What Hath God Wrought (157 page)

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Authors: Daniel Walker Howe

Tags: #History, #United States, #19th Century, #Americas (North; Central; South; West Indies), #Modern, #General, #Religion

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77. William Lee Miller,
Arguing Against Slavery
(New York, 1996), 115–19; Lonnie Maness, “Henry Clay and the Problem of Slavery” (Ph.D. diss., Memphis State University, 1980), 153–61; Daniel Wirls, “The Overlooked Senate Gag Rule,”
JER
27 (2007): 115–38.
 
 
78. George Rable, “Slavery, Politics, and the South,”
Capitol Studies
3 (1975): 69–87.
 
 
79. Quoted in Miller,
Arguing Against Slavery
, 356.
 
 
80. Ibid., 321, 230, 271;
Speech of John Quincy Adams upon the Right of the People, Men and Women, to Petition
(Washington, 1838), 64–81. See further Susan Zaeske,
Signatures of Citizenship
(Chapel Hill, 2003).
 
 
81. On Adams and public opinion, see Richard R. John, “John Quincy Adams” in
Reader’s Companion to the American Presidency
, ed. Alan Brinkley and Davis Dyer (Boston, 2000), 83–90.
 
 
82. Dwight Dumond,
Antislavery
(Ann Arbor, Mich., 1961), 245–46; Edward Magdol,
The Antislavery Rank and File
(Westport, Conn., 1986), 55–56.
 
 
83. George Klos, “Blacks and the Seminole Removal Debate,”
Florida Historical Quarterly
68 (1989): 55–78.
 
 
84. Thomas Jesup to Roger Jones, March 6, 1837, quoted in Kevin Mulroy,
Freedom on the Border: The Seminole Maroons
(Lubbock, Tex., 1993), 29.
 
 
85. Journal entry for Nov. 4, 1840, in Ethan Allen Hitchcock,
Fifty Years in Camp and Field
, ed. W. A. Croffut (New York, 1909), 122.
 
 
86. John K. Mahon,
History of the Second Seminole War
(Gainesville, Fla., 1991), 214–18, 237.
 
 
87. James Covington,
The Seminoles of Florida
(Gainesville, Fla., 1993), 108–9.
 
 
88. Jill Watts says that records show nine hundred blacks registered for removal, and since only five hundred reached Oklahoma, most likely the others were sold. “Seminole Black Perceptions and the Second Seminole War,”
UCLA Historical Journal
7 (1986): 23. Certainly some were returned to white or Creek Indian masters.
 
 
89. Covington,
Seminoles of Florida
, 72.
 
 
90. Niven,
Martin Van Buren
, 465–66, 674 n. 42.
 
 
91. Gerald Craig,
Upper Canada: The Formative Years
(1963; Toronto, 1984), 241–51; Colin Read,
The Rising in Western Upper Canada
(Toronto, 1982).
 
 
92. For Van Buren’s perspective, see Wilson,
Presidency of Van Buren
, 157–62; Cole,
Martin Van Buren
, 321–25.
 
 
93. Albert Corey,
The Crisis of 1830–1842 in Canadian–American Relations
(New Haven, 1941), 121.
 
 
94. The fullest account of all these events is Kenneth Stevens,
Border Diplomacy
(Tuscaloosa, Ala., 1989). See also Reginald Stuart,
United States Expansionism and British North America
(Chapel Hill, 1988), 126–47.
 
 
95. The following account is based largely on Howard Jones,
Mutiny on the Amistad
, rev. ed. (New York, 1988), with additional information from Arthur Abraham,
The Amistad Revolt
(Freetown, Sierra Leone, 1987).
 
 
96. On legal aspects of the case, see Don Fehrenbacher,
The Slaveholding Republic
(New York, 2001), 191–95; on Van Buren’s role in it, see Wilson,
Presidency of Van Buren
, 155–56.
 
 
97.
Argument of John Quincy Adams, Before the Supreme Court of the United States, in the Case of the United States, Appellants, vs. Cinque, and Others, Africans
(New York, 1841).
 
 
98.
United States v. Claimants of the Amistad
, 40 U.S. (15 Peters) 518 (1841).
 
 
99. Cinque, Kinna, and Kale to John Quincy Adams, Nov. 6, 1841, in John Blassingame, ed.,
Slave Testimony: Two Centuries of Letters, Speeches, Interviews, and Autobiographies
(Baton Rouge, 1977), 42–43.
 
 
100. The assertion made by some historians that Cinque became a slave trader after his return home rests on no evidence. See Howard Jones, “Cinque of the
Amistad
a Slave Trader? Perpetuating a Myth,”
JAH
87 (2000): 923–39.
 
 
101. Wilson,
Presidency of Van Buren
, 154.
 
 
102.
Congressional Globe
, 27th Cong., 3rd sess. (Aug. 19, 1842), appendix, 103.
 
 
1. Quotations from
The Autobiography of John Ball
(Grand Rapids, Mich., 1925), 7, 13, 14, 16. See also Joyce Appleby,
Inheriting the Revolution
(Cambridge, Mass., 2000), 59–62.
 
