The American Party Battle: Election Campaign Pamphlets, 1828-1876

The nineteenth century was the heyday of furious contention between American political parties, and Joel Silbey has recaptured the drama and substance of those battles in a representative sampling of party pamphlets. Political parties mapped the landscape of electoral and ideological warfare, constructing images of themselves and of their adversaries that resonate and echo the basic characteristics of America’s then reigning sets of ideas. The nature of political controversy, as well as the substance of politics, is embedded in these party documents which both united and divided Americans. Unlike today’s party platforms, these pamphlets explicated real issues and gave insight into the society at large. Andrew Jackson’s Democrats, Millard Fillmore’s Whigs, Abraham Lincoln’s Republicans, and other, lesser-known parties are represented here. The pamphlets demonstrate how, for this fifty-year period, political parties were surrogates for American demands and values. Broad in scope, widely circulated, catalysts for heated debate over the decades, these pamphlets are important documents in the history of American politics.

In an excellent Introduction, Silbey teases out and elucidates the themes each party stressed and took as its own in its fight for the soul of the nation.

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The American Party Battle: Election Campaign Pamphlets, 1828-1876

The nineteenth century was the heyday of furious contention between American political parties, and Joel Silbey has recaptured the drama and substance of those battles in a representative sampling of party pamphlets. Political parties mapped the landscape of electoral and ideological warfare, constructing images of themselves and of their adversaries that resonate and echo the basic characteristics of America’s then reigning sets of ideas. The nature of political controversy, as well as the substance of politics, is embedded in these party documents which both united and divided Americans. Unlike today’s party platforms, these pamphlets explicated real issues and gave insight into the society at large. Andrew Jackson’s Democrats, Millard Fillmore’s Whigs, Abraham Lincoln’s Republicans, and other, lesser-known parties are represented here. The pamphlets demonstrate how, for this fifty-year period, political parties were surrogates for American demands and values. Broad in scope, widely circulated, catalysts for heated debate over the decades, these pamphlets are important documents in the history of American politics.

In an excellent Introduction, Silbey teases out and elucidates the themes each party stressed and took as its own in its fight for the soul of the nation.

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The American Party Battle: Election Campaign Pamphlets, 1828-1876

The American Party Battle: Election Campaign Pamphlets, 1828-1876

The American Party Battle: Election Campaign Pamphlets, 1828-1876

The American Party Battle: Election Campaign Pamphlets, 1828-1876

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Overview

The nineteenth century was the heyday of furious contention between American political parties, and Joel Silbey has recaptured the drama and substance of those battles in a representative sampling of party pamphlets. Political parties mapped the landscape of electoral and ideological warfare, constructing images of themselves and of their adversaries that resonate and echo the basic characteristics of America’s then reigning sets of ideas. The nature of political controversy, as well as the substance of politics, is embedded in these party documents which both united and divided Americans. Unlike today’s party platforms, these pamphlets explicated real issues and gave insight into the society at large. Andrew Jackson’s Democrats, Millard Fillmore’s Whigs, Abraham Lincoln’s Republicans, and other, lesser-known parties are represented here. The pamphlets demonstrate how, for this fifty-year period, political parties were surrogates for American demands and values. Broad in scope, widely circulated, catalysts for heated debate over the decades, these pamphlets are important documents in the history of American politics.

In an excellent Introduction, Silbey teases out and elucidates the themes each party stressed and took as its own in its fight for the soul of the nation.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674043633
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 07/01/2009
Series: John Harvard Library Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 549 KB

About the Author

Joel H. Silbey is President White Professor of History, Cornell University.

Table of Contents

Contents Preface Acknowledgments Introduction: Defining the Soul of the Nation Part Three: New Issues and Parties: Americans, Republicans, and Divided Democrats, 1854—1860 10. A Few Considerations for Reflecting Voters (New York, 1855?) 11. The Parties of the Day. Speech of William H. Seward at Auburn, October 21, 1856 (Washington, 1857) 12. The Conspiracy to Break Up the Union. The Plot and Its Development. Breckinridge and Lane the Candidates of a Disunion Party (Washington, 1860) 13 Salient Points of the Campaign. A Tract Issued by the Ill[inois] Republican State Central Committee (Springfield, 1860) Part Four: The Culmination of the Battle for the Soul of America, 1861–1876 14. An Address to the People of the States, and Particularly to the People of the States Which Adhere to the Federal Government (Washington, 1864) 15. “Union” on Dis-Union Principles! The Chicago Platform, McClellan’s Letter of Acceptance, and Pendleton's Haskin Letter, Reviewed and Exposed. A Speech Delivered by Abram Wakeman, of New York, at Greenfield Hill, Conn., Nov. 3, 1864 (New York, 1864) 16. Modern Philanthropy Illustrated. How They Tried to Make a White Man of a Negro Twenty Five Hundred Years Ago. Will Better Success Attend the Experiment Now? (n.p., 1868) 17. The Three Secession Movements in the United States. Samuel J.Tilden . . . the Adviser, Aider, and Abettor of the Great Secession Movement of 1860 . . . His Claims as a Statesman and Reformer Considered (Boston, 1876)
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