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Bloody Flag of Anarchy - Unionism in South Carolina During the Nullification Crisis (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,238
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Bloody Flag of Anarchy - Unionism in South Carolina During the Nullification Crisis (Hardcover)
Series: Conflicting Worlds: New Dimensions of the American Civil War
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Generations of scholars have debated why the Union collapsed and
descended into civil war in the spring of 1861. Turning this
question on its head, Brian C. Neumann's Bloody Flag of Anarchy
asks how the fragile Union held together for so long. This
fascinating study grapples with this dilemma by reexamining the
nullification crisis, one of the greatest political debates of the
antebellum era, when the country came perilously close to armed
conflict in the winter of 1832-33 after South Carolina declared two
tariffs null and void. Enraged by rising taxes and the specter of
emancipation, 25,000 South Carolinians volunteered to defend the
state against the perceived tyranny of the federal government.
Although these radical Nullifiers claimed to speak for all
Carolinians, the impasse left the Palmetto State bitterly divided.
Forty percent of the state's voters opposed nullification, and
roughly 9,000 men volunteered to fight against their fellow South
Carolinians to hold the Union together. Bloody Flag of Anarchy
examines the hopes, fears, and ideals of these Union men, who
viewed the nation as the last hope of liberty in a world dominated
by despotism-a bold yet fragile testament to humanity's capacity
for self-government. They believed that the Union should preserve
both liberty and slavery, ensuring peace, property, and prosperity
for all white men. Nullification, they feared, would provoke social
and political chaos, shattering the Union, destroying the social
order, and inciting an apocalyptic racial war. By reframing the
nullification crisis, Neumann provides fresh insight into the
internal divisions within South Carolina, illuminating a facet of
the conflict that has long gone underappreciated. He reveals what
the Union meant to Americans in the Jacksonian era and explores the
ways both factions deployed conceptions of manhood to mobilize
supporters. Nullifiers attacked their opponents as timid
"submission men" too cowardly to defend their freedom. Many
Unionists pushed back by insisting that "true men" respected the
law and shielded their families from the horrors of disunion.
Viewing the nullification crisis against the backdrop of global
events, they feared that America might fail when the world,
witnessing turmoil across Europe and the Caribbean, needed its
example the most. By closely examining how the nation avoided a
ruinous civil war in the early 1830s, Bloody Flag of Anarchy sheds
new light on why America failed three decades later to avoid a
similar fate.
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