How partisan politics lead to the Civil War What brought about the Civil War? Leading historian Michael F. Holt convincingly offers a disturbingly contemporary answer: partisan politics. In this brilliant and succinct book, Holt distills a lifetime of scholarship to demonstrate that secession and war did not arise from two irreconcilable economies any more than from moral objections to slavery. Short-sighted politicians were to blame. Rarely looking beyond the next election, the two dominant political parties used the emotionally charged and largely chimerical issue of slavery's extension westward to pursue reelection and settle political scores, all the while inexorably dragging the nation towards disunion. Despite the majority opinion (held in both the North and South) that slavery could never flourish in the areas that sparked the most contention from 1845 to 1861-the Mexican Cession, Oregon, and Kansas-politicians in Washington, especially members of Congress, realized the partisan value of the issue and acted on short-term political calculations with minimal regard for sectional comity. War was the result. Including select speeches by Lincoln and others, The Fate of Their Country openly challenges us to rethink a seminal moment in America's history.
This book is a fascinating look at one of the pivotal decades in U.S. history.
22. since the work of S. L. A. Marshall on nonfirers in World War II. See Grossman's response to these debates on p. 333. See also S. L. A. Marshall, Men Against Fire: The Problem of Battle Command in Future War (New York: Morrow, ...
From reinventing welfare systems to redefining the working age, from reimagining education to embracing automation, Emmott lays out the changes the West must make to revive itself in the moment and avoid a deathly rigid future.
1 ( Washington , 1903 ) ; Bertram Wyatt - Brown , " Prelude to Abolitionism : Sabbatarian Politics and the Rise of the Second Party System , " Journal of American History , 58 ( 1971 ) , 316-341 ; and Michael F. Holt , " The Antimasonic ...
Relates the author's decision, years after her father was taken away by the KGB, to relocate to her uncle's home in America, where she pursued an education and worked as an interpreter before becoming a cultural adviser for the U.S. Army.
3; Priscilla Bond Diary, May 13, May 16, 1862, LSU; quoted in George Rable, Civil Wars: Women and the Crisis of Southern Nationalism (Urbana, 1989), 179, and see also the analysis at 154–180. On the Revolutionary War, see Kerber, ...
Objectively surveys the causes of the Civil War as rooted in the events occuring between 1820 and 1860
Whichever group wins there will determine what our future looks like. This is a book for all concerned South Africans.
Discusses the failure of America's political elites to recognize how group identities drive politics both at home and abroad, and outlines recommendations for reversing the country's foreign policy failures and overcoming destructive ...
On Kentucky as a borderland between Ohio Indians and the Cherokees , see Henry Timberlake , Lieutenant Henry Timberlake's Memoirs , 1756-1765 , ed . Samuel Cole Williams , 113-14 . 6 Merrell , “ ' Their Very Bones Shall Fight ...