Crisis of Fear: Secession in South CarolinaIn the wake of the John Brown raid on Harpers Ferry, an atmosphere of hysteria and suspicion gripped South Carolina, an atmosphere in which large-scale slave insurrections or invasions of Northern fanatics seemed imminent. Mass arrests, feverish attempts to arm for self-defense, vigilante actions and irrational accusations became the order of the day. Far more than ideological or economic motives, it was this atmosphere, Steven Channing argues, that predisposed South Carolinians toward the great defiance that would end the Union. It provided the framework in which the radical politicians, at once exploiting the fear and dominated by it, were able to outmaneuver the Unionists and bring about secession. |
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用戶評語 - anthonywillard - LibraryThingThis is a scholarly analysis of the political and social events leading to the secession of South Carolina from the United States after the election of Lincoln as president. It focuses on the years ... 閱讀評論全文
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abolition abolitionist accept action Advertiser appeared Association attack August Barnwell believed Black Brown Buchanan called candidate Carolinians cause Charles Charleston Civil clear Columbia committees confidence Congress conservative constitutional convention Courier crisis December delegation Democratic Democratic party desire district disunion Douglas election expressed fact Family fear February follow Government Governor Hammond Papers Harpers Ferry Hayne Henry History hope House institution issue James January John Journal June lead leaders legislature letter looked March meeting Memminger Mercury Miles Papers moderate move movement Negro never nomination North Northern November October party Perry Pettigrew Pickens political position present President question quoting race radical remained representatives Republican resolutions Rhett Richmond Robert secession seemed Senator sentiment Simms slave slavery social South Carolina Southern speech tion Trescot Union Unionists vigilance Virginia vote William wrote York
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第 304 頁 - The South alone should govern the South, and African Slavery should be controlled by those only who are friendly to it.