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Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Review: Legacy of a Southern Lady


Legacy of a Southern Lady: Anna Calhoun Clemson, 1817-1875
is based on the dairies that Anna Calhoun Clemson kept during her life. She was born in 1817 to a socially prominent claveholding family and very close to her father, John C. Calhoun traveled to Washington, DC as a statesman from South Carolina. Anna accompanied his to be his assistant. Anna was considered his “favorite child” and he made sure that she had everything plus some. John C. Calhoun was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, Secretary of War, Vice President, Senator, and Secretary of State.

In 1838 Anna met Thomas Green Clemson; they were married. Thomas was a engineer, planter, diplomat and the founder of Clemson Agricultural college of South Carolina, which today is Clemson University. Thomas suffered from depression and mood swings that became severe. During these times Anna became a shield between Thomas and the children. Anna and Thomas’s first daughter, died soon after birth. There second child, a boy, named John Calhoun Clemson; third child, 17 months later, named Elizabeth Floride Clemson. Then when John and Elizabeth were in there teens, Anna had another daughter but she died when she was three years old. This put Thomas into a very bad depression, Anna and her mother Floride Bonneau Cohhoun Calhoun became worried that he might commit suicide. With the help of family and friends Thomas was able to get through this.

Thomas, Anna and the children lived in Brussels, Belgium from 1844 to 1851; Thomas served as Charge d’Affaires to the court of King Leopold I. They were able to return for a visit from November 1848 to May 1849 then returned to Brussels. Anna’s father died in 1850.

During the Civil War Thomas and his son John joined the Confederate Army in South Carolina. On September 3, 1863 John was captured and sent Johnson’s Island in Lake Erie a Union prison camp. John remained there until the end of the war. Anna and there daughter Floride was living in Maryland and did not move until the spring of 1865, so they were able to visit John once in 1864.

Anna came from family of 6 children; in 1865 she was the only child left living. Anna and Thomas’s daughter Elizabeth, on August 2, 1869 married a man named Gideon Lee, Jr. and they had one daughter Floride Isabella Lee, on May 15, 1870. On July 23, 1871 Elizabeth died from tuberculosis; she was only 28 years old. Anne and Thomas’s son John was killed 17 days later in a train accident he was only 30. Anna and Thomas were both devastated. So they worked on putting their dream together; of opening an agricultural college. Anna didn’t live to see the dream come true. She died on September 22, 1875 at the age of 58. Thomas established the Clemson Agricultural College of South Carolina, which is Clemson University and sets on the land that was their plantation home. Thomas age 80 died April 6, 1880.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading the diaries of Anne Calhoun Clemson. She was a very interesting woman that lived through very tough times. There is no-way I can even compare anything in my life to the lives that people lived before, during and after the Civil War. I thoroughly enjoy reading about the families and what they had to endure.

If you would like to read the 1st chapter, click here

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Violence in Kansas

Here is the next article for you that don't know much about the civil war.
To read the previous article "The Compromise of 1850"...click here.

Under the Missouri compromise, slavery was prohibited in land north of 36 degree, 30 and on May 30, 1854 the Kansas-Nebraska Act was finally passed. Four attempts to organize this territory had already been defeated in Congress, mainly because of southern opposition to the Missouri Compromise. The Kansas-Nebraska Act organized the northern Great Plains into the territories of Kansas and Nebraska and allowed popular sovereignty in the territory. The territorial organization of this area was no problem but this bill, which revoked the Missouri Compromise of 1820, prohibited slavery’s expansion into the territories north west of the border between the states of Arkansas and Missouri. The terms of the bill allowed the residents of Kansas and Nebraska territories to decide for themselves whether they would enter the Union as a free state or slave state. By revoking the Missouri Compromise, the Kansas-Nebraska Act reopened the dividing issue of slavery.

After the Compromise of 1850 was past, which settled the slavery issue in New Mexico and Utah, many Americans hoped the controversy over slavery was finished, but soon it rose again, manly because plans were being drawn up for the building of the transcontinental railroad to the pacific coast. This railroad was very important for the settlements of the western territories and the location of where it would be built. Northern Congressmen wanted a northern route, while the Southern Congressmen wanted a southern route. This divided debate threatened to stop its construction until Senator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois entered the heated dispute. Stephen, a devoted supporter of the western expansion and promoter for the Midwest’s development, understood that a railroad was absolutely necessary for that’s region’s political and economic future. Douglas realized that if it took a northern route, Chicago would probably serve as its eastern stopping point, which would benefit his home state of Illinois. But national interest was the concern. Douglas believed that a heavy populated and prosperous Midwest would be able to settle the divided conflicts between the North and South and provide harmony for the Nation.

