This compelling, highly readable book focuses on the men who shaped the
events that led to secession and the Civil War. Secessionists tore at
the bonds that bound Americans to one another and their government as
they maligned Northerners and found sinister intent in federal policy.
But equally as adamant on the opposite side were the determined
abolitionists and others in the North who sought to hold the Union
together. Tariffs, the loss of political power, and the antislavery
movement were all taking their toll on the South, but it took specific
individuals and groups to bring to action the causes they believed in
and thus to alter the course of history. The Men of Secession and Civil
War, 1859-1861 traces the period from John Brown's 1859 Harper's Ferry
raid to the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter and the subse-quent
secession of the Upper South states in April 1861. The cast of
characters in this book includes abolitionists John Brown and Salmon P.
Chase; President Abraham Lincoln; U.S. Senator Stephen Douglas; Andrew
Johnson, whom Lincoln named his vice president in 1864; secessionists
Jefferson Davis, Roger Taney, and Barnwell Rhett; John Breckenridge, the
1860 presidential nominee of the Southern Democratic Party; and
Tennessee Senator John Bell. The Men of Secession and Civil War is a
useful volume for Civil War courses.