TTil GLEAN IB 1 Li 0 VOL. 4 LASIvEIt, KORTIIAMPTON" COUNTY, X. O., THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1803. NO. 5. Z B. VANCE. His Life and Character For trayed by Senator Ransom. EULOGY DELIVERED IN THE UNITED STATES SENATE VANCE THE GREATEST TRIBUNE OF THE PEOPLE.- Mr. President, the Senate is asked to render its last duties of honor and sorrow to the memory of the Hon. Zebulon Baird Vance late a Senator from North Caro lina. ' In this Chamber on the 16th of last April two days after his death, the Senate lighted its black torches around the lifeless form of that most honored and beloved son of our State, and his mortal figure, covered with the white flowers of spring and lover and hallowed by the sacred devotions of religion, passed amid tears like a shadow from these portals for ever. To-day his associates on this lloor are here to place on the ever-living annals of the Senate the record of their admiration and affection for his virtues. I take this summary from the Congressional Directory: Z btilonl5. Vaticr, of Charlotte, whs horn hi 'Buncombe comity. North Canv- liiia. May Hi, 1830, was educated at Wa-hingtou College, Tennessee, and at the University .f North Carolina, stuoied lii'v; was admitted to the bar ii. Janu ary, I8.V2, and was elected cdunty attor ney for Buncombe county the same year; was a member of the State House of Common in IS.VJ; was a rcptf tentative frmii North Carolina jn the -.Thirty-lift It and Thirty-sixth Congresses; entered the Confederate army as captain in May, 1BG! , and was made Colonel in August. 1801; was elected Goycrror of North Car olina in August, 1802, and re-elected in August, 1804; wa.elected to tlc United State Senate in 1870, but was refused admission, and resigned in Januajy, 1872; was elected Governor of North C iioli'iu for the third time in 1870; and i i January, 1878, was elected to the Uu- ied States SenaTe; was re-elected in 1SS5, was again re-elected in 1891, and died at ' his residence in Washington, Apiil 14. 1804. His Birth-place. His paternal and maternal an cestors both were revolutionary iwitriots. I have passed the spot where he was born. The "Vance homestead ' ' was a large frame building of the "olden time, " with bi-oad stone chimneys, indicate of comfort and hospitality. It stood near the French Broad Riv er and in the midst of the Blue Ridge mountains. Now the house has been taken down and only a few stones remain to mark the site where it once was It is a lilace of beauty. In front of it the river is smooth and placid as a lake; above and below, it dashes and roars into a mountain torrent and you almost hear the echoes of the ocean. - Around it the great mountains tower like giants, and their dark forests are mirrored in tlie deep blue bosom of the stream. On this scene, amid sub limity and beauty, Vance first be held the light of heaven. From this beautiful river, from these sublime mountains, from neigh boring scenes, all bristling with 'heroic and patriotic recollections, he received his first impressions. These were ths books from which 1 he learned the lessons that were to be the foundations of his illus trious career. He was a son of the mountaius,and I rarely looked on him without being reminded of them. His Boyhood. I know but little of his boyhood, but if the Senate will pardon me I will speak of an incident that il lustrates his character. In the canvass of 187-1 was with Gov ernor Vance in the mountain counties of our State. Passing from Ashe ville over the mountain to Burnsvillc, we made a short stop" at the home of Nehemiah Blackstock, not far from Ivy Greek. Squire Blackstock was nearly 80 years of age and his good wife was but little younger. He had been tlie surveyor of Bun combe county for more than thir ty years, 1 shall never forget tlie meeting of Governor Vance and that venerable couple. They fell on each other's necks they embraced and wept They had not met for years before.' The conversation was short, not an half, hour long, and consisted mainly of reminiscences. Vance when a boy1 had lived with Hie old people and attended a country school close by. Mrs. Blackstock, betming with joy, asked him if he remembered the scenes of his schoolboy days and vividly de picted his wild, wayward ml& chief, his pranks, his plays with the girls, his wrongs to the boys, ins visits to the orchards, his raids upon the watermelons, his practical jokes, his offences to the teacher, and many similar aber rations. When old Mr.