The Fifth Border State: Slavery and the Formation of West Virginia, 1850-1868

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Fifth Border State: Slavery and the Formation of West Virginia, 1850-1868 THE FIFTH BORDER STATE: SLAVERY AND THE FORMATION OF WEST VIRGINIA, 1850-1868 by Scott Alexander MacKenzie A Dissertation submitted to the Graduate Faculty of Auburn University in partial fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Auburn, Alabama August 2, 2014 Keywords: West Virginia, Civil War, Slavery, Border States. Copyright 2014 by Scott Alexander MacKenzie Approved by Patience E. Essah, Chair, Associate Professor Kenneth W. Noe, Alumni Professor and Draughon Professor of Southern History William F. Trimble, Alumni Professor Gerard S. Gryski, University Reader, Curtis O. Liles III Professor of Political Science Abstract Civil War historians unfairly treat West Virginia as an oddity. They tend to see it as the dissident part of Virginia that resisted its secession in 1861 to protest decades of economic neglect. Some explain this process from the area more closely resembling Pennsylvania and Ohio than to its parent. Each centers his or her interpretations on the paucity of slavery in the region in 1860. I suggest another possibility: West Virginia was a border state. Four slave states, Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri, remained loyal to the Union. Each had fewer slaves than in the Upper and Lower South states, but each defended the practice for as long as possible. Their allegiances concerned both sides in the Civil War. President Abraham Lincoln worked tirelessly to preserve their loyalties to the Union, demonstrating great flexibility when dealing with them, especially on slavery. On the other hand, Confederate leader Jefferson Davis sought to keep all slaveholding states under his domain. Men from each state joined both armies as well as numerous guerrilla bands. Recent scholarship has renewed interest in finding the nexus of social and political divisions within each state, yet historians may have neglected another place that endured similar ordeals. My dissertation will integrate West Virginia into the border states. Although it did not exist as an independent polity at the war’s beginning like the ii other states, the federal government treated northwestern Virginia as if it were one before and after statehood. My work starts by challenging long-held beliefs about the region’s politics and society. The population was in fact mostly southern in ancestry and proslavery in attitude. Only the small yet vital northern panhandle differed. The landholding class and an urban middle class shared rule over a stratified population of laborers, farmers, and slaves. During the 1850s, the region consistently supported the South and its mother state against northern agitation over slavery. Northwestern Virginians were, I believe, content with the status quo if desirous of economic progress. When secession came, however, the region split along geographic and economic lines. Middle-class Unionists seized power from landowners who seceded with Virginia. These loyalists sought to form a new state to show that slavery was safe under the Constitution while treason led only to its destruction. Even so, bitter disputes over slavery almost thwarted the project. Conservatives demanded no federal interference on the issue. More radical leaders sought a gradual emancipation plan as a war measure. A compromise plan resolved the deadlock and allowed West Virginia to enter the Union as a slave state in 1863. Lincoln’s flexible approach to the border states permitted this to happen. As with the other border states, he tolerated the northwest’s stubborn attachment to slavery, and exempted it and the four others from the Emancipation Proclamation. West Virginia’s war would drag on for two more costly years. Armies fought over it in seemingly endless battle against each other. Guerrilla warfare plagued most of its territory. As in other border states, iii the Thirteenth Amendment, which ended slavery, caused great dissention in the state. In short, West Virginia was not an oddity or a mere dissident appendage of another state. It is fairer to call it a Border State. Its mix of northern and southern influences, class structures, intense debate over slavery, and divided wartime allegiances more closely resembled its four neighbors than it did eastern Virginia. Civil War historians need to include West Virginia as a fifth border state arising from a combination of factors rather than see it as a singular entity born from special circumstances. iv Acknowledgments One accumulates many debts while working on a project as large as a dissertation. The first ones go to those in whose memory I pursued graduate school. To my father Roderick I. MacKenzie, M.D. (1944-2007), my brother Roderick A. MacKenzie, B.A., B. Comm. (1976-2002), and my mentor Stanley P. Hirshson, Ph.D. (1928-2003), please let this work justify that your faith in me was well placed. I thank you for your sending your encouragement and support from heaven to earth. My family made this all possible. My mother Maryel Andison has been a constant source of inspiration to me, and selflessly gave her time to me when I had health problems in 2011 and 2013. To my brother John, sister-in-law Brandi, nephew Noah and niece Sara in Calgary: thank you, Uncle Scott loves you. To my sister Karen, brother-in-law Erik, and my nephews Samuel, David and Malcolm in Stockholm: tack, Morbor Scott älskar dig. Space prevents me from thanking my numerous other relatives here so I will thank them all individually. I had the honor of making some incredible friends in my lifetime. Dick Denny and Sharon Hamilton shared many TV nights