ShilohSlavery in the Civil War |
Brochure about Slavery in the Civil War at Shiloh National Military Park (NMP) in Tennessee and Mississippi. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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Slavery and the Civil War
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
www.nps.gov
The role of slavery in bringing on the Civil War has been hotly debated for decades. One
important way of approaching the issue is to look at what contemporary observers had to say. In
March 1861, Alexander Stephens, vice president of the Confederate States of America, gave his
view:
The new [Confederate] constitution has put at rest, forever, all the agitating questions relating
to our peculiar institution — African slavery as it exists amongst us — the proper status of the
negro in our form of civilization. This was the immediate cause of the late rupture and present
revolution . . . The prevailing ideas entertained by . . . most of the leading statesmen at the
time of the formation of the old constitution, were that the enslavement of the African was in
violation of the laws of nature; that it was wrong in principle, socially, morally, and politically
. . . Those ideas, however, were fundamentally wrong. They rested upon the assumption of
the equality of races. This was an error . . .
Our new government is founded upon exactly the opposite idea; its foundations are laid, its
corner–stone rests upon the great truth, that the negro is not equal to the white man; that
slavery — subordination to the superior race — is his natural and normal condition.
Alexander H. Stephens, vice
president of the Confederate
States of America.
— Alexander H. Stephens, March 21, 1861, reported in the Savannah Republican, emphasis in the original.
Today, most professional historians agree with Stephens that
slavery and the status of African Americans were at the heart of
the crisis that plunged the U.S. into a civil war from 1861 to
1865. That is not to say that the average Confederate soldier
fought to preserve slavery or that the North went to war to end
slavery. Soldiers fight for many
reasons — notably to stay alive
and support their comrades in
arms — and the North’s goal in
the beginning was preservation
of the Union, not emancipation. For the 200,000 African
Americans who ultimately
served the U.S. in the war,
emancipation was the primary
aim.
The roots of the crisis over
slavery that gripped the nation
in 1860–1861 go back to the
nation’s founding. European
settlers brought a system of
slavery with them to the
An African–American sergeant,
western
hemisphere in the
Furney Bryant, of the United States
1500s. Unable to find cheap
Colored Troops.
labor from other sources,
white settlers increasingly turned to slaves imported from
Africa. By the early 1700s in British North America, slavery
meant African slavery. Southern plantations using slave labor
produced the great export crops — tobacco, rice, forest
products, and indigo — that made the American colonies
profitable. Many Northern merchants made their fortunes
either in the slave trade or by exporting the products of slave
labor. African slavery was central to the development of British
North America.
could not be ignored. Although slaves could not vote, white
Southerners argued that slave labor contributed greatly to the
nation’s wealth. The Constitution therefore gave representation in the Congress and the electoral college for 3/5ths of
every slave (the 3/5ths clause). The clause gave the South a role
in the national government far greater than representation
based on its free population alone would have given it. The
Constitution also provided for a fugitive slave law and made
1807 the earliest year that Congress could act to end the
importation of slaves from Africa.
The Constitution left many questions about slavery
unanswered, in particular, the question of slavery’s status in
any new territory acquired by the U.S. The failure to deal
forthrightly and comprehensively with slavery in the
Constitution guaranteed future conflict over the issue. All
realistic hope that slavery might eventually die out in the South
ended when world demand for cotton exploded in the early
1800s. By 1840, cotton produced in the American South earned
Although slavery existed in all 13 colonies at the start of the
American Revolution in 1775, a number of Americans
(especially those of African descent) sensed the contradiction
between the Declaration of Independence’s ringing claim of
human equality and the existence of slavery. Reacting to that
contradiction, the Northern states decided to phase out slavery
following the Revolution. The future of slavery in the South
was debated, and some held out the hope that it would
eventually disappear there as well.
When the U.S. Constitution was written in 1787, however, the
interests of slaveholders and those who profited from slavery
The South’s cotton economy ran on slave labor.
more money than all other U.S. exports combined. White
Southerners came to believe that cotton could be grown only
with slave labor. Over time, many took for granted that their
prosperity, even their way of life, was inseparable from African
slavery.
