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Copperhead (politics)

In the 1860s, the Copperheads, also known as Peace Democrats,[1] were a faction of the Democratic Party in the Union who opposed the American Civil War and wanted an immediate peace settlement with the Confederates.

Copperhead Democrats
Historical leadersClement Vallandigham
Alexander Long
Founded1860 (1860)
Dissolved1868 (1868)
IdeologyAnti-abolitionism
Anti-Civil War
Jacksonianism
National affiliationDemocratic Party

Republicans started labeling anti-war Democrats "Copperheads" after the eastern copperhead (Agkistrodon contortrix), a species of venomous snake. Those Democrats embraced the moniker, reinterpreting the copper "head" as the likeness of Liberty, which they cut from Liberty Head large cent coins and proudly wore as badges.[2] By contrast, Democratic supporters of the war were called War Democrats. Notable Copperheads included two Democratic Congressmen from Ohio: Reps. Clement L. Vallandigham and Alexander Long. Republican prosecutors accused some prominent Copperheads of treason in a series of trials in 1864.[3]

Copperheadism was a highly contentious grassroots movement. It had its strongest base just north of the Ohio River and in some urban ethnic wards. In the State of Ohio, perhaps in contrast with Indiana and Illinois, the counties that had Peace Democrat majorities tended not to be along the Ohio River, but more in the central and northwestern portions of the state.[4] Historians such as Wood Gray, Jennifer Weber and Kenneth M. Stampp[citation needed] have argued that it represented a traditionalistic element alarmed at the rapid modernization of society sponsored by the Republican Party and that it looked back to Jacksonian democracy for inspiration. Weber argues that the Copperheads damaged the Union war effort by opposing conscription, encouraging desertion, and forming conspiracies. Still, other historians say that the draft was already in disrepute and that the Republicans greatly exaggerated the conspiracies for partisan reasons.[5][6]

Historians such as Gray and Weber argue that the Copperheads were inflexibly rooted in the past and were naive about the refusal of the Confederates to return to the Union. Convinced that the Republicans were ruining the traditional world they loved, they were obstructionist partisans.[7] In turn, the Copperheads became a significant target of the National Union Party in the 1864 presidential election, where they were used to discredit the leading Democratic candidates.

Copperhead support increased when Union armies did poorly and decreased when they won great victories. After the fall of Atlanta in September 1864, Union military success seemed assured, and Copperheadism collapsed.

Name edit

 
The Eastern copperhead snake is venomous and has coloration well-adapted for camouflage

A possible origin of the name came from a New York Times newspaper account in April 1861 that stated that when postal officers in Washington, D.C., opened a mail bag from a state now in the Confederacy:

A day or two since, when one of the mail-bags coming from the South by way of Alexandria, was emptied in the court-yard of the Post-office, a box fell out and was broken open, – from which two copperheads, one four and a half and the other three feet long, crawled out. The larger one was benumbed and easily killed; the other was very lively and venomous, and was dispatched with some difficulty and danger. What are we to think of a people who resort to such weapons of warfare.[8][9]

Agenda edit

 
Copperhead pamphlet from 1864 by Charles Chauncey Burr, a magazine editor from New York City[10]

During the American Civil War (1861–1865), the Copperheads nominally favored the Union and strongly opposed the war, about which they faulted abolitionists. They demanded immediate peace and resisted draft laws. They wanted President Abraham Lincoln and the Republicans ousted from power, seeing the President as a tyrant destroying American republican values with despotic and arbitrary actions.[11]

Some Copperheads tried to persuade Union soldiers to desert. They talked of helping Confederate prisoners of war seize their camps and escape. They sometimes met with Confederate agents and took money. The Confederacy encouraged their activities whenever possible.[12]

Newspapers edit

The Copperheads had numerous important newspapers, but the editors never allied. In Chicago, Wilbur F. Storey made the Chicago Times into Lincoln's most vituperative enemy.[13] The New York Journal of Commerce, originally abolitionist, was sold to owners who became Copperheads, giving them an important voice in the largest city. A typical editor was Edward G. Roddy, owner of the Uniontown, Pennsylvania Genius of Liberty. He was an intensely partisan Democrat who saw African Americans as an inferior race and Lincoln as a despot and dunce. Although he supported the war effort in 1861, he blamed abolitionists for prolonging the war and denounced the government as increasingly despotic. By 1864, he was calling for peace at any price.[citation needed]

John Mullaly's Metropolitan Record was the official Catholic newspaper in New York City. Reflecting Irish American opinion, it supported the war until 1863 before becoming a Copperhead organ. In the spring and summer of 1863, the paper urged its Irish working-class readers to pursue armed resistance to the draft passed by Congress earlier in the year. When the draft began in the city, working-class European Americans, largely Irish, responded with violent riots from July 13 to 16, lynching, beating and hacking to death more than 100 black New Yorkers and burning down black-owned businesses and institutions, including the Colored Orphan Asylum, an orphanage for 233 black children. On August 19, 1864, John Mullaly was arrested for inciting resistance to the draft.

Even in an era of extremely partisan journalism, Copperhead newspapers were remarkable for their angry rhetoric. Wisconsin newspaper editor Marcus M. Pomeroy of the La Crosse Democrat referred to Lincoln as "Fungus from the corrupt womb of bigotry and fanaticism" and a "worse tyrant and more inhuman butcher than has existed since the days of Nero ... The man who votes for Lincoln now is a traitor and murderer ... And if he is elected to misgovern for another four years, we trust some bold hand will pierce his heart with dagger point for the public good".[14]

Copperhead resistance edit

 
Clement Vallandigham, leader of the Copperheads, coined the slogan: "To maintain the Constitution as it is, and to restore the Union as it was."

