Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
There would be years of controversy over the legal status of freedmen, but
· 260 ·
Reconstruction and Renewal, 1865–1877 · 261
the labor system that replaced the institution of slavery came by military
order.
Sharecropping, crop liens, and tenant farming extended across the old
plantation belt and affected both black and white farmers for decades after
the Civil War. Cotton was produced by this inefficient system at a time when
demand for it was constantly declining. The result was that the economy of
old Middle Florida languished at the same time that East Florida and the
peninsula began to grow.
Florida’s readmission to the Union and the status of freedmen as citizens
were matters that consumed much time and left a bitter legacy. Lincoln had
anticipated the anger and bitterness that eventual y engulfed the nation over
these matters. Wishing to avoid as much conflict as possible, he had tried
to rebuild loyal governments in Union-occupied territories such as north-
eastern Florida while the war was still being fought. Eager Florida Unionists
such as Lyman Stickney, Calvin Robinson, and John Sammis seized upon the
president’s “ten-percent plan,” but their efforts were thwarted by the Union
military defeat at Olustee in early 1864. Little more was heard of Lincoln’s
plan, but the Direct Tax Commission, of which Stickney and Sammis were
original members, carried out its duties to foreclose upon and sell Confed-
erate property within Union lines. The ensuing “direct tax sales” transferred
proof
hundreds of pieces of property from Confederate owners to Unionists,
many of whom were freedmen, and caused tremendous difficulties when
President Andrew Johnson subsequently restored ownership to the former
Confederates. The problem that arose is il ustrated by the case of Confeder-
ate General Joseph Finegan’s home in Fernandina. It was auctioned to Chloe
Merrick of Syracuse, New York, for twenty-five dol ars. Miss Merrick, who
later married Republican Governor Harrison Reed, made the house into
an orphanage for black children. When General Finegan marched home
with President Johnson’s amnesty proclamation in hand and found little
black children playing on his veranda and the U.S. Army guarding them, the
tenuous peace of Fernandina was sorely tested. Much of the tax-sale land
was eventual y returned to its former Confederate owners, but the matter
exacerbated the struggle over Reconstruction in Florida and remained an
issue until the 1890s.
With Freedmen’s Bureau agents encountering increasing resistance from
planters unaccustomed to limits on their autonomy, and confrontations be-
tween contesting owners of tax-sale property, President Johnson’s Recon-
struction plan was implemented. Fol owing Lincoln’s nonpunitive ideas,
262 · Jerrell H. Shofner
Johnson permitted most former Confederates to participate in forming a
new government. He appointed Wil iam Marvin, a former federal judge
from Key West, as provisional governor. Working closely with Major Gen-
eral John Foster, the military commander, Marvin registered those adult
white males who took the requisite oath and called an election for delegates
to a constitutional convention. The convention wrote a new constitution
to conform with recent developments. Slavery was repudiated, as was the
right of a state to secede from the Union. All debts incurred in support of
the Confederacy were also repudiated. Laws enacted by Congress since 1861
were recognized, and a committee was appointed to review the state statutes
and make recommendations for necessary changes when the first legislature
met. In the ensuing election, David Walker became the new governor, and
Ferdinand McLeod was elected to the national House of Representatives.
The legislature was composed of many prominent former Confederates.
There were, of course, no black members, and James Dopson Green of Man-
atee County was the only former Unionist named to the body. Former gov-
ernor William Marvin and former Confederate Wilkinson Cal were elected
by the legislature to the U.S. Senate. There was some grumbling among
congressmen in Washington about the predominance of Confederates in
Florida’s restored government, but the major portent of future difficulties
proof
came with the report of the three-member committee on statutory changes.
Speaking for the committee, Anderson J. Peeler recommended that the leg-
islature preserve, insofar as possible, the beneficial features of the “benign,
but much abused and greatly misunderstood institution of slavery.”1 The leg-
islature complied. Freedmen were given customary civil rights except that
they were not permitted to give testimony in cases involving white people.
Since most of their difficulties were with their employers, this was a major
shortcoming. Beyond that, a lengthy series of laws clearly discriminated
between white and black citizens, even to the extent of substituting corporal
punishment for fines and imprisonment for blacks convicted of crimes.
Already angered by President Johnson’s decision to proceed with “presi-
dential Reconstruction” without calling them into session, some congress-
men watched with growing alarm as Florida and most other southern states
enacted legislation denying equal citizenship to the freedmen. When it con-
vened in December 1865, Congress refused to recognize Johnson’s efforts.
Marvin, Cal , and McLeod were denied seats in their respective Houses
along with everyone elected from the other former Confederate states. A
joint committee was named to investigate the conditions in the South and
recommend an alternative course of action.