and several Auburn football games with me. Karen Hartt, Ashley Hartt, Bill King, Cindy Kressler, Colin Shannon, Noah Skelton, Beth White, Ian Wilson, and Jennifer Zimmer each helped me in their own ways. Elizabeth Butcher kindly rented a room to me during my research trip to Morgantown. I will thank many others individually. v To all the students whom I served as a teaching assistant and studied alongside in our joint classes, I thank you for a great experience at Auburn. War Eagle! I also thank my colleagues at the History Department for accepting me into your lives. They include, in alphabetical order, Meredith Bocian, Tommy Brown, Dave Burke, Carol Ann Dennis, Brett Derbes, Rebecca Eckstein, Michael Johnson, John Klein, Corey Markum, David McCrae, Hector and Hesper Montford, Susan Moore, Rolundus Rice, Angelia Rivera, Abby Sayers, Sean Seyer, Tom Szendry, Matt Vogeler, Charles Wexler and Andy Wood. My professors with whom I took classes and/or for whom I worked as a teaching assistant also deserve gratitude: Morris Bian, Donna Bohanan, Kathryn Braund, Jennifer Brooks, David Carter, Ruth Crocker, Boris Gorshkov, Reagan Grimsley, Charles Israel, Joseph Kicklighter, Kelly Kennington, Ralph Kingston, Angela Lakwete, Matt Malczycki, Mark Sheftall, Tiffany Sippial, Rod Stewart and Abigail Swingen. I also thank people from other institutions for their insights and support. From the University of Calgary, I thank Frank Towers, Jewel Spangler and Patrick Brennan. From the University of Florida, Allison Fredette. From Marshall University, Kevin Barksdale. From West Virginia University, Kenneth Fones-Wolf and Adam Zucconi. From East Tennessee State University, Andrew L. Slap. From the University of Central Florida, Barbara Gannon. From the University of Georgia, John C. Inscoe, Angela Elder, and Keri Leigh Merritt. From the University of Virginia, Jeff Zvengrowski. From Shepherd University, John E. Stealey III. From the George Tyler Moore Center for the Study of the vi Civil War, Mark Snell, Denise Messinger, Tom White and Al Pejack. From the Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Christian McWhirter. From the University of Louisville, A. Glenn Crothers. From Queens College of the City of New York, Frank A. Warren, Francine Kapchan and Marilyn Harris. I also thank the following institutions for aiding my research: In Morgantown, the West Virginia and Regional History Collection in the Wise Library. In Richmond, the Library of Virginia. In Philadelphia, the Mid-Atlantic Branch of the National Archives. In Charleston, the West Virginia State Archives. At Auburn, the Interlibrary Loan section of the Ralph Draughon Library. Without these fine people, this project would never have become a reality. I thank my committee for their hard work turning some vague ideas into a dissertation. Patience Essah generously gave me her time and attention. Her door was always open to me on any issue I wished to raise. When it came to the work, however, she was most impatient with bad writing and thinking. I learned a great deal from her. It was an honor to be her student. Ken Noe deserves similar credit. His attention to the smallest details of primary and secondary research kept this project on track towards something important. Bill Trimble’s rigor as an editor made his participation on the committee essential and most welcome. Gerry Gryski, the university reader, kept us all on track. I owe each of them a great debt. I take full responsibility for any errors in analysis and evidence in my work. vii Table of Contents Abstract……………………….……………………………………………….......ii Acknowledgments.…………………………...……………………………………v List of Tables……………………………………………………………………..ix List of Maps.…………………………...………………………………………….x Introduction………………………………………………………………………..1 Chapter One: Part of the South: The Social and Economic Structure of Antebellum Northwestern Virginia…………………………………………………………………………..22 Chapter Two: Increasing Strife and Discord: The Politics of Slavery in Northwestern Virginia 1851-1859…...………..…………………………………55
Recommended publications
  • Cutting Patterns in DW Griffith's Biographs
    Cutting patterns in D.W. Griffith’s Biographs: An experimental statistical study Mike Baxter, 16 Lady Bay Road, West Bridgford, Nottingham, NG2 5BJ, U.K. (e-mail: [email protected]) 1 Introduction A number of recent studies have examined statistical methods for investigating cutting patterns within films, for the purposes of comparing patterns across films and/or for summarising ‘average’ patterns in a body of films. The present paper investigates how different ideas that have been proposed might be combined to identify subsets of similarly constructed films (i.e. exhibiting comparable cutting structures) within a larger body. The ideas explored are illustrated using a sample of 62 D.W Griffith Biograph one-reelers from the years 1909–1913. Yuri Tsivian has suggested that ‘all films are different as far as their SL struc- tures; yet some are less different than others’. Barry Salt, with specific reference to the question of whether or not Griffith’s Biographs ‘have the same large scale variations in their shot lengths along the length of the film’ says the ‘answer to this is quite clearly, no’. This judgment is based on smooths of the data using seventh degree trendlines and the observation that these ‘are nearly all quite different one from another, and too varied to allow any grouping that could be matched against, say, genre’1. While the basis for Salt’s view is clear Tsivian’s apparently oppos- ing position that some films are ‘less different than others’ seems to me to be a reasonably incontestable sentiment. It depends on how much you are prepared to simplify structure by smoothing in order to effect comparisons.