The Copperheads sometimes talked of violent resistance and, in some cases, started to organize. However, they never actually made an organized attack. As war opponents, Copperheads were suspected of disloyalty, and their leaders were sometimes arrested and held for months in military prisons without trial. One famous example was General Ambrose Burnside's 1863 General Order Number 38, issued in Ohio, which made it an offense (to be tried in military court) to criticize the war in any way.[15] The order was used to arrest Ohio congressman Clement L. Vallandigham when he criticized the order itself.[16] However, Lincoln commuted his sentence while requiring his exile to the Confederacy.

Probably the largest Copperhead group was the Knights of the Golden Circle. Formed in Ohio in the 1850s, it became politicized in 1861. It reorganized as the Order of American Knights in 1863 and again in early 1864 as the Order of the Sons of Liberty, with Vallandigham as its commander. One leader, Harrison H. Dodd, advocated the violent overthrow of the governments of Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky, and Missouri in 1864. Democratic Party leaders and a Federal investigation thwarted his "Northwest Conspiracy". Despite this Copperhead setback, tensions remained high. The Charleston Riot took place in Illinois in March 1864. Indiana Republicans then used the sensational revelation of an antiwar Copperhead conspiracy by elements of the Sons of Liberty to discredit Democrats in the 1864 House elections. The military trial of Lambdin P. Milligan and other Sons of Liberty revealed plans to set free the Confederate prisoners held in the state. The culprits were sentenced to hang, but the Supreme Court intervened in Ex parte Milligan, saying they should have received civilian trials.[17]

Most Copperheads actively participated in politics. On May 1, 1863, former Congressman Vallandigham declared the war was being fought not to save the Union but to free the blacks and enslave Southern whites. The U.S. Army then arrested him for declaring sympathy for the enemy. He was court-martialed by the Army and sentenced to imprisonment, but Lincoln commuted the sentence to banishment behind Confederate lines.[18] The Democrats nevertheless nominated him for governor of Ohio in 1863. He left the Confederacy and went to Canada, where he campaigned for governor but lost after an intense battle. He operated behind the scenes at the 1864 Democratic convention in Chicago. This convention adopted a largely Copperhead platform and selected Ohio Representative George Pendleton (a known Peace Democrat) as the vice-presidential candidate. However, it chose a pro-war presidential candidate, General George B. McClellan. The contradiction severely weakened the party's chances to defeat Lincoln.[citation needed]

Characteristics edit

The values of the Copperheads reflected the Jacksonian democracy of an earlier agrarian society. The Copperhead movement attracted Southerners who had settled north of the Ohio River, and the poor and merchants who had lost profitable Southern trade.[19][20] They were most numerous in border areas, including southern parts of Ohio, Illinois, and Indiana (in Missouri, comparable groups were avowed Confederates).[21]

The movement had scattered bases of support outside the lower Midwest. A Copperhead element in Connecticut dominated the Democratic Party there.[22] The Copperhead coalition included many Irish American Catholics in eastern cities, mill towns and mining camps (especially in the Pennsylvania coal fields). They were also numerous in German Catholic areas of the Midwest, especially Wisconsin.[23]

Historian Kenneth Stampp has captured the Copperhead spirit in his depiction of Congressman Daniel W. Voorhees of Indiana:

There was an earthy quality in Voorhees, "the tall sycamore of the Wabash." On the stump his hot temper, passionate partisanship, and stirring eloquence made an irresistible appeal to the western Democracy [i.e. the Democratic Party]. His bitter cries against protective tariffs and national banks, his intense race prejudice, his suspicion of the eastern Yankee, his devotion to personal liberty, his defense of the Constitution and State's rights faithfully reflected the views of his constituents. Like other Jacksonian agrarians, he resented the political and economic revolution then in progress. Voorhees idealized a way of life that he thought was being destroyed by the current rulers of his country. His bold protests against these dangerous trends made him the idol of the Democracy of the Wabash Valley.[24]

Historiography edit

Two central questions have run through the historiography of the Copperheads, i.e., "How serious a threat did they pose to the Union war effort and hence to the nation's survival?" and "to what extent and with what justification did the Lincoln administration and other Republican officials violate civil liberties to contain the perceived menace?".[25]

The first book-length scholarly treatment of the Copperheads was The Hidden Civil War: The Story of the Copperheads (1942) by Wood Gray: in it, Gray decried the "defeatism" of the Copperheads and argued that they deliberately served the Confederacy's war aims.[26] Also in 1942, George Fort Milton published Abraham Lincoln and the Fifth Column, which likewise condemned the traitorous Copperheads and praised Lincoln as a model defender of democracy.[27][25]

Gilbert R. Tredway, a professor of history, in his 1973 study Democratic Opposition to the Lincoln Administration in Indiana found most Indiana Democrats were loyal to the Union and desired national reunification. He documented Democratic counties in Indiana having outperformed Republican counties in recruiting soldiers. Tredway found that Copperhead sentiment was uncommon among the rank-and-file Democrats in Indiana.[28]