Douglas also knew that a transcontinental railroad running from Chicago to San Francisco was only possible after the settlement of the Midwestern lands between the Rocky Mountains and the Missouri River. Douglas introduced a bill to organize the land into the territories of Kansas and Nebraska, which he believed would bring settlers into the northern Great Plains.

Douglas needed support for the bill. He found an influential senator from Missouri named David R. Atchison, who was seeking reelection in 1854. Atchison’s campaign put him up against Senator Thomas Hart Benton, an opponent of slavery’s western expansion. Atchison was a strong supporter of slavery’s expansion and he saw the Kansas-Nebraska bill as an opportunity to expand slavery’s domain. Atchison promised Douglas that he would support the bill and the settlement of the Kansas and Nebraska territories under one condition. He insisted that the Missouri Compromise be revoked so that his slaveholding population would be allowed to move into the new Kansas and Nebraska territories with their human property. To appease Atchison’s concerns, Douglas introduced a bill for the territorial organization of Kansas and Nebraska. This bill included a clause that effectively revoked the Missouri Compromise. The bill stated that the Compromise of 1850 had replaced the 1820 principle that slavery would not be extended north and west of the Arkansas-Missouri state border. The bill also stated that the question of slavery in the territories should be settled by the person living in them, which is known as Popular Sovereignty.

The wording of this bill favored Atchison in his campaign. Thomas Hart Benton was in a dilemma. If he voted for the bill, he would betray his antislavery sympathies; but if he voted against it, he would be defaulting on his promise to work for expansion into Kansas and Nebraska. Benton voted against the bill and lost the race with Atchison. After three bitter months of debate in Congress the final bill explicitly revoked the Missouri Compromise, which would have made the territory one, and slavery would have been banned. The possibility now of slavery in the new territories was made real. The obvious conclusion, at least to the Missourians, was that Kansas would be slave and Nebraska would be free.

The political development of the Kansas-Nebraska bill reached well within the politicians. The Southern members of Congress were nearly unanimous but the Northern Democrats were split in half. Half of the votes in the House went for the measure and the other half against it. Nearly all-northern Whigs opposed the bill. Under no circumstances did proslavery Congressmen want a free territory (Kansas) West of Missouri.

In addition to the political changes, the Kansas-Nebraska Act had direct consequences. In 1854 Kansas and Nebraska were promptly opened for settlement. Nebraska remained relatively quiet while Kansas, the destination of most of the new settlers, became a place for heated political debate. Settlers came to Kansas not only to develop the frontier but also to help determine whether Kansas would be a free or slave state.

Almost from the start, Kansas was lacking political stability. Proslavery Missourians traveled into Kansas to vote in favor of slavery, often arriving in armed bands. The Emigrant Aid Company of Massachusetts, which helped to establish settlements in Topeka and Lawrence plus other groups from the North and East, helped large numbers of antislavery settlers move into the territory. It was thought that these settlers would not permit slavery in Kansas. Territorial elections were held in 1854 and 1855, in which the proslavery forces won. Missouri raiders or “Border Ruffians,” as they were sometimes called, were Missourians who were sympathetic to slavery. They entered the territory in great numbers stuffing the ballot boxes, which made an honest count impossible. In some districts the number of ballots counted were twice the number of registered voters.

Few of the Border Ruffians actually owned slaves but they hated the Yankees and abolitionists and were unhappy with the prospect of free blacks living in neighboring areas.

The free-soil settlers were not necessarily abolitionists. Most were farmers who opposed slavery because the institution brought with it the plantation system. A copy of the cotton belt economy in Kansas would drive out the small homesteaders. The free-soil settlers loved their lands more than they cared about the plight of the slaves.

A proslavery territorial legislature was established in the town of Lecompton, Kansas and at the same time an antislavery legislature was established in Topeka. Civil War erupted in Kansas as proslavery and antislavery forces clashed for control of the territory. Radicals from both sides armed themselves, resulting in violence that spread throughout eastern Kansas and western Missouri.

