WILLIAM E. DODD

PROFESSOR OF AMERICAN HISTORY

UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO

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HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY

BOSTON NEW YORK CHICAGO
The Riverside Press Cambridge

COPYRIGHT, 1915, BY WILLIAM E. DODD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

The Riverside Press

CAMBRIDGE · MASSACHUSETTS
U. S. A.

PREFACE

The purpose of this volume is to show the action and reaction of the most important social, economic, political, and personal forces that have entered into the make-up of the United States as a nation. The primary assumption of the author is that the people of this country did not compose a nation until after the close of the Civil War in 1865. Of scarcely less importance is the fact that the decisive motive behind the different groups in Congress at every great crisis of the period under discussion was sectional advantage or even sectional aggrandizement. If Webster ceased to be a particularist after 1824 and became a nationalist before 1830, it was because the interests of New England had undergone a similar change; or, if Calhoun deserted about the same time the cause of nationalism and became the most ardent of sectionalists, it was also because the interests of his constituents, the cotton and tobacco planters of the South, had become identified with particularism, that is, States rights.

And corollary to these assumptions is the further fact that public men usually determine what line of procedure is best for their constituents, or for what are supposed to be the interests of those constituents, and then seek for “powers” or clauses in State or Federal Constitutions which justify the predetermined course. This being, as a rule, true, the business of the historian is to understand the influences which led to the first, not the second, decision of the Representative or Senator or President or even Justice of the Supreme Court. Hence long-winded speeches or tortuous decisions of courts have not been studied so closely as the statistics of the cotton or tobacco crops, the reports of manufacturers, and the conditions of the frontier, which determined more of the votes of members of Congress than the most eloquent persuasion of great orators.

Thus the following pages utterly fail of their purpose if they do not picture the background of congressional and sectional conflicts during the period from Andrew Jackson to Abraham Lincoln. But, to be sure, in so brief a book all the contributing elements of the growing national life cannot be fully described or even be mentioned. Still, it is the hope of the author that all the greater subjects have been treated. What has been omitted was omitted in order to devote more space to what seemed to be more important, not in order to suppress what some may consider to be of primary significance. Three hundred short pages for the story of the great conflict which raged from 1828 to 1865 do not offer much latitude for explanations and diversions along the way. Nor is it possible for any one to describe this conflict satisfactorily even to all historians, to say nothing of the participants who still live and entertain the most positive and contradictory convictions. Hence one must present one's own narrative and be content if open-mindedness and honesty of purpose be acknowledged.

The book is intended for the maturer students in American colleges and universities and for readers who may be desirous of knowing why things happened as they did as well as how they happened. And by the employment of collateral readings suggested in the short bibliographies at the close of each chapter, both the college student and the more general reader may find his way through the labyrinth of conflicting opinion and opposing authorities which make up the body of our written history.

To make this task easier some twenty-five maps have been prepared and inserted at the appropriate places in the text. These maps, perhaps one might say photographs of social or economic conditions, attempt to present the greater sectional and industrial groups of “interests” which entered into the common life of ante-bellum times. They treat party evolution, economic development, and social antagonisms in a way which, it seems to the author, should help the reader to a better understanding of things than would be possible by the simple narrative.

For permission to use the maps on pages 291, 313, and 327 the author expresses his thanks to the publishers of The Encyclopedia Americana.

In this connection cordial thanks are extended to Professor J. F. Jameson and Dr. C. O. Paullin, of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, for the privilege of using the data which they collected on the election of 1828 and the vote in Congress on the Tariff of 1832. Likewise Mr. P. L. Phillips, of the Division of Maps of the Library of Congress, has given the author much assistance. Nor must I fail to say that many of my students have rendered practical aid in working out the details of several of the maps. Mr. Edward J. Woodhouse, of Yale University, very kindly read all the proof and prepared the index. And Professors A. C. McLaughlin and M. W. Jernegan, of the University of Chicago; Allen Johnson, of Yale; Carl Becker, of Kansas; and Frederic L. Paxson, of Wisconsin, have all given counsel and criticism on certain chapters which have been of great practical benefit.

But in making these acknowledgments for assistance rendered, it is not intended to shift to other shoulders any of the responsibility for statements or manner of treatment which may arouse criticism. The book is intended to be helpful, interpretative, and beyond any sectional bias. If the author has not been successful, it is not the fault of others, nor because of any sparing of personal efforts.

William E. Dodd.


CONTENTS

I.[Andrew Jackson]1
II.[The West]20
III.[The East]39
IV.[Conflict and Compromise]58
V.[The Triumph of Jackson]77
VI.[Distress and Reaction]96
VII.[The Militant South]114
VIII.[War and Conquest]147
IX.[The Abolitionists]161
X.[Prosperity]184
XI.[American Culture]208
XII.[Stephen A. Douglas]231
XIII.[Abraham Lincoln]251
XIV.[The Appeal to Arms]268
XV.[One Nation or Two?]289
XVI.[The Collapse of the Confederacy]309
[INDEX]xiv


[MAPS]

[The Presidential Election of 1828]between 18 and 19
[Distribution of Indians and Location of Indian
Lands and Unorganized Territory of the
United States or the States]
26
[The Distribution of Industrial Plants in 1833]49
[The Vote in the House of Representatives on
the Tariff of 1832 in Eastern and Western
States]
between 66 and 67
[Growth of the West and Removal of Indians
from Cotton, Tobacco, and First Western
Grain Belts]
88
[The Presidential Election of 1836]between 92 and 93
[Tobacco Areas in 1840]133
[Cotton Areas in 1840]134
[Wheat Areas in 1840]139
[The Presidential Election of 1844]between 148 and 149
[Annexations of 1845-53]159
[Location of Abolition Societies in 1847]169
[The Presidential Election of 1852]between 180 and 181
[The Industrial Belt of 1860]188
[Railroads in Operation 1850]190
[Railroads in Operation 1860]191
[The Black Belt of 1860]193
[The Cotton Belt of 1860]196
[Tobacco Areas in 1860]197
[Wheat Areas in 1860]200
[Conflicting Sectional Interests 1850-60]237
[The Presidential Election of 1860]between 264 and 265
[One Nation or Two?]291
[The Confederacy in 1863]313
[Regions which surrendered with Lee and
Johnston, April, 1865]
327

Transcriber's Note: Links to Maps above go directly to the map, but not necessarily the page.