, 1866, Senator Howard examined General Rufus Saxton, former assistant commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau in South Carolina, who testified that South Carolina's militia were seizing firearms from freedmen and thereby, violating their Second Amendment rights. After asserting that South Carolina whites sought a "disarmed and defenseless" black population, General Saxton further testified that the disarming of blacks would result in violence and oppression.
VII. Personal Security, Personal Liberty,
And The Civil Rights Act
Beginning on February 27, 1866 the first draft of the proposed Fourteenth Amendment was debated in the House for three days. Representative John A. Bingham of Ohio, the draft's author, argued that previously the "immortal bill of rights embodied in the Constitution, rested for its execution and enforcement hitherto upon the fidelity of the States."
Representative Robert S. Hale of New York, although a Republican, saw no need for the Fourteenth Amendment, interpreting the existing Bill of Rights to bind not just Congress, but also the States. Representative Bingham responded that "The proposition pending before the House is simply a proposition to arm the Congress . . . with the power to enforce the bill of rights as it stands in the Constitution today." Representative Frederick E. Woodbridge of Vermont characterized the scope of the proposed Fourteenth Amendment in terms of protecting a broad panoply of rights, asserting that the proposed amendment "merely gives the power to Congress to enact those laws which will give to a citizen of the United States the natural rights which necessarily pertain to citizenship."
In debate on February 28, 1866, regarding the representation of the Southern States in Congress, Senator James W. Nye of Nevada opined that the Bill of Rights already applied to the States and that Congress had power to enforce the Bill of Rights against the States. Referring to "the colored population," Senator Nye continued that, "As citizens of the United States they have equal right to protection, and to keep and bear arms for self-defense. They have long cherished the idea of liberty . . . ." Senator Nye's comments typify the thought of those who supported the Fourteenth Amendment, confirming the widely-held views that the Bill of Rights already applied to the States, that Congress could enforce it, that blacks were citizens, and that individuals have a right to keep and bear arms for personal protection. Senator William M. Stewart of Nevada repeated that the Bill of Rights was binding on the States.
On March 1, 1866, a significant debate on S. 61 took place in the House. Representative James Wilson, Chairman of the Judiciary Committee, explained in detail the meaning of "civil rights and immunities" as used in the bill, which also protected in part the related right "to full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and property . . . ." Representative Wilson stated: "I understand civil rights to be simply the absolute rights of individuals, such as-'the right of personal security, the right of personal liberty, and the right to acquire and enjoy property.'" He added that the House, through its proposed enactment, was attempting to reduce to statute "the spirit of the Constitution." By this Representative Wilson apparently meant, in great part, the Bill of Rights.
Furthermore, Representative Wilson noted that William Blackstone had divided "the great fundamental civil rights" into three categories: the right of personal security, the right of personal liberty, and the right of personal property. Blackstone considered the right to bear arms as one of "the rights of persons." Blackstone then specified certain "auxiliary subordinate rights" including the right to petition and the right to have arms for defense as among the methods of securing, protecting, and maintaining the inviolate "primary rights of personal security, personal liberty, and private property."
The Freedmen's Bureau bill, of course, declared that the rights of personal security and personal liberty included what Blackstone referred to as "the right of having and using arms for self-preservation and defence." Senator Wilson partly had in mind the Second Amendment when he said of the Federal Constitution that "there is no right enumerated in it by general terms or by specific designation which is not definitely embodied in one of the rights I have mentioned, or results as an incident necessary to complete defense and enjoyment of the specific right." Particularizing this philosophy, the Bill of Rights reflected the of Blackstone's philosophy, which included the right of having arms to protect for personal security, personal liberty, and personal property.
The opponents of S. 60 agreed, as evidenced by New Jersey Democrat Representative Rogers' declaration that S. 61 "is nothing but a relic of the Freedmen's Bureau bill . . . ." S. 60, of course, explicitly declared that the rights of personal security and personal liberty included "the constitutional right of bearing arms." Yet even Representative Rogers held that "the rights of nature" include "the right of self-defense, [and] the right to protect our lives from invasion by others" and that "the great civil rights [are] the privileges and immunities created and granted to citizens of a country by virtue of the sovereign power . . . ."
On March 5, 1866, the Senate debated the basis of representation in Congress, which ultimately became Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment. Senator Samuel Pomeroy of Kansas, a supporter of the proposed amendment, stated that the rights to have a home, bear arms, and vote are indispensable for liberty. Senator Pomeroy did not know whether the proposed Fourteenth Amendment would pass, but argued that the enforcement clause of the Thirteenth Amendment justified federal legislation protecting the right to have arms and the right to vote. In short, Senator Pomeroy argued that the Bill of Rights-including the right to bear arms-could be enforced against the states and perhaps against private individuals through the Thirteenth Amendment.
That same day in the Joint Committee, Senator Jacob Howard questioned Captain Alexander Ketchum, assistant to General O.O. Howard, concerning South Carolina. Captain Ketchum noted that, as a general rule, the freedmen did not have arms, but that removal of the Freedmen's Bureau would subject the freedmen to oppressive State legislation and would result in armed self protection by the freedmen. The questioning then turned to contracts of peonage between the former masters and slaves. Captain Ketchum explained that these contracts typically prohibited the freedmen from leaving the plantation without a pass and from possessing firearms. Senator Howard produced a paper that the witness identified as a model contract drafted by a committee of planters. Under the contract's terms, freedmen agreed "to keep no poultry, dogs or stock of any kind, except as hereinafter specified; no firearms or deadly weapons, no ardent spirits, nor introduce or invite visitors, nor leave the premises during working hours without the written consent of the proprietor or his agent."
On March 6, 1866, President Johnson communicated to the Senate all reports made by the assistant commissioners of the Freedmen's Bureau since December 1, 1865. These reports were also received by the House on March 20, 1866. The reports included a circular promulgated by Assistant Commissioner for the State of Georgia, Davis Tillson, on December 22, 1865, stating that the Second Amendment protects the right to bear arms to all persons and that no civil or military officer was authorized to disarm a person, unless convicted of dangerous use of a weapon.
Among accounts of "outrages committed upon colored persons in Kentucky" were instances of firearms seizure from, and arrests of, freedmen. Assistant Commissioner Clinton B. Fisk wrote that, in Kentucky, "the civil law prohibits the colored man from bearing arms," and that firearms seizures there infringed on the right to keep and bear arms. Commissioner Fisk's report added that "the town marshal takes all arms from returned colored soldiers, and is very prompt in shooting the blacks whenever an opportunity occurs." As a result, Fisk added, outlaws throughout Kentucky "make brutal attacks and raids upon the freedmen, who are defenseless, for the civil law-officers disarm the colored man and hand him over to armed marauders."
A report of Assistant Commissioner Wager Swayne described the abuses committed by militia and special constables in Alabama. He exclaimed that "the weaker portion of the community should not be forbid[den] to carry arms, when the stronger do so as a rule of custom." Commissioner Swayne explained that militiamen broke into the homes of the freedmen, seized firearms, and committed robberies against them.
On March 7, 1866, Representative Thomas D. Elliot reintroduced the Freedmen's Bureau bill, and it then was referred to the Select Committee on Freedmen, of which Representative Elliot was chairman. This bill had a more refined formulation of the rights of security and personal liberty than the Civil Rights bill, which had just been debated, and also had explicit recognition of "the constitutional right to bear arms." The debates on the Civil Rights bill, which quoted William Blackstone's language in detail, apparently contributed to the more advanced draftsmanship in the Freedmen's Bureau bill.
The Civil Rights bill was debated on March 8 and 9, 1866, as Representative John M. Broomall of Pennsylvania identified "the rights and immunities of citizens" as including rights in the text of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, such as the writ of habeas corpus and the right of petition.
Representative Henry J. Raymond of New York, the editor of the New York Times and a member of the Joint Committee, proposed an amendment to the bill declaring that all persons born in the United States are "citizens of the United States and entitled to all rights and privileges as such." According to Raymond, citizenship included the rights to bear arms and to self defense.
Later, there ensued a debate, spurred by the argument of Representative Martin R. Thayer of Pennsylvania, that Congress already could enforce the first eleven amendments against the States. Representative Michael C. Kerr, a Democrat from Indiana, quoted Barron v. Baltimore in support of his position that the first eleven amendments were limitations only on the power of Congress. Representative Thayer asked "[o]f what value are those guarantees if you deny all power on the part of the Congress of the United States to execute and enforce them?" Representative Thayer's argument may have been on shaky constitutional ground, but it exhibited the intent of what would become the Fourteenth Amendment.
