Lincoln, Evil? Our Certainties of 1865 Give Us Pause Today
by Martin Kettle
The Guardian
Mention the
American civil war in Britain today and you are likely to encounter
something close to a unanimity of views. The north were the goodies.
The south were the baddies. The northern states had history and
right on their side, whether on slavery and race or on the question
of maintaining the union. The south, by extension, was wrong and
against history on both counts. So, in short, the right side won.
Moreover, in Abraham Lincoln the federal side had one of the greatest
leaders America has ever produced, the man who rose to the occasion
in deeds and words to save his country, and whose murder was one
of the greatest calamities in the republic's history.
Those are almost
certainly, in broad terms, the views of the conflict held by most
readers outside parts of the American south, just as they are, equally
broadly, my own. They are indeed the official version. Happily,
there is a good amount of truth in them. Yet not only was the civil
war less straightforward than this benign retrospective view suggests,
it was also a much more divisive conflict in Britain than the received
pro-northern and anti-southern consensus lets us see. The imminent
150th anniversary of the start of the war is a good time to venture
out of our comfort zone.
The best recent
guide to a historically informed approach is Amanda Foreman's book
A
World on Fire. Foreman stumbled on her subject while researching
her bestselling 1999 biography of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire.
In the family archives she discovered that the heir to the Devonshire
title later the eighth duke had spent Christmas Day
1862 making eggnog for Robert E Lee's Confederate cavalry officers
in Virginia.
This Devonshire
heir, though, was not some deranged rightwing romantic but one of
the pillars of Victorian Liberalism. As Lord Hartington, he served
in Gladstone's first two Liberal cabinets, introduced the secret
ballot into British law, pulled troops out of Afghanistan in the
1880s, was leader of the Liberal party in opposition, nearly became
PM, and finally broke with Gladstone over home rule for Ireland,
becoming leader of the breakaway Liberal Unionists an irony
for a man who had sided with the Confederates 20 years previously.
Yet as Foreman
shows, Hartington's support for the south was anything but unusual
among liberal and progressive 1860s Britain. This country was almost
as torn over the civil war as Americans themselves. Many went to
fight. The war even crossed the Atlantic, with a battle between
Union and Confederate ships in the Channel in 1864. The political
parties, and Lord Palmerston's Whig government, were split down
the middle over the issues. And the battle for British public opinion
was hard-fought, too.
Which raises
the question of where the Guardian stood. Surely the paper, every
bit as much a pillar of Victorian Liberalism as Lord Hartington,
was solid in the union cause? So you might think, if you only read
history through the eyes of the present. Yet the Manchester Guardian
was as conflicted as many others of progressive views and
some of those inner conflicts of view have resonance even today.
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the rest of the article
February
28, 2011
Copyright
© 2011 The
Guardian
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