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Timeline of West Virginia: Civil War and Statehood
February 21, 1861


Wellsburg Herald
March 1, 1861

Virginia State Convention

Speech of Waitman T. Willey

Thursday, February 21, 1861.

The Convention met at 12 o'clock M., and was called to order by the President.

A considerable time was consumed in discussing resolutions relative to printing the debates in which Messrs. Wise, Clemens, Montague and others participated.

Mr. Haymond presented a list of delegates elected to the Convention, and also asked the adoption of an ordinance for its government in case of contested elections. The Secretary read the ordinance, and it was explained at length by Mr. Haymond. Ordered to be printed.

Mr. Conrad offered a resolution, which was adopted, that the Committee on Federal Relations be allowed to sit during the session of the Convention.

Mr. Woods, of Barbour, offered the following resolutions:

1. Resolved, That the allegiance which the citizens of Virginia owe to the Federal Government of the United States of America is subordinate to that due to Virginia, and may, therefore, be lawfully withdrawn by her whenever she may deem it her duty to do so.

2. That in case the State of Virginia should exercise this authority, her citizens would be in duty bound to render allegiance and obedience to her alone.

3. That Virginia recognizes no authority in any government, State or Federal, to coerce her or any of her citizens to render allegiance to the government of the United States, after she may, in the exercise of her sovereign power, have withdrawn from it; and that she will regard any attempt to coercion as equivalent to a declaration of war against her, to be resisted at "every hazard and to the last extremity."

4. That the States of South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas, having severally and formally withdrawn the allegiance of their respective people from the United States of America, a faithful, earnest desire to avert civil war, and the sound conservative sentiment of the country, alike indicate to the Government of the United States, the necessity and policy of acknowledging their independence.

Mr. Woods, at some length, justified his course in offering the foregoing resolutions.

Mr. Wise thanked the gentleman for the sentiments he had just expressed:which elicited loud applause and clapping of hands from the galleries.

Mr. Wise continued in a rambling sort of way, till interrupted by Mr. Carlisle, who wished to know if there was anything before the body.

The President said the resolutions of the gentleman from Barbour had not been referred.

Mr. Hall, of Wetzel, of begged leave to thank the gentleman from Princess Anne, (Mr. Wise,) and the gentleman from Lunenburg, (Mr. Neblett,) on the part of the Northwest; but Mr. Wise would allow him to make a single remark, and that was that he was afraid the Northwest was not as sound as he (Wise) thinks. He was the only man in all that section who was elected upon the Crittenden proposition. There was no sounder State rights people upon the face of the earth than the people of Wetzel. He believed a State has a right to secede; that the Constitution is nothing more than a treaty between the sovereignties; that the whole commercial world is a confederation bound by treaties.:He said in conclusion: "I am willing to co-operate with any gentleman on the floor as a Northwestern man, and to go before my people, whatever may be the consequences, and unite in presenting an ultimatum to run to the first of July; and if Virginia has to go, let her go and take the Constitution with her.

Mr. Wise made some further remarks. After he had concluded, Mr. Willey, of Monongalia, said:

Speech of Mr. Willey.

I will avail myself, Mr. President, of the indulgence of the Convention, for a very few moments, while I attempt to disabuse the minds of many members, as I have been given to understand, of a very serious misapprehension of the public sentiment of the Northwestern section of this State.:For some cause unknown to me, intimations and insinuations prejudicial to the character of that section of Virginia, have been busily circulated among the members of the Convention.:I was willing, for a while, to submit to a misapprehension which to some extent might be considered as natural, when it comes alone from the Eastern borders of the State; but when I hear a member of this Convention, upon this floor, giving out intimations confirmatory of these suspicions, and going to credit the idea that there is want of loyalty in the Northwestern section of this State, to the institution of Virginia, to all of our institutions, I can not but violate the fixed resolution which I had formed in my mind when I came here, and ask the indulgence of this Convention, for a few moments, while I disabuse any mind which has been poisoned by any such insinuations.

Sir, there exists not within the broad limits of this great State any people more loyal to its interests than the people of the Northwestern part of the State:any people readier to defend her rights to the death. I speak especially for my own constituency, and I verily believe that I represent the universal sentiment of trans-Alleghany. But this seems to be the age of distrust and suspicion. Guaranties are required on every hand, and it appears that Western gentlemen are asked for some guarantees for their fidelity to this glorious old Commonwealth.

