Civil War 1860
Election
The “wedges of separation” caused by slavery split large
Protestant sects into Northern and Southern branches and dissolved the Whig
party . Most Southern Whigs joined the Democratic party , one of the few
remaining, if shaky, nationwide institutions. The new Republican party , heir to
the Free-Soil party and to the Liberty party , was a strictly Northern
phenomenon. The crucial point was reached in the presidential election of 1860,
in which the Republican candidate, Abraham Lincoln , defeated three
opponents—Stephen A. Douglas (Northern Democrat), John C. Breckinridge (Southern
Democrat), and John Bell of the Constitutional Union party .
Lincoln's victory was the signal for the secession of South Carolina (Dec. 20,
1860), and that state was followed out of the Union by six other
states—Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas. Immediately
the question of federal property in these states became important, especially
the forts in the harbor of Charleston, S.C. (see Fort Sumter ). The outgoing
President, James Buchanan , a Northern Democrat who was either truckling to the
Southern, proslavery wing of his party or sincerely attempting to avert war,
pursued a vacillating course. At any rate the question of the forts was still
unsettled when Lincoln was inaugurated, and meanwhile there had been several
futile efforts to reunite the sections, notably the Crittenden Compromise
offered by Sen. J. J. Crittenden. Lincoln resolved to hold Sumter. The new
Confederate government under President Jefferson Davis and South Carolina were
equally determined to oust the Federals.
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