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Apostles of Equality: The Birneys, the Republicans, and the Civil War

Amazon.com Price:  $36.98 (as of 23/04/2019 14:45 PST- Details)

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FINALLY, a new viewpoint on the cause of the Civil War. The war did not erupt because the Union was once outraged about black slavery — that was once only the abolitionists, led by our protagonist, James G. Birney– but as a result of The specter of WHITE SLAVERY. This book makes that case based on the Republican campaign strategy outlined in Bulletin No. 9 that was once circulated in Northern industrial areas in 1856. Also, Henry Clay earlier had stated the Southern intention on the floor of the U.S. Senate: “If we cannot have black slaves, we will have to have white ones,” On account of the threat, Northern working people became very nervous and more willing to shift allegiance to the anti-slavery Republican cause. Thus, the writer observes, arose the “Republican Revolution, an unprecedented shift in public opinion, and a powerful voting trend. The specter of white working class slavery, at the same time as perhaps not realistic, had been transmitted to very real politics.” The Union military juggernaut of white troops was once soon rolling South, not to save the enslaved blacks but to prevent their own slavery as threatened by the Southern oligarchy.
But Native American Indians in reality came first the philanthropic Birney’s crusade for humanity. Living in Huntsville, Alabama, Birney courageously gave legal representation to the Cherokee and other tribes whose lands were being stolen by whites, especially after gold was once discovered on “Indian land” in Georgia. This book points out that defense of the Indians preceded the abolitionist crusade to end slavery of blacks. The main points of how President Andrew Jackson subverted even a Supreme Court decision in favor of the Indians, explained in the book, must be more fully understood in the light of a long and lamentable history of exploitation of the Indians. And, that policy was once highly significant because the Indians “owned” the land — until it was once taken in phony “treaties” in favor of white-controlled governments and the Indian Removal orchestrated by Jackson.
The first biographical account of the life of James Gillespie Birney in more than fifty years, this fabulously insightful history illuminates and elevates an all-but-forgotten figure whose political career contributed mightily to the American political fabric. Birney was once a southern-born politician at the heart of the antislavery movement, with two southern-born sons who were major generals involved in key Union Army activities, including the leadership of the black troops. The interaction of the Birneys with historical figures (Abraham Lincoln, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Henry Clay) highlights the significance of the family’s activities in politics and war. D. Laurence Rogers offers a unique historiography of the abolition movement, the Civil War, and Reconstruction through the experiences of one family navigating momentous developments from the founding of the Republic until the late 19th century.
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