- In the schoolbook account of the American Civil War,
Abraham Lincoln rose to the Presidency and took the steps needed to end
slavery. He led the country in a great Civil War against the slaveholding
states that seceded, restored these states to the Union, and ended slavery.
Accordingly, historians rate Abraham Lincoln as one of our greatest presidents.
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- People in the South, like my great-great-grandfather
Louis Thomas Hicks, had a different view of the war. Louis Hicks fought
in the Battle of Gettysburg in the Army of Northern Virginia, commanding
the 20th North Carolina Regiment (in Iverson's Brigade of Rodes Division
in Ewell's Second Corps). He led his regiment into action on the first
day of the battle and was forced to surrender after losing eighty percent
of his men (238 out of 300) in two-and-a-half hours of fighting. In his
personal account of the battle, he wrote, "[As a prisoner] I lied
awake, thinking of my comrades and the great cause for which we were willing
to shed our last drop of blood." His daughter, Mary Lyde Williams,
echoed similar sentiments in her Presentation Address given at the Unveiling
of the North Carolina Memorial on the Battlefield of Gettysburg on July
3, 1929. She began her address with the words, "They wrote a constitution
in which each state should be free." Four children, including her
granddaughter, my mother, who was then 10 years old, removed the veil that
covered the statue.
-
- Today American children are taught in the nation's schools,
both in the North and South, that it was wrong for people to support the
Confederacy and to fight and die for it. Well-intentioned, "right
thinking" people equate anyone today who thinks that the South did
the right thing by seceding from the Union as secretly approving of slavery.
Indeed, such thinking has now reached the point where groups from both
sides of the political spectrum, notably the NAACP and Southern Poverty
Law Center on the left and the Cato Institute on the right, want to have
the Confederate Battle Flag eradicated from public spaces. These people
argue that the Confederate flag is offensive to African-Americans because
it commemorates slavery.
-
- In the standard account, the Civil War was an outcome
of our Founding Fathers failure to address the institution of slavery in
a republic that proclaimed in its Declaration of Independence that "all
men are created equal." But was it really necessary to wage a four-year
war to abolish slavery in the United States, one that ravaged half of the
country and destroyed a generation of American men? Only the United States
and Haiti freed their slaves by war. Every other country in the New World
that had slaves, such as Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Cuba,
Ecuador, Mexico, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela, freed them in the 19th century
peacefully.
-
- The war did enable Lincoln to "save" the Union,
but only in a geographic sense. The country ceased being a Union, as it
was originally conceived, of separate and sovereign states. Instead, America
became a "nation" with a powerful federal government. Although
the war freed four million slaves into poverty, it did not bring about
a new birth of freedom, as Lincoln and historians such as James McPherson
and Henry Jaffa say. For the nation as a whole the war did just the opposite:
It initiated a process of centralization of government that has substantially
restricted liberty and freedom in America, as historians Charles Adams
and Jeffrey Rogers Hummel have argued Adams in his book, When in
the Course of Human Events: Arguing the Case for Southern Secession (published
in 2000); and Hummel in his book, Emancipating Slaves, Enslaving Free Men
(1996).
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- The term Civil War is a misnomer. The South did not instigate
a rebellion. Thirteen southern states in 1860-61 simply chose to secede
from the Union and go their own way, like the thirteen colonies did when
they seceded from Britain. A more accurate name for the war that took place
between the northern and southern American states is the War for Southern
Independence. Mainstream historiography presents the victors' view, an
account that focuses on the issue of slavery and downplays other considerations.
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- Up until the 19th century slavery in human societies
was considered to be a normal state of affairs. The Old Testament of the
Bible affirms that slaves are a form of property and that the children
of a slave couple are the property of the slaves' owner (Exodus 21:4).
Abraham and Jacob kept slaves, and the New Testament says nothing against
slavery. Slaves built the pyramids of Egypt, the Acropolis of Athens, and
the coliseums in the Roman Empire. Africans exported 11,000,000 Black slaves
to the New World 4,000,000 to Brazil, 3,600,000 to the British and
French West Indies, and 2,500,000 to Spanish possessions in Central and
South America. About 500,000 slaves, 5 per cent of the total number shipped
to the New World, came to America. Today slavery still exists in some parts
of Africa, notably in Sudan and Mauritania.
