T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
43.1 | | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | As magnificent as that | Mon Sep 16 1991 13:40 | 4 |
| Read MacKinlay Kantor's book _If the South Had Won the Civil WAR_
published in 1960 as part of the runup for the Centennial.
-d
|
43.2 | | VCSESU::VCSESU::COOK | Demons fall as Angels thrive | Mon Sep 16 1991 14:22 | 2 |
|
Any details?
|
43.3 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Mon Sep 16 1991 18:35 | 8 |
| Yeah, what a world that would be....our blacks would probably be
poor, uneducated, living in third-world conditions, and mostly
lacking any ambition or hope for the future. Death by gun-shot
would probably be common. Sure glad those mean old biggots didn't
win the woah.
|
43.4 | If The South Had Won The Civil War | JUPITR::ZAFFINO | | Mon Sep 16 1991 19:53 | 13 |
| re .2
Grant fell from his horse before Vicksburg, stiking his head and dying.
Lee took Cemetery Hill on the first day at Gettysburg. Being more con-
centrated than the AoP, the ANV destroyed the AoP piecemeal on its way
to Washington D.C. The Union surrenders. Texas eventually secedes
from the Confederacy in conflict over the Oklahoma Territory. In the
1960's, due to the threat of nuclear conflict with the Soviet Union,
the presidents of the United States, Confederate States, and the
Republic of Texas hold conferences with the aim of reunification in
mind. This is where the book ends.
Ziff
|
43.5 | England retaking her colonies. | NYTP07::LAM | Q ��Ktl�� | Tue Sep 17 1991 15:44 | 6 |
| I am not knowledgeable about the Civil War but I have a friend who
believes that if the Confederacy had won, England would have come back
into North America. He speculates that England would;ve retaken her
former colonies. He bases this on the idea that England was supplying
the South with arms and material. The British wanted to see America
breakup.
|
43.6 | | RDOVAX::BRAKE | A Question of Balance | Tue Sep 17 1991 16:35 | 46 |
| I believe this is a purely opinionated approach to what might have
been. You ask 100 people what would have happened had the South won the
war and you would get 100 different answers.
However, it must be clearly understood that the CSA had no territorial
ambitions and, hence, if the Union army had been defeated it would have
simply meant that hostilities would have ceased, boundaries would be
set and 2 nations would emerge from 1.
Given that premise I would propose that England would NOT have come
back to the colonies to imperialize the South - rather they would have
become a prime trading partner with the new CSA trading technology,
finished goods and cash for raw material.
The North would have grown to the west with the resultant problems with
Indian nations occuring nevertheless. However, considering that neither
Johnson, Grant, Hayes or Harrison would have been elected president,
perhaps Indian policy would have been different.
The South would most likely have become a loyal trading partner with
the USA in the same manner as Great Britain. After the bitterness died
down, the similarities would far outweigh the differences and a
closeness would have occurred.
As far as slavery and the resultant effect on blacks in the CSA is
concerned, that's a tough one. I agree with Wess' position, somewhat,
but I am still inclined to believe that the black was considered, to
put it kindly, a second class human prior to the war by many
southerners and would have taken years to attain the social standing
they so desired. However, as Wess suggested, much of the hatred pointed
to the blacks after the war was due to reconstruction policies. The
black was the easiest target to pinpoint since the Yanks more or less
let them fend for themselves.
How anyone can condemn the South as a segregationist region is beyond
me. Up until the '40's the US military still treated black men and
women differently. Black nurses were not allowed to treat white
patients in New York City or Boston in the 1930's. Would this have been
commonplace had the CSA won? Who's to know? The final analysis clearly
indicates that the black man has suffered a tremendous amount in
America - from the time the first slave was taken from the shores of
Africa to today where selective segregation occurs in every state in
the nation.
Rich
|
43.7 | Invalid speculation | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | As magnificent as that | Tue Sep 17 1991 16:40 | 33 |
| Re: 43.5
In actual fact Great Britain was not supplying the South with any
significant amount of anything. Sure, blockade runners got in and
out, but that was *not* official British support. Not even close.
Great Britain sedulously avoided doing anything that would smack of
recognition for the South; it was said that the Confederates were
demanding a respect they had not yet earned.
The Confederate States had an emissary (James Slidell) in London until
the middle of 1863, and he was universally snubbed by diplomats and
politicians; he was finally withdrawn to avoid further worldwide
embarrassment after Gettysburg. He went to Paris, where there were
other emissaries who were similarly unsuccessful, only having convinced
the Emperor to suggest a moderated peace conference -- which idea
he later repudiated when the British refused to entertain the notion.
Great Britain would not have tried to reclaim the Northern states had
the Confederacy won. The Confederates would have demanded reparations,
but they would not have emasculated the Union; Davis said time and
again that all the South wanted was to be left alone. The British were in no
position militarily to embark on such a war of conquest, especially
having just witnessed the bloodiest war in all history. Consider that
by the time the British could have brought any force to bear, the US
military would be fully mobilized, well trained, and superbly
equipped. The Gatling gun had been demonstrated successfully before
war's end, and the US Army after Ripley's departure as chief of Ordnance
in 1863 wasn't slow to recognize the value of new weapons. (The US was,
after the war, the first government in the world to adopt a machine gun;
it was Gatling's.)
-d
|
43.8 | I can! | USEM::PMARTIN | | Tue Sep 17 1991 18:36 | 8 |
| <<< Note 43.6 by RDOVAX::BRAKE "A Question of Balance" >>>
<< How anyone can condemn the South as a segregationist region is
<< beyond me.
I can condemn the South for segregation. I can equally condemn the
North for the same thing. I can also condemn the South for promoting
slavery. I can applaud the North for abolishing it.
|
43.9 | what ifs... | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Tue Sep 17 1991 20:06 | 23 |
| I think Cantor offered a pretty reasonable approach. The bitterness
created by that god-awful, protracted war can not be overestimated.
Without the horrors of '64 and '65 - not to mention reconstruction
- the sense of common blood could have recovered and flourished.
re: .8 ...condemnation...
You are right about the actions of both regions being condemnable.
When I first read Brake's note, though, I thought about how the
South is generally singled out as the only villian. I don't mean
to put words in his mouth, but I interpreted 43.6 as meaning, "...can
condemn [only] the South...."
Having said that, I must call you on committing that very error.
You said you could condemn the South for promoting slavery and
the praise the North for aboloishing it. Well, the North was an
equal partner in slavery for many, many years; I don't think they
can be left *ANY* list of "promoters of slavery." As for whether
they were unique in abolishing it... well, since the Confederacy
died aborning on the bayonets of the U.S. Army, we'll never know,
will we?
Wess
|
43.10 | a different kind of slavery | JUPITR::ZAFFINO | | Tue Sep 17 1991 21:52 | 8 |
| Wess brings up a very good point. Both sides are equally to blame for
slavery. The institution could not have survived if not for the large
textile industry in the north (especially here in New England)
demanding a never ending supply of cotton, and investing money and
political pull to make the south economically subservient to those
interests
Ziff
|
43.11 | Slavery was about to die -- it wasn't efficient | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | As magnificent as that | Tue Sep 17 1991 22:29 | 15 |
| The times we well on the way to mechanical farming -- even had social
pressure been insufficient to put it out of business, slavery could not
have survived another 40 years because steam-powered traction engines
and other more efficient devices were in use before the turn of the
century. You can't feed a dozen slaves on what it costs to run a
traction engine, but the engine can do the work of 20 or 30.
The American auto makers are seeing the same thing today. People are
getting damned tired of large, inefficient, cheaply made cars, and so
they're buying Japanese cars. And the Americans are responding --
today's Fords, Chevys and Plymouths are tons better than the same
brands 10 years ago. Economic pressure, while favoring slavery in the
years leading up to the war, was about to take a turn.
-d
|
43.12 | The need for arable land... | STRATA::RUDMAN | Always the Black Knight. | Wed Sep 18 1991 14:17 | 6 |
| Despite the intention of the South to do any expanding Southward,
logic would seem to indicate the West would be part of reparations;
somehow I can't see a victorious Confederacy leaving all that
potential farmland to the U.S.
Don
|
43.13 | Everyone assumes "glory" in victory | BROKE::LEE | Just trying to get stuff to work | Wed Sep 18 1991 15:39 | 38 |
| There are a ton of possibilities and this moves away from the assumptions given
in that book or mentioned here (I've never read the book, so I'm just reacting
to what is said here. The Confederacy could've "won" if the North had stopped
attacking (say war weary public forces armistice late 1863 perhaps) but was
still stronger than the South militarily. I guess I'm saying is the CSA
could've gained independence without completely crushing the USA.
The United States might've been able to say "fine, you are free, but you can't
expand past Texas". If US was able to back this up with force (maybe a big if.
Is the US population willing to fight over territory?), then the CSA would have
to fight to expand. My assumption is based on the fact that the USA would
still have a stronger and much less damaged manufacturing potential.
Now how do the territories react to the independance of the CSA? Which country
would they join? Or would they join at all, or form a third country.
And what about the future? What if other regions of the USA (or CSA) decide to
split? Would either country be willing to fight the next attempt at secession?
I feel that it is a very *big* assumption to think that if the CSA made it that
there would be no futrue attempts.