The chief historians who favored the Copperheads are Richard O. Curry and Frank L. Klement. Klement devoted most of his career to debunking the idea that the Copperheads represented a danger to the Union. Klement and Curry have downplayed the treasonable activities of the Copperheads, arguing the Copperheads were traditionalists who fiercely resisted modernization and wanted to return to the old ways. Klement argued in the 1950s that the Copperheads' activities, especially their supposed participation in treasonous anti-Union secret societies, were mostly false inventions by Republican propaganda machines designed to discredit the Democrats at election time.[25] Curry sees Copperheads as poor traditionalists battling against the railroads, banks, and modernization.[29] In his standard history Battle Cry of Freedom (1988), James M. McPherson asserted Klement had taken "revision a bit too far. There was some real fire under that smokescreen of Republican propaganda".[25][30]

Jennifer Weber's Copperheads: The Rise and Fall of Lincoln's Opponents in the North (2006) agrees more with Gray and Milton than with Klement. She argues that first, Northern antiwar sentiment was strong, so strong that Peace Democrats came close to seizing control of their party in mid-1864. Second, she shows the peace sentiment led to deep divisions and occasional violence across the North. Third, Weber concluded that the peace movement deliberately weakened the Union military effort by undermining both enlistment and the operation of the draft. Indeed, Lincoln had to divert combat troops to retake control of New York City from the anti-draft rioters in 1863. Fourth, Weber shows how the attitudes of Union soldiers affected partisan battles back home. The soldiers' rejection of Copperheadism and overwhelming support for Lincoln's reelection in 1864 was decisive in securing the Northern victory and the preservation of the Union. The Copperheads' appeal, she argues, waxed and waned with Union failures and successes in the field.[6]

Notable Copperhead Democrats edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Weber, Jennifer L. (2006). Copperheads: The Rise and Fall of Lincoln's Opponents in the North. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 1. ISBN 1429420448. OCLC 76960635.
  2. ^ Benjamin P. Thomas, Abraham Lincoln: A Biography (1952) p. 377.
  3. ^ Wertheim, (1989).
  4. ^ Carl, Denbow (4 July 2013). "1863 Gubernatorial Election". The Glorious 78th Ohio Veteran Volunteer Infantry. Retrieved 30 Apr 2023.
  5. ^ Gray, Wood (1942). The Hidden Civil War. Penguin Books.
  6. ^ a b Weber, Jennifer L. (2008). Copperheads: The Rise and Fall of Lincoln's Opponents in the North. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-534124-9.
  7. ^ Andrew L. Slap; Michael Thomas Smith (2013). This Distracted and Anarchical People: New Answers for Old Questions about the Civil War-Era North. Fordham UP. p. 47. ISBN 9780823245680.
  8. ^ THE IMPENDING WAR.; EXCITEMENT AT THE NATIONAL CAPITAL Anticipated Raid of the Secessionists. THE DISTRICT MILITIA ORDERED OUT. Intentions of the Administration Regarding Fort Sumpter. Object and Result of Lieutenant Talbot's Mission. What is Thought of the Refusal to Allow him to Returnt to the Fort. SOUTH CAROLINA TO BE HELD RESPONSIBLE., New York Times, 11 April 1861, pg. 1
  9. ^ Strausbaugh, John City of Sedition: The History of New York City during the Civil War Hachette UK, 2 August 2016
  10. ^ Joseph George Jr., "'Abraham Africanus I': President Lincoln Through the Eyes of a Copperhead Editor," Civil War History (1968) 14#3 pp. 226–239.
  11. ^ Charles W. Calhoun, "The Fire in the Rear," Reviews in American History 35.4 (2007), pp- 530–537 online at Project MUSE.
  12. ^ William A. Tidwell, April '65: Confederate Covert Action in the American Civil War. Kent State University Press. 1995. pp. 155–20.
  13. ^ Walsh (1963).
  14. ^ Mark Wahlgren Summers, A Dangerous Stir: Fear, Paranoia, And the Making of Reconstruction (2009) p. 38
  15. ^ George Henry Porter (1911). Ohio Politics During the Civil War Period. Columbia UP. p. 159.
  16. ^ Michael Kent Curtis, "Lincoln, Vallandigham, and Anti-War Speech in the Civil War." William and Mary Bill of Rights Journal 7 (1998) pp. 105+.
  17. ^ Frank L. Klement, The Copperheads in the Middle West.
  18. ^ Frank L. Klement, "Clement L. Vallandigham's Exile in the Confederacy, May 25 – June 17, 1863." Journal of Southern History (1965): 149–163. in JSTOR.
  19. ^ Mary Beth Norton, et al. A People and a Nation, A History of the United States" Vol I, (Houghton Mifflin Co., 2001) pp. 393–395.
  20. ^ Eugene H. Roseboom, "Southern Ohio and the Union in 1863." Mississippi Valley Historical Review (1952): 29–44. in JSTOR.
  21. ^ Robert H. Abzug, "The Copperheads: Historical Approaches to Civil War Dissent in the Midwest." Indiana Magazine of History (1970): 40–55. online.
  22. ^ Joanna D. Cowden, "The Politics of Dissent: Civil War Democrats in Connecticut." New England Quarterly (1983): 538–554. in JSTOR.
  23. ^ Weber, Copperheads (2006).
  24. ^ Stampp (1949), p. 211.
  25. ^ a b c d Calhoun, Charles W. (2007). Weber, Jennifer L. (ed.). "The Fire in the Rear". Reviews in American History. 35 (4): 530–537. doi:10.1353/rah.2007.0078. ISSN 0048-7511. JSTOR 30031593. S2CID 144322336.
  26. ^ Gray, Wood (1942). The Hidden Civil War: The Story of the Copperheads. Viking Press.
  27. ^ Fort Milton, George (1942). Abraham Lincoln and the Fifth Column. Vanguard Press.
  28. ^ Tredway, G. R. (1975). Democratic Opposition to the Lincoln Administration in Indiana. Indiana Historical Bureau. ISBN 978-1-885323-25-5.
  29. ^ Curry, Richard O. (1967). "The Union As It Was: A Critique of Recent Interpretations of the "Copperheads"". Civil War History. 13 (1): 25–39. doi:10.1353/cwh.1967.0067. ISSN 1533-6271. S2CID 143592749.
  30. ^ McPherson, James M. (1988). Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-974390-2.

