General Grant's Infamy
The Civil War hero expelled Jews from three states until Lincoln made him
rescind the order.
Reprinted with permission of
the American Jewish Historical Society from "Chapters
in American History."
In 1862, in the heat of the Civil War, General Ulysses S.
Grant initiated the most blatant official episode of anti-Semitism in 19th-century
American history. In December of that year, Grant issued his infamous General
Order No. 11, which expelled all Jews from Kentucky, Tennessee, and
Mississippi.
Background
The immediate cause of the expulsion was the raging black
market in Southern cotton. Although enemies in war, the North and South
remained dependent on each other economically. Northern textile mills needed
Southern cotton. The Union Army itself used Southern cotton in its tents and
uniforms. Although the Union military command preferred an outright ban on
trade, President Lincoln decided to allow limited trade in Southern cotton.
To control that trade, Lincoln insisted the Treasury
Department and the Army license it. As commander of the Department of the
Tennessee, Grant was charged with issuing trade licenses in his area. As cotton
prices soared in the North, unlicensed traders bribed Union officers to allow
them to buy Southern cotton without a permit. As one exasperated correspondent
told the Secretary of War, "Every colonel, captain or quartermaster is in
a secret partnership with some operator in cotton; every soldier dreams of
adding a bale of cotton to his monthly pay."
In the fall of 1862, Grant was pressured by his superiors to
capture heavily defended Vicksburg, which would allow the Union to control the
entire Mississippi River and cut the Confederacy in half. Grant resented having
to divert his personal attention from capturing Vicksburg to controlling the
cotton trade--and especially the corruption it was causing. Merchants seeking
trade permits besieged his headquarters.
When Grant's own father appeared one day seeking trade
licenses for a group of Cincinnati merchants, some of whom were Jews, Grant's
frustration boiled over.
The Jewish Connection
A handful of the corrupt traders were Jews, although the
great majority was not. In the emotional climate of the war zone, ancient
prejudices flourished. The terms "Jew," "profiteer" "speculator,"
and "trader" were employed interchangeably. Union commanding General
Henry W. Halleck linked "traitors and Jew peddlers." Grant shared
Halleck's mentality, describing "the Israelites" as "an
intolerable nuisance."
In November 1862, convinced that the black market in cotton
was organized "mostly by Jews and other unprincipled traders," Grant
ordered that "no Jews are to be permitted to travel on the railroad
southward [into the Department] from any point," nor were they to be
granted trade licenses. When illegal trading continued, on December 17th Grant
issued Order No. 11: "The Jews, as a class violating every regulation of
trade established by the Treasury Department... are hereby expelled from
[Kentucky, Tennessee, and Mississippi] within 24 hours."
Subordinates enforced the order at once in the area
surrounding Grant's headquarters in Holly Springs, Mississippi. Some Jewish
traders had to trudge 40 miles on foot to evacuate the area. In Paducah,
Kentucky, military officials gave the town's 30 Jewish families--all long-term
residents, none of them speculators, and at least two of them Union Army
veterans--24 hours to leave.
Fighting the Order
A group of Paducah's Jewish merchants led by Cesar Kaskel
dispatched an indignant telegram to President Lincoln condemning Grant's order
as an "enormous outrage on all laws and humanity... the grossest violation
of the Constitution and our rights as good citizens under it." Jewish
leaders organized protest rallies in St. Louis, Louisville, and Cincinnati, and
telegrams reached the White House from the Jewish communities of Chicago, New
York, and Philadelphia.
Cesar Kaskel arrived in Washington on January 3, 1863. Two
days earlier, the Emancipation Proclamation had gone into effect. Kaskel
conferred with influential Jewish Republican Adolphus Solomons and then went
with Cincinnati Congressman John A. Gurley directly to the White House. Lincoln
received them promptly, studied Kaskel's copies of General Order No. 11 and the
specific order expelling Kaskel from Paducah, and commanded Halleck to order
Grant to revoke General Order No. 11. Grant complied three days later.
On January 6th, a delegation led by Rabbi Isaac M. Wise of
Cincinnati called on Lincoln to express its gratitude that Grant's order had
been rescinded. Lincoln received the delegation cordially, expressed surprise
that Grant had issued such a command, and stated his conviction that "to
condemn a class is, to say the least, to wrong the good with the bad." He
drew no distinction between Jew and Gentile, the president said, and would
allow no American to be wronged because of his religious affiliation.
After the war, Grant transcended his anti-Semitic
reputation. He explained his actions by saying that he had signed the order,
which had been prepared by a subordinate, without reading it. Grant carried the
Jewish vote in the Presidential election of 1868 and named several Jews to high
office. However, General Order No. 11 remains a blight on the military career
of the general who saved the Union.