We are so grateful to guest blogger Josh Stein for joining us this past month. His fascinating post on the PhD-to-JD transition (here) sparked a great conversation about interdisciplinary and professional training (here and here). We also enjoyed his thought-provoking series of posts on "George Zimmerman and the Right to Violence." The full essay is available here, on SSRN.
If you're sad to see Josh go -- fear not! We have an exciting slate of guests lined up for the fall. Stay tuned...
Friday, August 31, 2012
Farewell, LHB!
Thank you again for inviting me, Karen! I had a wonderful month as guest blogger. The Zimmerman posts were a lot of fun to write. I also really enjoyed putting together the top-ten piece I submitted on the post-Ph.D. J.D. experience.
Most of all, I loved being a part of this great community. Please follow my twitter feed, as I try to keep it chock-full of interesting links and thoughts for legal history buffs. And enjoy the rest of your summer. I'd like to bid adieu with a short and favorite poem (I'm a big enough Stevens fan that I named my dog "Wally", in his honor). I'm not sure it has legal-historical relevance, but in the opinion of your humble guest blogger, it is a good way to say goodbye.
Most of all, I loved being a part of this great community. Please follow my twitter feed, as I try to keep it chock-full of interesting links and thoughts for legal history buffs. And enjoy the rest of your summer. I'd like to bid adieu with a short and favorite poem (I'm a big enough Stevens fan that I named my dog "Wally", in his honor). I'm not sure it has legal-historical relevance, but in the opinion of your humble guest blogger, it is a good way to say goodbye.
Of Mere Being by Wallace Stevens
The palm at the end of the mind,
Beyond the last thought, rises
In the bronze distance.
Beyond the last thought, rises
In the bronze distance.
A gold-feathered bird
Sings in the palm, without human meaning,
Without human feeling, a foreign song.
Sings in the palm, without human meaning,
Without human feeling, a foreign song.
You know then that it is not the reason
That makes us happy or unhappy.
The bird sings. Its feathers shine.
That makes us happy or unhappy.
The bird sings. Its feathers shine.
The palm stands on the edge of space.
The wind moves slowly in the branches.
The bird’s fire-fangled feathers dangle down.
The wind moves slowly in the branches.
The bird’s fire-fangled feathers dangle down.
Milbrandt on Livingstone the Explorer and the African Slave Trade
Jay Milbrandt, Pepperdine University School of Law, has posted Livingstone and the Law: Africa's Greatest Explorer and the Abolition of the Slave Trade. Here is the abstract:
Few historical events have had such tragic, widespread, and lingering consequences as the exportation of slaves from Africa. While the abolition of western Africa’s transatlantic slave trade is well documented, the events and legal framework that led to the abolition of the slave trade in East Africa remain practically untold. There, an unlikely hero championed abolition: Missionary and explorer Dr. David Livingstone. His method: an ambitious publicity stunt to dramatically change international law.
This article will illustrate how explorer David Livingstone’s advocacy profoundly affected the legal landscape to restrict the slave trade in East Africa, and eventually dealt the deathblow abolishing it forever. Further, this article will illustrate how a lack of enforcement of the law and a policy of incremental restrictions on the slave trade, in lieu of outright abolition, was destructive to East and Central Africa, intensifying the slave trade with ramifications that can still be felt today. Finally, it will demonstrate, by modern analog, how strict enforcement of the rule of law is necessary in the developing world today.
Thursday, August 30, 2012
The Survey: Slavery & the Civil War
Ok, back to Hall, Finkelman, & Ely. In The
People & Their Peace, Laura Edwards argues that a customary law of
slavery emerged alongside and at times in defiance of the written law. One of her most arresting examples is the
case of Jesse Ruffin, a slave who leaves his plantation for days on end, makes
his own money, buys liquor, and visits friends – all in violation of both his
master’s wishes and written law. A
remarkable story in its own right, Jesse Ruffin happens to be owned by Thomas
Ruffin, the author of State v. Mann
(1829). For those of you who don’t know, Mann is infamous for the line that “[t]he power of the master must
be absolute, to render the submission of the slave perfect,” a declaration that
has won it a place in several primary source compendiums on slavery, including
HFE. However, HFE makes no mention of
Edwards in its note on Mann. Perhaps it should. Alternately, why not include one of the local
cases that Edwards describes, showing how the customary law of slavery yielded
unpredictable results?
