Book contents
- Born in Blood
- Born in Blood
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Introduction A System of Violence: Liberal Society in the United States
- Part I Early Manifestations
- Part II Evolutions
- 4 The 1850s: A People’s Government and the Politics of Belligerence
- 5 The United States Greets John Brown
- 6 1860: The Undisputed Election that Sparked Dispute
- 7 Emancipation’s Fury
- Part III Modern Traditions
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Index
6 - 1860: The Undisputed Election that Sparked Dispute
from Part II - Evolutions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 January 2024
- Born in Blood
- Born in Blood
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Introduction A System of Violence: Liberal Society in the United States
- Part I Early Manifestations
- Part II Evolutions
- 4 The 1850s: A People’s Government and the Politics of Belligerence
- 5 The United States Greets John Brown
- 6 1860: The Undisputed Election that Sparked Dispute
- 7 Emancipation’s Fury
- Part III Modern Traditions
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Index
Summary
Scholars often frame Republican supporters in 1860 as the moral center of American politics. The Republicans, after all, were antislavery proponents, at least in a moderate sense. But it is important not to infuse Republican Party morality with a more modern ethic, such as an antiracist or antiviolence stance. Most Republicans focused on White enslavers and the institution of slavery without developing much policy on freed slaves beyond colonization - the removal of African Americans from the United States. Despite the Republican Party’s self-promotion as a coalition committed to peaceful law and order (in contrast to the bullying leadership of slaveholders and Democrats), it was an organization built to resist and fight. In the 1860 election cycle, the Wide Awakes, Abraham Lincoln’s Republican backers, engaged their Democratic counterparts in physical battle across the northern, urban landscape. Shootings, stabbings, chasings, and beatings marked these clashes. Chapter 6 explores how partisan physical and electoral fights would shape questions of violence and the national state in the challenging period between Lincoln’s election and his assumption of office.
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- Born in BloodViolence and the Making of America, pp. 132 - 156Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024