Furthermore, if the CSA gained independence I question if the bitterness and
hard feelings on both sides (I don't believe for a second that the South
was the helpless victim of Northern imperialism :-) ) would subside in
any reasonable time. There is a common heritage, and that might help mitigate
the pain, but not enough (along this train of thought that is). I mean,
look at the bitterness that survives today.
So, if they don't like each other in the 1860's will they try to cooperate
when needed? The Spanish American War? Would it have happened? Say there
was a conflict. Who takes what sides over Cuba? What about WWI? The October
Revolution?
I guess I wonder why there appears to be an assumption that the USA and CSA
would have a relationship much like USA-Canada? Why not more like
Serbs-Croations? France-Germany? NH-Mass?
Anyways, this is intersting stuff.
|
43.14 | | CRBOSS::QUIRICI | | Wed Sep 18 1991 16:30 | 9 |
| re: .12
>expanding Southward
Do you mean Central/South America? I think the South would have
expanded there; large populations with a heritage of plantation-type
living, no real experience with democracy.
Ken
|
43.15 | CSA may have expanded South. | NYTP07::LAM | Q ��Ktl�� | Wed Sep 18 1991 17:43 | 4 |
| I'm not sure where I heard this from but didn't Jefferson Davis
envision a empire that expanded into Latin America? So I think there
might have been inklings of expansionism among members of the
Confederate government.
|
43.16 | The South Could Have Won | USEM::PMARTIN | | Wed Sep 18 1991 20:22 | 83 |
| RE: .9
I too believe that the author of .8 was making the point that the South
was being singled out as the ONLY side that practiced segregation, and
I agree that it is an unfair assessment.
I also agree that the North was an equal partner in slavery for many
years. I do not agree however, that the Confederacy can be cast in an
equal light with the Union once the Union had decided that slavery was
wrong. If slavery is wrong, and one side declares it as such, then
the motives behind such a declaration whether noble or suspect, do not
diminish the fact that slavery is wrong. This being the case, the
Confederacy was "wrong" on the issue of slavery, and therefore I
condemn them, and not the Union, on that single issue.
Now there are an assortment of other issues that comprise the
"seamless" position of the Confederacy during that period, and in fact,
a few moments ago, I praised note 37.20 (authored by Wess which
includes many of those issues), as being an outstanding assessment of
what that Southern position was.
And recognizing that this note concerns what would have happened if the
South won, I would like to contribute an additional thought. Although
I share Shelby Foote's belief that the South never had a chance to
win the Civil War through military means, I fully believe that lasting
secession was not only possible, but highly probable if the South had
chosen to delete slavery from their agenda of "beefs" with the North.
Up until the issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation, the South was
highly motivated by their "cause" and their military successes were a
result of fighting for this cause, possibly as much, or more so, than
the fact that the North's military was being led by abject buffoons.
I believe that this was also borne out by the fact that there were many
Southern sympathizers in the North who felt that the South's cause had
a lot of merit, including politicians, newspapers, and public
sentiment, a combination that absolutely skewered Lincoln's image on
BOTH sides, and nearly cost him re-election.
Once Lincoln made up his mind to announce the Emancipation
Proclamation, the merit of the Southern cause was deeply diminished to
the point where slavery became so abhorrent that the remainder of the
Southern agenda, much of it highly valid and reasonable, was
discounted. This was borne out by the almost instantaneous withdrawal
of support by Great Britain and France. A by-product effect of this
announcement was that now the Union had a cause, in fact, a cause that
was arguably more motivating than that of the Confederacy.
Consequently, the Union began to experience more military success,
possibly as much a result of this, as was purging the Union military
leadership of incompetents. Ultimately, it also led to Lincoln's
almost miraculous re-election.
On this single issue, Lincoln was clearly the intellectual superior of
Jefferson Davis who was not able to adapt to this new development, and
in fact, by the end of the war became a scapegoat in the eyes of many
Southerners for the resulting defeat. Had Davis, and the leadership
of the Confederacy, been willing to reverse their position on the
slavery issue, it is very conceivable that the North would have sued
for peace, since:
a) the remainder of Lincoln's agenda was not particularly strong, and
he likely would have been replaced if he continued his efforts to
preserve the Union,
b) one of the strongest political forces in the North (the
abolitionists) would no longer have their sacred cause to promote, and
c) the North was just as tired of the bloodshed as their Southern
brothers and sisters, and the aforementioned Southern sympathizers in
the North might have become the new leading political force, filling
the void created by the departure of the abolitionists.
Without question in my mind, Davis and the Confederate leadership had
the intellectual ability to do so, but just were unable to do so,
primarily due to the Southern psyche that is so well described in
note 37.20. In other words, their position was so totally in
opposition to that of the Union, that their failure to concede even
one plank led to the destruction of the entire platform.
Paul
The result of all of this is that the South could have successfully
seceded, and by doing so, would, in effect, have won.
|
43.17 | matter of principle, but a different principle? | CSCOAC::HUFFSTETLER | | Thu Sep 19 1991 12:53 | 32 |
| > win the Civil War through military means, I fully believe that lasting
> secession was not only possible, but highly probable if the South had
> chosen to delete slavery from their agenda of "beefs" with the North.
> Had Davis, and the leadership of the Confederacy, been willing to
> reverse their position on the slavery issue, it is very conceivable
> that the North would have sued for peace, since:
> In other words, their position was so totally in opposition to that of
> the Union, that their failure to concede even one plank led to the
> destruction of the entire platform.
From a philosophical standpoint, wouldn't conceding the issue of
slavery to the U.S. have been in direct contrast to the principle of
States' Rights? As I've come to understand it, the driving force
behind the whole war was over the States' "right" to determine their own
legislative (and moral, since slavery was a moral issue) destiny.
The South chose, then, to secede instead of allowing a centralized
Federal body to make those decisions for their collective states.
I can agree with the arguments made - agreeing to abolish slavery might
very well have ended the war sooner since slavery was the main issue
for much of the North (instead of secession). This might also have
allowed the CSA to remain a separate entity. I wonder, though, if Davis
could've talked the CSA into dropping slavery as an issue even if he
wanted to. Doing so would have meant sacrificing or at the very least
compromising the ideals he and the South were fighting for and
embracing those against which they were fighting, namely a centralized
Federal government attempting to enforce legislation or morality or
whatever on the individual states.
Scott
|
43.18 | Wait, wait, wait. | VFOVAX::STULL | | Thu Sep 19 1991 14:14 | 16 |
| I think it's stretching things a bit to consider slavery as the
"main issue for much of the North" (this was covered somewhere else
in here, but my memory's failing me). From what I've read and heard,
the "man-in-the-street" of the North didn't care a whole lot about
slavery, and in fact, had it been thought of as a war against slavery
in the first place, the North would have had a much harder time
recruiting troops.
I do agree with .17 though, in that it would surely have been
impossible to convince the Southern Leaders to "give up" slavery as
an issue. Say what you want, I believe it _was_ the issue. States'
Rights was just a convenient euphemism to hide behind. I think it
(State's Rights) was sold to the masses to "popularize" the war, and
secession in general. IMHO.
Mark
|
43.19 | Just a thought... | GVRIEL::SCHOELLER | Schoeller - Failed Xperiment | Thu Sep 19 1991 15:06 | 9 |
| It is also clear that by constantly attacking existing compromises on the
westward expansion of slavery, the South contributed to the uncompromising
attitudes of many northern politicians concerning abolition. This attitude
in turn helped convinced the South that the only way to maintain their "rights"
was to leave. Perhaps, if the southern leaders in Congress had not worked so
hard to add new slave states in areas where this was prevented by the Missouri
Compromise, we wouldn't even have had a CW.
Dick
|
43.20 | | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Thu Sep 19 1991 15:40 | 39 |
| re: southward expansion
The C.S. had designs on Cuba and maybe on Mexico. The ever-increasing
land hunger of the plantation system would have pushed them into
some pretty serious conquests. I think there would have eventually
been a war between the U.S. and the C.S. over possession of the
SW territories - Arizona, N.M., Colo., Utah. It would have been
a simple territorial war, though, and not the philosohical and moral
morass that actually occured.
re: slavery and abolotion as motives
Had the North been fighting even primarily for abolition, or the
South been fighting primarily for slavery, I would agree instantly
that the North was right. This just isn't the case, however. Slavery
was a part of the issue of state's rights. Even the Empancipation
Proclamation admitted the existence of slavery. It said that if
the South would cease its rebellion, it could keep its slaves.
It specificallly said that slaves in the parts of the country,
including the United States, that were under Federal control were
to continue as if the EP had never been issued. The Emancipaion
Proclamation *DID NOT* end or even condem slavery in the United
States. It was shallow and cold-blooded piece of political chicanery,
intended to do precisely what it did: to confuse the world as to
just what was going on. It worked beautifully; Lincoln was a masterful
politician, and I agree [surprise!] that Davis was no match for
him intellectually. Ironically, Davis had much the more difficult
job.
I also agree that the South never stood a snowball's chance in hell
of winning a protracted military conflict. Their only hope was
in either wearing down the North's resolve or in bringing world
opinion against Lincoln and forcing him to negotiate a settlement.
Wess
PS. Just so you don't think I've gone plumb soft in the head, Davis
was one heck of a lot smarter than he is generally given credit
for being.
|
43.21 | | CRBOSS::QUIRICI | | Thu Sep 19 1991 15:59 | 8 |
| re: .20
Mexico, now there's a thought! Many of the CS generals had fought
(victoriously) in the Mexican War (as U.S. soldiers); what did they
think of that area when they came back? They can't have thought it
would put up too much resistance.
