In 1830, at the age of 24, Aiken attended a
nullification dinner, where many of his peers offered toasts in support of the idea of
South Carolinian independence. Thirty-one years before the outbreak of the
American Civil War, Aiken stood and spoke: “The Union—Let not the hasty and ill-timed resistance on the part of the South sever forever the golden links with which we are so beautifully united." In an 1865 interview, Aiken said, "No, I have never cast my lot with them (the secessionists). I told them they were wrong from the first. I gave a toast for the Union at a nullification supper in 1830, and offended all my young associates, and since the rebellion commenced I have not been to Richmond or Montgomery, and have declined office from
Mr. Davis (President of the Confederacy) for myself and friends. When
Mr. Davis was my guest recently in Charleston, I defended the Union, and scouted the absurd
doctrine of secession in a conversation with him. Since the war began I have never said nor done a thing of which my conscience accuses me as an act of disloyalty to the nation." Aiken continued, "These have been four dreadful years," ,"but I told the
rebels from the beginning what the end would be. I have been disappointed in only one respect—I told them I would give them two years to be conquered in, and it has taken four. They have fought desperately; every boy partook of the fanaticism and went into the fight, and the woman cheered them on and gave their jewels and treasures to the cause. You of the
North know nothing of the war in this respect. Every family in the South is bereaved, and I told them it would be so." == Renaming of Aiken Fellows Society ==