In 1957, Congress voted to set up the United States Civil War
Centennial Commission. A federally funded agency within the
Department of the Interior, the commission's charge was to oversee
preparations to commemorate the one-hundredth anniversary of the
central event in the Republic's history. Politicians hoped that a
formal program of activities to mark the centennial of the Civil
War would both bolster American patriotism at the height of the
cold war and increase tourism in the South. Almost overnight,
however, the patriotic pageant that organizers envisioned was
transformed into a struggle over the historical memory of the Civil
War and the injustices of racism. In Troubled Commemoration, Robert
J. Cook recounts the planning, organization, and ultimate failure
of this controversial event and reveals how the broad-based public
history extravaganza was derailed by its appearance during the
decisive phase of the civil rights movement.
Cook shows how the centennial provoked widespread alarm among
many African Americans, white liberals, and cold warriors because
the national commission failed to prevent southern whites from
commemorating the Civil War in a racially exclusive fashion. The
public outcry followed embarrassing attempts to mark secession, the
attack on Fort Sumter, and the South's victory at First Manassas,
and prompted backlash against the celebration, causing the
emotional scars left by the war to resurface. Cook convincingly
demonstrates that both segregationists and their opponents used the
controversy that surrounded the commemoration to their own
advantage. Southern whites initially embraced the centennial as a
weapon in their fight to save racial segregation, while African
Americans and liberal whites tried to transform the event into a
celebration of black emancipation.
Forced to quickly reorganize the commission, the Kennedy
administration replaced the conservative leadership team with
historians, including Allan Nevins and a young James I. Robertson,
Jr., who labored to rescue the centennial by promoting a more
soberly considered view of the nation's past. Though the
commemoration survived, Cook illustrates that white southerners
quickly lost interest in the event as it began to coincide with the
years of Confederate defeat, and the original vision of celebrating
America's triumph over division and strife was lost.
The first comprehensive analysis of the U.S. Civil War
Centennial, Troubled Commemoration masterfully depicts the episode
as an essential window into the political, social, and cultural
conflicts of America in the 1960s and confirms that it has much to
tell us about the development of the modern South.
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