-Blackstock, with a benignant smile, said, "Well, you may say what you will about Zeb; he was a mighty bad boy and hard to control, but he had one redeeming quality, that made up for all his faults. Zeb would tell the truth. When you missed your eggs mat you wanted so much for the preacher, and were so mad that they, we re gone, and all the boys denied everything about them, Zeb came up like a man and told them he took them, out- he would not tell who helped him eat them. He would always tell the truth." . Then I knew that from his boyhood on Truth nad been Vance's star: and what a star: At the University. At the University vance re mained two years, and pursued a selected course of studies, and soon made a name for genius, wit and oratory. He was an especial favorite of President Swain, who for so many years had exerted a powerful influence in elevating and directing the youth of the South and made all of us who came under it better citizens and better men. xoung Vance was extremely-popular with the stu dents and also with the people of the villagre of Chapel Hill. Even then reports came from the Uni versify of his brilliant wit, his striking originality, and his high promise. Beginning of His Political Career. ' He served one session . in the State Legislature, and there gave unmistakable earnest of the lllus trious life before him. He was elected to the House of Representatives in the Thirty- fifth and Thirty-sixth Congress es, and took distinguished posi tion in that Assembly, which has ''.1 I 1 ' l M. A oeen me lists oi so many states menIn 1861, upon the adjourn ment of Congress, he returned home, and seeing that war Was in evitable raised a company of vol unteers, marched to Virginia, and was soon alter elected uoionei oi the Twenty-sixth RegimentNorth Carolina infantry, a regiment just ly distinguished for the largest oss of killed and wounded at (Get tysburg. He had always been opposed to the secession of the Southern States, did everything possible to avert it, and was one of the very ast Southern men to declare his ove and devotion to the Union. ' In the battle of Newbern, N. C, n 1862, Colonel Vance was con- spicuous tor courage ana cool ness, and received the highest commendation for his soldierly conduct on that field. In August of that year he was electedGov ernor of the State, and received the almost unanimous vote of the soldiers. In 1864 he was re-elect ed governor by a very large ma jority, and held tlie executive of fice until until the occupation of Raleigh by JGen. Sherman in April, 1865. The Great War Governor. As the executive of North Car olina his administration was sig nally distinguished by great abil ity, vigor,and energy, by ardent and constant fidelity to the South ern cause, and by wise foresight and prudent husbandryof all the resources of tlie State. He was in every sense governor of the State. From the day on which he entered upon the duties of the office until the hojur when he laid it down his commanding genius asserted his competence for the great-responsibilities of the posi tion, and his administration de served and received tlie unbound ed confidence, support, and ap probation of all the patriotic peo ple of 2?orth Carolina. He called to his councils the wisest, the best the most trusted men in the State of all shades of patriotic senti ment He inspired the people with renewed love for the strug gle, he united the discordant ele ments among us, he animated the despondent, he, tolerated the con scientious lovers of peace, he re-J buked the timid, he brought back to life the spirit of our revolution patriots. He gave new hope to the army, he aroused the pride of the State,' he strengthened all its means, and prepared for war to the end.. Well may he have been designated as the "great war gov ernor of the South." These acts of his administra tion are Justly entitled to be ranked as historic. First: The organization of a fleet of vessels to sail from Wilmington, N. C, to .Europe with cargoes of -'cotton and return with supplies for the soldiers and essential necessaries for the people. This supreme en terprise was eminently success ful For months and years the Advance and other vessels com manded by skillful officers, well manned and adequately equipped, went like sea birds across the Europe laden "with the great sta Dies or tnft hontn ann rfttnrmner with stores of the needed sup plies, triumphantly eluded the blockading squadron, and sailed with colors flying up the Cape Fear to Wilmington. The sol diers were clothed and fed, cards and spinning wheels, sewing and knitting needles, were furmshed to our noble-women, machinery tor looms, surgical instruments, medicines, books and seeds, were all brought home to a suffering: people. The history of thwar does not present on example of greater wisdom and success. Second: In 1864 and 1865, when the resources of the South were absolutely exhausted, when our noble armies were reduced and hemmed in on every side, ragged, hungry and almost without am munition; when starvation and famine confronted every thresh old in the South and a morsel of bread was the daily subsistence of a family: in that dark i and dreadful hour Governor Vance first appealed to the Government at Richmond, and finding it per fectly helpless to give any relief, summoned