Ken
|
43.22 | Avalon-Hill Wargame | NYTP07::LAM | Q ��Ktl�� | Fri Sep 20 1991 12:59 | 5 |
| I saw a game put out by the Avalon-Hill company that presents the
scenario of the South winning the Civil War and a rematch is fought later
during the 1930's. Avalon-Hill is a well known publisher of war games
and combat simulations. Has anyone seen or played this game
before?
|
43.23 | DIXIE? | MAGES::BURR | | Tue Sep 24 1991 11:39 | 7 |
| This sounds like a game call DIXIE that was published in S&T magazine by
SPI (not Avalon Hill), although Avalon Hill might have reissued it. I have
the game, but have never played it. I believe it assumed that both North and
South had remained within the geographical limits of the continental U.S.,
within the general border along the Mason-Dixon line.
Rod
|
43.24 | Note written in '89 | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Fri Oct 25 1991 11:44 | 65 |
| <<< SWECSC::DISK$PELLE:[NOTES$LIBRARY]HISTORY.NOTE;2 >>>
-< Alea Jacta Est! >-
================================================================================
Note 55.51 American Civil War 51 of 450
KLO::JOYCE 57 lines 10-FEB-1989 18:04
-< What if the South had won? >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I get a monthly magazine "History Today" which is basically
history by professionals written for amateurs like myself. They
did an article recently on Confederate war strategy. This led
to an interesting letter on what would have happened if the
South had won - "winning" being that the Confederacy stayed in
existence and the US conceded its right to co-exist in North
America.
The letter-writer mentioned that Winston Churchill believed
that if this happened both North and South would have joined
a re-constituted Greater British Empire, or a British-oriented
North American Federation.
An alternative scenario was put forward by a science-fiction
writer (whose name escapes me) in a novel. Here, the
Confederacy and British North America (backed by Britain)
confine the Union to 25 states. The writer did not say if
the Pacific coast would be part of the Union, but the
suggestion seemed to be that it would not. Presumably this
would have been devided between the Confederacy and British
North America.
I do not find either of these entirely plausible. However,
I do believe that the Confederacy could only have existed
successfully if its borders were guaranteed by a European
power - France or Britain, or both. Thus the Monroe doctrine
would have been set at nought, and European powers would
have had greater say in the development of North America.
Churchill was probably really trying to say this, though
his fully realised scenario is wildly implausible.
Worse case, North America would have been "Europeanized"
(i.e split into competing and often warring states) as
if the South seceded, the Pacific may have at a later date
leading to at least three countries where there is now the
USA. This would have had quite enormous effect on the
history of western civilization - for example the power
of the USA to intervene (for the good I believe) in both
world wars would have been greatly reduced, as it probably
would have been checkmated by another power in the region.
Economically, also the USA as a giant economic area has
always been the engine pulling the western economies along
- had this market splintered into competing economic zones
the industrial development of the west would have been
greatly retarded.
My personal opinion is that the Confederacy would have
expanded South into the Gulf, probably annexing Cuba and
more of Mexico. If so, it might exist today as another
South Africa with an apartheid system for whites,
hispanics and blacks.
That's my personal speculation. Any others?
Toby
|
43.25 | Confederacy | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Fri Oct 25 1991 12:01 | 31 |
|
Just to add to the note:
- Southern Expansionism. The radical secessionists were VERY
expansionist. In the 1850's there were regular calls for the
annexation of Cuba or Nicaragua with a view to adding them as
slave states. There was wide support in the south for filibustering
in the Gulf - read McPherson's "Battle Cry of Freedom", in particular
the chapter "An Empire for Slavery".
- Would the South have become an "apartheid-type" state? Yes, I think
so. Modern racism and segregation in Western countries really grew
up in the 1890's, fuelled by populism and half-baked
"Social-Darwinist" theories that branded blacks as losers in the
battle of evolution. In fact the early "Redeemer" governments that
took over in 1876 after Reconstruction were relatively paternalistic
towards blacks, just like most slaveowners had been, it was at a later
stage that the blacks were deprived of some of the benefits won during
the 1860's - though slavery was not re-introduced. It was during and
after the Spanish-American war when southerners began to rejoin
the US army in large numbers that black units were changed from
combat to labour, and segregation in the armed forces took strong
hold until President Trueman abolished it.
Looking at the subsequent history of desegregation,
which was largely imposed on the South, it is difficult to imagine
an integrated Confederacy happening without a major upheaval like
the one that has gripped South Africa - the upheaval that DID take
place was of earthquake proportions !!!!
Toby
|
43.26 | | STRATA::RUDMAN | Always the Black Knight. | Fri Oct 25 1991 14:23 | 4 |
| Kind of makes you wonder if a successful CSA would eventually have
had their own civil war, and what it would be called.
Don
|
43.27 | | NYTP07::LAM | Q ��Ktl�� | Mon Oct 28 1991 13:21 | 12 |
| re: .24
>Confederacy and British North America (backed by Britain)
>confine the Union to 25 states. The writer did not say if
When you say 'British North America', would that be what is now Canada?
I remember reading somewhere that had the Confederacy won, Texas
would've gone back to being a separate republic. Can anyone confirm
this?
|
43.28 | possession of the West | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Thu Oct 31 1991 13:16 | 21 |
| re: .27 Republic of Texas
That's a good bet, I think. Texas was far removed from the
Confederate national government, and Texans have always thought
of themselves as a breed apart. The CS constitution allowed
secession, so the process would have been peaceful. It is
likely, in my opinion, that a very strong social and political
tie would have formed between the USA, the CSA, and the RT.
Canada might have tried to extend its boundaries to the southwest,
but I doubt it. I'm no expert on Canadian history, but I can't
think of a motive for them to have done so.
NOw here's a variation on that theme: if Texas had seceeded from
the Confederacy, and if the U.S. and C.S were hassling over possesion
of the western territories, Mexico, and not Canada, might have come
up and tried to retake some old ground. At that point, the Mexican
(ie, French) government was far more aggressive than was the Canadian.
Wess
|
43.29 | Fragmentation? | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Thu Oct 31 1991 14:16 | 26 |
| RE .27:
You may well have read the idea about Texas seceeding - it was
postulated in Kantor's book, "If The South Had Won The Civil War".
RE .28:
Canada might well have tried to move south along the Pacific coast if
there had been a weakened USA. They were worried a bit about American
expansion into _their_ territory (so they built their transcontinental
railroad through some of the roughest mountains in North America as an
"anchor" for the boundary), so they might have pushed for a bigger
buffer.
Wes also raises, indirectly, another point: would the CSA have lasted?
How long would the "tidewater" states, "the Gulf Squadron", and the
states like Tennessee, Missouri, and Arkansas have felt they had enough
commonality to overcome their differences? Economic development would
not have moved at a uniform pace, and sooner or later the old
"North/South" stresses would have appeared in the CSA, with secession
an easy "remedy". Remember that Georgia did a lot of things that were
harmful to the Confederate war effort _during_ the war - would they
have put up with "meddling" from Richmond after it was over?
MikeR
|
43.30 | Map would be like Latin America. | NYTP07::LAM | Q ��Ktl�� | Mon Nov 04 1991 14:47 | 21 |
| re: .29
>Wes also raises, indirectly, another point: would the CSA have lasted?
>How long would the "tidewater" states, "the Gulf Squadron", and the
>states like Tennessee, Missouri, and Arkansas have felt they had enough
>commonality to overcome their differences? Economic development would
>not have moved at a uniform pace, and sooner or later the old
>"North/South" stresses would have appeared in the CSA, with secession
>an easy "remedy". Remember that Georgia did a lot of things that were
>harmful to the Confederate war effort _during_ the war - would they
>have put up with "meddling" from Richmond after it was over?
If this had happened, I can imagine the map of North America would look
more like that of South or Central America. It would be made up of
several little countries. I remember learning in high school when we were
studying the history of Latin America that some great Latin American
leader wanting to unite all the Latin American states into sort of a
United States of South America. I think it might have been Simon
Bolivar but I can't remember for sure it was a long time ago. As you
can guess he was unsuccessful.
|
43.31 | Suppose the British had recognised the Confederacy.. | BRADAN::TJOYCE | | Wed Nov 06 1991 12:38 | 22 |
|
Re: Canada
I think some of the previous notes forget that Canada in the 1860's
was very much British North America - I read somewhere that the
British reinforced their garrison there during the war, to guard
against any fall-out from the Civil War.
People also forget that in the early days the South's survival
depended to a large degree on British recognition - suppose
Britain had recognised the Confederacy, and used its navy to
break the blockade? Suppose French troops had joined the
Confedeate army in Virginia and Tennessee? The Monroe doctrine
would be in pieces, and forever ....
It is not hard to imagine the North, having been confronted
by British/ French support for the South, allying with the
Bismarck's emerging Prussian state .....
... how different could the 20th have been in that event ....
Toby
|
43.32 | It would ahve been worse than it was. | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | As magnificent as that | Wed Nov 06 1991 12:57 | 28 |
| Re: .31
The North might have allied with the Prussians, but maybe not. It is
clear that beginning sometime in 1863 the North was the most advanced
state in the world militarily and technologically. All IMHO, of course.
