Tracing the sectionalization of American politics in the 1840s and
1850s, Michael Morrison offers a comprehensive study of how slavery and
territorial expansion intersected as causes of the Civil War.
Specifically, he argues that the common heritage of the American
Revolution bound Americans together until disputes over the extension of
slavery into the territories led northerners and southerners to
increasingly divergent understandings of the Revolution's legacy.
Manifest Destiny promised the literal enlargement of freedom through the
extension of American institutions all the way to the Pacific. At each
step--from John Tyler's attempt to annex Texas in 1844, to the
Kansas-Nebraska Act, to the opening shots of the Civil War--the issue of
slavery had to be confronted. Morrison shows that the Revolution was the
common prism through which northerners and southerners viewed these
events and that the factor that ultimately made consensus impossible was
slavery itself. By 1861, no nationally accepted solution to the dilemma
of slavery in the territories had emerged, no political party existed as
a national entity, and politicians from both North and South had come to
believe that those on the other side had subverted the American
political tradition.