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Expansion and Conflict

by William Edward Dodd

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Set in the United States during the early to mid-19th century, "Expansion and Conflict" by William Edward Dodd provides a historical analysis of the social and political upheavals from the 1820s through the Civil War. The author concentrates on key themes such as sectionalism, regional conflicts, and political rivalries, with particular emphasis on the presidency of Andrew Jackson and the differing interests of the West, East, and South. The volume discusses the development of American national identity, framing it as a process that solidified following the Civil War. It examines how these internal tensions influenced national policies and societal changes during this period, highlighting major events and figures in shaping the evolving American landscape.

The work situates these conflicts within broader historical trends, presenting a chronological narrative focused on regional disputes, the impact of tariffs, and the treatment of Native American tribes. It aims to clarify how internal divisions influenced the trajectory of American expansion and the formation of a unified national identity.

From the opening pages

declared the tariff law unconstitutional. At the commencement of the University of Georgia the orator of the occasion appeared in a suit of white cotton cloth, while his valet wore the cast-off suit of shining broadcloth. The “Tariff of Abominations,” passed in 1828, was producing revolutionary results in all the region where tobacco, cotton, and rice were grown, and this was the governing section of the South. [1] Nor was this all; Georgia was still at the point of making actual war upon the United States because the President and Congress did not remove the Creek and Cherokee Indians as rapidly as the cotton planters desired. The Cherokees had declared themselves a State within the boundaries of Georgia, defied both local and national authority, and applied to the United States Supreme Court for recognition and support. The Government of Georgia had formally spread her laws over the Indian lands and imprisoned those who resisted her sway. This Indian problem which Jackson would have to solve was of the utmost importance to all the region from Georgia to northwestern Louisiana, for in that region lived the ambitious and prosperous cotton planters, who were bent on getting possession of all the fertile lands of their section, and the legislatures of Alabama and Mississippi followed the example of Georgia in assuming jurisdiction over all Indians within their boundaries. Jackson entertained no tender scruples about dispossessing the natives, a fact which was well known and widely advertised. When, therefore, Crawford, who had been very popular with the planters of all the South, gave up his antagonism to the Tennessee candidate, and joined with the friends of Calhoun, whom Crawford hated only a little more than he had disliked Jackson, there was no substantial resistance in any of the States, from South Carolina to Louisiana. The way was preparing for a united South and West. If the Crawford men of the lower South gave up their hostility to Jackson and the extreme anti-nationalists of South Carolina submitted once more to “Calhoun and Jackson,” it was by no means certain what the gentry of the eastern counties of North Carolina would do. They had supported Crawford in the last campaign, and there was neither Indian nor land question to compel them to support the Western candidate. Moreover, there was a bitter struggle between the east and the west of North Carolina which resembled very much the…

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