[After a mild
start, it ended up being a long, cold, wintry winter. But all winters end,
metaphorically as well as seasonally, and in this week’s series I’ll be
AmericanStudying a few cultural and historical such American thaws—leading up
to a weekend post on one of our most recent warmings.]
On late-in-life
evolutions that don’t impress me much, and those that do.
In a footnote to
this
post nominating Nathan Bedford Forrest for an American Hall of Shame, I
mentioned Forrest’s apparent, late-in-life
reversals in perspective on issues like race. In that footnote, I called
Forrest’s shifts “far too little and too late,” and I would stand by that
assessment. Of course I’m glad that Forrest seems to have seen the error of his
ways before the end, but unlike (for example) Ben Franklin, whose late-in-life change
in perspective on immigration was accompanied by extensive writings and
efforts, Forrest’s shifts seem to have been mostly in personal relationships,
which are nice but don’t leave nearly the same legacy or influence. And thus,
Forrest’s enduring legacies can and should still be defined by the worst of
what he did: as a
slave trader who designed a particularly “successful” system for such
transactions; a Civil
War general responsible for one of the war’s most brutal massacres; and,
most of all, the
creator of one of America’s most longstanding terrorist organizations.
Just because
Forrest’s thaws don’t strike me as historically significant, however, doesn’t
mean I would say the same for all Confederate veterans. I’ve elsewhere made the
case, for example, for why and how we should better
remember James Longstreet’s impressive post-war evolutions. Even more
striking, and to my mind even more impressive, were the second-act shifts of
another Confederate general, William
Mahone. My fellow blogger
and scholar Kevin Levin tells Mahone’s story (in the article linked at
Mahone’s name) much better than I can here, but the sweep of it can be summed
up in two details: the former railroad engineer Mahone rose to
prominence leading the Confederates to victory in the Battle of the Crater, another of the Civil
War’s bloodiest and most brutal battles; and yet in the post-war era he became
a leader instead of Virginia’s
Readjuster Party, a political coalition of African Americans, Republicans,
and Democrats that offered a profoundly different vision of Southern politics
and identity than most of the period’s trends and narratives. In 1881 Mahone
helped the Readjusters elect both a new Virginia
governor (William Cameron) and himself as a US Senator.
There are lots
of reasons why I find Mahone’s shifts as impressive and inspiring as I do, but
I would highlight two in particular here. For one thing, I can’t imagine a
better example of going against the popular trend—not only in Virginia and the
South, which by 1881 were well on their way to the dominance
of Jim Crow and all its accompanying histories; but throughout the nation,
which likewise was well on the way to becoming “distinctly
Confederate in sympathy” (as Albion
Tourgée famously put it in an 1888 essay). And for another, related thing,
Mahone’s post-war choices and actions exposed him to unrelenting criticism and
hatred from many throughout the state that had been and would remain his
lifelong home (and in the 19th century development of which he had
served a key role). To do something unpopular, at great personal cost, seems to
me one of the most difficult and most admirable choices a person can make. The
Readjuster Party may have faded in the century’s final years, but Mahone’s
efforts, and the personal, political, and historical shifts they exemplified,
have left a far longer and deeper legacy for us to remember and respect.
Next thaw
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other thaws you’d highlight?
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