MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · November 6 · 1860
ON THIS DAY · 6 NOVEMBER 1860
Lincoln elected

6 Nov 1860 — Lincoln wins with 40% of the popular vote and not a single Southern state — a purely sectional victory, exactly what the arithmetic of free-state population promised. South Carolina summons a convention within days.
THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT
Before a shot is fired, study the map’s geography of money. The charcoal South is the world’s cotton engine: by 1860 cotton is about 60% of all American exports, and the four million people enslaved to grow it are, by market price, the South’s largest capital asset — worth more than all the nation’s railroads and factories combined. That is the brutal arithmetic under every compromise: the South is not defending an aberration, it is defending the foundation of its wealth, and every western territory (the pale expanse at the map’s left) is a fight over whether that system spreads or is fenced in to die.
From Chapter 1 — A House Dividing of The American Civil War, 1861–1865 (JAN 1861).
OPEN THE INTERACTIVE MAP →New here? Chapters 1–2 of every atlas are free to sample, and the WW2 atlas is free in full. One membership opens all ten — the Cartographer’s Circle.
TEACH THIS IN 5 MINUTES
- Why it happened — Slavery as capital, not merely labor. Emancipation somewhere threatened property values everywhere: an enslaved person in Virginia was worth more because Mississippi and the territories…
- The turn — 6 November 1860 — the election. Nothing in Lincoln’s platform freed a single enslaved person — it barred slavery only from the territories. But the South read the result correctly:…
- What it changed — Secession begins in the Deep South. South Carolina, then the six cotton states, leave between December and February — before Lincoln even takes office. Watch which states move first:…
Then ask the room: Was the Civil War “about” slavery, states’ rights, or economics — and is that even a well-formed question? The argued answer is on the chapter page →
THE ATLAS THAT SHOWS IT
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