Dubbed “Fire-Eaters” by critics, the group was not a cohesive political faction but a collection of radical Democrats well known for their extreme rhetoric and nationalist demands for an independent southern nation. Among the best known Fire-Eaters were
Edmund Ruffin,
Robert Rhett,
Louis T. Wigfall, and
William Lowndes Yancey. By urging
secession in the South, the Fire-Eaters aggravated the growth of divisive
sectionalism in the U.S., and they materially contributed to the outbreak of the
Civil War (1861–1865). At an
1850 convention in
Nashville, Tennessee, Fire-Eaters urged Southern secession, citing what they called irreconcilable differences between the North and the South, and they inflamed passions by using
propaganda against the North. However, the
Compromise of 1850 and other concessions isolated the Fire-Eaters for a while. In the latter half of the 1850s, the group reemerged. During the
election of 1856, Fire-Eaters used threats of secession to persuade Northerners, who generally valued saving the Union over fighting slavery, to vote for
James Buchanan. They used several recent events for propaganda, among them "
Bleeding Kansas" and the
caning of Charles Sumner, to accuse the North of trying to abolish
slavery immediately. Using effective propaganda against
1860 presidential candidate
Abraham Lincoln, the nominee of the anti-slavery
Republican Party, the Fire-Eaters were able to convince many Southerners of this. However, Lincoln, despite abolitionist sentiment within the party, had promised not to abolish slavery in the Southern states, but only to prevent its expansion into the Western territories. They first targeted
South Carolina, which passed an
Ordinance of Secession in December 1860.
Wigfall, for one, actively encouraged an attack on
Fort Sumter to prompt
Virginia and other upper Southern States to secede as well. The Fire-Eaters helped to unleash a chain reaction that led directly to the formation of the
Confederate States of America and the
Civil War. Their influence waned quickly after the start of major fighting. ==Notable Fire-Eaters==