From Civil War to Civil Rights, Alabama 1860–1960: An Anthology from The Alabama Review
by Sarah Woolfolk Wiggins
University of Alabama Press, 1987 eISBN: 978-0-8173-9061-7 | Paper: 978-0-8173-0341-9 Library of Congress Classification F326.5.F76 1987 Dewey Decimal Classification 976.106
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
To understand Alabama history one must appreciate the impact of the failure of secession of the state in the subsequent half century as well as the causes for the success of the Civil Rights Movement in the state in the mid-twentieth century. The prophet of the first revolution was William Lowndes Yancey and the prophet of the second was Martin Luther King, Jr., two Southerners who set in motion forces that shaped American history beyond the borders of the state and region. In the years between their two lives Alabama changed dramatically.
These examples of outstanding scholarship were published in The Alabama Review over the past forty years and provide an overview of a century of change in Alabama. The first articles center of the Civil War and Reconstruction era, which left Alabama reeling in turmoil. The efforts of the Greenbackers, the Grange, the Alliance, and the Populists ended in frustration as the politics of pressure and intimidation prevailed for the half-century after the Civil War. White as well as black poor had not yet appreciated the political power of their numbers.
In the new century, progressives had a distinct sense that they could take on outside forces larger than themselves. National currents swept Alabama into movements for the regulation of railroads, women’s suffrage, child labor reform, and welfare capitalism. Still, progressive reform coexisted with the most frightening political and social movement of early twentieth-century Alabama, the Ku Klux Klan, whose blessing or curse made or broke the careers of powerful politicians.
The desperation of the Great Depression gave way to a revived sense that Alabamians could shape their world. Not only was this feeling new, but so were the politicians whose debut represented emergence of the poor determined to act in their own behalf. The Montgomery Bus Boycott was the first thunder of a social and political storm that would remake Alabama and the entire country.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Sarah Woolfolk Wiggins is professor emerita of history at the University of Alabama, a past president of the Alabama Historical Association, and editor of the Alabama Review for twenty years. She is the author or editor of The Scalawag in Alabama Politics, 1865–1881; The Journals of Josiah Gorgas, 1857–1878; and Love and Duty: Amelia and Josiah Gorgas and Their Family.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Preface
Introduction
Civil War and Reconstruction
The Young Manhood of William L. Yancey
DRAUGHON,
RALPH B.
Selma and the Confederate States Navy
STILL,
WILLIAM N.
The Cahawba Military Prison, 1863–1865
BRANNON,
PETER A.
The 1863 Raid of Abel D. Streight: Why It Failed
COOK,
JAMES F.
Five Men Called Scalawags
WOOLFOLK,
SARAH VAN V.
Carpetbaggers in Alabama: Tradition Versus Truth
WOOLFOLK,
SARAH VAN
Josiah Gorgas and the Brierfield Iron Works
VANDIVER,
FRANK E.
Female Planters and Planters' Wives in Civil War and Reconstruction: Alabama, 1850–1870
WIENER,
JONATLIAN M.
Bourbonism and Populism
The Revolution in Nineteenth-Century Alabama Agriculture
McWHINEY,
GRADY
The Alabama State Grange
ROGERS,
WILLIAM WARREN
William Manning Lowe and the Greenback Party in Alabama
ROBERTS,
FRANCES
The Farmers's Alliance in Alabama
ROGERS,
WILLIAM WARREN
Governor Johnston's Attempt to Unseat Senator Morgan, 1899–1900
FRY,
JOSEPH A.
Progressive Era
Political Reforms of the Progressive Era
JONES,
ALLEN W.
Comer, Smith, and Jones: Alabama's Railroad War of 1907–1914
DOSTER,
JAMES F.
Edgar Gardner Murphy and the Child Labor Movement
BAILEY,
HUGH C.
George Gordon Crawford: Man of the New South
RIKARD,
MARLENE HUNT
Religion in the Urban South: The Divided Religious Mind of Birmingham, 1900–1930
FLYNT,
WAYNE
The Woman Suffrage Movement in Alabama, 1910–1920
ALLEN,
LEE N.
The Twenties
Henry Ford and Muscle Shoals
WRIGHT,
LESLIE S.
Fiery Crosses in the Roaring Twenties: Activities of the Revised Klan in Alabama, 1915–1930
SNELL,
WILLIAM R.
The 1924 Underwood Campaign in Alabama
ALLEN,
LEE N.
Bibb Graves as a Progressive, 1927–1930
GILBERT,
WILLIAM E.
Alabama Politics, J. Thomas Heflin, and the Expulsion Movement of 1929
THORNTON III,
J. MILLS
The Great Depression
Spindle, Mine, and Mule: The Poor White Experience in Post–Civil War Alabama
FLYNT,
WAYNE
World War II and Beyond
The Old Order Changes: Graves, Sparks, Folsom, and the Gubernatorial Election of 1942
BARNARD,
WILLIAM D.
