The Failure of Our Fathers: Family, Gender, and Power in Confederate Alabama by Victoria E. Ott (review)

Pub Date : 2024-04-22 DOI:10.1353/soh.2024.a925466
David T. Gleeson
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Ott seeks to understand the role of family in the lives of Alabama’s “common whites” (those who, for the most part, did not own slaves) and in their relationship with the Confederacy (p. 2). <em>The Failure of Our Fathers: Family, Gender, and Power in Confederate Alabama</em> takes readers through prewar, wartime, and postwar experiences to highlight that “family remained the central focus” of these common whites (p. 175). Loyalty to their state and its participation in the Civil War ebbed and flowed depending on the conflict’s effect on their families. Despite most not having a direct interest in slavery, the majority supported the Confederacy. As Stephanie McCurry has discovered in South Carolina, Ott finds in Alabama that the “shared belief [between elite and non-elite white southerners] that outsiders threatened to undermine their liberties, invade their communities, and, in the process, harm their families brought poor whites and yeomen to join the [secessionist] cause” (p. 5).</p> <p>These new Confederates, however, expected substantial support from the state and central governments in return, especially proper treatment (equipment, food, pay, and so on) in the army and support for their families left at home. For these soldiers, as mostly nonslaveholders, departing for war meant a <strong>[End Page 433]</strong> serious removal of labor from farms. Ott clearly shows that as Confederate authorities failed to meet expectations of aid, patriotism waned. First, soldiers and their families at home complained to each other, and eventually to government officials, about their hardships. The Confederate government’s introduction of conscription in April 1862 brought a further loss of agricultural labor and of important skilled workers such as millers and blacksmiths. Revisions to conscription through the rest of the war, especially expanding the age range for compulsory military service (more so than the exemptions for overseers who supervised more than twenty slaves), raised discontent among non-elite white Alabamians. The Confederate “tax-in-kind” law, which obliged producers to give up 10 percent of their “agricultural products,” only exacerbated resentment (p. 125). With families already facing serious food shortages, the extra levy made their lives even more difficult. There were some private and public phil-anthropic efforts to help soldiers’ wives, but they were never sufficient to ease all distress. Many common white Alabamians felt then that the key to their restored prosperity was the return of their major breadwinner from the army.</p> <p>Ott chronicles declining support for the Confederacy well. Though there were no major rebellions in Alabama akin to the one in Jones County, Mississippi, these non-elite white southerners longed for peace, with or without victory. When defeat finally came, most accepted it and focused more on reconstructing their families than on politics. The state of Alabama, having introduced some forms of relief during the war, sought to extend support to former Confederate soldiers and their families after it. Though such efforts were underfunded and piecemeal, they did indicate that the state had to respond to the economic needs and demands of poorer white residents, reasoning it were better they got aid from their former white leaders than from the federal Freedmen’s Bureau. These gestures from the anti-Reconstruction elite (and the end of the bureau itself) helped keep most white Alabamians united against any Radical Republican appeals. Thanks to their Civil War experience, however, common white southerners still expected help from their government and could rebel politically, supporting, for example, Populism and Progressivism later in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Ott concludes that the Confederate experience meant that common whites “claimed the same dignity and honor as a man or woman that shaped elite culture while creating a sense of self unique to their socio-economic class” (p. 178). 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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • The Failure of Our Fathers: Family, Gender, and Power in Confederate Alabama by Victoria E. Ott
  • David T. Gleeson
The Failure of Our Fathers: Family, Gender, and Power in Confederate Alabama. By Victoria E. Ott. (Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2023. Pp. xiv, 209. $49.95, ISBN 978-0-8173-2147-5.)

Victoria E. Ott seeks to understand the role of family in the lives of Alabama’s “common whites” (those who, for the most part, did not own slaves) and in their relationship with the Confederacy (p. 2). The Failure of Our Fathers: Family, Gender, and Power in Confederate Alabama takes readers through prewar, wartime, and postwar experiences to highlight that “family remained the central focus” of these common whites (p. 175). Loyalty to their state and its participation in the Civil War ebbed and flowed depending on the conflict’s effect on their families. Despite most not having a direct interest in slavery, the majority supported the Confederacy. As Stephanie McCurry has discovered in South Carolina, Ott finds in Alabama that the “shared belief [between elite and non-elite white southerners] that outsiders threatened to undermine their liberties, invade their communities, and, in the process, harm their families brought poor whites and yeomen to join the [secessionist] cause” (p. 5).

These new Confederates, however, expected substantial support from the state and central governments in return, especially proper treatment (equipment, food, pay, and so on) in the army and support for their families left at home. For these soldiers, as mostly nonslaveholders, departing for war meant a [End Page 433] serious removal of labor from farms. Ott clearly shows that as Confederate authorities failed to meet expectations of aid, patriotism waned. First, soldiers and their families at home complained to each other, and eventually to government officials, about their hardships. The Confederate government’s introduction of conscription in April 1862 brought a further loss of agricultural labor and of important skilled workers such as millers and blacksmiths. Revisions to conscription through the rest of the war, especially expanding the age range for compulsory military service (more so than the exemptions for overseers who supervised more than twenty slaves), raised discontent among non-elite white Alabamians. The Confederate “tax-in-kind” law, which obliged producers to give up 10 percent of their “agricultural products,” only exacerbated resentment (p. 125). With families already facing serious food shortages, the extra levy made their lives even more difficult. There were some private and public phil-anthropic efforts to help soldiers’ wives, but they were never sufficient to ease all distress. Many common white Alabamians felt then that the key to their restored prosperity was the return of their major breadwinner from the army.

