Becoming Confederates
Becoming Confederates: Paths to a New National Loyalty
GARY W. GALLAGHER
Series: Mercer University Lamar Memorial Lectures
Copyright Date: 2013
Published by: University of Georgia Press
Pages: 152
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt46nn0z
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Book Info
Becoming Confederates
Book Description:

In Becoming Confederates, Gary W. Gallagher explores loyalty in the era of the Civil War, focusing on Robert E. Lee, Stephen Dodson Ramseur, and Jubal A. Early-three prominent officers in the Army of Northern Virginia who became ardent Confederate nationalists. Loyalty was tested and proved in many ways leading up to and during the war. Looking at levels of allegiance to their native state, to the slaveholding South, to the United States, and to the Confederacy, Gallagher shows how these men represent responses to the mid-nineteenth-century crisis. Lee traditionally has been presented as a reluctant convert to the Confederacy whose most powerful identification was with his home state of Virginia-an interpretation at odds with his far more complex range of loyalties. Ramseur, the youngest of the three, eagerly embraced a Confederate identity, highlighting generational differences in the equation of loyalty. Early combined elements of Lee's and Ramseur's reactions-a Unionist who grudgingly accepted Virginia's departure from the United States but later came to personify defiant Confederate nationalism. The paths of these men toward Confederate loyalty help delineate important contours of American history. Gallagher shows that Americans juggled multiple, often conflicting, loyalties and that white southern identity was preoccupied with racial control transcending politics and class. Indeed, understanding these men's perspectives makes it difficult to argue that the Confederacy should not be deemed a nation. Perhaps most important, their experiences help us understand why Confederates waged a prodigiously bloody war and the manner in which they dealt with defeat.

eISBN: 978-0-8203-4497-3
Subjects: History
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-vi)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. vii-viii)
  3. Acknowledgments
    Acknowledgments (pp. ix-xii)
  4. Introduction
    Introduction (pp. 1-7)

    The seeds of this short book lie in my examination of Stephen Dodson Ramseur as a case study in the development of officers in the Army of Northern Virginia. I undertook that military biography more than thirty years ago, tracing the young North Carolinian’s rise from lieutenant to major general in just more than three years. In the course of reading Ramseur’s voluminous correspondence, I was impressed with the intensity of his commitment to the Confederacy. Following graduation from West Point and less than a year in the U.S. Army, he resigned well before his home state of North Carolina...

  5. CHAPTER ONE Conduct Must Conform to the New Order of Things: R. E. Lee and the Question of Loyalty
    CHAPTER ONE Conduct Must Conform to the New Order of Things: R. E. Lee and the Question of Loyalty (pp. 8-34)

    Robert E. Lee should not be understood as a figure defined primarily by his Virginia identity. As with almost all his fellow American citizens, he manifested a range of loyalties during the late antebellum and wartime years. Without question devoted to his home state, where his family had loomed large in politics and social position since the colonial era, he also possessed deep attachments to the United States, to the white slaveholding South, and to the Confederacy—levels of loyalty that became more prominent, receded, or intertwined at various points. Lee’s commitment to the Confederate nation dominated his actions and...

  6. [Illustrations]
    [Illustrations] (pp. None)
  7. CHAPTER TWO He Died as Became a Confederate Soldier: Stephen Dodson Ramseur’s Easy Embrace of the Confederacy
    CHAPTER TWO He Died as Became a Confederate Soldier: Stephen Dodson Ramseur’s Easy Embrace of the Confederacy (pp. 35-56)

    Stephen Dodson Ramseur typified a cohort of young men from slaveholding families who made an early and zealous commitment to the idea of a Confederate nation. Reared during the increasing sectional tensions of the 1840s and 1850s, Ramseur developed a powerful sense of southern identity that guided his actions during the secession crisis and into the war years, more than did concomitant loyalties to his native North Carolina and to the republic he served as a West Point graduate and junior officer in the U.S. Army. Ramseur’s unqualified belief in the superiority of a slaveholding society undergirded his southern identity...

  8. CHAPTER THREE Consistent Conservative: Jubal A. Early’s Patriotic Submission
    CHAPTER THREE Consistent Conservative: Jubal A. Early’s Patriotic Submission (pp. 57-82)

    Jubal Anderson Early seemingly defines staunch Confederate national loyalty. As an important general in the Army of Northern Virginia, he participated in nearly all the great battles of the Eastern Theater, became widely known for his anti-Yankee rhetoric, and proved willing to lay a hard hand on northern civilian property. Following the war, he assumed a position in the front rank of Lost Cause controversialists, defending the honor and legitimacy of the Confederacy and insisting that only insurmountable advantages of human and material resources and a predilection for indiscriminate brutality had allowed Union forces to achieve a victory. Yet his...

  9. CHAPTER FOUR For His Country and His Duty: Confederate National Sentiment beyond Appomattox
    CHAPTER FOUR For His Country and His Duty: Confederate National Sentiment beyond Appomattox (pp. 83-92)

    Robert E. Lee and Jubal A. Early occupied critical positions in the story of how Confederate national sentiment persisted in the postwar decades. Stephen Dodson Ramseur, mortally wounded almost six months before Appomattox, was relegated to a secondary though still noteworthy place in the narrative. All had been committed nationalists, demanding collective sacrifice to establish a republic that promised long-term social and economic stability within a slave-based structure. Although scrupulous in his public call for acceptance of reunion, Lee became the centerpiece of a Lost Cause interpretation of the mid-nineteenth century that glorified the Confederacy and its white populace. Early...

  10. Notes
    Notes (pp. 93-108)
  11. Index
    Index (pp. 109-118)
  12. Back Matter
    Back Matter (pp. 119-120)
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