The Theory of the Blending of the Races
In 1864,
an anonymous hardbound pamphlet was published entitled Miscegenation:
The Theory of the Blending of the Races, Applied to the American White Man and
Negro. The word "miscegenation" was coined by the authors who claimed it was a scientific theory describing how racial blending enhances humanity. The pamphlet encouraged the interbreeding of people from different
racial or ethnic groups through marriage or sexual relations.
During the
Civil War, the North was terrified that freed slaves would swarm to their
states. Racial bigotry was real and serious. Northerners were frightened for
good reasons. For seven decades slaveholders and their Democratic Party allies had
exclaimed on the floor of Congress, in newspapers, in churches, and in pubs
that emancipation would cause hordes of black men to migrate north to take the
White man’s job and daughters. Tribal instincts were fanned until they were
burned into the subconscious of most Americans.
After their
defeats at Gettysburg and Vicksburg, savvy Confederates knew the war was lost and placed their hope on a General
McClellan victory in the Union presidential election. Running as a Peace
Democrat, the South assumed McClellan would negotiate a peace that would include independence and retain the institution of slavery.
This is
the environment that Miscegenation was tossed into. An anonymous publication
that purported to be the official position of the Republican Party. Here are a couple
of quotes.
The
object of this work is to show that the amalgamation of the two races is not
only desirable, but that it is inevitable, and that the sooner it is
accomplished the better for all concerned.
The
Republican party, in its platform of 1860, implicitly favored this great
reform. Let us carry it to its logical conclusion! Encourage intermarriages;
let the white daughters of the North wed the sable sons of Africa. Thus, shall
we purify the Republic and fulfill its destiny as a beacon of liberty?
Miscegenation
was published in December
1863, and over five thousand copies were distributed with countless newspaper
articles and reviews. In July of 1864, the New York Times published an
article tying the pamphlet to the pro-Confederate New York World. This article
and those that followed proved that the pamphlet was published by Democrats to harm
Abraham Lincoln’s chances of reelection.
The pamphlet is an interesting read and quite artful in its subterfuge. The hoax fooled many at the time and the term miscegenation has endured. Additionally, it seems that hoaxes have become an integral part of the Democratic Party's DNA.
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