Posted by Alumni from The Atlantic
February 13, 2026
A vivid rumor began circulating in the United States in the middle of the 1850s. It was said that Robert Toombs, the ardently pro-slavery Georgia senator, was going to come to Boston and 'call the roll of his slaves at the foot of Bunker Hill.' It's not clear where the notion of a southern politician taking enslaved people to a sacred Revolutionary battlefield came from'whether Toombs spread it to troll the high-minded, antislavery Bostonians, or whether the Bostonians themselves conjured it from their own fever dreams. The nightmare never came to pass, but it was the kind of idea'conspiratorial, frightening, plausible'that flourishes in a highly charged political environment. These were the conditions in which The Atlantic was established: information overload and profound uncertainty. By the end of 1857, no one knew the crack-up of the Union was coming in three years, or that the nation would be in a civil war in four, but the portents were bleak. What did this mean for the new... learn more