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- Britain heralded the end of slavery, in the Western world
at least, with its Bill of Abolition, passed in 1807. This Bill made the
African slave trade (but not slaveholding) illegal. Later that year the
United States adopted a similar bill, called the Act to Prohibit the Importation
of Slaves, which prohibited bringing slaves into any port in the country,
including into the southern slaveholding states. Congress strengthened
this prohibition in 1819 when it decreed the slave trade to be a form of
piracy, punishable by death. In 1833, Britain enacted an Emancipation Law,
ending slavery throughout the British Empire, and Parliament allocated
twenty million pounds to buy slaves' freedom from their owners. The German
philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer rightly described this action as one of
the greatest acts of collective compassion in the history of humankind.
This happened peacefully and without any serious slave uprisings or attacks
on their former owners, even in Jamaica where a population of 30,000 whites
owned 250,000 slaves.
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- The Constitution of the Confederate States of America
prohibited the importation of slaves (Article I, Section 9). With no fugitive
slave laws in neighboring states that would return fugitive slaves to their
owners, the value of slaves as property drops owing to increased costs
incurred to guard against their escape. With slaves having a place to escape
to in the North and with the supply of new slaves restricted by its Constitution,
slavery in the Confederate states would have ended without war. A slave's
decreasing property value, alone, would have soon made the institution
unsustainable, irrespective of more moral and humanitarian considerations.
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- The rallying call in the North at the beginning of the
war was "preserve the Union," not "free the slaves."
Although certainly a contentious political issue and detested by abolitionists,
in 1861 slavery nevertheless was not a major public issue. Protestant Americans
in the North were more concerned about the growing number of Catholic immigrants
than they were about slavery. In his First Inaugural Address, given five
weeks before the war began, Lincoln reassured slaveholders that he would
continue to enforce the Fugitive Slave Act.
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- After 17 months of war things were not going well for
the North, especially in its closely watched Eastern Theater. In the five
great battles fought there from July 1861 through September 17, 1862, the
changing cast of Union generals failed to win a single victory. The Confederate
army won three: First Bull Run (or First Manassas) on July 21,1861; Seven
Days six major battles fought from June 25-July 1, 1862 during the
Union army's Peninsular Campaign that, in sum, amounted to a strategic
Confederate victory when McClellan withdrew his army from the peninsula;
and Second Bull Run (or Second Manassas) on August 29-30, 1862. Two battles
were indecisive: Seven Pines (or Fair Oaks) on May 31-June 1, 1862, and
Antietam (or Sharpsburg) on September 17, 1862. In the West, Grant took
Fort Donelson on February 14, 1862 and captured 14,000 Confederate soldiers.
But then he was caught by surprise in the battle of Shiloh (or Pittsburg
Landing) on April 6-7, 1862 and lost 13,000 out of a total of 51,000 men
that fought in this two-day battle. Sickened by the carnage, people in
the North did not appreciate at the time that this battle was a strategic
victory for the North. Then came Antietam on September 17, the bloodiest
day in the entire war; the Union army lost more than 12,000 of its 60,000
troops engaged in the battle.
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- Did saving the Union justify the slaughter of such a
large number of young men? The Confederates posed no military threat to
the North. Perhaps it would be better to let the southern states go, along
with their 4 million slaves. If it was going to win, the North needed a
more compelling reason to continue the war than to preserve the Union.
The North needed a cause for continuing the war, as Lincoln put the matter
in his Second Inaugural Address, that was willed by God, where "the
judgments of the Lord" determined the losses sustained and its outcome.
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- Five days after the Battle of Antietam, on September
22, 1862, Abraham Lincoln issued his Emancipation Proclamation.
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- The Emancipation Proclamation was a "war measure,"
as Lincoln put it. Foreign correspondents covering the war recognized it
as a brilliant propaganda coup. Emancipation would take place only in rebel
states not under Union control, their state sovereignty in the matter of
slavery arguably forfeited as a result of their having seceded from the
Union. The president could not abolish slavery; if not done at the state
level, abolition would require a constitutional amendment. Slaveholders
and their slaves in Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, Delaware, Tennessee,
and parts of Virginia and Louisiana occupied by Union troops were exempt
from the edict. Slaves in the Confederacy would be "forever free"
on January 1, 1863 one hundred days after the Proclamation was issued
but only if a state remained in "rebellion" after that
date. Rebel states that rejoined the Union and sent elected representatives
to Congress before January 1, 1863 could keep their slaves. Such states
would no longer be considered in rebellion and so their sovereignty regarding
the peculiar institution would be restored. As the London Spectator put
it, in its October 11, 1862 issue: "The principle [of the Proclamation]
is not that a human being cannot justly own another, but that he cannot
own him unless he is loyal to the United States."