Concerning the terms of the Civil Rights bill "all laws and proceedings for the security of person and property," Representative James Wilson of Iowa, Chairman of the Judiciary Committee, stated that the right to testify, which the black codes denied, was part of a broader right to protect personal security and liberty. This was the same explanation set forth by both William Blackstone and the authors of the Freedmen's Bureau Act regarding the right to keep and bear arms, because it too was necessary to guarantee personal liberty and personal security.
Congressman John Bingham supported enactment of the pending Civil Rights bill because it would "enforce in its letter and its spirit the bill of rights as embodied in that Constitution." Congressman Bingham stated that "the term 'civil rights,' as used in this bill does include and embrace every right that pertains to the citizen as such." Alluding to Aristotle's concept of citizenship, Congressman Bingham argued that "The term civil rights includes every right that pertains to the citizen under the Constitution, laws, and Government of this country." Congressman Bingham then quoted § 1 of the Civil Rights bill, including its provision concerning the "full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and property . . . ."
Congressman Bingham reiterated his support for "amending the Constitution of the United States, expressly prohibiting the States from any such abuse of power in the future." He explained that "the seventh and eighth sections of the Freedmen's Bureau bill enumerate the same rights and all the rights and privileges that are enumerated in the first section of this [Civil Rights] bill." Congressman Bingham quoted the seventh section of the Freedmen's Bureau bill, which provided that all persons, including negroes, shall "have full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and estate, including the constitutional right of bearing arms . . . ." As such, he would have empowered Congress to punish state officers who violated the Bill of Rights. In drafting the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment, Congressman Bingham thus sought to protect these same rights, privileges, and immunities.
On March 9, 1866, in the Joint Committee, Representative George S. Boutwell of Massachusetts examined Brevet Major General Wager Swayne, who was in charge of the Freedmen's Bureau in Alabama. Swayne recounted the all-too-familiar story of blacks being disarmed and plundered by militia. He did not intervene initially, but later did so to protect Second Amendment rights.
According to the March 10, 1866 testimony of Captain J.H. Matthews, officer of the colored infantry and Subcommissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau, a similar situation existed in Mississippi. Responding to questions by Representative Boutwell, Matthews described how militiamen, sometimes with their faces blackened, would patrol the country, flogging and mistreating freedmen.
In mid-March, 1866, a controversy erupted concerning the proceedings of the Joint Committee. The House passed a resolution to print for House members 25,000 extra copies of the testimony before the Joint Committee. After rancorous debate, the Senate, decided on 10,000 copies for its members. Senator Garrett Davis of Kentucky attacked most of the testimony as being grossly exaggerated. Apparently, General Fisk, head of the Freedmen's Bureau in Kentucky, had alleged a major incident involving the malicious wounding of several black soldiers. Upon investigation, a committee of the Kentucky legislature, found some mistreatment, but little actual violence. An Army officer informed the Joint Committee of the following interesting incident: "A negro, in United States uniform, stated that he had been beaten by a party of unknown men, who met him in the road at night, in Nicholas county, for admitting that he had a pistol at home." Meanwhile, Reconstruction policy continued to be debated in earnest in Congress. On March 24, 1866, Representative Leonard Myers of Pennsylvania referred to "Alabama, . . . whose aristocratic and anti-republican laws almost reenacting slavery, among other harsh inflictions impose an imprisonment of three months and a fine of $100.00 upon any one owning fire-arms . . . ." To overturn such conditions, Representative Myers recommended civil rights legislation.
Quoting the Republican-Form-of-Government Clause of the Constitution, Article IV, § 4, Representative Roswell Hart of New York stated that "The Constitution clearly describes that to be a republican form of government for which it was expressly framed[,] A government . . . where 'the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed . . . .'" Also included in Representative Hart's list were freedom of religion, search and seizure, and due process. In addition, he asserted the duty of the United States to guarantee that the States, especially in the South, have a form of government where these rights are protected.
The Civil Rights bill passed both Houses, but on March 27, 1866, President Johnson surprised everyone by sending a veto message to the Senate. The debate to override the veto took place in the Senate on April 4, 1866. Senator Lyman Trumbull made an eloquent speech arguing that every citizen has "inherent, fundamental rights which belong to free citizens or free men in all countries, such as the rights enumerated in this bill . . . ." Of course, these were the same rights generally recited in the Civil Rights bill and explicitly expounded by both in Blackstone and the Freedmen's Bureau bill as including the right to have arms. On April 6, 1866, the Senate voted to override President Johnson's veto of the Civil Rights bill. An editorial published in the New York Evening Post on the override vote illustrated the public's understanding of Congressional intent as expressed in the debates. The editorial referred to "the mischiefs for which the Civil Rights bill seeks to provide a remedy . . .-that there will be no obstruction to the acquirement of real estate by colored men, no attempts to prevent their holding public assemblies, freely discussing the question of their own disabilities, keeping fire-arms . . . ." On the next page was a prominent advertisement for Remington rifles, muskets, "pocket and belt revolvers," and other arms, with the admonition: "In these days of housebreaking and robbery every house, store, bank, and office should have one of Remington's revolvers."
On the same day as the override debate, in the Joint Committee, Senator Howard examined Brevet Lieutenant Colonel W.H.H. Beadle, superintendent of the Freedmen's Bureau in North Carolina. Beadle testified about police beatings of blacks in Wilmington, North Carolina, affirming that the police ransacked homes, seized firearms, and committed thefts.
Representative William Lawrence of Ohio made similar arguments in the House override debate on April 7, 1866, as Senator Trumbull had made in the Senate. After quoting the same passage from Kent on the rights of personal security and personal liberty, Representative Lawrence explained that the rights to life and liberty are inherent and exist independently of any constitution. Lawrence further elucidated the view that the rights to life and liberty are inherent and could not be infringed by a state, implying that the right to have the means for protection of these rights-such as arms-is also inherent. In support of the need for the bill, Representative Lawrence quoted the testimony of Major General Alfred H. Terry before the Joint Committee. Major General Terry had been entreated by Virginia State officers "to take the arms of the blacks away from them," but had refused to disarm the freedmen.
Representative Sidney Clarke of Kansas angrily referred to an 1866 Alabama law providing "That it shall not be lawful for any freedman, mulatto, or free person of color in this State, to own firearms, or carry about his person a pistol or other deadly weapon." This statute, Representative Clarke noted, also made it unlawful "to sell, give, or lend fire-arms or ammunition of any description whatever, to any freedman, free negro, or mulatto . . . ." Representative Clarke then attacked Mississippi, "whose rebel militia, upon the seizure of the arms of black Union soldiers, appropriated the same to their own use," and thereby violated the Second Amendment. Representative Clarke presupposed the existence of a constitutional right to keep privately held arms for protection against oppressive state militia.
By April 9, 1866, both Houses had overridden President Johnson's veto by the requisite two-thirds vote, and the Civil Rights Act became law. As enacted, § 1 of the Civil Rights Act of 1866 provided:
[C]itizens, of every race and color, without regard to any previous condition of slavery or involuntary servitude, . . . shall have the same right, in every State and Territory in the United States, to make and enforce contracts, to sue, be parties, and give evidence, to inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold, and convey real and personal property, and to full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and property, as is enjoyed by white citizens . . . .
VIII. No State Shall Abridge, Deprive, Or Deny:
The Passage Of The Fourteenth Amendment
In a secret meeting of the Joint Committee on April 21, 1866, Representative Thaddeus Stevens proposed a plan of Reconstruction, which he stated he had not drafted. Section 1 of his proposal stated that "No discrimination shall be made by any state, nor by the United States, as to the civil rights of persons because of race, color, or previous condition of servitude." That language had been submitted to Representative Stevens by Robert Dale Owen, an ex-Representative and famous reformer, who was a strong supporter of the individual's right to keep and bear arms.
