Myth, Manchester, and the Battle of British Public Opinion during the American Civil War

被引:1
作者
Brown, David [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Manchester, Dept English Amer Studies & Creat Writing, Manchester, England
关键词
D O I
10.1017/S0018246X23000237
中图分类号
K [历史、地理];
学科分类号
06 ;
摘要
Manchester 'working men' approved an address in support of Abraham Lincoln's emancipation policy and the American Union at the Free Trade Hall on 31 December 1862. The US president described their gesture as 'sublime Christian heroism' when hopes of restoring the cotton supply and reopening the mills were better served by Confederate recognition. This transatlantic exchange became an integral part of the scholarly traditional interpretation that the British working class frustrated the pro-Confederate designs of the upper classes during the American Civil War. It formed the historiographical orthodoxy until revisionists countered that Lancashire workers advocated Confederate recognition. The Manchester meeting, revisionists claimed, was contrived to give the impression of working-class support for Lincoln which was, in fact, a myth. These two incompatible interpretations simplify and flatten the complexity of an event with local, national, and international ramifications. This article presents the first detailed examination of who organized the Free Trade Hall meeting and why. It moves scholarly understanding of the British public response to the American Civil War beyond its current stasis of 'traditional' versus 'revisionist' by placing the field in conversation with the recent history of radicalism and 'class' in the Victorian era.
引用
收藏
页码:818 / 841
页数:24
相关论文
共 50 条
[41]   The Alabama, British neutrality, and the American Civil War. [J].
Browning, RM .
JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY, 2006, 72 (02) :486-487
[42]   Flat Is Fair American Public Opinion on Taxes and the Myth of Egalitarianism [J].
Gaines, Brian J. .
INDEPENDENT REVIEW, 2017, 22 (01) :93-104
[43]   World War II and American Racial Politics: Public Opinion, the Presidency, and Civil Rights Advocacy. [J].
Baer, Andrew S. .
JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY, 2020, 86 (02) :521-522
[44]   Civil Rights, World War II, and US Public Opinion [J].
White, Steven .
STUDIES IN AMERICAN POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT, 2016, 30 (01) :38-61
[45]   World War II and American Racial Politics: Public Opinion, the Presidency, and Civil Rights Advocacy. [J].
Stewart, Joseph, Jr. .
CONGRESS & THE PRESIDENCY-A JOURNAL OF CAPITAL STUDIES, 2021, 48 (03) :409-410
[46]   'Our Brethren': A British Version of Southern Separatist Ideology during the American Civil War [J].
Turner, Michael J. .
BRITAIN AND THE WORLD, 2020, 13 (01) :47-68
[47]   Caution & Cooperation: The American Civil War in British-American Relations [J].
Palen, Marc-William .
BRITAIN AND THE WORLD, 2008, 1 (01) :127-128
[48]   Caution and Cooperation: The American Civil War in British-American Relations [J].
Ford, Charles H. .
HISTORIAN, 2010, 72 (04) :942-943
[49]   Caution and Cooperation: The American Civil War in British-American Relations [J].
Mitton, Steven Heath .
JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY, 2009, 75 (04) :1068-1069
[50]   The American Civil War and British The Threat of Anglo-American Conflict [J].
Carroll, Francis M. .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF HISTORY-ANNALES CANADIENNES D HISTOIRE, 2012, 47 (01) :87-115