Tempers rose from both groups, common people began to die uncommonly violent deaths. Near Lawrence, Kansas, on November 21, 1855, Franklin Coleman, a pro-slavery claim-jumper from Missouri, gunned down Charles Dow, a neighboring Free Stater from Ohio, shooting him in the back. Pro-Slavery Sheriff Samuel Jones of Westport used the murder as a reason to arrest Dow’s companion Jacob Branson and gather 1,500 pro-slavers from Missouri for an attack on Lawrence. The attack was more of a diplomatic maneuver than bloodshed but it inflamed the residents in the area. Under the command of Dr. Charles Robinson, armed Free Staters gathered. Pro-slaver George Clark murdered Thomas W. Barber, a Free Stater, near Lawrence and E.P. Brown of Leavenworth was killed during the election of January 1856 in a skirmish as a member of a Free State company attempting to drive ruffians from Leavenworth County. R.P. Brown was also brutally murdered by a hatchet to his head. There were more and more murders as the days went on. On May 19, Donaldson murdered a Free State boy named Jones and a friend of his near Lawrence. The boy had been returning home to care for his widowed mother. The senseless killing infuriated free Staters. Violence grew and three days later a band of 800 ruffians assaulted Lawrence. Among their leaders was fire-breathing Missouri Senator David Rice Atchison called ‘Staggering Davy’ by his fondness of hard drink. The mob destroyed two local Free State newspaper offices, looted the town of more than $150,000 in merchandise and burned the home of Governor Charles Robinson.

On May 19, 1858, a pro-slavery band led by Charles Hamilton executed unarmed Free State men near Marais des Cygnes on the Kansas-Missouri border. Hamilton, a native Georgian who had been forced from Kansas into Missouri, assembled about 30 followers and returned to the territory. Along the way, the band captured 11 Free Staters; some were Hamilton’s neighbors and expected no harm from him. The captives were led into a ravine and shot. Five of the 11 victims died and Hamilton and his men immediately returned to Missouri.

Such incidents were by no means isolated. Two hundred people died in the border dispute between November 1855 and December 1856. The new governor John W. Geary, managed to convince the Missourians to return home in late 1856. A very fragile peace followed, but violent outbreaks continued intermittently for several more years.

The National reaction to the events in Kansas demonstrated how deeply divided the country had become. The Border Ruffians were widely applauded in the South while the North mostly ignored them although a few praised them.

In 1857, a Kansas constitutional convention was convened, which drafted a pro-slavery document. Antislavery forces boycotted the ratification vote because it failed to offer them a means to vote against slavery. The questionable approval of the Lecompton Constitution did not deter President James Buchanan, who urged acceptance and statehood. Congress refused and ordered another election. This time the proslavery forces boycotted the process, allowing the antislavery forces to claim victory by defeating the document. Both sides had resorted to fraud and violence, but it was clear the prevailing sentiment in Kansas was antislavery. In mid-1859, a new constitution was drafted which reflected that view and was approved by the electorate by a 2-to-1 margin. Kansas entered the Union as a free state in January 1861.

Statehood didn’t settle the hard feelings in Kansas or the violence. Guerrilla bands from both sides continued to terrorize the Kansas-Missouri border throughout the war. Lawrence, was burned and more than 150 men and boys were killed by a pro-Southern irregular force under William Quantrill in 1863.

The dramatic events that happened in Kansas are known today as “Bleeding Kansas” and were also the opening shots of the Civil War.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Review: A Separate Country


Robert Hicks’s new novel, A Separate Country, is a novel about Confederate General John Bell Hood’s life after the Civil War. General Hood was a strong and tough General. The decisions he made during the war stayed with him the rest of his life. Hood lost the Battle of Peachtree Creek, Battle of Franklin and Nashville. When the war was over, Hood headed to New Orleans, the only Southern City that still functioned as a city, to try to live out the rest of his life. While attending a ball, he meets young Creole society girl, Anne Marie Hennen, they marry, having 11 children.
Hood starts as a cotton trader but fails, then takes on General James Longstreet’s insurance business and fails again. The war had scarred him and ate at his sole. It ate at everything he tried to do except the one thing that he truly had, the love of his wife but by the time he realized this Yellow Fever had taken over the city. He had written his war memoirs after the war as most of the Generals had done, with hatred in his heart. As the years went by he had also written a totally different book that no one knew about. After his wife and eldest daughter Lydia had died of the Yellow Fever, Hood on his own death bed summoned Eli Griffin, whose history intertwined with his, to publish this second book only if he got the first memoirs back that was in the hands of General Beauregard, burn it and let Sebastein Leverle, another New Orleans Creole, to read and approve the publication of this one. After the death of Hood, Eli also discovered a journal written by Anne, as she was dying, to her daughter Lydia that was about the life of Anne and their extraordinary marriage. With this book you will dwell into the life of this couple, the depth of New Orleans, the Creole people; a dwarf, priest and an assassin.

Robert Hicks shows us that Hood was not only a General but also a man.

Personally I enjoyed A Separate Country even though it was a fictional account of General Hood. It shows us that love can conquer all if we only let it.
If you would like to hear more, here is an interview with Robert Hicks – you can click here to listen.

Review copy provided by Hachette Books


Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Quiz!

What did Lincoln carry in his famous tall stovepipe hat?

A. Keys, wallet, watch
B. Crossword puzzles
C. Letters, bills, notes
D. Shopping lists

Answer coming soon!