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DECADE OF DISUNION by Robert W. Merry Kirkus Star

DECADE OF DISUNION

How Massachusetts and South Carolina Led the Way to Civil War, 1849-1861

by Robert W. Merry

Pub Date: July 23rd, 2024
ISBN: 9781982176495
Publisher: Simon & Schuster

A noted historian demonstrates how the vastly different cultures, attitudes, and mores of Massachusetts and South Carolina brought about secession and war.

Former journalist and editor Merry, author of President McKinley and A Country of Vast Designs, presents a sweeping, invaluable history of the long prelude to the Civil War, examining the wildly disparate political, economic, and social development of Massachusetts and South Carolina—the two states that most exemplified what would become irreconcilable differences over slavery—and the words and deeds of their representatives who failed to come to a resolution and prevent the onset of war. The author capably compares the austere, judgmental Puritanism of the agriculture and merchant classes of early Massachusetts with the Anglicans who bought huge tracts of land to boost their proprietary colonies and imported the culture of the sugar plantations of Barbados and the West Indies. Merry also contrasts the two states as embodied by their famed representatives, Daniel Webster of Massachusetts and John Calhoun of South Carolina, who, along with Henry Clay, formed the “so-called Great Triumvirate.” Always maintaining a readable style, the author skillfully analyzes the complex political and social motivations and influences of what Calhoun called "the great battle" to resolve the impasse between the regions. As in his previous acclaimed books, Merry employs consistently thorough and crisp prose, combining his best attributes as a journalist and historian. The author’s deft organization of the narrative and inclusion of generous excerpts of debates and speeches from a variety of sources—great figures from Massachusetts, South Carolina, and elsewhere, in addition to noted abolitionists and proslavery journalists and orators of the era—is extraordinarily useful to readers no matter their level of familiarity with this particular period of American history.

An essential volume for serious students of U.S. history, especially Civil War buffs.