appears to have retained the Democrats hold on Catholic voters. He may also have won a majority of Episcopalian and Old School Presbyterian voters.
But the Protestant center of gravity was firmly within a Republican/Union party that seems to have won over
many Baptists and Methodists, and even Old School Presbyterians, who had previously been Democrat in loyalty.
51
In a celebratory editorial, written in the grey dawn after election day, Theodore Tilton attributed the Union victory to nothing less than an overruling Divine Hand outstretched to save the Republic.”
52
More prosaically we can see it as the result of an extraordinary mobilization of
Union opinion by those who saw themselves as God’s servants the leaders of the Protestant churches.
Limitations of space preclude considering other networks of moral or non-coercive influence that contributed to this energizing of Unionism. They included (paradoxical as it may seem) the North’s
most potent physical force, the Union army. Federal troops constituted a mighty weapon whose informal operations on the home front were less easily measured than the battlefield impact of their bullets and bayonets but which in their own way worked to stiffen patriotism. Most troops were staunch republicans,
loyal, even devoted, to Lincoln, and remained convinced of the political and moral values symbolized by the flag under which they served they generally voted the Union ticket at elections and exercised an unquantifiable but indisputable influence over their families and home communities. That influence reached its apogee in the election that brought an extraordinarily high proportion of voters to the polls, returned
Lincoln to the White House,
and opened the way to a reconstituted Union free from slavery.
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The Union leadership’s chief means of mobilizing wartime opinion,
however, were the Republican Party and the Protestant churches. Lincoln used them concertedly to articulate the moral purposes that underpinned the material concerns of northern Unionism. Constrained by popular racism and a persisting Democratic opposition, Lincoln could not ignore conservative, loyalist public sentiment. But there was more to the President than the shrewd manager who went only as fast as the ambitions of conservatives would allow. What kept the Union going, both on the home
front and on the battlefield, was a sense of purpose and republican vision that owed much to the more radical perspectives of New England and its cultural diaspora.
Lincoln’s fluctuating relations with the most radical in his party, those who sought to effect asocial and racial revolution, were scarcely easy. But his steadfastness of purpose and his skill in handling the instruments of communication, allied to a firm moral perspective, made him the architect and anchor of an ethically renewed Union.
Lincoln
and the Union•
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