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- Regarding slaves in states loyal to the government or
occupied by Union troops, Lincoln proposed three constitutional amendments
in his December 1862 State of the Union message to Congress. The first
was that slaves not freed by the Emancipation Proclamation be freed gradually
over a 37-year period, to be completed by January 1, 1900. The second provided
compensation to owners for the loss of their slave property. The third
was that the government transport freed Blacks, at government expense,
out of the country and relocate them in Latin America and Africa. Lincoln
wrote that freed blacks need "new homes [to] be found for them, in
congenial climes, and with people of their own blood and race." For
Lincoln, emancipation and deportation were inseparably connected. Secretary
of the Navy Gideon Wells wrote in his diary that Lincoln "thought
it essential to provide an asylum for a race which he had emancipated,
but which could never be recognized or admitted to be our equals."
As historian Leone Bennett Jr. puts it in his book Forced Into Glory: Abraham
Lincoln's White Dream (2000), "It was an article of faith to him [Lincoln]
that emancipation and deportation went together like firecrackers and July
Fourth, and that you couldn't have one without the other."
-
- Congress refused to consider Lincoln's proposals, which
Horace Greeley in the New York Tribune labeled whales' tubs of "gradualism,
compensation, [and] exportation." None of the Confederate States took
the opportunity to rejoin the Union in the 100-day window offered and the
war continued for another two years and four months. Eight months later
the 13th Amendment was ratified, and slavery ended everywhere in the United
States (without gradualism, compensation, or exportation).
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- Black and White Americans sustained racial and political
wounds from the war and the subsequent Reconstruction that proved deep
and long lasting. Northern abolitionists wanted southern Black slaves to
be freed, but certainly did not want them to move north and live alongside
them. Indiana and Illinois, in particular, had laws that barred African-Americans
from settling. The military occupation and "Reconstruction" the
South was forced to endure after the war also slowed healing of the wounds.
At a gathering of ex-confederate soldiers shortly before he died in 1870,
Robert E. Lee said,
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- If I had foreseen the use those people [Yankees] designed
to make of their victory, there would have been no surrender at Appomattox
Courthouse; no sir, not by me. Had I foreseen these results of subjugation,
I would have preferred to die at Appomattox with my brave men, my sword
in my right hand.
-
-
- Why were business and political leaders in the North
so intent on keeping the southern states in the Union? It was, to paraphrase
Charles Dickens, solely a fiscal matter. The principal source of tax revenue
for the federal government before the Civil War was a tariff on imports.
There was no income tax, except for one declared unconstitutional after
its enactment during the Civil War. Tariffs imposed by the federal government
not only accounted for most of the federal budget, they also raised the
price of imported goods to a level where the less-efficient manufacturers
of the northeast could be competitive. The former Vice-President John C.
Calhoun put it this way:
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-
- "The North had adopted a system of revenue and disbursements
in which an undue proportion of the burden of taxation has been imposed
upon the South, and an undue proportion of its proceeds appropriated to
the North the South, as the great exporting portion of the Union, has in
reality paid vastly more than her due proportion of the revenue."
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-
- In March 1861, the New York Evening Post editorialized
on this point:
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-
- That either the revenue from duties must be collected
in the ports of the rebel states, or the port must be closed to importations
from abroad, is generally admitted. If neither of these things be done,
our revenue laws are substantially repealed; the sources which supply our
treasury will be dried up; we shall have no money to carry on the government;
the nation will become bankrupt before the next crop of corn is ripe. There
will be nothing to furnish means of subsistence to the army; nothing to
keep our navy afloat; nothing to pay the salaries of public officers; the
present order of things must come to a dead stop.
-
-
- Given the serious financial difficulties the Union would
face if the Southern states were a separate republic on its border engaging
in duty-free trade with Britain, the Post urged the Union to hold on to
its custom houses in the Southern ports and have them continue to collect
duty. The Post goes on to say that incoming ships to the "rebel states"
that try to evade the North's custom houses should be considered as carrying
contraband and be intercepted.
