American Mobbing 1828-1861: Toward Civil War.
Buchanan, Thomas C.
American Mobbing 1828-1861: Toward Civil War. By David Grimsted
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1998. xx plus 372pp. $65.00).
David Grimsted's groundbreaking tome, the product of over
twenty-five years of work, is a deeply considered meditation on the
relationship between mob violence and the coming of the Civil War. Using
impressive social historical research and drawing from his vast
knowledge of nineteenth-century American political history, he argues
that sectional differences in mob violence contributed to escalating
tensions between the North and the South. He shows how various types of
northern and southern mobs expressed different sectional values about
slavery and how they frustrated the efforts of moderates who wished to
avoid the brewing conflict. In the process Grimsted provides a fresh
perspective on the nation's sectional strife.
The book's arguments unfold in three distinct parts. The first
section focuses on rioting in the North. Grimsted argues that two main
types of riots were most evident in this region: mobs against
abolitionists, and those in favor of fugitive slaves. In this section he
illustrates the complex ways in which these very different kinds of
riots combined to catalyze the growth of anti-slavery sentiment in the
North. Part two, which contains perhaps the most fascinating chapters in
the book, analyzes southern mobbing. Here Grimsted focuses on the three
types of mobs that were most associated with the South: mob punishment
of alleged criminals, insurrectionary scare mobs, and mobs against those
people thought to be abolitionists. These mobs differed from northern
mobs in a number of respects. In the South mobs received less opposition
from authorities, were more likely to sadistically torture their
victims, and were more likely to kill. Their terror was, in these
respects, more powerful and complete than that of no rthern mobs. As a
result of this mob ferocity, Grimsted suggests, southerners, blacks and
white alike, were reluctant to criticize the slave regime publicly. This
stifling of dissent, he argues, allowed thoughts that slaves were
content, and that slavery was a "positive good", to define
southern public discourse. In this way southern mobs contributed to
escalating sectional tensions. Part three analyzes political
mobbing--which Grimsted defines as voting riots and rioting of political
speakers--in the North, South, and West. This section illustrates how
different sectional systems of mob violence seeped into national
politics and further heightened the looming crisis. Most interesting
here is Grimsted's interpretation of the politics of the 1850s,
particularly the rise of the Know-Nothing party. Know-Nothings, for
Grimsted, were a "beachhead" of antislavery in the South. The
Know-Nothings' anti-immigrant agenda threatened to divide the
southern polity around an issue other than race and thus they posed a
cons iderable threat to slave interests. Southern mobbing of
Know-Nothings, Grimsted argues, must be interpreted as an attempt to
stifle this potentially divisive political insurgence. Part three
climaxes in the book's final chapter which analyzes mobbing in
"bleeding" Kansas. For Grimsted the famous sectional battles
for control of the territory are best interpreted as a clash between the
nation's distinct sectional systems of violence. In Kansas, he
argues, southerners' willingness to kill enflamed northern public
opinion and edged the nation closer to civil war.
Prodigious research supports these arguments. Grimsted draws his
conclusions from a vast database of 1218 mobs compiled from all types of
available sources. (Grimsted defines mobbing as "Incidents where
six or more people band together to enforce their will publicly by
threatening or perpetrating physical injury to persons or property
extralegally, ostensibly to correct problems or injustices within their
society without challenging their basic structures."(xii)) This
database, which Grimsted promises to make available to the public, will
be a major contribution in its own right. Historians of the period will
be very well served to have available this thorough compilation of such
an important social phenomenon.
While Grimsted's research is magnificent, his awkward
presentation diminishes the overall power of his book. He alludes in his
introduction to a certain "pleasure" that his work has not
found a wide readership--an ominous and revealing comment indeed (xiv).
Grimsted is remarkably erudite on every page but the sum of his insights
is not as meaningful as the parts. Major themes sometimes get lost in
the details of his many riots. This is understandable given the often
fascinating events he uncovers but it would have been helpful if he had
adopted a more forceful, more argumentative, narrative style. A related
problem with the presentation is that he makes no effort to engage the
historiography surrounding the causes of the Civil War. Grimsted
comments that mobs "contributed substantially" to sectional
tensions (viii) and that they "would mark and deepen" (13)
sectional confrontation. But how exactly mobbing interacted with other
factors is left underarticulated. He seems to believe that slavery was
the root ca use of the conflict, and that mobbing worked in the service
of this more fundamental sectional division, but this is never firmly
worked out. One wishes Grimsted had pushed his analysis further and
argued, perhaps in his conclusion, just how crucial mobbing was to the
coming of the War.
These are minor quibbles with what is an outstanding book.
Grimsted's linkage of the violence of ordinary Americans with the
larger rupture of the nation's political system is remarkably
creative. He addresses one of the central questions in American history
and his important answers deserve widespread acclaim and continued
commentary.