Lincoln, Colonization, and Evidentiary Standards: A Response to Allen C. Guelzo

14 Pages Posted: 21 May 2013 Last revised: 22 May 2013

See all articles by Phillip Magness

Phillip Magness

Independent Institute

Sebastian Page

University of Oxford - Rothermere American Institute

Date Written: May 1, 2013

Abstract

This article is offered in response to historian Allen C. Guelzo, who recently called into question the authenticity of a body of evidence utilized by the authors to trace and interpret the policies of black colonization enacted during the administration of Abraham Lincoln.

For the better part of his presidency, Lincoln pursued the voluntary colonization or resettlement of freed slaves in multiple tropical locales under the authority of a series of statutes adopted in 1862. Subsequent assessments of this policy; including the criticism to which we respond; have called into question the sincerity of Lincoln's actions; despite a body of evidence to support Lincoln's attachment to the colonization idea in matters of statute, international relations, and personal philosophy.

In answering Guelzo, we conclusively demonstrate the provenance of the historical documents he has called into question, and offer a series of further research challenges to the conventional assessments found in the colonization and emancipation literature of the past 50 years.

Keywords: Abraham Lincoln, Civil War, colonization, slavery, emancipation, African-American history

Suggested Citation

Magness, Phillip and Page, Sebastian, Lincoln, Colonization, and Evidentiary Standards: A Response to Allen C. Guelzo (May 1, 2013). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2267625 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2267625

Phillip Magness (Contact Author)

Independent Institute ( email )

100 Swan Way
Oakland, CA 94621
United States

Sebastian Page

University of Oxford - Rothermere American Institute ( email )

1a South Parks Road
Oxford, OX1 3UB
United Kingdom

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