The Great Conspiracy, Volume 4

audiobook

The Great Conspiracy, Volume 4

by John Alexander Logan

EN·~2 hours

Chapters

Description

The book plunges listeners into the turbulent first years of the Civil War, when the very notion of emancipation was being wrestled with in the halls of Congress, the war rooms of generals, and the streets of contested border states. It follows a cast of familiar figures—Lincoln, Sherman, McClellan, and countless legislators—as they argue over constitutional authority, military necessity, and the moral urgency of ending slavery. Through vivid excerpts from speeches, letters, and proclamations, the narrative shows how the conflict’s early politics were a chaotic mix of legal theory, battlefield pragmatism, and personal conviction.

Beyond the grand strategies, the story captures the human dimension of a nation on the brink of transformation. Listeners hear the raw urgency in debates about compensated emancipation, the clash between radical abolitionists and cautious politicians, and the uneasy compromises forced upon border‑state leaders. The work paints a nuanced portrait of a country wrestling with its conscience, setting the stage for the profound changes that will follow.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (164K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Widger

Release date

2004-06-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

John Alexander Logan

John Alexander Logan

1826–1886

A fiery Civil War general and influential Illinois politician, he moved from the battlefield to Congress and became one of the most prominent public figures of his era. He is also closely linked with the early national remembrance of Union soldiers after the war.

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