Emperor Norton Was More Interested in National Unity Than in "State's Rights"
Discovery of an 1864 Proclamation
EMPEROR NORTON always was about the big picture.
In his Proclamation of 17 September 1859 declaring himself Emperor, Joshua Norton wrote:
I…do hereby order and direct the representatives of the different States of the Union to assemble in Musical Hall, of this city, on the 1st day of February next, then and there to make such alterations in the existing laws of the Union as may ameliorate the evils under which the country is laboring, and thereby cause confidence to exist, both at home and abroad, in our stability and integrity.
Fourteen years later, in December 1873, the Emperor was in Sacramento pressing the point. The Sacramento Daily Bee took note of the Emperor’s visit by calling him “the representative of Caesarism on this slope.”
In the same issue, the Bee published the following editorial, “He Is Here,” that goes to the substance of the Emperor’s visit:
Emperor Norton…came here last night all the way from San Francisco for the sole purpose of laying his views of the science of government before the Legislature and asking for favorable action thereon. His theory, as he will explain it to members, is to abolish State lines and State Governments, and blend the people of this Union into one harmonious whole....
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WHILE ON ANOTHER visit to Sacramento, some 10 years earlier, Emperor Norton gave a preview of his thinking on this subject — his theory of government, if you will — in a Proclamation issued on 6 January 1864 and published in the San Francisco Daily Evening Bulletin three days later as part of the Bulletin’s “Letter from Sacramento.”
We’ve not seen this Proclamation mentioned elsewhere and believe that — with this publication — it may be seeing the light of day for the first time in many generations:
Conceiving that the nation is drifting toward absolutism, and being desirous of preserving the Constitution, and if possible, perpetuating the vote of the American citizen; Now, therefore, do we hereby command the State Legislatures of all the States of the Union to take such measures as may be necessary to merge the State and Federal Constitutions into one, thereby consolidating the same, making therefrom one instead of a number of Governments.
If the Sacramento Bee’s characterization of Emperor Norton’s views at the end of 1873 is accurate, then — arguably…
Between (a) the publication of his Proclamation of January 1864 — coinciding with the approach to the end of the third year of the Civil War — and (b) his Sacramento visit of December 1873…
The Emperor’s belief in the power of a strong national government to produce strong national unity — to the point of making state government, and states themselves, irrelevant — was being distilled to a higher and higher proof.
Exactly what we should expect from a monarch — is it not?
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