“…This event coupled with the infamous attack on the Massachusetts Senator, Charles Sumner, by the Southern congressman, Preston Brooks, did much to convince the North that Southerners were dangerous fanatics, educated by slavery to violence, and determined to dominate the free states.I3 To New York lawyer, George Templeton Strong, the caning of Sumner offered positive proof that 'civilization at the South is retrograde', and he was appalled that Southern editors and Congressmen should 'talk about the "chivalry", "gallantry", and manliness of the act' (Nevins and Thomas 1952: 2 7 4 5 ; 278). It would be a mistake, however, to argue, as some have done, that it was this episode alone which produced a marked anti-Southernism in Strong (Gienapp 1979).14 Distinctly anti-Southern elements were evident in Strong's thinking before 1856. South Carolina, in particular, was described by Strong in 1850 as a 'preposterous little state', which was utterly inferior to the 'city of New York or Boston or Philadelphia in resources, civilization, importance, and everything else'.…”