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Alabamians in Blue - Freedmen, Unionists, and the Civil War in the Cotton State (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,335
Discovery Miles 13 350
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Alabamians in Blue - Freedmen, Unionists, and the Civil War in the Cotton State (Hardcover)
Series: Conflicting Worlds: New Dimensions of the American Civil War
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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Alabamians in Blue offers an in-depth scholarly examination of
Alabama's black and white Union soldiers and their contributions to
the eventual success of the Union army in the western theater.
Christopher M. Rein contends that the state's anti-Confederate
residents tendered an important service to the North, primarily by
collecting intelligence and protecting logistical infrastructure.
He highlights an underappreciated period of biracial cooperation,
underwritten by massive support from the federal government.
Providing a broad synthesis, Rein's study demonstrates that
southern dissenters were not passive victims but rather active
participants in their own liberation. Ecological factors, including
agricultural collapse under levies from both armies, may have
provided the initial impetus for Union enlistment. Federal
pillaging inflicted further heavy destruction on plantation
agriculture. The breakdown in basic subsistence that ensued pushed
Alabama's freedmen and Unionists into federal camps in garrison
cities in search of relief and the opportunity for revenge. Once in
uniform, Alabama's Union soldiers served alongside northern
regiments and frustrated Confederate General Nathan Bedford
Forrest's attempts to interrupt the Union supply efforts in the
1864 Atlanta campaign, which led to the collapse of Confederate
arms in the western theater and the eventual Union victory. Rein
describes a ""hybrid warfare"" of simultaneous conventional and
guerilla battles, where each significantly influenced the other. He
concludes that the conventional conflict both prompted and
eventually ended the internecine warfare that largely marked the
state's experience of the war. A comprehensive analysis of
military, social, and environmental history, Alabamians in Blue
uncovers a past of biracial cooperation in the American South, and
in Alabama in particular, that postwar adherents to the ""Myth of
the Lost Cause"" have successfully suppressed until now.
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