Equality was necessary but insufficient for Representative Bingham, who moved to add the following language: "nor shall any state deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws, nor take private property for public use without just compensation." The first phrase of Bingham's proposal would become the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Since Representative Stevens' proposal already had prohibited discrimination, Representative Bingham's addition of "equal protection" assured more than mere equality-it guaranteed equal protection of rights, not mere equal deprivation of rights. Indeed, equal protection of "the laws" might well have included, in Representative Bingham's mind, the Bill of Rights. The second phrase in Representative Bingham's proposal, derived from the "takings" clause of the Fifth Amendment, might have been intended to state explicitly only one of the Bill of Rights guarantees to be protected. This was similar to the recitation of the constitutional right to bear arms in the Freedmen's Bureau bill, the mention of which was not intended to preclude protection of other guarantees.
Although Representative Bingham's amendment was not successful, the five to seven vote was nonpartisan. Democrats Reverdy Johnson and Andrew Rogers voted with Republicans Bingham and Stevens in favor of the amendment. Representative Stevens' original proposal was then adopted. Representative Bingham, however, came back with another proposal for a separate section, which ten of the committee members, even Senator Johnson, approved. Absent the citizenship clause, Representative Bingham's proposal would become § 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment. Additionally, the committee approved what became the Enforcement Clause.
On April 28, 1866, Representative Bingham moved, and the Joint Committee voted, to delete Representative Stevens' draft, which prohibited race discrimination as to civil rights, and to insert Representative Bingham's draft, which guaranteed privileges and immunities, due process, and equal protection. The language of Representative Bingham's draft became § 1 of the then proposed constitutional amendment. Representative Stevens voted in the affirmative, while Senator Howard wanted to keep both drafts. Furthermore, the committee also voted to require that the Southern States ratify the amendment as a price of readmission into the Union. Finally, the committee reported to Congress a joint resolution proposing the constitutional amendment and lifted the veil of secrecy, notifying the newspapers of the proposal. For all practical purposes, the work of the Joint Committee was now over.
Attention in Congress then focused upon the proposed Fourteenth Amendment and the second Freedmen's Bureau bill. Three months had passed since the first draft of the proposed Fourteenth Amendment was recommended in Congress. On April 30, 1866, Representative Thaddeus Stevens, the House leader and leader of the House delegation to the Joint Committee, brought forth to the House a joint resolution proposing the constitutional amendment. Section 1 was Representative Bingham's proposal. Representative Stevens also introduced a Joint Committee bill, mandating that when the constitutional amendment became effective, the southern states would be readmitted into the Union only if they ratified the amendment and accordingly conformed their constitutions and laws.
On May 8, 1866, a report from President Johnson written by Benjamin C. Truman on the condition of the southern people was delivered to the Senate. Truman recalled the fear of a black insurrection in late 1865 and early 1866, which led to disarming measures against blacks.
Truman's account suggests that many blacks outwardly exhibited their perceived entitlement to the right to keep and bear arms, to the dismay of whites who were uncomfortable with allowing this liberty to recent slaves. Truman's choice of words combined a grain of white paternalism while still recognizing the utility of the right for lawful protection.
When the Fourteenth Amendment was debated in the House on May 8 through 10, 1866, Representative Thaddeus Stevens remarked that the amendment's provisions embodied "our Declaration of organic law." Representative Martin R. Thayer of Pennsylvania stated that the amendment "simply brings into the Constitution what is found in the bill of rights of every State" and that "it is but incorporating in the Constitution of the United States the principle of the civil rights bill which has lately become a law . . . ."
The broad character of the amendment prompted New Jersey Representative Andrew J. Rogers to object and ask: "What are privileges and immunities? Why sir, all the rights we have under the law of the country are embraced under the definition of privileges and immunities." Representative Bingham averred that the amendment would protect "the privileges and immunities of all the citizens of the Republic and the inborn rights of every person within its jurisdiction . . . ." Bingham added that the amendment would furnish a remedy against state injustices, such as the infliction of cruel and unusual punishment. By stating that the Eighth Amendment violations by states would be prohibited under the Fourteenth Amendment, Representative Bingham indicated that the Fourteenth Amendment also would prohibit State deprivations of any rights recognized in the remainder of the Bill of Rights.
The proposed Fourteenth Amendment passed the House on May 10, 1866. The New York Evening Post remarked that "[t]he first section[of the amendment] merely reasserts the Civil Rights Act." The Post earlier asserted that the Civil Rights Act protected "public assemblies" and "keeping firearms," i.e., the rights set forth in the First and Second Amendments.
At the Joint Committee on May 18, 1866, and under questioning by Senator Howard, T.J. Mackay, an ex-Confederate who had assisted in the surrender of arms to the Northern army, stated that "a majority of [the freedmen] are armed and entitled to bear arms under the existing laws of the southern States." Senator Mackay's statement was accurate for Texas, which passed no explicit black code provision for disarming freedmen, but was inaccurate for some other southern states.
On May 22, 1866, Representative Eliot, on behalf of the Select Committee on Freedmen's Affairs, reported the second Freedmen's Bureau bill, H.R. 613. The Republicans were not going to accept defeat in the aftermath of the failure to override President Johnson's veto. As with H.R. 61, this reintroduced bill explicitly recognized and guaranteed "the constitutional right to bear arms."
That same day, President Johnson provided a report to the House, which referred it to the Joint Committee, on provisions in southern state laws concerning freedmen. The report included black code provisions prohibiting possession of firearms by freedmen. Although these state laws generally had been known in Congress for some time, it was significant that they were received again in Congress on May 23, 1866, because that day proved to be an important day in the process of guaranteeing the right to keep and bear arms against such state infringements.
May 23, 1866, was the first time that the Senate considered H.R. No. 127, which would become the Fourteenth Amendment. Senator Jacob M. Howard introduced the subject on behalf of the Joint Committee, promising to present "the views and motives which influenced that Committee . . . ." After acknowledging the important role of the testimony before the Joint Committee, Senator Howard examined § 1 of the proposed constitutional amendment. Senator Howard referred to "the personal rights guaranteed and secured by the first eight amendments of the Constitution; such as freedom of speech and of the press; . . . the right to keep and bear arms . . . ." Because state legislation infringed these rights, adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment was imperative. As Senator Howard explained "The great object of the first section of this amendment is, therefore, to restrain the power of the States and compel them at all times to respect these great fundamental guarantees."
In the ensuing debate on the Fourteenth Amendment, no one questioned Senator Howard's statement that the Amendment made the first eight amendments enforceable against the States. Quoting the enforcement clause, Howard asserted, "Here is a direct affirmative delegation of power to Congress to carry out all the principles of all these guarantees, a power not found in the Constitution." Howard added that the proposed amendment "will, if adopted by the States, forever disable every one of them from passing laws trenching upon those fundamental rights and privileges which pertain to citizens of the United States, and to all persons who happen to be within their jurisdiction."
Front-page press coverage was given to Senator Howard's speech introducing the Fourteenth Amendment to the Senate. Part of the speech that was printed included Senator Howard's explanation that the Fourteenth Amendment would compel the States to respect "these great fundamental guarantees . . . the personal rights guaranteed by the first eight amendments of the United States Constitution, such as . . . the right to keep and bear arms . . . ." On the day after they were uttered, these words appeared on the first page of the New York Times and the New York Herald and also were printed in such papers as the National Intelligencer, published in Washington, D.C., and the Philadelphia Inquirer.
Numerous editorials appeared on Senator Howard's speech, but none disputed his explanation that the Fourteenth Amendment would protect freedoms in the Bill of Rights, such as keeping and bearing arms, from state infringement. The New York Times editorialized that Senator Howard's exposition was "clear and cogent." The Chicago Tribune noted that Senator Howard's explanation "was very forcible and well put, and commanded the close attention of the Senate." "It will be observed," summarized the Baltimore Gazette, "that the first section [of the amendment] is a general prohibition upon all of the States of abridging the privileges and immunities of the citizens of the United States, and secures for all the equal advantages and protection of the laws." Several newspapers were impressed with the "length" or "detail" in which Senator Howard explained the amendment.
The Southern Democratic newspapers did not normally publish any speeches by Republicans, but reacted to Senator Howard's amendment in a revealing manner. The Daily Richmond Examiner complained that the amendment's supporters "are first to make citizens and voters of the negroes." In the southern states, being a citizen included the right of keeping and bearing arms. Yet, the Examiner had a little glee for the Senator from Michigan and reported that, "Howard, who explained [the Amendment] on the part of the Senate, himself objected to the disenfranchisement [of ex-Confederate's] feature." The Southern papers never claimed that the amendment was unclear, but objected to its breadth in guaranteeing to blacks the kinds of rights found in the first eight amendments as well the as the privilege of suffrage. Typifying the Southern view, attacks on Senator Howard, along with prominently displayed advertisements for Remington revolvers, laced the Charleston Daily Courier. Remington placed similar advertisements in such papers as the New York Evening Post, which at the time championed the right of blacks to keep and bear arms.