Further reading edit

  • Calhoun, Charles W. "The Fire in the Rear", Reviews in American History (2007) 35#4 pp. 530–537 10.1353/rah.2007.0078 online; Historiography.
  • Cowden, Joanna D. "The Politics of Dissent: Civil War Democrats in Connecticut", The New England Quarterly, 56#4 (December 1983), pp. 538–554 in JSTOR.
  • Cowden, Joanna D., "Heaven Will Frown on Such a Cause as This": Six Democrats Who Opposed Lincoln's War. (UP of America, 2001). xviii, 259pp.
  • Curry, Richard O. "Copperheadism and Continuity: the Anatomy of a Stereotype", Journal of Negro History (1972) 57(1): 29–36. in JSTOR.
  • Curry, Richard O. "The Union as it Was: a Critique of Recent Interpretations of the 'Copperheads'". Civil War History 1967 13(1): 25–39.
  • George, Joseph Jr. "'Abraham Africanus I': President Lincoln Through the Eyes of a Copperhead Editor". Civil War History 1968 14(3): 226–239.
  • George, Joseph Jr. "'A Catholic Family Newspaper' Views the Lincoln Administration: John Mullaly's Copperhead Weekly". Civil War History 1978 24(2): 112–132.
  • Gray, Wood. The Hidden Civil War: The Story of the Copperheads (1942), emphasizes treasonous activity.
  • Hershock, Martin J. "Copperheads and Radicals: Michigan Partisan Politics during the Civil War Era, 1860–1865", Michigan Historical Review (1992) 18#1 pp. 28–69.
  • Kleen, Michael, "The Copperhead Threat in Illinois: Peace Democrats, Loyalty Leagues, and the Charleston Riot of 1864", Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society (2012), 105#1 pp. 69–92.
  • Klement, Frank L. The Copperheads in the Middle West (1960).
  • Klement, Frank L. The Limits of Dissent: Clement L. Vallandigham and the Civil War (1998).
  • Klement, Frank L. Lincoln's Critics: The Copperheads of the North (1999).
  • Klement, Frank L. Dark Lanterns: Secret Political Societies, Conspiracies, and Treason Trials in the Civil War (1984).
  • Landis, Michael Todd. Northern Men with Southern Loyalties: The Democratic Party and the Sectional Crisis. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2014.
  • Lendt, David L. Demise of the Democracy: The Copperhead Press in Iowa. (1973).
  • Lendt, David L. "Iowa and the Copperhead Movement". Annals of Iowa 1970 40(6): 412–426.
  • Manber, Jeffrey, Dahlstrom, Neil. Lincoln's Wrath: Fierce Mobs, Brilliant Scoundrels and a President's Mission to Destroy the Press (2005).
  • Milton, George F. Abraham Lincoln and the Fifth Column (1942).
  • Nevins, Allan. The War for the Union (4 vols. 1959–1971), the standard scholarly history of wartime politics and society.
  • Rodgers, Thomas E. "Copperheads or a Respectable Minority: Current Approaches to the Study of Civil War-Era Democrats". Indiana Magazine of History 109#2 (2013): 114–146. in JSTOR; historiography focused on Klement, Weber and Silbey.
  • Silbey, Joel H. A Respectable Minority: The Democratic Party in the Civil War Era, 1860–1868 (1977) online edition 2012-05-25 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Stampp, Kenneth M. Indiana Politics during the Civil War (1949) online edition 2012-05-25 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Smith, Adam. No Party Now: Politics in the Civil War North (2006), excerpt and text search.
  • Tidwell, William A. April '65: Confederate Covert Action in the American Civil War. (1995).
  • Walsh, Justin E. "To Print the News and Raise Hell: Wilbur F. Storey's Chicago 'Times'". Journalism Quarterly (1963) 40#4 pp. 497–510. doi: 10.1177/107769906304000402.
  • Weber, Jennifer L. Copperheads: The Rise and Fall of Lincoln's Opponents in the North (2006).
  • Wertheim, Lewis J. "The Indianapolis Treason Trials, the Elections of 1864 and the Power of the Partisan Press". Indiana Magazine of History 1989 85(3): 236–250.
  • Wubben, Hubert H. Civil War Iowa and the Copperhead Movement (1980).