    [Show full text]
  • Title: West Virginia Road to Statehood Guided Viewing
    Telling West Virginia’s Story Guided Viewing and the Election of 1860 Objective: Students will learn the impact of the presidential election of 1860 on the people of western Virginia and the steps taken in the formation of the state of West Virginia Grade Level and Subject: Eighth Grade West Virginia Studies Time Needed to Complete Lesson: Guided Viewing only: film 47 minutes Quiz: 30 minutes Election of 1860 Activity: 75 minutes Overall Lesson: Three to five 50 minute class periods Strategic Vocabulary: abolitionist – one who wished to end slavery right away. amendment – the act or process of changing a law. cavalry – an army component mounted on horseback emancipation – freeing of the slaves free state – a state that did not permit slavery. ordinance – a regulation or decree; often used to refer to a municipal law. proclamation – an official or public announcement. secede – to withdraw from the Union. sectionalism – putting one’s section of the country ahead of the nation as a whole. slave state – a state that permitted slavery. slavery - the practice of owning people as property and forcing those people to work for a slaveholder. Guiding Questions 1. What role did the Election of 1860 play in the separation of Virginia? 2. What were the steps taken to create West Virginia? 3. How could West Virginia be called an illegal state? 1 List of Materials Needed 1. WVPBS video: West Virginia: Road to Statehood 3. Guided Viewing Worksheets 4. Quiz 5. Printed 1860 Party Platform (found in the appendix) or Computer lab with links for students. Text Set File (copies of documents can be found in the appendix) 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Civil War Generals Buried in Spring Grove Cemetery by James Barnett
    Spring Grove Cemetery, once characterized as blending "the elegance of a park with the pensive beauty of a burial-place," is the final resting- place of forty Cincinnatians who were generals during the Civil War. Forty For the Union: Civil War Generals Buried in Spring Grove Cemetery by James Barnett f the forty Civil War generals who are buried in Spring Grove Cemetery, twenty-three had advanced from no military experience whatsoever to attain the highest rank in the Union Army. This remarkable feat underscores the nature of the Northern army that suppressed the rebellion of the Confed- erate states during the years 1861 to 1865. Initially, it was a force of "inspired volunteers" rather than a standing army in the European tradition. Only seven of these forty leaders were graduates of West Point: Jacob Ammen, Joshua H. Bates, Sidney Burbank, Kenner Garrard, Joseph Hooker, Alexander McCook, and Godfrey Weitzel. Four of these seven —Burbank, Garrard, Mc- Cook, and Weitzel —were in the regular army at the outbreak of the war; the other three volunteered when the war started. Only four of the forty generals had ever been in combat before: William H. Lytle, August Moor, and Joseph Hooker served in the Mexican War, and William H. Baldwin fought under Giuseppe Garibaldi in the Italian civil war. This lack of professional soldiers did not come about by chance. When the Constitutional Convention met in Philadelphia in 1787, its delegates, who possessed a vast knowledge of European history, were determined not to create a legal basis for a standing army. The founding fathers believed that the stand- ing armies belonging to royalty were responsible for the endless bloody wars that plagued Europe.
