Years before the Civil War began, another dark conflict threatened to
shatter the Union. It was December 1849. The U.S.-Mexican War had just
ended, doubling the size of the country. A grave problem emerged:
whether slavery should be admitted into the new territories that were to
be carved out of the vast new domain resulting from the war. This
dilemma strained the relationship between the slave-holding South and
the antislavery North. Other issues loomed as well: where to draw the
Texas boundary line with the New Mexico territory, how to settle the
Texas debt claims, and what to do about the problem of fugitive slaves
escaping to the North and the slavetrade in the District of Columbia.
The nation was on the brink of secession, dissolution, and civil war. On
the Brink of Civil War tells the dramatic story of what happened when a
handful of senators-towering figures in nineteenth-century American
history-tried to hammer out a compromise to save the Union. The
characters in this critical political drama included Henry Clay,
seasoned politician and statesman known as the Great Pacificator, who
formulated an agreement in the Senate and would fight to get it through
Congress; the gifted orator Daniel Webster, who helped Clay in his
efforts by delivering the Seventh of March compromise speech on the
Senate floor, one of the most memorable speeches in American history;
and John C. Calhoun, a fervent defender of slavery and the South who,
though nearing death, spoke to the Senate and demanded equal rights for
the South in the new Western territories. Four young senators stepped
into the fray to play their own unique, important roles: Henry Seward,
the Whig from New York who many say controlled President Zachary Taylor
and who opposed compromise; Stephen A. Douglas, the dynamic Little Giant
from Illinois who favored agreement; Salmon P. Chase, the voice of the
Free-Soilers and foe of compromise and concessions to the South; and
Jefferson Davis, Mexican War hero and second only to Calhoun as the V