Wade, what do you think would have been the result had Lincoln not taken the steps he did? Would the war have lasted longer or ended sooner?
Originally Posted by: PackFanWithTwins
Sorry, PFWT...been away and just saw your question.
1. I don't think the decision to suspend habeas corpus did anything to change the length of the war, any more than I think the internment of Japanese-Americans did anything for the prosecution of the war against Tojo and the Emperor of Japan.
2. The compromises he made with respect to slavery....that's a much harder call. The reality was that without the war, slavery would likely have remained for at least another 2-3 decades. And given the efficiency parallels between plantation slavery in the South and industrial capitalism of the corporate sort that came on the scene later in the 19th century, the lack of actual Southern abolition in 1865 could conceivably have made expansion of slavery more attractive in the North. Without the military victory against the south providing the exclamation point to the argument about the evil of the defeated institution ("victory shows essential evil of slavery"), northern industrialists seeking profit might well have taken steps to expand slave labor.
I simply don't know enough about the political dynamic in the north -- how powerful were those who didn't want emancipation in the north, how much influence did they have over war appropriations, etc. I just don't know.
I do know, however, that the best evidence that compares the material conditions of free labor in the north and of plantation slaves in the south suggests that in every economic sense other than their abilities to choose their place of employment and to move from one geographic location to another, the average working and living conditions of free industrial labor in the north were
no better than the average working and living conditions of plantation slaves in the south in 1861. Industrialists of the North in the nineteenth century were at least as Dickensian in their on-the-job treatment and pay of their workers than were plantation owners, and in many cases worse.
Popular tale-telling loves to point fingers at the life of laboring classes under Rockefeller and the other "robber barons" of the late 19th century. But the industrialists of the North in 1860 were worse. And part of the reason was that, despite corporate models that draw heavily on the organizational efficiencies demonstrated by ante-bellum plantations, Rockefeller et al could not adopt the full slave model because in their victory over the South, Lincoln, Grant, and the rest demonstrated not military superiority but moral superiority.
It's a truly complicated counterfactual question you ask and I don't have a good answer. The compromises Lincoln made with respect to those northern slaves may have been politically necessary. And, in the long run, the North won. Lincoln was a politician and he was successful.
But that doesn't make him a "great" president. Great presidents (e.g., Washington) find ways to transcend the ways of political success that "need" the moral hypocrisy far more than Lincoln did.
Great presidents find ways better than Machiavelli, better than realpolitick.
Lincoln could not.
He was successful. He deserves credit for helping eliminate the legitimacy of the "peculiar institution". He does not deserve a place on coins and Mt. Rushmore and half of the "President's Day" holiday.
IMO.
And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
Romans 12:2 (NKJV)