Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-t5pn6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-20T00:07:58.599Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Transatlantic Anxieties: Democracy and Diversity in Nineteenth-Century Discourse

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 September 2019

David A. Bateman*
Affiliation:
Department of Government, Cornell University

Abstract

This article reconstructs a set of widely disseminated nineteenth-century ideas about the relationship between diversity and democracy and details how these informed state-building and political action. An emerging argument in nineteenth-century discourse held that representative governments in diverse societies would degenerate into anarchy without “amalgamation,” extermination, expulsion, or enslavement: Only in societies where there was sympathy across the entire community, constantly renewed through intercourse among social equals, could free institutions be sustained. This argument gave support for state-builders to regulate diversity either through an imperial politics of “moving people” or by interposing the state in intimate encounters of sexual and social intercourse. The intimate and imperial dimensions of state-building were thereby conceptually linked. This account helps explain important features of nineteenth-century politics, including the frequent criticism of abolitionists that by supporting racial civic or political equality they were encouraging “racial amalgamation.” In responding to this charge, American antislavery discourse contributed to a distinction between political and social equality that would fundamentally shape state-building after the Civil War. The article shows scholars of American political development how our accounts might be revised by situating debates and developments within a transnational perspective.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. “From the New York Enquirer.” Statesman & Gazette (MS), October 25, 1827, 2.

2. Quoted in Cox, Samuel S., Miscegenation or Amalgamation; Fate of the Freedman. (Washington, DC: The Constitutional Union, 1864), 6Google Scholar.

3. Lerner, Gerda, “The Grimké Sisters and the Struggle Against Racial Prejudice,” The Journal of Negro History 48, no. 4 (1963): 277–91, 280CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

4. The Parliamentary Register, or History of the Proceedings and Debates of the House of Commons of Ireland, 5th Parliament, 3rd Sess., vol. 12 (Dublin: P. Byrne and J. Moore, 1793), 148.

5. Daily National Intelligence (Washington, DC), September 11, 1847, 3; Charleston Courier (SC), March 2, 1848, 2; April 29, 1848, 2.

6. Quoted in “Letter from Yucatan.” The Southern Patriot (Charleston, SC) February 7, 1848, 2.

7. “Yucatan.” Richmond Whig (VA), May 2, 1848, 2.

8. U.S. Congress, Senate, Message from the President of the Unites States, 30th Congress, 1st Sess., Ex. Doc. 49, 2; “Correspondence of the Courier.” Charleston Courier (SC), April 29, 1848, 2.

9. Cass conceded that “it is very probable” that the Maya had been “oppressed,” but considered it “the inevitable consequence of the effect of power exercised by a civilized caste over a savage one.” Lewis Cass (MI), Appendix to the Congressional Globe, 30th Congress, 1st Sess., 1848, 619–20; John C. Calhoun (SC), Congressional Globe, 30th Congress, 1st Sess., 1848, 770. A few denied altogether “that this is a war between the races.” John Davis (MA), in James A. Houston, Proceedings and Debates of the United States Senate. 30th Congress, 1st Sess., 1848, 611.

10. “Correspondence of the Courier.” Charleston Courier (SC), May 22, 1848, 2.

11. Cass noted that the guns used by the Maya bore the English Tower mark indicating that they had been supplied by the British state. Appendix to the Congressional Globe, May 11, 1848, 30th Congress, 1st Sess., 619; U.S. Congress, Senate, Message from the President of the Unites States, 30th Congress, 1st Sess., Ex. Doc. 42, 6-7; Brock, William, “The Image of England and American Nationalism,” Journal of American Studies 5, no. 3 (1971): 232–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Butter, Michael, Plots, Designs, and Schemes: American Conspiracy Theories from the Puritans to the Present (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2014), 174–85CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Sleigh, William W., Abolitionism Exposed! (Philadelphia: C. Schneck, 1838), 2024Google Scholar; Davis, David Brion, The Fear of Conspiracy: Images of Un-American Subversion from the Revolution to the Present (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1971), 135–43Google Scholar.

12. “Letter from Yucatan,” The Southern Patriot (SC), August 30, 1847, 2; “From Tampico,” The Daily Picayune, March 8, 1848, 1; “Correspondence of the Courier,” Charleston Courier (SC), May 22, 1848, 2.

13. Even a sympathetic scholar of the slaveocracy noted that the expected “disastrous effect of sudden liberation upon the whole economic life” of the South led the slave-owning class to curtail the ability of the press to discuss slavery. “Almost invariably the appeal was made to the need of safeguarding the community from the danger of servile insurrection,” and the “policy of silence which they sought to impose” was achieved first through “the silent pressure of public opinion” on publishers and later by restrictive legislation. Eaton, Clement, Freedom of Thought in the Old South (New York: Peter Smith, 1951 [1940]), 91, 162–63Google Scholar.

14. de Tocqueville, Alexis, Democracy in America, trans. Nolla, Eduardo and Schleifer, James T. (Indianapolis, IN: Liberty Fund, 2012), 575Google Scholar.

15. On the importance of such “interpretive” work, see Smith, Rogers M., “Ideas and the Spiral of Politics: The Place of American Political Thought in American Political Development,” American Political Thought: A Journal of Ideas, Institutions, and Culture 3 (Spring 2014): 135CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

16. An excellent example of a transnational perspective that goes beyond comparison is Paul Frymer's analysis of Mexico. Frymer, Paul, Building an American Empire: The Era of Territorial and Political Expansion (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2017)Google Scholar. See McDaniel, W. Caleb, The Problem of Democracy in the Age of Slavery: Garrisonian Abolitionists & Transatlantic Reform (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University, 2013), 13Google Scholar; Simon, Joshua, The Ideology of Creole Revolution: Imperialism and Independence in American and Latin American Political Thought (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2017)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Ernst, Daniel R., “Ernst Freund, Felix Frankfurter, and the American Rechtsstaat: A Transatlantic Shipwreck, 1894–1932,” Studies in American Political Development 23, issue 2 (2009): 171–88CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Rothstein, Sidney A., “Macune's Monopoly: Economic Law and the Legacy of Populism,” Studies in American Political Development 28, no. 1 (2014): 80–106CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

17. As we shall see, the relevant axis of division could be race, language, religion, class, arbitrary legal distinctions, distance, or any other factor that impeded social intercourse on equal terms.

18. Frymer, Building an American Empire; Stoler, Ann Laura, Race and the Education of Desire: Foucault's History of Sexuality and the Colonial Order of Things (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1995)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Stoler, Ann Laura, Carnal Knowledge and Imperial Power: Race and the Intimate in Colonial Rule (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2010), 16Google Scholar.

19. Brown, Kathleen, Good Wives, Nasty Wenches and Anxious Patriarchs: Gender, Race and Power in Colonial Virginia (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1996)Google Scholar; Bynum, Victoria, Unruly Women: The Politics of Social and Sexual Control in the Old South (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1992)Google Scholar; Bardaglio, Peter W., “‘Shamefull Matches’: The Regulation of Interracial Sex and Marriage in the South before 1900,” in Sex, Love, Race: Crossing Boundaries in North American History, ed. Hodes, Martha (New York: New York University Press, 1999): 112–39, 116Google Scholar; Ghosh, Durba, Sex and the Family in Colonial India: The Making of Empire (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2006), 24CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

20. Novkov, Julie, Racial Union: Law, Intimacy, and the White State in Alabama, 1865–1954 (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2008), 7, 3839, 76CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

21. Pascoe, Peggy, What Comes Naturally: Miscegenation Law and the Making of Race in America (New York: Oxford University Press, 2009)Google Scholar; Hodes, Martha, White Women, Black Men: Illicit Sex in the Nineteenth-Century South (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1997)Google Scholar; Bardaglio, Peter, Reconstructing the Household: Families, Sex, and the Law in the Nineteenth Century South (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1995), 184–85Google Scholar; Cott, Nancy, Public Vows: A History of Marriage and the Nation (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2000)Google Scholar; Sullivan, Kathleen S., “Marriage and Federal Police Power,” Studies in American Political Development 20 (Spring 2006): 4556CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Strach, Patricia, All in the Family: The Private Roots of American Public Policy (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2007)Google Scholar.

22. Pascoe, What Comes Naturally, 8; Frymer, Building an American Empire.

23. Fredrickson, George M., “Mulattoes and Métis. Attitudes toward Miscegenation in the United States and France Since the Seventeenth Century,” International Social Science Journal 57, no. 183 (2005): 103–12CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Ann Laura Stoler, “Tense and Tender Ties: The Politics of Comparison in North American History,” Journal of American History 88, no. 3: 829–65, 832; Salesa, Damon Ieremia, Racial Crossings: Race, Intermarriage, and the Victorian British Empire (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2011)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Hyam, Ronald, Empire and Sexuality: The British Experience (Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 1990)Google Scholar; Ghosh, Sex and the Family in Colonial India; Freeman, Victoria, “Attitudes toward ‘Miscegenation’ in Canada, the United States, New Zealand, and Australia, 1860–1914,” Native Studies Review 16, no. 1 (2005): 4169Google Scholar.

24. Carter, Greg, The United States of the United Races: A Utopian History of Racial Mixing (New York: New York University Press, 2013)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Hollinger, David A., “Amalgamation and Hypodescent: The Question of Ethnoracial Mixture in the History of the United States,” The American Historical Review 108, no. 5 (2003): 1363–90CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

25. Novkov identified a few rationales, but notes that more commonly “pamphleteers did not explain precisely how [the disruption of the entire social order] would happen.” Novkov, Racial Union, 38–39.

