Authors: Charles Adams
ISBN-13: 9780847697236, ISBN-10: 0847697231
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Date Published: February 2005
Edition: 1st Edition
Including a new afterword by the author, this bold and controversial book will not only change how historians think about the causes of the Civil War but will place its powerful legacy into proper perspective.
From Adams (Those Dirty Rotten Taxes, 1998), a selectively argued, sometimes absurd polemic against Abraham Lincoln and the Union. Abraham Lincoln assumed in the Second Inaugural Address that his audience knew that slavery `was, somehow, the cause of the war.` Adams disagrees: brushing aside massive historical evidence to the contrary (including the observations of northern and southern contemporaries) and relying heavily on British rather than American writers about the war, Adams asserts that the slavery was a non-issue devised as a pretext to justify Lincoln's unconstitutional `assault` on the South. He argues instead, with extraordinarily slender evidence, that the preservation of taxes and revenues from the South were somehow the cause of the war. Validly, though not particularly controversially, Adams argues against the Lincoln administration's suspension of habeas corpus and its practice of suppressing dissent in the North, although he fails to discuss the Confederacy's attitudes toward internal political dissent. Less reasonably, Adams excoriates Lincoln for not observing constitutional niceties in 1861 with a hostile southern army nearby (arguing that Lincoln had no authority to do anything more than call Congress into session), and he appears to go well beyond historical evidence in attributing the entire war to northern contentiousness about the low southern tariff. Adams grounds his argument for the legitimacy of southern secession in the language of the Declaration of Independence, ignoring the fact that no southern state except Texas had ever been independent and that millions of slaves were not consulted in the southern ordinances of secession. Finally, he rendersanabsurd, quibbling attack on Lincoln's Gettysburg Address: among other objections, he feels the American Revolution did not establish the US as a `new nation, conceived in liberty` and that US national existence and democracy were not at stake in the Civil War. The world will little note nor long remember this poorly reasoned, quarrelsome little tract.
List of Illustrations | viii | |||
Preface | xi | |||
Acknowledgments | xiii | |||
Credits | xiv | |||
Introduction | 1 | |||
1 | The Dangerous Road to Secession | 7 | ||
2 | A Useless Fort? | 17 | ||
3 | Lincoln Crosses the Rubicon | 35 | ||
4 | Whose War Was It, Anyway? | 61 | ||
5 | The British Press Views the War | 71 | ||
6 | British Scholars Speak | 85 | ||
7 | How British Cartoonists Saw the War | 97 | ||
8 | A Just War? | 109 | ||
9 | Negrophobia | 127 | ||
10 | The Ku Klux Klan | 149 | ||
11 | The Peacemakers | 167 | ||
12 | The Trial of the Century That Never Was | 177 | ||
13 | Lincoln's Logic | 193 | ||
14 | The High Ground | 213 | ||
15 | Reflections: Healing the Breach | 223 | ||
Notes | 231|911 | Bibliographical Thoughts | 241 | |
Index | 245 | |||
About the Author | 257 |