Why should these guaranties be asked? In what portion of our history can a single incident be pointed to that would subject us to the ban of your distrust? In what have we been derelict? In what have we been faithless? When did we not come up to the full demands of justice to the East on all questions? Never; but, sir, we have a record upon this subject:a record written in blood. I stand here representing the sons of sires who fell in your defence in the war of 1812.:The cry of your distress and for help had scarcely echoed back from our Western mountains and died along the Eastern shores of your coast, when the crack of the Western rifle was heard defending your firesides that and your families:defending [that] very property which you now make the object and subject of distrust of the Western heart. We have a glorious record. Your soil is consecrated with the memories of the loyalty of the West, because it contains the honored remains of some of her bravest and noblest sons. Why, sir, your honor is her honor; your interest is her interest; your country is her country; your faith shall be her faith; your destiny shall be her destiny.

But, sir, it seems we love the Union too well. That seems to be the measure of our offence. If it be treason to love the Union, we learned that treason from you, sir:we learned it from your great men:from your Jeffersons, from your Madisons, your Monroes, and from others of equally illustrious dead; and we have learned it from the living, little less distinguished men who are recognized as leaders at the present day, and who need but the consecration of death to place their names on the same roll of immortality.:Above all, we learned it from the Father of his country, the greatest of Virginia's sons:the greatest man that ever stood upon the shore of time.:As I passed down by his monument the other day, and gazed upon it with the reverence with which every American heart must contemplate his memory, I could almost imagine that I heard falling from his sacred lips the admonitions he gave us in his Farewell Address, bidding us beware of sectional dissensions, bidding us beware of geographical divisions, and instructing and conjuring us to regard the Union as the palladium of our liberties; to look with distrust upon any man who would teach us any other doctrine.:As I passed further down and gazed upon the beautiful statue of the immortal statesman of Kentucky, there came rising up in my memory the recollection of his almost dying words, when he went home after the memorable contest of the compromise in 1850. When at Frankfort, in the last speech he ever uttered, he said these words:

"Mr. President, I may be asked, as I have often been asked, when I would consent to the dissolution of the Union,":and I could almost imagine that I heard falling from his lips, "Never!" "Never!"

And, sir, there lingers in the Western heart, especially of the Democratic constituency which I have the honor to represent, that sentiment uttered or written by Mr. Calhoun, in 1832, to General Hamilton, when he said:--"The institution of the Union was so wisely ordered for the redress of grievances and for the correction of all evils, that he who would seek a remedy for this disease in dissolution would merit and receive the execration of this and all future generations." That sentiment lingers there yet. You will forgive us if we cannot forget these great lessons of these great men in a moment. But I tell the distinguished gentleman from Princess Anne, (Mr. Wise,) that while I do not understand altogether what he meant by fighting in the Union, the West, who still remembers him with gratitude for his services in the Convention of 1851, will rally to his support, or to the support of any other man in any fair contest, for the redress of any just grievances. When the last resort must come, when the proper appeal to the law and to the Constitution has failed to redress the grievances of the East, when her oppressions are intolerable, I tell you the Northwest will send you ten thousand men, with hearts as brave and arms as strong as ever bore the banner of freemen; and they will rally to her support, and seize by violence, if you see proper to call it so, or rescue by revolution, what we could not get by means of law. We are with the gentleman from Princess Anne in that regard.:We do not stand upon nice distinctions. We do not understand what is meant by the right of secession:we do not understand what is meant by the right of revolution; but when the proper cause arises, there are men in Western Virginia who will stand by the right to the last extremity.

I have been betrayed, by the impulse of the moment, to claim your attention much longer than I intended when I rose to address you; but, impelled by the kind indulgence of the Convention, I could not repress the desire to repel any insinuation against the loyalty of the citizens of Western Virginia, or to allow, on the other hand, any wrong impression to be made upon the minds of this Convention, that we are going to yield up our glorious Union for naught.

The resolutions of Mr. Woods were then referred.


Timeline of West Virginia: Civil War and Statehood: February 1861

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