I can't recommend Dr. Clyde or Chronicles too much.
Widely
acclaimed as the world’s foremost scholar of John C. Calhoun, Dr. Clyde
N. Wilson is an eminent authority on America’s War Between the States
and its fundamental causes. His introduction to the North Carolina War
Between the States Sesquicentennial website is required reading for any
honest student of history, and for anyone with a serious interest in
understanding that conflict. The following article was published in
July 2009 issue of Chronicles, the Magazine of American Culture. This
fine periodical can be subscribed to via www.chroniclesmagazine.org.
Bernhard Thuersam, Chairman
North Carolina War Between the States Sesquicentennial Commission
"Unsurpassed Valor, Courage and Devotion to Liberty"
"The Official Website of the North Carolina WBTS Sesquicentennial"
Real Causes
“Ask
any trendy student of history today and he will tell you that, without
question, the cause of the great American bloodletting of 1861-65 was
slavery. Slavery, and nothing but slavery. The unstated and usually
unconscious assumption is that only people warped by a vicious
institution could possibly fight against being part of “the greatest
nation on earth.”
This
is an older corollary of the present national dictum that everybody in
the world really wants to be an American if they could only be cured of
delusions and bad motives – by aerial bombardment if necessary.
There
is an even deeper and less conscious assumption here: malicious,
unprovoked hatred of Southern people that is endemic in many American
circles. Thus, according to the wisdom of current “scholars,” no credit
is to be given to anything that Southerners might say about their own
reasons and motives. They are all merely repeating “Lost Cause myths” to
cover up their evil deeds. (Of course, no one points out that “Father
Abraham,” the Glorious Union,” and “dying to make men free” might
partake of some myth-making too.)
Set
aside the question of causation in history is a complex one, to say the
least. Still, it is true that historians of other generations, of
vastly greater breadth of learning than most of today’s ascribed other
“causes” to the most critical event in American history: a clash of
economic interests and cultures, blundering politicians, irresponsible
agitators.
There
is a bit of sleight of hand along with today’s fashionable assumptions.
Even if slavery may have in some simplistic and abstract sense “caused”
the secession of the first seven Southern States, that does not
establish that it “caused” the war. The war was caused by the
determination of Lincoln and his party to conquer the Southern States
and destroy their legal governments.
Caused,
one might say, by Northern nationalism – nationalism being a
combination of romantic identification with a centralized state and
interest in a unitary economic market. The war, after all, consisted of
the invasion and conquest of the South by the US government – a very
simple fact that most Americans are unable to process, along with the
plain fact that Northern soldiers did not make war for the purpose of
freeing black people.
One
of Lincoln’s main deceptions was the claim that the Founding Fathers
had intended to abolish slavery but had not quite got around to it.
Thus the Southerners of this time were rebelling against the true
founding by insisting on noninterference, while he and his party were
upholding the settled understanding of the Founders. James McPherson,
perhaps the “leading” historian of today in regard to the Great
Unpleasantness and no Southern apologist, along with many others points
out that it was the North that had changed by 1860, while the South had
remained attached to the original concept of the Union.
Now
one may be glad, as McPherson is, that the North changed and triumphed
with a new version of America, but to deny which side was revolutionary
is simply dishonest.
Historians
have devoted vast attention to the South, feeling it was necessary to
explain where the South went wrong and find the source of the perversion
that led it to a doomed attempt to escape the greatest country on
earth. For, after all, “American” is the norm of the universe, and any
divergence from it is a pathology. But if it was the North that changed,
ought not our primary focus in understanding American history to be on
how and why the North changed during the pre-war period?
I
pointed out on these pages 20 years ago or more that Northern history
was the future cutting-edge of American historical study. A large number
of solid works have since proved that my prediction has some merit:
Susan-Mary Grant, North Over South; Harlow W. Scheidley, Sectional
Nationalism; Richard F. Bensel, Yankee Leviathan; Anne Farrow et al,
Complicity; Richard H. Abbott, Cotton and Capital; Leonard P. Curry,
Blueprint for Modern America; two excellent books on Lincoln by William
Marvel; and others. Clash of Extremes may be counted among the works on
the War that pay serious attention to the North. Writes [author Mark]
Egnal:
“In
sum, the current emphasis on slavery as the cause of the Civil War is
fraught with problems. It does not clarify the sequence of events, the
divisions within the sections, or the politics and actions of the
Republican party. It is these problems that a new interpretation must
address.”
The
author does not neglect the sins of the South, real and alleged, but
his most important contribution is his description of a truly critical
new development of the late antebellum period, which he calls “the Lake
Economy.”
The
Midwest was first settled by Southerners farming the north side of the
Ohio Valley. In the late antebellum period, the Upper Midwest was
settled by New Englanders and Europeans who developed a new economic
regime along with a militant agenda of their own self-interest and
vision of the national future.
It
was this culture that Lincoln and his party represented and out of
which, by military conquest, they created a new America that superseded
the old Union of the fathers and put us on the course that the follow
today. It was certainly American, but it was a new version that
essentially repudiated the founding.”
He lays it our perfectly. I use many of the same points, and no one can refute them. What stuns me is that so many Conservatives do not grasp this
ReplyDeleteNot many true Conservatives around anymore.
DeleteI like Dr. Wilson's writing, he seems very thorough. You mention he is a Calhoun scholar,
ReplyDeleteI was reading about Calhoun the other day, no way he could get elected today. The dude looked like Frankenstien!
Getting back on topic, he says," ...the Upper Midwest was settled by New Englanders and Europeans..."
Almost 100% of those Europeans were German vs the almost uniformly British South. Even more telling, is the failed German revolution of '48, an anti-aristocracy movement (some might say socialist), which sent an even larger wave of German immigrants.
I had a post a while back with a map of claimed US ancestery from 2000. The South all claimed "American" or "African American" while the North and upper Midwest mostly claim "German". Pretty interesting stuff.
I had a post a while back with a map of claimed US ancestery from 2000.
DeleteSeems I remember that, but will check it out.