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WSWS : History
: Historian
James M. McPherson
Historian James M. McPherson and the cause of intellectual
integrity
By David Walsh
18 May 1999
Starting tomorrow we will be presenting on the WSWS
a lengthy interview with James M. McPherson, probably the leading
contemporary historian of the American Civil War era. We hope
that readers will find that the subjects of the discussionthe
political turmoil of the period leading up to the Civil War, the
violence of the war, Lincoln's legacy, the impeachment of Andrew
Johnsonare of interest and that they shed some light on
contemporary events.
Professor McPherson is a remarkable and admirable figure. Born
in 1936, he received a PhD from Johns Hopkins University in 1963
and has taught at Princeton University for more than 35 years.
The author of a number of major works on the Civil War, as well
as countless articles, reviews and essays, he has paid particular
attention to the role of slaves in their own liberation and the
activities of the Abolitionists. His Battle Cry of Freedom
won the Pulitzer Prize for History in 1989.
At a time when the appellation historian is loosely
applied to ideologues such as Richard Pipes and Daniel Goldhagen,
and much of left historiography consists of largely
subjective and arbitrary exercises in class, race and gender
analysis, McPherson continues to take the study of history and
its responsibilities seriously. He treats facts with respect,
as they deserve, and while he clearly has a conceptual framework
within which he approaches his raw material, he is not blind to
nuance and ambiguity. If there is a problem in Civil War history
that he has not fully worked out to his satisfaction, he has the
modesty to say so.
Nearly 40 years ago Professor McPherson arrived at a conception
of the American Civil War, based on the work of the best of his
predecessors and his own researches, as a revolutionary struggle
for equality and democracy and he has not, I think, ever deviated
from that view. This is noteworthy in light of the fact that the
last several decades have not been favorable for progressive social
thought. The most noxious notions have gained popularity, which,
in the final analysis, justify the adaptation of their advocates
to the status quo.
In the formation of an outlook various factors come into play,
some of which must remain hidden to the observer. What is evident
is that McPherson arrived at certain conclusions about US history
at a significant moment in postwar American life, the eruption
of the Civil Rights movement. As someone deeply moved by the issues
it raised, he set to out to find in historical fact the basis
for a deeper grasp of contemporary events. That study convinced
him that the key to the problems of the 1960s lay at least in
part in an understanding of the great conflict of the 1860s, and
he set his intellectual compass in that direction. His earliest
work, The Struggle for Equality, examined the activities
of the Abolitionist movement following the Emancipation Proclamation.
How has he retained his principles in the course of the intervening
years, when so many have not? This is also a complex matter. I
think that in any serious figure, historian, artist or political
leader, principle is not simply a matter of certain intellectual
formulations that rest on top, so to speak, of one's personality.
It is more a matter of the coming together of various powerful
social and cultural currents at a critical moment in one's life,
so that the most positive external influences and what is best
in oneself are heated in a crucible, fuse and become one. One
is able to retain principles, across time and in the face of all
sorts of opposition and setbacks, because they are imbedded in
some part of consciousness that is not susceptible to shifts in
popular mood. One knows with one's entire being certain
things to be true, they are not up for debate, much less sale.
Professor McPherson's conception of the Civil War as a titanic
social upheaval remains, as I say, as firm as ever. One need only
look at his most recent and excellent collection of essays, Drawn
With the Sword (1996), for proof. The volume is introduced
by a passage from Abraham Lincoln's second inaugural address,
on March 4, 1865, from which it derives its title: Fondly
do we hopeand fervently do we praythat this mighty
scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet, if God wills that
it continue, until all the wealth piled by the bond-man's two
hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and
until every drop of blood drawn with the lash, shall be paid by
another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years
ago, so still it must be said, the judgments of the Lord,
are true and righteous altogether.'
Drawn With a Sword contains a number of remarkable essays.
One is suggestively entitled The War that Never Goes Away.
