“Ordered, That Governor Andrew, of Massachusetts, is authorized, until further orders, to raise such number of volunteer companies of artillery for duty in the forts of Massachusetts and elsewhere, and such corps of infantry for the volunteer military service, as he may find convenient; such volunteers to be enlisted for three years, or until sooner discharged.”
Here are no nine months’ men. There is nobody under the second statute, but all are clearly under the first by the plain language of the order. And this is none the less so, even if the second statute, so far as Africans are concerned, may be interpreted to sanction a longer term of enlistment.
Mark well, that “all persons who have been or shall be hereafter enrolled in the service of the United States under this Act shall receive the pay and rations now allowed by law to soldiers.” (§ 15.) But were not the soldiers of the fifty-fourth and fifty-fifth Massachusetts regiments “enrolled in the service of the United States”? Unquestionably, if troops ever were enrolled.
But it is the proviso that follows which causes the mischief. “Persons of African descent, who under this law shall be employed, shall receive ten dollars,” &c.
It is said that these colored soldiers were “employed,”—that is all,—not “enrolled,” but “employed”; and on this distinction the promise of Governor Andrew in the name of the National Government, and the honest expectations of the soldiers, are set aside.
The order of the Secretary of War is for “volunteer companies of artillery,” also for “corps of infantry,” “to be enlisted for three years,” “and may include persons of African descent.” The persons of African descent are to be included in the artillery or infantry “enlisted.” Such persons are in advance declared men to be enlisted. And yet the argument which denies them their well-earned wages asserts that they are only “employed,” and not enlisted. But if they are “employed,” then are the “corps of infantry” in which they are included “employed” also.
To me the conclusion seems irresistible, on the face of these facts, that these troops were enrolled or enlisted under the earlier statute. It is clear that Governor Andrew thought so at the time, and it is equally clear that the troops themselves thought so at the time.
But there remains behind another question. Is there anything in existing legislation to prevent the enlistment of a colored person under the statute of 1861? To this I answer positively in the negative, and I challenge contradiction. There is no color in that statute. There is no color in any statute raising troops for the army of the United States, nor any color in any statute raising sailors for the navy of the United States. Only in our militia statutes do you find the word “white.” In all our army and navy statutes there is no such limitation. The statute of 1861, therefore, in point of law embraced all persons, whether black or white, and it was entirely at the option of the President, before the passage of the statute of 1862, to organize or receive colored troops under that statute. He hesitated. I regretted at the time his hesitation. I thought it an error by which the country suffered. We endeavored to repair that error by the amendment introduced by the brave Senator from New York, who is no longer here [Mr. King], which you will find in the statutes of 1862. But I doubt if any person at the time, who had given attention to the subject, supposed this amendment necessary, except as an encouragement to a policy which the Government was too slow to adopt. For myself, I remember well my own feelings in voting for it. I accepted it as notice to the Administration that in the opinion of Congress the time had come when colored troops must be used. In point of law it was plain that it could not stand in the way of an enrolment under the earlier statute.
And the Secretary of War seems to have acted on this interpretation; for, in undertaking to raise colored troops, no allusion was made to the statute of 1862, but the language of his order in every particular pointed to the statute of 1861. Am I wrong, then, if I say that in point of law these colored troops have just the same right to the full pay of a soldier that any Senator on this floor has to his compensation? It is by just as good title, and as firm in the statute-book, as your own pay, Sir.