Secessionist Impulse
Alabama and Mississippi in 1860
Format:Paperback
Publisher:The University of Alabama Press
Published:31st Jan '04
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This is an outline of the economic crisis in the South based on the declining yields, increasing class stratification and higher slave prices. It supplies data on the property holdings and occupations of the elected representatives and finds the secessionists to be young, probably lawyers who were both ambitious and confident. Because the economic dislocation of the 1850s made people receptive to a rhetoric that emphasized conspiratorial abolitionists and almost paranoid fear of blacks and strangers, the politicians were able to persuade their constituents that a real crisis did exist and that secession was the only remedy.
Barney outlines an economic crisis in the South based on declining yields, increasing class stratification, and higher slave prices. He then supplies us with detailed data on the property holdings and occupations of the elected representatives and finds the secessionists to be young, probably lawyers... ambitious and confident. Because the economic dislocation of the 1850s made people receptive to a rhetoric that emphasized conspiratorial abolitionists and almost paranold fear of blacks and strangers, the politicians were able to persuade their constituents that a real crisis did exist and that secession was the only remedy. - Virginia Quarterly Review
ISBN: 9780817350895
Dimensions: 230mm x 141mm x 9mm
Weight: 513g
386 pages