 
2. Bureau of the Census,
Historical Statistics of the United States
(Washington, 1975), I, 11–12.
 
 
3. Winifred Rothenberg,
From Market-Places to a Market Economy
(Chicago, 1992), 244; David R. Meyer,
Roots of American Industrialization
(Baltimore, 2003), 36.
 
 
4. Edwin G. Burrows and Mike Wallace,
Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898
(New York, 1999), 735–37; Sean Wilentz,
Chants Democratic: New York City and the Rise of the American Working Class
(New York, 1984), 109.
 
 
5. Mary Ryan,
Civic Wars: Democracy and Public Life in the American City during the Nineteenth Century
(Berkeley, 1997), 22.
 
 
6. See Meinig,
Continental America
, 352–74.
 
 
7. The murder rate in pre–Civil War New York City (the only American place for which we have a comprehensive modern study) was lower than at the end of the twentieth century, though it rose in times of major riots; Eric Monkkonen,
Murder in New York City
(Berkeley, 2001), 12–19.
 
 
8. Michael Kaplan, “New York City Tavern Violence and the Creation of a Working. Class Male Identity,”
JER
15 (1995): 591–617, quotations from 617, 595.
 
 
9. J. F. Richardson,
The New York Police
(New York, 1970), 25–27; Christine Stansell,
City of Women
(New York, 1986), 171–92; Patricia Cline Cohen,
The Murder of Helen Jewett
(New York, 1998), 74, 111; Timothy Gilfoyle,
City of Eros
(New York, 1992), 29–61.
 
 
10. Edward Baptist, “Rape, Commodification, and the Domestic Slave Trade in the United States,”
AHR
106 (2001): 1619–50.
 
 
11. See, e.g., Amy Greenberg,
Cause for Alarm: The Volunteer Fire Department in the Nineteenth Century
(Princeton, 1998); Bruce Laurie, “Fire Companies and Gangs in Southwark,” in
Peoples of Philadelphia
, ed. Allen Davis and Mark Haller (Philadelphia, 1973), 71–88.
 
 
12. Burrows and Wallace,
Gotham
, 596–98; Maureen Ogle,
All the Modern Conveniences
(Baltimore, 1996) 36.
 
 
13. George Rogers Taylor,
The Transportation Revolution
(New York, 1951), 390–92; Ryan,
Civic Wars
, 40.
 
 
14. Demonstrated statistically from the records of Pennsylvania men who served in the Civil War by Timothy Cuff,
The Hidden Cost of Economic Development
(Burlington, Vt., 2005).
 
 
15. Robert Fogel, “Nutrition and the Decline in Mortality Since 1700,” in
Long-term Factors in American Economic Growth
, ed. Stanley Engerman and Robert Gallman (Chicago, 1986), Table 9.A.1; Taylor,
Transportation Revolution
, 392.
 
 
16. Charles Dickens,
American Notes,
ed. John Whitley and Arnold Goldman (1842; Harmondsworth, Eng., 1972), 137–38. See also Tyler Anbinder,
Five Points
(New York, 2001).
 
 
17. Economists have termed this factor a “bribe” to attract workers to accept the health risks of city life; Robert Fogel,
The Escape from Hunger and Premature Death
(Cambridge, Eng., 2004), 35, 131–33.
 
 
18. James Cassedy,
Medicine and American Growth
(Madison, Wisc., 1986), 197.
 
 
19. Cf. Joyce Appleby,
Inheriting the Revolution: The First Generation of Americans
(Cambridge, Mass., 2000), 170–74.
 
 
20. Whitney’s status as popular icon is embodied in Constance Green,
Eli Whitney and the Birth of American Technology
(Boston, 1956); for more sober estimates, see Merritt Roe Smith, “Eli Whitney and the American System of Manufacturing,”
Technology in America
, ed. Carroll Pursell (Washington, 1979), 49–65; Angela Lakwete,
Inventing the Cotton Gin
(Baltimore, 2003).
 
 
21. David Hounshell,
From the American System to Mass Production, 1800–1932
(Baltimore, 1984), 15–46.
 
 
22. Quoted in William Gienapp, “The Myth of Class in America,”
Journal of Policy History
6 (1994): 247.
 
 
23. See Nathan Rosenberg, “Why in America?” in
Yankee Enterprise: The Rise of the American System of Manufactures
, ed. Otto Mayr and Robert Post (Washington, 1981), 49–63; for Eli Terry, see Donald Hoke,
Ingenious Yankees
(New York, 1990), 52–99.
 
 
24.
OED
, s.v. “factory.”
 
 
25. See Kenneth Sokoloff and Zorina Khan, “The Democratization of Invention,”
Journal of Economic History
59 (1990): 363–78. Quotation from Richard D. Brown,
Modernization: The Transformation of American Life
(New York, 1976), 144.
 
 
26. Steven Usselman and Richard R. John, “Patent Politics,”
Journal of Policy History
18 (2006): 101; Kenneth Sokoloff, “Invention, Innovation, and Manufacturing Productivity Growth,” in
American Economic Growth and Standards of Living Before the Civil War
, ed. Robert Gallman and John Wallis (Chicago, 1992), 353; idem, “Patenting Activity in Early Industrial America,”
Journal of Economic History
48 (1988): 813–50.
 
 

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