Letters from an American - March 15, 2025
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March 15, 2025. March 15th is a crucially important day in U.S. history. As the man
who taught me to use a chainsaw said, it is immortalized by Shakespeare's famous warning,
Cedar, beware the adds of March. He put it that way because the importance of March 15th is, of course, that it is the day in 1820 that Maine, the pine tree state, joined the Union.
Maine statehood had national repercussions.
The inhabitants of this northern part of Massachusetts had asked for statehood in 1819, but their petition
was stopped dead by Southerners, who refused to permit a free state, one that did not permit
human enslavement, to enter the Union without a corresponding slave state.
The explosive growth of the northern states had already given free states control of the
House of Representatives, but the South held its own in the Senate, where each state got two votes.
The admission of Maine would give the North the advantage, and Southerners insisted that
Maine's admission be balanced with the admission of a Southern slave state, lest those opposed
to slavery use their power in the federal government to restrict enslavement in the
South.
They demanded the admission of Missouri to counteract Maine's two free Senate votes.
But this Missouri compromise infuriated Northerners, especially those who lived in Maine.
They swamped Congress with petitions against admitting Missouri as a slave state, resenting that
slave owners in the Senate could hold the state of Maine hostage until they got their
way.
Tempers rose high enough that Thomas Jefferson wrote to Massachusetts, and later Maine, Senator
John Holmes, that he had for a long time been content with the direction of the country,
but that the Missouri question, like
a fire bell in the night, awakened and filled me with terror.
I consider it at once as the knell of the Union.
It is hushed indeed for the moment, but this is a reprieve only, not a final sentence."
Congress passed the Missouri Compromise, but Jefferson was right to see it as nothing more than a reprieve.
The petition drive that had begun as an effort to keep the admission of Maine from being tied to the admission of Missouri
continued as a movement to get Congress to whittle away at slavery where it could, by, for example, outlawing slave sales in the nation's capital,
and would become a key point of friction
between the North and the South. There was also another powerful way in which the conditions of
the state's entry into the Union would affect American history. Mainers were angry that their
statehood had been tied to the demands of far-distant slave owners, and that anger worked its way into the state's popular culture.
The opening of the Erie Canal in 1825 meant that Maine men
who grew up steeped in that anger could spread west,
and so they did.
In 1837, Elijah P. Lovejoy, who had moved to Alton, Illinois
from Albion, Maine, to begin a newspaper
dedicated to the abolition of human enslavement, was murdered by a
pro-slavery mob who threw his printing press into the Mississippi River.
Elijah Lovejoy's younger brother, Owen, had also moved west from Maine.
Owen saw Elijah shot and swore his allegiance to the cause of abolition.
I shall never forsake the cause that has been sprinkled with my brother's blood, he declared.
He turned to politics, and in 1854 he was elected to the Illinois State Legislature.
His increasing prominence brought him political friends, including an up-and-coming lawyer who had arrived in Illinois from Kentucky, Abraham Lincoln. Lovejoy and Lincoln were also friends with another Maine man gone to Illinois.
Elihu Washburn had been born in Livermore, Maine in 1816, when Maine was still part of
Massachusetts.
He was one of seven brothers,
and one by one, his brothers had all left home,
most of them to move west.
Israel Washburn Jr., the oldest, stayed in Maine,
but Kadwalener moved to Wisconsin,
and William Drew would follow, going to Minnesota.
Elihu was the only brother
who spelled his last name with an E.
Israel and Elihu were both serving in Congress in 1854 when Congress passed the Kansas
Nebraska Act, overturning the Missouri Compromise and permitting the spread of
slavery to the West. Furious, Israel called a meeting of 30 congressmen in
May to figure out how they could come together to stand against
the slave power that had commandeered the government to spread the South's system
of human enslavement.
They met in the rooms of Representative Edward Dickinson of Massachusetts, whose talented
daughter Emily was already writing poems.
And while they came to the meeting from all different political parties, they left with one sole principle,
to stop the slave power that was turning the government into an oligarchy.
The men scattered for the summer back to their homes across the North,
sharing their conviction that a new party must rise to stand against the slave power.
In the fall, those calling themselves anti-Nebraska candidates were
sweeping into office. Cadwallader Washburn would be elected from Wisconsin
in 1854 and Owen Lovejoy from Illinois in 1856. And they would indeed create a
new political party, the Republicans. The new party took deep root in Maine, flipping the state from Democratic to Republican in
1856, the first time it fielded a presidential candidate.
In 1859, Abraham Lincoln would articulate an ideology for the party, defining it as
the party of ordinary Americans standing together against the oligarchs of slavery.
And when he ran for president in 1860, he knew it was imperative that he get the
momentum of Maine men on his side. In those days, Maine voted for state and
local offices in September rather than November, so a party's win in Maine could start a wave.
As Maine goes, so goes the nation, the saying went.
So Lincoln turned for his vice president to Hannibal Hamlin,
who represented Maine in the Senate,
and whose father had built the House in which the Washburns grew up.
Lincoln won 62% of the vote in Maine in 1860,
taking all eight of the state's electoral votes,
and went on to win the election.
When he arrived in Washington quietly in late February to take office the
following March, Ella Hugh Washburn was at the railroad
station to greet him.
I was not a great student in college. I liked learning, but not on someone else's timetable.
It was this story that woke me up and made me a scholar.
I found it fascinating that a group of ordinary people from country towns who shared a fear that they were losing their democracy could figure out
how to work together to reclaim it. Happy birthday Maine.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson. It was
produced at Soundscape Productions, Dead in Massachusetts. Recorded with music composed
by Michael Moss.