26. Nell Irvin Painter noted that “‘social equality’ meant associating as equals, which, according to the logic inherent in the slogan, would lead inexorably to black men's marrying white women.” Brandwein, Pamela, Rethinking the Judicial Settlement of Reconstruction (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2011), 61, 65, 72CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Painter, Nell Irvin, “‘Social Equality,’ Miscegenation, Labor, and Power,” in The Evolution of Southern Culture, ed. Bartley, Numan V. (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1988): 4767, 53Google Scholar; Scott, Rebecca J., “Public Rights, Social Equality, and the Conceptual Roots of the Plessy Challenge,” Michigan Law Review 106, no. 5 (2008): 777804, 781Google Scholar.

27. This complicates the more common chronological ordering of the “civil,” “political,” and “social” emerging as distinct spheres of rights and proper concerns of states. I suggest instead that republican government was early on understood as requiring a foundation of social equality, and that the juxtaposition of social and political rights cohered later as an effort to preserve deep inequalities despite looming or real democratic expansions. Marshall, T. H., Citizenship and Social Class: And Other Essays (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1950)Google Scholar.

28. King, Desmond S. and Smith, Rogers M., “‘Without Regard to Race’: Critical Ideational Development in Modern American Politics,” Journal of Politics 76, no. 4 (2014): 958–71CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

29. King, Desmond S. and Smith, Rogers M., “Racial Orders in Political Development,” American Political Science Review 99, no. 1 (2005): 7592CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

30. Frymer, Building an American Empire, 278; Bruyneel, Kevin, “Hierarchy and Hybridity: The Internal Postcolonialism of Mid-Nineteenth-Century American Expansionism,” Race and American Political Development, ed. Lowndes, Joseph, Novkov, Julie, and Warren, Dorian T. (New York: Routledge, 2008): 106–24Google Scholar.

31. As Kathleen Sullivan has argued, “race was not only an object of state government policy but an instrument of governance,” with racial categories enlisted in projects of state-building. Sullivan, Kathleen, “Charleston, the Vesey Conspiracy, and the Development of the Police Power,” Race and American Political Development, ed. Lowndes, Joseph, Novkov, Julie, and Warren, Dorian T. (New York: Routledge, 2008): 5979, 60Google Scholar.

32. Frymer, Building an American Empire, 15.

33. Status categories that carried distinct rights and privileges had long regulated intercourse in the home and family, demarcating the proper subjects of family formation, buttressing patriarchal authority, and establishing a stable religious or racial ordering to family units. Novkov, Julie, “Making Citizens of Freedmen and Polygamists,” in Statebuilding from the Margins: Between Reconstruction and the New Deal, ed. Nackenoff, Carol and Novkov, Julie (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014), 34Google Scholar; Lenhardt, R. A., “Marriage as Black Citizenship?Hastings Law Review 66, no. 5 (2015): 1317–64, 1327–38Google Scholar.

34. Brandwein, Pamela, “Reconstruction, Race, and Revolution,” in Race and American Political Development, ed. Lowndes, Joseph, Novkov, Julie, and Warren, Dorian T. (New York: Routledge, 2008): 125–54Google Scholar.

35. The sources are mostly English, Irish, American, or French, as well as some from the Spanish-speaking Americas.

36. Skinner, Quentin, “Meaning and Understanding in the History of Ideas,” History and Theory 8, no. 1 (1969): 353CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

37. Reed, Adolph L. Jr., W.E.B. Du Bois and American Political Thought: Fabianism and the Color Line (New York: Oxford University Press, 1997), 1113Google Scholar.

38. Ibid., 89.

39. “Stability of American Institutions,” Daily Globe (Washington, DC), February 17, 1857, 1.

40. Smith, Adam, The Theory of Moral Sentiments. (London: Henry G. Bohn, 1853 [1759])Google Scholar. See also, Martineau, Harriet, How to Observe Morals and Manners (London: Charles Knight, 1838), 41Google Scholar; Burke, Edmund, A Philosophical Inquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (London: N. Hailes, 1824), 40Google Scholar; Stafford, John, “The Power of Sympathy,” Midcontinent American Studies Journal 9, no. 1 (1968): 5257, 54Google Scholar; Morrow, Glenn R., “The Significance of the Doctrine of Sympathy in Hume and Adam Smith,” The Philosophical Review 32, no. 1 (1923): 6078, 61CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Scurr, Ruth, “Inequality and Political Stability from Ancien Régime to Revolution: The Reception of Adam Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments in France,” History of European Ideas 35, no. 4 (2009): 441–49CrossRefGoogle Scholar; John W. Danford, “Adam Smith, Equality, and the Wealth of Sympathy,” American Journal of Political Science 24, no. 4: 674–95, 690; Vetter, Lisa Pace, “Sympathy, Equality, and Consent: Tocqueville and Harriet Martineau on Women and Democracy in America,” in Feminist Interpretations of Alexis de Tocqueville, ed. Locke, Jill and Botting, Eileen Hunt (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2009), 151–76Google Scholar. On the importance of Hume and Smith in articulating a view about the centrality of human sociability and sympathy to the state, see Sagar, Paul, The Opinion of Mankind: Sociability and the Theory of the State from Hobbes to Smith. (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2018)Google Scholar.

41. Hume, David, A Treatise of Human Nature (London: T. and J. Allman, 1817), 1:412, 2:322Google Scholar.

42. Crallé, Richard, The Works of John C. Calhoun, vol. 2 (New York: D. Appleton, 1856), 79Google Scholar; Finch, Thomas, Essays on the Principles of Political Philosophy (Lynn: W. G. Whittingham, 1812), 8Google Scholar; Lee, Rachel Fanny Antonia, An Essay on Government (London: T. Gillet, 1808), 8189Google Scholar.

43. Smith, Theory of Moral Sentiments, 73–75, 87, 93, 100.

44. Burton, John Hill, Political and Social Economy: Its Practical Application (Edinburgh, UK: William and Robert Chambers, 1849), 175Google Scholar; Finch, Essays on the Principles of Political Philosophy, 175; de Tracy, Antoine Louis Claude Destutt, A Commentary and Review of Montesquieu's Spirit of the Laws, trans. Jefferson, Thomas (Philadelphia: William Duane, 1811), 33, 41CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

45. Grimké, Frederick, Considerations upon the Nature and Tendency of Free Institutions (Cincinnati, OH: H. W. Derby, 1848), 284Google Scholar.

46. Sismondi, Jean-Charles-Léonard, History of the Fall of the Roman Empire (Philadelphia, PA: Carey, Lea & Blanchard, 1835), 117Google Scholar.

47. One conservative reviewer was sick of reading these travelogues, and announced that this “whole doctrine of social equality” was the “doctrine of vanity, envy, and hypocrisy,” which could only be approximated in America because of the availability of land. “Art. V. Tours in America,” The London Quarterly Review 54 (September 1835): 205–15, 213.

48. Grimké, Considerations upon the Nature and Tendency of Free Institutions, 306–308.

49. Bowen, Francis, “Review,” North American Review 146 (January 1850): 8485Google Scholar.

50. Grimké, Considerations upon the Nature and Tendency of Free Institutions, 281–82, 283, 312.

51. “Foreign Newspapers in the United States,” The Weekly Herald, October 3, 1849, 317.

52. Tocqueville, Democracy in America, 900, 989–90, 993; “An Essay on the Advantages of the Discovery of America to the Happiness of Mankind,” Academic Recreations 1, no. 5 (1815): 169–78, 198–201.

53. This emphasis on social equality could be read as counter to Hofstader's claim that the American political tradition rested on a consensus about the “the economic virtues of capitalist culture.” Hofstader, Richard, The American Political Tradition and the Men Who Made It (New York: Vintage Books, 1989), xxxviGoogle Scholar. Antebellum conceptions of social equality, however, saw it as a sensibility expected to be cultivated by commerce while essential to its realization. Beaumont, Marie, 224–31.

54. Agg, John, Proceedings and Debates of the Convention of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, vol. 10 (Philadelphia: Packer, Barrett, and Parke, 1838), 22Google Scholar.

55. Beaumont, Gustave de, Marie, or, Slavery in the United States: A Novel of Jacksonian America, trans. Chapman, Barbara (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1958), 224–31Google Scholar.

56. Mackay, Alexander, The Western World; or, Travels in the United States in 1846–47, vol. 1 (London: Richard Bentley, 1850), 196Google Scholar.

57. Candler, Isaac, A Summary View of America (London: T. Cadell, 1824), 3940Google Scholar. See de Warville, Jacques Pierre Brissot, New Travels in the Unites States of America, trans. Barlow, Joel (London: J. S. Jordan, 1792), 175Google Scholar; Russell, R. W., America Compared with England: The Respective Social Effects of the American and English Systems of Government and Legislation (London: J. Watson, 1849), 83Google Scholar.

58. “Scene in New York,” Richmond Enquirer (VA), May 18, 1847, 1.

59. A few, however, rather prematurely claimed that “to the honor of this country, the odious distinctions of color are fast doing away.” “An Essay on the Advantages of the Discovery of America to the Happiness of Mankind,” Academic Recreations 1, no. 5 (1815): 169–78, 198–201, 201.

60. This was observed both in mainland America and the West Indies. Edwards, Bryan, The History, Civil and Commercial, of the British Colonies in the West Indies, vol. 2 (London: John Stockdale, 1793), 7Google Scholar.

