July 31; 1859My Angel of purity love and Goodness!Forgive this offence and I’ll be guilty of the like again the first time I feel like writing. You had as well bid the Sun cease to wander the earth with its heat as to bid the heart of Winston not to commune with the object of its adoration . . .March 12; 1862My own dear husband;I hardly know what to write and how to write to you my poor heart is so full of anxiety . . . I think you may as well give up and come home as to try and keep the enemy back . . . I suppose you heard that the Government has abandoned this state and the Governor has ordered all the regiments that are mustered into the Confederate service away from East Fla. What is to become of us?Feb 2; 1864My Dear Wife;Oh! That I could have you by me to talk to . . . We get no news here; still it does seem that something must be doing to make ready for a grand move. . . I often think and wonder if our Government sees the awful truth and is preparing to meet and defeat the attempt to crush us. . . .As fresh and poignant today as when they were written; these touching letters and diaries capture the heart of everyday life during the Civil War. Set both at home in north Florida and on the front; the letters were written from 1856 to mid-1865 by two generations of the Bryant and Stephens families; ordinary Confederate folk whose members included radical secessionists; moderates; and even a few Unionists. The domestic letters; written mostly by mothers and daughters from their homes near Welaka; Florida; describe their hatred of Yankee invaders; their emotions in dealing with slaves; and their flaming patriotism as well as their fear of being abandoned by the government. They offer a rare picture of the expanded roles of women as farm managers; their naive hopes for a quick victory; and their yearning for peace. From the military camps; soldiers and officers write about Abe Lincoln; "coloured troops"; endless marches; Florida's two best-known battles; Olustee and Natural Bridge; and all the skirmishes around Jacksonville and the St. Johns River as well as distant military events like the Battle of Gettysburg. For all of the letter writers; death has become as familiar as Spanish moss. Especially; though; the letters tell a love story. The courtship of Winston Stephens and Tivie Bryant was prolonged; erratic; and stormy; their married life at Rose Cottage was nearly perfect--and brief. Four years and three months after their wedding--during the final ticks of the Confederate clock--Winston was killed in battle. Days later their only son was born. Virtually all of the letters--more than one thousand exchanged between eight major and four minor correspondents--survive in this family saga; a riveting human and historical chronicle set in the foreground of the Civil War. Arch Fredric Blakey; retired military historian; has written several books and numerous articles on the Civil War and Florida history; including General John H. Winder; C.S.A. (UPF; 1990); a History Book Club selection. He lives near Bell; Florida.Ann Smith Lainhart; a descendant of the Bryant-Stephens families; is a professional genealogist. She lives in Peabody; Massachusetts.Winston Bryant Stephens; Jr.; also a descendant of the Bryant-Stephens families; is a retired businessman in Jupiter; Florida.
#158179 in Books Bruce Levine 2014-04-01 2014-04-01Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 7.99 x 1.07 x 5.19l; .79 #File Name: 0812978722480 pagesThe Fall of the House of Dixie The Civil War and the Social Revolution That Transformed the South
Review
268 of 280 people found the following review helpful. The destruction of a way of lifeBy Ashutosh S. JogalekarHaving read the book after seeing all the negative reviews; I don't find any evidence of the "Yankee bias" that the negative reviewers of this book claim exists. What I see instead is a comprehensive and engaging narrative of how the culture and commerce of the Antebellum South thrived on the institution of slavery and how deep and widespread the South's dependence on slave labor was; not just in shaping its economic structure but also its moral worldview. By focusing on the devastating cultural and social effects of the Civil War on this colossal edifice; the volume nicely complements others primarily dealing with military campaigns. At the same time the military campaigns provide a recurring background to the author's narrative. The story is illuminated by valuable diary entries and testimonies from a handful of key Southerners and slave-owners; most prominently the Edmondstons of North Carolina and the Stones of Louisiana. In addition Levine draws upon the words of dozens of major and minor players; including generals; privates; politicians; slaves; non slave-owning commoners; religious leaders and merchants. Their words showcase the diversity of opinions about slavery; the Union and the Civil War dispersed across multiple social strata.Levine starts by providing us with an overview of the astounding affluence that slave labor made possible for Southerners and the sheer size of the slave-based economy. The combined value of the slaves in the South was a gargantuan $3 billion and one in three persons was a bonded laborer. Levine then documents the slave policies perpetuated by masters in the south and the self-serving justifications that they came up with for sustaining this labor. While economic reasons always loomed large in their calculations; it was clear that the longtime dependence of their families on this system had allowed them to come up with all kinds of convenient moral; religious and social reasons for supporting a way of life fundamentally grounded in slavery. In addition they