The Urban South and the Coming of the Civil War |
| Frank Towers |
| 272 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 |
| 1 b&w illustration, 6 tables |
| Print-on-demand paperback 978-0-8139-2787-9 $22.50 |
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Source print-on-demand copy |
The role the rural South and its plantation system played in
the secession of the Confederate states is well established, but
historian Frank Towers contends that we should look just as closely
at the South’s urban centers. An exemplary feat of research,
The Urban South and the Coming of the Civil War sheds
light on the dynamics of secession by concentrating on pivotal
sociopolitical shifts in the South’s three largest citiesBaltimore,
New Orleans, and St. Louis.
Despite having a culture and an economy rooted in agriculture,
between 1840 and 1860 the South actually experienced greater growth
in its cities than in its rural sectors. Attracted to the cities
by jobs in commerce and industry, propertyless white workingmen
developed a slave-state variant of the free-labor politics that
Abraham Lincoln’s Republican Party used to gain prominence
in the North. Lacking the sort of national organization that could
contribute to the cause through patronage and legislation, parties
such as Baltimore’s Know-Nothings relied instead on a combination
of nativism, labor-supported machine politics, and electoral coercion.
By the late 1850s, the Democratic Party dominated the state legislatures
of Louisiana, Missouri, and Maryland, and yet it had lost all
of those states’ largest cities.
Towers shows how the ascendance of urban opposition parties hastened
the collapse of the Jacksonian party system. Although they were
pro-slavery, urban voters favored workers’ rights and stronger
municipal government, both of which threatened the landowning
society, particularly in light of prospective urban alliances
with Washington. Fearing the horrors of mob rule and the slim
chances of slavery’s survival in an atmosphere of working-class
politics, rural planters largely abandoned the traditional Whig-Democrat
competition and banded together in a more staunchly secessionist
position. The Urban South and the Coming of the Civil War
makes clear that this shift played a critical role in placing
the South on an unalterable path towards war.
Frank Towers is Associate Professor of History
at the University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.