The strategies and tactics of Grant, which became those under which the
Union's war was conducted early in 1864, were unconventional enough that
the Europeans, who had were still mired in their "gentleman's war"
style, would have fared very poorly against the burgeoning Union armies,
especially on American ground against troops who had faced rifled arms
for years. Given that the Gatling gun, the Henry and Spencer rifles,
and the technology to make them were coming of age, the Union, even had
it had no other advantage, would have shown greatly superior firepower.
The British navy was indeed superior to the Union's -- in number of sail
and in weight of metal thrown. But how long that advantage would have
served against the developed ironclads of the Union navy is anyone's
guess, and mine is that the British would have been served short shrift
befiore they could gear their technology and production up to meet those
of the already booming Union.
I am convinced that the war would have been far longer, far more widely
spread, and far bloodier, but I do think the result would still have
been a Union victory. The difference, in the end, would likely have
been to place the US in the position of victor in the first world war.
-dick
|
43.33 | The North against the Rest? | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Fri Nov 08 1991 09:17 | 31 |
|
I beg to differ with the previous note .... no matter how powerful
the North was, I do not think it could have withstood the leading
naval and military powers at that time AND defeated the Confederacy
as well.
Defeating the South was such an arduous and closely-run affair that
the outcome could have turned either way.
The British could quite easily have gobbled up the US's merchant
fleet ... the North would have had to built a fleet of ocean-going
warships to stop them, which would have detracted significantly
from their war effort on land. It is likely that it would be the
North's commerce that would suffer, while the South's would prosper.
It is true that probably European troops would maybe not have been as
effective as American, but 10 or 20 thousand extra troops, (disciplined
professionals with experience in the Crimea, Algeria and Mexico) on the
Southern side would have made an enormous difference to Robert E.
Lee in his battles!
While the US was obviously a growing power, it was still not regarded
as a world power by the other countries, for example, the British
representative in Washington, Lord Lyons, did not have full ambassador
status. And I do not think that the North had yet outstripped Britain
as an industrial power. In fact, Germany was the first nation to do
that.
Toby
|
43.34 | Beg all you like. :-) | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | As magnificent as that | Fri Nov 08 1991 13:10 | 41 |
| Re: .33
The problem with your line of reasoning, as I see it, is Parkinson's
Law. As people will always do everywhere, the North put forth the
minimum effort required to defeat the South. Had other enemies
presented themselves, Lincoln would have had the most unbelievably
powerful call to arms at his disposal, namely defense of the very
existence of the Union -- this is the same thing that carried the
Confederacy on for so long. But the Union, by and large, was fighting
for an idea, not for existence, and did not rise to the ultimate need.
Look today at Israel. The Israeli people know that if they lose a war
with a major Arab state they will likely be dispossessed of their
nation. So they simply do not allow that eventuality to happen. I am
convinced that the Union had the resources to rise and protect itself
against that kind of threat. Fer gosh sakes, the 13 colonies managed
to defeat Britain when Britian was the greatest land and naval power in
the entire Western world!
Look at the USA in WWII. From being the most backward militarily of
all the major combatants, it emerged form the war literally decades
ahead of all the others. (The USSR built an A-bomb in 1951 as a result
of superb espionage, not because they had developed the technology on
their own.) This kind of ingenuity cannot be bought just by having a
solid manufacturing base. The benefits of ingenious technology were
already being felt -- the Gatling gun, revolvers, Spencer and Henry
rifles, the Parrott and Dahlgren guns, balloon observation, monitors,
the near advent of true submersibles (John Ericsson's boats), effective
grenades and land mines. Project the rate of Union invention during
the war for another five years...
Bear in mind as well that Britain was still recovering from the Crimean
War and was dealing with *severe* labour unrest internally. France was
no longer a significant naval power and was in fact actively engaged in
securing Mexico for itself. I think it would have been ineffably
horrible, maybe 2 or 3 million lives lost, but I really believe that
the Union would finally have come out as top dog. I will, however,
pose this as a question to my son, who is a historian specializing in
military history.
-dick
|
43.35 | Another opinion | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | As magnificent as that | Fri Nov 08 1991 14:27 | 10 |
| My son, a historian specializing in military history, says that in his
opinion the ONLY reason that the South lost was that they could not keep
their armies supplied properly. He says that had Britan and France
taken arms on the side of teh Confederacy, the Union would have lost
bigtime.
I suppose I'm at liberty to disagree with him, but I do think now that
I need to revisit the issue.
-dick
|
43.36 | Supply and Logistics | ODIXIE::RRODRIGUEZ | | Fri Nov 08 1991 15:06 | 15 |
| That's an interesting point. The issue of supply, that is.
It would seem (to me, at least) that difficulty with supply
and logistics would have made the British and the French
themselves ineffective.
After all, they would have had to maintain a transatlantic
supply line through all seasons and we're not talking about
twentieth century comforts either. The Union would have had
access to resupplying and refueling a steel and steam fleet
in days, not weeks.
Just a thought...
2
R
|
43.37 | Mahan Would Back England... | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Fri Nov 08 1991 15:26 | 31 |
| RE .35 & previous:
I agree with Toby (and your son ;^} ). Even in the example you cite of
the Revolutionary War, America was only able to win because Britain was
fighting other, bigger enemies elsewhere, and because the French fleet
was able to briefly deny England command of the sea.
In the Civil War, the appearance of the Royal Navy on the side of the
Confederacy would have destroyed the blockade, and would have probably
prevented such strategic and morale-building victories as the capture
of New Orleans. True, the US was beginning to build ironclads, but
they were by no means deep-water warships, and England was already
experimenting. The so-called Laird Rams, with all their design flaws,
caused the US to exert significant diplomatic pressure in order to keep
England from delivering them to the Confederacy - I think the British
would not have lagged far behind any naval effort the US could have
made.
I'll have to check, but I think the French commissioned an armored
frigate, the Gloire, in 1858 (a regular broadside sail/steam ship with
armor plate), so the US did not exactly have a monopoly on armored
ships.
Another factor is timing. Much of the innovation you speak of came
into significant battlefield use in late 1862 or 1863. If the British
and French had intervened earlier, they would have faced a US Army
which was plagued by marginally competent commanders and armed about
the same as they were.
MikeR
|
43.38 | Handy Bases | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Fri Nov 08 1991 15:35 | 17 |
| RE .36:
The British had excellent sites for bases in the Bahamas and Nova
Scotia. (Nassau was a major port for blockade runners with England
neutral.) Remember that until late 1863 or so, the Union "blockade"
was pretty porous, even _without_ a major navy to contend with. It was
the gradual capture of Confederate ports, plus the eventual building of
a fleet of small gunboats, that finally sealed the Southern coast.
With the Royal Navy in the picture, the US would have needed to
maintain fairly large squadrons at any points they wanted to blockade,
and it _still_ might have been pretty easy for a troop or supply convoy
to force its way in. The British had learned about convoys during the
Napoleonic Wars, and I suspect they would have had little trouble
supplying their own and Confederate armies.
MikeR
|
43.39 | | METECH::WARFIELD | Gone Golfing | Sun Nov 10 1991 20:06 | 20 |
| RE: .34
>But the Union, by and large, was fighting for an idea, not for existence, and
>did not rise to the ultimate need. ...Fer gosh sakes, the 13 colonies managed
>to defeat Britain when Britian was the greatest land and naval power in the
>entire Western world!
I heard an interview with an author (who's name escapes me) who has written a
book critical of Robert E. Lee. His arguement was similar to the points you
make. The basis of his arguement was that Lee lost the war because:
1. He fought agressively against the North instead of trying to
create a long protracted war. His compared it to the American
Revolution where the colonies dragged out the war.
2. That he incurred too many casualties relative to his opponent.
I don't necessarily buy his arguement due to the superior numbers and strategic
advantages of the North. However due to Northern incompetance the extended war
scenario would seem plausible by the middle of the war.
Larry
|
43.40 | another factor to consider | JUPITR::ZAFFINO | | Mon Nov 11 1991 19:11 | 10 |
| Being no expert on naval matters, especially where the ACW is
concerned, I'll pose this more as a question than as an argument.
From my readings on the various fleets of the world during that period
I notice that while the other powers in question also had some
iron-clads (Britain and France), they were armed with 9" guns. The
US ocean-going fleet, while mainly built for coastal defense, was
almost entirely armed with 15" guns. Could this have made the
difference in a major naval engagement?
Ziff
|
43.41 | Naval factors | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | As magnificent as that | Tue Nov 12 1991 10:42 | 22 |
| Weight of metal was often the deciding factor in naval engagements.
But the size of a ship's guns can be more than offset by the number
of guns on an enemy ship. The difference in engagements between two
ironclads would come down to whether a 9-inch gun was sufficient to
batter a ship's armor into uselessness.
The skill of the respective commanders would figure into things, and
there is no doubt in my mind that British captains were superior to
any others on earth at that time. I don't think it would have taken
most captains very long to learn that you don't just sit there and
batter at each other -- tactics become important. Very important.
One other factor is that of luck. There are many records of a ship's
losing a battle because her fires were swamped or her boiler holed by
a stray shot that came in through a gunport or a stack or some other
fortuitous opening. Also, most ironclads were clad only above the
waterline. In heavy seas, it could -- and did -- happen that a ship
heeled at just the wrong moment and took a shot below the waterline.
I think it would have been interesting, to say the least.
-dick
|
43.42 | like I said, I'm no expert | JUPITR::ZAFFINO | | Tue Nov 12 1991 19:04 | 5 |
| I think I was suffering a bit of dain bramage in my last entry.
