Rhett & the Golden Circle
June 4, 2012 By
Michael
Southern Nationalist Network
Robert Barnwell Rhett’s optimistic vision of an an
independent Southern confederation which would spread south through the
Caribbean and the secessionist regions of Mexico did not come to fruition. In
fact, Rhett became a bitter critic of the Confederate government which he more
than anyone else had worked so tirelessly for three decades to create. In the
aftermath of South Carolina’s secession from the Union though, the South’s
leading Fire-eater was extremely cheerful and believed his dream was all but
inevitable. Author and historian William C Davis describes Rhett’s outlook for
the fledgling Confederacy, a vision which was very much in line with the
aspirations of the Knights of the Golden Circle and other Southern expansionists
who dreamed of a vast classical civilisation of confederated republics in the
New World based upon agriculture and free trade and led by
Southerners:
[Forming] that new nation [sic] would only be the beginning, not
the ending of their challenges, for they would have to prevent free states from
seceding to join them; of that he was certain. Theirs must be exclusively a
slaveholding confederacy; however, like ancient Greece and Rome, whose glories
of intellect he attributed to slavery. They must also avoid the pitfalls of
universal white suffrage with the whole population controlling the government.
The only safe form of government in a country where population grew faster than
capital, and where the majority owned no property, was an oligarchy such as
South Carolina’s, for otherwise those who had not would soon use their votes to
take from those who had. Further to that end, they must reform taxation in their
new nation [sic] and engage in free trade with other nations, with tariffs for
revenue only, no internal improvements, and no monopolies allowed or encouraged
by government. Every man must have the same chance to rise or fall strictly on
his own merits. And finally, even if a new confederation should be formed, South
Carolina must maintain full control over the forts in Charleston harbor and
never again allow any other power, even a new Southern government, to control
them. Already he voiced the hint of distrust of any sort of nationalism or
strong central authority in their future alliances.
Impelled by these ideas,
the South could form a new constitution and a new confederacy that would last
the ages and make them powerful as well as great. The nations of the world would
bow to them and their produce. And that was not all. “We will expand, as our
growth and civilization shall demand – over Mexico – over the isles of the sea –
over the far-off Southern tropics – until we shall establish a great
Confederation of Republics – the greatest, freest and most useful the world has
ever seen.” It was the same expansionist promise he had made ten years before at
Walterborough. The South would be the new Rome, extending its brand of localism,
conservatism, and slavery across half a hemisphere.
Source: Davis, William C. Rhett: The Turbulent Life
and Times of a Fire-Eater Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina
Press, 2001. Page 401.
Also see: Rhett’s vision of a vast, Southern-led
confederation, The Republic of the Yucatan & the Golden Circle and Barbados,
Carolina & the civilisation of the Lower South