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Previously, I have argued in these pages that
the decisive battle of the Civil War was not Gettysburg, as so many assume
(though its critical importance cannot be denied), but Spotsylvania and
Grant's literal turning south that preceded it after his defeat in the
Wilderness. My point was that the rolling twelve day slugfest that was
Spotsylvania demonstrated to Robert E. Lee both the unprecedented doggedness
of the new commander of the Army of the Potomac and the terrible arithmetic
that spelled the doom of the Confederacy, that is, Grant's ability and Lee's
inability to replace losses.
But, lo, a new candidate has emerged and it is none other than the mighty
battle that took place in what is today a thriving metropolis of slightly more
than one hundred souls and resulted in the deaths of (are you ready for this?)
twenty-one men! in (are you ready for this?) Virginia City, Montana! Virginia
City, Montana? I am daft, you say. Maybe... Maybe. And you haven't even heard
the punch line. The punch line is that none of the twenty-one (and we have all
of their names) died in battle. They were murdered in what can only be
described as a terroristic orgy that bypassed anything and everything
resembling due process -- no trials, no judges, no juries, and not even death
in the usual manner, hanging, but, so as to get the maximum deterrent effect
from each murder, by strangulation.
What on earth could possibly account for the extra-judicial strangulation of
twenty-one men and what on earth does it have to do with the Civil War? The
answer lies in one word: gold! What else but that shiny yellow metal that has
always been equated with power and, because of its beauty, scarcity, and the
fact that
it neither corrodes nor tarnishes, has driven men (and women) batty for all
time and, since circa 700 B.C., been used as money and, therefore, to
underwrite the economies of great states and empires. Here, briefly, is what
happened.
It need hardly be said that nations need liquid wealth to wage war,
particularly protracted war. Not worthless paper, but paper backed by tangible
wealth, or the wealth itself, is necessary to manufacture weapons, build the
facilities for their manufacture, and equip and supply armies and navies with
whatever they need to carry on the struggle -- clothing, food, vehicles,
ships. Gold meets that need more than any other form of wealth. Because of its
intrinsic qualities -- beauty, portability, malleability, etc. -- it is in
demand by virtually everyone and thus serves as an international medium of
exchange. At the beginning of the war, the Federal government had the liquid
wealth, mostly gold, necessary to wage protracted war.
The Confederate government had very little. To be more precise, the
Confederacy had, at the beginning of the war, perhaps $20,000,000 in gold and
silver, mostly from loans, bullion confiscated from U.S. mints, coins
confiscated from U.S. Custom Houses and mints, and the suspension of specie
payments by southern bankers, who then turned their coins over to the
Confederate Treasury. (By the end of the war, the Confederacy had $156,000 in
gold and silver, all of it in the possession of Jefferson Davis's party when
he was captured.) Federal greenbacks, therefore, had substantial value and
maintained most of it throughout the war. Confederate paper money had little
value and even less as the war dragged on. That would certainly have been
different had the Confederacy been able to place its hands on a good supply of
gold. It almost did.
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Bannock, Montana, late
1800's
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When the war began, Montana, then part of the Dakota Territory, was almost
vacant. As the war progressed (regressed would be more accurate), settlers of
every variety and origin, including many from the South, moved in, first to
the western slope of the Rockies (present day Idaho) and then to the eastern
(present day Montana). The lure? Gold, of course. It was discovered in 1861 in
the area of Mullen Road, in 1862 in Bannock (present day Idaho City, Idaho),
and in 1863 in Virginia City, originally named Varina City for Jefferson
Davis's wife, later changed to Virginia City as a concession to the
secessionist majority by a territorial officer from Connecticut.
The Lincoln administration, of course, recognized the critical importance of
assuring that all this gold flowed into Federal coffers and not to the
Confederacy. How much gold? In Virginia City alone, $600,000 worth of gold was
being mined every week. In today's dollars, that is $18,000,000 per week. By
some standards of measurement it could be the equivalent of $30,000,000 per
week or $1.5 billion a year. The Federal government thus took immediate steps
to preserve this immense wealth. It established, in the spring of 1863, a new
political entity known as Idaho Territory, comprising the present states of
Wyoming, Idaho, and Montana, with its capital at Lewiston.
Lincoln then appointed W. W. Wallace as Governor of the new Territory and his
friend, and one of the founders of the Republican Party, Sidney Edgerton, as
Chief Justice. The latter arrived in Bannock (sometimes spelled Bannack) on
September 17, 1863 with his family and a nephew, Wilbur Fisk Sanders. They
were originally supposed to travel to Lewiston, but went instead to Bannock,
which was only seventy-five miles from Virginia City and its gold. Edgerton's
and Sanders's problem was that they had to accomplish their purpose -- the
preservation of the gold for the Union -- in what was essentially enemy
territory.