-
- Observers in Britain looked beyond the rhetoric of "preserve
the Union" and saw what was really at stake. Charles Dickens views
on the subject were typical:
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-
- Union means so many millions a year lost to the South;
secession means the loss of the same millions to the North. The love of
money is the root of this, as of many other evils. The quarrel between
the North and South is, as it stands, solely a fiscal quarrel.
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- Karl Marx seconded this view:
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-
- The war between the North and the South is a tariff war.
The war is further, not for any principle, does not touch the question
of slavery, and in fact turns on the Northern lust for sovereignty.
-
-
- The South fought the war for essentially the same reason
that the American colonies fought the Revolutionary War. The central grievance
of the American colonies in the 18th century was the taxes imposed on them
by Britain. Colonists particularly objected to the Stamp Act, which required
them to purchase an official British stamp and place it on all documents
in order for them to be valid. The colonists also objected to the import
tariff that Britain placed on sugar and other goods (the Sugar Act).
-
- After the enactment of what was called the "Tariff
of Abomination" in 1828, promoted by Henry Clay, the tax on imports
ranged between 20-30%. It rose further in March 1861 when Lincoln, at the
start of his presidency, signed the Morrill Tariff into law. This tax was
far more onerous than the one forced on the American colonies by Britain
in the 18th century.
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- Lincoln coerced the South to fire the first shots when,
against the initial advice of most of his cabinet, he dispatched ships
carrying troops and munitions to resupply Fort Sumter, site of the customs
house at Charleston. Charleston militia took the bait and bombarded the
fort on April 12, 1861. After those first shots were fired the pro-Union
press branded Southern secession an "armed rebellion" and called
for Lincoln to suppress it.
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- Congress was adjourned at the time and for the next three
months, ignoring his constitutional duty to call this legislative branch
of government back in session during a time of emergency, Lincoln assumed
dictatorial powers and did things, like raise an army, that only Congress
is supposed to do. He shut down newspapers that disagreed with his war
policy, more than 300 of them. He ordered his military officers to lock
up political opponents, thousands of them. Although the exact number is
not known, Lincoln may well have arrested and imprisoned more than 20,000
political opponents, southern sympathizers, and people suspected of being
disloyal to the Union, creating what one researcher has termed a 19th century
"American gulag," a forerunner of the 20th century's political
prison and labor camps in the former Soviet Union. Lincoln denied these
nonviolent dissenters their right of free speech and suspended the privilege
of Habeas Corpus, something only Congress in a time of war has the power
to do. Lincoln's soldiers arrested civilians, often arbitrarily, without
any charges being filed; and, if held at all, military commissions conducted
trials. He permitted Union troops to arrest the Mayor of Baltimore (then
the third largest city in the Union), its Chief of Police and a Maryland
congressman, along with 31 state legislators. When Supreme Court Chief
Justice Roger Taney wrote an opinion that said these actions were unlawful
and violated the Constitution, Lincoln ignored the ruling.
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- Lincoln called up an army of 75,000 men to invade the
seven southern states that had seceded and force them back into the Union.
By unilaterally recruiting troops to invade these states, without first
calling Congress into session to consider the matter and give its consent,
Lincoln made an error in judgment that cost the lives of hundreds of thousands
of Americans. At the time, only seven states had seceded. But when Lincoln
announced his intention to bring these states back into the Union by force,
four additional states Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas
seceded and joined the Confederacy. Slavery was not the issue. The
issue was the very nature of the American union. If the President of the
United States intended to hold the Union together by force, they wanted
out. When these four states seceded and joined the Confederacy rather than
send troops to support Lincoln's unconstitutional actions, the Confederacy
became much more viable and the war much more horrible.
-
- From the time Lincoln entered politics as a candidate
for state legislature in 1832, he championed a political agenda known as
the "American System." First advocated by his idol and mentor,
Henry Clay, it was a three-part program of protective tariffs, internal
improvements, and centralized banking. This program "tied economic
development to strong centralized national authority," as Robert Johannsen
puts it in Lincoln, the South, And Slavery. Lincoln believed that import
tariffs were necessary, at the expense of consumers. He believed that American
industries needed to be shielded from foreign competition and cheap imported
goods. The "internal improvements" he advocated were simply subsidies
for industry, i.e., corporate welfare. Abraham Lincoln was the first president
to give us centralized banking, with paper money not backed by gold.
