Dark Bargain: Slavery, Profits, and the Struggle for the Constitution

Dark Bargain: Slavery, Profits, and the Struggle for the Constitution

by Lawrence Goldstone
Dark Bargain: Slavery, Profits, and the Struggle for the Constitution

Dark Bargain: Slavery, Profits, and the Struggle for the Constitution

by Lawrence Goldstone

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Overview

On September 17, 1787, at the State House in Philadelphia, thirty-nine men from twelve states, after months of often bitter debate, signed America's Constitution. Yet very few of the delegates, at the start, had had any intention of creating a nation that would last. Most were driven more by pragmatic, regional interests than by idealistic vision. Many were meeting for the first time, others after years of contention, and the inevitable clash of personalities would be as intense as the advocacy of ideas or ideals.No issue was of greater concern to the delegates than that of slavery: it resounded through debates on the definition of treason, the disposition of the rich lands west of the Alleghenies and the admission of new states, representation and taxation, the need for a national census, and the very make-up of the legislative and executive branches of the new government. As is provocatively made clear in Dark Bargain, "to a significant and disquieting degree, America's most sacred document was molded and shaped by the most notorious institution in its history."Dark Bargain chronicles the forging of the Constitution through the prism of the crucial compromises made by men consumed with the needs of the slave economy. As the daily debates and backroom conferences in inns and taverns stretched through July and August of that hot summer--and as the philosophical leadership of James Madison waned--Lawrence Goldstone clearly reveals how tenuous the document was, and how an agreement between unlikely collaborators--John Rutledge of South Carolina, and Roger Sherman and Oliver Ellsworth of Connecticut--got the delegates past their most difficult point. Dark Bargain recounts an event as dramatic and compelling as any in our nation's history.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781985665163
Publisher: CreateSpace Publishing
Publication date: 03/13/2018
Pages: 274
Sales rank: 465,480
Product dimensions: 5.98(w) x 9.02(h) x 0.58(d)

About the Author

Lawrence Goldstone holds a Ph.D. in American Constitutional Studies and is the co-author, with his wife, Nancy, of the highly-praised works of narrative history, Out of the Flames and The Friar and the Cipher. He lives in Westport, Connecticut.

What People are Saying About This

Edward Ball

"I thought I'd read the Constitution, but this book turns a good, harsh light on the founding documents, not to mention the Founders, who look in these pages to have been a shrewd and self-loving clique."
author of Slaves in the Family

James Grant

"Slavery has always lurked around the periphery of our constitutional history. In this disturbing yet scintillating work of scholarship, Lawrence Goldstone has restored the peculiar institution to its rightful, horrific place at the center. Fascinating and important."
author of John Adams: Party of One

Howard Zinn

"DARK BARGAIN puts slavery near the heart of the making of the Constitution, where it belongs. Goldstone’s narrative is lively and carefully researched, and we learn more than we knew about James Madison and the other "founding fathers."
author of A People's History of the United States

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