Ott chronicles declining support for the Confederacy well. Though there were no major rebellions in Alabama akin to the one in Jones County, Mississippi, these non-elite white southerners longed for peace, with or without victory. When defeat finally came, most accepted it and focused more on reconstructing their families than on politics. The state of Alabama, having introduced some forms of relief during the war, sought to extend support to former Confederate soldiers and their families after it. Though such efforts were underfunded and piecemeal, they did indicate that the state had to respond to the economic needs and demands of poorer white residents, reasoning it were better they got aid from their former white leaders than from the federal Freedmen’s Bureau. These gestures from the anti-Reconstruction elite (and the end of the bureau itself) helped keep most white Alabamians united against any Radical Republican appeals. Thanks to their Civil War experience, however, common white southerners still expected help from their government and could rebel politically, supporting, for example, Populism and Progressivism later in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Ott concludes that the Confederate experience meant that common whites “claimed the same dignity and honor as a man or woman that shaped elite culture while creating a sense of self unique to their socio-economic class” (p. 178). By centering the voices of common white Alabamians in her work, Ott provides an excellent analysis of not only why so many nonslaveholders supported the slaveholders...

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我们父辈的失败:维多利亚-E.-奥特(Victoria E. Ott)所著的《南方邦联阿拉巴马州的家庭、性别与权力》(评论
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者 我们父辈的失败:维多利亚-E.-奥特(Victoria E. Ott)著,大卫-T.-格里森(David T. Gleeson)译,《我们父辈的失败:邦联时期阿拉巴马州的家庭、性别和权力》(The Failure of Our Fathers:邦联时期阿拉巴马州的家庭、性别与权力》。作者:维多利亚-E-奥特。(塔斯卡卢萨:阿拉巴马大学出版社,2023 年。第 xiv、209 页。49.95美元,书号978-0-8173-2147-5)。维多利亚-E.-奥特试图了解家庭在阿拉巴马州 "普通白人"(大多数不拥有奴隶的人)生活中的作用,以及他们与南方联盟的关系(第 2 页)。我们父辈的失败:我们父辈的失败:邦联阿拉巴马州的家庭、性别和权力》带领读者回顾了战前、战时和战后的经历,强调 "家庭仍然是 "这些普通白人 "关注的中心"(第 175 页)。他们对本州的忠诚以及本州对南北战争的参与,取决于冲突对其家庭的影响而起伏不定。尽管大多数人对奴隶制并无直接兴趣,但大多数人还是支持南方邦联。正如斯蒂芬妮-麦科里(Stephanie McCurry)在南卡罗来纳州发现的那样,奥特在阿拉巴马州发现,"[南方白人精英和非精英]共同认为,外来者有可能破坏他们的自由、入侵他们的社区,并在此过程中伤害他们的家庭,这促使贫穷白人和贵族加入[分离主义]事业"(第 5 页)。然而,这些新加入的南方邦联士兵期望得到州政府和中央政府的大力支持,特别是军队中的适当待遇(装备、食物、军饷等)以及对留在家中的家人的支持。对这些士兵来说,他们大多不是奴隶主,出征意味着农场劳动力的严重流失。奥特清楚地表明,由于邦联当局未能满足人们对援助的期望,爱国主义也随之消退。首先,在家的士兵及其家人互相抱怨,最终向政府官员抱怨他们的苦难。邦联政府于 1862 年 4 月开始征兵,这进一步造成了农业劳动力以及磨坊主和铁匠等重要技术工人的流失。在战争余下的时间里,对征兵制度的修改,尤其是扩大义务兵役的年龄范围(比对监管 20 名以上奴隶的监工的豁免更严格),引起了阿拉巴马州非精英白人的不满。邦联的 "实物税 "法要求生产者放弃 10% 的 "农产品",这只会加剧不满情绪(第 125 页)。由于家庭已经面临严重的粮食短缺,额外的征税使他们的生活更加艰难。虽然有一些私人和公共慈善机构为士兵的妻子提供了帮助,但始终不足以缓解所有的困境。当时,许多阿拉巴马州的普通白人认为,恢复繁荣的关键在于他们的主要经济支柱从军队中归来。奥特很好地记录了邦联支持率下降的情况。虽然阿拉巴马州没有发生类似密西西比州琼斯县的大规模叛乱,但这些非精英南方白人渴望和平,无论是否取得胜利。当失败最终降临时,大多数人都接受了这一事实,并将更多精力放在重建家庭上,而不是政治上。阿拉巴马州在战争期间推出了一些形式的救济措施,并在战后努力为前邦联士兵及其家人提供支持。虽然这些努力资金不足且零敲碎打,但它们确实表明该州必须对较贫穷的白人居民的经济需求和要求做出回应,他们的理由是,与其从联邦自由人局获得援助,不如从他们的前白人领袖那里获得援助。反重建精英的这些姿态(以及自由人局本身的终结)帮助大多数阿拉巴马白人团结起来,抵制任何激进共和党的呼吁。然而,由于他们在南北战争中的经历,普通的南方白人仍然期望得到政府的帮助,并可能在政治上进行反抗,例如在 19 世纪晚期和 20 世纪早期支持民粹主义和进步主义。奥特的结论是,邦联的经历意味着普通白人 "要求与塑造精英文化的男人或女人一样的尊严和荣誉,同时创造出他们社会经济阶层独有的自我意识"(第 178 页)。奥特在她的著作中以阿拉巴马州普通白人的声音为中心,不仅出色地分析了为什么如此多的非奴隶主支持奴隶主,而且还分析了为什么奴隶主会 "在自己的土地上"......
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