Tammie says that slavery was on its way out anyway, and I believe that. With the huge advances in the cotton gin and other farm machine technology, the spreading of the railroads, the discovery of oil in Pennsylvania and the beginning of that industry in the 1850's-------in short, with the Industrial Revolution in full swing and with good ol' Yankee ingenuity coming up with solutions to age-old problems--------machinery was heading south, and even with the Southern adherence to tradition, I don't think they could have stopped it, and once they tried it, I think they would have embraced it whole-heartedly. So, it just makes sense that slavery's days were numbered. Within one generation, two at the most, slavery would have probably outlived it's importance and usefulness. BUT----(and there's always a "but",isn't there?)------this is the speculation of perfect hindsight, and they didn't realize this at the time. At that time, all they saw was their way of life being threatened by meddling Northern politicians and Abolitionists. Bigboi says that slavery is what shaped southern culture. How true. And this isn't to say that every Southerner owned slaves or that every Southerner lived on a fabulous antebellum plantation. They didn't. But the "peculiar institution", as it was called, certainly had a more profound impact on southern life than anything else, and they didn't want to give it up.
LB, you said that if the south hadn't pushed the issue the north would have loved to continue to collect their taxes and allow the blacks to be enslaved. That's a very interesting thought, and I would have to think about that and do some research on it. But off the top of my head, I would have to doubt it, because the Abolitionist movement was picking up steam and getting pretty strong, and they were putting enormous pressure on everybody. Many Abolitionists very wealthy and had strong political connections. And so, even with the powerful lure of money, I don't think tariffs would have stopped the righteous (and hypocritical) indignation that was spreading through the north like a Colorado wildfire.
Farkel, as usual, your logic and facts are unassailable, and I agree that I have brought up a hypothethical question that can't be answered. However, part of the lessons of history and the benefits of studying history is to raise the "What if........" questions. And again, with the benefit of hindsight, I think the question is a valid one; so I'll ask it again: "If slavery didn't exist or if both sides agreed on the issue, would there have been a Civil War?"
And so, that brings me back around as to what the war was fought over in the first place. (And I admit : I've got to get my books and look this up. I'm doing that right now.........)
OK, dammit, I can't find the smoking gun that I'm looking for----------you know, the one that quotes Lincoln or Seward or someone saying: "If you Southern states don't end slavery immediately, then I will send Federal troops down there and end it for you." That's what I'm looking for, but it just doesn't exist, does it? By the same token, I can't find it stated anywhere that the South presented an ultimatum to Washington to "butt-out of our business or get ready for war." It does get complicated.
But this is what I did find:
May 19, 1856. After a speech attacking slavery, Senator Charles Sumner is beaten on the Senate floor by Congressman Preston Brooks from South Carolina.
May 12, 1859. The Southern Commercial Convention meeting in Vicksburg, Mississippi demands that all laws prohibiting the African slave trade be repealed.
February, 1860. Senator Jefferson Davis introduces a bill saying that the Federal government cannot prohibit slavery.
November 13, 1860 editorial in New Orleans Daily Crescent: "The history of the Abolition Party of the North is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establisment of absolute tyranny over the slaveholding States. And all without the smallest warrent, excuse or justification....They have robbed us of our property (italics mine)......"
I could go on and on, but you get the idea: The issue over slavery was was an open sore, emotions were running high and violence was pending. Admittedly, I have skewered this presentation to include the quotes I want-----------while reading, I also found references to states' rights and other issues that were causing heated debates, and in one quote, Jefferson Davis even says that slavery wasn't the reason why the war started. Well, I shouldn't have brought that up, should I? But, Farkel, it comes down to the question I raised: Without slavery, would there have been a war? You yourself said that "slavery was what precipitated the Civil War, or to put it another way it was the straw that broke the Camel's back." Without that straw, would there have been a war? Kenneth Davis, in his wonderful book "Don't know Much About the Civil War" wrote: "The Civil War was clearly fought because of African slavery. All the other justifications come down to political differences..." My other references say pretty much the same thing. But I'm sure that other respected historians will say exactly the opposite. And the debate rages. Comments.........?
(This is why I love this place----------just look at everthing you get into.)
David