his council of State and by almost superhuman efforts prevailed upon the destitute peo ple of North Carolina to divide their last meal and their pitiful lothing with the suffering Union prisoners at Salisbury. Human ity, chivalry, piety, I invoke from you a purer, better, holier exam ple of Christian Charity in war! . Third: During his administra tion as Governor of North CarolK tit 1 r na, aitnougn war was nagranr, though camps covered the fields, though soldiers were conscripted by thousands, though cold-hear t- d men of ample-means refused supplies to soldiers with bleeding feet, though thousands of desert ers, refugees Trom duty, were arrested, though the War Depart ment daily called j for more men, though every art and artifice and device was practiced to keep the soldiers from the field, though spies and traitors were detected and seized, though traders in con traband of war were constantly caught flagrante delicto and cap- j tured, though in all countries in ime or war civil autnority nas been compelled to submit to mili tary necessity and power, yet in North Carolina during the war the writ of habeas corpus, the great writ of liberty, was never for one moment suspended. Im mortal history ! Worthy of Meck- enburg and the 20th of May, 1 o. Third Time Elected Gov- ernor. 1 In 1876 Governor Vance was tor the third time elected ijover- ernor of the State, and his admin istration, was the beginning of a new era for North Carolina. Dur- mthis administration the fraud- ulent bonds issued by a recon struction Legislature were made null and void by constitutional amendment The debt of the State was adjusted on terms of equity and justice. Important railroad enterprises were revived and -new internal improvements organized and begun. Tlie pub lic schools were, extended, en larged and improved. - Education was provided for tire-colored peo ple; asylums for the insane, their deaf, dumb and blincLwe re estab lished. A great duty nobly per formed! It was at this period that the legislature established the county of Vance and named it in honor of him, which fact contributed large ly to the popularity of the meas ure creating the county. Elected to the Senate. In 1878 he was elected to the Senate, and until he died remained a member of this body, having been elected four times a Sena tor. His record in the Senate is part of the Nation's history. Prom the beginning he was an ac tive, earnest debater, a constant, faithful worker, adutif mVdevoted Senator, aspiring and laboring for the welfare and honor of the whole country. He was at all times on the important commit tees of the body and took a prom inent part in the discussion of al most evoxY leading question. He was the unceasing advocate, of revenue reform, uncompromis ingly opposed to civil service, and the ardent friend of silver money and its free coinage by the gov ernment He vigilantly defended the rights, honorT and interests of the Southern States, not from sectional passion or prejudice, but because it was his duty as a pat riot to every State and to the Un ion. He was bold, i brave, open, candid, and without reserve. He desired all the world to know his opinions and positions, and never hesitated to avow them. An Uncommon Orator. His heart every moment was in JNorth uarolina. His devotion to the State and people was un bounded, his solicitude for her welfare, his deep anxiety in all that concerned lier, and his ever readiness to make every sacrifice in her behalf was daily manifest- 3d in all his words and actions. Senator Vance was an uncommon orator. He spoke with great pow er. His style was brief, clear,and strong. His statements vere ac curate and definite. His arsru- ments compact and forcible, his illustrations unsurpassed in their ntness, nis wit and humor were the eer Waiting and ready hand maids to his reasoning,.- and al ways subordinated to the higher purpose of- his speech. They were torchbearers, ever bringing fresh hgnt He always instruct ed, always interested, always en tertained, and never "wearied or fatigued an audience, and knew when to conclude. The Senate arways jheard him with pleasure, and - the galleries hung upon his lips, and with bended bodies and out stretched necks would catch his every word as it fell. He rarely if ever spoke without bringing down applause. His wit was as inexhaustible as it was ex quisite. His humor was overflow- ng, fresh, sparkling like bubbling drops of wine in a goblet; but he. husbanded these resources of speech with admirable skill, and never displayed them for osten tation. They were weapons of offence and defense, and were al ways kept sharp and bright and ready for. use. ! He was -master of irony and sarcasm, but there was 'no malice, no hatred in his swift and true arrows. Mortal wounds were often given, but the shafts were never poisoned. Jt was the strength of the bow and the skill of the archer