The Census of Doom

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Disunion follows the Civil War as it unfolded.

Map of the Southern states, 1861 Library of CongressMap of the Southern states, 1861. CLICK TO ENLARGE

A little knowledge is a dangerous thing; a lot of it can be deadly. Such was the case on the eve of the Civil War. Among all the events that touched off the great conflict — John Brown’s raid in 1859, Abraham Lincoln’s presidential victory in 1860 — there is one that has been strangely ignored by most historians. True, it was less dramatic than the others. It occurred when enumerators traveled from door to door throughout America, counting up Easterners and Westerners; Northerners and Southerners; blacks and whites; freemen and slaves. The numbers that they came up with helped to split apart the Union.

Eighteen-sixty was a federal Census year, and the results had begun coming in early that autumn — with exquisitely poor timing, as far as Southern paranoia and Northern hubris were concerned. At the very moment that the slave states faced the imminent election of a Republican, antislavery president, a candidate who would win without a single vote in the Deep South, came other, equally shocking signs of change.

Preliminary figures that began appearing in the press as early as September 1860 confirmed what many Americans already suspected: immigration and westward expansion were shifting the country’s balance of population and power. Since the last count, in 1850, the North’s population had increased an astonishing 41 percent, while the South’s had grown only 27 percent. (Between 2000 and 2010, by comparison, the entire nation’s population grew just 9.7 percent.) Tellingly, the statistical center of national population had shifted for the first time not only west of the original 13 states, but also from slave territory into free: from Virginia to Ohio.

Some regions of the country — places that just a few years earlier had been sparsely populated forests and prairies, with unfamiliar Indian names — were now thriving states. In a number of cases, the growth had been astonishing. In 1836, one of these upstart territories had claimed fewer than 12,000 inhabitants. Now, in 1860, it boasted 778,000 — an increase of almost 6,400 percent in less than a quarter of a century.

That demographic prodigy was Wisconsin. Reviewing the data, its governor boasted to the legislature that the state “exhibits a wonderful increase in number, and growth in every material element of prosperity.” Nor was it even the most remarkable case. Neighboring Minnesota’s population had risen from 6,000 to 172,000 in the past decade alone.

Worried Southerners could not fail to notice that the areas of the greatest population boom were all in the North. Both Wisconsin and Minnesota were, of course, free states. Both went heavily for Lincoln in the 1860 election. Both were populated largely by immigrants with roots in Germany and Scandinavia and pioneers with roots in New England and New York — groups well known for their strong antipathy to slavery. And both, as it happened, would soon send tens of thousands of their inhabitants to fight in the Union Army.

“The official jottings of the census show great alterations,” one Northern newspaper editor noted smugly. “The difference in the relative standing of the slave states and the free, between 1850 and 1860, inevitably shows where the future greatness of our country is to be.”

This page of the 1860 census lists some of Jefferson Davis's slaves. This page of the 1860 census lists some of Jefferson Davis’s slaves. Click on the image to see the full page.

Southern analysts looked at the data and reached a similar conclusion. They were also quick to note that changing demographics were about to usher in a political cataclysm in Washington — and not just in the White House. Legislative reapportionment based on the new Census figures was about to set off a tectonic shift at the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue.

Under the headline “Census Data for Reflection,” the editor of the New Orleans Picayune noted that states like Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa and Illinois would each be gaining multiple seats in Congress; Virginia, South Carolina and Tennessee would be losing some. (The only Deep South state to gain would be Texas, whose population had almost tripled since 1850; it would get two new seats.)

Perhaps even more alarming as a barometer of the South’s long-term prospects lay farther west, in the federal territories — what the Picayune called “the embryo states, manufactured for new political power within the Senate, of which there are now seven, Nebraska, Washington, Utah, New Mexico, Colorado, Dakotah and Nevada…. They lie up in that Western region, beyond and about Kansas, where free soil states are planted in hot haste by emigration societies, and U.S. Senators manufactured out of the roughest material, to vote down the oldest and most populous commonwealths.” Among them, the paper noted, all but perhaps New Mexico were “certain to be free-soil or rather Abolition States.”

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True, the population of slaves was still increasing steadily, with each new infant representing another three-fifths of a Southerner for electoral purposes. (For white electoral purposes, of course, since very few people in 1860 anticipated that any of these black Americans would ever cast a ballot on his own behalf.) Yet even here, there were signs of Southern power eroding. The Philadelphia Inquirer noted that slaves now formed a smaller portion of the total population than at any point in history — just 12.5 percent. (The New York Herald did find at least one source of comfort for the South: the paper’s statistician declared it “very certain” that the nation’s slave population would reach 50 million by the year 1925.)

After official Census figures were released in early April — a week before the attack on Fort Sumter — one Southern editor even scrutinized the data for signs of abolitionist treachery. Looking at the growth of free black population in the Northern states, he claimed to find evidence of the “immense losses which the South has sustained” from the nefarious activities of the Underground Railroad.

By squinting at the numbers from a slightly different angle, however, some Southerners found reason to hope. In late April 1861, the Picayune reexamined its data and noticed that with Virginia joining the rebellion, the new Confederacy’s white population would total almost 4 million. This figure, it noted, was “larger by 700,000 than that with which the thirteen colonies went into revolution, in 1775, against the might of the British Empire; and larger by half a million than the population of the thirteen States when the constitution of the United States was made and accepted.” It was larger, too, than the populations of such European countries as Portugal, Denmark, Belgium and Sweden.

In other words, while the Census figures seemed to prophesy that the South was doomed within the Union — but that without it, slaveholders could fight and win a revolution and then hold their own as an independent nation. Moreover, the demographic imbalances accelerated with each new slave state that seceded. This tipping effect made it less and less likely that the Upper South slave states would remain.

And so, on the eve of the war’s first shots, Southern slaveholders felt that they were escaping one of the worst fates that a human being might suffer: that of becoming a politically oppressed minority. The living examples of just such a fate — reproachful and terrifying — could be seen all around them, in the quarters and the cotton fields.


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Sources: New York Herald, Sept. 6 and 13 and Nov. 22, 1860; Philadelphia Inquirer, Feb. 9 and April 2, 1861; Milwaukee Evening Patriot, Jan. 11, 1861; New York Times, April 5, 1860; Daily Picayune (New Orleans), March 21 and April 28, 1861; New Orleans Commercial Advertiser, Dec. 19, 1860; Baltimore Sun, March 28, 1861.


Adam Goodheart

Adam Goodheart is the author of the forthcoming book “1861: The Civil War Awakening.” He lives in Washington, D.C., and on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, where he is the Hodson Trust-Griswold Director of Washington College’s C.V. Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience.