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Nothing Says It Better Than A Good Quote

Many times, nothing proves a point better than a good quote.  Anything else—a paraphrase or an explanation--only dampens a literary passage’s verve or weakens an argument’s persuasiveness.

So with brief contextual background, here are four quotes from North Carolinians regarding the importance of liberty and the imperative to defend it against corrupt government.

Herman Husband, a leader of the Regulator Rebellion of the late 1760s and early 1770s, encouraged colonial Tar Heels to protest against excessive fees and corrupt government: “Are you not sensible, Brethren that we have too long groaned in Secret under the Weight of these crushing Mischiefs?  How long will ye in this servile Manner subject yourselves to Slavery?  Now shew yourselves to be Freemen, and for once assert your Liberty and maintain your Rights.  This election let us exert ourselves, and show, that we will not through Fear, Favour or Affection, bow and subject ourselves to those who, under the Mask of Friendship, have long drawn Calamities upon us.”  

In “Principles of an American Whig,” written in late 1775 or early 1776, James Iredell, then a practicing lawyer and later a leading proponent of the U.S. Constitution and justice on the first U.S. Supreme Court, wrote: “That government being only the means of securing freedom and happiness to the people, whenever it deviates from this end, and their freedom and happiness are in great danger of being irrevocably lost, the government is no longer entitled to their allegiance, the only consideration for which it could be justly claimed or honorably pledged being basely and tyrannically withheld.”   Doubtless “Principles” influenced Thomas Jefferson when drafting “The Declaration of Independence” and thereby giving North Carolina a primary role in fostering and nurturing an American spirit of liberty.

Let’s fast-forward approximately 160 years to 1937.  Frustrated with corruption at the highest levels of government, North Carolina Senator Josiah Bailey wrote to fellow Senator, Peter G. Gerry (RI): “We do not have a Government at Washington.  It is a gift enterprise and the gifts are at the expense of those who earn and save.”  In hopes of stopping what he considered the juggernaut of government intervention and FDR’s New Deal, Bailey exclaimed in the Senate chamber, “In God’s name, do not do nothing while America drifts down to the inevitable gulf of collectivism . . . Give enterprise a chance, and I will give you the guarantees of a happy and prosperous America.”

And now one of my favorites by Richard M. Weaver, a native Tar Heel often considered the founder of post-World War II conservatism.  At a Young Americans for Freedom award banquet on March 7, 1962, the man from Weaverville remarked: “It is our traditional belief that man was given liberty to ennoble him.  We may infer that those who would take his liberty away have the opposite purpose of degrading him. . .  There can be no worth of man unless there is an inviolable area of freedom in which he can assume the stature of man and exercise choice in regard to his work, his associates, his use of earnings, his way of life.  Little by little this area has been traded away in return for plausible gifts and subventions, urged on by slogans. . . . The past shows unvaryingly that when a people’s freedom disappears, it goes not with a bang, but in silence amid the comfort of being cared for.”  

Liberty should be cherished, and its protectors should always be wary of political favors and promises.  May we be at least half as bold as former Tar Heels and invoke their legacy of timeless wisdom to protect our cherished liberties from their enemies, wherever they may be found.


By Troy L. Kickler, North Carolina History Project


See Also:

Related Categories: Political History
Related Encyclopedia Entries: Charles Woodmason (1720?-1776?), Herman Husband (1724-1795), Nicholas Ludwig von Zinzendorf (1700-1760), Edmund Fanning (1737-1808), Watauga Association, Edward Vail (1717-1777), Sandy Creek Baptists, John Sevier (1745-1815), Marriage, History of, Shubal Stearns (1706-1771), Johnston Riot Act, Hillsborough Riot (1770), Hillsborough Confrontation (1768), Skimmington, American Revenue Act, Angus W. McLean (1925-1929), James Emerson (1736-1786), Battle of Alamance, James Few (1746-1771), The Nutbush Address (1765), Henderson Walker (1659 - 1704), Richard J. Salem (1947- ), James Iredell, Sr. (1751-1799), Act Concerning Marriages (1669), Lieutenant Governor, Alfred Moore (1755-1810), Carolina Charter of 1663, Affirmations, William Linkhaw, Dual Tenure (late 1800s), To The Inhabitants of Great Britain, Stamp Act, Stamp Tax Protests (Wilmington), Sons of Liberty, Non-Importation Movement, The Justice and Policy of Taxing the American Colonies in Great Britain Considered, Plantation Duty Act (1673), Tories, Concessions and Agreement (1665), State v. Mann, Reginald Hawkins (1923-2007), An Address to the Freemen of North Carolina (Publicola), Tabitha Ann Holton, Lillian Exum Clement (1894-1925), Woodson v. North Carolina , Capital Punishment , Racial Justice Act , State v. Negro Will (1834) and State v. Manuel (1838), Frankie Silver Murder Case of 1833, The Conservative Manifesto, Josiah Bailey (1873-1946)
Related Commentary: A New Light "Infestation": Charles Woodmason on Colonial Piedmont Religion, Tryon's Ferry: Myth or Fact, Schoolmaster Yorke and The Tories, Comparing the Occupy Movement to Our Regulator Rebellion, 1771 Alamance: The First Battle of Our American Revolution, Josiah Bailey and the Creation of a Post-World War II Conservatism, Works Progress Administration (WPA): One Failure to End the Great Depression
Related Lesson Plans: A Missionary of English Civilization to the Piedmont: Backcountry Religion and One Man’s Perspective, Can God Be on Both Sides?: The Role of Religion and Politics during the North Carolina Regulation
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