regularly appeased poor; white non-slave owners with gifts of slaves; money and social status to keep them from commiserating with the slaves and turning against them. And while the friction that their policies caused with the North was often couched in terms of states' rights; it was clear - and Levine details this through words explicitly uttered by many prominent slave owners and Southern leaders themselves- that slavery was always the main issue at stake; Southern slave owners simply could not envision a system without bonded labor and the question of states' rights was often at best a secondary issue. The perpetuation of slavery was explicitly codified in the Confederate Constitution. These are all cold facts supported by extensive documented evidence (the bibliography runs to more than 150 pages); and not bias on the part of the author as the negative reviewers would have us believe.Levine provides an excellent run-up to 1860 when matters came to a head with the election of Lincoln. The book does a very good job of describing how Lincoln's thinking changed over time; from wanting to simply preserve the Union by only gradually setting the stage for abolition to becoming a convert aligned with Thaddeus Stevens and other "radical" Republicans. As the Northern states decided on various progressive policies including the abolition of slavery in new states; the Southern states felt the noose tightening. It's interesting to note that the Republicans did not try to outlaw slavery outright; but it was the South's constant opposition to their policies (especially pertaining to newly admitted states and the fugitive slave law) and the concurrent secession that made compromise impossible. Levine also sheds valuable light on pro-Union Southerners; especially in the upper Southern states; whose conflicting views about the war were shaped by political; economic and even moral concerns.After laying this groundwork; the book then deals with the systematic demolition by the Civil War of this decades-old way of life. Levine charts the changing; initially upbeat; attitudes of slaveless whites and even blacks about the war as chances of victory started looking slim. Confederate armies started finding little support among pro-Union Southerners in states like Kentucky and Missouri and poor whites grew disillusioned about what they increasingly saw as a rich man's war. Concomitantly; the recruitment of black soldiers in large numbers was a breath of fresh air to slaves in the South who were accustomed to thinking of themselves as perpetually indentured. Levine also details the rising aspirations among free black people in the North even as they dreamt of a future of literacy; money and freedom for their children. Another interesting statistic cited by Levine is the enthusiastic support in favor of the Union among immigrant Irish and German military recruits who made up almost a quarter of the Union army. Military engagements are succinctly described; but they provide a backdrop to the far more consequential uprooting of traditions and customs that the conflict brought about; engendering deep feelings of fear and hatred but also hope and understanding. Families which had owned and exploited slavery for three generations suddenly found themselves literally out on the streets. This demolition caused a seismic shift in the whole nature of the South and irreversibly affected the social structure and politics of the entire country. While one does sometimes sympathize with the plight of folks whose entire world came crashing down around them; it's clear that we were dealing with two fundamentally opposed systems which simply could not co-exist. Perhaps the greatest irony in the end is that it was the Confederacy which hastened the end of slavery.The book thus is basically a descriptive account of the depth to which slavery was woven into the South's existence and how massively the Civil War overturned this basic social foundation. It's a historical account dealing with the facts; not a moral one in which the author doles out his personal judgement. And unless you actually think that slavery was a good thing; there's no way in which you can accuse the author of having ulterior motives. I think the simplest explanation of the negative reviews (which are almost all one line pronouncements) is that they have been written by folks who haven't actually read the book. Based on my reading; I strongly urge readers to take a look at the book themselves and decide if the vitriol makes sense.7 of 7 people found the following review helpful. Required readingBy WDEThis is a wonderful book that anyone interested in the history of the South or the Civil War should read. The neo-confederates dislike this history because it focuses on the social history rather than the supposedly heroic military characters. This author decimates any argument that the Civil War was not caused by slavery or fought over slavery as well as a number of other neo-confederate themes; which were always revisionist history and closer to myth or fantasy.2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. The South's Slave CultureBy William D. HunkerFascinating "behind the scenes" account of the social structure and beliefs of various demographic groups in the antebellum and Civil War South. As there is today; there was a top 1% of society that fought for its slavery-based economic and social privileges. But there were also lower social classes that had their own reasons for secession and maintaining the slavery status quo. Every action has multiple causes. The author skillfully presents the conflicting political; social; and cultural interests of the South's population in choosing war.