that sent the steel through the heartof its victim. "Butstrengtlvforcei clear- ness, brevity, honesty of convic- ion, truth, passion, good judge ment were the qualities that made his speech powerful and effective. Believed What lie Said. He believed what he said. He knew it was true, he fell its force himself, his heart was in his words, he was ready to put place", honor, life itself upon the issue. This was the secret of his popu larity, fame and success as a speaker. He studied his speech es with the greatest care, delib erated, meditated upon them con stantly, arranged the order of his topics with consummate discre tion, introduced authorities from history, and very often from sa cred history, presented some pop ular faith as an anchor to his ship, and concluded with a sincere ap peal to the patriotic impulses of the peopla No speaker ever re sorted to the bayonet more fre quently. , r He did notskirmish.he'marched into the battle, charged the cen ter of the lines, and never failed to" draw the blood of the enemy. Sometimes he was supreme in manner, in words, in thought, in pathos. He possessed the thunder-bolts, but, like Jove, he never trifled with them, he only invoked them when gigantic perils con fronted his cause. In 187Q, upon his third nomination for govern or, speaking to an immense audi ence in the Statehouse Square at Raleigh, he held up both hands in the light of the sun and with sol emn invocation to Almighty God declared that they were white and stainless, that not one cent of corrupt money had ever touched their palms. The effect was elec tric; the statement was convic tion and conclusion. The argu-" ment was unanswerable. It was great nature's action. It was eloquence. It was truth. His Integrity Absolute. Senator Vance's integrity and uprightness m public and in pri vate life were absolute; they were unimpeached and .unimpeachable he was honest it is the price less inheritance which he leaves to his family, his friends, his coun try. He was an honest man. Cal umny fell harmless at his feet; the light dissipated every cloud and he Uved continually in its broad rays; his breastplate, his snieid, his armor was the light the truth. There was no dark ness, no mystery, ho shadow up on his bright standard. Senators will all remainder the loss of his eye in the winter of lty. How touching it was a sacrifice, an offering on the altar of his country. For no -victim was ever more tightly bound to the stake than he was to his dutv here. How bravely, how ratient- y, how cheerfully, how manfallv he bore the d readf ul loss !But the light, the glorious light of a warm heart a noble nature, a good conscience,aninnocentmem- oiy, was never obscured to him. It was to him a great bereave- ment. but it was another, a more sacred tie that again and again bound his countrymen to him. His Long Illness. , 1 1n his long and tedious illness no complaint, no murmurs es caped his calm and cheerful lips. He was composed, firm, brave, constant hopeful to the last His love cf country was unabated, his friendships unchanged, his de votion to duty un relaxed. His philosophy was serene, his brow was cloudless, his spiritf his tem per, his great .mind,. aJl were su perior to his sufferings. His great souk illuminated the physical wreckind ruin around it and shone outwith clearer lus ter amid disease and decay. Truly he was a most wonderful man. His last thoughts, his dy ing words, his expiring prayers, were tor his country, for liberty and the people. A great patriot, a noble citizen; a good man, it is impossible not to remember, to admire, to love him. . I cannot compare Senator Vance with Caesar, Napoleon, or Washington. I cannot place him at the side of Webster, Clay, and Ualhoun. I do not measure him with Chatham arid', Gladstone. He j was not a philosopher like Franklin, he was not an orator ike Mirabeau, but placed in any company of English or American statesmen he would have taken high position. He Loved the People. He had not the wisdom and vir tue of -Macon. He was not like Baderer. a master of argument He was not like Graham, a model of 'dignity and learning he had not the superb speech and grand passion oi iuangum, ne wanted the tenacious and inexorable loeric of Bragg, but in all the endow ments, qualities, faculties and at lamments mat matte up me ora tor and the statesman he was the a ual of either. No man among the living or the dead ever so possessed and held the hearts of North Carolina's people. In their confidence, their affection, heir devotion, and their gratitude he stood unapproachable with out a peer . When he spoke to hem they listened to him with aith, with admiration, with rapt ure and exultant joy. His name was ever upon their lips. His pictures were in almost every household. Their children by hundreds bore his beloved name, and his words of wit and wisdom were repeated ty every tongue. What Tell