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In 1861, as part of a last-ditch effort to preserve the Union and prevent war, Abraham Lincoln offered to accept a constitutional amendment that barred Congress from interfering with slavery in the slave states. Daniel Crofts unearths the hidden history and political manoeuvring behind the stillborn attempt to enact this amendment.
The Diary of a Public Man, published anonymously in 1879, claimed to offer accounts of secret conversations with Abraham Lincoln, William H. Seward, and Stephen A. Douglas in the weeks before the start of the Civil War. Historians have never been able to pinpoint its author or determine its authenticity until now.
Nat Turner's 1831 slave insurrection made Virginia's Southampton County notorious. Old Southampton links local and national history. It explains how partisan loyalties developed, how white democracy flourished in the late antebellum years, how secession sharply divided neighbourhoods, and how former slaves challenged the prerogatives of former slaveholders.
Daniel Crofts examines Unionists in three pivotal southern states - Virginia, North Carolina, and Tennessee - and shows why the outbreak of the war enabled the Confederacy to gain the allegiance of these essential, if ambivalent, governments.
Originally published in 1942, this perceptive and impartial analysis of one of the most baffling periods in American history, the months between the election of Lincoln and the fall of Fort Sumter, was a bold declaration of intellectual independence.
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