122 Repeal of the Embargo (1809)

An 1807 political cartoon showing merchants caught by a snapping turtle named “Ograbme” (“Embargo” spelled backwards).

It was during the session of 1808-1809 that the embargo, unlimited in duration and extent, was passed at the instance of Mr. Jefferson as a retaliatory measure upon England. It prostrated the whole commerce of America and produced a degree of distress in the New England States greater than that which followed upon the War. I always thought that it was a measure of doubtful policy but I sustained it however with all my little influence for the purpose of giving it a fair experiment. A year passed away and the evils which it inflicted upon ourselves were daily increasing in magnitude and extent. And in the meantime our navigation being withdrawn from the ocean, Great Britain was enjoying a triumphant monopoly of the commerce of the world. Alive to the sufferings of my fellow citizens and perceiving that their necessities were driving them to the most violent resistance of the measure and indeed to a degree which threatened the very existence of the Union, I became convinced of the necessity of abandoning it. And as soon as I arrived at Washington I held free conversations with many distinguished members of the Republican party on the subject, which were soon followed up by consultations of a more public nature.

I found that as a measure of retaliation the system had not only failed but that Mr. Jefferson from pride of opinion as well as from that visionary course of speculation which often misled his judgment, was resolutely bent upon maintaining it at all hazards. He professed a firm belief that Great Britain would abandon her orders in council if we persisted in the embargo. And having no other scheme to offer in case of the failure of this, he maintained in private conversation the indispensable necessity of closing the session of Congress without any attempt to limit the duration of the system. The consequence of this would be an aggravation for another year of all the evils which then were breaking down New England. I felt that my duty to my country called on me for a strenuous effort to prevent such calamities. And I was persuaded that if the embargo was kept on during the year there would be an open disregard and resistance of the laws. I was unwearied therefore in my endeavors to impress other members of Congress with a sense of our common dangers.

Mr. Jefferson has imputed mainly to me the repeal of the embargo in a letter to which I have already alluded and has stigmatized me on this account with the epithet of “pseudo-republican”. “Pseudo-republican” of course I must be, as everyone was in Mr. Jefferson’s opinion who dared to venture upon a doubt of his infallibility. But Mr. Jefferson has forgotten to mention the reiterated attempts made by him through a committee of his particular adherents (Mr. Giles, Mr. Wilson, Mr. C. Nicholas, and Mr. G. W. Campbell) to detach me from my object. In the course of those consultations I learned the whole policy of Mr. Jefferson and was surprised as well as grieved to find that in the face of the clearest proofs of the failure of his plan, he continued to hope against facts.

Mr. Jefferson has honored me by attributing to my influence the repeal of the embargo. I freely admit that I did all I could to accomplish it, though I returned home before the act passed. The very eagerness with which the repeal was supported by a majority of the Republican party ought to have taught Mr. Jefferson that it was already considered by them as a miserable and mischievous failure. It is not a little remarkable that many years afterwards, Mr. Jefferson took great credit to himself for yielding up sud sponte [voluntarily] this favorite measure to preserve, as he intimates, New England from open rebellion. What in me was almost a crime became it seems in him an extraordinary virtue. The truth is that if the measure had not been abandoned when it was, it would have overturned the Administration itself and the Republican party would have been driven from power by the indignation of the people, goaded on to madness by their sufferings.

The whole influence of the Administration was directly brought to bear upon Mr. Ezekiel Bacon and myself to seduce us from what we considered a great duty to our country and especially to New England. We were scolded, privately consulted, and argued with by the Administration and its friends on that occasion. I knew at the time that Mr. Jefferson had no ulterior measure in view and was determined on protracting the embargo for an indefinite period, even for years. I was well satisfied that such a course would not and could not be borne by New England and would bring on a direct rebellion. It would be ruin to the whole country. Yet Mr. Jefferson, with his usual visionary obstinacy, was determined to maintain it and the New England Republicans were to be made the instruments. Mr. Bacon and myself resisted and measures were concerted by us with the aid of Pennsylvania to compel him to abandon his mad scheme. For this he never forgave me. The measure was not carried until I left Congress for home. The credit of it is due to the firmness and integrity of Mr. Bacon.

One thing however I did learn (and I may say it to you) while I was a member of Congress. And that was that New England was expected, so far as the Republicans were concerned, to do everything and to have nothing. They were to obey but not to be trusted. This in my humble judgment was the steady policy of Mr. Jefferson at all times. We were to be kept divided and thus used to neutralize each other. So it will always be unless we learn wisdom for ourselves and our own interests.

 

 

 

Source: Joseph Story, Life and Letters (edited by William W. Story, 1851), I, 183-7. https://archive.org/details/toldcontemporari03hartrich/page/406/mode/2up

 

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