61. See, for instance, the antifederalists belief that the cultural heterogeneity of an extended republic was a danger. Levy, Jacob T., “Beyond Publius: Montesquieu, Liberal Republicanism and the Small-Republic Thesis,” History of Political Thought 27, no. 1 (2006): 5090, 63Google Scholar; Kramnick, Isaac, “The ‘Great National Discussion’: The Discourse of Politics in 1787,” The William and Mary Quarterly 45, no. 1 (1988): 3–35, 910CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

62. Crallé, The Works of John C. Calhoun, 189–90. Tracy argued that modern transportation had obliterated the small state difficulty, but insisted “that the extent of a state be such as not to contain within itself, people differing too much in manners, character, and particularly language.” Tracy, A Commentary and Review of Montesquieu's Spirit of the Laws, 79.

63. de Talleyrand-Perigord, Charles Maurice, Memoir Concerning the Commercial Relations of the United States with England (Boston: Thomas B. Wait, 1809), 6, 14Google Scholar.

64. Smith, Adam, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, vol. 2 (London: W. Strahan, 1778), 586Google Scholar.

65. Forman-Barzilai, Fonna, Adam Smith and the Circles of Sympathy: Cosmopolitanism and Moral Theory (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2010)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

66. Phelps, Samuel S., Speech of Mr. Phelps, of Vermont, on the War and the Public Finances (Washington, DC: J. & G.S. Gideon, 1848), 11Google Scholar; “The Acquisition of California,” The Tri-Weekly Ohio Statesman (OH), August 28, 1846, 2; Tocqueville, Democracy in America, 276.

67. Carey, John L., Some Thoughts Concerning Domestic Slavery (Baltimore, MD: Joseph Lewis, 1838), 34, 3639Google Scholar; The Daily Picayune (LA), April 27, 1849, 2.

68. “Art. V,” The Eclectic Review 1 (May 1809): 446–59, 446.

69. “Stability of American Institutions,” Daily Globe (Washington, DC), February 17, 1857, 1.

70. “Remarks of the Rev. Dr. Fisk,” The Evening Star (NY), May 19, 1835, 2.

71. “Relief and Improvement of the Colored Race,” Commercial Advertiser (NY), June 22, 1835, 1.

72. Bolívar was obsessed with the possibility that “when admixture permeates society, but does not create a single, homogenous, entirely identical group, political interests can generate conflict and inequality.” von Vacano, Diego A., The Color of Citizenship: Race, Modernity and Latin American/Hispanic Political Thought (New York: Oxford University Press, 2012), 62, 66CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Helg, Aline, “Simón Bolívar and the Spectre of ‘Pardocracia’: José Padilla in Post-Independence Cartagena,” Journal of Latin American Studies 35, no. 3 (2003): 447–71CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Simon, The Ideology of Creole Revolution, 104–109; Lynch, John, Simón Bolívar: A Life. (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2006)Google Scholar.

73. de Humboldt, Alexander, Political Essay on the Kingdom of New Spain, vol. 1, trans. Black, John (London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1814 [1811]), 259–62Google Scholar.

74. Prefiguring arguments used later to attack U.S. abolitionism, one English author asked, “will the pride of the creole admit the Indian and mulatto to a real equality with himself? Will the hatred and jealousy of the inferior casts suffer the political power of the whites?… If they [New Spain white republicans] should have recourse to artifice or chicane for the purpose of excluding their sable or copper-coloured brethren from an equal participation of political power, do they suppose that, fresh from the lessons of natural right, the degraded casts will submit quietly to the disfranchisement? And, superior as these are in numerical population, if admitted to a political equality with the whites, will they not in effect be their masters” and seek to settle those “old accounts [that] are still open.” “Art. VII,” Edinburgh Review 19, no. 37 (1811): 164–98, 177–79.

75. Robertson, William, The History of the Discovery and Settlement of the Americas (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1837 [1777]), 357–58Google Scholar.

76. Grimké wished that earlier writers had more explicitly framed their histories in terms of race; that they had not suggests that it was not, for them, as obviously important as it would be for later writers. Grimké, Considerations upon the Nature and Tendency of Free Institutions, 280, 283–84.

77. Raynal, Abbé, A Philosophical and Political History of the Settlements and Trade of the Europeans in the East and West Indies, vol. 2 (London: A Strahan, 1784), 234Google Scholar.

78. Austin, James T., Remarks on Dr. Channing's Slavery (Boston: Russell, Shattuck, 1835), 45Google Scholar.

79. “Stability of American Institutions,” Daily Globe (Washington, DC), February 17, 1857, 1.

80. “Speech of Phelps,” Daily National Intelligencer (Washington, DC), February 16, 1848, 2; Carey, Some Thoughts, 39.

81. “Abolition versus Colonization,” The Evening Star (NY), Tuesday, May 19, 1835, 2.

82. Branagan, Thomas, Serious Remonstrances (Philadelphia: Thomas T. Stiles, 1805), 6667Google Scholar.

83. Carey, Some Thoughts, 51.

84. “Mr. Randolph's Motion,” Daily National Intelligencer (Washington, DC), March 6, 1826, 1.

85. Saxton, Alexander, The Rise and Fall of the White Race: Class Politics and Mass Culture in Nineteenth-Century America (London: Verso), 1990Google Scholar; Stewart, James Brewer, “The Emergence of Racial Modernity and the Rise of the White North, 1790–1840.Journal of the Early Republic 18, no. 2 (1998): 181217CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

86. Indeed, Thomas Jefferson's suspicions about whether persons of African descent were a distinct species were elaborated in the context of explaining why incorporation could never occur.

87. Anonymous (Lucius Crassus), “Politics,” The Port Folio 2 (January 1802), 28.

88. The Parliamentary Register, v. 12 (1793), 148; Clarke, Thomas B., Memoirs of the King's Supremacy; and of the Rise, Progress, and Results of the Supremacy of the Pope (London: J. J. Stockdale, 1809), 243Google Scholar; “Art. V,” The Edinburgh Review 21 (July 1813): 340–64, 346; Dillon, John Joseph, The Claims of the Irish Catholics, Considered, as They Regard the Institutions of Scotland, Civil and Religious (Glasgow: W. Lang, 1813), 2728Google Scholar.

89. Lord Liverpool, in rejecting an assembly for Trinidad, argued that heterogeneity made representative government difficult, that the population was not versed in British government, and that the proposed disfranchisement of free persons of color would inflame antagonisms. “A Political Account of the Island of Trinidad,” Antijacobin Review 28 (October 1807), 166; Papers Relating to the Island of Trinidad, 1810–11, sessional papers, vol. 11, H. C. Papers [184], 333-35(1-3).

90. Hansard, HC, 1st series, v. 25, 1813, cc. 858–59.

91. Edwards, Bryan, An Historical Survey of the Island of Saint Domingo (London: John Stockdale, 1801 [1797])Google Scholar, passim; Marryat, Joseph, Thoughts on the Abolition of the Slave Trade, and Civilization of Africa (London: J. M. Richardson, 1816), 205–13Google Scholar; “The Crisis of the Sugar Colonies,” The Edinburgh Review 1 (October, 1802): 216–37, 227; “Art. VIII,” The Foreign Quarterly Review (July, 1844): 239–248.

92. One writer denounced representative institutions in Canada for inflaming hostility across lines of nationality, property, and religion, regretting that “social intercourse,” which “often modifies other distinctions and softens the contrarities of habits or political discordance,” was impeded by the social inequality between them: “There is little communication betwixt the English and the Canadians by which evil impressions might be softened,” as the Canadiens “cannot cope with the English in expense, and therefore shrink from an association in which they must appear to disadvantage.” “Politics of Lower Canada,” The Monthly Magazine 53, no. 3 (1822): 193–98.

93. France, according to many historians, had for centuries been “the grand theater of civil wars” because it had failed to amalgamate the Franks with the Gauls, who now constituted the country's aristocracy and peasantry. “Stability of American Institutions,” Daily Globe (Washington, DC), February 17, 1857, 1; Painter, Nell Irvin, “Was Marie White? The Trajectory of a Question in the United States,” The Journal of Southern History 74, no. 1 (2008): 330, 10Google Scholar.

94. Lambton, John, Report on the Affairs of British North America (London: J. W. Southgate, 1839), 89Google Scholar.

95. Hansard, HC, 3rd series, v. 47, 1839, cc. 833-34; 3rd series, v. 162, 1861, c. 1867.

96. Robert Walsh defended the disenfranchisement of black Americans by recalling the Duke of Wellington's position on Ireland, which itself resembled tropes about black Americans. Walsh, Robert, An Appeal from the Judgments of Great Britain Respecting the United States of America (London: John Miller, 1819), 389–90Google Scholar; Bishop, William and Attree, William, Report of the Debates and Proceedings of the Convention for the Revision of the Constitution of the State of New York (Albany, NY: Evening Atlas, 1846), 1043Google Scholar.

97. McRae, Kenneth, “The Plural Society and the Western Political Tradition,” Canadian Journal of Political Science/Revue canadienne de science politique 12, no. 4 (1979): 675–88CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Ajzenstat, Janet, The Political Thought of Lord Durham (Kingston, ON: McGill-Queens’ University Press, 1988)Google Scholar.

98. “Colonization,” Alexandria Gazette (VA), January 31, 1851, 2.