Moving to the Civil War, almost the entire HFE section on
the war focuses on rights: first the rights of slave-owners to retrieve
runaways, then the rights of slaves in free territories, then the right to
secede, then emancipation and Reconstruction, and finally the denial of rights
during Redemption. However, there is a
structural aspect to the war that did not involve rights, per se, but still
warrants attention. As Heather Cox
Richardson demonstrates in The GreatestNation of the Earth: Republican Economic Policies During the Civil War (Cambridge,MA: Harvard University Press, 1997), the Civil War prompted a dramatic
expansion of federal power, including the creation of a national currency, the
enactment of federal banking law, and the imposition of a federal income
tax. At least some of these developments
warrant mention, arguably more so than both Inaugural Addresses of Abraham
Lincoln, which are included in the collection.
Why not cut one address and include something on national currency? Paul?
Jim?
Mehrotra on Shroup and the Columbia School of Taxation and Development
Ajay K. Mehrotra, Indiana University Maurer School of Law, has posted From Seligman to Shoup: The Early Columbia School of Taxation and Development, which will appear in The Political Economy of Transnational Tax Reform: The Shoup Mission to Japan in Historical Context, eds. W. Elliot Brownlee, Yasunori Fukagai & Eiasku Ide (New York: Cambridge University Press, Forthcoming). Here is the abstract:
In 1949, the Columbia University economist Carl Sumner Shoup helped lead a post-World War II tax mission to Japan. One of the principal goals of the mission was to assist in the reconstruction of the Japanese fiscal system. As part of this mission, Shoup brought with him not only his experience as an academic economist and longtime advisor to the U.S. Treasury Department, but also his deep intellectual commitment to fundamental tax reform. Throughout his career Shoup applied economic ideas about public finance to the practical issues of improving fiscal, political, and administrative institutions in redeveloping and lesser-developed nation-states. In many ways, though, Shoup was the culmination of a multi-generational tradition of research, scholarship, and policy guidance that can be described loosely as the Columbia school of taxation and development. This essay, which is a chapter in a forthcoming edited volume on the Shoup mission to Japan, provides a brief intellectual history of the Columbia school. More specifically, this chapter traces the genealogical connection between the type of economic institutionalism that was prominent at Columbia in the early twentieth century and Shoup’s specific ideas about taxation and development. The aim is to provide some historical perspective on the principles and proposals that were central to the many Shoup tax missions and to his overall vision of a “prescriptive” or “political economy” branch of public finance.
Posner Reviews Witt, "Lincoln's Code"
Yesterday we noted the release of Lincoln's Code: The Laws of War in American History, by John Fabian Witt (Yale Law School). Today we have a review by Eric Posner (University of Chicago), writing for Slate.
Here's Posner on the book's contemporary relevance:
And here's a bit more on substance:
Read the full review here.
Here's Posner on the book's contemporary relevance:
The law of war has played a central role in debates about American policies toward al-Qaida under Presidents Bush and Obama, with critics frequently arguing that the U.S. government has violated the law of war or improperly cited it as support for its policies. Witt’s historical account helps explain why both administrations felt it necessary to deviate from a strict interpretation of international law.
And here's a bit more on substance:
For many observers [of law of war violations during the Civil War], these examples admit of only one conclusion: that Lincoln chose to violate the laws of war when they stood in his way. He did not violate all the rules, but if one gets to pick and choose which rules to obey and which to violate, then the law lacks binding force. The law of war, which at the time was customary rather than embodied in treaties, was not worth the paper it wasn’t written on. Enthusiasts for the way that the Bush administration disregarded or rewrote the law of war to address the threat from Al Qaeda and the Taliban could cite none other than the sainted Lincoln as precedent.
Witt believes that this view is too simple. He agrees that Lincoln did not always follow the rules, yet he regards Lincoln as a pragmatist rather than as a criminal. What’s the difference? Witt points out that Lincoln did much to advance the law of war. In 1863, under Lincoln’s authority, a military theorist named Francis Lieber drafted a code of military conduct that became known among international lawyers as the Lieber Code, though Witt prefers to call it Lincoln’s Code, the title of his book. The Lieber Code codified large swaths of the unwritten customary laws of war and modified them where necessary to serve the Union’s immediate war aims—most notably in provisions that authorized belligerents to emancipate slaves owned by persons in enemy countries and that banned discrimination against soldiers on the basis of race. The code was also notable in its insistence that “military necessity” trumped (nearly) all of the substantive rules it contained. So although the Code humanely prohibited belligerents from executing POWs, it also grimly permitted them to do so in the service of “military necessity.” All that was ruled out was private violence or sadistic cruelty.\
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
New Release: Witt, "Lincoln's Code"
Out next week from the Free Press: Lincoln's Code: The Laws of War in American History, by John Fabian Witt (Yale Law School).
