Authors: Bruce Chadwick
While Lincoln led the United States from the White House in Washington, DC, Jefferson Davis led the Confederate States of America from the Southern White House in Richmond, Virginia. Davis, who survived a near fatal herpes/neuralgia attack in the spring of 1858 and later that year solidified his position as the leading secessionist in the country, was selected as the president of the Confederacy at a special convention in Alabama in February 1861. He was seen by Southerners as a military hero who could lead the South to victory in a Civil War, if one came, and as a national executive respected throughout the North, as evidenced by the warm reception accorded him on his trip to New England in the summer of 1858. His difficulty in working with anyone and short temper was not seen as a drawback—then.
None of the lives of the men involved in this book were affected more by events that transpired in 1858 than abolitionist John Brown. The radical antislavery leader, his flowing white beard now familiar throughout the North and South, became convinced during his Missouri raid that the federal government would not or could not stop him and that, eventually, thousands of like-minded abolitionists would join him in successive raids into the South to free slaves. That confidence led him and a band of twenty-two men—seventeen whites and five blacks, including two of the Oberlin Rescuers—to attack and seize Harper’s Ferry in October of 1859, killing four townspeople in the process.
He expected thousands of abolitionists to join him at Harper’s Ferry, but none did. A military detachment led by Colonel Robert E. Lee captured Brown in a shoot-out on October 18 in which one marine and seven raiders, including two of Brown’s sons, were killed. Brown was tried, convicted, and hanged on December 2, 1859. Despite criticism of Brown and his Harper’s Ferry raid by every leading federal official and many Republican leaders, including Abraham Lincoln, the abolitionist immediately became the martyred hero of the antislavery movement and numerous songs were written about him, including the fabled “John Brown’s Body.” Brown’s raid gained him national acclaim, galvanized opposition to slavery in the North, and dramatically increased the Southern belief that the U.S. government would somehow eliminate slavery.
And so, when Confederate guns opened up on Fort Sumter in Charleston’s harbor at 4:30 a.m. on April 12, 1861, Abraham Lincoln was the president of the United States, William Seward was U.S. secretary of state, and Jefferson Davis was the president of the Confederacy. Robert E. Lee would shortly assume command of the Army of Northern Virginia and William Tecumseh Sherman would become one of the Union’s most successful generals. By the time Southerners commenced their thirty-three hour bombardment of Fort Sumter just before dawn that morning, the antislavery movement in the United States had reached epic proportions, thanks to the Oberlin rescue and John Brown’s 1858 Christmas raid into Missouri, just as fierce defense of slavery, and hatred of Northerners, had reached similarly titanic proportions in the South.
All of these people were in place because of events that occurred three years earlier, in 1858, a year when slavery became the overriding issue in the United States, and a year in which the president, James Buchanan, ignored it so he could spend time feuding with Stephen Douglas, threaten a war with Paraguay, try to annex Cuba, and open his niece’s mail.
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