<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_36"></SPAN>CHAPTER 36</h2>
<h3>SECESSION, 1860-1861</h3>
<p>[Illustration: WILLIAM H. SEWARD.]</p>
<p class="side">Candidates for the Republican nomination 1860.<br/>
Lincoln nominated. The platform.</p>
<p><b>369. The Republican Nomination, 1860.</b>--Four names were
especially mentioned in connection with the Republican nomination
for President. These were Seward, Chase, Cameron, and Lincoln.
Seward was the best known of them all. In the debates on the
Compromise of 1850 he had declared that there was "a higher law"
than the Constitution, namely, "the law of nature in men's hearts."
In another speech he had termed the slavery contest "the
irrepressible conflict." These phrases endeared him to the
antislavery men. But they made it impossible for many moderate
Republicans to follow him. Senator Chase of Ohio had also been very
outspoken in his condemnation of slavery. Senator Cameron of
Pennsylvania was an able political leader. But all of these men
were "too conspicuous to make a good candidate." They had made many
enemies. Lincoln had spoken freely. But he had never been prominent
in national politics. He was more likely to attract the votes of
moderate men than either of the other candidates. After a fierce
contest he was nominated. The Republican platform stated that there
was no intention to interfere with slavery in the states where it
existed; but it declared the party's opposition to the extension of
slavery. The platform favored internal improvements at the national
expense. It also approved the protective system.</p>
<p class="side">The Charleston convention, 1860. <i>McMaster</i>,
360-361.<br/>
The Douglas Democrats.<br/>
The Breckinridge Democrats.</p>
<p><b>370. The Democratic Nominations.</b>--The Democratic
convention met at Charleston, South Carolina. It was soon evident
that the Northern Democrats and the Southern Democrats could not
agree. The Northerners were willing to accept the Dred Scott
decision and to carry it out. But the Southerners demanded that the
platform should pledge the party actively to protect slavery in the
territories. To this the Northerners would not agree. So the
convention broke up to meet again at Baltimore. But there the
delegates could come to no agreement. In the end two candidates
were named. The Northerners nominated Douglas on a platform
advocating "popular sovereignty." The Southerners nominated John C.
Breckinridge of Kentucky. In their platform they advocated states'
rights, and the protection of slavery in the territories by the
federal government.</p>
<p class="side">The Constitutional Union party.</p>
<p><b>371. The Constitutional Union Party.</b>--Besides these three
candidates, cautious and timid men of all parties united to form
the Constitutional Union party. They nominated Governor John Bell
of Tennessee for President. In their platform they declared for the
maintenance of the Constitution and the Union, regardless of
slavery.</p>
<p>[Illustration: LINCOLN'S SURVEYING INSTRUMENTS AND
SADDLEBAG.]</p>
<p class="side">The campaign of 1860.<br/>
Lincoln elected.</p>
<p><b>372. Lincoln elected President, 1860.</b>--With four
candidates in the field and the Democratic party hopelessly
divided, there could be little doubt of Lincoln's election. He
carried every Northern state except Missouri and New Jersey. He
received one hundred and eighty electoral notes. Breckenridge
carried every Southern state except the "border states" of
Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee, and received seventy-two
electoral votes. Bell carried the three "border" Southern states
and Douglas carried Missouri and New Jersey. There was no doubt as
to Lincoln's election. He had received a great majority of the
electoral votes. But his opponents had received more popular votes
than he had received. He was therefore elected by a minority of the
voters.</p>
<p>[Illustration: LINCOLN'S BOOKCASE. From the Keyes-Lincoln
Memorial Collection, Chicago.]</p>
<p class="side">Weakness of the Republicans.<br/>
Southern fears.</p>
<p><b>373. The North and the South.</b>--Lincoln had been elected
by a minority of the people. He had been elected by the people of
one section. Other Presidents had been chosen by minorities. But
Lincoln was the first man to be chosen President by the people of
one section. The Republicans, moreover, had not elected a majority
of the members of the House of Representatives, and the Senate was
still in the hands of the Democrats. For two years at least the
Republicans could not carry out their ideas. They could not repeal
the Kansas-Nebraska Act. They could not admit Kansas to the Union
as a free state. They could not carry out one bit of their policy.
