Lincoln and Immigration: The Other American Civil War

May 28, 2026 from 06:00 PM to May 28, 2026@ 07:00 PM
Lincoln and Immigration: The Other American Civil War

In the run-up to secession and rebellion, the great issue dividing the United States was, of course, slavery. But the parallel, often violent dispute over immigration and immigrants, including citizenship and voting rights, remained a stubborn and intractable battleground issue as well, with unexpected but profound impact on the Union, the Confederacy, and the Civil War itself. Harold Holzer’s lecture explores the nineteenth-century pathway to citizenship for the foreign-born; the rise of the anti-immigrant, nativist Know-Nothing movement; the pervasive violence against Catholics; the recruitment of immigrant soldiers to fight on both sides of the Civil War (and why their numbers and allegiance proved crucial), and Abraham Lincoln’s seldom-remembered efforts to spur immigration—either to further diversify the North, increase manpower to put down the rebellion—or both. Immigrants played a major role in both resisting and enforcing emancipation, and in fighting for both union and separation—and this talk will explore these attitudes and their consequences. Harold Holzer is a scholar of Abraham Lincoln and the political culture of era of the American Civil War. He serves as director of Hunter College’s Roosevelt House Public Policy Institute. Holzer previously spent twenty-three years as senior vice president for external affairs at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York before retiring in 2015.

Event Cost: $

May 28, 2026 from 06:00 PM to May 28, 2026 @ 07:00 PM

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