[December 6th
marks the 150th
anniversary of the ratification of perhaps the most important amendment to
the U.S. Constitution, the 13th. This week I’ve AmericanStudied some
contexts for five other amendments, leading up to this special weekend post on
the 13th!]
Given how much all
rational 21st century Americans agree that slavery was a dark stain
on America’s identity, it might seem to have been inevitable that, with the Civil
War concluded, slavery would be permanently abolished with a Constitutional
Amendment. But here are three reasons why we should most definitely not see
that amendment as a given:
1)
How it happened: Steven
Spielberg’s historical drama Lincoln
(2012) is not without its flaws, but the film does an excellent job portraying the
tense, difficult, extremely uncertain process by which Lincoln and his
Congressional allies secured passage of the 13th Amendment. I don’t
want to suggest for even a moment that the Civil War was not centrally about
the issue of slavery—it
was, full stop—but that didn’t mean that most Northerners, nor most political
leaders, shared the same idea of what should happen with that issue as the war
concluded. That what happened was a Constitutional amendment was thus anything
but inevitable, and the process
by which the amendment passed reflects both that uncertainty and the heroic
lengths to which Lincoln and many others went to make it happen.
2)
What happened next: The 13th Amendment
was in many ways the most straightforward of the three so-called Reconstruction
Amendments, and that fact, along with the many ways that the 14th
and 15th Amendments have been extended, deepened, and (unfortunately)
challenged in the 150 years since, might lead to it seeming the least
significant of the three. But among the many ways (such as the rest of this
post) that I would push back on that idea, I would note that neither the 14th
nor the 15th Amendment would likely have been imaginable, much less
possible, had the 13th not been passed. It’s not just that slavery
might well have returned (on which see #3 in a moment), but that in any case
there would have been no Constitutional or federal law defining African
Americans as anything other than slaves. Without that first step, the rest of
the path, fraught and incomplete as it has been, could not have existed.
3)
What might have happened otherwise: I don’t
actually believe that slavery could have returned in the immediate aftermath of
the Civil War—but I absolutely believe it might have a couple decades later. I
wrote at length in
my first book, and have written in many places since,
about the process by which American culture and society became by the 1880s (as
Albion
TourgĂ©e succinctly put it) “distinctly Confederate in sympathy.” Indeed, as
early as 1877 an
editorial in the progressive magazine The
Nation opined that with the end of Reconstruction, “the negro will
disappear from the field of national politics. Henceforth the nation, as a
nation, will have nothing more to do with him.” If (in the absence of a 13th
Amendment) Southern states had wished to re-implement a slave system in the
late 19th century, it’s very possible that neither law nor
mainstream white society would have objected. And while segregation and its
attendant histories have been called, with justice, “slavery
by another name,” the truth is that they were, at least, not slavery—and we
have the 13th Amendment to thank for it.
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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