Abstract
From within the common national, gradualist, and liberal narrative of emancipation, Major General John C. Fremont’s proclamation of August 30, 1861, emancipating all the slaves of disloyal Missourians, appears as a recklessly premature step threatening to derail the progress of freedom in the United States. Fremont’s proclamation, however, was not simply a misstep in the national process of legislating emancipation. Rather, it reflected, and perhaps attempted to justify, extralegal processes of emancipation already taking place in the Trans-Mississippi West. These were the self-emancipatory efforts of slaves themselves, the ongoing antislavery guerrilla warfare of Kansas Jayhawkers, and the military strategies of European, especially German, revolutionary socialists. This essay only focuses only on the last group, the European socialists, to highlight how the Civil War, arguably the central turning point in US history, was also an important episode in a larger revolutionary drama pitting plebian proponents of democracy against concentrations of wealth, whether of slaveholders or of capitalists, and also against concentrations of elite power in the limited, liberal state.
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