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The South, Slavery, and More from David Lesser Antiquarian Books

The South, Slavery...etc. from David M. Lesser.


By Michael Stillman

The latest catalogue from David Lesser Fine Antiquarian Books is headed The South, Slavery, The Civil War, Reconstruction, Afro-Americana. Lesser has a knack for finding material that truly reflects its time. This catalogue is filled with the debates that took place in 19th century America, and many pertained to the most contentious and difficult issue the nation faced - slavery. The ringing words of northern abolitionists, the increasingly strident defenses of the "peculiar institution" from the South, and even the pleas of the middle-of-the-roaders who tried to find some sort of compromise, are all heard in these documents. As you read through the descriptions of so many of these works, it is hard not to feel the impending doom, a nation headed toward a cataclysmic disaster, a split so deep that nothing but brute force could ever resolve the differences. Lesser offers not just a collection of books, but a look at America dealing with an irresolvable conflict. Here are a few examples.

Item 7 is a perverse message of "hope" for slaves written by Thomas Bacon in the colonial era. It would be here reprinted in 1842 for the "Society for the Advancement of Christianity in South Carolina." The aim of this so-called "Christian" society was to convince slaves that it was in their own best interests to passively accept their fate. The book's title is Sermons by the Rev. Thomas Bacon, of Maryland, First Published in 1763. On the Duties of Servants. Bacon's thesis was that slaves were serving God just as well as the most important of leaders, and God appreciated their labors equally. Nonetheless, being slaves was the role they had been called to, and therefore they should obediently serve their masters as they would serve God. "Poor creatures! You little consider, when you are idle and neglectful of your master's business...what faults you are guilty of towards your masters and mistresses are faults against God himself." Unlike the typical slaveholder, Bacon educated his slaves, quite progressive and humanitarian for his era, and yet he hoped to use that education to convince slaves to be accepting of their status, rather than seek freedom. Priced at $500.

Popular sovereignty was a pre-war doctrine made famous by Stephen A. Douglas, Abraham Lincoln's noted protagonist. In the two decades before the Civil War, the burning issue was whether slavery would be permitted in new states being formed in the West. Popular sovereignty would have allowed residents of these states to decide for themselves, thereby avoiding rancorous fights in Congress. However, while Douglas is most associated with the principle, it was the basis of Lewis Cass's 1848 candidacy for the presidency. Democrat Cass, like Douglas, hoped to be all things to all people with this compromise. However, Whig candidate Zachary Taylor did Cass one better in being all things to all people, simply refusing to enunciate positions on the major issues of the day. Voters on all sides of the spectrum could imagine Taylor shared their own views, so they elected him over Cass. Item 39 is General Cass on the Wilmot Proviso. Cass opposed the Wilmot Proviso, which would have banned slavery in territories obtained from the Mexican Cession, in favor of popular sovereignty. His position antagonized many northern Democrats, some of whom defected to the new Free Soil party, helping assure Cass' defeat. $350.

The South, Slavery, and More from David Lesser Antiquarian Books

Popular sovereignty was not a winning ticket for Lewis Cass in 1848.


Montgomery Blair was a different sort of Republican during the era of Lincoln. From the border state of Maryland, he joined the Republicans as an opponent to the extension of slavery into the new territories. However, his concern was not the interests of the slaves. He just wanted to keep the African race out of the territories, reserving them for Whites, while removing Blacks to some overseas location. In his Address of Montgomery Blair Before the Maryland State Republican Convention, at Baltimore, April 26, 1860, he states that the Republicans must become "pre-eminently the white man's party." It took awhile, but eventually the party to a large degree adopted Blair's advice during the Nixon era. Item 23. $350.

The support slave owners received from average, poor Southerners in their cause is in many ways surprising. So many gave so much in defense of an institution that in no way benefited them personally. Perhaps this phenomenon can be best understood in terms of the fears that were encouraged by those who favored slavery. An example of those fears of black people can be seen in these Addresses Delivered Before the Virginia State Convention in 1861. A delegate from Georgia tells the assembly that if the slaves are freed, "The consequence will be that our men will be exterminated or expelled to wander as vagabonds over a hostile earth, and as for our women, their fate will be too horrible to contemplate even in fancy." Of course none of it was true, but the fear led many men who could never own a slave to go off to war and die to preserve that institution. Item 4. $375.

Here is a touching, if perhaps less than major addition to the war effort. From Baltimore, it is the By-laws of the Aged Guard of 1862. These were a bunch of old men, knowing they were too old to be soldiers, who still wanted to help the Union effort. They were over the age of 45, which might not sound that "aged" today, but this was a time when the average life span was less than 45. Item 11. $350.

David M. Lesser Fine Antiquarian Books can be reached online at www.lesserbooks.com,
phone number 203-389-8111.