External links edit

  • The Old Guard – a Copperhead magazine 1863–1867
  • Ohio Copperhead History
  • An Anti-Copperhead Broadside Denouncing Former President Franklin Pierce As A Traitor. Shapell Manuscript Foundation

copperhead, politics, peace, democrats, redirects, here, south, korean, political, party, peace, democratic, party, 1860s, copperheads, also, known, peace, democrats, were, faction, democratic, party, union, opposed, american, civil, wanted, immediate, peace, . Peace Democrats redirects here For the South Korean political party see Peace Democratic Party In the 1860s the Copperheads also known as Peace Democrats 1 were a faction of the Democratic Party in the Union who opposed the American Civil War and wanted an immediate peace settlement with the Confederates Copperhead DemocratsHistorical leadersClement VallandighamAlexander LongFounded1860 1860 Dissolved1868 1868 IdeologyAnti abolitionismAnti Civil WarJacksonianismNational affiliationDemocratic PartyPolitics of United StatesPolitical partiesElectionsRepublicans started labeling anti war Democrats Copperheads after the eastern copperhead Agkistrodon contortrix a species of venomous snake Those Democrats embraced the moniker reinterpreting the copper head as the likeness of Liberty which they cut from Liberty Head large cent coins and proudly wore as badges 2 By contrast Democratic supporters of the war were called War Democrats Notable Copperheads included two Democratic Congressmen from Ohio Reps Clement L Vallandigham and Alexander Long Republican prosecutors accused some prominent Copperheads of treason in a series of trials in 1864 3 Copperheadism was a highly contentious grassroots movement It had its strongest base just north of the Ohio River and in some urban ethnic wards In the State of Ohio perhaps in contrast with Indiana and Illinois the counties that had Peace Democrat majorities tended not to be along the Ohio River but more in the central and northwestern portions of the state 4 Historians such as Wood Gray Jennifer Weber and Kenneth M Stampp citation needed have argued that it represented a traditionalistic element alarmed at the rapid modernization of society sponsored by the Republican Party and that it looked back to Jacksonian democracy for inspiration Weber argues that the Copperheads damaged the Union war effort by opposing conscription encouraging desertion and forming conspiracies Still other historians say that the draft was already in disrepute and that the Republicans greatly exaggerated the conspiracies for partisan reasons 5 6 Historians such as Gray and Weber argue that the Copperheads were inflexibly rooted in the past and were naive about the refusal of the Confederates to return to the Union Convinced that the Republicans were ruining the traditional world they loved they were obstructionist partisans 7 In turn the Copperheads became a significant target of the National Union Party in the 1864 presidential election where they were used to discredit the leading Democratic candidates Copperhead support increased when Union armies did poorly and decreased when they won great victories After the fall of Atlanta in September 1864 Union military success seemed assured and Copperheadism collapsed Contents 1 Name 2 Agenda 3 Newspapers 4 Copperhead resistance 5 Characteristics 6 Historiography 7 Notable Copperhead Democrats 8 See also 9 Notes 10 Further reading 11 External linksName edit nbsp The Eastern copperhead snake is venomous and has coloration well adapted for camouflageA possible origin of the name came from a New York Times newspaper account in April 1861 that stated that when postal officers in Washington D C opened a mail bag from a state now in the Confederacy A day or two since when one of the mail bags coming from the South by way of Alexandria was emptied in the court yard of the Post office a box fell out and was broken open from which two copperheads one four and a half and the other three feet long crawled out The larger one was benumbed and easily killed the other was very lively and venomous and was dispatched with some difficulty and danger What are we to think of a people who resort to such weapons of warfare 8 9 Agenda edit nbsp Copperhead pamphlet from 1864 by Charles Chauncey Burr a magazine editor from New York City 10 During the American Civil War 1861 1865 the Copperheads nominally favored the Union and strongly opposed the war about which they faulted abolitionists They demanded immediate peace and resisted draft laws They wanted President Abraham Lincoln and the Republicans ousted from power seeing the President as a tyrant destroying American republican values with despotic and arbitrary actions 11 Some Copperheads tried to persuade Union soldiers to desert They talked of helping Confederate prisoners of war seize their camps and escape They sometimes met with Confederate agents and took money The Confederacy encouraged their activities whenever possible 12 Newspapers editThe Copperheads had numerous important newspapers but the editors never allied In Chicago Wilbur F Storey made the Chicago Times into Lincoln s most vituperative enemy 13 The New York Journal of Commerce originally abolitionist was sold to owners who became Copperheads giving them an important voice in the largest city A typical editor was Edward G Roddy owner of the Uniontown Pennsylvania Genius of Liberty He was an intensely partisan Democrat who saw African Americans as an inferior race and Lincoln as a despot and dunce Although he supported the war effort in 1861 he blamed abolitionists for prolonging the war and denounced the government as increasingly despotic By 1864 he was calling for peace at any price citation needed John Mullaly s Metropolitan Record was the official Catholic newspaper in New York City Reflecting Irish American