The Politics of Union: Northern Politics During the Civil WarUniversity of Nebraska Press, 1980 - 202 páginas "The best general account of politics in the North," as David Herbert Donald calls this book, is also the first one-volume history of its subject. Abraham Lincoln's single goal of saving the Union required not simply subduing the South but contending as well with divisiveness in the North--with refractory state officials, draft resisters, peace advocates, secret organizations, with Northern Democrats (too often seen only as Copperheads or as traitors to the Union), and with powerful Republicans who often vocally disagreed with Lincoln's policies. In this account, Radical Republicans represent consensus with Lincoln more than conflict, sectional more than economic interests, and party over faction. Largely, dissent was heard and accommodated; and, if the federal legislation of the time did amount to a Second American Revolution, it emerged from the conflicts, within the North as well as against the South, of a nation at war. The outcome was a nation not only saved but strengthened and slavery ended. |
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Página 82
... later Lincoln in an irregular act sent a measure to Congress for distributing bonds to states enacting immediate or gradual emancipa- tion , and he went over to the Capitol for further talks with Border men . That staunch antislavery ...
... later Lincoln in an irregular act sent a measure to Congress for distributing bonds to states enacting immediate or gradual emancipa- tion , and he went over to the Capitol for further talks with Border men . That staunch antislavery ...
Página 110
... later several times amended . The Provost Marshal General thought the law as improved es- tablished " a military system adequate to any emergency .... " This opinion is perhaps too lofty , but the careful scholar J. F. Leach came to a ...
... later several times amended . The Provost Marshal General thought the law as improved es- tablished " a military system adequate to any emergency .... " This opinion is perhaps too lofty , but the careful scholar J. F. Leach came to a ...
Página 168
... later recommended a second important new office - naval judge advocate general . Congress complied with both recommendations . David Farragut became the first vice admiral in United States History ; when he appeared in the Senate ...
... later recommended a second important new office - naval judge advocate general . Congress complied with both recommendations . David Farragut became the first vice admiral in United States History ; when he appeared in the Senate ...
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
CHAPTER | 6 |
The Appeal to Arms | 18 |
Derechos de autor | |
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The Politics of Union: Northern Politics During the Civil War James A. Rawley Vista de fragmentos - 1974 |
Términos y frases comunes
abolitionist Abraham Lincoln administration amendment American antislavery army authority bill Blacks cabinet chairman Civil committee Confederacy Confederate confiscation congressional conscription constitutional Copperhead crisis Davis draft election emancipation Emancipation Proclamation enacted executive factions favored federacy Federal Fernando Wood Fessenden finance Fort Sumter freedom Frémont governor habeas corpus Henry Winter Davis House issue Jefferson Davis July Kentucky labor leader legal tender legislation legislature Liberty lican Lincoln loyal Lyman Trumbull majority Maryland McClellan measures ment military militia million national banks navy Negroes North Northern Ohio opposition passed peace platform political president presidential proclamation radical radical Republicans railroad reconstruction Repub Republican party resolution seceded secession secretary sectional Senate session Seward Seymour slavery soldiers South Southern Stanton Stevens Sumner Supreme Court tariff taxation Thirty-seventh Congress tion troops Unionists United Vallandigham victory Virginia volunteers vote voters War Democrats writ of habeas York