The Field of Blood

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The Field of Blood Page 61

by Joanne B. Freeman


  see also slave power

  Rhett, Robert Barnwell

  Richardson, William

  Richmond Enquirer

  Richmond Whig

  ridicule, see humor

  right of petition

  Rip-Raps

  Rivers, Thomas

  Rives, Alexander

  Rives, Francis

  Rives, John C.

  Robinson, Charles

  Root, Joseph

  Rousseau, Lovell

  Rousseau-Grinnell fight

  rules of order:

  and Benton-Foote conflict

  and Compromise of 1850

  and “Crime Against Kansas” speech

  French as expert on

  and gag rule debate

  and honor code

  in House vs. Senate

  and Manual of Parliamentary Practice

  personal explanations

  purpose of

  and Speaker role

  as weapon

  Rust, Albert

  Sargent, John Turner

  Schaumburg, James W.

  Scott, Winfield

  Seaton, William

  secession

  secession threats, see disunion threats

  sectional degradation

  sectional differences:

  and bullying

  Congress’s intensification of

  and dueling

  and patterns of violence

  sectional distrust

  sectionalism

  sectional rights:

  and Cilley-Graves duel

  and Compromise of 1850

  and disunion threats

  and gag rule debate

  and Kansas-Nebraska Act

  Northern rights

  Southern rights

  and Sumner caning

  and weapon-wearing

  see also honor code

  sectional tensions:

  as crisis of communication

  late 1850s heightening of

  rise of

  see also specific issues

  self-defense

  Seminole War

  Senate, U.S.

  conditions in

  and disunion threats

  and gag rule debate

  interaction tone in

  rules of order in

  see also Sumner caning

  Seward, William

  Sherman, John

  Slade, William

  slaveholders:

  as angry at antislavery advocacy

  and Bleeding Kansas

  conversation with

  power of

  violent culture of

  see also bullying; specific people

  Slave Power

  slavery:

  British abolition of

  fear of slave insurrections

  implicit violence of

  petitions

  as root of congressional violence

  telegraph complications of

  in Washington, D.C.

  see also antislavery advocacy; Northern appeasement of Southerners; slaveholders

  slavocrats/slavocracy

  slavery expansion

  see also Kansas-Nebraska Act; Missouri Compromise

  Smith, F.O.J.

  Smith, Perry

  Smith, Samuel

  Smith, William “Extra Billy”

  “Song for Certain Congressmen” (Dough-face Song; Whitman)

  sources

  Southern Address

  Southern advantages

  Southern culture, see sectional differences

  Southerners in Congress

  see also bullies

  Speaker

  Stanbery, William

  Stanly, Edward, in Wise conflict

  Stephens, Alexander

  Stevens, Thaddeus

  street fights

  Sumner, Charles

  see also Sumner caning

  Sumner caning (1856)

  and anti-dueling law

  and Bleeding Kansas

  and bullying

  congressional responses to

  and “Crime Against Kansas” speech

  and duel challenges

  and fairness expectations

  and free speech

  impact of

  investigation

  location of

  moderate responses to

  press coverage of

  public responses to

  and Republican Party

  scholarship on

  Swanson, John

  Swisshelm, Jane

  telegraph

  Texas

  annexation of (1845)

  “Then Let the Union Slide” (French)

  Thirty-sixth Congress

  duel challenges

  speakership election (1859)

  Sumner “Barbarism of Slavery” speech

  weapon-wearing

  Thompson, Waddy

  threats, see bullying

  Three-fifths Compromise

  tobacco chewing

  Toombs, Robert

  Trumbull, Lyman

  Tuck, Amos

  Turney, Hopkins

  Tyler, John

  Union:

  and Compromise of 1850

  Congress as symbol of

  emotional power of

  and French’s political transition

  and gag rule debate

  and Jackson

  nature of

  as pact

  and Republican Party

  and sectional rights

  Washington, D.C., as symbol of

  United States Magazine and Democratic Review, The

  Utah Territory

  Vanity Fair (magazine)

  Van Wyck, Charles

  Virginia Sentinel

  “Vision, A” (French)

  vote calls

  Wade, Benjamin

  Wallach, William “Dug”

  Walsh, Mike

  War of 1812

  Washburn, Cadwallader

  Washburn, Israel

  Washburne, Elihu

  Washington, D.C.

  alcohol in

  black residents of

  character of

  and Congress

  French’s arrival in

  and sectional diversity

  slavery in

  Southern culture of

  symbolism of

  with Southerners gone

  and women

  Washington, Lund, Jr.