Here's the Press's description.
Here's the Press's description.
In the fateful closing days of 1862, three weeks before Emancipation, the administration of Abraham Lincoln commissioned a code setting forth the laws of war for the armies of the United States. The code announced standards of civilized conduct in wartime concerning issues such as torture, prisoners of war, civilians, spies, and slaves. The code Lincoln approved ultimately shaped the course of the Civil War. And when the war was over, the same code reshaped warfare the world over. By the twentieth century, the 157 articles of Lincoln’s code had become the basis of a new international law of war. European powers adopted the American code. International agreements like the Geneva Conventions incorporated and expanded it.
In this pathbreaking and deeply original book, John Fabian Witt tells the hidden story of the laws of war in the first century of the United States–and of the extraordinary code that emerged from it to change the course of world history. Lincoln’s Code is the haunting and inspiring story of an idea in American history: the idea that conduct in war can be regulated by law. For many, the very idea of a law for war has seemed like an oxymoron. But with sweep and vitality, Witt unfolds the story of the cast of characters who invented the modern laws of war. Washington, Jefferson, and Franklin championed Enlightenment rules for civilized warfare.
James Madison went to war in 1812 to vindicate them. Indian conflicts challenged and distorted them. The Mexican War quietly revolutionized them. In the Civil War, Lincoln and a small band of now forgotten figures helped remake those same laws to support Emancipation and advance the Union war effort. Three decades later, a new generation of Americans went into a war of American empire in the Philippines equipped with the very rules Lincoln had laid down.
Journal of Supreme Court History 37:3
Via H-Law, we have the table of contents for the 37:3 of the Journal of Supreme Court History, Volume 37, Issue No. 3. The principal articles are:
“The Lincoln Administration and the Supreme Court during the Civil War: A Letter by Attorney General Edward Bates,” edited by Jonathan W. White
“The Justice and The Dean: Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. and John Henry Wigmore,” by Andrew Porwancher
“‘Omak's Minimum Pay Law Joan D'Arc’: Telling the Local Story of West Coast Hotel v. Parrish (1937),” by Helen J. Knowles
“‘He Travels Fastest Who Travels Alone’: Justice Robert H. Jackson-One of the Court's Finest Advocates and Writers,” by David M. O'Brien
The Supreme Court As An Issue In Presidential Campaigns, by William G. Ross
“The Lincoln Administration and the Supreme Court during the Civil War: A Letter by Attorney General Edward Bates,” edited by Jonathan W. White
“The Justice and The Dean: Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. and John Henry Wigmore,” by Andrew Porwancher
“‘Omak's Minimum Pay Law Joan D'Arc’: Telling the Local Story of West Coast Hotel v. Parrish (1937),” by Helen J. Knowles
“‘He Travels Fastest Who Travels Alone’: Justice Robert H. Jackson-One of the Court's Finest Advocates and Writers,” by David M. O'Brien
The Supreme Court As An Issue In Presidential Campaigns, by William G. Ross
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
The Survey: Inequality, Slavery & Rights
I received some thoughtful responses to my post on Madison and equality last Friday. Let's see if I can continue the line of argument here. Two books come to mind. The first is Laura Edwards' The People and Their Peace: Legal Culture and the Transformation of Inequality in the Post-Revolutionary South (Chapel Hill: UNC, 2009). Focusing on North and South Carolina, Edwards argues that inequality actually increased following the Revolution, as white males used the rhetoric of rights to undermine a collective legal culture focused on preservation of the peace. In a fascinating recovery of local cases, Edwards shows again and again how a system of "legal localism" evolved in the slave South, a system that operated free from centralized oversight and oftentimes in contradiction of state statutes. (p. 62) For example, legal localism "resulted in the periodic prosecution of whites for violence against slaves," even in instances where "historians' readings of statute and case law suggest that such cases should not exist." (p. 62) Despite the rigid slave codes of South and North Carolina, in other words, local courts carved out a much less rigid, particularized body of law that "allowed outcomes to depend on specific situations." (p. 62). Yet, such localized arrangements suffered as white men began to increasingly adopt a "political discourse of rights" that not only intruded on the legal localism governing master/slave relations but also implicated the rights of free blacks. As rights rhetoric permeated, free blacks found themselves in increasingly unequal positions. Dan Sharfstein picks up a similar development in his recent book The