Instead of 15" guns it should read 13" guns. Sorry about the
confusion...
Ziff
|
43.43 | Fine. I'm quitting and taking my ball... | CSCOA1::HUFFSTETLER | | Fri Dec 13 1991 19:19 | 17 |
| Another thought on what might've happened...
Suppose the CSA gained independence from the Union. That in itself
would have set a precedent that a state, or group or states, or group
of people, if dissattisfied with the current ruling body, has a right
to secede from that governement, right? At that point, what would keep
Farmer Brown from seceding from Georgia because he didn't like paying
state taxes and creating "The great state of Brown"?
Someone mentioned earlier the map of the US and CSA today would look
like central America. I think it would be much more complex, with
thousands of little "State of Johnson" mini-states existing from people
seceding, and seceding again, and so on. Eventually, with no federal
army providing any type of protection, Mexico or Britain or the Union
would've tried to annex the south again.
Scott
|
43.44 | Small freeholds VS. big tyrannies | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Mon Dec 16 1991 13:49 | 46 |
| re: .43
So?
Seriously, the purpose of governments is to serve their Human
constituents. Humans do NOT exist to serve governments. If a
government does not serve the needs of its constitutents, then it ought
to be abandoned or overthrown. Secession is an option.
However, people in government like to govern. They need constituents
in order to govern. If a government knows that it can lose its reason
for existing if it does not meet the needs of its constituents, it
will, if it is reasonable, meet those needs. If a government is denied
the arbitrary use of force to *MAKE* people do what it wants, it must,
if it is to survive, get them to do what it wants *VOLUNTARILY*. That
means it must serve their needs. If a government is serving the
people's needs, there is little chance they will secede or rebel. Read
the Declaration of Independence and see what Jefferson said about
governments being overthrown for "light and transient reasons."
The number of states in a region has nothing whatsoever to do with the
moral validity of the governments of those states. To say that Lincoln
was justified in initiating the slaughter of 600,000 Humans in order to
keep up the acreage under control of the Federal government is giving
tyranny a pretty easy path.
The fundamental unit of morality is the individual Human Being, not a
government.
Now before anyone jumps on this, it is true that the Confederate
constitution did not recognize the liberty or validity of the slaves.
However, the Confederacy at least paid lip service to Jefferson's
ideals, and would, sooner or later, have had to deal with the
contradiction. The Union, on the other hand, threw out all ideals
altogether and just said, "Might makes right."
The primary difference between the Union and Confederate causes was
this: The Confederacy stood for a government that would allow slavery
of a select group of people, but in contradiction of some of its basic
premises. The Union stood for a government that could enslave *ALL*
people, and *IN DIRECT ACCORDANCE* with its basic premises.
I prefer the former, thank you.
Wess
|
43.45 | leaving out politics for a minute... | CSCOAC::HUFFSTETLER | | Mon Dec 16 1991 14:54 | 11 |
| Wess,
My point was that had the South "won" the war, it could've eventually
splintered into a number of seperate states, given the precedent that
secession was legal under that government's constitution. Without a
Federal government to "provide for the common defense" as the (US)
Constitution reads, someone (Mexico, France, England, Iceland,
Antartica, whomever ;^)) could've eventually come in to conquer all the
little fiefdoms created by multiple secessions.
Scott
|
43.46 | The Nature of Government | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Tue Dec 17 1991 10:19 | 195 |
| RE .44:
Wes, your line of argument has some flaws - you are glossing over a
fundamental issue of cooperative endeavor.
You said:
>Seriously, the purpose of governments is to serve their Human
>constituents. Humans do NOT exist to serve governments.
I agree entirely.
>If a government does not serve the needs of its constitutents, then
>it ought to be abandoned or overthrown. Secession is an option.
Here is where the first problem arises. In this statement, and in the
paragraph that followed, you leave out a fundamental set of questions:
_Which_ needs of _which_ constituents? What does a government do when
meeting a vital need of many constituents causes inconvenience to a few -
leaving them, in effect, with an unmet "need"? And what constitutes a
"need", anyway? Is it anything that any single individual _feels_ they
"need"? (I hope you don't say yes; anyone who has ever raised children
knows that humans can feel strongly that they "need" something which
is actually harmful to them. Even your own example of Omaha Beach shows
that what "feels right" to a person can, in _fact_, be wrong.)
_No_ government, _no_ organization, _no_ association of people for
cooperative endeavor can _ever_ act at all times in ways that please
or satisfy _all_ of the people involved. I'll bet there has never
been an action of any government that was _unanimously_ approved by
its constituents. So, one fundamental problem of government, or indeed
of any association of people from a family on up, is how to provide
some kind of "proper" balance between the needs and desires of each
member, the needs and desires of other members, and the needs and
desires of the group as a whole - when _all_ of those _may_ be _different_
in some particular situation.
There is an obvious corrolary here. For any cooperative effort to be
possible, there will be _some_ times when _some_ people will have to
make _some_ sacrifice for the benefit of others. The trick, from
a perspective that values the individual (there are philosophies that
do not, but I don't subscribe to those), is to make sure that it is
not always the _same_ people who are asked to sacrifice. When you
start to make all the demands on one particular part of a constituency,
you are heading down the path of tyranny.
>However, people in government like to govern. They need constituents
>in order to govern. If a government knows that it can lose its reason
>for existing if it does not meet the needs of its constituents, it
>will, if it is reasonable, meet those needs.
And, as discussed above, the _constituents_ will, if _they_ are reasonable,
recognize that their _particular_ needs cannot always be met. My desire
to have lots of open space around my house might conflict with another's
need for a place to live - so _I_ cannot dictate what is done with a
neighbor's land, though in a properly functioning government I have some
process available to influence decisions which affect me.
>If a government is denied the arbitrary use of force to *MAKE* people
>do what it wants, it must, if it is to survive, get them to do what it
>wants *VOLUNTARILY*.
A second fundamental problem surfaces here. I think our difference turns
on the word "arbitrary". I would agree that government, or the commander
of an infantry company, or the president of a company, should be denied
the "arbitrary" use of force. But if we are to have a rule of laws and
not of individual strength, then the governing authority _must_ be able,
if needed, to use some level of force to _compell_ obedience to its
decisions. That compulsion might be subtle or direct, might be a threat
of punishment or a promise of reward, but it _cannot_ be subject to the
self-ish veto of each and every member of the constituency - if it is,
then you have, in effect, no "law" and no "crime", because each person
always can do anything they want (or are able to do) to others.
Now, I would definitely say that the use of force needs to be controlled.
As you have pointed out quite well, and as history shows, it is easy for
the governors to feel that any exercise of force to get the governed to
do what they want is okay. Again, the trick for a system that wants to
value the individual is to find the mechanisms and balance which will
try to keep most (you will never achieve _all_, people being what they
are) uses of force within "just" limits. But there _will_ be times
and situations when soldiers must obey an order not because they agree
with it, or like it, or see how it will benefit them, but simply because
it _is_ an _order_ from an authority they have covenanted to obey. If
one volunteers to enter an association, then one agrees to abide by the
rules of that association, and not "take my bat & ball and go home" when
the umpire makes a call you don't like.
There is certainly room for discussion about _what_ mechanisms should be
used, and what appropriate responses are when they break down, and even
about whether particular historical situations represent "opression" of
some group of people. But just because someone feels opressed does not
mean that they _are_, and the fact that an action taken by a government
is disadvantageous to a group does not mean that mechanisms have not
functioned properly; we need to look at a factual historical context to
evaluate whether a particular action was "meeting the needs" of the
constituency as a whole.
>That means it must serve their needs.
Yes, but _real_ needs, not necessarily _felt_ needs.
>If a government is [ perceived as] serving the people's needs, there
>is little chance they will secede or rebel. Read the Declaration of
>Independence and see what Jefferson said about governments being
>overthrown for "light and transient reasons."
Brackets are mine. It is possible for an authority to be serving the needs
of a constituency without the constituency perceiving it so. I know of
no six month old child who can see the "need" for a DPT shot. I realize
we are talking about adults (at least in theory - I know of lots of
childish behavior by biological adults ;^}), but even reasonable people
can be blind, at the time, to the need for a particular action.
What usually tips the scale here is pattern. If I _never_ seem to get _my_
needs met by an authority, and if some other group or person always seems
to get preference, then you are correct: I will tend to rebell. (But my
perception may not, in fact, be correct. That's where an outside
evaluation is needed.)
>The fundamental unit of morality is the individual Human Being, not a
>government.
Absolutely! A "government" is not even an entity; it is a group of
individual human beings chosen (somehow) to act in a particular capacity
in relation to other human beings. As you said at the beginning, the
people who make up a government are _supposed_ to be acting as "agents",
or servants, of their constituency, and not for themselves. But as
Edmund Burke (I think) said, a representative owes the people not only
his energy but his judgment, and he betrays both them and himself if he
sacrifices it to their opinion! Those agents will make mistakes, true.
They will not always act as they should. They will certainly displease
_some_ of their constituents in any action they take.
Because of that basic problem of government, what you talk about as secession
- the withdrawal of a territorially defined section of a voluntary
governmental association from the other portions, on the decision of
_some_ of the people in that geographic entity, is not a viable or valid
option. It is not viable because such a principle is fatal, ultimately,
to cooperative endeavor. It is not valid because it imposes exactly the
same arbitrary force on those residents who do not agree with separation
as _it_ claims to be suffering from the rest of the group - i.e., "we got
out-voted".