The same day that Senator Howard was explaining in the Senate that the Fourteenth Amendment would protect the people's right to keep and bear arms from state infringement, the House was debating the second Freedmen's Bureau bill, § 8 of which protected "the constitutional right to bear arms." In a section-by-section explanation, Representative Eliot explained that "The eighth section simply embodies the provisions of the civil rights bill, and gives to the President authority, through the Secretary of War, to extend military protection to secure those rights until the civil courts are in operation." The constitutional basis of the bill, Representative Eliot noted, was the Thirteenth Amendment.
Representative Eliot argued the need for the bill based upon Freedmen's Bureau reports of abuses of blacks. General Fisk described 25,000 discharged black Union soldiers returned to their homes only to be disarmed. General Fisk added that civil authorities seized the freedmen's arms and rendered them defenseless.
For several days the Fourteenth Amendment and the second Freedmen's Bureau bill, H.R. 613, continued to be debated simultaneously in the Senate and House. On May 29, 1866, the House passed H.R. 613 by a vote of ninety-six to thirty-two, with fifty-five members not voting. The House immediately proceeded to consider the proposed constitutional amendment.
Noting the House's passage of the second Freedmen's Bureau bill, the New York Evening Post reprinted some of the Black Code provisions, which had been communicated to Congress by the President, including those punishing freedmen with flogging for keeping arms.
May 30, 1866 began with Senator Howard proposing a new sentence to § 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment, which would begin, "All persons born in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the States wherein they reside." This would settle the issue raised in Dred Scott-i.e., who are "citizens" and thus who would have the bundle of rights appertaining to citizenship. After a raucous debate over making "Indians, coolies, and gypsies" into citizens, the Senate passed Howard's new language.
On June 4, 1866, Indiana Senator Thomas A. Hendricks complained that "What citizenship is, what are its rights . . . are not defined." The Senate also debated the proposed requirement that the southern states adopt the constitutional amendment as a condition to reentry into the Union, a requirement that would make little sense unless the amendment was intended to protect broad rights.
Supporters of what became known as the "Howard Amendment" repeatedly asserted the broad character of the rights that needed to be protected. On June 5, 1866 Senator Luke P. Poland of Vermont analyzed § 1 and argued that it protected "all the provisions of the Constitution." This obviously included the entire Bill of Rights, just as the state laws to be invalidated deprived freedmen of the rights to free speech and to keep and bear arms. Senator Poland also made it clear that the constitutional amendment had the same objective as the Civil Rights Act and, by implication, the second Freedmen's Bureau bill.
On June 8, 1866, Senator John B. Henderson of Missouri expounded the concept of citizenship by reference to the Dred Scott case which held that if blacks were citizens, the State could not violate the privileges and immunities to which they would be entitled. In Dred Scott, according to Senator Henderson, Chief Justice Taney had conceded to members of the State communities "all the personal rights, privileges, and immunities guaranteed to citizens of this 'new Government.' In fact, the opinion distinctly asserts that the words 'people of the United States' and 'citizens' are 'synonymous terms.'" However, Senator Henderson noted the Chief Justice had disregarded the plain meaning of the term "the people" and had excluded blacks. Chief Justice Taney's opinion also explicitly declared that citizens are entitled to Bill of Rights guarantees, including those of the Second Amendment.
Senator Henderson further noted that one objective of the second Freedmen's Bureau bill and the Civil Rights Act was to recognize the right "to enjoy in the respective States those fundamental rights of person and property which cannot be denied without disgracing the Government itself." He characterized these rights as "civil rights" and as "the muniment of freedom." Senator Richard Yates of Illinois agreed that the abolition of slavery by the Thirteenth Amendment overruled Dred Scott and conferred citizenship on the freedman, who was thereby "entitled to be protected in all his rights and privileges as one of the citizens of the United States."
When Senator Hendricks claimed not to understand the meaning of the word "abridged" in the privileges-and-immunities clause, Senator Howard responded that "it is easy to apply the term 'abridged' to the privileges and immunities of citizens, which necessarily include within themselves a great number of particulars." Senator Hendricks countered that no one had defined "what are the rights and immunities of citizenship . . . ."
Although he would join with Senator Hendricks in voting against the Fourteenth Amendment, Senator Reverdy Johnson of Maryland supported the Citizenship and Due Process Clause and only opposed the Privileges and Immunities Clause. If Senator Hendricks' reservation implied that he thought the Privileges and Immunities Clause to be too broad, Senator Johnson knew that citizenship and protection of life, liberty, and property would include the right of every citizen to keep and bear arms. As counsel for the slave owner in Dred Scott, Senator Johnson was well aware that citizenship "would give to persons of the negro race . . . the full liberty . . . to keep and carry arms wherever they went."
The Fourteenth Amendment passed the Senate by a vote of thirty-three to eleven. Thus, it received seventy-five percent of the total votes, far more than the necessary two-thirds for a constitutional amendment.
On June 11, 1866, Senator Wilson reported H.R. No. 613, the second Freedmen's Bureau bill, on behalf of the Committee on Military Affairs and Militia. Four days later, the Senate resolved to print 50,000 additional copies of the Report of the Joint Committee.
On the June 13, 1866, the House considered the proposed Fourteenth Amendment as amended by the Senate. Representative Thaddeus Stevens found the amendments to be so slight that he would not speak further. The amended proposed Fourteenth Amendment then passed the House by a vote of one-hundred twenty to thirty-two. This amounted to a victory of seventy-nine percent, again far more than the necessary two-thirds for a constitutional amendment.
IX. Congress Overrides The President's Veto Of
H.R. No. 613, The Second Freedmen's Bureau Bill
On June 15, Senator Wilson moved to revive H.R. No. 613, the second Freedmen's Bureau bill, as expeditiously as possible. Additionally, the House debated H.R. No. 543, which required the southern states to ratify the Fourteenth Amendment. Representative Godlove S. Orth of Indiana stated that the Fourteenth Amendment "[s]ecures to all persons born or naturalized in the United States the rights of American citizenship." Representative Orth's statement suggests that the Amendment would incorporate the entire Bill of Rights.
Representative George W. Julian of Indiana continued the discussion the next day, noting as follows:
Although the [C]ivil [R]ights bill is now the law, none of the insurgent States allow colored men to testify when white men are parties. The bill, as I learn from General Howard, is pronounced void by the jurists and courts of the South. Florida makes it a misdemeanor for colored men to carry weapons without a license to do so from a probate judge, and the punishment of the offense is whipping and the pillory. South Carolina has the same enactments; and a black man convicted of an offense who fails immediately to pay his fine is whipped. . . . Cunning legislative devices are being invented in most of the States to restore slavery in fact.
This illustrates the common objective of the Civil Rights Act and the Freedmen's Bureau bill to protect the right to keep and bear arms. It also illustrates the need for the Fourteenth Amendment to provide a constitutional foundation and mandate for protecting this right and others.
On June 21, 1866, the House resolved that 100,000 copies of the Report of the Joint Committee would be printed. This Report, detailing the violations of freedmen's rights, was destined for mass circulation.
On June 26, 1866 the Senate considered H.R. No. 613, the second Freedmen's Bureau bill. Unrelated amendments resulted in § 8, which recited "the constitutional right to bear arms," being renumbered as § 14. Senator Thomas Hendricks of Indiana moved to strike out this entire section on the basis that the Civil Rights Act already protected the same rights. Senator Hendricks told a joke about the client who paid his lawyer extra money because he wanted a man "sued harder" and analogize that Congress was trying "to legislate harder" than it had already done in the Civil Rights Act. Members laughed at the joke, but rejected the amendment to strike. Once again, the Civil Rights Act was seen as embodying the same principles as the Freedmen's Bureau bill, which included protection for "the constitutional right to bear arms," and the Fourteenth Amendment was seen as the necessary constitutional basis for guaranteeing such rights against state action.
