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(Ebook) The South Vs. The South: How Anti-Confederate Southerners Shaped the Course of the Civil War by William W. Freehling ISBN 9780195130270, 9780195156294, 9780195302196, 0195130278, 0195156293, 0195302192

  • SKU: EBN-1975862
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Instant download (eBook) The South Vs. The South: How Anti-Confederate Southerners Shaped the Course of the Civil War after payment.
Authors:William W. Freehling
Pages:256 pages.
Year:2001
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Language:english
File Size:12.06 MB
Format:pdf
ISBNS:9780195130270, 9780195156294, 9780195302196, 0195130278, 0195156293, 0195302192
Categories: Ebooks

Product desciption

(Ebook) The South Vs. The South: How Anti-Confederate Southerners Shaped the Course of the Civil War by William W. Freehling ISBN 9780195130270, 9780195156294, 9780195302196, 0195130278, 0195156293, 0195302192

Why did the Confederacy lose the Civil War? Most historians point to the larger number of Union troops, for example, or the North's greater industrial might. Now, in The South Vs. the South, one of America's leading authorities on the Civil War era offers an entirely new answer to this question. William Freehling argues that anti-Confederate Southerners--specifically, border state whites and southern blacks--helped cost the Confederacy the war. White men in such border states as Missouri, Kentucky, and Maryland, Freehling points out, were divided in their loyalties--but far more joined the Union army (or simply stayed home) than marched off in Confederate gray. If they had enlisted as rebel troops in the same proportion as white men did farther south, their numbers would have offset all the Confederate casualties during four years of war. In addition, when those states stayed loyal, the vast majority of the South's urban population and industrial capacity remained in Union hands. And many forget, Freehling writes, that the slaves' own decisions led to a series of white decisions (culminating in the Emancipation Proclamation) that turned federal forces into an army of liberation, depriving the South of labor and adding essential troops to the blue ranks. Whether revising our conception of slavery or of Abraham Lincoln, or establishing the antecedents of Martin Luther King, or analyzing Union military strategy, or uncovering new meanings in what is arguably America's greatest piece of sculpture, Augustus St.-Gaudens' Shaw Memorial, Freehling writes with piercing insight and rhetorical verve. Concise and provocative, The South Vs. the South will forever change the way we view the Civil War.
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