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Evangelicals and politics in antebellum America

Title
Evangelicals and politics in antebellum America / Richard J. Carwardine.
ISBN
9780300239324
0300239327
0300054130
9780300054132
0870499742
9780870499746
Publication
New Haven : Yale University Press, ©1993.
Physical Description
1 online resource (xx, 487 pages)
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
This book seeks to fill one of the great gaps in American historical writing by examining the relationship between evangelical Protestant piety and political life in the critical twenty years before the Civil War. It is the first study directly to address the question of how effectively evangelicals engaged in secular politics, how far they fashioned American political culture and party development, and how instrumental they were in shaping the lines of sectional antagonism. Using voluminous public and private sources, Carwardine explores the complex character of the evangelical movement and its remarkable impact during the early years of the world's first mass political parties. He reveals how evangelicals, both in the North and the South, reinforced the drive towards two-party, adversarial politics by encouraging voting and responsible citizenship, pressuring politicians, and forcing questions of education, Indian removal, war, drink, and above all, slavery, onto the political agenda. He shows how religious loyalties affected everyday political behavior and voting habits, and how the evangelical view of church and state shaped party affiliation and influenced the break-up of the party system in the early to mid-1850s. This book goes further than any previous work to argue - convincingly and thoroughly - that religion was the coin of politics in the antebellum period, and that the roots of the Civil War lay in religious as well as secular factors. Religion furnished the vocabulary, the platform and the speakers for political debate, and by 1861 the ethical perceptions of hundreds of thousands of Americans had fused with their material ambitions to define their party loyalty. In the two halves of the Union, evangelicals offered very different solutions to the question of how to be a citizen of the Republic. But all addressed the same God and believed Him to be on their side.
Variant and related titles
Books at JSTOR. OCLC KB.
Other formats
Print version: Carwardine, Richard. Evangelicals and politics in antebellum America. New Haven : Yale University Press, ©1993
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
July 30, 2019
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 440-461) and index.
Contents
Protestant evangelicals in an age of mass political parties
Presidential electioneering and the appeal to evangelicals : 1840
Presidential electioneering and the appeal to evangelicals : 1844 and 1848
Patterns of electoral response : evangelicals and partisan allegiance during the second party system
Evangelicals, slavery, and sectionalism in the 1840s
Evangelicals and the resolution of political crisis, 1850-52
The collapse of the second party system : Protestant insurgents and know nothing millennialism
The emergence of the third party system : evangelicals and sectional antagonism, 1854-56
Houses divided : evangelical churches and the sundering of the union, 1857-61
Conclusion : "God prosper the right."
Genre/Form
Church history.
History.
Citation

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