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The Slave Power - The Free North and Southern Domination, 1780-1860 (Paperback)
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The Slave Power - The Free North and Southern Domination, 1780-1860 (Paperback)
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From the signing of the Constitution to the eve of the Civil War
there persisted the belief that slaveholding southerners held the
reins of the American national government and used their power to
ensure the extension of slavery. Later termed the Slave Power
theory, this idea was no mere figment of a lunatic fringe's
imagination. It was, as Leonard L. Richards shows in this
innovative reexamination of the Slave Power, endorsed at midcentury
by such eminent and circumspect men as Abraham Lincoln, William
Henry Seward, Charles Sumner, the editors and owners of the New
York Times and the Atlantic Monthly, and the president of Harvard
College. With The Slave Power, Richards reopens a discussion
effectively closed by historians since the 1920s- when the Slave
Power theory was dismissed first as a distortion of reality and
later as a manifestation of the ""paranoid style"" in the early
Republic- and attempts to understand why such reputable leaders
accepted this thesis wholeheartedly as truth and why hundreds of
thousands of voters responded to their call to arms. Through
incisive biographical cameos and narrative vignettes, Richards
explains the evolution of the Slave Power argument over time,
tracing the oft-repeated scenario of northern outcry against the
perceived slaveocracy, followed by still another ""victory"" for
the South: the three-fifths rule in congressional representation;
admission of Missouri as a slave state in 1820; the Indian removal
of 1830; annexation of Texas in 1845; the Wilmot Proviso of 1847;
the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850; and more. Richards probes inter-
and intraparty strategies of the Democrats, Free-Soilers, Whigs,
and Republicans and revisits national debates over sectional
conflicts to elucidate just how the southern Democratic
slaveholders- with the help of some northerners- assumed,
protected, and eventually lost a dominance that extended from the
White House to the Speaker's chair to the Supreme Court. The Slave
Power reveals in a direct and compelling way the importance of
slavery in the structure of national politics from the earliest
moments of the federal Union through the emergence of the
Republican Party. Extraordinary in its research and interpretation,
it will challenge and edify all readers of American history.
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