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2 THE PRESBYTERIAI
THE BLUNDER OF THE BRITISH WEEKLY.
In an editorial, July 1, with the title, "Tartars and
Lapps," The British Weekly, an English non-conformist
journal, well known and esteemed in this country,
made the following astounding assault upon the people
of the South in the United States of America:
"Still, history tells us that it is the privileged and the
powerful who are the most cruel. In the American Civil
War the Southern women wore personal ornaments made of
the bones of their nnhnrioH fnoa
? .V.W. ?vvw. 1 I1CJ oiai vcu pi 1SUUC1B,
they took scalps for trophies; when they reckoned on taking
Washington they proposed to darken the air with gibbeted
carcases of dogs and caitiffs. So it is always with the
defenders of institutions that are safe only in law and forever
in danger from justice. Selfishness, fear, cruelty follow in
an inevitable order."
Could anything be more absolutely false? Could a
paragraph be written that would be a more outrageous
slander upon the Southern people? In the issue
of August 12, the editor, who is Dr. W. Robertson
Nicoll, states that he has a number of letters from
eminent men in the Southern States of America protesting
against these false and slanderous charges.
rrotn tnese letters the editor publishes one, from the
Rev. R. W. Weaver, of the Baptist church, Nashville,
Tenn., who says:
"At the beginning of the Civil War the white population
of the States forming the Southern Confederacy was less
than 5,500,000, while the white population of the Northern
States was over 21,500,000. 'The privileged and the powerful'
were in the North. The South was overwhelmed, the
North putting into the field 2,200,000 soldiers, while the South,
robbing the cradle and the grave, was able to muster only
1,000,000 men. The charge that the Confederacy starved
prisoners is answered by the facts: In Northern prisons
12 nf>r ron t r*f tb a Gnut V* /%? ?? J1?* * "
__ wuv uuuiuciu auiuu'is uifu irum oisease,
wounds, and starvation; in Southern prisons, though Southern
soldiers were starving in the trenches about Petersburg
and Richmond, only 9 per cent, of Federal prisoners died
from every cause. The statement regarding Southern women
is a monstrous slander, .and the writer must give his
authority, or stand forth as an acknowledged traducer of
women. In some way such a report must have gained circulation
in England. It is most unfortunate that so many
English are so full of misinformation regarding America.
Let the writer of this calumny give his authority, and it will
afford Southern men no little satisfaction to prove the utter
falsity and virulence of the charge. The statement that
Southern soldiers scalped their dead foes is too absurd to
be credited for a moment by any one acquainted with the
facts of American history."
In reply to the challenge for authority for these
statements, Dr. Xicoll quotes from a paper written
by James Russell Lowell, and published in 1865 in the
North American Review, and republished in volumes
in 1888 and in 1890. Upon this paper of Lowell, written
in 1865, in the bitter passion of Boston at the close
of the war, and upon this alone Dr. Xicoll bases his
r? J-' ' -?
auuium; iui ins uciamauon oi tne j>outnern women,
and his charges of starving prisoners and scalping
wounded men on the field. He repeats the charges in
his editorial of 1909, as if he had known nothing else
of the American- South, of the character of her people,
and of their conduct through the war period, and the
horror of reconstruction. He expresses surprise that
we in the South have not known the paper of Mr.
Lowell, which he supposes has not been rrmfnt#?H
The fact is that there was much of such literature emamating
from notable men in the Northern cities in
J OF THE SOUTH. September 15, 1909.
the years immediately following the war. They were
the productions of an angry and unworthy sectional
passion. ?Dr. Phillip Brooks, as well as Mr. Lowell,
said things false and bitter in the extreme, and a
thousand pulpits were dishonored by such things.
They confuted themselves. People of ordinary sense
knew they were false when they were uttered.
It is to be regretted that Dr. Nicoll does not recall
a word of the unjust charges against a whole people.
We can have no controversy with Mr. Lowell of
1865. What shall we say of the British editor of
1909?
SOME RELIGIOUS STATISTICS.
Between 1890 and 1909.
1 lie recent bulletin of the Census Bureau, giving
the membership of the churches of the United States,
is full of interest. It calls attention, very properly, to
the fact that the comparison of Protestant and Romanist
statistics is rendered difficult by the fact that
in all Protestant bodies the membership is practically
adult membership, whereas, in the Roman Catholic
Church all baptized persons, including infants, are regarded
as members, so that in comparison with the
Catholic Church the strength of the Protestant bodies
is considerably understated. Taken altogether. it is
a fact that the figures given are hardly to be depended
upon as absolutely accurate. Approximately,
however, they may be looked upon as representing
the general facts.
The Romanists report 12,079,142, an increase of
93.5 per cent since 1890, and the Protestant churches
report 20,287,742, an increase of 44.8 per cent. The
increase of Romanists is almost altogether due to immigration,
fully eighty per ceirt of the foreigners coming
to the United States being of that faith. The Protestants
outnumber the Romanists in twentv-nine
States, while the converse is true in sixteeen States.
The only Southern State in this latter list is Louisiana,
with 61.3 per cent of the nominal membership.
Of the total population in 1906, 39.1 per cent are reported
as members of the Church, as against 32.7 per
cent in 1890. The increase from 1890 to 1906 was 60.4
per cent, which was considerably larger than the increase
in the population of the country. Of the
church members, 43.1 per cent were males and 56.9
per cent, females. The totals of Protestant membership
do not include Jewish congregations and a number
of smaller bodies, such as Greeks, Spiritualists,
Mormons, Theosophists, etc., which number 1.7 per
cent of the aggregate. Of the total membership, the
Romanists embrace 36.7, and the Protestants 61.6,
showing that despite the large accession to the Romanists'
ranks by immigration, the Protestant forces
of this country are nearly twice as strong.
In the period covered, from 1890 to 1906, the Baptist
bodies increased 52.5 per cent, the Methodist 25.3,
the Congregationalfsts 36.6, the Disciples 78.2; the
Enisconal 66.7. thp T 71 f*
a I , v..v. mii r * .v/, niv x i tut mil
43.3, the Unitarian 4.1. The bulletin should have included
the 449,514 members of the Reformed Churches
with the Presbyterian bodies, where they properly belong.
Had it done so the Preshvterian n<?rrpntaorp nf
r
numbers and increase would have been very much
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