Long Civil War in the North Georgia Mountains

Confederate Nationalism, Sectionalism, and White Supremacy in Bartow County, Georgia

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June 19, 2023 | History

Long Civil War in the North Georgia Mountains

Confederate Nationalism, Sectionalism, and White Supremacy in Bartow County, Georgia

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Civil War historians have long noted that support for the Confederacy in the antebellum South tended to align with geography: those who lived in towns, along railroads, and on land suited for large-scale farming tended to side with the Confederacy, while those who lived a more isolated existence and made their livings by subsistence farming and bartering usually remained Unionist. Bartow County in northwest Georgia, with its distinctive terrain of valley, piedmont, and Appalachian hill country, is an ideal microcosm to examine these issues.

Keith S. Hébert examines the rise and precipitous fall of Confederate nationalism in Bartow County, a shared experience among many counties in the upland South. Hébert’s story tells us much about the war’s origins, Confederate defeat, and the enduring legacy of white supremacy in these rural areas. Although no major battles were fought in Bartow County, Sherman’s Atlanta Campaign saw Federal troops occupying the area, testing the loyalties of Bartow County soldiers serving in the Army of Tennessee and elsewhere. As the home front collapsed, they had to decide if they should remain in the army and fight or return home to protect their families and property. Locals hardly knew whom to trust as Unionists and Confederates—from both home and afar—engaged in guerilla warfare, stole resources from citizens, and made the war a confusing trap rather than a struggle for an emergent nation.

Drawing on the primary source record of newspapers, letters, diaries, and official documents from the county, Hébert compellingly works personalized vignettes into a scholarly study of developments from the advent of war through Reconstruction and the decades following. The Long Civil War in the North Georgia Mountains solidifies recent scholarship about the war in southern Appalachia and opens a window into a community deeply divided by civil war.

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Language
English

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Book Details


Classifications

Library of Congress
F292.B3H43 2017, F292.B3 H43 2017

The Physical Object

Pagination
xi, 282

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL37977375M
ISBN 13
9781621903178
LCCN
2016053322
OCLC/WorldCat
972771383

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June 19, 2023 Edited by description, tags
December 19, 2022 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
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