99. As Barbara Fields has noted, pro-assimilationist thought has often mistaken the effect for the cause, to believe that race and racial diversity was the problem rather than racism, leading to mistaken assumptions that “intermarriage would promote assimilation, which would eliminate the problem by eliminating the problem people.” Barbara J. Fields, “Of Rogues and Geldings,” The American Historical Review 108, no. 5: 1397–1405, 1403.

100. This list bears a resemblance to taxonomies developed in the contemporary literature on ethnic conflict. The main difference is that the historical taxonomy was premised on the belief that multicultural states would not be stable outside of monarchical government. McGarry, John and O'Leary, Brendan, “The Macro-Political Regulation of Ethnic Conflict,” in The Politics of Ethnic Conflict Regulation (New York: Routledge, 1993), 140Google Scholar.

101. The choice to import indentured Indian labor for sugar production shows that the elimination of diversity was by no means the paramount consideration of imperial governments. But the increased diversity that this introduced would be repeatedly cited as a reason why self-government, or later independence, could not be granted.

102. Cape of Good Hope, &c, sessional papers, vol. 29. H.C. Papers [400], 11-12(6-7); New Zealand. Copies or Extracts of Further Correspondence, sessional papers, vol. 30, H. C. Papers [337], 230(74).

103. “With such a division of races and political ideas, the British government would not establish a legislative council and took the safe course, taken in other Crown colonies of mixed population, of establishing an advisory council.” Gladstone, Hansard, HC, 3rd series, v. 246, 1873, c. 951. “The Insurrection in Jamaica,” The London Review 11, no. 283 (December 1865): 580–81, 581; Memorials from the Island of Trinidad, 1831–32, sessional papers, vol. 31, H. C. Papers [212], 353-54(31-32); Ward, John Manning, Colonial Self-Government: The British Experience, 1759–1856 (London: Macmillan Press, 1976), 137CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

104. “Address of John H. B. Latrobe,” The African Repository 40, no. 2 (1864): 47–57, 52.

105. Carey, Some Thoughts, 44, 52.

106. “Abolition vs. Christianity,” The United States Magazine and Democratic Review 27, no. 145 (July 1850): 1–16, 2–3.

107. “Speech of Cass,” The Daily Globe (Washington, DC), January 28, 1857, 49; “Art. IV,” The Quarterly Review (May 1809): 293–304, 293.

108. Merivale, Herman, Lectures on Colonization and Colonies (London: Longman, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1841), 179Google Scholar.

109. “Philadelphia,” The Emancipator (NY), June 21, 1838, 31; An Universal History, From the Earliest Account of Time, vol. 2 (London: T. Osborn, 1747), 188.

110. Perhaps they should have sought further, for they quickly noted that in fact “an upper class had by degrees been formed in Hayti, composed of the two races … apt, like the aristocracy of England, to combine against the lower orders. This circumstance had diverted attention of many from the incessant action of the rivalry of the two races, which in reality is the cause, proximate or remote, of almost every event that has taken place of late in Hayti.” “Art. VIII,” 239–247, 240, 245.

111. “Art. VII,” 164–98, 178; Daily National Intelligencer, May 21, 1838, 2.

112. Grimké, Considerations upon the Nature and Tendency of Free Institutions, 282.

113. Bowen, “Review,” 78–136, 84–85.

114. “Art. VII,” 164–98, 178. Robin argued that by promoting intermarriages, the Spaniards had been spared the violence of the French side of the island. Robin, Charles-Cesar, Voyages dans l'interieur de la Louisiane, de la Floride occidentale, et dans les isles de la Martinique et de Saint-Domingue, vol. 1 (Paris: F. Buisson, 1807), 280–81Google Scholar.

115. Debates in Both Houses of Parliament on the Catholic Petition (London: P. Stuart, 1809), 206.

116. Young, Arthur, A Tour in Ireland, with General Observations on the Present State of That Kingdom, vol. 2 (Dublin: James Williams, 1780), 40Google Scholar.

117. Macaulay, Thomas, Speeches of Lord Macaulay (London: Longmans, Green, 1866), 141Google Scholar.

118. That the same liberals could participate in the denigration of the Irish as an inferior race suggests not only the changing significance and content of “race” over the nineteenth century but also that they believed amalgamation would make the Irish more like the English: “British and Irish intermarriage was always acceptable and not regarded as miscegenation.” de Nie, Michael, The Eternal Paddy: Irish Identity and the British Press, 1798–1882 (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2004), 268Google Scholar. While state and church regulations on intermarriage between non-co-religionists continued, an 1825 parliamentary committee heard that such mixed-marriages “were very frequent even among the lower orders.” Lee, Raymond M., “Intermarriage, Conflict and Social Control in Ireland: The Decree ‘Ne temere,’The Economic and Social Review 17, no. 1 (1985): 1127, 13Google Scholar.

119. Thierry, Augustin, History of the Conquest of England by the Normans, vol. 1, trans. Hazlitt, William (London: H.G. Bohn, 1856), xxiiGoogle Scholar; Macaulay, Thomas, The History of England, from the Accession of James the Second, vol. 1 (Philadelphia: E. H. Butler, 1856), 5Google Scholar; Hansard, HC, 3rd series, v. 72, 1844, c. 1172; 3rd series, v. 190, 1868, c. 1765; 3rd series, v. 96, 1848, cc. 476–77; The Morning Chronicle (UK), September 20, 1828, 2.

120. Debates in Both Houses of Parliament on the Catholic Petition, 76.

121. The Parliamentary Register, v. 12 (1793), 148, 240.

122. Ensor, George, On National Government, vol. 1 (London: Johnson, 1810), 182–83Google Scholar. This argument is similar to contemporary arguments that whites will cling to the privileged distinction of color when their own position in the civic hierarchy is seen to be in decline. Roediger, David, The Wages of Whiteness: Race and the Making of the American Working Class (London: Verso, 1991)Google Scholar.

123. Carey, Mathew, Vindiciae Hibernicae (Philadelphia: R. P. Desilver, 1837), 2526, 210Google Scholar.

124. Carey, Mathew, Letters on the Colonization Society (Philadelphia: Young, 1832), 2, 27Google Scholar.

125. Crawfurd, John, History of the Indian Archipelago, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, UK: Archibald Constable, 1820), 96Google Scholar; Jeffrey, Francis, Contributions to the Edinburgh Review, vol. 1, 2nd ed. (London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1846 [1813]), 79135, 86Google Scholar; Sismondi, History of the Fall of the Roman Empire, 59.

126. Carter, The United States of the United Races, 3; Nash, Gary B., “The Hidden History of Mestizo America,” Journal of American History 82, no. 3 (1995): 941964, 955CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

127. English Liberals’ position on the Irish was that they should be made “less Catholic, and therefore more English.” Parry, Jonathan, The Rise and Fall of Liberal Government in Victorian Britain (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1996), 107Google Scholar. In some cases, writers favored the creation, through “intermixing,” of an intermediate class that could exercise influence among the indigenous while accessing privileges conferred by the imperial state.

128. Placing native women under the patriarchal authority of a white European settler would invest in the husband the authority and responsibility for ensuring that the family would replicate European cultural practices.

129. Raynal recognized both the erection of distinct statuses and the fostering of amalgamation as tools of statecraft. “Tyrants soon discovered how far it was proper for them to separate, or connect, their subjects, in order to keep them in a state of dependence. They formed men into separate ranks by availing themselves of their prejudices: because this line of division between them became a bond of submission to the sovereign, who maintained his authority by their mutual hatred and opposition.” Alternatively, “they connected families to each other in every station, because this union totally extinguished every spark of dissension repugnant to the spirit of civil society.” Raynal, Abbé, A Philosophical and Political History of the Settlements and Trade of the Europeans in the East and West Indies, vol. 3 (Dublin: John Exshaw, 1776), 192–93Google Scholar.

130. Frymer, Building an American Empire, 22–23.

131. Beverley, Robert, History and Present State of Virginia, ed. Wright, Louis B. (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1947), 3839, 159Google Scholar; Godbeer, Richard, “Eroticizing the Middle Ground: Anglo-Indian Sexual Relations along the Eighteenth-Century Frontier,” in Sex, Love, Race: Crossing Boundaries in North American History, ed. Hodes, Martha (New York: NYU Press, 1999): 91110, 94Google Scholar; Nash, “Hidden History of Mestizo America,” 943; Boyd, William K., ed., William Byrd's Histories of the Dividing Line betwixt Virginia and North Carolina (Raleigh: The North Carolina Historical Commission, 1929), 34Google Scholar; Dickason, Olive, The Myth of the Savage and the Beginnings of French Colonialism in the Americas (Edmonton: University of Alberta Press, 1984), 278Google Scholar; Jaenen, Cornelius, Friend and Foe: Aspects of French-Amerindian Cultural Contact in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (New York: Columbia University Press, 1976), 165Google Scholar; Kaplan, Sidney, “Historical Efforts to Encourage White-Indian Intermarriage in the United States and Canada,” International Social Science Review 65, no. 3 (1990): 126132Google Scholar; Jacobs, Wilbur R., The Appalachian Indian Frontier: The Edmond Atkin Report and Plan of 1755 (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1967 [1954]), 80Google Scholar.

132. John Marshall regretted that “our prejudices … oppose themselves to our interests and operate too powerfully for them.” Kaplan, “Historical Efforts to Encourage White-Indian Intermarriage,” 128.

133. Ford, Paul Leicester, The Works of Thomas Jefferson, vol. 9 (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1905), 447–49Google Scholar; Horsman, Reginald, Race and Manifest Destiny: The Origins of Racial Anglo-Saxonism (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1981), 108109Google Scholar.