    [Show full text]
  • West Virginia and Regional History Collection Newsletter Twenty-Year Index, Volume 1-Volume 20, Spring 1985-Spring 2005 Anna M
    West Virginia & Regional History Center University Libraries Newsletters 2012 West Virginia and Regional History Collection Newsletter Twenty-Year Index, Volume 1-Volume 20, Spring 1985-Spring 2005 Anna M. Schein Follow this and additional works at: https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/wvrhc-newsletters Part of the History Commons West Virginia and Regional History Collection Newsletter Twenty-Year Index Volume 1-Volume 20 Spring 1985-Spring 2005 Compiled by Anna M. Schein Morgantown, WV West Virginia and Regional History Collection West Virginia University Libraries 2012 1 Compiler’s Notes: Scope Note: This index includes articles and photographs only; listings of WVRHC staff, WVU Libraries Visiting Committee members, and selected new accessions have not been indexed. Publication and numbering notes: Vol. 12-v. 13, no. 1 not published. Issues for summer 1985 and fall 1985 lack volume numbering and are called: no. 2 and no.3 respectively. Citation Key: The volume designation ,“v.”, and the issue designation, “no.”, which appear on each issue of the Newsletter have been omitted from the index. 5:2(1989:summer)9 For issues which have a volume number and an issue number, the volume number appears to left of colon; the issue number appears to right of colon; the date of the issue appears in parentheses with the year separated from the season by a colon); the issue page number(s) appear to the right of the date of the issue. 2(1985:summer)1 For issues which lack volume numbering, the issue number appears alone to the left of the date of the issue. Abbreviations: COMER= College of Mineral and Energy Resources, West Virginia University HRS=Historical Records Survey US=United States WV=West Virginia WVRHC=West Virginia and Regional History Collection, West Virginia University Libraries WVU=West Virginia University 2 West Virginia and Regional History Collection Newsletter Index Volume 1-Volume 20 Spring 1985-Spring 2005 Compiled by Anna M.
    [Show full text]
  • Students of the University of Virginia. a Semi-Centennial Catalogue With
    UC-NRLF i *C Ifl fi2b •^^' "'/ ^-t^ '.* '(,1 •?.,{' -v . *,.},. ' !/ vTl STU DENTS OF THE University of Virginia. A Semi-centennial Catalogue, WITH BRIEF BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES. BALTIMORE : Charles Harvey & Co., Publishers, COR. SOUTH AND GKRMAN STS. ^^f COPYRIGHT. JOSEPH VAN HOLT NASH. d878. PREFACE. of the first half of CATALOGUE was apparently finished in 1875, at the end century the existence of the University THISBut when at that time the manuscript was placed in the hands of Captain Joseph Van Holt Nash, who had undertaken to publish the work, it was found to be far from complete. Captain Nash thereupon with true devojion set to work and with indomitable perseverance, perfected the work, spending money, time and labor without stint in the difficult task. To him, therefore, the friends of the University are deeply indebted for the improved form and completeness of this memorial of their Alma Mater. Nor must it be forgotten that venerable Alumni, seated in the highest seats of honor, and of young men just entering upon life's career, soldiers with a glorious record in the annals war, and diligent workers in peaceful pursuits, old pupils cast by fate upon distant shores, and happy sons of Virginia who have never left their native land—all have cheerfully and promptly aided in the great work. But for the efficient assistance thus rendered by kind friends, and the indefatigable efforts of Captain Nash, the publication would have been impossible. University of Virginia. 1878. SCHELE DeVERE. THE READER is respectfully requested to remember, that the volume before him contains ten thousand names and over a hundred thousand statements of facts.
    [Show full text]
  • A New Exhibit on the Battle of Rich Mountain, the Union Occupation of Beverly, and the First Campaign of the Civil War Is Slowly
    A new exhibit on the Western Virginia from General Rosecrans used to firsts and promotions that Battle of Rich Mountain, Ohio, and moved east, by defeat the Confederates. they produced, will begin the Union occupation of railroad and then by turn- Artifacts and photo props to wrap things up. The Beverly, and the First pike, occupying towns and will help set the scene. exhibit will finish where it Campaign of the Civil fighting the war’s first Following the sequence of started, discussing state- War is slowly taking shape land battle at Philippi. the real events, visitors hood, tying it to the Battle at the Beverly Heritage Moving into the Craw- will then encounter an of Rich Mountain. Center. ford Building, the exhibit interpretation of the Un- The exhibit is in plan- The Bushrod Crawford will provide a detailed ion occupation of Beverly. ning at this time. It will Building, which served as look at what happened on The exhibit will focus on be the last of four new McClellan’s headquarters Rich what life exhibits at the Beverly during his brief stay in was Heritage Center. The Beverly, will house the Bank, Courthouse, and bulk of the exhibit. A rep- Crawford Building were resentational vignette of finished in 2007, and new the Wheeling Custom exhibits on the Staunton- House in the early sum- Parkersburg Turnpike mer of 1861 will set the and Beverly’s role as stage. Visitors will learn county seat have opened how, as Virginia joined in them since then. An the Confederacy, pro- exhibit on the town’s com- Unionists in the west be- like mercial heyday is in the gan discussions about Moun- for civil- works, to be installed in forming their own state.
