“A knife sharp enough to divide us”: William H. Seward, Abraham Lincoln, and black colonization

This article explores William H. Seward's opposition to Abraham Lincoln's pursuit of black colonization (resettlement) during the American Civil War. Although the existing literature has shown a cursory awareness of the two men's differences over that policy, scholars have failed to a...

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Main Author: Page, S
Format: Journal article
Published: Oxford University Press 2016
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description This article explores William H. Seward's opposition to Abraham Lincoln's pursuit of black colonization (resettlement) during the American Civil War. Although the existing literature has shown a cursory awareness of the two men's differences over that policy, scholars have failed to appreciate the full force of what was easily the strongest point of disagreement between the president and his secretary of state. Drawing on archival research from three countries, this article explains why Seward opposed colonization. It charts how wartime colonization policy evolved and investigates why even Seward could discern some merit in the idea during the early part of the war. Above all, it demonstrates the dilemmas faced by a would-be saboteur of the presidential will, as well as the unintended consequences that can arise from an administrator's well-meaning interventions in policymaking.
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spelling oxford-uuid:c3d606d6-4d9c-45b5-81e6-24dd969ac9ab2022-03-27T06:19:31Z“A knife sharp enough to divide us”: William H. Seward, Abraham Lincoln, and black colonizationJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:c3d606d6-4d9c-45b5-81e6-24dd969ac9abSymplectic Elements at OxfordOxford University Press2016Page, SThis article explores William H. Seward's opposition to Abraham Lincoln's pursuit of black colonization (resettlement) during the American Civil War. Although the existing literature has shown a cursory awareness of the two men's differences over that policy, scholars have failed to appreciate the full force of what was easily the strongest point of disagreement between the president and his secretary of state. Drawing on archival research from three countries, this article explains why Seward opposed colonization. It charts how wartime colonization policy evolved and investigates why even Seward could discern some merit in the idea during the early part of the war. Above all, it demonstrates the dilemmas faced by a would-be saboteur of the presidential will, as well as the unintended consequences that can arise from an administrator's well-meaning interventions in policymaking.
spellingShingle Page, S
“A knife sharp enough to divide us”: William H. Seward, Abraham Lincoln, and black colonization
title “A knife sharp enough to divide us”: William H. Seward, Abraham Lincoln, and black colonization
title_full “A knife sharp enough to divide us”: William H. Seward, Abraham Lincoln, and black colonization
title_fullStr “A knife sharp enough to divide us”: William H. Seward, Abraham Lincoln, and black colonization
title_full_unstemmed “A knife sharp enough to divide us”: William H. Seward, Abraham Lincoln, and black colonization
title_short “A knife sharp enough to divide us”: William H. Seward, Abraham Lincoln, and black colonization
title_sort a knife sharp enough to divide us william h seward abraham lincoln and black colonization
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