To be clear, though, this is NOT talking about the "legitimacy" or
"propriety" of rebelling (i.e. instituting a violent process aimed at
altering a government); I am only talking about the notion of "peaceful
secession". Whether the South had a "right" to rebell is another
question. I assert that they did not have a right, given the nature
of government, to secede as States.
MikeR
Side issue:
>The number of states in a region has nothing whatsoever to do with the
>moral validity of the governments of those states.
Okay.
>To say that Lincoln was justified in initiating the slaughter of 600,000
>Humans in order to keep up the acreage under control of the Federal
>government is giving tyranny a pretty easy path.
Initiating? Wes, you aren't sounding like a historian. Lincoln did not
cause South Carolina to secede, or formulate the Dred Scott decision, or
publish _The Liberator_, or do any of a myriad of things that combined to
produce armed conflict. Nor did he "plan" to get 600,000 people killed,
or have the war last until 1865. You could better lay the casualty list
and the length of the war at McClellan's door than Lincoln's, but that's
not valid historically either. If the Confederacy had simply ignored
Fort Sumter, there might have been no fighting (not likely, but possible),
but they didn't "initiate the slaughter of 600,000 Humans" either.
Don't forget - most of that "territory" you are talking about was acquired
_by_ the United States Government, divided into entities by that same
government, and then those entities were allowed, by the rules and
authorization of that government, to exercise jurisdiction over their
particular pieces of United States land. Only Georgia, the Carolinas,
and Virginia "got" their land from some other government. The mouth
of the Mississippi was more important, in 1860, to the people of Ohio,
Indiana, and Illinois than it was to the government of the State of
Louisiana - and it wasn't up to that small piece of the national
constituency to decide that the rest of the country could do without
it.
>The Union, on the other hand, threw out all ideals altogether and
>just said, "Might makes right."
Unsupported by the facts. The soldiers who went to war to preserve the
Union were _not_ throwing out all ideals, and did not all think that
"might makes right". It may be that none of them thought so.
|
43.47 | common defense, liberalism | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Tue Dec 17 1991 19:35 | 84 |
| re: .45 Scott
The Confederate constitution did, in fact, provide for the common
defense.
I'll certainly agree that a confederation has more dificulty in
developing the military unity or punch than does a federal government,
but dificulty does not mandate failure.
re: .46 MikeR
Whew! You put some work into that, Amigo! I'm sorry that I don't have
time to really get into answering your note, but I'll try to get some
high spots.
First: You are correct in that no government [that I know of] has ever
pleased all its people all the time. That is why, (A) the best
government is the least government, and (B) a government should
concentrate on protecting its citizens from the initiation of force by
others, rather than on deciding against whom the government, itself,
will initiate force.
Second: Some folks will disagree with other folks over who is getting
the elevator and who is getting the shaft. That's why one function of
a legitimate government is a system of courts that operate on a body of
written law. Additionally, refer to "First," above: The fewer actions
a government takes - eg, as a smaller government - the less chance it
will hurt someone.
Third: Yes, it is possible in a classically liberal society that
anyone with an axe to grind can try to start a rebellion. It's called
freedom. If said person can get enough support to cause trouble, the
government darned well ought to look into the matter. There will
always be conflict between those who think folks ought to be free and
those who think folks ought to be controlled by someone else. You
state this point very well. However, you think it a vice of a
classically liberal system, and I think it a virtue.
Fourth: The Federal government made no effort to negotiate with the
Southern states for compensation for forts and other Federal
properties. Whether the Confederacy would have made some agreemen to
pay for that property is something we'll never know. South Carolina
could NOT ignore Ft. Sumpter because the *ONLY* thing anyone could gain
from possession of the fort was control over Charleston harbor. The
Federal government could have had utterly no use for that fort unless
it intended to control that harbor. Lincoln tried to reenforce Sumpter
with armed ships, and that was AFTER Slemmer fired on the Florida
militia at Pensacola. Lincoln never once tried to work out a peaceful
settlement that would have granted the South's independence. His
first and consistent recourse was to armed force.
Lincoln had a wonderful chance to make a statement on Human liberties
and individual rights, but instead, he chose to "provide for the common
defense," [to tie this back to Scott's .45] by calling up troops and
sending them against their countrymen with deadly intent.
Yes, I said a statment on Human liberties. We are today a good deal
less free than were our ancestors who rebelled against the Crown in
'75. (Whew! Did I show my national-centrism there, or what?! I
apologize to my honored correspondents in this file whose ancestors
were on the side of the Crown in that fracas, or who had no stake in
it. Rather than delete the sentence, I think I'll leave it and the
point it makes.) The War Between the States - and the politics of
Lincoln - have destroyed the principles of small government - of the
theory that the individual Human Being is more important than the
government. Mike, look at your own remarks in .46. How many times did
you say that sometimes individuals have to be sacrificed for the good
of the government, or of their neighbors? That is Abraham Lincoln
talking. I say that if a nation is to run on such principles, then the
sacrifical lambs have every right to shoot back, and on their own
terms. That would lead to even worse rebellion than would liberalism,
and a far more serious anarchy.
Human liberties? Considering how strong the abolition movement had
always been in the South, what would have happened had Lincoln let
the South go, and then refused to deal with them in shape, way, or
fashion until they emancipated the slaves?
Especially if tens of thousands of the South's most intelligent and
respected leaders weren't mouldering in soldier's graves...
Wess
|
43.48 | | TOLKIN::QUIRICI | | Wed Dec 18 1991 11:18 | 7 |
| re: .47
One little nit: the less government, the less it will hurt people.
True. On the other hand, the less government, the more people will hurt
people. There has to be some balance that is not at either extreme.
Ken
|
43.49 | What war was this? | NYTP07::LAM | Q ��Ktl�� | Wed Dec 18 1991 15:15 | 8 |
| > <<< Note 43.7 by SMURF::CALIPH::binder "As magnificent as that" >>>
> -< Invalid speculation >-
>again that all the South wanted was to be left alone. The British were in no
>position militarily to embark on such a war of conquest, especially
>having just witnessed the bloodiest war in all history. Consider that
What war was Britain involved in at the time?
|
43.50 | | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Magister dixit | Wed Dec 18 1991 15:17 | 10 |
| Re: .48
From a science fiction story: "The more control, the more that
requires control. This is the road to chaos."
But anarchy doesn't work. Where's the median point? Arguably, the
Confederate ideal was some ways better than the Federal reality either
then or now.
-dick
|
43.51 | Not theirs, ours | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Magister dixit | Wed Dec 18 1991 15:30 | 20 |
| Re: .49
In my .7, I was discussing "what if the Confederacy had won?" Meaning
that the ACW would have been over. And I also said Great Britain had
"witnessed" the bloodiest war in all history, not that they had fought
(or were fighting) it. The ACW was the bloodiest single war in history
up until that time, having killed over 600,000 soldiers (200,000 in
battle, the rest from disease and other causes, many of which were as a
result of wounds received) and wounded an additional 500,000. Add
civilian casualties to that, and you don't get any comparison from any
earlier war.
My intent was to indicate that if the British took cognizance of how
awful "modern" warfare had become when fought on American terms, the
British would clearly have thought twice about attempting to reconquer
the USA. I pointed out further that with the advent of new weapons of
mass descruction such as the Gatling gun, the full horror potential was
visible...
-dick
|
43.52 | | TOLKIN::QUIRICI | | Wed Dec 18 1991 16:14 | 28 |
| re: .50
In some ways, the Confederate ideal may have been better; the
Confederate 'nation' might have, had it been allowed to live,
provided more freedom, and less hassle, for its citizens, than
the northern nation - ours.
On the other hand, if we take note of the key word 'citizen', and
realize that slaves were excluded from citizenship, one may start to
question the idyllic view some people have of the Confederate
nation.
Specifically, I question whether, in the absence of a strong central
government with COERCIVE powers, the slaves would ever have been freed.
Voluntarily. Without bloodshed.
If freed in some technical sense, would they ever have been granted
full citizenship? To assume that white southerners, in the absence of
any coercion, would have simply 'seen the light', is assuming a lot.
In other words, it was the greater freedom in the South that permitted
slavery. This is a clear example of the absence of governmental
'injury' permitting greater 'injury' by person to person.
In sum, I would draw the line to enclose more governmental power than
the Southern example.
Ken
|
43.53 | Anarchy, law, Human rights | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Wed Dec 18 1991 19:32 | 57 |
| The last few contain some valid questions. I'd like to offer a few
short [yes, short, even for me! ;-) ] comments.
First, I do not advocate anarchy. The amount of government necessary
to protect its citizens from domestic assault (viz. a police force) and
foreign assault (viz. a military) is one measure of the minimum
acceptable amount. Let me *VERY QUICKLY* add, though, that the modern
liberal approach to protection - a policeman in every pocket - is not
what I'd consider the minimum. I don't want to get into gun control
issues here, but in my opinion, if the people are allowed liberal use
of self-defense - and any violence MUST be investigated by the police -
the need for government protection will be dramatically reduced from
what we have today.
re: emancipation in an independent Confederacy
This is all speculation, of course, but I'd offer the following facts:
1. Far more anti-slavery societies originated in the South than in the
North.
2. Virginia had already banned the importation of slaves into its
territory. This set the stage for further discussion of the subject.
