Tag: Civil War

  • The Civil War: Jefferson Davis: Farewell Address in the U.S. Senate

    January 21, 1861

    United States Senator Jefferson Davis, of Mississippi, rose on the floor of that august chamber the morning of January 21, 1861 to make an announcement. It would not be one pertaining to some Senate bill, or a resolution, but instead an announcement that he was leaving the Senate.

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  • The Civil War: Catherine Edmondston: Diary, December 27, 1860

    December 27, 1860

    Catherine Edmondston lived with her husband in North Carolina, and they operated a plantation there. During a visit to Aiken, South Carolina, to see her parents, she became a witness to the action surrounding South Carolina’s secession from the Union.

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  • The Civil War: South Carolina Declaration of the Causes of Secession

    December 24, 1860

    On Christmas Eve, 1860, South Carolina announced that it would, indeed, be seceding from the Union and declared the many causes for taking this drastic step. On its face, this declaration would appear to articulate the reasons for secession and presumably would serve as part of the historical record—as an explanation of the secessionist’s cause. But, given the importance of the moment, perhaps this declaration would simply be a cloak—covering darker ambitions to continue to subjugate all other races to the white race with a veneer of nobly preserving states’ rights.

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  • The Civil War: Memorandum Regarding Abraham Lincoln

    December 22, 1860

    Two days prior, South Carolina had decided to secede from the Union with a 169-0 vote. The day after that vote, the New York Times reported that President James Buchanan had ordered Major Robert Anderson to surrender Fort Moultrie in Charleston harbor, if attacked. The report was not entirely correct, however: Buchanan’s Secretary of War, John Floyd, had instructed Anderson to “exercise a sound military discretion” if attacked and to avoid “a vain and useless sacrifice” of life “upon a mere point of honor.”

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  • The Civil War: Henry Adams to Charles Francis Adams Jr.

    The Civil War: Henry Adams to Charles Francis Adams Jr.

    December 18, 1860

    Washington, D.C., as ever, was the site of negotiations that would change the direction of the country. A month after Abraham Lincoln’s victory in the election of 1860, the national dialogue was rife with talk of secession. However, there had not yet been any state that had made good on its threats and seceded. There was even talk of ratifying an amendment to the Constitution that would protect the institution of slavery—but it would not amount to anything more than talk.

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  • The Civil War: Benjamin F. Wade: Remarks in the U.S. Senate

    The Civil War: Benjamin F. Wade: Remarks in the U.S. Senate

    December 17, 1860

    Benjamin Wade, a Republican Senator from Ohio, rose to speak in the Senate. There were murmurs abound of averting the crisis—of stopping states from seceding from the Union. Some talked of forming a committee to explore the potential for a compromise between northern and southern states, even though no one knew what contours such a compromise could take. After all, for decades, Congress had been encapsulating compromises into bills, presidents had been signing those bills into law, and none of the laws resolved the tensions between the states.

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  • The Civil War: New-York Daily Tribune: The Right of Secession

    December 17, 1860

    Thurlow Weed, the editor of the Albany Evening Journal and one of the leaders of the Republican Party in New York, had criticized another newspaper editor, Horace Greeley of the New-York Daily Tribune. Weed’s criticism was on the issue of secession and Greeley’s apparent support for it.

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  • The Civil War: Joseph E. Brown to Alfred H. Colquitt

    December 7, 1860

    A false dichotomy, or false dilemma, is a situation where a person is choosing from two options and believes that there are no other options available. The worst kind of false dichotomy occurs where there are not only other options but false information matriculating into the public discourse and creeping into the minds of people—particularly those people who are easily influenced; the kind of people who can come to believe anything, no matter how outlandish.

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  • The Civil War: Abraham Lincoln to John A. Gilmer

    Springfield, Illinois

    December 15, 1860

    The outgoing president, James Buchanan, had delivered his lukewarm message of unity to the country. South Carolina wasn’t swayed; she continued her efforts to secede. The incoming president, Abraham Lincoln, had the opportunity to send to the country his own statement. Perhaps he still could save the Union without a war.

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  • The Civil War: J.D.B. DeBow: The Non-Slaveholders of the South

    Nashville, Tennessee

    December 5, 1860

    J.D.B. DeBow had run into a friend on the street and talked with him about how, in the South, even non-slaveholders benefitted from the region’s slave labor system. Then, promising to expand on what he said, he wrote this friend a letter, setting out in detail—in ten points—those benefits. As is common in political discourse, people use fallacious arguments to support their positions. DeBow was one such person.

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