opinion it supported the war until 1863 before becoming a Copperhead organ In the spring and summer of 1863 the paper urged its Irish working class readers to pursue armed resistance to the draft passed by Congress earlier in the year When the draft began in the city working class European Americans largely Irish responded with violent riots from July 13 to 16 lynching beating and hacking to death more than 100 black New Yorkers and burning down black owned businesses and institutions including the Colored Orphan Asylum an orphanage for 233 black children On August 19 1864 John Mullaly was arrested for inciting resistance to the draft Even in an era of extremely partisan journalism Copperhead newspapers were remarkable for their angry rhetoric Wisconsin newspaper editor Marcus M Pomeroy of the La Crosse Democrat referred to Lincoln as Fungus from the corrupt womb of bigotry and fanaticism and a worse tyrant and more inhuman butcher than has existed since the days of Nero The man who votes for Lincoln now is a traitor and murderer And if he is elected to misgovern for another four years we trust some bold hand will pierce his heart with dagger point for the public good 14 Copperhead resistance edit nbsp Clement Vallandigham leader of the Copperheads coined the slogan To maintain the Constitution as it is and to restore the Union as it was The Copperheads sometimes talked of violent resistance and in some cases started to organize However they never actually made an organized attack As war opponents Copperheads were suspected of disloyalty and their leaders were sometimes arrested and held for months in military prisons without trial One famous example was General Ambrose Burnside s 1863 General Order Number 38 issued in Ohio which made it an offense to be tried in military court to criticize the war in any way 15 The order was used to arrest Ohio congressman Clement L Vallandigham when he criticized the order itself 16 However Lincoln commuted his sentence while requiring his exile to the Confederacy Probably the largest Copperhead group was the Knights of the Golden Circle Formed in Ohio in the 1850s it became politicized in 1861 It reorganized as the Order of American Knights in 1863 and again in early 1864 as the Order of the Sons of Liberty with Vallandigham as its commander One leader Harrison H Dodd advocated the violent overthrow of the governments of Indiana Illinois Kentucky and Missouri in 1864 Democratic Party leaders and a Federal investigation thwarted his Northwest Conspiracy Despite this Copperhead setback tensions remained high The Charleston Riot took place in Illinois in March 1864 Indiana Republicans then used the sensational revelation of an antiwar Copperhead conspiracy by elements of the Sons of Liberty to discredit Democrats in the 1864 House elections The military trial of Lambdin P Milligan and other Sons of Liberty revealed plans to set free the Confederate prisoners held in the state The culprits were sentenced to hang but the Supreme Court intervened in Ex parte Milligan saying they should have received civilian trials 17 Most Copperheads actively participated in politics On May 1 1863 former Congressman Vallandigham declared the war was being fought not to save the Union but to free the blacks and enslave Southern whites The U S Army then arrested him for declaring sympathy for the enemy He was court martialed by the Army and sentenced to imprisonment but Lincoln commuted the sentence to banishment behind Confederate lines 18 The Democrats nevertheless nominated him for governor of Ohio in 1863 He left the Confederacy and went to Canada where he campaigned for governor but lost after an intense battle He operated behind the scenes at the 1864 Democratic convention in Chicago This convention adopted a largely Copperhead platform and selected Ohio Representative George Pendleton a known Peace Democrat as the vice presidential candidate However it chose a pro war presidential candidate General George B McClellan The contradiction severely weakened the party s chances to defeat Lincoln citation needed Characteristics editThe values of the Copperheads reflected the Jacksonian democracy of an earlier agrarian society The Copperhead movement attracted Southerners who had settled north of the Ohio River and the poor and merchants who had lost profitable Southern trade 19 20 They were most numerous in border areas including southern parts of Ohio Illinois and Indiana in Missouri comparable groups were avowed Confederates 21 The movement had scattered bases of support outside the lower Midwest A Copperhead element in Connecticut dominated the Democratic Party there 22 The Copperhead coalition included many Irish American Catholics in eastern cities mill towns and mining camps especially in the Pennsylvania coal fields They were also numerous in German Catholic areas of the Midwest especially Wisconsin 23 Historian Kenneth Stampp has captured the Copperhead spirit in his depiction of Congressman Daniel W Voorhees of Indiana There was an earthy quality in Voorhees the tall sycamore of the Wabash On the stump his hot temper passionate partisanship and stirring eloquence made an irresistible appeal to the western Democracy i e the Democratic Party His bitter cries against protective tariffs and national banks his intense race prejudice his suspicion of the eastern Yankee his devotion to personal liberty his defense of the Constitution and State s rights faithfully reflected the views of his constituents Like other Jacksonian agrarians he resented the political and economic revolution then in progress Voorhees idealized a way of life that he thought was being destroyed by the current rulers of his country His bold protests against these dangerous trends made him the idol of the Democracy of the Wabash Valley 24 Historiography