In their platform they had declared that they had no intention to
interfere with slavery in the states. Lincoln had said over and
over again that Congress had no right to meddle with slavery in the
states. The Southern leaders knew all these things. But they made
up their minds that now the time had come to secede from the Union
and to establish a Southern Confederacy. For the first time all the
southernmost states were united. No matter what Lincoln and the
Republicans might say, the Southern slaveholders believed that
slavery was in danger. In advising secession, many of them thought
that by this means they could force the Northerners to accept their
terms as the price of a restored Union. Never were political
leaders more mistaken.</p>
<p class="side">Southern conventions.</p>
<p><b>374. Threats of Secession, November, 1860.</b>--The
Constitution permits each state to choose presidential electors as
it sees fit. At the outset these electors had generally been chosen
by the state legislatures. But, in the course of time, all the
states save one had come to choose them by popular vote. The one
state that held to the old way was South Carolina. Its legislature
still chose the state's presidential electors. In 1860 the South
Carolina legislature did this duty and then remained in session to
see which way the election would go. When Lincoln's election was
certain, it called a state convention to consider the question of
seceding from the United States. In other Southern states there was
some opposition to secession. In Georgia, especially, Alexander H.
Stephens led the opposition. He said that secession "was the height
of madness." Nevertheless he moved a resolution for a convention.
Indeed, all the southernmost states followed the example of South
Carolina and summoned conventions.</p>
<p class="side">Buchanan's compromise plan.<br/>
Crittenden's plan of compromise. <i>McMaster</i>, 380-381.<br/>
It fails to pass Congress.</p>
<p><b>375. The Crittenden Compromise Plan.</b>--Many men hoped that
even now secession might be stopped by some compromise. President
Buchanan suggested an amendment to the Constitution, securing
slavery in the states and territories. It was unlikely that the
Republicans would agree to this suggestion. The most hopeful plan
was brought forward in Congress by Senator Crittenden of Kentucky.
He proposed that amendments to the Constitution should be adopted:
(1) to carry out the principle of the Missouri Compromise (p.
222);(2) to provide that states should be free or slave as their
people should determine; and (3) to pay the slave owners the value
of runaway slaves. This plan was carefully considered by Congress,
and was finally rejected only two days before Lincoln's
inauguration.</p>
<p class="side">South Carolina secedes, 1860. <i>Eggleston</i>,
304-305.<br/>
Six other states secede.</p>
<p><b>376. Secession of Seven States, 1860-61.</b>--The South
Carolina convention met in Secession Hall, Charleston, on December
17, 1860. Three days later it adopted a declaration "that the union
now subsisting between South Carolina and other states, under the
name of the United States of America, is hereby dissolved." Six
other states soon joined South Carolina. These were Mississippi,
Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas.</p>
<p class="side">Confederate states constitution.<br/>
Views of Jefferson Davis.</p>
<p><b>377. The "Confederate States of America."</b>--The next step
was for these states to join together to form a confederation. This
work was done by a convention of delegates chosen by the
conventions of the seven seceding states. These delegates met at
Montgomery, Alabama. Their new constitution closely resembled the
Constitution of the United States. But great care was taken to make
it perfectly clear that each member of the Confederacy was a
sovereign state. Exceeding care was also taken that slavery should
be protected in every way. Jefferson Davis of Mississippi was
chosen provisional president, and Alexander H. Stephens provisional
vice-president.</p>
<p>[Illustration: CHARLESTON MERCURY EXTRA: The UNION is
DISSOLVED!]</p>
<p class="side">Views of Jefferson Davis.<br/>
Views of Alexander H. Stephens. <i>Source-Book</i>, 296-299.</p>
<p><b>378. Views of Davis and Stephens.</b>--Davis declared that
Lincoln had "made a distinct declaration of war upon our (Southern)
institutions." His election was "upon the basis of sectional
hostility." If "war must come, it must be on Northern and not on
Southern soil.... We will carry war ... where food for the sword
and torch awaits our armies in the densely populated cities" of the
North. For his part, Stephens said the new government's
"foundations are laid, its cornerstone rests, upon the great truth
that the negro is not equal to the white man."</p>
<p class="side">"Let the erring sisters" go in peace.<br/>
Greeley's opinions.<br/>
Buchanan's opinions.</p>
<p><b>379. Hesitation in the North.</b>--At first it seemed as if
Davis was right when he said the Northerners would not fight.
