''A fascinating and provocative study that illuminates the history of the Civil War era by probing the relationship between political secret societies and social radicalism in Europe and antebellum reform and sectional crisis in the United States. This book will be a tremendous resource of information for scholars, and it is one of the most genuinely original works that I have ever read.''--Robert E. May, author of Manifest Destiny's Underworld: Filibustering in Antebellum America''A challenging look at the reality of Civil War-era secret societies. This work opens up enormous possibilities for future research, prompting us to reconsider--or indeed consider for the first time--people and perspectives that have been, at best, on the periphery of studies of the Civil War era.''--Susan-Mary Grant, author of The War for a Nation: The American Civil War''Dispelling the mysticism and self-aggrandizement of fraternal orders in antebellum America, Mark A. Lause successfully removes the Panjandrum from the panorama of American secret societies. The result is a careful examination of the consequence of secret societies and their place in shaping America's national identity on the eve of the Civil War.''--Michael A. Halleran, author of The Better Angels of Our Nature: Freemasonry in the American Civil War