editTwo central questions have run through the historiography of the Copperheads i e How serious a threat did they pose to the Union war effort and hence to the nation s survival and to what extent and with what justification did the Lincoln administration and other Republican officials violate civil liberties to contain the perceived menace 25 The first book length scholarly treatment of the Copperheads was The Hidden Civil War The Story of the Copperheads 1942 by Wood Gray in it Gray decried the defeatism of the Copperheads and argued that they deliberately served the Confederacy s war aims 26 Also in 1942 George Fort Milton published Abraham Lincoln and the Fifth Column which likewise condemned the traitorous Copperheads and praised Lincoln as a model defender of democracy 27 25 Gilbert R Tredway a professor of history in his 1973 study Democratic Opposition to the Lincoln Administration in Indiana found most Indiana Democrats were loyal to the Union and desired national reunification He documented Democratic counties in Indiana having outperformed Republican counties in recruiting soldiers Tredway found that Copperhead sentiment was uncommon among the rank and file Democrats in Indiana 28 The chief historians who favored the Copperheads are Richard O Curry and Frank L Klement Klement devoted most of his career to debunking the idea that the Copperheads represented a danger to the Union Klement and Curry have downplayed the treasonable activities of the Copperheads arguing the Copperheads were traditionalists who fiercely resisted modernization and wanted to return to the old ways Klement argued in the 1950s that the Copperheads activities especially their supposed participation in treasonous anti Union secret societies were mostly false inventions by Republican propaganda machines designed to discredit the Democrats at election time 25 Curry sees Copperheads as poor traditionalists battling against the railroads banks and modernization 29 In his standard history Battle Cry of Freedom 1988 James M McPherson asserted Klement had taken revision a bit too far There was some real fire under that smokescreen of Republican propaganda 25 30 Jennifer Weber s Copperheads The Rise and Fall of Lincoln s Opponents in the North 2006 agrees more with Gray and Milton than with Klement She argues that first Northern antiwar sentiment was strong so strong that Peace Democrats came close to seizing control of their party in mid 1864 Second she shows the peace sentiment led to deep divisions and occasional violence across the North Third Weber concluded that the peace movement deliberately weakened the Union military effort by undermining both enlistment and the operation of the draft Indeed Lincoln had to divert combat troops to retake control of New York City from the anti draft rioters in 1863 Fourth Weber shows how the attitudes of Union soldiers affected partisan battles back home The soldiers rejection of Copperheadism and overwhelming support for Lincoln s reelection in 1864 was decisive in securing the Northern victory and the preservation of the Union The Copperheads appeal she argues waxed and waned with Union failures and successes in the field 6 Notable Copperhead Democrats editJesse D Bright of Indiana Charles R Buckalew of Pennsylvania Henry Clay Dean of Virginia Alexander Long of Ohio Edson B Olds of Ohio George Pendleton of Ohio Thomas H Seymour of Connecticut Rodman M Price of New Jersey James W Wall of New Jersey William Wright of New Jersey Fernando Wood of New York Benjamin Wood of New York James Brooks of New York Clement Vallandigham of Ohio William Allen of Ohio Daniel W Voorhees of Indiana Joseph W White of Ohio John Reynolds of Illinois William Temple of Delaware Ira Allen Eastman of New Hampshire George W Woodward of Pennsylvania Carter Harrison Sr of Illinois William W Eaton of Connecticut James C Robinson of Illinois Thomas G Pratt of Maryland Benjamin G Harris of Maryland Thomas D English of New Jersey George Lunt of Massachusetts C Chauncey Burr of New York Marcus M Pomeroy of Wisconsin Wilbur F Storey of Illinois William Taylor Davidson of Illinois Lewis W Ross of Illinois Nathan Lord President of Dartmouth College Henry C Dean of Iowa Andrew Humphreys of Indiana William A Wallace of Pennsylvania Anthony L Knapp of IllinoisSee also editAmerican election campaigns in the 19th century Bourbon Democrat Butternut people Copperhead 2013 film Doughface Opposition to the American Civil War Red Strings Andrew JohnsonNotes edit Weber Jennifer L 2006 Copperheads The Rise and Fall of Lincoln s Opponents in the North Oxford Oxford University Press pp 1 ISBN 1429420448 OCLC 76960635 Benjamin P Thomas Abraham Lincoln A Biography 1952 p 377 Wertheim 1989 Carl Denbow 4 July 2013 1863 Gubernatorial Election The Glorious 78th Ohio Veteran Volunteer Infantry Retrieved 30 Apr 2023 Gray Wood 1942 The Hidden Civil War Penguin Books a b Weber Jennifer L 2008 Copperheads The Rise and Fall of Lincoln s Opponents in the North Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 534124 9 Andrew L Slap Michael Thomas Smith 2013 This Distracted and Anarchical People New Answers for Old Questions about the Civil War Era North Fordham UP p 47 ISBN 9780823245680 THE IMPENDING WAR EXCITEMENT AT THE NATIONAL CAPITAL Anticipated Raid of the Secessionists THE DISTRICT MILITIA ORDERED OUT Intentions of the Administration Regarding Fort Sumpter Object and Result of Lieutenant Talbot s Mission What is Thought of the Refusal to Allow him to Returnt to the Fort SOUTH CAROLINA TO BE HELD RESPONSIBLE New York Times 11 April 1861 pg 1 Strausbaugh John City of Sedition The History of New York City during the Civil War Hachette UK 2 August 2016 Joseph George Jr Abraham Africanus I President Lincoln Through the Eyes of a Copperhead Editor Civil War History 1968 