The Senate's Rejection of Aubrey Williams as Rural Electrification Administrator
DINNERSTEIN,
LEONARD
James E. Folsom's 1946 Campaign
GRAFTON,
CARL
Challenge and Response in the Montgomery Bus Boycott of 1955–1956
From Civil War to Civil Rights, Alabama 1860–1960: An Anthology from The Alabama Review
by Sarah Woolfolk Wiggins
University of Alabama Press, 1987 eISBN: 978-0-8173-9061-7 Paper: 978-0-8173-0341-9
To understand Alabama history one must appreciate the impact of the failure of secession of the state in the subsequent half century as well as the causes for the success of the Civil Rights Movement in the state in the mid-twentieth century. The prophet of the first revolution was William Lowndes Yancey and the prophet of the second was Martin Luther King, Jr., two Southerners who set in motion forces that shaped American history beyond the borders of the state and region. In the years between their two lives Alabama changed dramatically.
These examples of outstanding scholarship were published in The Alabama Review over the past forty years and provide an overview of a century of change in Alabama. The first articles center of the Civil War and Reconstruction era, which left Alabama reeling in turmoil. The efforts of the Greenbackers, the Grange, the Alliance, and the Populists ended in frustration as the politics of pressure and intimidation prevailed for the half-century after the Civil War. White as well as black poor had not yet appreciated the political power of their numbers.
In the new century, progressives had a distinct sense that they could take on outside forces larger than themselves. National currents swept Alabama into movements for the regulation of railroads, women’s suffrage, child labor reform, and welfare capitalism. Still, progressive reform coexisted with the most frightening political and social movement of early twentieth-century Alabama, the Ku Klux Klan, whose blessing or curse made or broke the careers of powerful politicians.
The desperation of the Great Depression gave way to a revived sense that Alabamians could shape their world. Not only was this feeling new, but so were the politicians whose debut represented emergence of the poor determined to act in their own behalf. The Montgomery Bus Boycott was the first thunder of a social and political storm that would remake Alabama and the entire country.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Sarah Woolfolk Wiggins is professor emerita of history at the University of Alabama, a past president of the Alabama Historical Association, and editor of the Alabama Review for twenty years. She is the author or editor of The Scalawag in Alabama Politics, 1865–1881; The Journals of Josiah Gorgas, 1857–1878; and Love and Duty: Amelia and Josiah Gorgas and Their Family.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Preface
Introduction
Civil War and Reconstruction
The Young Manhood of William L. Yancey
DRAUGHON,
RALPH B.
Selma and the Confederate States Navy
STILL,
WILLIAM N.
The Cahawba Military Prison, 1863–1865
BRANNON,
PETER A.
The 1863 Raid of Abel D. Streight: Why It Failed
COOK,
JAMES F.
Five Men Called Scalawags
WOOLFOLK,
SARAH VAN V.
Carpetbaggers in Alabama: Tradition Versus Truth
WOOLFOLK,
SARAH VAN
Josiah Gorgas and the Brierfield Iron Works
VANDIVER,
FRANK E.
Female Planters and Planters' Wives in Civil War and Reconstruction: Alabama, 1850–1870
WIENER,
JONATLIAN M.
Bourbonism and Populism
The Revolution in Nineteenth-Century Alabama Agriculture
McWHINEY,
GRADY
The Alabama State Grange
ROGERS,
WILLIAM WARREN
William Manning Lowe and the Greenback Party in Alabama
ROBERTS,
FRANCES
The Farmers's Alliance in Alabama
ROGERS,
WILLIAM WARREN
Governor Johnston's Attempt to Unseat Senator Morgan, 1899–1900
FRY,
JOSEPH A.
Progressive Era
Political Reforms of the Progressive Era
JONES,
ALLEN W.
Comer, Smith, and Jones: Alabama's Railroad War of 1907–1914
DOSTER,
JAMES F.
Edgar Gardner Murphy and the Child Labor Movement
BAILEY,
HUGH C.
George Gordon Crawford: Man of the New South
RIKARD,
MARLENE HUNT
Religion in the Urban South: The Divided Religious Mind of Birmingham, 1900–1930
FLYNT,
WAYNE
The Woman Suffrage Movement in Alabama, 1910–1920
ALLEN,
LEE N.
The Twenties
Henry Ford and Muscle Shoals
WRIGHT,
LESLIE S.
Fiery Crosses in the Roaring Twenties: Activities of the Revised Klan in Alabama, 1915–1930
SNELL,
WILLIAM R.
The 1924 Underwood Campaign in Alabama
ALLEN,
LEE N.
Bibb Graves as a Progressive, 1927–1930
GILBERT,
WILLIAM E.
Alabama Politics, J. Thomas Heflin, and the Expulsion Movement of 1929
THORNTON III,
J. MILLS
The Great Depression
Spindle, Mine, and Mule: The Poor White Experience in Post–Civil War Alabama
FLYNT,
WAYNE
World War II and Beyond
The Old Order Changes: Graves, Sparks, Folsom, and the Gubernatorial Election of 1942
BARNARD,
WILLIAM D.
The Senate's Rejection of Aubrey Williams as Rural Electrification Administrator
DINNERSTEIN,
LEONARD
James E. Folsom's 1946 Campaign
GRAFTON,
CARL
Challenge and Response in the Montgomery Bus Boycott of 1955–1956