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Happy birthday to the IRS

In 1862, the Civil War was raging and it had become clear that it would not be the quick and easy victory either the North or the South had predicted at its outset.

Men and materiel were being chewed up by the war machines on both sides of the Mason-Dixon line.

And one of the pressing questions in the United States Congress was how to pay for keeping the men and materiel on the move.

And, in 1862, Fred T. Frelinghuysen was a 42-year-old lawyer who lived in Newark, New Jersey, with his wife and five children.1 His law practice was located at 283 Market Street in Newark, New Jersey. And for the first time in his professional life, in 1862, he had to cough up $10 to an outfit called the Bureau of Internal Revenue.2

Because 151 years ago, today, Congress passed what became known simply as the Tax Act — a vehicle to raise funds to finance the war… and establishing what was then called the Bureau of Internal Revenue. The precursor to today’s Internal Revenue Service.3 The agency we all love to hate.

It wasn’t the first time Congress had passed a tax to finance the Civil War. It did so a year before in 1861.4 But efforts to enforce that law had gone essentially nowhere; even Treasury Secretary Salmon Chase had said it was unworkable because it didn’t have any enforcement mechanism. 5

Principally because of the lack of enforcement, the 1861 law didn’t raise the money needed. So along came the 1862 statute, which spanned 57 pages of text and 119 sections and had three essential parts:

     • the first-ever graduated tax on income;
     • an excise tax on many goods and services;
     • and an enforcement mechanism headed by a Commissioner of Internal Revenue whose enforcers were known as the Bureau of Internal Revenue.6

Now as citizens we may not want to celebrate the birthday of the IRS.

But as genealogists? Oh yes. That’s a whole ‘nother kettle of fish, isn’t it?

Where else but in the records of the Bureau of Internal Revenue would we find out that, in 1862, E.A. Stevens of Castle Point, New Jersey, paid $49 in taxes on a $2000 yacht, a billiard table, and five horse carriages?7

Or that Allan Stevens of Owego, Tioga County, New York, had to pay a $5.85 tax bill on 1 November 1862 on 44 pairs of boots made and sold, valued at 195.05 total?8

Or that Edwin M. Robinson of East Orange, New Jersey, had $83,089.31 in income in 1862 on which he paid $4154.47 in income taxes?9 (And the mind simply boggles at that kind of income in 1862. One website I looked at said that would be about $1,930,232.56 in 2013 dollars.10)

And, of course, once having begun to tax the citizens, governments are loathe to stop taxing. And the checkered past of the income tax notwithstanding, the Bureau of Internal Revenue and its successor the IRS have continued to collect taxes — and create records — ever since:

Internal taxes for nonrevenue purposes were imposed on oleomargarine, 1886; opium, 1890; beet sugar, 1893; and white phosphorus matches, 1912. An income tax included in the Wilson Tariff Act (28 Stat. 570), August 27, 1894, was declared unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court, May 20, 1895. Wartime taxes, levied during the Spanish-American War by an act of June 13, 1898 (30 Stat. 448), were substantially repealed by an act of March 2, 1901 (31 Stat. 938). The 16th amendment to the Constitution, effective February 25, 1913, authorized a federal income tax, which was imposed by an act of October 13, 1913 (38 Stat. 166).11

Check it out… and remember that the Civil War taxes were collected even after the War, and even in the southern states.

Yep, we may not like taxes. But boy do we like records. And tax records are among the very best there are.


 
SOURCES

  1. 1860 U.S. census, Essex County, NJ, population schedule, p. 86 (stamped), dwelling 861, family 1204, Fred T. Frelinghuysen; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 30 Jun 2013); citing National Archive microfilm publication M653, roll 688; imaged from FHL microfilm 803688.
  2. 1862-1863 Annual Tax List, District 5 (NJ), Division 12, alphabetical list, entry for F.T. Frelinghuysen; “U.S. IRS Tax Assessment Lists, 1862-1918,” database and images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 30 Jun 2013); citing National Archive microfilm publication M603, roll 31.
  3. “An Act to provide Internal Revenue to support the Government and to pay Interest on the Public Debt,” 12 Stat. 432 (1 July 1862); digital images, “A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774-1875,” Library of Congress, American Memory (http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/index.html : accessed 30 Jun 2013).
  4. Ibid., “An Act to provide increased Revenue from Imports, to pay Interest on the Public Debt, and for other Purposes,” 12 Stat. 292 (5 Aug 1861).
  5. See generally Wikipedia (http://www.wikipedia.com), “Revenue Act of 1861,” rev. 21 May 2013.
  6. See “An Act to provide Internal Revenue to support the Government and to pay Interest on the Public Debt,” 12 Stat. 432-489.
  7. 1862-1863 Annual Tax List, District 5 (NJ), Division 16, alphabetical list, entry for E.A. Stevens.
  8. 1862-1863 Monthly and Annual Tax Lists, District 26 (NY), Division 17, p. 3-4 (penned), entry for Allan Stevens; “U.S. IRS Tax Assessment Lists, 1862-1918,” database and images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 30 Jun 2013); citing National Archive microfilm publication M603, roll 177.
  9. 1862-1863 Annual Income Tax List, District 5 (NJ), Division 5, p. 7 (penned), entry for Edwin M. Stevens.
  10. Inflation Calculator, DaveManuel.com (http://www.davemanuel.com : accessed 30 Jun 2013).
  11. Guide to Federal Records, Records of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Record Group 58, National Archives (http://www.archives.gov/ : accessed 30 June 2013).