With its in-depth coverage of the border South’s search for a middle ground in a time of mounting catastrophe, Conservative Americanism is first-class political history on a subject too little done, written with clarity, a fair amount of verve, and the most prodigious research.
— Mark Summers, University of Kentucky
George-Nichol’s tight chronological and regional focus pays multiple dividends, helping make this a strong contribution to the growing literature on late antebellum conservatism. Her organizing concept of Conservative Americanism also lends a welcome precision to her discussion of a terribly important but often underrated group, Border South Unionists.
— Matthew Mason, Brigham Young University
This welcome book by a promising young scholar breathes life into a heretofore overlooked political movement that surfaced during the mid-1850s. Alarmed by the increasingly fractious North-South impasse and by the surge of foreign immigration, promoters of 'Conservative Americanism' decided that radical refugees from the failed European revolutions of 1848 threatened to intensify the dangerous antislavery movement. The Conservative American political coalition showed promise in the Upper South, but never commanded enough support to become a national force. Kentucky Senator John J. Crittenden emerges as the most memorable character in Jesse George-Nichol’s resurrection of an alternate universe, where reason and compromise prevailed over the passionate polarization that led to the Civil War.
— Daniel W. Crofts, The College of New Jersey
In our current political crisis over minoritarian extremism, Jesse George-Nichol has offered a timely window into an earlier American reckoning, when moderate proslavery 'conservatives' from the Border South proved unable to convince other proslavery Americans, southern and northern, to compromise in defense of the Union against what they believed was the nation’s greatest threat: egalitarian radicalism. As both irony and cautionary tale, Conservative Americanism is the best kind of political history.
— Christopher Phillips, University of Cincinnati
In this engrossing and much-needed study of Southern Unionism in the Civil War era, Jesse George-Nichol shows the close connections between nineteenth-century conservatism and fears of foreign influence. Key to this history is the Know Nothing Party, typically seen as a northern phenomenon, that attracted Southern moderates who defined American democracy in opposition to the tumultuous politics of Europe. Told through compelling portraits of six prominent slave-state Unionists, Conservative Americanism provides fresh insights into the South’s troubled path to secession and the civil war.
— Frank Towers, University of Calgary