Senator Lyman Trumbull replied that, although the two bills protected the same rights, the Civil Rights Act would apply in regions where the civil tribunals were in operation, while the Freedmen's Bureau bill would "protect . . . the rights of person and property in those regions of the country, like Virginia and Alabama, where the civil authority is not restored . . . ." Senator Hendricks agreed that the purpose of the Second Freedmen's Bureau bill was "to protect civil rights . . . and to secure men in their personal privileges . . . . " The bill passed without a roll-call vote.
Since the House did not concur on certain amendments made by the Senate to the second Freedmen's Bureau bill, a conference committee was necessary. While these amendments are not germane to the topic here, the committee appointments again indicate the commonality of thought and intent of the prime movers of the second Freedmen's Bureau bill and the Fourteenth Amendment. For the House, the Speaker appointed Thomas D. Eliot of Massachusetts, John A. Bingham of Ohio, and Hiram McCullough of Maryland. The first two of these, of course, were the respective authors of both Freedmen's Bureau bills and the Fourteenth Amendment. The Senate Chair appointed Henry Wilson, Ira Harris, and J.W. Nesmith to the committee.
Senator Wilson, on behalf of the Conference Committee, filed a report on the Freedmen's Bureau bill on July 2, and the Senate concurred in the report. Representative Eliot raised the report in the House the next day. Representative William E. Finck, an Ohio Democrat, made a last-minute attempt to kill the bill by moving to lay the report of the conference committee on the table. Finck's motion was rejected in a roll call vote with twenty-five yeas and one-hundred and two nays. Since the report then was agreed to without another roll call vote, the recorded vote represented yet another landslide vote in favor of passing the bill.
Meanwhile a controversy was brewing about publication of the Report of the Joint Committee. On July 11, Representative Francis C. Le Blond, a Democrat from Ohio, noted that the report, including all testimony, was available, however, the minority report was not included. Since the report and testimony were already published in book form, the Republicans succeeded in keeping the minority report from being nationally distributed.
Addison H. Laflin of New York indicated that "the testimony was printed immediately after it was presented," and once the committee presented the report it was sent to be bound with the testimony. As such, 25,000 copies were quickly printed. Thus, the testimony was available contemporaneously with congressional action on the second Freemen's Bureau bill and the Fourteenth Amendment. The report was then printed in large volume for distribution to the public. Ultimately, 150,000 copies would be printed.
Not unexpectedly, President Johnson vetoed the second Freedmen's Bureau bill, and the veto message was read to the House on July 16, 1866. The President conceded that previously, because the civil courts were closed, the need existed for military tribunals to exercise "jurisdiction over all cases concerning the free enjoyment of the immunities and rights of citizenship, as well as the protection of person and property . . . ." President Johnson claimed that now, however, the courts were again in operation and "the protection granted to the white citizen is already conferred by law upon the freedmen . . . ." The President trusted protection of "the rights, privileges, and immunities of the citizens" to the civil tribunals, where one is entitled to trial by jury. President Johnson believed that the Civil Rights Act, which protected, among other things, the "full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and property," was ample for such purposes.
The House then decided to vote without further debate and override the President's veto by a vote of one hundred and four to thirty-three, a seventy-six percent margin. Over a dozen of the forty-five members who did not vote were excused by their Republican colleagues as absent due to "indisposition." The nature of the "indisposition" was not explained, but one could speculate that it could have involved anything from spirituous liquors the night before to political considerations.
Word of the House's override then reached the Senate. Senator Henry Wilson urged the body to proceed to immediate action. Senator Thomas Hendricks and Senator Willard Saulsbury, the latter of whom months before had defended the power of States to prohibit firearms possession by selected groups, gave speeches urging members to sustain the veto primarily because of the military jurisdiction established by the bill. No other member spoke, and the Senate overrode the veto by a vote of thirty-three to twelve, seventy-three percent of the total vote, once again a good margin more than the necessary two thirds.
X. Summary Of Congressional Action
On The Freedmen's Bureau Act And
The Fourteenth Amendment
As finally passed into law on July 16, 1866, the Freedmen's Bureau Act prolonged the Bureau's existence for two more years. The Act protected "personal liberty" and "personal security," including "the constitutional right to bear arms," and characterized these as "immunities and rights." With the enactment of the Freedmen's Bureau Act, the civil rights revolution in the Thirty-Ninth Congress was complete. The Fourteenth Amendment was proposed by Congress, and the ratification process was the next step. The following summarizes the roll-call voting behavior of Congressmen concerning the Freedmen's Bureau Act and the Fourteenth Amendment.
Every single Senator who voted for the Fourteenth Amendment also voted for the Freedmen's Bureau bills, S. 60 and H.R. No. 613, and thus for recognition of the constitutional right to bear arms. The only recorded Senate vote on S. 60 (the first Freedmen's Bureau bill) as amended to include recognition of the right to bear arms, was the thirty to eighteen veto override vote of February 20, 1866, that barely failed to reach the necessary two-thirds. On June 8, 1866, the Senate passed the proposed Fourteenth Amendment by a vote of thirty-three to eleven. H.R. 613, the second Freedmen's Bureau bill, then passed the Senate by voice vote on June 26, 1866. On July 16, the Senate overrode the President's veto of H.R. 613 by a vote of thirty-three to twelve, receiving seventy-three percent of the votes, more than the necessary two-thirds.
An analysis of the roll call votes revealed that all thirty-three senators who voted for the Fourteenth Amendment also voted for either S. 60 or H.R. 613. Of the thirty-three who voted for the Fourteenth Amendment, twenty-eight voted for both S. 60 and H.R. No. 613. All eleven who voted against the Fourteenth Amendment voted against either S. 60 or H.R. No. 613 or both.
Members of the House cast recorded votes overwhelmingly in favor of the Freedmen's Bureau bills, on three occasions, and the Fourteenth Amendment on two occasions. On February 6, 1866, a day after inserting the right to bear arms into the bill, the House passed S. 60 by a vote of one-hundred thirty-six to thirty three. Since the Senate barely mustered the necessary two-thirds to override the President's veto, the House had no override vote. The proposed Fourteenth Amendment passed the House on May 10, 1866, by a vote of one-hundred twenty-eight to thirty-seven and again, with the Senate amendments on June 13, 1866 by a vote of one-hundred and twenty to thirty-two. The House passed H.R. 613 on May 29 by a ninety-six to thirty-three margin and then on July 16 overrode the President's veto by a vote of one-hundred and four to thirty-three.
The overwhelming majority of House members voted in the affirmative on all five recorded votes-once on S. 60, twice on the proposed Fourteenth Amendment, and twice on H.R. 613. Some voted only once on the proposed Fourteenth Amendment, or once or twice on the Freedmen's Bureau bills. A total of one-hundred and forty representatives voted at least once in favor of the proposed Fourteenth Amendment, and every one of the one-hundred and forty voted at least once in favor of one of the Freedmen's Bureau bills. Of the one-hundred forty representatives who voted for the proposed Fourteenth Amendment, a total of one-hundred and twenty-i.e., eighty-six percent-voted for both S. 60 and H.R. 613.
Thus, the same two-thirds-plus members of Congress who voted for the proposed Fourteenth Amendment also voted for the proposition contained in both Freedmen's Bureau bills, that the constitutional right to bear arms was included in the rights of personal liberty and personal security. No other guarantee in the Bill of Rights was the subject of this official approval.
The Framers intended, and opponents well recognized, that the Fourteenth Amendment was designed to guarantee the right to keep and bear arms as a right and attribute of citizenship on which no State could infringe. The passage of the Fourteenth Amendment accomplished the abolitionist goal that each state recognize all the freedoms contained in the Bill of Rights. In Horace Edgar Flack's words, Representative Bingham, author of the Amendment, intended "to confer power upon the Federal Government, by the first section of the Amendment, to enforce the Federal Bill of Rights in the States . . . ." Flack added "the following objects and rights were to be secured by the first section . . . the right peaceably to assemble, to bear arms, etc. . . ."
Each clause of § 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment reflects the broad character of the rights for which protection was sought.
Among other freedoms in the Bill of Rights, the keeping and bearing of arms had been considered part of the definition of "citizen" since the time of Aristotle. Depicted as a civil right and a privilege or immunity in Dred Scott, the debates on the Fourteenth Amendment, and related civil rights legislation, this liberty interest effectuated the defense and practical realization of the guarantees of life, liberty, or property. This fundamental right under "the laws," including the Bill of Rights, also qualified for "equal protection" but never for deprivation, whether equal or unequal. To the Framers, these universally recognized rights, too numerous to list individually, were to be protected by the all-inclusive language of the Amendment.
