Lincolnites and Rebels: A Divided Town in the American Civil War

Couverture
Oxford University Press, 9 nov. 2006 - 320 pages
At the start of the Civil War, Knoxville, Tennessee, with a population of just over 4,000, was considered a prosperous metropolis little reliant on slavery. Although the surrounding countryside was predominantly Unionist in sympathy, Knoxville itself was split down the middle, with Union and Confederate supporters even holding simultaneous political rallies at opposite ends of the town's main street. Following Tennessee's secession, Knoxville soon became famous (or infamous) as a stronghold of stalwart Unionism, thanks to the efforts of a small cadre who persisted in openly denouncing the Confederacy. Throughout the course of the Civil War, Knoxville endured military occupation for all but three days, hosting Confederate troops during the first half of the conflict and Union forces throughout the remainder, with the transition punctuated by an extended siege and bloody battle during which nearly forty thousand soldiers fought over the town. In Lincolnites and Rebels, Robert Tracy McKenzie tells the story of Civil War Knoxville-a perpetually occupied, bitterly divided Southern town where neighbor fought against neighbor. Mining a treasure-trove of manuscript collections and civil and military records, McKenzie reveals the complex ways in which allegiance altered the daily routine of a town gripped in a civil war within the Civil War and explores the agonizing personal decisions that war made inescapable. Following the course of events leading up to the war, occupation by Confederate and then Union soldiers, and the troubled peace that followed the war, Lincolnites and Rebels details in microcosm the conflict and paints a complex portrait of a border state, neither wholly North nor South.
 

Table des matières

INTRODUCTION
3
1 The Metropolis of East Tennessee
11
2 Contemplating Calamity
27
3 A Town Dividing
50
4 The Reign of Terror Unfolds
83
5 Prudent Silence and Strict Neutrality
111
6 Liberation Occupation and Twenty Minutes of Carnage
141
7 A New Set of Strains
173
8 Retribution and Reconciliation
196
AFTERWORD
224
Identifying Individual Unionists and Confederates
231
NOTES
235
BIBLIOGRAPHY
283
INDEX
295
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À propos de l'auteur (2006)

Robert Tracy McKenzie is Associate Professor of History at Wheaton College. He is the author of One South or Many? Plantation Belt and Upcountry in Civil War-Era Tennessee, which received awards from the American Historical Association's Pacific Coast Branch and the Agricultural History Society.

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