General Scott, commanding the army, suggested that the "erring
sisters" should be allowed to "depart in peace," and Seward seemed
to think the same way. The Abolitionists welcomed the secession of
the slave states. Horace Greeley, for instance, wrote that if those
states chose to form an independent nation, "they had a clear moral
right so to do." For his part, President Buchanan thought that no
state could constitutionally secede. But if a state should secede,
he saw no way to compel it to come back to the Union. So he sat
patiently by and did nothing.</p>
<br/>
<p>QUESTIONS AND TOPICS</p>
<br/>
<p>CHAPTER 35</p>
<p>§§ 361, 362.--<i>a</i>. Compare the area and
population of the United States in 1800 and in 1860.</p>
<p><i>b</i>. Compare the white population of the North and the
South. Were all the Southern whites slave owners?</p>
<p><i>c</i>. Why had the control of the House passed to the free
states? Did a white man in the North and in the South have
proportionally the same representation in the House? Why?</p>
<p><i>d</i>. What change in the control of the Senate had taken
place? Why? Why was this change so important?</p>
<p>§§ 363, 364.--<i>a</i>. What had caused the growth of
the Northern cities? Why were there so few large cities in the
slave states?</p>
<p><i>b</i>. How had the population of the states changed since
1790? What had caused the growth of the Northwest?</p>
<p><i>c</i>. Where was there the greatest density of population?
Why?</p>
<p>§§ 365, 366.--<i>a</i>. Describe the change of life in
the cities. What arrangements were made for the comfort and health
of the people?</p>
<p><i>b</i>. How had railroads increased, and what improvements had
been made?</p>
<p>§§ 367, 368.--<i>a</i>. Of what use are newspapers?
How do they influence the opinions of the people? What policy did
Horace Greeley uphold? Why?</p>
<p><i>b</i>. Who were some of the important writers? Mention two
works of each.</p>
<p><i>c</i>. What influence did the telegraph have? Was this
important?</p>
<p><i>d</i>. Describe some of the other inventions.</p>
<p><i>e</i>. Why had this progress been confined mainly to the
North?</p>
<br/>
<p>CHAPTER 36</p>
<p>§ 369.--<i>a</i>. Who were the leading Republican
candidates?</p>
<p><i>b</i>. Why was Lincoln nominated? What is the meaning of the
phrase "too conspicuous"?</p>
<p><i>c</i>. What did Seward mean by saying that there was a
"higher law" than the Constitution? Why was the slavery contest
"irrepressible"?</p>
<p><i>d</i>. What declaration was made by the Republican party as
to slavery? Compare this policy with the Wilmot Proviso.</p>
<p>§§ 370, 371.--<i>a</i>. What divisions took place in
the Democratic party? Why?</p>
<p><i>b</i>. What candidates were named? What policy did each
uphold?</p>
<p><i>c</i>. How had the demands of the Southerners concerning
slavery increased?</p>
<p><i>d</i>. What third party was formed? By whom? What does the
name show?</p>
<p>§§ 372, 373.--<i>a</i>. What was the result of the
election?</p>
<p><i>b</i>. What was there peculiar in Lincoln's election?</p>
<p><i>c</i>. Were the Southern states in any particular danger?</p>
<p><i>d</i>. Why should the Southerners have felt so strongly about
this election? What was their hope in threatening secession?</p>
<p>§§374, 375.--<i>a</i> Give arguments for and against
secession. In what other question similar to this had South
Carolina led?</p>
<p><i>b</i>. Were the people of the South generally in favor of
secession?</p>
<p><i>c</i>. What compromise did Buchanan suggest? What do you
think of the wisdom of the plan?</p>
<p><i>d</i>. Explain carefully the points in Crittenden's plan.
