Sam Houston drew heavily from Andrew Jackson’s school of thought in opposing the idea of sectionalism, and decried both political parties in the 1856 presidential election for what Houston saw as sectionalism.4 As for the Sam Houston papers, these contained various useful newspaper accounts documenting Sam Houston’s response to the secession crisis, but were at times visibly biased against Sam Houston, one even peddling a conspiracy theory about Old Sam.5 Hence a broad range of methodological issues needed to be
Sam Houston drew heavily from Andrew Jackson’s school of thought in opposing the idea of sectionalism, and decried both political parties in the 1856 presidential election for what Houston saw as sectionalism.4 As for the Sam Houston papers, these contained various useful newspaper accounts documenting Sam Houston’s response to the secession crisis, but were at times visibly biased against Sam Houston, one even peddling a conspiracy theory about Old Sam.5 Hence a broad range of methodological issues needed to be