Reconstruction and Renewal, 1865–1877 · 263
An acrimonious deadlock developed between President Johnson and
Congress. It became increasingly clear that Johnson’s program would not
be approved without significant modifications. It was equal y clear that the
president was unwil ing to compromise. The standoff became ugly. Con-
gress enacted a civil rights law in April which expanded the rights of na-
tional citizens and gave enforcement authority to the U.S. Army. President
Johnson vetoed the legislation and proclaimed an end to the “insurrection”
in the South, with the apparent intention of removing martial law. Florid-
ians applauded the president, but their elation was premature. Angered by
the president’s arbitrary actions and unwilling to readmit the seceded states
without some guarantees of fair treatment of the freedmen, Congress voted
to override the president’s veto of the Civil Rights Act and another measure
extending the life of the Freedmen’s Bureau.
The continuing controversy between president and Congress gradu-
al y eroded the effectiveness of both the army and the bureau in protecting
freedmen and Unionists in Florida. As chief of staff of the U.S. Army, Gen-
eral Ulysses S. Grant had at first instructed his field commanders to protect
all freedmen and Unionists from abuses of their civil and property rights.
But he was acting under the laws of Congress while his commander-in-chief
was at odds with those laws.
proof
In Florida, General John Foster tried to follow General Grant’s instruc-
tions. Governor David Walker understandably agreed with the proclama-
tions of the president. Both were reasonable men, and they tried to keep
order in a situation that was becoming increasingly unclear. When the U.S.
Army and a Nassau County sheriff’s posse faced each other in the street
in front of General Finegan’s house, the two men went on the same train
to Fernandina and prevented a violent confrontation. But they could not
give personal attention to the hundreds of incidents arising throughout the
northern Florida counties. Freedmen were treated atrociously by the county
criminal courts. When Freedmen’s Bureau agents attempted to intercede,
they often confronted county sheriffs with large armed posses. General Fos-
ter felt compelled to declare martial law in nine counties in the summer of
1866. His action angered Governor Walker and did little to improve the
plight of the freedmen.
The deteriorating situation in Florida was accompanied by increasing ac-
rimony between President Johnson and Congress in Washington. In August
1866, Johnson issued an even stronger proclamation restoring civil law in
Florida. Still sympathetic with congressional efforts to protect freedmen in
their civil rights, General Grant was, after al , accountable to the president,
264 · Jerrell H. Shofner
who was commander-in-chief of all armed forces. The general accordingly
issued new instructions to the field commanders which left their authority
unclear. Increasingly frustrated at his inability to protect freedman from
mistreatment, General Foster resigned in November 1866. He told his supe-
riors that he would happily return to Florida but only if the laws were made
adequate for him to execute his duties to protect al citizens in their civil
rights.
The failure of President Johnson’s Reconstruction plan in Florida coin-
cided with the eclipse of his authority in Washington. Congress wrested
control from him and implemented its own plan. Under congressional Re-
construction, martial law was reinstated with Major General John Pope in
command. He appointed Ossian B. Hart of Jacksonvil e as supervisor of
registration for a new electorate, which this time included al adult black
males. New elections were held for delegates to yet another constitutional
convention. The new document was to include a guarantee of black suffrage.
When a suitable constitution was ratified by Florida voters and the legisla-
ture ratified the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, military
occupation would be ended and the state would be able to resume its nor-
mal place in the Union.
At the end of the war many native white Floridians had time only “to
proof
worship the Confederate dead and hate the Yankee living,” but they had
“gradual y learned to manage” under the Johnson plan of Reconstruction.2
Now, nearly two years after the war, Congress was forcing black suffrage
upon them. There was talk of white immigration to Latin America or the
unsettled American West, and a few Floridians did resettle in Brazil. A
larger number simply abandoned Middle Florida and moved southward to
Brevard, Orange, Hil sborough, and other sparsely populated central Flor-
ida counties. Most of them remained where they were, but they were badly
divided over what course to follow. Some chose not to participate in elec-
tions involving blacks, but Hart’s registration teams administered the oath
of loyalty to several thousand who decided to make the best of the situation.
The demoralization and division of the white population left an open
field for the evolving Republican Party, but it was also badly divided. At a
convention called by Hart in the summer of 1867, vigorous disagreements
emerged. A group led by Daniel Richards, a former tax commissioner;
Liberty Billings, a former commander of a black regiment; and William U.
Saunders, a representative of the Union League, joined by Charles H. Pearce,
a Canadian minister of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, wanted to
emphasize rights for blacks at the expense of native whites. Another faction
Reconstruction and Renewal, 1865–1877 · 265
proof
A Florida family photographed in the 1870s. Despite the fact that a few African Ameri-
cans won election to government offices, Reconstruction did not result in securing for
blacks an equal part in Florida society. In his book on Florida during that period,
Nor
Is
It
Over
Yet,
Jerrell Shofner wrote: “The moderate Republicans who implemented the
1867 Reconstruction acts in Florida had never given Negro rights more than second-
ary consideration. Black voters contributed more to the Republican Party than they
received from it. Even their basic right to vote was diluted by provisions for dispro-
portionate legislative representation. Yet their situation between 1868 and 1877 was