Invisible Line: Three American Families and the Secret Journey from Black to
White (New York:
Penguin, 2011). A great read, Invisible Line demonstrates how racial
ideology “helped maintain the idea that all white men were equal citizens in a
country increasingly stratified by wealth,” particularly at a moment when
ever-larger numbers of whites found themselves living in frontier conditions
akin to “the lowest peasantry of Europe” (Sharfstein, p. 47, 49). Hopeful that migration west might improve their plight, settlers found themselves not on Jay Gitlin’s bourgeois
frontier, but a complex battleground where life was profoundly unequal, and
where the racial identities that bolstered slavery assumed a significance
independent of slavery, a place where the struggle for resources and the
struggle for identity merged, and where whiteness became both a legal status
and a destination. This is Sharfstein’s
most salient point. While those who
argue that America is more unequal today than ever before might try to cordon
off slavery as an exception, Sharfstein argues that behind the law of slavery
rested a much larger justification for inequality based on race, one that did
not simply “separate Africans and Europeans” as free and slave, but “spurred
some people of African descent to try to escape their classification.”
(Sharfstein, p. 21) This body of law,
Sharfstein demonstrates, survived well into the 20th Century.
A World of Citizens: Celebrating Linda Kerber
[We have the following announcement for A World of Citizens: Women, History, and the Vision of Linda K. Kerber, October 5-6, 2012.]
We hope Linda's students, friends, and colleagues will join us to honor and celebrate her career at a symposium to be held Oct. 5-6, 2012, in Iowa City. The theme of this symposium, "A World of Citizens: Women, History, and the Vision of Linda K. Kerber," draws on important threads in Linda's work over the decades of her career, and especially on her moving 2007 AHA Presidential Address, "The Stateless as the Citizen's Other." As a scholar of the rights, obligations, and complexities of citizenship; as a member of the generation which brought the study of women's history into college and university curricula; and as the friend and teacher of another generation of historians, Linda's influence reaches deep into our profession.
The Symposium will be held at the Old Capitol Senate Chambers on the University of Iowa Pentacrest. On Friday, October 5, the Symposium begins at 9:30 and ends at 4:45; it will be immediately followed by a reception and dinner at the Levitt Center for University Advancement. On Saturday, October 6, the Symposium resumes at 9:00 and ends at 4:15; a closing session and reception will be held at 4:15-6:00 at the Iowa Women’s Archives followed by a reception at Prairie Lights from 6:30-8:30.
If you plan to attend, please follow the link [here] to the Center for Conferences and scroll down to "A World of Citizens" in the October list of conferences. When you do, you'll be asked to create a password so that you can register for the symposium, order lunches and your banquet ticket, and indicate your intention to attend the Prairie Lights reception.
Credit |
We hope Linda's students, friends, and colleagues will join us to honor and celebrate her career at a symposium to be held Oct. 5-6, 2012, in Iowa City. The theme of this symposium, "A World of Citizens: Women, History, and the Vision of Linda K. Kerber," draws on important threads in Linda's work over the decades of her career, and especially on her moving 2007 AHA Presidential Address, "The Stateless as the Citizen's Other." As a scholar of the rights, obligations, and complexities of citizenship; as a member of the generation which brought the study of women's history into college and university curricula; and as the friend and teacher of another generation of historians, Linda's influence reaches deep into our profession.
The Symposium will be held at the Old Capitol Senate Chambers on the University of Iowa Pentacrest. On Friday, October 5, the Symposium begins at 9:30 and ends at 4:45; it will be immediately followed by a reception and dinner at the Levitt Center for University Advancement. On Saturday, October 6, the Symposium resumes at 9:00 and ends at 4:15; a closing session and reception will be held at 4:15-6:00 at the Iowa Women’s Archives followed by a reception at Prairie Lights from 6:30-8:30.