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- The Constitution of the Confederate States of America
forbid protectionist tariffs, outlawed government subsidies to private
businesses, and made congressional appropriations subject to approval by
a two-thirds majority vote. It enjoined Congress from initiating constitutional
amendments, leaving that power to the constituent states; and limited its
president to a single six-year term. When the South lost, instead of a
Jeffersonian republic of free trade and limited constitutional government,
the stage was set for the United States to become an American Empire ruled
by a central authority. In starting his war against the Confederate States,
Lincoln was not seeking the "preservation of the Union" in its
traditional sense. He sought the preservation of the Northern economy by
means of transforming the federal government into a centralized welfare-warfare-police
state.
-
- The failure of the South to win the War for Southern
Independence was a blow to liberty. The Confederate lyrics to the song
"Battle Cry of Freedom" read:
-
-
- Down with the eagle
- And up with the cross!
- We'll rally 'round the bonny flag
- We'll rally once again
- Shout, shout the battle cry of freedom
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- Paroled from the prison camp at Johnson's Island, Ohio
shortly before the end of the war, my grandparent Louis Hicks walked, barefoot,
back to North Carolina to his home named "Liberty Hall" in the
town of Faison. But instead of enjoying a new birth of freedom, he and
his family, along with other people in the South, had to endure a twelve-year
military occupation and an oppressive Reconstruction instituted by radical
republicans.
-
- Reflecting on the War for Southern Independence let us
hope that the Confederate Battle Flag that Louis Thomas Hicks' North Carolina
regiment carried with it into battle at Gettysburg, with the cross of Scotland's
patron saint emblazoned on it, will come to be viewed in the 21st century,
not as an badge of slavery, which it is not, but as a symbol of opposition
to centralized government power and tyranny.
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- Notes
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- The Confederate Battle Flag has 13 white stars superimposed
on a blue Cross of St. Andrew, centered on a red backdrop. Each star represents
a state that seceded from the Union, which includes Kentucky and Missouri,
the last two states to be admitted into the Confederacy in late 1861. Throughout
the war, however, they remained largely under Union control. St. Andrew
was the younger brother of St. Peter and is the patron saint of Scotland.
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- The population of the United States in 1860 was 31,101,000,
of which 21,244,000 lived in the North and 10,957,000 in the Confederacy.
In the Confederate states 5,447,000 of these people were white, 133,000
free black, and 3,951,000 were slaves. There were 320,000 deaths in Union
forces, 3.2 percent of the total male population; and 300,000 deaths in
the Confederate forces, 9.7 percent of the (white) male population. This
death rate, with the current population of the United States 284,050,000,
would be equivalent to 6.5 million men being killed today. Most of those
killed were teenagers and men in their 20s.
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- In his First Inaugural Address, for United States Lincoln
uses the term Union. In his Gettysburg Address, however, instead of Union
he uses the word nation, which implies a closer association of states under
centralized control, as opposed to a looser association connoted by the
word Union, of separate and sovereign states. Likewise, in his Second Inaugural
Address Lincoln only uses the word Union when referring to the country
as it was when he gave his First Inaugural Address four years earlier,
before the war began; he uses the word nation for the country it had become
in 1865. In these two later speeches he says that the war was fought to
preserve the "nation," that the "nation" shall have
a new birth of freedom, and that we must bind up the "nation's wounds."
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- In a civil war the warring sides battle for control of
the central government. The term "civil war" was coined in England
in the 17th century to identify the war fought between supporters of Charles
I and the Parliamentarians led by Oliver Cromwell for control of the government.
The South had no designs on the federal government of the North, headquartered
in Washington, D. C. It did not want to run that government. The breakaway
Southern States asserted their independence, like the American colonies
did from Britain eighty-five years before, formed their own Confederate
States of America and placed their seat of government in Richmond, Virginia.
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- The American Republic was founded on the concept that
all men are created equal, with inalienable rights to life, liberty and
property. Black slaves, being sentient human beings, should therefore be
as equally free and independent, with equality under the law, as White
human beings; but, as slaves, they were also someone's property and subject
to the due process of law in that regard. Federalist Paper No. 54 addresses
the problem of counting slaves in the population with regard to legislative
representation, concluding that slaves are divested as "two-fifths
of the MAN" and three-fifths as capital, or property.
