Senator Nathaniel Macon of North Carolina was called “the last of the Romans.” As a hard money man, he viewed gold and silver as the only constitutional currency and paper money as an evil. He was also opposed to all pensions to officers and soldiers of the Revolution “and refused a pension for himself though entitled to one, for he urged that all had been rewarded by the establishment of independence and freedom, and that was sufficient in itself.”
Bernhard Thuersam, Director
Cape Fear Historical Institute
www.cfhi.net
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Nathaniel Macon on American Self-Determination:
Buck Springs, February 9, 1833
“Sir: I have received your letter of the 24th ulto.
There can be no doubt that the United States are in a deplorable situation, and that the publication of the opinion you desire would be useless. My opinion has never been a secret, and I have always stated it to those who wanted to know it.
In the year 1824, the Constitution was buried. The Senators who were then present will, it is believed, recollect the fact, and was never afterward quoted by me while I continued in the Senate. The opinions of General Washington, Mr. Jefferson and Governor Clinton were known but not respected.
I never believed that a State could nullify and remain in the Union, but always believed that a State could secede when she pleased, provided she would pay her proportion of the public debt. This right I have considered the best guard to public liberty and the public justice that could be desired, and it ought to have prevented what is now felt in the South – oppression.
A government of opinion established by sovereign States cannot be maintained by force. The use of force makes enemies, and enemies cannot live in peace.”
Nathaniel Macon
(Letter to S.P. Carson, Reminiscences and Memoirs of North Carolina and Eminent North Carolinians, John H. Wheeler, Columbus Printing Works, 1884, page 454)b
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"The Last Of The Romans"
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