134. Morse, Jedidiah, A Report to the Secretary of War of the United States on Indian Affairs (New Haven, CT: S. Converse, 1822), 7475Google Scholar.

135. Mooney, Chase C., William H. Crawford: 1772–1834 (Lexington: University of Kentucky, 1974), 89Google Scholar.

136. Frymer, Building an American Empire.

137. Guyatt, Nicholas, “‘The Outskirts of Our Happiness’: Race and the Lure of Colonization in the Early Republic,” Journal of American History 95, no. 4 (2009): 986–1011, 994–95CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

138. Appendix to the Register of Debates in Congress, 19th Congress, 1st Sess., 40–43, 42.

139. Tilton, Robert S., Pocahontas: The Evolution of an American Narrative (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1994), 1213Google Scholar.

140. “Speech of William Pinckney, Esq.,” The Freeman's Journal (PA), April 27, 1790, 2.

141. Edwards, Jonathan, The Injustice and Impolicy of the Slave-Trade and of the Slavery of the Africans (New Haven, CT: Thomas and Samuel Green, 1791), 37Google Scholar.

142. Rice, David, Slavery Inconsistent with Justice and Good Policy (London: M. Gurney, 1793), 1617Google Scholar. When George Bourne reprinted passages from Rice he “took a scalpel to the text and removed Rice's admissions that a free society would involve the blending of the races.” Guyatt, Nicholas, Bind Us Apart: How Enlightened Americans Invented Racial Segregation (New York: Basic Books, 2016), 167Google Scholar.

143. Guyatt, Bind Us Apart, 115–17; Oberg, Barbara B., The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, vol. 30 (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2003), 146–54Google Scholar.

144. Brissot de Warville, New Travels in the United States of America, 281; Raynal, A Philosophical and Political History, vol. 3, 173.

145. Jefferson, Thomas, Notes on the State of Virginia (Richmond: J. W. Randolph, 1853), 149–51Google Scholar.

146. Jefferson's relations with Sally Hemings were widely suspected. The best source remains Gordon-Reed, Annette, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy. (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1997)Google Scholar.

147. Smith, Stanhope, The Lectures, Corrected and Improved, vol. 2 (Trenton: James J. Wilson, 1812), 176–77Google Scholar; Dain, Bruce R., A Hideous Monster of the Mind: American Race Theory in the Early Republic (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2002), 69Google Scholar; Guyatt, Bind Us Apart, 127; Painter, “Was Marie White,” 6.

148. Frymer, Building an American Empire, ch. 4.

149. Grégoire, Henri, An Enquiry Concerning the Intellectual and Moral Faculties, and Literature, of Negroes, trans. Warden, D. B. (Brooklyn: Thomas Kirk, 1810), 67Google Scholar.

150. Dubois, Laurent, Avengers of the New World: The Story of the Haitian Revolution (Cambridge, UK: Belknap Press, 2004), 6162, 70Google Scholar; Idowu, H. Oludare, “Assimilation in 19th Century Senegal,” Cahiers d’études africaines 9, no. 34 (1969): 194218, 206CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

151. Imlay, Gilbert, A Topographical Description of the Western Territory of North America (Dublin: William Jones, 1793), 189, 192Google Scholar.

152. Frater [Anonymous], “On Slavery,” City of Washington Gazette, August 15, 1820, 2; Guyatt, Bind Us Apart, 163.

153. “Georgia and the Cherokees,” Connecticut Courant, July 24, 1826, 2; “Indians and Negroes,” National Democrat (Lecompton, KS), September 1, 1859, 2; Horsman, Race and Manifest Destiny, 196.

154. “The Hon. William H. Crawford,” The Gleaner (PA), May 10, 1816, 3; see also, “The Federal Whig Candidates,” North Carolina Sentinel, July 6, 1836, 3; “From the Raleigh Standard: General Dudley an Amalgamationist,” North Carolina Sentinel, July 20, 1836, 1; “Indian Lectures,” The North Star (NY), March 16, 1849, 1.

155. Lemire, Elise, “Miscegenation”: Making Race in America (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002), 49CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Horsman, Race and Manifest Destiny, 108–109, 196–97.

156. de Warville, J. P. Brissot, Memoire sur les Noirs de l'Amerique Septentrionale (Paris: Patriote Francais, 1789), 3031Google Scholar. Contemporaries noted that black and white couples were especially common among “degraded” whites, and on the basis of census records and contemporary observations, Carter G. Woodson has argued that “race admixture was common.” Woodson, Carter, “The Beginnings of Miscegenation of the Whites and the Blacks,” Journal of Negro History 3, no. 4 (1918): 335–53, 348, 352CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

157. Brown, Thomas, “The Miscegenation of Richard Mentor Johnson as an Issue in the National Election Campaign of 1835–1836,” Civil War History 39, no. 1 (1993): 530CrossRefGoogle Scholar, 5, 14, 18, 24; Yarbrough, Fay A., “Power, Perception, and Interracial Sex: Former Slaves Recall a Multiracial South,” The Journal of Southern History 71, no. 3 (2005): 559–88CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

158. Willis, William S., “Divide and Rule: Red, White, and Black in the Southeast,” The Journal of Negro History 48, no. 3 (1963): 157–76CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Moran, Rachel F., Interracial Intimacy: The Regulation of Race & Romance (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001), 20Google Scholar.

159. Those born of free women, regardless of the father, would be free. Those whose parents included a free man and an enslaved woman would be enslaved, but may have been more likely to be manumitted. Hodes, White Women, Black Men, 4.

160. Everett S. Brown, “The Senate Debate on the Breckinridge Bill for the Government of Louisiana, 1804,” The American Historical Review 22, no. 2: 340–64, 352.

161. “House of Delegates,” The Virginia Argus, Richmond (VA), January 17, 1806, 2–3.

162. “To the Freemen of Talbot, Caroline, and Queen-Ann's Counties,” The Republican Star (MD), September 20, 1803. Horne, Gerald, “The Haitian Revolution and the Central Question of African American History,” Journal of African American History 100, no. 1 (2015): 2658, 38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

163. Taylor, John, Arator, 3rd ed. (Baltimore, MD: J. M. Carter, 1817), 8283Google Scholar.

164. Walsh, Appeal from the Judgment of Great Britain, 395.

165. Drayton, William, The South Vindicated from the Treason and Fanaticism of the Northern Abolitionists (Philadelphia: H. Manly, 1836), 227–28Google Scholar.

166. Bishop and Attree, Report of the Debates and Proceedings New York, 1028; Laughlin, S. H. and Henderson, J. F., Journal of the Convention of the State of Tennessee (Nashville: Banner & Whig, 1834), 92Google Scholar.

167. Agg, Proceedings and Debates Pennsylvania, vol. 10, 132–33, 95.

168. Lieber, Francis, The Stranger in America; or, Letters to a Gentleman in Germany. (Carey, Lea, & Blanchard, 1835), 293–94Google Scholar.

169. “Direct Trade of the South,” De Bow's Review 14, no. 5 (1853): 437–49, 438.

170. “Speech of W.F. Bullock,” The Examiner, Louisville (KY), June 19, 1847, 1.

171. The support given to the ACS by prominent American statesmen is suggestive of the potential alliance between government agents and social movements organized around racial policy questions in developing state capacity, a theme developed much more fully with regard to a pro-civil rights social movement in Francis, Megan Ming, Civil Rights and the Making of the Modern American State (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2014)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

172. This was both because their ostensible equality was supposed to be an immediate threat to social stability, and because it stood a better chance of attracting northern and southern support. King, Desmond S., The Liberty of Strangers: Making the American Nation. (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2004), 55Google Scholar; Guyatt, Bind Us Apart.

173. News of conflict in Liberia led the Emancipator to remark, “unless the U.S. Government will interfere…all the colonists must be brought back to ‘their own country,’ or amalgamate with the larger tribes, or be exterminated. To this issue things will come at last.” “Hon. Henry Clay's Speech,” Kentucky Gazette, March 2, 1827, 1; “Mr. Clay's Speech,” Alexandria Gazette (VA), January 22, 1848; “Address of the American Colonization Society,” Daily National Intelligencer, November 14, 1831, 2; Clay, Henry, An Address Delivered to the Colonization Society of Kentucky (Lexington: Thomas Smith, 1830), 14Google Scholar; Journal of the Senate of the State of Ohio, 46th General Assembly (Columbus: Chas. Scott's Steam Press, 1848), 192; “Extracts,” The North Star, April 13, 1849, 1; “Liberia,” The Emancipator, August 16, 1838, 63.

174. Cooper, James Fenimore, The American Democrat, or, Hints on the Social and Civic Relations of the United States of America (Cooperstown, NY: H. & E. Phinney, 1838), 175Google Scholar. Cooper's literary works had shown a particular interest in amalgamation. Sanborn, Geoffrey, “James Fenimore Cooper and the Invention of the Passing Novel,” American Literature 84, no. 1 (2012): 129, 2CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

175. Bishop and Attree, Report of the Debates and Proceedings New York, 1034; Appendix to the Congressional Globe, 30th Congress, 1st Sess., 1848, 581, 645.

176. Bellinger, Edmund Jr., A Speech on the Subject of Slavery (Charleston, SC: Dan J. Dowling, 1835), 1617Google Scholar.

