Ensign of the Confederate Revenue Service
April 12 marked the 150th anniversary of the outbreak of the American Civil War, when Confederates fired on U.S. troops holding Fort Sumter, in the Charleston, South Carolina, harbor. Although people routinely succumb to the temptation to reduce the cause of the war to a single factor (e.g., to the slavery issue or to "states' rights"), the cause was more complex. Independent Institute Research Fellow Joseph R. Stromberg discusses one causal factor that often gets short shrift in public discourse (although he cites many historians who support his analysis): interest groups with material, rather than ideological, stakes in promoting the war.Antislavery, Stromberg writes, "was one of many themes generally serving as the stalking horse for more practical causes." The Republican Party Platform of 1860, for example, focused less on antislavery grievances than on proposals designed to benefit northeastern financial and manufacturing interests and Midwestern and western farmers--policies that would have become harder to implement if southern states were allowed to secede. Lest he overgeneralize, Stromberg hastens to add that northern trading and manufacturing interests that bought from the suppliers of southern cotton--"the petroleum of the mid-nineteenth century," as he puts it--were aware that they would face severe disruptions if war broke out.
In a post on The Beacon, Independent Institute Research Editor Anthony Gregory argues that April 12, 1861, also marks the date of the federal government's repudiation of the Founders' vision of the American republic and the birth of Big Government. "The war ushered in federal conscription, income taxes, new departments and agencies, and the final victory of the Hamiltonians over the Jeffersonians.... Slavery could have been ended peacefully, to be sure, but ending slavery was not Lincoln's motivation in waging the war--throughout which this purely evil institution was protected by the federal government in the Union states that practiced it, and during which slaves liberated from captivity by U.S. generals were sent back to their Southern 'masters.'"
"Civil War and the American Political Economy," by Joseph R. Stromberg (The Freeman, April 2011)
"The Regime's 150th Birthday," by Anthony Gregory (The Beacon, 4/12/11)
"The Real Abraham Lincoln: A Debate," an Independent Policy Forum featuring Harry V. Jaffa and Thomas J. DiLorenzo (5/7/02)
"The Civil War: Liberty and American Leviathan," an Independent Policy Forum featuring Henry E. Mayer and Jeffrey Rogers Hummel (11/14/99)
"The Bloody Hinge of American History," by Robert Higgs (Liberty, May 1997)
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