After considering a number of the factors that help explain the
war's enduring fascination, McPherson points to what
he holds to be the most important reason: Great
issues were at stake, issues about which Americans were willing
to fight and die; issues whose resolution profoundly transformed
and redefined the United States but at the same time are still
alive and contested today. It is such eloquent simplicity
and bluntness that help make Professor McPherson so unusual, and
perhaps somewhat unfashionable, in the world of contemporary scholarship.
In From Limited to Total War: 1861-1865, one of
the volume's most radical inclusions, McPherson returns to a recurring
theme in his work, the ferocity of the Civil War and the depth
of the political and social transformation it wrought. In regard
to the first point, the author writes: Altogether nearly
4 percent of the Southern people, black and white, civilians and
soldiers, died as a consequence of the war. This percentage exceeded
the human cost of any country in World War I and was outstripped
only by the region between the Rhine and the Volga in World War
II. The amount of property and resources destroyed in the Confederate
States is almost incalculable. It has been estimated at two-thirds
of all assessed wealth, including the market value of slaves.
The Civil War mobilized human resources on a scale unmatched
by any other event in American history except, perhaps, World
War II. For actual combat duty the Civil War mustered a considerably
larger proportion of American manpower than did World War II.
As to the liberating character of the war, McPherson seems
more passionate than ever. In this same piece, after explaining
the background to Lincoln's announcement of the Emancipation Proclamation
in September 1862, he continues: With this action Lincoln
embraced the idea of the Civil War as a revolutionary conflict.
Things had changed a great deal since he had promised to avoid
any devastation, or destruction of, or interference with,
property.' The Emancipation Proclamation was just what the Springfield
Republican pronounced it: the greatest social and political
revolution of the age.' No less an authority on revolutions than
Karl Marx exulted: Never has such a gigantic transformation
taken place so rapidly.'
How can one fail to be moved by the book's account, which obviously
so moves its author, of the exploits of the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts
Volunteer Infantry, one of the first black regiments organized
in the Civil War and the subject of the film Glory? The
heroic attack by the Fifty-fourth on Fort Wagner in July 1863
set straight any Union supporters who had doubted the willingness
of blacks to fight. Moreover, the thought of armed black ex-slaves
and free men, the South's ultimate revolutionary nightmare,
put fear in Confederate hearts.
McPherson pays tribute to Robert Gould Shaw (played by Matthew
Broderick in Glory), the white commanding officer of the
regiment, explaining that he embodied the finest traditions of
New England society. Shaw, along with many of his men, died in
the attack on Fort Wagner. After the battle Confederate soldiers
stripped his body and dumped it in a mass grave. When a Union
commander sent a message requesting its return, as was customarily
done with high-ranking officers at the time, a Confederate officer
replied: We have buried him with his niggers. The
remark provoked outrage in the North. When Union troops occupied
the fort some weeks later and an officer offered to search for
Shaw's body, Shaw's father wrote an eloquent letter to stop
the effort: We hold that a soldier's most appropriate burial-place
is on the field where he has fallen.'
McPherson is attracted to the most democratic strain within
the Union camp. His principled outlook obliges him to criticize
the various efforts by contemporary radical historians
to diminish or reject the role played by anti-slavery forces in
the North. In an essay entitled, Who Freed the Slaves?,
he takes up the sophistic arguments of historians, many of them
black, who argue that the end of slavery was simply an act of
self-liberation. While acknowledging the active role played by
slaves in achieving their own freedom (a subject about which,
as we noted, he has written extensively), McPherson rejects the
argument that Lincoln was more of a hindrance than a help to the
cause and demonstrates that emancipation would not have been possible
without Union military victory and the enormous sacrifices made
by white Northern soldiers.