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- After the war Robert E. Lee also wrote, "The best
men in the South have long desired to do away with the institution [of
slavery], and were quite willing to see it abolished. But with them in
relation to this subject is a serious question today. Unless some humane
course, based on wisdom and Christian principles, is adopted, you do them
great injustice in setting them free." (Thomas Nelson Page, Robert
E. Lee: Man and Soldier [New York, 1911], page 38.) Lee did not own slaves
(he freed his in the 1850s), nor did a number of his most trusted lieutenants,
including generals A. P. Hill, Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson,
J. E. Johnston, and J. E. B. Stuart.
-
- The source references for these quotes can be found in
Charles Adams' book When in the Course of Human Events: Arguing the Case
for Southern Secession.
-
- Colonists also objected to the search and seizure of
their property without a specific warrant, and to being denied the right
of trial by jury, which the British instituted to help them more easily
catch and imprison smugglers who avoided paying taxes on imported goods.
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- Suggested Reading
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- Books
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- Charles Adams, When in the Course of Human Events: Arguing
the Case for Southern Secession (New York: Rowman & Littlefield, 2000)
-
- In this book Charles Adams does to our understanding
of the Civil War what Copernicus did to our ancestors' understanding of
the solar system. The sun does not rotate around the Earth and slavery
did not cause the Civil War. Adams presents a compelling case for the true,
financial cause of the war. A must read.
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- Jeffrey Rogers Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, Enslaving
Free Men: A History of the American Civil War (Chicago: Open Court, 1996)
-
- With extensive documentation and in an erudite fashion,
the author shows how the Civil War was, indeed, a disaster for liberty.
The bibliographic essays at the end of each chapter all alone are worth
the price of the book.
-
- Francis W. Springer, War for What? (Nashville: Bill Coats
Ltd., 1990)
-
- A little known but very insightful view of the Civil
War published a year before the author died at the age of 92. He puts the
African slave trade, import tariffs, the South's two-crop economy, Lincoln,
and the true nature of the war into clear focus, anticipating Adams' groundbreaking
work by a decade.
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- David Gordon (Editor), Secession, State & Liberty
(New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1998)
-
- Eleven articles on secession based on papers presented
at a conference on this subject by the Ludwig von Mises Institute in 1995.
Those by Donald Livingson, Steven Yates, Murray N. Rothbard, Thomas DiLorenzo,
and James Ostrowski are particularly important.
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- Lerone Bennett, Jr., Forced Into Glory: Abraham Lincoln's
White Dream (Chicago: Johnson, 2000)
- Bennett debunks the standard view of Lincoln as "the
great emancipator." He shows that Lincoln believed Blacks to be an
inferior race. Consequently, they could never have equal "political"
rights with White people and be given the full prerogatives of citizenship.
The author presents irrefutable evidence that Lincoln wanted to have freed
Blacks transported, at government expense, out of the country and relocated
somewhere else.
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- Articles
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- By Thomas J. DiLorenzo:
-
- * "The Great Centralizer: Abraham Lincoln and the
War Between the States" (Fall 1998)
- * "Lincoln's Economic Legacy" (February 9,
2001)
- * "Trade and the Rise of Freedom" (January
31, 2000)
- * "Henry Clay: National Socialist" (The Free
Market, March 1998)
- * "Libertarians and the Confederate Battle Flag"
- * "Birth of an Empire" (The Free Market, July
1997)
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- By Joe Sobran
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- * "Slavery in Perspective" (May 31, 2001)
- * "McCarthyism and Lincolnism" (April 26, 2001)
- * "The Ultimate Lincoln" (April 5, 2001)
- * "Lincoln with Fangs" (February 8, 2001)
- * "Slavery, No; Secession, Yes" (January 16,
2001)
- * "How Tyranny Came to America"
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- By others
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- * Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr., "Genesis of the Civil
War" (May 11, 2000)
- * Tibor R. Machan, "Rethinking the Civil War"
(May 7, 2001)
- * Steven Yates, "The Great Struggle: Republic or
Empire" (February 3, 2000)
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-
- This article, in somewhat altered form, was published
under the title "The Economic Causes of the Civil War" in the
October 2001 issue of Liberty Magazine.
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- September 7, 2001
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- Donald Miller (send him mail) lives in the state of Washington
with his wife and youngest son and is a cardiac surgeon in Seattle.
|