
It Was A Year Packed With Unsettling Events. The Panic Of 1857 Closed Every Bank In New York City, Ruined Thousands Of Businesses, And Caused Widespread Unemployment Among Industrial Workers. The Mormons In Utah Territory Threatened Rebellion When Federal Troops Approached With A Non-mormon Governor To Replace Brigham Young. The Supreme Court Outraged Northern Republicans And Abolitionists With The Dred Scott Decision (a Breathtaking Example Of Judicial Activism). And When A Proslavery Minority In Kansas Territory Tried To Foist A Proslavery Constitution On A Large Antislavery Majority, President Buchanan Reneged On A Crucial Commitment And Supported The Minority, A Disastrous Miscalculation Which Ultimately Split The Democratic Party In Two. In America In 1857, Eminent American Historian Kenneth Stampp Offers A Sweeping Narrative Of This Eventful Year, Covering All The Major Crises While Providing Readers With A Vivid Portrait Of America At Mid-century. Stampp Gives Us A Fascinating Account Of The Attempt By William Walker And His Band Of Filibusters To Conquer Nicaragua And Make It A Slave State, Of Crime And Corruption, And Of Street Riots By Urban Gangs Such As New York's Dead Rabbits And Bowery Boys And Baltimore's Plug Uglies And Blood Tubs. But The Focus Continually Returns To Kansas. He Examines The Outrageous Political Frauds Perpetrated By Proslavery Kansans, Buchanan's Calamitous Response And Stephen Douglas's Break With The President (a Rare Event In American Politics, A Major Party Leader Repudiating The President He Helped Elect), And The Whirl Of Congressional Votes And Dramatic Debates That Led To A Settlement Humiliating To Buchanan--and Devastating To The Democrats. 1857 Marked A Turning Point, At Which Sectional Conflict Spun Out Of Control And The Country Moved Rapidly Toward The Final Violent Resolution In The Civil War. Stampp's Intensely Focused Look At This Pivotal Year Illuminates The Forces At Work And The Mood Of The Nation As It Plummeted
This book investigates the pivotal year of 1857 as the critical turning point where sectional tensions in the United States spiraled toward the inevitable conflict of the Civil War. Kenneth M. Stampp, a distinguished historian of the American South and the antebellum period, utilizes primary source documents and contemporary political records to construct a detailed analysis of the era. He argues that the convergence of economic collapse, judicial overreach, and political mismanagement during this single year effectively dismantled the national consensus and fractured the Democratic Party. By focusing on the specific failures of the Buchanan administration, Stampp illustrates how institutional instability accelerated the nation's descent into violence.
What You Will Find
Historians frequently cite this work as a definitive micro-history that successfully captures the volatile atmosphere of the late 1850s. Scholars note that the text provides a rigorous, well-documented account of political maneuvering that remains accessible to both academic researchers and general readers interested in American history.
Page Count:
416
Publication Date:
1992-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199729034
ISBN-13:
9780199729036
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