Discuss its value.</p>
<p>§§ 376, 377.--<i>a</i> Could one state dissolve the
Union? <i>b</i>. What other states followed South Carolina?</p>
<p><i>c</i>. What government was formed by them? What two points
were especially emphasized in their constitution? Why these?</p>
<p>§§ 378, 379.--<i>a</i>. What statement did Davis make
as to Lincoln? Was it true or false? Give your reasons.</p>
<p><i>b</i>. Why did Davis advocate war on Northern soil?</p>
<p><i>c</i>. Why was there such hesitation in the North? State the
opinions of Scott, Greeley, and Buchanan.</p>
<p><i>d</i>. What would Jackson probably have done had he been
President?</p>
<br/>
<p>GENERAL QUESTIONS</p>
<p><i>a</i>. Was the South justified in thinking that the North
would yield? Give illustrations to support your view.</p>
<p><i>b</i>. Were the years 1857-61 more or less "critical" than
the years 1783-87? Why?</p>
<p><i>c</i>. How was the South dependent upon the North?</p>
<br/>
<p>TOPICS FOR SPECIAL WORK</p>
<p><i>a</i>. Comparison between the North and the South.</p>
<p><i>b</i>. Any invention mentioned in this part.</p>
<p><i>c</i>. Some writer of this period.</p>
<p><i>d</i>. The condition of your own state (or town or city) in
1860.</p>
<br/>
<p>SUGGESTIONS TO THE TEACHER</p>
<p>The first chapter of this part should be taught very slowly, and
at each point the contrast between the North and the South should
be pointed out.</p>
<p>In Chapter 36 the changed attitude of the Southern politicians
should be noted and their demands clearly set forth. The fact that
the slave owners while a minority in the South dominated public
opinion should be pointed out.</p>
<p>In considering the question of secession it will be well to
review the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions, the Hartford
Convention, and the Nullification episode. The weakness of Pierce
and Buchanan may be contrasted with the strength of Jackson, and
will serve as an introduction to the study of Lincoln's
character.</p>
<br/>
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<hr style="width: 35%;">
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<h2><SPAN name="XIII"></SPAN>XIII</h2>
<br/>
<h3>THE WAR FOR THE UNION, 1861-1865</h3>
<h4>Books for Study and Reading</h4>
<p><b>References</b>.--Dodge's <i>Bird's-Eye View</i>; Scribner's
<i>Popular History</i>, IV and V; McMaster's <i>School History</i>.
chap, xxix (the cost of the war); Lincoln's <i>Inaugurals</i> and
<i>Gettysburg Address</i>.</p>
<p><b>Home Readings</b>.--<i>Battles and Leaders of the Civil
War</i> (composed largely of articles that had previously appeared
in the <i>Century Magazine</i>; Whittier's <i>Barbara
Frietchie;</i> Coffin's <i>Winning his Way</i> and other stories;
Soley's <i>Sailor Boys of '61</i>; Trowbridge's <i>Drummer Boy</i>
and other stories; Read's <i>Sheridan's Ride</i>; Champlin's
<i>Young Folks' History of the War for the Union</i>).</p>
<br/>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_37"></SPAN>CHAPTER 37</h2>
<h3>THE RISING OF THE PEOPLES, 1861</h3>
<p class="side">Lincoln's inaugural address, March 4, 1861.</p>
<p><b>380. Lincoln's Inauguration.</b>--On March 4, 1861, President
Lincoln made his first inaugural address. In it he declared: "The
Union is much older than the Constitution.... No state upon its own
motion can lawfully get out of the Union.... In view of the
Constitution and the laws the Union is unbroken ... I shall take
care that the laws of the Union be faithfully executed in all the
states." As to slavery, he had "no purpose ... to interfere with
the institution of slavery in the states where it exists." He even
saw no objection to adopt an amendment of the Constitution to
prohibit the Federal government from interfering with slavery in
the states. But he was resolved to preserve, protect, and defend
the Constitution of the United States.</p>
<SPAN name="347.jpg"></SPAN><br/>
<p class="ctr"><ANTIMG src="images/347.jpg" width-obs="100%" alt=""><br/>
<b>SLAVERY AND SECESSION.</b></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p class="ctr"><ANTIMG src="images/349.jpg" width-obs="40%" alt=""><br/>
<b>"OLD GLORY" AS USED IN THE CIVIL WAR.</b></p>
<br/>
<p class="side">Fort Sumter. <i>Source-Book</i>, 299-302.<br/>
The call to arms, April 15, 1861.</p>
<p><b>381. Fall of Fort Sumter, April, 1861.</b>--The strength of
Lincoln's resolve was soon tested. When South Carolina seceded,
Major Anderson, commanding the United States forces at Charleston,
withdrew from the land forts to Fort Sumter, built on a shoal in
the harbor. He had with him only eighty fighting men and was sorely
in need of food and ammunition. Buchanan sent a steamer, the
<i>Star of the West,</i> to Charleston with supplies and soldiers.