The Freedmen's Bureau Act declared that "the constitutional right to bear arms" is included among the "laws and proceedings concerning personal liberty, personal security," and estate, and that "the free enjoyment of such immunities and rights" is to be protected. The Supreme Court has repeatedly recognized the "indefeasible right of personal security, personal liberty, and private property . . . ."
XI. Conclusion
It remains to be seen whether the Supreme Court will decide if the Fourteenth Amendment incorporates the Second Amendment so as to invalidate state infringements of the right of the people to keep and bear arms. Clearly, the Fourteenth Amendment protects the rights to personal security and personal liberty, which its authors declared in the Freedmen's Bureau Act include "the constitutional right to bear arms." To the members of the Thirty-Ninth Congress, possession of arms was a fundamental, individual right worthy of protection from both federal and state violations.
The arms which the Fourteenth Amendment's framers believed to be constitutionally protected included the latest firearms of all kinds, from military muskets, which were fitted with bayonets, and repeating rifles to shotguns, pistols, and revolvers. The right of the people to keep arms meant the right of an individual to possess arms in the home and elsewhere; the right to bear arms meant to carry arms on one's person. The right to have arms implied the right to use them for protection of one's life, family, and home against criminals and terrorist groups of all kinds, whether attacking Klansman or lawless "law" enforcement. Far from being restricted to official militia activity, the right to keep and bear arms could be exercised by persons against the State's official militia when the latter raided and plundered the innocent.
In the above sense, "the constitutional right to bear arms" was perhaps considered as the most fundamental protection for the rights of personal liberty and personal security, which may explain its unique mention in the Freedmen's B *Ph.D., Florida State University, 1972; J.D., Georgetown University, 1978; Attorney at Law, Fairfax, Virginia, 1978-present; Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Tuskegee Institute, Howard University, George Mason University, 1972-1981. Author of A Right to Bear Arms: State and Federal Bills of Rights and Constitutional Guarantees (Greenwood Press 1989) and That Every Man Be Armed: The Evolution of a Constitutional Right (University of New Mexico Press 1984; reprinted by the Independent Institute, 1991).
The author thanks the following persons for their inspiration, suggestions for the direction of this study, or helpful comments on the manuscript: Akhil Reed Amar, David I. Caplan, Robert J. Cottrol, Michael Kent Curtis, Robert Dowlut, Richard E. Gardiner, and George S. Knight.
. Act of July 16, 1866, 14 STATUTES AT LARGE 173, 176.
. Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 485 (1965) (invalidating state birth control regulation as an impermissible intrusion of privacy despite there being no express provision in the Constitution).
The Fourteenth Amendment provides in pertinent part:
§ 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. . . .
§ 5. The Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.
U.S. CONST. amend. XIV
. U.S. CONST. amend II. The Second Amendment provides in full: "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." Id.
. Miller v. Texas, 153 U.S. 535, 538 (1894)(refusing to consider whether the Fourteenth Amendment protects Second and Fourth Amendment rights because that claim was not made in trial court); Presser v. Illinois, 116 U.S. 252, 265, 267 (1886) (holding that the city's requirement of a license for an armed march on public streets did not violate the right to assemble or bear arms); United States v. Cruikshank, 92 U.S. 542, 551, 553 (1876) (holding that private harm to the rights to assemble and bear arms was not a federal offense).
. Miller, 153 U.S. at 538.
. E.g., Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335, 341 (1963) (including the right to counsel); Robinson v. California, 370 U.S. 660, 666 (1962) (incorporating the protection from cruel and unusual punishment); Wolf v. Colorado, 338 U.S. 25, 27-28 (1949) (incorporating the right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure); DeJong v. Oregon, 299 U.S. 353, 364 (1937) (integrating the right to assembly); Gitlow v. New York, 268 U.S. 652, 666 (1925) (incorporating the right to freedom of speech and press); Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy R.R. Co. v. Chicago, 166 U.S. 226, 238-39 (1897) (incorporating the right to just compensation).
. See Freedmen's Bureau Act, 14 Stat. 173, 177 (1866).
. Morton Grove Ill., Ordinance 81-11 [entitled "An Ordinance Regulating the Possession of Firearms and Other Dangerous Weapons"] (June 8, 1981).
. California's Roberti-Roos Assault Weapons Control Act of 1989 ["AWCA"], Cal. Penal Code §§ 12275-12290 (1989).
. Fresno Rifle & Pistol Club v. Van de Kamp, 965 F.2d 723, 730 (9th Cir. 1992) (refusing to consider "remarks by various legislators during passage of the Freedmen's Bureau Act of 1866, the Civil Rights Act of 1866, and the Civil Rights Act of 1871"); Quilici v. Village of Morton Grove, 695 F.2d 261, 270 n.8 (7th Cir. 1982), cert. denied, 464 U.S. 863 (1983) ("The debate surrounding the adoption of the Second and Fourteenth Amendments . . . has no relevance on the resolution of the controversy before us.").
. See Akhil R. Amar, The Bill of Rights and the Fourteenth Amendment, 101 YALE L.J. 1131 (1992); MICHAEL K. CURTIS, NO STATE SHALL ABRIDGE: THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT AND THE BILL OF RIGHTS (1986); HORACE E. FLACK, THE ADOPTION OF THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT (1908).
. STEPHEN P. HALBROOK, THAT EVERY MAN BE ARMED: THE EVOLUTION OF A CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT 107-53 (1984) [hereinafter "HALBROOK, THAT EVERY MAN BE ARMED"]; STEPHEN P. HALBROOK, "The Fourteenth Amendment and The Right To Keep and Bear Arms: The Intent of The Framers," in THE RIGHT TO KEEP AND BEAR ARMS: REPORT OF THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON THE CONSTITUTION, Senate Judiciary Committee, 97th Cong., 2d Sess., at 68-82 (1982).
. Compare Charles Fairman, Does the Fourteenth Amendment Incorporate the Bill of Rights? 2 STANFORD L. REV. 5 (1949) (arguing against incorporation) with William W. Crosskey, Charles Fairman, "Legislative History," and the Constitutional Limitations on State Authority, 22 U. CHI. L. REV. 1 (1954) (arguing for incorporation).
. See, e.g., Amar, supra note 11; Elaine Scarry, War and the Social Contract: Nuclear Policy, Distribution, and the Right to Bear Arms, 139 U. OF PA. L. REV. 1257 (1991); Sanford Levinson, The Embarrassing Second Amendment, 99 YALE L.J. 637 (1989). On the intent of the framers of the Second Amendment, see Stephen P. Halbrook, The Right of the People or the Power of the State: Bearing Arms, Arming Militias, and The Second Amendment, 26 VAL. U. L. REV. 131 (1991); Stephen P. Halbrook, Encroachments of the Crown on the Liberty of the Subject: Pre-Revolutionary Origins of the Second Amendment, 15 UNIV. DAYTON L. REV. 91 (Fall 1989).
. See Robert J. Cottrol & Raymond T. Diamond, The Second Amendment: Toward an Afro-Americanist Reconsideration, 80 GEO. L.J. 309 (1991).
. See supra note 1 and accompanying text. The significance of this declaration to support incorporating the Second Amendment, as well as other parts of the Bill of Rights, into the Fourteenth Amendment is recognized in three of the best studies on the Fourteenth Amendment. See Amar, supra note 11, at 1182 n.228 ("[The] last clause was understood as declaratory, simply clarifying what was already implicit . . . that the Second Amendment right to bear arms . . . were [sic] encompassed by both the Freedmen's Bureau Act and its companion Civil Rights Act."); CURTIS supra note 11, at 72; FLACK, supra note 11, at 17.
. Benjamin B. Kendrick noted:
[T]he testimony taken by the joint committee on reconstruction served as the raison d'etre of the fourteenth amendment and as a campaign document for the memorable election of 1866. 150,000 copies were printed in order that senators and representatives might distribute them among their constituents. . . . That this testimony was read by the people generally in the North, is proved by the fact that the newspapers of the time published copious extracts from it, as it was made public, together with editorial comments upon it.
BENJAMIN B. KENDRICK, JOURNAL OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE OF FIFTEEN ON RECONSTRUCTION 264-65 (1914).
