Reluctant Confederates: Upper South Unionists in the Secession CrisisDaniel 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. |
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... remained Unionists until confronted by Lincoln's procla- mation . We may therefore identify and study " upper South Unionists in the secession crisis . " The upper South included eight states , but in this study the term will typically ...
... remained Unionists until confronted by Lincoln's procla- mation . We may therefore identify and study " upper South Unionists in the secession crisis . " The upper South included eight states , but in this study the term will typically ...
Page 2
... remained prominent in the state legislature . His brother William B. Stokes , who lived in adjoin- ing DeKalb County , won election to the U.S. House in 1859 from what the legislature had intended as a Democratic seat.2 Robert Hatton ...
... remained prominent in the state legislature . His brother William B. Stokes , who lived in adjoin- ing DeKalb County , won election to the U.S. House in 1859 from what the legislature had intended as a Democratic seat.2 Robert Hatton ...
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... remained in the Union . Reports indicated that Lincoln would adopt a peaceful policy and avoid an armed clash with the seceding states . Late in March , Hatton noted : " All is quiet here . Secession is making no head- way . Can't for ...
... remained in the Union . Reports indicated that Lincoln would adopt a peaceful policy and avoid an armed clash with the seceding states . Late in March , Hatton noted : " All is quiet here . Secession is making no head- way . Can't for ...
Page 6
... remained loyal Unionists until re- ceiving word about Lincoln's proclamation calling for seventy - five thousand troops , shortly after the fall of Fort Sumter . That changed everything . The proclamation came as an " awful shock " to ...
... remained loyal Unionists until re- ceiving word about Lincoln's proclamation calling for seventy - five thousand troops , shortly after the fall of Fort Sumter . That changed everything . The proclamation came as an " awful shock " to ...
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Contents
Unionist Profiles | 8 |
Political Parties in the Late Antebellum Upper South | 37 |
The Political Origins of Upper South Unionism | 66 |
Unionists on the Defensive | 90 |
The Unionist Offensive | 104 |
The Unionist Offensive | 130 |
Measuring the Unionist Insurgency | 164 |
The Unionists and Compromise | 195 |
The Unionists Fort Sumter and the Proclamation for Seventyfive Thousand Troops | 308 |
Forced to Choose Sides Southern Unionists after the Proclamation | 334 |
Rethinking the Secession Crisis | 353 |
Multiple Regression Party Slavery and Secession | 361 |
Ecological Regression Estimating Voter Behavior | 367 |
Statistics Secession and the Historians | 376 |
Notes | 383 |
Bibliographical Essay | 457 |
Other editions - View all
Reluctant Confederates: Upper South Unionists in the Secession Crisis Daniel W. Crofts Limited preview - 2014 |
Reluctant Confederates: Upper South Unionists in the Secession Crisis Daniel W. Crofts No preview available - 1993 |
Common terms and phrases
Alexander H. H. Stuart American Andrew Johnson antebellum April Baldwin Baton Rouge Border State plan Breckinridge cabinet Campbell candidate Charles Francis Adams compromise Conciliatory Republicans Confederacy Confederate Congress Congressman Crittenden Crittenden Compromise CWAL deep South delegates Democratic party disunion Douglas East Tennessee editor election electorate eligible estimated favored February federal Fort Sumter Gilmer ginia Governor Henry Henry Winter Davis high-slaveowning History hope Intelligencer James John Bell John Letcher Johnson Papers leaders Letcher letter Lincoln Papers Louisiana State University lower South majority Nashville newspaper Nonvoting North Carolina northern Peace Conference percent percentage political presidential pro-Union Raleigh Reese regression Republican party Rives Robert Hatton Ruffin seceded seces secession crisis Secession Movement secessionists Senate Seward sion slave slavery Southern Rights southern Unionists Sumter territorial tion Union party University Press upper South upper South Unionists Virginia Convention Virginia Unionists voters Washington Weed William H York