If you plan to attend, please follow the link [here] to the Center for Conferences and scroll down to "A World of Citizens" in the October list of conferences. When you do, you'll be asked to create a password so that you can register for the symposium, order lunches and your banquet ticket, and indicate your intention to attend the Prairie Lights reception.
Law, Society & Culture at Indiana
The Fall 2012 schedule is out for the colloquium of the Center for Law, Society, and Culture at the Indiana University Maurer School of Law. It includes some history sessions, including one by Felicity Turner, one of Indiana’s two Jerome Hall Postdoctoral Fellows. (The other is Sophia Wilson.)
Sept. 6 |
"Judicial Ethics and Supreme Court Exceptionalis"
Amanda FrostAmerican University Law School |
Sept. 26 Noon, 335 |
"Data-mining, Analysis, and Citizen
Activism: Can we create a new market for monitoring and regulating
economic activity and reverse the trend toward economic feudalism?"
Harvard University |
Oct. 4 | "Making apartheid work: Black workers, South African labor law, and the struggle for racial justice" Alex Lichtenstein Indiana University Department of History |
Oct. 25 | “Comparing Children’s Rights Regimes: Sweden and the United States in the Twentieth Century and into the Twenty-First” Michael Grossberg Indiana University Department of History Bengt Sandin Linköping University |
Nov. 1 | “Narratives of Infanticide: Mothers, Murder, and the State in Nineteenth-Century America” Felicity Turner Indiana University Jerome Hall Postdoctoral Fellow |
Nov. 29 | “How and Why Judges and Police Bend the Law: Human Rights, Courts and Law Enforcement in the Post-Soviet World” Sophia Wilson Indiana University Jerome Hall Postdoctoral Fellow |
Women’s Rights in Meiji Japan
The latest podcast from Marshall Poe’s New Books in History is an interview with Marnie Anderson on A Place in Public: Women’s Rights in Meiji Japan (Harvard University Asia Center, 2010). Here’s the link and the abstract:
In the late nineteenth century the Japanese elite embarked on an aggressive, ambitious program of modernization known in the West as the “Meiji Restoration.” In a remarkably short period of time, they transformed Japan: what was a thoroughly traditional, quasi-feudal welter of agricultural estates became a modern industrial nation-state. Since the inspiration for these reforms came from the West (the Japanese had seen what the Western Powers had done in China), the question of women’s status had to be dealt with. How did the Japanese–men and women, elite and commoner–do it? In A Place in Public: Women’s Rights in Meiji Japan (Harvard University Asia Center, 2010), Marnie Anderson attempts to answer this question. It’s a fascinating story, and Marnie does a terrific job of telling it (despite, I should say, of working in a remarkably thin and difficult documentary environment). This book is essential reading for anyone interested in East Asian and Gender Studies.
Monday, August 27, 2012
Triangle Legal History Seminar Schedule
Following up on our call for legal history workshop schedules, here is the line-up for the Triangle Legal History Seminar:
Hat tip: The Faculty Lounge
Sept. 21, 2012: Daniel Bessner, History Graduate Student, Duke University
David Gilmartin (image credit)
"'We Shall Repeal the Twentieth Century': Murray Rothbard and the Making of Radical Libertarianism"
Oct. 19, 2012: David Gilmartin, Professor of History, North Carolina State University
"The Paradox of Patronage: Influence, Dealing, and Moral Character in mid-20th century Indian Election Law"
Nov. 16, 2012: Emiliano Corral, Graduate of UNC Law School and recent Ph.D. recipient, University of Chicago
"Legal Culture as Impetus to Action: The Gary Code and Progressive-Era Capitalism."
Dec. 7, 2012: Linda Rupert, Assistant Professor of History, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
“'Henceforth al slaves who seek refuge in my domains shall be free': Spanish Royal Decrees regarding Inter-imperial Marronage in the Eighteenth-Century Caribbean." (jointly sponsored with the Triangle Early American History Seminar)
Verena Kasper-Marienberg (image credit) |
Jan. 18, 2012: Cynthia Greenlee, History Graduate Student, Duke University
"'A Most Offensive Outrage against One So Young': Defining Childhood and Sexual Harm in South Carolina's Criminal Courts, 1885-1905."
