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CHAPTER XXIII - NATIONAL AND SECTIONAL FORCES IN THE UNITED STATES

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

D. M. Potter
Affiliation:
Yale University
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Summary

The years between 1830 and 1870 were marked, in the western world, by the triumph of nationalism in three important areas—Italy (chs. IX and XXI), Germany (chs. IX and XIX) and the United States. In Italy, nationalism could not achieve its fulfilment until it overcame the obstacles of universalism—the universalism of both church and empire. In Germany, Bismarckian nationalism reached its goal by breaking down the forces of German particularism and by sacrificing the democratic values of 1848. In America, the alignment of forces was different: the ideals of nationalism and democracy were fused and the force which resisted nationalism was sectionalism within the United States. The sequence of development was also different, for nationalism seemed to gain a quick and easy triumph in America during the first three decades of the nineteenth century, and then belatedly encountered the disruptive force of sectionalism which grew in strength until the tension between the two forces culminated in the Civil War of 1861-5.

At the time when Andrew Jackson came to the American Presidency in 1829, Italy was still split into minor principalities, largely under the domination of the Habsburgs, and Germany as yet remained a loose confederation of thirty-eight autonomous states. By contrast, the triumph of nationalism in the United States already appeared, at least outwardly, to be complete. During the forty years of the republic's existence, no other country had grown so rapidly and no other people were so proud of their national growth. The population, which stood at 12,800,000 in 1830, was more than three times as great as in 1790.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1960

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References

Besler, Roy P. (ed.), The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln (New Brunswick, 1953), vol. II.
Blaine, James G., Twenty Years of Congress… (Norwich, Conn., 1884), vol. I.
Channing, Edward, A History of the United States (New York, 1925), vol. VI.
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Crallé, Richard K. (ed.), Works of John C. Calhoun (New York, 1851–67), vol. II.
Craven, Avery O., The Repressible Conflict (Baton Rouge, La., 1939)
Milton, G. F., The Eve of Conflict: Stephen A. Douglas and the Needless War (Boston, Mass., 1934)
Potter, David M. and Manning, Thomas G., Nationalism and Sectionalism in America 1775-1877 (New York, 1949).
Randall, James G., in ‘The Civil War Restudied’, Journal of Southern History (1940), vol. VI.Google Scholar
Randall, James G., Lincoln, the President (New York, 1945), vol. I.
Richardson, James D. (ed.), A Compilation of the Messages and Papers of Presidents (1900), vol. I.
Schlesinger, Arthur M. Jr.,, ‘The Causes of the Civil War’, in Partisan Review, vol. XVI (1949).Google Scholar
Truslow Adams, James, The Epic of America (Boston, 1931).

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