In this carefully researched book William J. Cooper gives us a
fresh perspective on the period between Abraham Lincoln's election
in November 1860 and the firing on Fort Sumter in April 1861,
during which all efforts to avoid or impede secession and prevent
war failed. Here is the story of the men whose decisions and
actions during the crisis of the Union resulted in the outbreak of
the Civil War.
Sectional compromise had been critical in the history of the
country, from the Constitutional Convention of 1787 through to
1860, and was a hallmark of the nation. On several volatile
occasions political leaders had crafted solutions to the vexing
problems dividing North and South. During the postelection crisis
many Americans assumed that once again a political compromise would
settle yet another dispute. Instead, in those crucial months
leading up to the clash at Fort Sumter, that tradition of
compromise broke down and a rapid succession of events led to the
great cataclysm in American history, the Civil War.
All Americans did not view this crisis from the same perspective.
Strutting southern fire-eaters designed to break up the Union. Some
Republicans, crowing over their electoral triumph, evinced little
concern about the threatened dismemberment of the country. Still
others-northerners and southerners, antislave and proslave
alike-strove to find an equitable settlement that would maintain
the Union whole. Cooper captures the sense of contingency, showing
Americans in these months as not knowing where decisions would
lead, how events would unfold. The people who populate these pages
could not foresee what war, if it came, would mean, much less
predict its outcome.
We Have the War Upon Us helps us understand what the
major actors said and did: the Republican party, the Democratic
party, southern secessionists, southern Unionists; why the
pro-compromise forces lost; and why the American tradition of
sectional compromise failed. It reveals how the major actors
perceived what was happening and the reasons they gave for their
actions: Lincoln and Jefferson Davis, Stephen A. Douglas, William
Henry Seward, John J. Crittenden, Charles Francis Adams, John
Tyler, James Buchanan, and a host of others. William J. Cooper has
written a full account of the North and the South, Republicans and
Democrats, sectional radicals and sectional conservatives that
deepens our insight into what is still one of the most
controversial periods in American history.
A new perspective on the period between Lincoln's election in November 1860 and the firing on Fort Sumter in April 1861 when all efforts to avoid or impede secession and prevent war failed.