Professor McPherson forthrightly rejects the method that looks
at history through the prism of race. Even while commenting very
favorably on Joseph T. Glatthaar's Forged in Battle: The Civil
War Alliance of Black Soldiers and White Officers (1990),
McPherson scolds the author for succumbing to the fashionable
practice of condemning all whites as racists. Glatthaar
had written that Prior to the war virtually all of them
[white officers in black regiments] held powerful racial prejudices.
McPherson responds: Powerful racial prejudices? That was
not true of Thomas Wentworth Higginson, or Norwood P. Hallowell,
or George T. Garrison, or many other abolitionists and sons of
abolitionists who became officers in black regiments.
McPherson continues: Indeed, the contrary was true; they
had spent much of their lives fighting the race prejudice endemic
in American society, sometimes at the risk of their careers and
even their lives.... Perhaps by modern absolutist standards of
racial egalitarianism (which few could meet today), these men
harbored some mildly racist or paternalistic feelings. But to
call these powerful racial prejudices' is to indulge in
what William Manchester has called generational chauvinismjudging
past eras by the standard of the present.'
Anyone not familiar with McPherson's work will, I trust, have
begun to grasp the exceptional character of his efforts. Much
more could be said about Drawn With the Sword and his other
works, but the reader should discover their insights for himself.
Professor McPherson is not, in the commonly understood sense
of the word, a political man. Those who are looking for left-wing
pronouncements will be disappointed, legitimately or otherwise.
His banner, if one can avoid sounding too pompous saying it, is
intellectual integrity. He seems quite determined to remove himself
from the immediacy of day-to-day political life, immersing himself
in the study of complex, riveting events, but not living in the
past or mesmerized by it. He is neither a preserver of trite Americana
nor a Civil War buff. When one speaks with him about
the events of the Civil War era they are astonishingly contemporary
and alive.
One might wish he were more forthcoming about certain political
issues, but one must respect his reticence. One is evaluating
him as an historian. Society has a strong need for such people,
particularly those who strive to be both authoritative and accessible
to a wide audience, as McPherson does, those who aspire
to a general democratic public, in the words of Allan Nevins,
a phrase he cites approvingly.
The serious historian plays an objectively significant role
in social life, as the embodiment of historical memory. One need
only consider the harmful impact that the general decline in historical
knowledge has had on contemporary American society. Broad layers
of the US population are prevented at this point from responding
to contemporary events such as the war in the Balkans not primarily
because they have an extremely limited grasp of the history of
that region, although that is no doubt the case. An even greater
difficulty is that they do not understand their own history. If
masses of people appreciated the revolutionary content of the
Civil War and the issues of principle it raised, they would have
at least a frame of reference for understanding events in other
parts of the world.
Professor McPherson draws meaning and lessons from the most
profound, most humane moment in American history. All that the
first American Revolution represented in history found a concentrated
expression in the Civil War. We are presenting this interview
to our readers as part of the effort to effect an intellectual
re-awakening that is a precondition for substantial social change.
McPherson's writings, as an intellectual labor, have their
own independent significance. They are not simply about the middle
decades of the nineteenth century, they are also about the last
decades of the twentieth. When, in the future, historians consider
the ideological landscape of our time, in all its general dreariness
and moral and political renegacy, it seems certain that some consideration
will be given to James McPherson, as a contradictory figure of
the period itself. And it will be notedwith approval and
appreciation, one truststhat he contributed to an intellectual
ferment with far-reaching consequences.
An interview with historian James
M. McPherson
The Civil War, impeachment then and now, and Lincoln's legacy--Part
1
[19 May 1999]
Part 2
[20 May 1999]
Part 3
[21 May 1999]
"There is a big idea which is at
stake"--Corporal in the 105th Ohio, 1864
Review of For Cause and Comrades: Why Men Fought in the Civil
War, by James M. McPherson, New York, Oxford University Press,
1997
[3 November 1997]
An exchange with a Civil War historian
[19 June 1995]
James McPherson's What They Fought
For: When great ideals gripped the American people
[5 December 1994]
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