I. How did the war transform the North?
- Modernization thesis: With southerners out of the US Congress, the war enabled the North to enact the Republican agenda, which became the basis for the modern political and economic order
- Morrill Tarriff Act of 1861
- Higher tariffs; desired by factory workers and industrialists
- Homestead Act of 1862
- Land Grant College Act of 1862
- Legal Tender Act o 1862
- Authorized government to issue $150 million in notes (“greenbacks”)
- National Banking Acts of 1863 and 1864
- Morrill Tarriff Act of 1861
II. Economic impact: rural areas
- Hardship/negative effects not as pronounced as in cities
- Wages for rural farm workers actually rose
- Strong demand for crops—not just from Army, but from Europe
- People who suffered most: rural women left to try to get manage
III. Impact on workers
- Civil War’s economic effects felt most strongly in cities
- New jobs; wages go up
- Increase by 50-60%
- New jobs; wages go up
- BUT: Inflation—prices rising by almost 100%
- Living standards of many workers thus actually decline
- Rise in child labor; pauperism; prostitution; delinquency
- Living standards of many workers thus actually decline
- Growth of class conflict/class consciousness
- Reflected in significantly increased rates of labor unionism and strikes
- Growing resentment of federal government
- Sense that it is on the side of the rich
- Sense that it is on the side of the rich
III. Draft
- Enrollment Act of 1863: First national system of conscription
- Establishes new government bureau: Provost Marshals Bureau
- Divided North into 185 districts; provost marshals sent out to identify men eligible for draft
- Exemptions: Resident aliens; those with physical disabilities; only sons of dependent parents; sole supporters of motherless children
- Could also pay a commutation fee of $300 or hire a substitute
- $300 was roughly a year’s wages for an unskilled worker
- Commutation fees repealed in 1864
- In the end, few men actually draft: The draft was really a way to make people “volunteer”
- Stigma to being drafted
- Men paid high bounties for volunteering
- Jan. 1863: $300; 1864: $1,000
- Poor no more likely to serve as a result of the draft
- BUT: the perception that the government was persecuting the poor persisted
- And many poor, working-class men deeply resented the idea that the govt. is making them fight for slaves
- Feared black migration to North; job competition
- Pervasive racism
IV. New York City Draft Riot
- 5 days of mayhem and bloodshed, starting July 13
- First draft lottery had been held July 11
- Around 120 killed total
- 11 blacks lynched in the streets
- Black longshoremen viciously attacked
- Well-dressed, “$300 men” also targeted
- Colored Orphan Asylum burned to ground
- Recently built; imposing symbol of Northern benevolence (children themselves survive)
- Regiments returning from Gettysburg had to put down the uprising
V. Widespread desertion
- Provost Marshal estimates there were 200,000 deserters from years (1863-65)
- Joan Cashin suggests there were even more
- Majority of these men were not fleeing to Canada; hiding right in the US
- Could only do this with cooperation of families & communities
- Even though it was a crime to aid or abet deserters
- Could only do this with cooperation of families & communities
- Cashin argues that this shows the predominance of prewar loyalties—to one’s family, community, white race, own self interest
VI. Democratic Opposition
- Democratic strongholds throughout the US
- IL, IN, OH, parts of PA and NY
- “War Democrats” (loyal opposition)
- Opposed Emancipation and confiscation of southerners’ property, but believed war was necessary to restore the Union
- “Peace Democrats”
- Believed the war should end immediately; thought the North lacked constitutional right to force the South to remain in the Union
- Blamed the war on abolitionists
- Some engaged in small-scale guerrilla activity; parts of IL put under martial law
- Unionists referred to both as “Copperheads”
VII. 1864 Election
- Recall that Abraham Lincoln had received only 50% of the Northern vote in 1860
- Support for the Democrats grew in 1862-63
- 1862: Democrats made big gains in Congress and gained several governorships
- 1864 Election: Really key election
- Lincoln himself thinks he’s going to lose
- Republicans so desperate they rename their party the “National Union Party”
- Aug. 1864: Lincoln invites Douglass to WH
- Douglass had met Lincoln before, when he’d gone to the White House to complain about unequal black military pay, but this time he was summoned
- Lincoln essentially asks Douglass to organize an operation to funnel slaves out of the upper South/border; to get as many North as possible before McClellan was elected
- Douglass is stunned
- Douglass is stunned
- Lincoln essentially asks Douglass to organize an operation to funnel slaves out of the upper South/border; to get as many North as possible before McClellan was elected
- Douglass had met Lincoln before, when he’d gone to the White House to complain about unequal black military pay, but this time he was summoned
VIII. 1864 Presidential election
- Democratic candidate: George McClellan
- Ostensibly a War Democrat, but wants war to end soon
- How does Lincoln pull off a victory?
- Gets 55% of the popular vote in the end
- Key: Success on the battlefield
- Admiral Farragut takes Mobile Bay—last major southern port in Aug. 64
- Sherman’s taking of Atlanta in Sept. 64
- Soldier vote: Union soldiers vote overwhelmingly for Lincoln (78%)
- Upshot: Despite significant dissent, support for continuing the war remains relatively strong, especially when compared to the Confederacy