As Kendrick further remarked, "the testimony in regard to the treatment of the freedmen will tend to show why Congress was determined to pass such measures as the Freedmen's Bureau Bill, the Civil Rights Bill, and the Civil Rights Resolution for amending the Constitution." Id. at 269. Along with exhibiting what thoughts were on the minds of members of Congress who asked many searching questions at the hearings, the testimony reveals what materials Congressmen, who voted for the Fourteenth Amendment, considered and demonstrates the perceived evils that the public wanted remedied. Id.
. In the Reconstruction context, one test of whether blacks had the same civil rights as whites was whether blacks would be trusted to own firearms.
. See HALBROOK, THAT EVERY MAN BE ARMED, supra note 12, at 89-106. Antebellum courts held that the Second Amendment recognized an individual right to keep and bear arms. Id. at 93-96. Slavery, however, became the exception to the rule. In an effort to disarm freedmen and slaves, some courts limited the Second Amendment guarantee as applying only to citizens, rather than all people, and found the Second Amendment inapplicable to the States. Id. at 96-98. In his widely known criminal law commentaries, Joel P. Bishop wrote in 1865:
The constitution of the United States provides, that, "a well-regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." This provision is found among the amendments; and, though most of the amendments are restrictions on the General Government alone, not on the States, this one seems to be of a nature to bind both the State and National legislatures.
2 JOEL P. BISHOP, COMMENTARIES ON THE CRIMINAL LAW § 124 (1865).
. BISHOP, supra note 19, at § 120 n.6.
. Id. at § 125 n.2.
. W.E.B. DUBOIS, BLACK RECONSTRUCTION IN AMERICA 166-67, 223 (1962) (detailing laws passed against freedmen prohibiting ownership of firearms, authorizing arrest of freedmen for vagrancy, and otherwise limiting their rights); see also E. MERTON COULTER, THE SOUTH DURING RECONSTRUCTION 38, 49 (1947) (black code provisions on firearms). Coulter expressed that:
To possess a gun and be followed by a dog which he could call his own greatly helped the freedman to enjoy his new freedom; and to carry a pistol distinguished the 'young colored gentleman' from the 'gun-toting' generality of Negroes who sometimes carried their [long] guns to the fields to produce a thrill or to shoot a rabbit.
Id. at 49.
. FREE AT LAST: A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY OF SLAVERY, FREEDOM, AND THE CIVIL WAR 520-21 (I. Berlin et al. eds., 1992).
. Id. at 522.
. 1865 Miss. Laws 165 (Nov. 29, 1865).
. The Act provided in part:
Section 1. Be it enacted, . . . [t]hat no freedman, free negro or mulatto, not in the military service of the United States [G]overnment, and not licensed so to do by the board of police of his or her county, shall keep or carry fire-arms of any kind, or any ammunition, dirk or bowie-knife, and on conviction thereof in the county court shall be punished by fine, not exceeding ten dollars, and pay the costs of such proceedings, and all such arms or ammunition shall be forfeited to the informer; and it shall be the duty of every civil and military officer to arrest any freedman, free negro, or mulatto found with any such arms or ammunition, and cause him or her to be committed to trial in default of bail. . . .
Section 3 . . . . If any white person shall sell, lend, or give to any freedman, free negro, or mulatto any fire-arms, dirk or bowie-knife, or ammunition, or any spirituous or intoxicating liquors, such person or persons so offending, upon conviction thereof in the county court of his or her county, shall be fined not exceeding fifty dollars, and may be imprisoned, at the discretion of the court, not exceeding thirty days. . . .
Section 5 . . . . If any freedman, free negro, or mulatto, convicted of any of the misdemeanors provided against in this act, shall fail or refuse for the space of five days, after conviction, to pay the fine and costs imposed, such person shall be hired out by the sheriff or other officer, at public outcry, to any white person who will pay said fine and all costs, and take said convict for the shortest time.
Id. at 166-67; Ex. Doc. No. 6, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., at 195-96 (1867). John W. Burgess commented on the Mississippi Act stating:
This is a fair sample of the legislation subsequently passed by all the "States" reconstructed under President Johnson's plan. . . . The Northern Republicans professed to see in this new legislation at the South the virtual re-enslavement of the negroes.
JOHN W. BURGESS, RECONSTRUCTION AND THE CONSTITUTION, 1866-1876, at 52 (1902).
. See FREE AT LAST, supra note 23, at 523-25.
. Id. at 523.
. Id.
. Id. at 524.
. CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 14 (Dec. 6, 1865). The House Select Committee on Freedmen consisted of Thomas D. Eliot of Massachusetts, William D. Kelley of Pennsylvania, Godlove S. Orth of Indiana, John A. Bingham of Ohio, Nelson Taylor of New York, Benjamin F. Loan of Missouri, Josiah B. Grinnell of Iowa, Halbert E. Paine of Wisconsin, and Samuel S. Marshall of Illinois. Id.
. Id. at 14 (Dec. 6, 1865).
. The Senate Judiciary Committee, chaired by Lyman Trumbull of Illinois, id. at 11 (Dec. 6, 1865), and the House Judiciary Committee was chaired by James F. Wilson of Iowa. Id. at 21 (Dec. 11, 1865).
. Id. John Bingham eventually would author section one of the Fourteenth Amendment.
. Id. at 30 (Dec. 12, 1865).
. CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 39 (Dec. 13, 1865). Senate Bill No. 9 declared void state laws:
[W]hereby or wherein any inequality of civil rights and immunities among the inhabitants of said states is recognized, authorized, established, or maintained, by reason or in consequence of any distinctions or differences of color, race or descent, or by reason or in consequence of a previous condition or status of slavery or involuntary servitude of such inhabitants . . . .
Id.
. Id. at 40 (Dec. 13, 1865). Specifically, Senator Wilson exclaimed:
In Mississippi rebel State forces, men who were in the rebel armies, are traversing the State, visiting the freedmen, disarming them, perpetrating murders and outrages on them; and the same things are done in other sections of the country. . . . I am told by eminent gentlemen connected with the Freedmen's Bureau that where they have the power they arrest the execution of these laws, but as the laws exist they are enforced in the greater portions of those States. If we now declare those laws to be null and void, I have no idea that any attempt whatever will be made to enforce them, and the freedmen will be relieved from this intolerable oppression.
Id.
. Id. at 39. The Thirteenth Amendment provides in part:
Section 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.
Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.
U.S. CONST. amend. XIII.
. CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. at 40-41.
. Id. at 41.
. Id. at 42.
. See supra note 31 and accompanying text (discussing the implementation of the Joint Committee).
. Id. at 46 (Dec. 13, 1865).
. Id. at 47 (Dec. 13, 1865).
. Id. at 48 (Dec. 13, 1865).
. They included Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania, Elihu B. Washburne of Illinois, Justin S. Morrill of Vermont, Henry Grider of Kentucky, John A. Bingham of Ohio, Roscoe Conkling of New York, George S. Boutwell of Massachusetts, Henry T. Blow of Missouri, and Andrew J. Rogers of New Jersey. Id. at 57 (Dec. 14, 1865). Congressman Grider and Rogers were Democrats, while the others were Republicans.
. Id. at 69 (Dec. 18, 1865).
. Id. at 77 (Dec. 19, 1865).
. Id.
. Id. at 78 (Dec. 19, 1865).
. Id. at 79 (Dec. 19, 1865).
. BURGESS, supra note 26, at 64.
. The report noted that, "The militia [is] organized for the distinct purpose of enforcing the authority of the whites over the blacks . . . ." Ex. Doc. No. 2, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. pt. 1, at 40 (Dec. 13, 1865).
. Id. at 85.
. Ordinance No. 34, § 7 (July 3, 1865), in id. at 93. See also id. at 94-95 (St. Landry and Franklin ordinances).
. Id. at 93-95.
. Id. at 95.
. Some Senate Committee members included William P. Fessenden of Maine, J.W. Grimes of Iowa, Ira Harris of New York, Jacob M. Howard of Michigan, Reverdy Johnson of Maryland, and George H. Williams of Oregon. Of these members, Senator Johnson was the sole Democrat. Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 106 (Dec. 21, 1865).
. See supra note 36 and accompanying text.
. CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 109 (Dec. 21, 1865). See also id. at 90-97 (Dec. 21, 1865) (describing the debate regarding Senator Wilson's proposed civil rights bill).
. Id. at 129 (Jan. 5, 1866).
. Id.
. CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 135 (Jan. 8, 1866).
. Id. at 184 (Jan. 11, 1866).
. Id. at 209 (Jan. 12, 1866) (emphasis added).
. Id. at 211 (Jan. 12, 1866).
.It is instructive to compare the Freedmen's Bureau bill with the draft of a constitutional amendment proposed by John Bingham to the Joint Committee that same day, which read: "[t]he Congress shall have power to make all laws necessary and proper to secure to all persons in every state within this Union equal protection in their rights of life, liberty, and property." KENDRICK, supra note 17, at 46. Thaddeus Stevens proposed the following draft to the Joint Committee: "All laws, state or national, shall operate impartially and equally on all persons without regard to race or color." Id. These proposals resemble what became the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment.
. Id. at 45-47.
. CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 216-17 (Jan. 12, 1866).
. Representative Chandler of New York quoted from a speech by Honorable Michael Hahn of Louisiana to the National Equal Suffrage Association on November 17, 1865, where Judge Hahn stated:
It is necessary, in beginning our work, to see that slavery throughout the land is effectually abolished, and that the freedmen are protected in their freedom, and in all the advantages and privileges inseparable from the condition of freedom. . . . But I, who come from the South, and have seen the working of the institution for over a quarter of a century, tell you and I do it regrettingly that slavery in practice and substance still exists. . . .
'The right of the people to keep and bear arms' must be so understood as not to exclude the colored man from the term 'people.'
Id. at 217 (Jan. 12, 1866).
. Specifically, the article stated:
The militia of this country have seized every gun and pistol found in the hands of the (so called) freedmen of this section of the country. They claim that the statute laws of Mississippi do not recognize the negro as having any right to carry arms. They commenced seizing arms in town, and now the plantations are ransacked in the dead hours of night. . . . The colored people intend holding a meeting to petition the Freedman's Bureau to re-establish their courts in the State of Mississippi, as the civil laws of this State do not, and will not protect, but insist upon infringing on their liberties.
HARPER'S WEEKLY, Jan. 13, 1866, at 3, col. 2.
. . CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 297 (Jan. 18, 1866). Also supporting S. 61, Stewart explained:
I am in favor of legislation under the constitutional amendment that shall secure to him a chance to live, a chance to hold property, a chance to be heard in the courts, a chance to enjoy his civil rights, a chance to rise in the scale of humanity, a chance to be a man. . . . The Senator from Illinois has introduced two bills, well and carefully prepared, which if passed by Congress will give full and ample protection under the constitutional amendment to the negro in his civil liberty, and guaranty to him civil rights, to which we are pledged.
Id. at 298 (Jan. 18, 1866).
. Id. at 302 (Jan. 18, 1866).
. Id. at 318 (Jan. 19, 1866). For the full text of § 7 of S. 60, see supra note 65 and accompanying text.
. Id. at 318 (Jan. 19, 1866).
. Id. See also Ind. Const., Art. XIII, § 1 (1851) ("No negro or mulatto shall come into, or settle in, the state after the adoption of this constitution.").
Ind. Const., Art. I, § 32 (1851). A delegate at the constitutional convention which approved this provision, Senator Hendricks, proposed that no law should "deprive," rather than "restrict," this right. JOURNAL OF THE CONVENTION OF THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF INDIANA TO AMEND THE CONSTITUTION, assembled at Indianapolis, October 1850, at 574 (A.H. Brown 1851).
. CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 318 (Jan. 19, 1866).
. Id. at 320 (Jan. 19, 1866).
. Id. at 321 (Jan. 19, 1866).
. Id.
. Id. at 322 (Jan. 19, 1866).
. Id.
. Id. Senator Trumbull continued:
Even some of the non-slaveholding States passed laws abridging the rights of the colored man which were restraints on liberty. When slavery goes, all this system of legislation, devised in the interest of slavery . . . goes with it.
Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 331 (Jan. 19, 1866).
. Id.
. Id. at 335-36 (Jan. 19, 1866).
. Id. at 337 (Jan. 19, 1866).
. KENDRICK, supra note 17, at 51. A wholly separate amendment, proposed by the subcommittee, would have stated, in addition to Senator Bingham's proposal: "All provisions in the Constitution or laws of any State, whereby any distinction is made in political or civil rights or privileges, on account of race, creed or color, shall be inoperative and void." Id. at 50. The word "creed," however, eventually was deleted by the full Joint Committee, perhaps to exclude atheists or Confederate sympathizers. Id. at 53.
. Id. at 52-53.
. CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 337 (Jan. 22, 1866). Senator Sumner stated in more detail:
I also offer a memorial from the colored citizens of the State of South Carolina in convention assembled, representing, as the Senate will remember, four hundred and two thousand citizens of that State, being a very large majority of the population. They set forth the present condition of things in South Carolina, and pray that Congress will see that the strong arm of law and order is placed over the entire people of that State that life and property may be secure. They also ask that government in that State shall be founded on the consent of the governed, and insist that that can be done only where equal suffrage is allowed. . . . They ask also that they should have the constitutional protection in keeping arms, in holding public assemblies, and in complete liberty of speech and of the press. This memorial is accompanied by a printed document containing a report of the proceedings of this black convention in South Carolina.
Id.
. 2 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BLACK STATE CONVENTIONS 1840-1865, at 284 (P. Foner and G. Walker eds., 1980).
. Id. at 302-03.
. The actual language of the memorial to Congress concerning the Second Amendment was as follows:
We ask that, inasmuch as the Constitution of the United States explicitly declares that the right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed and the Constitution is the Supreme law of the land that the late efforts of the Legislature of this State to pass an act to deprive us [of] arms be forbidden, as a plain violation of the Constitution, and unjust to many of us in the highest degree, who have been soldiers, and purchased our muskets from the United States Government when mustered out of service.
Id. at 302. The only other guarantee in the Bill of Rights explicitly mentioned in the memorial related to jury trials and, indirectly, to assembly. Id. Senator Sumner's reference to free speech and press was an embellishment not appearing in the memorial. Rather, the emphasis of the memorial was on the Second Amendment, which indicated the perceived fundamental character of that right by the black convention.
. CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 337 (Jan. 22, 1866).
. See infra notes 99-139 and accompanying text (providing testimony given before the Joint Committee).
. REPORT OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON RECONSTRUCTION, H.R. NO. 30, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., pt. 3, at 3-4 (1866).
. See infra notes 118, 121 and accompanying text.
. CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 340 (Jan. 22, 1866).
. Id. at 363 (Jan. 23, 1866) ("For the first time in the history of the legislature of this country it is attempted by Congress to invade the States of this Union, and undertake to regulate the law applicable to their own citizens.").
. Id. at 371 (Jan. 23, 1866).
. Id. Senator Davis stated:
But there were some principles upon which those great, grand, noble old parties agreed; and what were they? They were for the Union under and by the Constitution. They were for the subordination of the military to the civil power in peace, in a war, and always. They were for the writ of habeas corpus. They were for the trial by jury according to the forms of the common law. They were for every man bearing his arms about him and keeping them in his house, his castle, for his own defense. They were for every right and liberty secured to the citizens by the Constitution.
Id. (emphasis added).
. Id. at 374-75 (Jan. 23, 1866). See also id. at 394-400 (Jan. 24, 1866) (offering amendments to prohibit or diminish the Freedmen's Bureau exercise of judicial powers).
. Id. at 416-17 (Jan. 24-25, 1866).
. Id.
. Id. at 420 (Jan. 25, 1866).
. Id. at 421 (Jan. 25, 1866).
. KENDRICK, supra note 17, at 55.
. Id.
. Id. at 55-56.
REPORT OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON RECONSTRUCTION, supra note 99, pt. 3, at 8. On January 26, 1866, an army general noted that in Alabama "the roads and public highways are patrolled by the State militia, and no colored man is allowed to travel without a pass from his employer . . . ." Id. The General further stated that "[t]he arming of the militia is only for the purpose of intimidating the Union men, and enforcing upon the negroes a species of slavery . . . ." Id. at 10.
. See infra notes 361-70 and accompanying text (introducing the Fourteenth Amendment on Senate floor by Jacob Howard).
. For example, on January 27 a federal employee testified to having been threatened with murder. REPORT OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON RECONSTRUCTION, supra note 99, at 20. Senator Jacob Howard asked the employee: "[h]ad you any arms?" Id. The e