14 3 pp 226 239 Charles W Calhoun The Fire in the Rear Reviews in American History 35 4 2007 pp 530 537 online at Project MUSE William A Tidwell April 65 Confederate Covert Action in the American Civil War Kent State University Press 1995 pp 155 20 Walsh 1963 Mark Wahlgren Summers A Dangerous Stir Fear Paranoia And the Making of Reconstruction 2009 p 38 George Henry Porter 1911 Ohio Politics During the Civil War Period Columbia UP p 159 Michael Kent Curtis Lincoln Vallandigham and Anti War Speech in the Civil War William and Mary Bill of Rights Journal 7 1998 pp 105 Frank L Klement The Copperheads in the Middle West Frank L Klement Clement L Vallandigham s Exile in the Confederacy May 25 June 17 1863 Journal of Southern History 1965 149 163 in JSTOR Mary Beth Norton et al A People and a Nation A History of the United States Vol I Houghton Mifflin Co 2001 pp 393 395 Eugene H Roseboom Southern Ohio and the Union in 1863 Mississippi Valley Historical Review 1952 29 44 in JSTOR Robert H Abzug The Copperheads Historical Approaches to Civil War Dissent in the Midwest Indiana Magazine of History 1970 40 55 online Joanna D Cowden The Politics of Dissent Civil War Democrats in Connecticut New England Quarterly 1983 538 554 in JSTOR Weber Copperheads 2006 Stampp 1949 p 211 a b c d Calhoun Charles W 2007 Weber Jennifer L ed The Fire in the Rear Reviews in American History 35 4 530 537 doi 10 1353 rah 2007 0078 ISSN 0048 7511 JSTOR 30031593 S2CID 144322336 Gray Wood 1942 The Hidden Civil War The Story of the Copperheads Viking Press Fort Milton George 1942 Abraham Lincoln and the Fifth Column Vanguard Press Tredway G R 1975 Democratic Opposition to the Lincoln Administration in Indiana Indiana Historical Bureau ISBN 978 1 885323 25 5 Curry Richard O 1967 The Union As It Was A Critique of Recent Interpretations of the Copperheads Civil War History 13 1 25 39 doi 10 1353 cwh 1967 0067 ISSN 1533 6271 S2CID 143592749 McPherson James M 1988 Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 974390 2 Further reading editCalhoun Charles W The Fire in the Rear Reviews in American History 2007 35 4 pp 530 537 10 1353 rah 2007 0078 online Historiography Cowden Joanna D The Politics of Dissent Civil War Democrats in Connecticut The New England Quarterly 56 4 December 1983 pp 538 554 in JSTOR Cowden Joanna D Heaven Will Frown on Such a Cause as This Six Democrats Who Opposed Lincoln s War UP of America 2001 xviii 259pp Curry Richard O Copperheadism and Continuity the Anatomy of a Stereotype Journal of Negro History 1972 57 1 29 36 in JSTOR Curry Richard O The Union as it Was a Critique of Recent Interpretations of the Copperheads Civil War History 1967 13 1 25 39 George Joseph Jr Abraham Africanus I President Lincoln Through the Eyes of a Copperhead Editor Civil War History 1968 14 3 226 239 George Joseph Jr A Catholic Family Newspaper Views the Lincoln Administration John Mullaly s Copperhead Weekly Civil War History 1978 24 2 112 132 Gray Wood The Hidden Civil War The Story of the Copperheads 1942 emphasizes treasonous activity Hershock Martin J Copperheads and Radicals Michigan Partisan Politics during the Civil War Era 1860 1865 Michigan Historical Review 1992 18 1 pp 28 69 Kleen Michael The Copperhead Threat in Illinois Peace Democrats Loyalty Leagues and the Charleston Riot of 1864 Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 2012 105 1 pp 69 92 Klement Frank L The Copperheads in the Middle West 1960 Klement Frank L The Limits of Dissent Clement L Vallandigham and the Civil War 1998 Klement Frank L Lincoln s Critics The Copperheads of the North 1999 Klement Frank L Dark Lanterns Secret Political Societies Conspiracies and Treason Trials in the Civil War 1984 Landis Michael Todd Northern Men with Southern Loyalties The Democratic Party and the Sectional Crisis Ithaca NY Cornell University Press 2014 Lendt David L Demise of the Democracy The Copperhead Press in Iowa 1973 Lendt David L Iowa and the Copperhead Movement Annals of Iowa 1970 40 6 412 426 Manber Jeffrey Dahlstrom Neil Lincoln s Wrath Fierce Mobs Brilliant Scoundrels and a President s Mission to Destroy the Press 2005 Milton George F Abraham Lincoln and the Fifth Column 1942 Nevins Allan The War for the Union 4 vols 1959 1971 the standard scholarly history of wartime politics and society Rodgers Thomas E Copperheads or a Respectable Minority Current Approaches to the Study of Civil War Era Democrats Indiana Magazine of History 109 2 2013 114 146 in JSTOR historiography focused on Klement Weber and Silbey Silbey Joel H A Respectable Minority The Democratic Party in the Civil War Era 1860 1868 1977 online edition Archived 2012 05 25 at the Wayback Machine Stampp Kenneth M Indiana Politics during the Civil War 1949 online edition Archived 2012 05 25 at the Wayback Machine Smith Adam No Party Now Politics in the Civil War North 2006 excerpt and text search Tidwell William A April 65 Confederate Covert Action in the American Civil War 1995 Walsh Justin E To Print the News and Raise Hell Wilbur F Storey s Chicago Times Journalism Quarterly 1963 40 4 pp 497 510 doi 10 1177 107769906304000402 Weber Jennifer L Copperheads The Rise and Fall of Lincoln s Opponents in the North 2006 Wertheim Lewis J The Indianapolis Treason Trials the Elections of 1864 and the Power of the Partisan Press Indiana Magazine of History 1989 85 3 236 250 Wubben Hubert H Civil War Iowa and the Copperhead Movement 1980 External links editThe Old Guard a Copperhead magazine 1863 1867 Ohio Copperhead History An Anti Copperhead Broadside Denouncing Former President Franklin Pierce As A Traitor Shapell Manuscript Foundation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Copperhead politics amp oldid 1206704582, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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