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The F Street Mess - How Southern Senators Rewrote the Kansas-Nebraska Act (Paperback)
Loot Price: R927
Discovery Miles 9 270
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The F Street Mess - How Southern Senators Rewrote the Kansas-Nebraska Act (Paperback)
Series: Civil War America
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Pushing back against the idea that the Slave Power conspiracy was
merely an ideological construction, Alice Elizabeth Malavasic
argues that some southern politicians in the 1850s did indeed hold
an inordinate amount of power in the antebellum Congress and used
it to foster the interests of slavery. Malavasic focuses her
argument on Senators David Rice Atchison of Missouri, Andrew
Pickens Butler of South Carolina, and Robert M. T. Hunter and James
Murray Mason of Virginia, known by their contemporaries as the ""F
Street Mess"" for the location of the house they shared. Unlike the
earlier and better-known triumvirate of John C. Calhoun, Henry
Clay, and Daniel Webster, the F Street Mess was a functioning
oligarchy within the U.S. Senate whose power was based on shared
ideology, institutional seniority, and personal friendship. By
centering on their most significant achievement - forcing a rewrite
of the Nebraska bill that repealed the restriction against slavery
above the 36 degrees 30' parallel - Malavasic demonstrates how the
F Street Mess's mastery of the legislative process led to one of
most destructive pieces of legislation in United States history and
helped pave the way to secession.
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