  Washington Telegraph

  Washington Union

  weapons

  Webb, James Watson:

  and bullying

  and Cilley-Graves duel

  in Gholson conflict

  in Marshall duel

  and Sumner caning

  Webster, Daniel:

  and conventional image of Congress

  death of

  and duel challenges

  and gallery-sitters

  oratory of

  and press

  wine cellar of

  Weld, Theodore Dwight

  Weller, John B.

  Wentworth, John “Long John”

  Whig Party:

  and Cilley-Graves duel

  and financial panics

  formation of

  and Jackson

  and Northern appeasement of Southerners

  and presidential campaign (1852)

  and rules of order

  and Wilmot Proviso

  see also Northern appeasement of Southerners

  White House

  Whitman, Walt

  Whitney, Reuben M.

  Whittier, John Greenleaf

  Wick, William

  Wigfall, Louis

  Wilmot Proviso (1846)

  Wilson, Henry

  Winthrop, Robert

  Wirt, John

  Wise, Charlotte

  Wise, Henry

  and alcohol

  and Bell-Jarvis conflict

  on Benton

  as b
ully

  character of

  in Cilley conflict

  and Cilley-Graves duel

  and Compromise of 1850

  death of

  on dueling

  and 1852 presidential campaign

  and gag rule debate

  and gallery-sitters

  and Gholson conflict

  and honor code

  as political combatant

  and Peyton-Whitney fight

  and Pierce

  and Reconstruction

  reelection of

  resignation of

  and rules of order

  and speakership conflict of 1859

  in Stanly conflict

  and Sumner caning

  and Whig Party

  Withington, William

  women:

  as gallery-sitters

  and petitioning

  and the press

  and sectional differences

  and Sumner caning

  and Washington, D.C.

  and working conditions

  Woodward, Joseph

  words, dangerous

  see also free speech

  working conditions, see congressional working conditions

  Wright, Augustus

  Yancey, William Lowndes

  Young, Don

  ALSO BY JOANNE B. FREEMAN

  Affairs of Honor: National Politics in the New Republic

  Alexander Hamilton: Writings

  The Essential Hamilton: Letters & Other Writings

  A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Joanne B. Freeman, a professor of history and American studies at Yale University, is a leading authority on early national politics and political culture. The author of the award-winning Affairs of Honor: National Politics in the New Republic and editor of The Essential Hamilton and Alexander Hamilton: Writings, she is a cohost of the popular history podcast BackStory. You can sign up for email updates here.

  Thank you for buying this

  Farrar, Straus and Giroux ebook.

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  CONTENTS

  Frontispiece

  Title Page

  Copyright Notice

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  List of Illustrations

  Author’s Note

  Introductions: Tobacco-Stained Rugs and Benjamin Brown French

  1.  The Union Incarnate for Better and Worse: The United States Congress

  2.  The Mix of Men in Congress: Meeting Place of North and South

  3.  The Pull and Power of Violence: The Cilley-Graves Duel (1838)

  4.  Rules of Order and the Rule of Force: Dangerous Words and the Gag Rule Debate (1836–44)

  5.  Fighting for the Union: The Compromise of 1850 and the Benton-Foote Scuffle (1850)

  6.  A Tale of Two Conspiracies: The Power of the Press and the Battle over Kansas (1854–55)

  7.  Republicans Meet the Slave Power: Charles Sumner and Beyond (1855–61)

  Epilogue: “I Witnessed It All”

  Appendix A. A Word About Words: Party Abbreviations and Sectional Loyalties

  Appendix B. A Note on Method: Constructing Fights and Deconstructing Emotions

  Notes

  Selected Bibliography

  Acknowledgments

  Index

  Also by Joanne B. Freeman

  A Note About the Author

  Copyright

  Farrar, Straus and Giroux

  175 Varick Street, New York 10014

  Copyright © 2018 by Joanne B. Freeman

  All rights reserved

  First edition, 2018

  E-book ISBN: 978-0-374-71761-2

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  Frontispiece: The caning of Sumner; detail of a print from the presidential election of 1856 (Courtesy of the Library of Congress)

 

 

 


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