But the Confederates fired on her, and she steamed away without
landing the soldiers or the supplies. Lincoln waited a month,
hoping that the secessionists would come back to the Union of their
own accord. Then he decided to send supplies to Major Anderson and
told the governor of South Carolina of his decision. Immediately
(April 12) the Confederates opened fire on Fort Sumter. On April 14
Anderson surrendered. The next day President Lincoln issued a
proclamation calling for seventy-five thousand volunteers.</p>
<p class="side">The Northern volunteers. <i>McMaster</i>, 386-387;
<i>Source-Book</i>, 303-305.<br/>
Douglas, Buchanan, and Pierce.<br/>
Progress of secession.</p>
<p><b>382. Rising of the North.</b>--There was no longer a question
of letting the "erring sisters" depart in peace. The Southerners
had fired on "Old Glory." There was no longer a dispute over the
extension of slavery. The question was now whether the Union should
perish or should live. Douglas at once came out for the Union and
so did the former Presidents, Buchanan and Franklin Pierce. In the
Mississippi Valley hundreds of thousands of men either sympathized
with the slaveholders or cared nothing about the slavery dispute.
But the moment the Confederates attacked the Union, they rose in
defense of their country and their flag.</p>
<p class="side">West Virginia.</p>
<p><b>383. More Seceders.</b>--The Southerners flocked to the
standards of the Confederacy, and four more states joined the ranks
of secession. These were Arkansas, Tennessee, North Carolina, and
Virginia. In Virginia the people were sharply divided on the
question of secession. Finally Virginia seceded, but the western
Virginians, in their turn, seceded from Virginia and two years
later were admitted to the Union as the state of West Virginia.
Four "border states" had seceded; but four other "border states"
were still within the Union. These were Delaware, Maryland,
Kentucky, and Missouri.</p>
<p class="side">Kentucky and Maryland saved to the Union.<br/>
Missouri saved to the Union. <i>Eggleston</i>, 310.</p>
<p><b>384. The Border States.</b>--The people of Maryland and of
Kentucky were evenly divided on the question of secession. They
even tried to set up as neutral states. But their neutrality would
have been so greatly to the advantage of the seceders that this
could not be allowed. Lincoln's firm moderation and the patriotism
of many wise leaders in Kentucky saved that state to the Union. But
Maryland was so important to the defense of Washington that more
energetic means had to be used. In Missouri, a large and active
party wished to join the Confederacy. But two Union men, Frank P.
Blair and Nathaniel Lyon, held the most important portions of the
state for the Union. It was not until a year later, however, that
Missouri was safe on the Northern side.</p>
<p class="side">Southern sentiment in Washington.<br/>
Southern Unionists.<br/>
First bloodshed, April 19, 1861.</p>
<p><b>385. To the Defense of Washington.</b>--The national capital
was really a Southern town, for most of the permanent residents
were Southerners, and the offices were filled with Southern men. In
the army and navy, too, were very many Southerners. Most of them,
as Robert E. Lee, felt that their duty to their state was greater
than their duty to their flag. But many Southern officers felt
differently. Among these were two men whose names should be held in
grateful remembrance, Captain David G. Farragut and Colonel George
H. Thomas. The first soldiers to arrive in Washington were from
Pennsylvania; but they came unarmed. Soon they were followed by the
Sixth Massachusetts. In passing through Baltimore this regiment was
attacked. Several men were killed, others were wounded. This was on
April 19, 1861,--the anniversary of the battles of Lexington and
Concord. It was the first bloodshed of the war.</p>
<br/>
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