They did so by arranging for the creation of a Vigilance Committee, also known
as the Vigilantes, in Bannock and Virginia City. The Vigilantes eliminated any
and all threats to the flow of gold to the Federal government, which is a nice
euphemism for saying they murdered a lot of people. It worked. The gold flowed
to the Federal government, thus maintaining the value of greenbacks at home
and abroad and producing the means to accomplish westward expansion, i.e., to
populate the west with Union sympathizers. The Homestead Act of 1862 had
already begun the process. Later, the Union-sympathizing emigrants to Montana
Territory came in substantial numbers from St. Paul, Minnesota, protected by
U.S. troops led by Captain James Liberty Fisk, who had also journeyed to
Washington to impress upon Lincoln the importance of controlling the gold
flow. This emigration was financed by the United States Congress for obvious
reasons. The effect was the desired one.
Within a few months, Edgerton realized that preserving the Virginia City gold
for the Union could not be effectively done from Lewiston, which was too far
away and separated from the gold by nearly impassable mountains, and that
Montana would therefore have to be established as a separate territory. He
traveled to Washington to make his case. Lincoln saw the wisdom of it
immediately, and thus it was that Montana Territory was established on May 26,
1864 with Sidney Edgerton as its first Governor.
How did Edgerton and Sanders succeed, with secessionists all around and
outvoting them and their Republican allies whenever there was access to a
ballot box? In a word: terror! With the Vigilantes, their field commander,
James Liberty Fisk, their hatchet man, i.e., their "unit commander,"
Sergeant James Williams, and a sadistic executioner named X. Biedler, who
delighted in strangling rather than hanging his victims, Edgerton and Sanders
carried the day for their Commander in Chief. The Vigilance Committee was
formally established by Paris Pfouts, Nick Wall, Wilbur Fisk Sanders, Alvin V.
Brookie, and John Nye.
Before long, the Committee had more than one thousand members, almost all of
them Republican Masons. Almost all of their victims were non-Mason, Democrat
secessionists. Paris Pfouts was an anomaly. He was a Missourian, with stops in
Denver and Salt Lake City, where he signed an oath of loyalty to the Union. He
was a Mason. He was also an avowed secessionist. How was it, then, that he was
a member -- indeed, a founder -- of the Committee? That he was a Mason
probably had something to do with it. Probably, too, his loyalty oath had
something to do with it. But my guess is that the conundrum is best explained
by his seeing where the real power lay and choosing to be on the winning side
for his ultimate gain. That he became Mayor of Virginia City supports this
theory. In any case, the Committee called their enemies "villains"
and, to galvanize the population, invented the myth of the "secret
society of road agents" -- robbers and murderers who, tipped off by
townspeople in league with them, waylaid innocent travelers, murdered them,
and made off with gold shipments.
In fairness to the Vigilantes, they have their supporters, a vociferous group
who contend that the story about the road agents was not story, but fact.
Worse, the normal channels of law enforcement were not available to them
because the Sheriff of Virginia City, Henry Plummer, a Democrat from Maine,
was the secret leader of the road agents! This belief, in fact, is accepted
today by most of the residents of Virginia City and most Montanans. Needless
to say, Plummer met the same fate as the others, strangulation. The
controversy as to the verities of the road agent hypothesis still rages after
one hundred forty years. The only thing that can be said with certainty is
that most of the public bought the story -- enough, in any case, to assure the
success of the Vigilantes and thus of Edgerton and President Lincoln's
mission, despite the sympathies of the great majority of the settlers. It is
arguable that this success -- accomplished not by votes and due process, but
by appointed officers and terror -- won the war for the North. In fact, it has
been stated, categorically, that "Virginia City gold won the war for the
North" and "The Civil War and the entire Union cause depended to a
very large extent upon the gold that flowed east from Virginia City."
These appear to be overstatements, but perhaps they aren't. We know what an
incredible fight the South made of it, despite serious shortfalls in men and
materiel. Imagine a Confederacy with all of that gold and the ability to
purchase everything it needed, if not from Yankees, then abroad.
It is worth noting that, in 1916, the Daughters of the Army of the Confederacy
erected a fountain in Women's Park in Helena, Montana. This is the
northernmost Confederate monument in the United States.
One final note: Lincoln's man on the frontier, Sidney Edgerton, like so many
Civil War personalities (Grant, Sherman, Sheridan, McPherson, to name a few),
was an Ohio boy. He moved from New York to Tallmadge (near Akron) in 1844 at
the age of twenty-six and taught there. He graduated from Cincinnati Law
School in 1845 and was admitted to the Bar and began his practice in Akron in
1846. He was the Prosecuting Attorney in Summit County from 1852 to 1856.
After his service in Idaho and Montana, he returned to Akron a wealthy man and
resumed his practice of law. He died on July 19, 1900, and is interred in
Tallmadge Cemetery.
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Sidney Edgerton
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Wilbur Fisk Sanders
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James Liberty Fisk
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Paris Pfouts
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Henry Plummer
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