177. Appendix to the Congressional Globe, July 25, 1848, 1165–66.

178. Fredrickson, “Mulattoes and Métis,” 107.

179. According to Angelina Grimké, their father had told her that “emancipation must come in some form or other and amalgamation will be the salvation of our country.” Kaplan, Sidney, “The Miscegenation Issue in the Election of 1864,” The Journal of Negro History, 34, no. 3 (1949): 274343CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Grimké, Considerations upon the Nature and Tendency of Free Institutions, 331, 338–39; Paulding, James Kirke, Slavery in the United States (New York: Harper & Bros., 1836), 64Google Scholar.

180. “Colonization,” Alexandria Gazette, January 31, 1851, 2; Latrobe, John H. B. and Gurley, Phinehas D., American Colonization Society: Addresses Delivered at its Late Annual Meeting (New York: T. R. Dawley, 1864)Google Scholar.

181. Throughout the transatlantic world, race was becoming conceptualized as a determinative category of human difference, buttressing slaveholder and imperialist ideologies.

182. Marixa Lasso, “Race War and Nation in Caribbean Gran Colombia, Cartagena, 1810–1832,” The American Historical Review 111, no. 2: 336–61, 344–46. He denounced persons of color for supposedly “want[ing] absolute equality, in the public and domestic areas alike; and next they will want pardocracia [rule by the persons of color], which is their natural and unique propensity, in order to exterminate the privileged class.” Vacano, The Color of Citizenship, 62; Helg, “Simón Bolívar and the Spectre of ‘Pardocracia’”; Simon, The Ideology of Creole Revolution, 104–109; Lynch, Simón Bolívar, 108–10, 149–55, 217–18; Lasso, Marixa, Myths of Harmony: Race and Republicanism during the Age of Revolution, Colombia 1795–1831 (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2007), 6061CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Fitzgerald, Gerald E., The Political Thought of Simón Bolívar (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1971), 63CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Simon Collier, “Simón Bolívar as Political Thinker,” in Simón Bolívar: Essays on the Life and Legacy of the Liberator, ed. David Bushnell and Lester D. Langley (Lanham, CO: Rowman & Littlefield), 13–35, 23.

183. Sepinwall, Alyssa Goldstein, The Abbé Grégoire and the French Revolution: The Making of Modern Universalism (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2005), 9596, 193CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

184. Munford, Clarence J. and Zeuske, Michael, “Black Slavery, Class Conflict, Fear and Revolution in St. Domingue and Cuba, 1785–1795,” The Journal of Negro History 73(1/4, 1988): 1232, 22CrossRefGoogle Scholar; de Caritat, Jean-Antoine-Nicolas [Condorcet], Réflexions sur l'esclavage des nègres (Neufchâtel: Société typographique, 1781), 63Google Scholar.

185. Tillery, Alvin B. Jr., “Tocqueville as Critical Race Theorist: Whiteness as Property, Interest Convergence, and the Limits of Jacksonian Democracy,” Political Research Quarterly 62, no. 4 (2009): 639–52CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

186. Ibid.,” 643–47; Tocqueville, Democracy in America, 519, 552–53, 563, 571, 572–73, 578, 1203.

187. Welch, Cheryl, “Creating Concitoyens: Tocqueville on the Legacy of Slavery,” in Reading Tocqueville: From Oracle to Actor, ed. Geenens, Rag and Dijn, Annelien (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007): 31–55, 32, 36, 39, 4345Google Scholar; Tocqueville, Democracy in America, 572.

188. In the Algerian case he eventually concluded that the pride of the settlers would, as in America, impede amalgamation; this again led him to conclude that a settler state would require continued tutelage and a powerful administration to interpose between native and settler. Pitts, Jennifer, A Turn to Empire: The Rise of Imperial Liberalism in Britain and France (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2005), 225CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

189. This belief in “fusion” as the best way for France to govern its imperial colonies would persist into the Third Republic, when it was displaced by a discourse that gave greater weight to the newly enfranchised settler classes. In neither case were the interests or well-being of the colonized the motivation for the policy or actually reflected in government actions. Assan, Valérie, Les consistoires Israélites d'Algérie au XIXe siècle: l'alliance de la civilisation et de la réligion (Paris: Armand Colin, 2012), 277CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Brower, Benjamin Claude, “Rethinking Abolition in Algeria: Slavery and the ‘Indigenous Question,’Cahiers d’études africaines 195, no. 3 (2009): 805–28CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Andrews, Naomi J., “D'Eichthal and Urbain's ‘Lettres sur la race noire et la race blanche’: Race, Gender, and Reconciliation after Slave Emancipation,” Nineteenth-Century French Studies 39(3/4, 2011): 240–58, 241, 243CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

190. Even as colonial administrators on occasion looked to encourage intermarriage between officers and indigenous communities in America, they periodically tried to suppress interracial intercourse and socializing in India and elsewhere. Hoping to “mak[e] empire respectable,” colonial administrators sought to correct the sexual behavior of British agents and limit the widespread practices of concubinage. Ghosh, Sex and the Family in Colonial India, 2, 10, 26, 251.

191. Salesa, Racial Crossings, 36.

192. Merivale, Lectures on Colonization, 180–81.

193. Salesa, Racial Crossings, 42.

194. Jeremie, John, Four Essays on Colonial Slavery (London: J. Hatchard and Son, 1831), 6970Google Scholar.

195. Hansard, HC, 3rd series, v. 18, 1833, cc. 479–80.

196. “Speech of Sir Robert Peel on the Colonial Slavery Question,” Richmond Enquirer (VA), July 30, 1833, 2; Hansard, HC, 3rd series, v. 18, 1833, c. 342.

197. Lionel Smith to the Earl of Aberdeen, March 29, 1835, H. E. Sharpe to the Lionel Smith, February 23, 1835, National Archives, CO/28/115/27, fs.189–199.

198. Papers Relative to the West Indies, 1841–42, sessional papers, vol. 29, Command Papers [374], 63, 105.

199. Hansard, HC, 3rd series, v. 96, 1848, cc. 584–85.

200. A “civilizational” hierarchy, itself bearing the imprint of Scottish Enlightenment thought, allowed writers to construct some groups as more immediately compatible for amalgamation with Europeans. “New Zealand,” The Economist 3, no. 30 (July 1845): 693–94, 693.

201. Salesa, Racial Crossings, 28.

202. Grey, Earl, The Colonial Policy of Lord John Russell's Administration, vol. 2 (London: Richard Bentley, 1853), 253Google Scholar.

203. Select Committee on State of Colony of New Zealand, 1844, sessional papers, vol. 13, H. C. Papers [556], 223 (190); Papers Relating to Aboriginal Tribes, 1834, sessional papers, vol. 44, H. C. Papers [617], 438 (95).

204. Report from the Select Committee on the West Coast of Africa; Together with the Minutes of Evidence, Appendix, and Index, Part I, 1842, sessional papers, vol. 11, H. C. Papers [551], 556.

205. Papers Relative to the Condition of Native Inhabitants of Southern Africa, Part II, 1835, sessional papers, vol. 39, H. C. Papers [252], 228 (98).

206. Report from the Select Committee on Aborigines, 1836, sessional papers, vol. 7, H. C. Papers [538], 43 (37).

207. “The United Irishmen and the Repeal Agitation,” Westminster Review, August 1843, 68.

208. Salesa, Racial Crossings, 143–44; Julie Evans, Patricia Grimshaw, David Philips, and Swain, Shurlee, Equal Subjects, Unequal Rights: Indigenous Peoples in British Settler Colonies, 1830–1910 (Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 2003), 74Google Scholar.

209. Hansard, HC, 3rd series, v. 96, 1848, cc. 612–20, 854–55.

210. Correspondence Relative to the Establishment of a Representative Assembly at the Cape of Good Hope, 1850, sessional papers, vol. 38, Command Paper [1137], 123, 126, 136 (13, 16, 26).

211. Papers in Explanation of Measures to Give Effect to Act for Abolition of Slavery: Part 3, 1836, sessional papers, H. C. Papers, vol. 48, 166-1, 343 (309).

212. Evans et al., Equal Subjects, Unequal Rights, 6.

213. After the Indian Mutiny of 1857, Benjamin Disraeli complained that “the mutual suspicions and prejudices between rival religions and different races, which were the cause of segregation between powerful classes in that country, have of late years, in consequence of our policy, gradually disappeared, and that for them has been substituted an identity of sentiments, and those sentiments, I am sorry to say, hostile to our authority.” “Our empire in India was, indeed, founded upon the old principle of divide et impera,” and it was time to return to that method. By the last decades of the nineteenth century, English colonial policy was committed to a firm adoption of the “color line” as a tactic of rule. While the developmental consequences of “amalgamation” policies were limited, they left a legacy in the varied cultures of racial hierarchy across the empire, cultures that nonetheless “occurred within the structure of dominance” imposed by the imperial regime and white settlers. Hansard, HC, 3rd series, v. 147, 1857, c. 444, 447; 3rd series, v. 177, 1865, cc. 1573–74; Erickson, Arvel B., “Empire or Anarchy: The Jamaica Rebellion of 1865,” Journal of Negro History 44, no. 2 (1959): 99122, 102CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Sio, Arnold A., “Race, Colour, and Miscegenation: The Free Coloured of Jamaica and Barbados,” Caribbean Studies 16, no. 1 (1976): 521, 21Google Scholar; Lake, Marilyn and Reynolds, , Drawing the Global Colour Line: White Men's Countries and the Question of Racial Equality (Melbourne, Australia: Melbourne University, 2008), 63, 131, 226–32Google Scholar; Freeman, “Attitudes toward ‘Miscegenation,’” 46, 48–49, 54.

