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This Author: Jeffrey Rogers Hummel
This Narrator: George C. Scott
This Publisher: Blackstone Audio

The Civil War by Jeffrey Rogers Hummel

The Civil War

by Jeffrey Rogers Hummel

Title Details

Narrator
Publisher
 
Unabridged Edition
Running Time
5 Hrs.

Description

Part I

From 1861 to 1865 America was caught in the convulsions of war—The Civil War. No historical event, short of the American Revolution itself, has so deeply affected the United States.

The Civil War is often called the War between the States by Southern historians. Thus, even terminology illustrates the political question underpinning the war. Was the United States one nation, or were the United States a group of sovereign states that could choose to disassociate? If America was a union rather than a confederacy of states then the powerful North could abolish slavery and impose tariffs on the slave-holding, agricultural South. If America was a confederacy, then Southern states could preserve their institutions by withdrawing from the union.

What provoked this bloodletting? Both sides honored the same Constitution, spoke the same language and worshipped the same God. But neither side could agree of whether America was a union or a compact of states.

The United States at War Series is a collection of presentations that review the political, economic, and social forces that have erupted in military conflict.

Part II

With the advent of war, the Confederate States of America faced serious problems. The Confederate population was 9.1 million compared to the Union’s 19.1 million. The South controlled only one quarter of America’s wealth. It had half the railroad mileage of the Union, and its Navy was badly outnumbered. Nevertheless, the South was fighting a defensive war on its own soil. Military theorists agree that such a war requires a three to one superiority for an aggressor to win. Many believed the South could prevail.

Nevertheless, on April 9, 1865, General Lee surrendered what remained of his Confederate Army. But what had the North won?

The United States of America was now one nation under God. But that nation was crippled by the economic costs of war: wholesale destruction, inflation, and poverty. The political costs were no less. Abraham Lincoln had been assassinated. Southern leaders were in jail.

The Federal government had swollen in size and power. Northern politicians now began to “reconstruct” the South, to build state governments that would be loyal to the union. But the conquered South simmered with resentments that could not be legislated out of existence.

The United States at War Series is a collection of presentations that review the political, economic, and social forces that have erupted in military conflict.


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