Online Encyclopedia

SECESSION

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 569 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SECESSION  , a

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term used in
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political science to signify the withdrawal of a state from a confederacy or composite state, of which it had previously been a
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part; and the resumption of all powers formerly delegated by it to the federal government, and of its status as an
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independent state . To secede is a
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sovereign right; secession, therefore, is based on the theory that the
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sovereignty of the individual states forming a confederacy or federal union has not been absorbed into a single new sovereignty . Secession is a right claimed or exercised by weaker states of a union whose rights are threatened by the stronger states, which seldom acknowledge such a principle . War generally follows the secession of a member of a union, and the seceding state, being weaker, is usually conquered and the union more firmly consolidated . The
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history of
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Europe furnishes several examples of secession or attempts to secede: in 1309 the Swiss cantons withdrew from the
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Empire and formed a confederacy from which, in 1843-1847, the Catholic cantons seceded and formed a new confederacy called the Sonderbund, which was crushed in the war that followed; in 1523 Sweden seceded from the Kalmarian Union formed in 1397 of Denmark, Sweden and Norway; and in 1814 Norway seceded and entered into a union with Sweden, from which, in the same
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year, it attempted to secede but was forcibly prevented; Norway, however, accomplished a peaceful secession from the Union in 1905 and resumed her independent status; in 1848-1849 Hungary attempted to withdraw from the union with Austria but the attempt was defeated; Prussia and other north German states withdrew in 1866-1868 from the German Confederation and formed a new one; a
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late instance of successful secession is that of
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Panama, which seceded in 1903 from the Republic of
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Colombia . But secession in theory and practice is best exhibited in the history of the
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United States . Most of the
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original states, and many of the later ones, at some period when rights were in
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jeopardy proclaimed that their sovereignty might be exercised in secession . The right to secede was based, the secessionists claimed, upon the fact that each state was sovereign, becoming so by successful revolution against England; there had been no political connexion between the colonies;. the treaty of 1783 recognized them " as
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free, sovereign and independent states "; this sovereignty was recognized in the Articles of Confederation, and not surrendered, they asserted, under the Constitution; the Union of 1787 was really formed by a secession from the Union of 1776-1787 . New states claimed all the rights of the old ones, having been admitted to equal
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standing . Assertions of the right and necessity of secession were frequent from the beginning; separatist conspiracies were rife in the West until 1812; various leaders in New England made threats of secession in 1790—1796 and 1800-1815—especially in 18o3 on account of the
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purchase of
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Louisiana, in 1811 on account of the proposed
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admission of Louisiana as a state, and during the troubles ending in the War of 1812 . Voluntary separation was frequently talked of before 1815 . Two early commentators on the Constitution, St George Tucker in 1803 and William Rawle in 1825, declared that the sovereign states might secede at will .

In 1832-1833 the " Union " party of

South Carolina was composed of those who rejected
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nullification, holding to secession as the only remedy; and from 183o to 186o certain radical abolitionists advocated a division of the Union . But as the North grew stronger and the South in comparison grew weaker, as
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slavery came to be more and more the dominant political issue, and as the South made demands concerning that "
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peculiar institution " to which the North was unwilling to accede, less was heard of secession in the North and more in the South . Between 1845 and 186o secession came to be generally accepted by the South as the only means of preserving her institutions from the interference of the North . The first general
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movement toward secession was in 1850 . In 186o-1861, when the federal government passed into the control of the stronger section, the
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Southern states, individually, seceded and then formed the Confederate states, and in the war that followed they were conquered and j forced back into the Union . So, in the United States, secession I along with state sovereignty is of the past . From the
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historical point of view it may be suggested that neither North nor South was correct in theory in 1861: the United States were not a nation; neither were the states sovereign; but from the embryo political communities of 1776-1787, in which no proper sovereignty existed anywhere, two nationalities were slowly being evolved and two sovereignties were in the making; the North and the South each fulfilled most of the requirements for a nation and they were mutually unlike and hostile . See Jefferson Davis, Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government (New York, 1881); A . H . Stephens, Constitutional View of the War between the States (
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Philadelphia, 1868-187o) ; J . L . M .

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Curry,
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Civil History of the Confederate States (Richmond, 1900) ; J . W . Du Bois, William L . Yancey (
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Birmingham, 1892) ; J . Hodgson, Cradle of the Confederacy (
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Mobile, 1876) ; B . J . Sage, Republic of Republics (Boston, 1876) ; W . Wilson, The State (Boston, 1900) ; A . L . Lowell, Government and Parties in
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Continental Europe (Boston, 1896) ; J . W . Burgess, Political Science and
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Comparative Constitutional Law (New York, 1895), and C .

E . Merriam,

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American Political Theories (New York, 1902) . See also STATE RIGHTS, NULLIFICATION, and CONFEDERATE STATES . (W . L .

End of Article: SECESSION
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ANGELO SECCHI (1818-1878)
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