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New Bedford's Civil War (Paperback)
Loot Price: R717
Discovery Miles 7 170
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New Bedford's Civil War (Paperback)
Series: The North's Civil War
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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New Bedford's Civil War examines the social, political, economic,
and military history of New Bedford, Massachusetts, in the
nineteenth century, with a focus on the Civil War homefront from
1861 to 1865 and on the city's black community, soldiers, and
veterans.
Earl Mulderink's engaging work contributes to the growing body of
Civil War studies that analyzes the "war at home" by focusing on
the bustling center of the world's whaling industry in the
nineteenth century. Using a broad chronological framework of the
1840s through the 1890s, this book contextualizes the rise and fall
of New Bedford's whaling enterprise and details the war's
multifaceted impacts between 1861 and 1865. A major goal of this
book is to explore the war's social history by examining how the
conflict touched the city's residents--both white and black.
Known before the war for both its wealth and its antislavery
fervor, New Bedford offered a congenial home for a sizeable black
community that experienced a "different Civil War" than did
native-born whites. Drawing upon military pension files, published
accounts, and welfare records, this book pays particular attention
to soldiers and families connected with the Fifty-fourth
Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, the "brave black regiment" (made
famous by the Academy Award-winning 1989 film Glory) that helped
shape national debates over black military enlistment, equal pay,
and notions of citizenship. New Bedford's enlightened white
leaders, many of them wealthy whaling merchants with Quaker roots,
actively promoted military enlistment that pulled 2,000 local
citizen-soldiers (about 10 percent of the city's total population)
into the Union ranks.
As the Whaling City gave way to a postwar landscape marked by
textile manufacturing and heavy foreign immigration, the black
community fought to keep alive the meaning and history of the Civil
War. Joining their one-time neighbor Frederick Douglass, New
Bedford's black veterans used the memory of the war and their
participation in it to push for full equality--a losing battle by
the turn of the twentieth century.
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