3. The Confederacy would have been quite dependent on the goodwill and
respect of the international community. Foreign pressure to emancipate
would have been enormous.
4. The Confederacy still at least *CLAIMED* to respect Human rights.
Their definition Human needed some work, but the philosophic groundwork
for true equality was there. Obviously, there was also a lot of
groundwork for the opposite extreme, too. I don't mean to paint a
moonlight and magnolias picture of the South; there was a very
deep-seated racism in Southern society. However,
5. The South had more universities per capita than did the North, and
had always prized liberal education above almost anythign else.
I guess here's a synopsis of my theory:
The South had a good potential for abolishing slavery on its own.
Had Southerners handled the problem on their own terms, they would
not have been as resentful and vengeful as was the historical case.
The South would have been forced by economic reality to take
drastic action in reforming its institutions and way of life. With
the help of leaders like those who would not have been slaughtered
in a war that didn't happen, and without the hatred generated by that
war, I *MUST* believe that liberty and equality under the law would
have been forthcoming for all residents of the South. It might
have taken a few more years - I think 10 to 15 at the most - but
the long-term gains would have been much greater and at a vastly
lower cost.
Yup. It's just a dream. But I think it has more substance that some
dreams that have proven true.
Wess
|
43.54 | One Clarification | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Thu Dec 19 1991 12:19 | 21 |
| RE .47:
I'm thinking about that. But, Wes, would you mind pointing out where I
said people might have to sacrifice for the good of the _government_?
Neighbors, yes; the good of the whole constituency, yes; but I don't
_think_ I said the government - even using that term to mean the good
of people who comprise the government. Yes, politicians have often
_asked_ for such sacrifice, but it is not one I was advocating.
Note also that I did NOT say _how_ the "sacrificial lambs" _should_ be
chosen. They might always volunteer, as thousands of young men did in
1861 to serve a greater cause than their own self-interest (and they
wore blue and gray uniforms). I was merely stating a fact which it
seemed to me you were giving too little weight - that no body of people
will coexist and cooperate without _some_body having to make _some_
sacrifices, and the ones who "get the shaft instead of the elevator"
might not agree with what's being done, so it is untenable to say that
government should not displease constituents.
MikeR
|
43.55 | The Road Not Taken | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Thu Dec 19 1991 12:46 | 60 |
| RE .53:
I would feel more comfortable with your projection of a Confederacy
emancipating its slaves if it were not for the historical pattern of
Southern attitude development prior to the war. It seems to me that
"the South" (using the term for convenience, with full awareness that
what I will say does not apply to every Southerner) painted itself into
a corner over the decades before the war _precisely_ by refusing to
acknowledge that slavery was, eventually, doomed, and therefore failing
to look for a way out.
I say that, because I think _if_ there had been enough vision in the
South and its leaders to recognize where things were going (England had
abolished the slave trade _and_ slavery long before the 1850 - 1860
tension-building decade), they could have done this:
Instead of repeatedly and loudly insisting that the North not only
leave slavery alone, but admit its right to expand, the South starts
advocating that, yes, slavery should end because of its debilitating
effects. But is it fair for all the economic and social burden to fall
on one section, when Northern industry has benefitted from the system?
And do you want thousands of freed Negros heading into Northern cities
to compete for jobs? (a real fear for many in the North) And do you
_really_ want racial equality? (almost nobody did) After all, the
argument could have run, these poor, ignorant Negros (common view)
_need_ guidance and protection. So, why not compensate slave owners
who free their slaves, and let all of us in Washington (or in each
State) design a social structure to help educate and care for these
freed slaves until (i.e. probably something very like a share-cropping
moderately segregated social order, leaving the Whites "on top")?
If the Southern politicians had done something like that, they
would have spiked the guns of the abolitionists (at least all those
except the radical few who saw slaveowners as evil), gotten a _lot_ of
support from the moderate elements in the North, and placated the
free-soil Northwest. The polarization that produced a successful
Republican party would not have occurred. Remember, the vast majority
of Northerners, even in 1860, were not anxious to abolish slavery where
it _was_; many _were_ anxious to keep it contained. If the South had
stopped pushing for expansion, and proposed a plan for abolition, the
war would not have happened because secession would not have happened.
I am NOT, by the way, saying that such a course would have been
"better" or "worse". It might have left us with an equally bad racial
situation today. (Or might not.) I present the scenario to show what
"the South" _might_ have done, if their attitude had been as
enlightened as Wes' proposed might-have-been seems to require. It
seems to me that such a course of events did _not_ happen because
public opinion in the South, and those who spoke for the South in the
1850s, had hardened into a dependence on continued slavery that no
"foreign" pressure, aside from conquest, would have changed, and that
no domestic pressure would have been allowed to change.
Have at it, folks!
:^)
MikeR
|
43.56 | Slaves vs. hired help. | STRATA::RUDMAN | Always the Black Knight. | Thu Dec 19 1991 14:56 | 40 |
| As states, the South did take the attitude you describe, Mike, but
individual slave holders/users were actually moving towards a different
view. Many had discovered paying non-negro workers was, in the
long run, more profitable than using their own slaves, especially
in manufacturing tasks. The influx of cheap Irish (& etc.) labor
into the South were pushing owned slaves back to field and domestic
work. Moreover, Southern manufacturers and planters who rented
help (slaves were also rented out, usually for a season or a year)
stopped mixing work gangs, finding that the "white" laborers would
notice the slaves doing as little as possible and they would begin
emulating them.
It seems to me if they'd been left alone they'd have phased out
slavery on their own.
Don
P.S. Not a few slaveowners/slaves had a racket where a slave would
be hired out by a farmer, and after a few days the slave would
take off for the hills (or the swamps) for the duration of the
lease. (This usually happened if the slave felt overworked
or mistreated.) Groups of them would survive by stealing from
the local farmers (cattle, etc.) and were often fed by the
farmer's slaves. The renter wouldn't notify the owner for fear
of incurring monetary damages for "losing" the slave. At the
end of the term the slave would return home (most well-treated
ones didn't run away) and would be rented out again.
Another misconception, while I'm on the subject, is how poorly
clothed (read mistreated) the average Southern slave has been
depicted. While each slave was usually issued a basic wardrobe,
many would hire themselves out on their own time or make money
selling a portion of their issued rations or food stolen from
their owners. (Eggs were in big demand). [Say, is that where
the expression "Black Market" comes from?] On Sundays & holidays
the slaves dressed very well, even better than a lot of free
white Southerners, while on normal work days they looked
rather ratty. (Hardly any of them spent their money on work
clothes. After all, that was their owner's responsibility.)
|
43.57 | Why wouldn't a form of apartheid have formed? | NYTP07::LAM | Q ��Ktl�� | Thu Dec 19 1991 15:39 | 11 |
| re: .last few
The last several replies seem to indicate that slavery would've died
out on its own. Why wouldn't a form of apartheid ensued if the South
had been left alone? What is different about the Confederacy that
would not have allowed a form of apartheid to take place as it did in
South Africa?
Actually if you look at the South before the Civil Rights movement in
the sixties', there was a form of apartheid that existed and it was
called segregation.
|
43.58 | *FORCED* change, apartheid | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Mon Dec 23 1991 15:17 | 38 |
| re: .55 (I think - by Mike R.)
Your analogy to the South painting itself into a corner is perfect. The
radicals in both the North and the South did that. The only reason the
South was able to defend slavery or promote its expansion was because
they had the North to help them survive. Had the territories gone with
the Union, the Confederacy could not have even contemplated getting
slavery or the Southern lifestyle established there. Had the U.S.
refused to trade with the C.S. until something were done slavery, the
attitudes of Southern leaders - described accurately by Mike - would
have been FORCED to change. The ultimate consequence of their refusing
to change would have been the collapse of the C.S. and its probably
re-annexation by the U.S..
In the event of Southern change, the problem would have been solved.
In the event of Southern collapse, the problem would have been solved.
I didn't mean to paint Southern leaders as enlightened, liberal
visionaries, but they were survival-oriented and ultimately realistic.
re: .57 Apartheid
I don't know that such a system would not have developed. There
probably would have been a pretty dramatic difference between economic
classes, at best. However, as you pointed out, there was something a
lot like apartheid in the South, anyway, and was greatly exacerbated by
the agonies of the War and Reconstruction. Your question is certainly
valid; I wish I could give a definite answer in my favor. ;-)
One thing that I think points away from apartheid is that Southern
Blacks, even slaves, were not strangers to entrepeneural undertakings.
Talk about survivors! In the face of such ability, combined with the
very liberal bent of a surprising number of Southerners, perhaps it
would have been hard to justify apartheid.
In any case, didn't we have virtual apartheid, anyway?
Wess
|
43.59 | How Long? | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Mon Dec 30 1991 14:11 | 65 |
| RE .56:
I'm not sure my point was clear. I realize that the kinds of things
you describe, and the anti-slavery feelings Wes talked about, existed
in the South. It seems, though, that by 1860 they were not very
_influential_ in a political sense. I'm not even sure anti-slavery
sentiment was very vocal in the South. Did Southern papers publish
anti-slavery articles? So, I was suggesting that it would have taken a
_long_ time for such sentiments to influence political behavior if the
South had been left to itself; look at all the trouble people ran into
with the idea of giving slaves their freedom if they would fight for
the Confederacy - and _that_ was a life-or-death issue.
