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When General E. A. Paine assumed command of the military District
of Western Kentucky at Paducah in the summer of 1864, he
encountered an unwelcoming and defiant populace, a thriving black
market and an undisciplined army plagued by low morale. Outside the
picket lines, armed guerrillas were pillaging towns, terrorizing
citizens and even murdering the vocal few that supported the Union.
Paine was assigned the impossible task to cure the district's many
ailments and defend a hostile area that covered over 2,300 square
miles. In less than two months, he succeeded where past commanders
had failed. To the region's secessionist majority, Paine's tenure
was a "reign of terror;" to the Unionist minority, it was a "happy
and jubilant" time. An abolitionist, Paine supported the
Emancipation Proclamation, promoted the enlistment of African
American troops and encouraged fair wages to former slaves. These
principled views, however, led to his downfall. His critics and
enemies wanted him out. Falsified reports led to his removal from
command and court martial. Paine was exonerated on all but one
minor charge, yet generations of local and state historians
perpetuated the Paine-the-monster myth. This book tells the true
story of General E. A. Paine.
On January 31, 1865, Congressman Lucian Anderson from slave state
Kentucky elevated principle above politics and voted for the 13th
Amendment to the constitution, which abolished slavery. He gambled
more than his political career; he put his life on the line. He was
from Mayfield, one of the most rabidly Rebel towns in the Bluegrass
State. In 1863 after Anderson was elected by Unionists -
secessionists were disfranchised as traitors - Confederate raiders
kidnapped him and held him for ransom. He already had received
death threats and was probably the most hated citizen in Mayfield,
though his father is credited with founding the western Kentucky
town. During the Civil War, Anderson evolved from a conservative
pro-slavery Union Democrat to an Unconditional Unionist and to a
Republican. He was a Kentucky delegate to the 1864 national
convention that re-nominated President Abraham Lincoln. Knowing he
could not win another term, Anderson chose not to seek reelection
in 1865. Profiles in Courage, John F. Kennedy's Pulitzer
Prize-winning book is about eight senators who, according to the
author, exemplified Ernest Hemingway's notion of ""grace under
pressure."" They endured ""the risks to their careers, the
unpopularity of their courses, the defamation of their characters,
and sometimes, sadly, but only sometimes, the vindication of their
reputations and their principles."" Anderson was such a lawmaker.
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