Feb. 15 , 2013: Verena Kasper-Marienberg, Institut fuer Geschichte, Karl Franzens Universitaet GrazFor more information, follow the link.
"Jewish Cases at an Early Modern Supreme Court: A Source for Legal and Gender History" (jointly sponsored with the Triangle Jewish Studies Seminar)
April 5, 2013: Steven Usselman, Professor, School of History, Technology, and Society, Georgia Tech University
"Antitrust as Technology Policy: The Case of Computing."
April 19, 2013: Madeline Zelin, Dean Lung Professor of Chinese Studies and Professor of History, Columbia University
“The Contested Role of Law in China’s First Commercial Law Regime”
Hat tip: The Faculty Lounge
Rahman, "Democracy and Productivity: The Glass-Steagall Act and the Shifting Discourse of Financial Regulation"
Image credit: The Roosevelt Institute |
Here's the abstract:
Regulatory reforms are not only the product of policy innovations; they are also shaped by the particular narratives, discourses, and arguments advanced in favor of or against reform. This paper examines the discourse of banking reform around the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933. The debate around the Act exemplifies a broader shift in discourses of financial regulatory reform, away from a previous era emphasizing the need to make concentrations of economic and political power democratically accountable, towards a new discourse grounding regulatory reform in the need to promote productive economic activity by preventing conflicts of interest and excess speculation. After exploring this shift in the rhetoric of reform around Glass-Steagall, this paper concludes by suggesting that this shift had lasting repercussions for the politics of financial regulation, conducing more readily to deregulation in the 1980s and 1990s, and undermining more aggressive attempts at financial reform in 2009.The article is available for download here, on SSRN.
Sunday, August 26, 2012
The Survey: The Early (French) Republic
If the Constitution aimed to secure inequality in the United States, how did average people respond? Many turned to evangelical religion, as I will demonstrate in a future post. Many also moved west. According to Edmund S. Morgan, tensions generated by class differences in Virginia encouraged founders like Thomas Jefferson to encourage westward expansion. This, most scholars argue, led directly to white/Indian conflict. However, Native Americans were not the only inhabitants of the American West at the time. As Jay Gitlin demonstrates in Bourgeois Frontier: French Towns, French Traders, and American Expansion (New Haven Yale University Press, 2009) much of North America's "wilderness"
was not only occupied by Indians but also French colonials, a point that has “never found a place in American history
textbooks." (BF, p. 2) According to Gitlin, “the French plugged Indian producers and
consumers into an international market economy.
Merchants such as Pierre Laclede and August Chouteau facilitated exchange and
encouraged regional development from a pioneering urban base." (BF, p. 15) The basis for this exchange was fur, and the French conducted business with “deerskin currency,” or “bucks," a point noted in James Neal Primm's Lion of the Valley: St. Louis Missouri, 1764-1980 (St. Louis: Missouri Historical Society, 1998). With this currency they bought “silks,
linens, and lace … fancy bonnets and shoes." Merchants labored up the Mississippi from New
Orleans, averaged 10 miles a day, bringing “silver, iron, and copper ware,
mirrors, clothing, blankets, and Iberian wines.” Members of a frontier bourgeoisie, the
Chouteaus had more in common with elites in New Orleans and Paris than the
frontier-people of North America.
The Chouteaus also enjoyed a different relationship with Indians, arguably a more equal one. According to historian James Primm, “[T]wenty-three
Indian tribes regularly … received presents at [St. Louis],” Laclede’s company
presenting “annual gifts of blankets, mirrors, vermilion, awls, knives, guns,
powder and ball, corn, tobacco, cloth, and other commodities, including brandy
at times, to the tribes.” Laclede himself “ceremoniously gave elaborate
large and small medals, fancy plumed military hats, and even uniform jackets to
the chiefs – usually distributed according to rank.” Once the Louisiana Purchase was made, however, Jefferson moved quickly to stifle this trade, in part by forbidding the French from providing Indians with firearms in exchange for fur. "The trade which is carried on with the savage nations," wrote the French citizens of St. Louis in 1803, "is founded entirely on fur peltries, and almost all are unable to procure them except by means of firearms." (Letter from Merchants of St. Louis, 1803, Territorial Papers of the United States). Put simply, if the West was to be a safety valve for class tensions in the East, then Indians had to be disarmed. Whatever the right to bear arms meant, it did not necessarily mean the right to trade them.
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