214. American abolitionism provided an occasion for one of the United States’ periodic panics about foreign influence in its domestic affairs. American statesmen saw in English abolition a vital threat to the interests of their own country, and President Tyler even instructed one member of Congress to accuse American antislavery activists’ of being “paid foreign agents” whose “entire antislavery enterprise, financed and directed by Great Britain, was a subversive scheme aimed at undermining the American Union.” Crapol, Edward P., John Tyler: The Accidental President (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006), 7071Google Scholar; Merton L. Dillon, Slavery Attacked, 169.; Law, Anna O., “Lunatics, Idiots, Paupers, and Negro Seamen—Immigration, Federalism and the Early American State,” Studies in American Political Development 28, no. 2 (2014): 107–18, 121–25CrossRefGoogle Scholar

215. “The Conspiracy of Fanaticism,” Camden Journal (SC), May 24, 1850, 1; “Robert J. Breckinridge” The Liberator (MA), July 27, 1838, 2; “For the Pennsylvania Freeman,” Philadelphia National Enquirer, September 27, 1838, 2; “Judge Robertson's Letters,” Daily National Intelligencer (Washington, DC), November 10, 1857.

216. Painter, “‘Social Equality,’ Miscegenation, Labor, and Power,” 53; Fredrickson, George M., The Black Image in the White Mind: The Debate on Afro-American Character and Destiny, 1817–1914 (New York: Harper & Row, 1971), 80Google Scholar.

217. Wickliffe, Robert, Speech of Robert Wickliffe, in Reply to the Rev. R.J. Breckinridge (Lexington, KY: Observer & Reporter Print., 1840), 41Google Scholar.

218. Wright, Frances, Fanny Wright Unmasked by her Own Pen (New York: s.n., 1830), 1011Google Scholar; Trumpet and Universalist Magazine March 19, 1831, 149.

219. Report of the Discussion on American Slavery in Dr. Wardlaw's Chapel Between Mr. George Thompson and the Rev. R. J. Breckinridge (Glasgow: David Prentice, 1836), 73–74.

220. Abdy, American Whites and Blacks, 41–42 emphasis added.

221. Smith, George, Facts Designed to Exhibit the Real Character and Tendency of the American Colonization Society. (Liverpool, UK: Egerton Smith, 1833), 14Google Scholar.

222. Stuart, Charles, A Letter to Thomas Clarkson by Thomas Cropper, and Prejudice Vincible (Liverpool, UK: Egerton Smith, 1832), 24Google Scholar.

223. Candler, A Summary View of America, 280–81, 287, 298, 300.

224. “Remarks of Prof. Walker,” Oberlin Evangelist 7, no. 17 (August 14, 1845): 134.

225. “The Marriage Question,” The Liberator, November 17, 1832, 3; “Letter from Virginia,” The Liberator, March 31, 1832, 3.

226. Harris, Leslie M., “From Abolitionist Amalgamators to ‘Rulers of the Five Points’: The Discourse of Interracial Sex and Reform in Antebellum New York City,” in Sex, Love, Race: Crossing Boundaries in North American History, ed. Hodes, Martha (New York: New York University Press, 1999): 191–212, 194Google Scholar. The social intercourse demonstrated on these occasions often fell short of full equality. Angelina Grimké placed the blame for this squarely on white abolitionists. Grimké, Angelina E., Appeal to the Women of the Nominally Free States (Boston: Anti-Slavery Convention of American Women, 1838), 6263Google Scholar; “Behold, We Count Them Happy Who Endure,” The Colored American (NY), December 16, 1837, 2.

227. T.T., “A Dream,” The Liberator, April 2, 1831.

228. Phillip Lapsansky, “Graphic Discord: Abolitionist and Antiabolitionist Imagery,” in The Abolitionist Sisterhood: Women's Political Culture in Antebellum America, ed., Jean Fagin Yellin and John C. Van Horne (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press): 201–30, 227; Bolokitten, Oliver, A Sojourn in the City of Amalgamation, in the Year of Our Lord, 19—. (New York: s.n., 1835)Google Scholar; Niles’ Weekly Register, July 19, 1834, 360; “Scene in New York,” Richmond Enquirer (VA), May 18, 1847, 1; “Abolition in All its Bearings,” The Evening Star (NY), September 10, 1835, 2; “Philadelphia,” The Emancipator (NY), June 14, 1838, 25; “Stoweism and Blackswanism,” Alexandria Gazette (VA), June 20, 1853, 2; “Sir Lionel Smith and the Negroes,” The Sun (MD), September 5, 1838, 2; “Amalgamation by Steam,” Emancipator and Free American (MA), August 31, 1843, 71; “Attempt to Amalgamate,” Saturday Morning Transcript (MA), August 1, 1835, 191; Nyong'o, Tavia, The Amalgamation Waltz: Race, Performance, and the Muses of Memory (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2009), 8283Google Scholar; McDaniel, The Problem of Democracy in the Age of Slavery, 55.

229. David Ruggles told of how an anti-abolitionist once explained that he used the charge of amalgamation solely as “a scare crow, because it seems to be the only thing that will reach the prejudices of the public.” Ruggles, David, The ‘Extinguisher’ Extinguished, or, David M. Reese, M.D., ‘Used Up’ (New York: D. Ruggles, 1834), 46Google Scholar.

230. Correspondence with British Coms. at Sierra Leone, Havana, &tc., 1839-40 (Class A), 1840, sessional papers, vol. 46, Command Papers [265], 212 (194).

231. Agg, Proceedings and Debates Pennsylvania, vol. 10, 23, 133.

232. Report of the Discussion on American Slavery in Dr. Wardlaw's Chapel, 100–101; Smith, Gerrit, Letter of Gerrit Smith to Hon. Henry Clay (New York: American Anti-Slavery Society, 1839), 36Google Scholar.

233. “Social Equality for the Negro,” The Daily Union (Washington, DC), June 28, 1854, 2.

234. “Appeal to the Christian Women of the South,” Philadelphia National Enquirer, October 29, 1836.

235. “College for Colored Youth,” Connecticut Journal, October 4, 1831, 3; “Miss Prudence Crandall,” New Bedford Mercury (CT), April 19, 1833, 1; “From the Albany State Register,” The Liberator (MA), July 18, 1851, 1.

236. Kerber, Linda K., “Abolitionists and Amalgamators: The New York City Race Riots of 1834,” New York History 48, no. 1 (1967): 2839, 30Google Scholar.

237. See Daniel Coker's 1810 pamphlet, in Dain, A Hideous Monster of the Mind, 71–72.

238. “Major ‘Noah's Negroes,” Freedom's Journal, New York, August 24, 1827, 3. See Tillery, John I. Gaines in Alvin B., “Reading Tocqueville behind the Veil: African American Receptions of Democracy in America, 1835–1900,” American Political Thought: A Journal of Ideas, Institutions, and Culture 7 (Winter 2018): 125, 14CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

239. Proceedings of the National Emigration Convention of Colored People (Pittsburgh, PA: A.A. Anderson, 1854), 40.

240. “Can't Amalgamate,” Colored American (NY), July 29, 1837, 2.

241. Ruggles, The ‘Extinguisher’ Extinguished, 10, 11–13, 16–17.

242. Grimké, Sarah M., Letters on the Equality of the Sexes and the Condition of Woman (Boston: Isaac Knapp, 1838), 52Google Scholar.

243. Channing, William E., Slavery, 4th ed. (Boston: James Munroe, 1836), 141–42Google Scholar.

244. The Liberator (MA), March 31, 1832, 3; July 19, 1834, 3.

245. Smith, Letter of Gerrit Smith to Hon. Henry Clay, 36.

246. Drayton, The South Vindicated, 156.

247. Jay, William, Inquiry into the Character and Tendency of the American Colonization Society and American Anti-Slavery Societies (New York: R.G. Williams, 1838), 16, 146Google Scholar.

248. “To the Editors of the Spy,” Massachusetts Spy, July 23, 1834, 3.

249. Kerber, “Abolitionists and Amalgamators,” 35; Brothers, Thomas, The United States of North America As They Are (London: Longman, Orme, Brown, Green, & Longmans, 1840), 380Google Scholar.

250. Kerber, “Abolitionists and Amalgamators,” 35.

251. Harris, “From Abolitionist Amalgamators to ‘Rulers of the Five Points,’” 199.

252. Drayton, The South Vindicated, 234.

253. J. Mitchell, “Thoughts on the Separation of the Races,” Indiana State Sentinel, December 19, 1850, 3; Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of Indiana, 36th Sess. (Indianapolis: J.P. Chapman, 1851), 1035.

254. Thirty-Second Annual Report of the American Colonization Society (Washington, DC: C. Alexander, 1849), 40–51, 42; Baldwin, Samuel Davis, Dominion; or, the Unity and Trinity of the Human Race (Nashville: E. Stevenson and F.A. Owen, 1858), 9496Google Scholar.

255. Drayton, The South Vindicated, 234–36.

256. Birney, James G., Letter on Colonization (New York: Anti-Slavery Reporter, 1834), 6162Google Scholar; “To the Ministers and Elders of the Presbyterian Church in Kentucky,” The Liberator (MA), October 4, 1834, 2.

257. S.F.D., “People of Colour,” Christian Spectator, March 1825, 135.

258. The “painful character” of their dilemma “was clearly evident in their tortured efforts to resolve it.” Jordan, Winthrop D., White over Black: American Attitudes toward the Negro, 1550–1812 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1968), 545Google Scholar.