In the decades preceding 1860, Northerners increasingly
supported the right of farmers and workers to enjoy the fruits
of their labor and try to better themselves. Slavery did not fit
with this view. Many
Northerners opposed its
presence in the territories,
which were viewed as the
birthright of ambitious,
free white men. The
proposed admission of
Missouri as a slave state in
1820 provoked a national
debate over slavery. After
much discussion, the 1820
Missouri Compromise was
worked out. Under its
Republican Party slogan from the 1860
terms,
Maine was admitted
election.
as a free state at the same
time that Missouri came in as a slave state, maintaining the
balance between slave and free states. Additionally, Congress
prohibited slavery in all western territories lying above 36° 30’
latitude (the southern boundary of Missouri).
The presidential election of 1860 was fought entirely along
sectional lines. The Democratic Party finally splintered over
slavery, with the party fielding two candidates. The
Republicans nominated Abraham Lincoln of Illinois. His
platform included government support of road and harbor
projects and higher tariffs (import taxes) to protect American
industry, in addition to keeping slavery out of the territories.
Lincoln won the election by sweeping the Northern states,
while failing to gain a single electoral vote in the Deep South.
Spurred by South Carolina, the states of the Deep South
decided that limitation of slavery in the territories was the first
step toward a total abolition of slavery.
One by one, seven states — South Carolina, Mississippi,
Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, and Texas — left the
Union. Lincoln hoped desperately to maintain the Union
without war. When he decided to resupply the U.S. army at Ft.
Sumter in Charleston Harbor, Confederate forces fired on the
fort. Lincoln then asked for 75,000 volunteers to put down the
rebellion. This prompted Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee,
and Arkansas to join the Confederacy. Civil war had come.
The Missouri Compromise quieted agitation over slavery for
only a while. In the 1830s, concerns over the issue resurfaced
for several reasons. One was the appearance in the North of a
tiny number of very persistent agitators calling for the
immediate abolition of slavery (the abolitionists). Another was
the bloody 1831 Nat Turner slave rebellion in Virginia. White
Southerners believed Northern abolitionists encouraged slave
revolts, while Southern efforts to silence the abolitionists
aroused Northern fears about freedom of speech.
A secession meeting in Charleston, South Carolina.
Later, U.S. victory in the Mexican War of 1846–1848 brought
the nation vast new acreage in the West. Once again, the status
of slavery in the territories became a hot issue. A new
agreement, the Compromise of 1850, was required when the
California Territory sought to join the Union. Aspects of the
compromise included 1) admission of California as a free state;
2) a stronger fugitive slave law; 3) assurance that Congress
would not interfere with the interstate traffic in slaves in the
South; and 4) prohibition of the slave trade in the District of
Columbia. The compromise left open the status of slavery in
the other areas won from Mexico. Then, in 1854, the Kansas–
Nebraska Act effectively repealed the Missouri Compromise,
causing more violent disputes over slavery. Pro– and anti–
slavery factions turned the Kansas Territory into a bloody
battleground.
Mostly as a result of tensions over slavery, a new party, the
Republicans, arose in the North in the 1850s. The Republicans
made prohibition of slavery in the territories their chief issue.
The party was the first in
the nation’s history to
draw its support from one
section only. Inevitably,
the party aroused deep
anger in the South.
Attitudes in the two
sections of the nation
continued to harden in the
late 1850s. In 1857, the U.S.
Supreme Court in the Dred
Scott decision ruled that
Americans of African
descent were not U.S.
Dred Scott, subject of a notorious
Supreme Court decision.
citizens. A failed effort to
start a slave uprising in
Virginia by abolitionist John Brown in 1859 spread fear and
distress across the South.
There were many sectional differences in 19th–century America.
Differences over slavery were the only ones that could not be
settled by peaceful means. Much evidence from that time
shows that the secession of seven Deep South states was
caused mostly by concerns over the future of slavery. When
Mississippi seceded, she published a “Declaration of the
Immediate Causes which Include and Justify the Secession of
the State of Mississippi from the Federal Union.” It stated:
“Our position is thoroughly identified with the
institution of slavery … Utter subjugation awaits us in
the Union, if we should consent longer to remain in it.
It is not a matter of choice, but of necessity. We must
either submit to degradation, and to the loss of
property worth four billions of money [the estimated
total market value of slaves], or we must secede from
the Union framed by our fathers, to secure this as well
as every other species of property.”
The Civil War begins as Confederate forces fire upon Fort Sumter.
EXPERIENCE YOUR AMERICA
6/2005