    [Show full text]
  • Copyright by CLP Research 1600 1700 1750 1800 1850 1650 1900
    Copyright by CLP Research Partial Genealogy of the Clemenses Main Political Affiliation: (of Virginia & Nevada) Robert Clemens I 1763-83 Whig Revolutionary (1595-1658) 1789-1823 Republican 1600 (born Cosby, Leicestershire, England; emigrated from Ansley, Warwickshire, England to Massachusetts after 1637) 1824-33 Democrat Republican = Lydia Drummer 1834-53 Democrat (1595-1642) 1854- Confederate & Democrat 10 Others Robert Clemens II (1634-1714) = Elizabeth Fawne (1631-1715) 1650 10 Others Abraham Clemens (1657-1716) (born MA); (moved to Newe Hampshire, then Virginia, then Pennsylvania) Hannah Gove (1664-1716) 8 Others Ezekiel Clemens (1696-1778) 1700 (born MA); (moved to NJ, then Virginia) = Christina Castell (1695-1778) Jeremiah Clemens 1 Son James Clemens I (1732-1811) (1734-95) (born NJ); (moved to Virginia) (born NJ); (moved to VA, then Pennsylvania) = Elizabeth Moore = Hannah Walton (1740-1811) (1742-1818) 1750 7 Others Samuel B. Clemens 9 Others William C. Clemens (1770-1805) (1767-1849); (farmer) (Buffalo, Washington co. PA justice) James Clemens II = Pamela Goggin = Mary Wolf (1779-1861) (1775-1844) (1776-1832) SEE CLEMENS OF AL 5 Others John Marshall Clemens 9 Others Dr. James Walton Clemens GENEALOGY (1798-1847); (merchant) (1795-1846) 1800 (born Virginia); (moved to Missouri, 1839) (helped found Wheeling, Virginia, later in West Virginia) = Jane Casey Lampton = Eleanor Sherrard (1803-90) (1799?-1872) Orion Clemens 5 Others 4 Others Sherrard Clemens (1825-97); (newspaper man/journalist) (1820-81); (Dem); (lawyer) (Nevada Territory secretary, 1861-64) Samuel Langhorne Clemens (born Wheeling, Ohio co. VA) (NV Territory Governor Pro Tem (1835-1910) (US House, 1852-53, 1857-61) when needed) (printer/journalist/correspondent/novelist) (moved to St.
    [Show full text]
  • A History of Appalachia
    University of Kentucky UKnowledge Appalachian Studies Arts and Humanities 2-28-2001 A History of Appalachia Richard B. Drake Click here to let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Thanks to the University of Kentucky Libraries and the University Press of Kentucky, this book is freely available to current faculty, students, and staff at the University of Kentucky. Find other University of Kentucky Books at uknowledge.uky.edu/upk. For more information, please contact UKnowledge at [email protected]. Recommended Citation Drake, Richard B., "A History of Appalachia" (2001). Appalachian Studies. 23. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_appalachian_studies/23 R IC H ARD B . D RA K E A History of Appalachia A of History Appalachia RICHARD B. DRAKE THE UNIVERSITY PRESS OF KENTUCKY Publication of this volume was made possible in part by grants from the E.O. Robinson Mountain Fund and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Copyright © 2001 by The University Press of Kentucky Paperback edition 2003 Scholarly publisher for the Commonwealth, serving Bellarmine University, Berea College, Centre College of Kenhlcky Eastern Kentucky University, The Filson Historical Society, Georgetown College, Kentucky Historical Society, Kentucky State University, Morehead State University, Murray State University, Northern Kentucky University, Transylvania University, University of Kentucky, University of Louisville, and Western Kentucky University. All rights reserved. Editorial and Sales Offices: The University Press of Kentucky 663 South Limestone Street, Lexington, Kentucky 40508-4008 www.kentuckypress.com 12 11 10 09 08 8 7 6 5 4 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Drake, Richard B., 1925- A history of Appalachia / Richard B.
