The Crisis of Eighteen Hundred and Sixty-One in the Government of the United States.

audiobook

The Crisis of Eighteen Hundred and Sixty-One in the Government of the United States.

by Abel D. Streight

EN·~3 hours

Chapters

Description

This brief but powerful pamphlet captures the heated debate that erupted in 1861 as the United States faced its gravest constitutional crisis. Drawing on Andrew Jackson’s famous proclamation to the South Carolina nullifiers, as well as contemporary responses and a selection of letters from John Jay, James Madison and Alexander Hamilton, it weaves together original documents with clear commentary. The author frames the conflict as a clash between the supremacy of federal law and the notion of state‑level nullification.

Writing from a staunch Unionist perspective, the author argues that only firm enforcement of the Constitution can preserve the Republic, warning that compromise with dissenting states would only delay further violence. The work reflects the urgency of its time, urging citizens to understand the stakes for a nation of thirty‑million people whose liberty and prosperity were at risk. Listeners will gain a vivid sense of the political rhetoric and moral arguments that shaped the early days of the Civil War.

Details

Full title

The Crisis of Eighteen Hundred and Sixty-One in the Government of the United States. Its Cause, and How It Should Be Met

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (213K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net.

Release date

2012-01-11

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Abel D. Streight

Abel D. Streight

1829–1892

A Union officer turned businessman and politician, he is remembered most for the bold Civil War raid that still bears his name. His life moved from frontier America to the battlefields of the 1860s and then back into public service in Indiana.

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