259. Jay, Inquiry into the Character and Tendency of the American Colonization Society, 147–48.

260. Carey, Some Thoughts, 83–84.

261. King and Smith, “‘Without Regard to Race,’” 958.

262. Greeley, Horace, The Writings of Cassius Marcellus Clay (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1848), 199Google Scholar; “West India Mission and Emancipation,” Philadelphia National Enquirer, February 8, 1838, 86; “Amalgamation,” Tioga County Agitator (PA), March 31, 1859, 2.

263. Olcott, Charles, Two Lectures on the Subject of Slavery (Massillon, OH: s.n., 1838), 115Google Scholar.

264. The Free Soil party dropped equal rights from its platform, but many members defended black political equality. Report of the Proceedings and Debates in the Convention to Revise the Constitution of the State of Michigan, 1850 (Lansing, MI: R.W. Ingals, 1850), 290.

265. “To the Editors of the Spy,” The Spy (MA), July 23, 1834, 3; “Negro Suffrage,” Daily Morning Gazette (WI), April 24, 1857, 2.

266. Combining the social and the economic, Scipio tied these social assertions to the fact that “employers often want help and cannot get it, or they are at best incessantly dismissing it and wrangling with it. The employees now and then band together in strikes for wages and they not infrequently desert the employer in a press of business.” “Revival of the Slave Trade, No. XV,” Edgefield Advertiser (SC), May 18, 1859, 1. See also, “Lyman Beecher,” The Liberator (MA), August 6, 1836, 2; “A Letter from Cassius Clay,” The Liberator (MA), March 15, 1856, 1.

267. “A White Woman Married to a Negro in Kansas,” State Record (KS), July 29, 1863, 4.

268. Still, he claimed that there should be no prohibition on interracial marriages, and justified the denial of social equality by reference to both blacks and whites. “A man proud of his purse may scorn a poor negro as he would a poor white man,” he wrote, even though “under the Constitution, in its most liberal interpretation, and admitting our cherished American doctrine of equal human rights, if a white man pleases to marry a black woman, the mere fact that she is black gives no one a right to interfere to prevent or set aside such marriage.” “About Negro Equality, Amalgamation. &c., &c.,” American Citizen (PA), August 9, 1865, 1; “Miscegenation,” New York Tribune, March 16, 1864.

269. Hurlbut, Elisha P., Civil Office and Political Ethics (New York: Taylor & Clement, 1840), 1620, 18Google Scholar.

270. Shaw, Charles B., Is Slavery a Blessing? A Reply to Prof. Bledsoe's Essay on Liberty and Slavery (Boston: John P. Jewett, 1857), 65Google Scholar.

271. This question had always been an important theme of antebellum debates. Bateman, David A., Disenfranchising Democracy: Constructing the Electorate in the United States, United Kingdom, and France (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2018)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

272. Owen, Robert Dale, The Wrong of Slavery, the Right of Emancipation, and the Future of the African Race in the United States (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1864), 212Google Scholar.

273. C. C. Andrews, Suffrage the Armor of Liberty (Washington, DC: Office of the Great Republic, 186–), 4.

274. Congressional Globe, 42nd Congress, 2nd Sess., 242.

275. Foner, Philp S. and Taylor, Yuval, Frederick Douglass: Selected Speeches and Writings (Chicago: Lawrence Hill Books, 1999), 161, 332Google Scholar.

276. Similar opposition was expressed toward an agent of the British government who was looking to attract African American laborers to the West Indies. When the agent suggested that social equality was hopeless in the United States, The Colored American noted that only “those who have no confidence in a moral principle, to destroy and break up moral evils” believed that it would be impossible for “the two races as they are here called, (it should rather be classes,) ever [being] allowed to coexist in a state of social equality.” Tillery, “Reading Tocqueville Behind the Veil,” 7; “Hon. Wm. H. Burnley's Letter to Lord John Russell,” The Colored American (NY), July 11, 1840, 2; “Editorial Correspondence,” The North Star (NY), April 7, 1848, 2.

277. “Politics,” The Colored American (NY), October 10, 1840.

278. There was no consensus, however, that white prejudices could be conquered. Augustine, “For the Colored American,” The Colored American (NY), July 28, 1838.

279. Foner and Taylor, Frederick Douglass, 161; Bell, Howard Holman, A Survey of the Negro Convention Movement, 1830–1861 (New York: Arno Press, 1969), 47Google Scholar; Condit, Celeste Michelle and Lucaites, John Louis, Crafting Equality: America's Anglo-African World (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1993), 95CrossRefGoogle Scholar; “The Union of the Oppressed for the Sake of Freedom,” The North Star (NY), August 10, 1849, 2.

280. Foner and Taylor, Frederick Douglass, 332; Brown, William Wells, The Black Man, His Antecedents, His Genius, and His Achievements (New York: Thomas Hamilton, 1863), 47Google Scholar. Post-Civil War, many black politicians adopted the premise that “social equality” meant interracial sex; but these were coupled with an insistence on the rights of “manhood,” which amounted to the substance of social equality, that is, a recognition of equal standing in social, economic, and political spaces. “Manhood” carried its own implication of patriarchal authority. Congressional Record, 43rd Congress, 1st Sess., 344; Hodes, White Women, Black Men, 167–68; “The Old Goose,” The Colored American (NY), July 3, 1841, 2; “Right of Suffrage in Michigan,” March 20, 1841, 2.

281. Du Bois, W. E. B., “President Harding and Social Equality,” The Crisis 23, no. 2, 1921): 5356Google Scholar.

282. Brandwein, Rethinking the Judicial Settlement of Reconstruction, 61.

283. “The Intermarriage Bugbear,” The Nation 5, no. 128 (December 1867): 481–82.

284. Miscegenation: The Theory of the Blending of the Races, Applied to the White Man and Negro (London: Trubner, 1864), 75.

285. Kaplan, “The Miscegenation Issue in the Election of 1864.”

286. King, Desmond S. and Smith, Rogers M., Still a House Divided: Race and Politics in Obama's America (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2011)Google Scholar.

287. Nash, “The Hidden History of Mestizo America.”

288. Frymer, Building an American Empire, 205–18.

289. The choices they made did not inevitably produce the consequences they desired. Frymer, Paul, “‘A Rush and a Push and the Land Is Ours’: Territorial Expansion, Land Policy, and U.S. State Formation,” Perspectives on Politics 12, no. 1 (2014): 119–44, 135CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Frymer, Building an American Empire, 14–16, 176.

290. King and Smith, “‘Without Regard to Race.”’

291. Tushnet, Mark, “The Politics of Equality in Constitutional Law: The Equal Protection Clause, Dr. Du Bois, and Charles Hamilton Houston,” The Journal of American History 74, no. 3 (1987): 884903, 889CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

292. Fredrickson, The Black Image in the White Mind, 269.

293. Wilmer, Charles Breckinridge, “Proposed Solutions of the Race Problem,” The Forensic Quarterly 1, no. 3 (1910): 145177, 157, 160–64Google Scholar; Winston, Robert, “A Century of Law in North Carolina,” North Carolina Reports: Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court, vol. 176, ed. Strong, Robert C. (Raleigh, NC: Mitchell Printing, 1919), 787Google Scholar; “Comment,” Harper's Weekly, July 18, 1903, 1177; Watkins, Edgar, “Should the Legal Status of the Negro Be Changed?Proceedings of the Twenty-Sixth Annual Session of the Texas Bar Association (Austin, TX: Von-Boeckmann-Jones, 1907): 114–20, 118–19Google Scholar; Louis B. Wehle, “Isolating the Negro,” The New Republic (November 27, 1915), 88–90; Stone, Alfred H., “Is Race Friction between Blacks and Whites in the United States Growing and Inevitable?American Journal of Sociology 13, no. 5 (1908): 676697, 682CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Gardiner, C. A., “The Race Problem in the United States,” Journal of Social Science 18 (1884): 266–75, 273Google Scholar; Miller, Kelly, “The Modern Land of Goshen,” The Southern Workman 29, no. 11 (1900): 601607, 602Google Scholar; Mecklin, John M., Democracy and Race Friction: A Study in Social Ethics (New York: Macmillan, 1914)Google Scholar.

294. Wilmer, “Proposed Solutions of the Race Problem,” 173; Ray Stannard Baker, “Negro Suffrage in a Democracy,” The Atlantic 106 (November, 1910): 612–19. For an excellent account of how “leading men” could seek to reform the Jim Crow state even as they sustained its basic premises, see Johnson, Kimberley S., Reforming Jim Crow: Southern Politics and State in the Age before Brown (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2010)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

295. Winston, George T., “The Relation of the Whites to the Negroes,” The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 18 (July 1901): 105–18, 117CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

296. Wilmer, “Proposed Solutions of the Race Problem,” 162.

297. Segregation had the advantage of retaining a subordinate working class, making it acceptable to a broader range of opinion. T. Lothrop Stoddard endorsed what he called “biracialism,” an intensified form of segregation, but held colonization in reserve as an alternative. Vitalis, Robert, White World Order, Black Power Politics: The Birth of American International Relations (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2015), 6566Google Scholar.

298. Blatt, Jessica, Race and the Making of American Political Science (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For an example of political theories developing through transnational channels, see Adalet, Begüm, Hotels and Highways: The Construction of Modernization Theory in Cold War Turkey (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2018)Google Scholar.