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Confederate Emancipation - Southern Plans to Free and Arm Slaves during the Civil War (Hardcover)
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Confederate Emancipation - Southern Plans to Free and Arm Slaves during the Civil War (Hardcover)
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In early 1864, as the Confederate Army of Tennessee licked its
wounds after being routed at the Battle of Chattanooga,
Major-General Patrick Cleburne (the "Stonewall of the West")
proposed that "the most courageous of our slaves" be trained as
soldiers and that "every slave in the South who shall remain true
to the Confederacy in this war" be freed. In Confederate
Emancipation, Bruce Levine looks closely at such Confederate plans
to arm and free slaves. He shows that within a year of Cleburne's
proposal, which was initially rejected out of hand, Jefferson
Davis, Judah P. Benjamin, and Robert E. Lee had all reached the
same conclusions. At that point, the idea was debated widely in
newspapers and drawing rooms across the South, as more and more
slaves fled to Union lines and fought in the ranks of the Union
army. Eventually, the soldiers of Lee's army voted on the proposal,
and the Confederate government actually enacted a version of it in
March. The Army issued the necessary orders just two weeks before
Appomattox, too late to affect the course of the war. Throughout
the book, Levine captures the voices of blacks and whites, wealthy
planters and poor farmers, soldiers and officers, and newspaper
editors and politicians from all across the South. In the process,
he sheds light on such hot-button topics as what the Confederacy
was fighting for, whether black southerners were willing to fight
in large numbers in defense of the South, and what this episode
foretold about life and politics in the post-war South. Confederate
Emancipation offers an engaging and illuminating account of a
fascinating and politically charged idea, setting it firmly and
vividly in the context of the Civil War and the part played in it
by the issue of slavery and the actions of the slaves themselves.
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