was to Switzerland, what Bruce was to Scotland, what William of Orange was to Holland, I had almost said what Moses was to Israel Vance was to North Carolina. I can give you but a faint idea of the deep, fervid, ex alted sentiment which our people cherished for their greatest ribuna His thoughts, his feel ings, his words were theirs. He was their shepherd, their cham- pion, their friend, their guidet blood of their blood, great good. noble, true, human like they were in all respects, no better, but wiser, abler, with higher knowl edge and profounder learning. Why They Loved Him. Nor was this unsurpassed de votion unreasonable or without ust foundation. For more than the third of a century, for up wards of thirty, years, in peace and in war, in prosperity and in adversity, m joy and in sorrow, he had stood by them hKeaDrom- er a defender, a preserver, a de liverer. He was their martyr and had suffered for their acts. He was their shield and had pro tected them from evil and from peril He had been with them he had been with them and their sons and brothers on the march by the camp fires, in the burn ing light of battle; beside the wounded and the dying; in their darkest hours, amid huncror and cold, and famine and pestilence. iua wuicniui care had brought them comfort and shelter and protection. They remembered the gray jackets, the warm blank ets, the good shoes, the timely j 1 . . iooti, me messed medicines, which his sympathy and provision had bronrrht tViAm Tr A O " ,vvil.k, amid tumult amid ruin, humilia tion, and the loss of all thev had. he had been their adviser, ho had guided them through tlie wilder ness of their woes and brought them safely back to their rights aud all their hopes. He had been to them like the north star to the storm-tossed and despairing mar iner. He had been greater than Ulysses to the Greeks. He had preserved their priceless honor. - had saved their homes, and was the defender of their liberties. He waff their benefactor. Every object around mem reminded them of his care, every memory recalled, every thought suggested his usefulness and their irrati- tude. V . - ....... Other States Honored Him. The light from their school houses spoke of his services to their education, The very sight of their graves brought back to their hearts his tender devotion to their sons. And' the papers and the wires with the rising of almost every sun bore to their pure oosoms xne news oi nis sue; cess, his triumphs, and his hon- mm m ors. They . we re proud oi mm ; they admired "him loved him. These, these were the founda tions, the solid foundations of his place in their minds and in their hearts. From the wind-beaten md storm-bleached Capes of Hat- teras to the dark blue mountain tops that divided North Carolina and Tennessee there is not a spof from which the name of Vance is not echoed with honor and love. But his influence and his fame were not confined within State lines. .. . In New England the sons of the brave Puritans admired hislovo of liberty, his independence of thought, his freedom of speech, his contempt for pretensions, and his abhorrence of deceit The hardy miners in the far West and on the Pacific hills felt his friend ship and were grateful for his services. Virginia loved him as the vindicator of her imperiled rights "and honor. From the farms, and fields and firesides of the husbandmen of the Republic there came to him the greeting of friends, for he was always the advocate of low taxes and equal rights and privileges to all men. From all the South he was looked upon as the representative of their sorrow and the example oi their honor ; and all over tho civr ilized world the people of Israel the scattered nation," every where bowed with uncovered heads to the brave man who had rendered his noble testimony and a tribute to the virtues of heir race. Even the officers, tho sentinels and watchmen over him in the old capitol prison, in which he was confined on the alleged and wrongful charge that he had violated the laws of 1 war, were spellbound by, his genial spirit and became his devoted friends up to the hour of his death. His " genius, his ability, his humanity, his long continued public service, his great pnysicai suuenng. u martyrdom to his duty, the sor cery of his wit, the magic of his humor, and me courage oi nis convictions had attracted tho uni versal sympathy and admiration of the American people. His 7as a Great Life. Tn thn '-brief summary, in the n; .fnrv. is embraced a creat life; County Attorney,' member of the State House oi uommons; Representative in two Congress- es: Captain and uoionei m mo Southern Army; three times elected Governor of his State, and'four times elected to the Sen ate of the United States. hat a iwonl and what a combination. A great statesman, a good soldier, a rare scholar, a successful law- 1 yer.an orator of surpassing power Continued on 2nd Page.