    [Show full text]
  • “A People Who Have Not the Pride to Record Their History Will Not Long
    STATE HISTORIC PRESERVATION OFFICE i “A people who have not the pride to record their History will not long have virtues to make History worth recording; and Introduction no people who At the rear of Old Main at Bethany College, the sun shines through are indifferent an arcade. This passageway is filled with students today, just as it was more than a hundred years ago, as shown in a c.1885 photograph. to their past During my several visits to this college, I have lingered here enjoying the light and the student activity. It reminds me that we are part of the past need hope to as well as today. People can connect to historic resources through their make their character and setting as well as the stories they tell and the memories they make. future great.” The National Register of Historic Places recognizes historic re- sources such as Old Main. In 2000, the State Historic Preservation Office Virgil A. Lewis, first published Historic West Virginia which provided brief descriptions noted historian of our state’s National Register listings. This second edition adds approx- Mason County, imately 265 new listings, including the Huntington home of Civil Rights West Virginia activist Memphis Tennessee Garrison, the New River Gorge Bridge, Camp Caesar in Webster County, Fort Mill Ridge in Hampshire County, the Ananias Pitsenbarger Farm in Pendleton County and the Nuttallburg Coal Mining Complex in Fayette County. Each reveals the richness of our past and celebrates the stories and accomplishments of our citizens. I hope you enjoy and learn from Historic West Virginia.
    [Show full text]
  • Indian Warfare, Household Competency, and the Settlement of the Western Virginia Frontier, 1749 to 1794
    Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports 2007 Indian warfare, household competency, and the settlement of the western Virginia frontier, 1749 to 1794 John M. Boback West Virginia University Follow this and additional works at: https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/etd Recommended Citation Boback, John M., "Indian warfare, household competency, and the settlement of the western Virginia frontier, 1749 to 1794" (2007). Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports. 2566. https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/etd/2566 This Dissertation is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by the The Research Repository @ WVU with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Dissertation in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you must obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/ or on the work itself. This Dissertation has been accepted for inclusion in WVU Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports collection by an authorized administrator of The Research Repository @ WVU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Indian Warfare, Household Competency, and the Settlement of the Western Virginia Frontier, 1749 to 1794 John M. Boback Dissertation submitted to the College of Arts and Sciences at West Virginia University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor
    [Show full text]
  • MS-017 Bickham Collection
    MS-017 Bickham Collection A Collection of Historical Manuscripts at the Dayton Metro Library Dayton, Ohio Processed By: Lisa P. Rickey, Archivist April 2011 with significant assistance from the earlier efforts of: Elli Bambakidis (2002) Helen Hooven Santmyer (1956) 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Table of Contents................................................................................................................ 2 Introduction......................................................................................................................... 4 Biographical Sketch............................................................................................................ 5 Bibliography & Further Reading ...................................................................................... 10 Scope and Content Note.................................................................................................... 12 Box and Folder Listing ..................................................................................................... 13 Item Level Description ..................................................................................................... 16 Series I: William D. Bickham Papers ........................................................................... 16 Box 1, Folder 1: “Weekly Anne Gazette”, 1850 .......................................................... 16 Box 1, Folder 2: Manuscript story about California Gold Rush, Undated ................... 16 Box 1, Folder 3: W. D. Bickham: Military papers, 1861-1864
    [Show full text]
  • African Americans and the Civil War Source Set Teaching Guide
    TEACHING WITH PRIMARY SOURCES African Americans and the Civil War How should the African-American story of the Civil War be told? While slavery was the major issue separating the North and South, it was not slavery itself that sparked the conflict. The South wanted to secede from the Union, and the North refused. While President Abraham Lincoln personally opposed slavery, he recognized that it was legal under the U.S. Constitution at the time. He also recognized that few in the North were ready to go to war to free the slaves. For Lincoln and the northern majority, preservation of the Union was the foremost goal. Freed Slaves during the Civil War The “Negro question,” as it was called, became an important issue early in the conflict. Most slaves were in fact “liberated” when the Union Army eliminated the local southern forces that kept them in slavery. They simply left their plantations to seek their freedom under the protection of northern military units. Union commanders had to decide how to deal with them. Early in the fighting in border states, slaves were sometimes returned to their masters in the hope of encouraging support for the Union. However, as more and more slaves walked to freedom, the army made provisions to use them as a resource. The army hired many to work in non-military roles — cooks, wagon drivers, blacksmiths, laundresses — but until later in the conflict, racial prejudice prevented arming former slaves and allowing to fight. As the war progressed, however, African Americans could sign up for combat units.
    [Show full text]