RE .58:
Gotta watch this agreeing about things, Wes! 8^}
I agree that the North and South were tightly linked economically. It
is even plausible that a boycott of the type you suggest would have
been effective.
But.
The two sections could not even stop trading _during the war_! That
reinforces your linkage point, but I think it also says that a boycott
against "slave-produced" goods would not have happened, at least before
sometime in the mid-20th Century. If the North could not even keep
people from trading with an "enemy", when such trade directly helped
(in many cases) the Confederate war effort, why would they suddenly
decide to stop doing business with a friendly nation because of some
internal practices of that nation? Remember, the idea of either
government-directed economic policy for private industry, or of massive
public pressure to influence business, did not really germinate for
many decades after the Civil War.
Look at Britain. She had abolished the slave trade, and then slavery,
and was politically unwilling to enter a war that seemed to be
supporting slavery (or old friend the Emancipation Proclamation was a
big factor here), but had shown no sign of telling industry to boycott
"slave" cotton - in fact, the South hoped that the demand for cotton by
British industry would bring England in on their side.
So, while I think you are right about the _power_ of an "anti-slavery"
economic weapon, and while it might have gotten used in the late 20th
Century, I don't see any sign that it would have been _tried_ by the
North against a separate Confederate States in the 19th.
In general, I don't see any evidence that a sufficiently powerful force
or set of forces would have been applied to the Southern "power base"
(meaning the leaders and those who influenced them) to cause them to
make any sudden (meaning within half a century) change in their
attitude towards slavery. That's why I created the scenario I did -
because many of those people were _smart_ politicians, and I think they
would have tried a strategy something like the one I presented if there
had been even a glimmering of their accepting the idea that slavery
could end within a couple of decades.
Note that when Lincoln tried to get slaveowners who were still within
the Union in 1862 to accept compensated emancipation - at a time when
the handwriting on the wall was getting pretty clear - he got _no_
positive response from them. I simply don't see what would have
happened to cause the massive change in such blindness/stubbornness
that your postulated "quick elimination" of slavery would require.
MikeR
|
43.60 | | RAVEN1::WATKINS | | Mon Feb 17 1992 15:33 | 9 |
| RE. .52
The slaves that lived in the north were not citizens according to
the Constituion of the US until amemdments were made after the
war. They could not vote and they could not own property.
Marshall
|
43.61 | | WMOVS4::SCHWARTZ_M | Write Stuff | Wed Feb 19 1992 09:52 | 9 |
| re .60
What was the status of free blacks?
Were blacks who had bought their freedom legally citizens?
Were blacks born free in the north legally citizens?
-**Ted**-
|
43.62 | how to divide community property ? | HARDY::SCHWEIKER | though it means an extra mile... | Tue Apr 28 1992 20:13 | 66 |
|
re .47
> Fourth: The Federal government made no effort to negotiate with the
> Southern states for compensation for forts and other Federal
> properties. Whether the Confederacy would have made some agreemen to
> pay for that property is something we'll never know. South Carolina
...
> militia at Pensacola. Lincoln never once tried to work out a peaceful
> settlement that would have granted the South's independence. His
> first and consistent recourse was to armed force.
The U.S. Constitution does not have an article in it providing
for secession. One might think that after the trouble they'd just
had getting independence from England, they would have considered
the advantages of such, and the fact that it doesn't exist shows
that the Founding Fathers planned on a permanent union.
Remember also that only 5 of the C.S.A. states were independent
entities that can be said to have joined up voluntarily. The
others were creations of the U.S. government and thus reasonably
subject to its authority.
Thus, to me, the appropriate avenue for secession would have been
to pass a constitutional amendment authorizing such and the terms
thereof. The advantage would be that if the necessary 2/3 majority
could be obtained, the union people would be clearly outnumbered
and give up. Alternately, a simple majority of Congress could
approve a measure allowing it if the president was sympathetic,
but once the secessionists left the remaining Congress might vote
strongly pro-Union (as actually happened).
Wess suggests above that the U.S. might have asked for compensation
for Federal properties in the South, another approach might have
been to parcel out both Federal assets and debts among the two
governments, sort of like a no-fault divorce. Anyone know if there
was a national debt in 1861, amazingly there were periods in our
history when there wasn't?
In New Hampshire, there are a number of cooperative school districts
in which towns joined voluntarily to combine resources for education.
A typical secession clause states that all property of the district
stays with the remaining towns (even facilities located in the
seceding ones), but indebtedness is distributed to seceding
towns in the proportion they normally contribute. In actual practice,
they may be able to negotiate a better deal, but the sttitude seems
to be that the existing entity should continue unless the seceder
is willing to sweeten the deal. If the South had offered a large
sum towards Federal properties, it might have made the difference
in terms of the undecided. Expecting the North to suggest a sum
after the South seceded is like a burglar expecting a homeowner to
put a value on what was taken - expect it to be high and to include
jail time! He might let that antique vase go a lot cheaper if you
offer to buy it in advance.
The N.H. legislature just recently refused to let the Weirs Beach
area secede from Laconia and form their own town, on the grounds
that it might be beneficial to Weirs Beach but not to Laconia as
a whole. The (remaining) Congress decided that it was in the nation's
best interest (greatest good for the greatest number) to remain as
one country, and they successfully forced the South to conform.
I think that in 1860 it was asking too much of the midwestern states
to allow a foreign country to control their access to the outside
via the Mississippi. Twenty years later, railroads were taking over
from steamboats and this might have been less significant.
|
43.63 | also _Confederate_ constitution | DECWET::PALMER | A is A | Thu May 14 1992 23:59 | 30 |
| re .62
Not only doesn't the U.S. constitution deal with the issue
of secession, but I understand that the Confederate
Constitution didn't either. (I'm sure someone will correct
me if this is incorrect - I believe I read it in the first
book of Catton's trilogy.)
This seems strange to me, in that, being that it was one
of the issues at hand, you'd think their document would
have certainly addressed it. Two things come to mind:
1. Maybe they sort of assumed it was implicitly OK.
2. Maybe it's kind of like divorce: its possibility is
not the kind of thing many people want to think about
when just starting out.
Has anyone done any reading on the Confederate convention
at which they drew up the constitution that might shed some
light on this?
----
With regard to an amendment on secession: I think it would
have been exceedingly difficult to pass. First, you need
2/3 of both houses of congress, and then it has to be
ratified by 3/4 of the state legislatures.
Jay
|
43.64 | Thought it did... | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Fri May 15 1992 12:02 | 9 |
| RE .63:
My memory was that the Confederate Constitution _did_ talk about the
right to secession, though I'm not sure any specific process was
spelled out. I'll try to check a source over the weekend, unless
someone knows for sure sooner! :^)
MikeR
|
43.65 | Catton: CS constitution silent on secession | DECWET::PALMER | A is A | Wed May 20 1992 22:44 | 19 |
| Mike,
Here's what Bruce Catton (_The_Coming_Fury_, beginning from
the bottom of page 209, Pocket Book Edition) has to say about
secession & the Confederate Constitution:
"The new constitution was slightly odd in just one respect:
it said nothing whatever about the right of secession. The
states were recognized as sovereign powers, but whether any
one of them could leave the Confederacy as simply as it had
entered was left unmentioned; the right to secede may have
been an article of Southern faith from the cradle upward,
but it was not provided for in the Confederacy's basic
charter."
Catton has a few more pages of interesting comments on
the Confederate constitution in this book.
Jay
|
43.66 | Noted... | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Tue May 26 1992 12:30 | 5 |
| RE .65:
Thanks for correcting my memory!
|
43.67 | Bring the Jubilee.... | DKAS::KOLKER | Conan the Librarian | Sat May 30 1992 20:36 | 43 |
| reply .0
There is a science fiction what-if by Ward Moore called "Bring the
Jubilee". In this version of history Lee wins at Gettysburg and the
Union Army is destroyed in detail. Shortly thereafter a surrender
occurs at Reading PA (The reversed counterpart of Appamotox).
The result is an impovershed Union whose growth is stunted and becomes
a punching bag for the emerging German Union and Great Britain.
The Confederacy expands south taking over Mexico and acheiving hegomony
in the rest of Central and South America. The capitol of annexed
Mexico is renamed Leesburg. The Confederacy exceeds the Union not only
in economic growth but in intellectual and academic acheivment.
The protagonist in this story is an historian who notes with some
sadness that an every growing freedom and expansion of the spirit that
was ongoing before the War for Southron Independence (sic) was somehow
stunted and the growth of liberal (in the classical sense) government
world wide was stunted and brought to a halt. This lead to the growth
of autocratic states the world wide.
My own speculation is that if the war had been short, say ending by
middle 1863 with a Confederate Victory, the Confederacy would have
expanded south, the Union west and the relationship between Union and
Confederacy would be similar to that of the U.S. to Canada. The fact
the a state of war existed between the U.S. and Canada (the war of
1812) did not prevent a peaceful relationship from evolving and being
finalized in the treaty of 1854 recognizing 48 north as the boundry. If
the U.S. and Canada could have a 3000 mile fortification free boundry I
don't see why a similar boundry could not have evolved between the
U.S.A and the C.S.A.
The result might have been a three nation split of North America, all
the nations English speaking (except for P.Q. of course).
It is hard to say what the effect on European politics would have been
given that the U.S. would not have been as powerful a nations if the
C.S.A. had acheived her independence.
This is one of the "whatifs" that haunt a fair amount of my waking
hours.
|