REFLECTIONS ON APOSTLES OF DISUNION - BY CHARLES DEW
By John M. Lloyd
There is little doubt among historians as to the importance of slavery as one of the main causes of the American Civil War. To what extent slavery played an important role as a cause is what has been debated for the past 150 years. Charles Dew’s book Apostles of Disunion, brings to light that the main motivation for the cause of the Civil War was, at its root, slavery and ultimately racism. Dew does this by analysis of the Southern state Secession Commissioners’ writings. These commissioners were appointed by their individual states in order to take-forth the feelings and sentiments on the secession question to persuade other southern states to secede from the Union and join the fledgling Southern Confederacy.
True, the antebellum South was a classed society that was based-upon chattel slavery as its base, broad-sweeping class. True, this class-system was of a race-based nature. Also true that this system included many different gradient levels of superiority (such as unskilled enslaved blacks, skilled enslaved blacks, free blacks, unskilled poor whites, skilled poor whites, etc.). I also definitely agree with Dew’s conclusion that fear of slave uprising, like had been done in a quite bloody-fashion in Haiti in the early 19th century as well as had happened on select occasions in the South before the Civil War, was a main motivation of fear in whites in the antebellum South and this led to a sense of paranoia amongst the white populations of Southern states.
Factually, I think that Dew highlights many of the slavery and racial causes of the Civil War. Dew has done his homework in analysis and documentation of the surviving Secession Commissioners’ papers and records. He seems to be thorough in his analysis and in his narrative of what commissioners did what and when they did it.
I believe Dew gets it wrong in that he concentrates only on the topic of slavery in the pre-war South as the main cause of the states leaving the Union and, in turn, the Civil War. Dew purposefully ignores all evidence that states rights, delegation of power responsibility in government, political dealings, economics between the two factions, and cultural differences ever played a roll in the break-up of the United States. I believe this is lazy and willingly ignorant conclusion-making based-upon good, narrative research and the desire to bend this research to prove a single, narrow-minded thesis.
Dew obviously writes this book in order that he can prove his thesis that slavery and racism were the reasons for the break-up of the United States. In the book’s forward, he states it is his goal to prove slavery and racism were the direct causes of hostilities that led to the Civil War. There is a danger here that Dew obviously does not seem to worry about in that analysis of a particular topic can be bent to a certain desired end through the interpretation of the willing.
Overall, though, Dew’s book is an interesting and telling look at the slavery discussion within and amongst the southern states during the secession crisis. I am curious as to see analysis of what other topics arose from the Secession Commissioners’ interstate dialogues, as I feel this book clearly does not provide this to the reader. I also have a difficult time believing that the commissioners’ dialogue included pro-slavery exhortations only due to the fact the root causes of the Civil War ran deeper and more complex than the slavery question. Nevertheless, it cannot be denied that slavery was a large part of the tipping-point into disunion, but it was not the only root cause.
At best, this book, I feel, is myopic, and at worst, borderline disingenuous. One cannot take a segment of anything that is clearly more complex than the author tells it to be and stretch it to be the sole cause of an event like the American Civil War. To do so, shows modern political beliefs read into historical events through modern-day eyes. To understand the motivations of those that lived the historical event being studied can be one of the biggest challenges of the historian. Some historians get this idea correctly more than others.
QUESTIONS:
Why does Dew just about omit States Rights, cultural, political, and economic known causes of the Civil War and focus only on slavery?
According to Dew, why did the Secession Commissioners play-up the paranoia of slave rebellion as a persuasive cause to secede from the Union?
Do you feel Dew is using a modern lens to see historical events?
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