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Six “Good Officers Make Good Men”: The Changing Meanings of Honor on the Quarterdeck
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Published:March 2013
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Abstract
A law introduced in 1835 explained in clear terms what officers on merchant vessels could and could not do to keep seamen under control, forcing captains to rethink their strategies for instilling and maintaining discipline. These encroachments upon the legitimacy of their authority meant that officers had to walk a fine line between reasserting old justifications of their power and augmenting them with new legalistic justifications without violating the rising democratic sentiments of the day. Officers, particularly ships’ masters, were considered gentlemen and therefore had to embody the masculine ethic of gentlemen of the period. However, there was a dramatic change in what constituted gentlemanly honor and behavior between the 1790s and 1860. This chapter examines how officers responded to competing definitions of honor in antebellum America and how their honor legitimated their authority.
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