Genesis of the Civil War
by Llewellyn H. Rockewll, Jr.
The historical event that looms largest in American public consciousness is the
Civil War. One-hundred thirty-nine years after the first shot was fired, its
genesis is still fiercely debated and its symbols heralded and protested. And no
wonder: the event transformed the American regime from a federalist system based
on freedom to a centralized state that circumscribed liberty in the name of
public order. The cataclysmic event massacred a generation of young men, burned
and looted the Southern states, set a precedent for executive dictatorship, and
transformed the American military from a citizen-based defense corps into a
global military power that can’t resist intervention.
And yet, if you listen to the media on the subject, you might think that
the entire issue of the Civil War comes down to race and slavery. If you favor
Confederate symbols, it means you are a white person unsympathetic to the plight
of blacks in America. If you favor abolishing Confederate History Month and
taking down the flag, you are an enlightened thinker willing to bury the past so
we can look forward to a bright future under progressive leadership. The debate
rarely goes beyond these simplistic slogans.
And yet this take on the event is wildly a historical. It takes Northern
war propaganda at face value without considering that the South had solid legal,
moral, and economic reasons for secession which had nothing to do with slavery.
Even the name "Civil War" is misleading, since the war wasn’t about
two sides fighting to run the central government as in the English or Roman
civil wars. The South attempted a peaceful secession from federal control, an
ambition no different from the original American plea for independence from
Britain.
But why would the South want to secede? If the original American ideal of
federalism and constitutionalism had survived to 1860, the South would not have
needed to. But one issue loomed larger than any other in that year as in the
previous three decades: the Northern tariff. It was imposed to benefit Northern
industrial interests by subsidizing their production through public works. But
it had the effect of forcing the South to pay more for manufactured goods and
disproportionately taxing it to support the central government. It also injured
the South’s trading relations with other parts of the world.
In effect, the South was being looted to pay for the North’s early
version of industrial policy. The battle over the tariff began in 1828, with the
"tariff of abomination." Thirty year later, with the South paying 87
percent of federal tariff revenue while having their livelihoods threatened by
protectionist legislation, it become impossible for the two regions to be
governed under the same regime. The South as a region was being reduced to a
slave status, with the federal government as its master.
But why 1860? Lincoln promised not to interfere with slavery, but he did
pledge to "collect the duties and imposts": he was the leading
advocate of the tariff and public works policy, which is why his election
prompted the South to secede. In pro-Lincoln newspapers, the phrase "free
trade" was invoked as the equivalent of industrial suicide. Why fire on Ft.
Sumter? It was a customs house, and when the North attempted to strengthen it,
the South knew that its purpose was to collect taxes, as newspapers and
politicians said at the time.
To gain an understanding of the Southern mission, look no further than
the Confederate Constitution. It is a duplicate of the original Constitution,
with several improvements. It guarantees free trade, restricts legislative power
in crucial ways, abolishes public works, and attempts to rein in the executive.
No, it didn’t abolish slavery but neither did the original Constitution (in
fact, the original protected property rights in slaves).
Before the war, Lincoln himself had pledged to leave slavery intact, to
enforce the fugitive slaves laws, and to support an amendment that would forever
guarantee slavery where it then existed. Neither did he lift a finger to repeal
the anti-Negro laws that besotted all Northern states, Illinois in particular.
Recall that the underground railroad ended, not in New York or Boston-since
dropping off blacks in those states would have been restricted-but in Canada!
The Confederate Constitution did, however, make possible the gradual elimination
of slavery, a process that would have been made easier had the North not so
severely restricted the movements of former slaves.
Now, you won’t read this version of events in any conventional history
text, particularly not those approved for use in public high schools. You are
not likely to hear about it in the college classroom either, where the single
issue of slavery overwhelms any critical thinking. Again and again we are told
what Polybius called "an idle, unprofitable tale" instead of the
truth, and we are expected to swallow it uncritically. So where can you go to
discover that the conventional story is sheer nonsense?
The last ten years have brought us a flurry of great books that look
beneath the surface. There is John Denson’s The Costs of War
(1998), Jeffrey Rodgers Hummel’s Emancipating Slaves, Enslaving Free Men (1996),
David Gordon’s Secession, State, and Liberty (1998),
Marshall de Rosa’s The Confederate Constitution (1991),
or, from a more popular standpoint, James and Walter Kennedy’s Was
Jefferson Davis Right? (1998).
But if we were to recommend one work-based on originality, brevity,
depth, and sheer rhetorical power-it would be Charles Adams’s time bomb of a
book, When in the Course of Human Events: Arguing the Case for Southern
Secession (Rowman & Littlefield, 2000). In a mere 242 pages, he
shows that almost everything we thought we knew about the war between the states
is wrong.
Adams believes that both Northern and Southern leaders were lying when
they invoked slavery as a reason for secession and for the war. Northerners were
seeking a moral pretext for an aggressive war, while Southern leaders were
seeking a threat more concrete than the Northern tariff to justify a drive to
political independence. This was rhetoric designed for mass consumption. Adams
amasses an amazing amount of evidence-including remarkable editorial cartoons
and political speeches-to support his thesis that the war was really about
government revenue.
Consider this little tidbit from the pro-Lincoln New York Evening Post,
March 2, 1861 edition:
"That either the revenue from duties must be collected in the ports
of the rebel states, or the port must be closed to importations from abroad, is
generally admitted. If neither of these things be done, our revenue laws are
substantially repealed; the sources which supply our treasury will be dried up;
we shall have no money to carry on the government; the nation will become
bankrupt before the next crop of corn is ripe. There will be nothing to furnish
means of subsistence to the army; nothing to keep our navy afloat; nothing to
pay the salaries of public officers; the present order of things must come to a
dead stop.
"What, then, is left for our government? Shall we let the seceding
states repeal the revenue laws for the whole Union in this manner? Or will the
government choose to consider all foreign commerce destined for those ports
where we have no custom-houses and no collectors as contraband, and stop it,
when offering to enter the collection districts from which our authorities have
been expelled?"
This is not an isolated case. British newspapers, whether favoring the
North or South, said the same thing: the feds invaded the South to collect
revenue. Indeed, when Karl Marx said the following, he was merely stating what
everyone who followed events closely knew: "The war between the North and
the South is a tariff war. The war is further, not for any principle, does not
touch the question of slavery, and in fact turns on the Northern lust for
sovereignty."
Marx was only wrong on one point: the war was about principle at one
level. It was about the principle of self-determination and the right not to be
taxed to support an alien regime. Another way of putting this is that the war
was about freedom, and the South was on the same side as the original American
revolutionaries.
Interesting, isn’t it, that today, those who favor banning Confederate
symbols and continue to demonize an entire people’s history also tend to be
partisans of the federal government in all its present political struggles? Not
much has changed in 139 years. Adams’s book goes a long way toward telling the
truth about this event, for anyone who cares to look at the facts.
May 11, 2000