From Election to Sumter: How the Union Fell Apart
Historian Adam Goodheart discusses the tumultuous period between Lincoln’s election and the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter
- By Brian Wolly
- Smithsonian.com, November 15, 2010, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 5)
Just two days before the election day in 1860, an editorial in the New York Herald, which was one of the most important newspapers in the whole country, said by electing an antislavery president like Lincoln, we will be killing the goose that lays the golden eggs. It reminded Northerners how much of the Northern economy was based on the cotton grown in the South being milled into cloth in the great textile mills of Lowell, Massachusetts, and elsewhere in New England.
A lot of the shipping industry in New York was based on the fact that it was largely Northern ships that would take the cotton bales from Southern ports to European ports and goods from the North down to the South. Northern manufacturers made the cloth for slaves’ clothing. Midwestern farmers grew the corn and raised the hogs that were shipped downriver to feed the slaves on the plantations.
The Northern economy was enmeshed with slavery in many different ways. Northern banks and insurance companies to a degree owned slaves themselves through mortgages and policies.
We forget today that slaves were not simply labor, but they were capital. The price of slaves in the years before the Civil War spiked to the point where in 1860 the combined value of slaves in the South was larger than the value of industry and railroads in the entire country. It was highly unlikely that the Southerners were going to divest themselves of their slaves willingly; slavery was flourishing as it never had before.
Goodheart’s book, 1861: The Civil War Awakening, will be published by Knopf in April 2011. He is the director of the Center for the Study of the American Experience at Washington College and is currently blogging about the Civil War for the New York Times at http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/category/disunion/
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Comments (6)
I wonder about the historian who can not use the word "literally" in the correct way. This is no small point. Many people use "literally" as a synonym for "really." It's not. It means the opposite of "figuratively."
Posted by Vincent Chaffee on April 16,2011 | 06:49 AM
Haley Barbour is not a racist nor are most people racist but those who are come equally divided black and white. Our governor has provided excellent leadership, kept Mississipp, along with the support of the legislature, out of financial peril and has done a terrific service to the state by helping bring in industry and high paying jobs.
What Haley Barbour is, however, is a very influential Republican and a gifted politician. He is a target of the Left for that reason. He cannot be President only because he is from Mississippi so in spite of his ability, success, leadership and good judgment he is targeted and excluded by Leftist hot heads.
Posted by Frank Edwards on January 18,2011 | 02:54 PM
I find the statement that Justice Taney was not an ill-intentioned man a bit hard to swallow. By that standard, Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson, etc. etc. were all men who were not ill-intentioned. Their only flaw was that they believed, truly, that one man had the right to enslave another and that anyone who felt strongly the other way was a bigot. The truth is--they knew that their position was morally bankrupt. They showed it by their vocabulary: slavery was a "peculiar institution." If it could pass muster morally why not call it slavery? Because they knew it was wrong. The very wrongness of it made them go off half-cocked if someone criticized them. They took great pride in the excesses of John Brown--some of which were actually criminal--as though his craziness validated theirs. The sad thing is that this controversy is alive and well today what with the Confederacy Ball in South Carolina which has as its piece de resistance a showing of Birth of a Nation. We see on television Haley Barbour of Mississippi bloviating about how his home town treated blacks well--when the obious truth is that they were not--and claiming that the White Citizens Councils of the 60's were just groups of well-intentioned businessmen who wanted to keep the north from interfering in their affairs. This long lie is all of a piece, and the poison of these lies has become infused into our national dialogue.
Posted by Lynda Christian on December 22,2010 | 10:17 PM
I find it amazing that after 150 years you know what Wendell Phillips and William Lloyd Garrison as well as the "John Brown radicals" were "READY TO SAY" regarding the possibility of southern succession.
Posted by Antoinette Dickenson on December 5,2010 | 09:59 PM
Regarding the media, I think it is important to point out that there was great censorship as well, at least in the South, in places such as Charleston, where abolitionist materials were prohibited.
Posted by Rick Fonda on December 4,2010 | 07:14 AM
Thank you for the article.....I am really interested in this time in history
Posted by Elaine Hamilton on December 2,2010 | 05:21 PM