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E-raamat: Michigan's War: The Civil War in Documents

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When it came to the Civil War, Michiganians never spoke with one voice. At the beginning of the conflict, family farms defined the southern Lower Peninsula, while a sparsely settled frontier characterized the state’s north. Although differing strategies for economic development initially divided Michigan’s settlers, by the 1850s Michiganians’ attention increasingly focused on slavery, race, and the future of the national union. They exchanged charges of treason and political opportunism while wrestling with the meanings of secession, the national union, emancipation, citizenship, race, and their changing economy. Their actions launched transformations in their communities, their state, and their nation in ways that Americans still struggle to understand.

Building upon the current scholarship of the Civil War, the Midwest, and Michigan’s role in the national experience, Michigan’s War is a documentary history of the Civil War era as told by the state’s residents and observers in private letters, reminiscences, newspapers, and other contemporary sources. Clear annotations and thoughtful editing allow teachers and students to delve into the political, social, and military context of the war, making it ideal for classroom use.



Building upon the current scholarship of the Civil War and the Midwest, Michigan’s War is a history as told by the state’s residents in private letters, newspapers, and other sources. Clear annotations and thoughtful editing allow students to delve into the political, social, and military context of the war, making it ideal for classroom use.

Arvustused

"(M)ore than soldiers' stories and the usual 'greatest hits' of Michigan in the war. (Michigan's War is) an excellent collection of real, mainly contemporaneous documents. (T)here are also heart-breaking and troubling views here that reflect Michigandlers' ambivalence over the war and abolition, and out-and-out racism. Any serious reader of the state's history in the Civil War will not want to leave this book to college students."

(Civil War Book Review)

Muu info

Building upon the current scholarship of the Civil War and the Midwest, Michigans War is a history as told by the states residents in private letters, newspapers, and other sources. Clear annotations and thoughtful editing allow students to delve into the political, social, and military context of the war, making it ideal for classroom use.
List of Illustrations
xiii
Series Editors' Preface xv
Preface xvii
Acknowledgments xix
Introduction 1(4)
One Michigan, Slavery, and the Coming of the Civil War
5(21)
Henry Bibb Writes from Detroit to His Former Owner in Kentucky
7(3)
Northerners Are Slaves to the Slaveholders
10(1)
Lewis Cass Favors Nonintervention in the Territories
10(2)
A Democrat Opposes Lewis Cass on Slavery
12(2)
Michigan Republican Platform, 1854
14(2)
Michigan's Personal Liberty Laws
16(2)
Abraham Lincoln Campaigns in Kalamazoo
18(1)
John Brown and Frederick Douglass Debate Slave Insurrection in Detroit
19(2)
A Nonpartisan Newspaper Bolts for the Republicans
21(1)
Stephen A. Douglas, "The Conflict and the Cause"
22(2)
Stephen A. Douglas Responds to Hecklers in Dowagiac
24(2)
Two The Secession Crisis
26(12)
Governor Austin Blair Declares "Secession Is Revolution"
27(3)
Secession Resulted from Republicans' Agitation on Slavery
30(1)
"The Blood of Southern Men Enriched the Soil of Michigan"
31(1)
An Anti-abolition Riot during the Secession Crisis
32(2)
The Michigan Legislature Opposes Compromise with Secessionists
34(1)
Zachariah Chandler's "Blood-Letting" Letter
34(2)
A Democrat's Pessimistic Response to Lincoln's Inaugural: "We Shall Have War"
36(1)
Northern Michigan Learns of the War
36(2)
Three Shifting Michigan to a War Footing
38(14)
Michigan's Deceptive Silence While War Fever Escalates
40(2)
A Mother Tries to Curb Her Son's Desire to Enlist
42(1)
The South May Be Crimsoned with Traitors' Blood, but Freedom Shall Be Maintained
43(1)
A Volunteer Meeting
44(1)
Recruiting a Cavalry Troop
45(2)
Leaving Michigan for the Front
47(1)
Orlando Bolivar Willcox Speaks in Detroit after His Release as a Prisoner of War
48(2)
One Year: Reflections on the War in December 1861
50(2)
Four The Soldier's Life
52(32)
The Routine of Camp Life
56(1)
Soldiers' Deteriorating Morals
57(1)
Paroling Prisoners of War
58(1)
Notifying a Soldier's Family Regarding Death
59(1)
A Self-inflicted Wound?
60(1)
Execution of a Deserter
60(1)
A Soldier's Thoughts Regarding Reenlistment
61(2)
A Soldier Discourages His Brother from Enlisting
63(1)
Two Michigan Soldiers on Opposing Sides of the Battlefield
64(1)
A Hospital Steward Describes the Battle of Shiloh
64(2)
A Soldier's Reflections on Combat and Military Life
66(2)
The 24th Michigan Infantry at Gettysburg
68(2)
Under Confederate and Union Fire
70(2)
Custer and the Michigan Cavalry Brigade at Yellow Tavern
72(1)
Environmental Devastation on the Virginia Front
73(1)
The 2nd Infantry's Address to the People of Michigan
74(2)
How the Soldiers Feel about the War
76(1)
Tensions in the Ranks
77(1)
A Woman and a Soldier
77(2)
Michigan Annie: A Regimental Daughter
79(1)
The Michigan Colored Regiment
80(2)
Indigenous People from Northern Michigan Form a Company of Sharpshooters
82(2)
Five Conscription, Commutation, and Dissent
84(13)
Hoping to Escape the Draft
86(1)
Detroit's Antiblack Riot, 1863
87(1)
Prevent Conscription by Increasing Bounties
88(1)
A Soldier's Reaction to Commutation Fees
89(1)
Avoiding the Draft by Pooling Resources
90(1)
The Challenges of Hiring Substitutes
91(1)
Draft Resistance in Huron County
92(2)
A Political Prank Succeeds beyond Its Creators' Wildest Dreams
94(1)
A Political Prisoner Writes to Abraham Lincoln
95(2)
Six Civilians Confront the War
97(25)
Reflections on Defeat following the First Battle of Bull Run
99(1)
A Mining Engineer Responds to the Federal Defeat at Bull Run
100(1)
The Civil War Comes to Copper Country
101(1)
"Let us have no more Robbery at the Expense of our Volunteers and Taxpayers"
102(1)
A Democrat Questions War Contracts
103(1)
An African American Gives Up on the United States
104(1)
Black Detroiters Denounce White Racism
105(1)
A Woman's Anxiety and Loneliness
106(1)
The Michigan Soldiers' Aid Society Issues an Appeal
107(1)
A Michigan Journalist Describes a Civil War Hospital
108(1)
A Nurse's Work at a Convalescent Hospital
109(3)
A Civil War Nurse Writes to Her Husband in Michigan in A Prospective Army Nurse Inquires about Serving
112(2)
War Accelerates the Push toward Labor-Saving Machinery
114(1)
A Soldier Complains about Inadequate Support for Military Families
115(1)
Labor Disputes in the Upper Peninsula's Iron Mines
116(1)
The Failed Attempt to Rescue Confederate Prisoners
117(3)
Detroit Responds to Another Attack from Canada
120(2)
Seven Michigan's Wartime Politics
122(21)
A Democrat's Growing Fears Regarding Abolitionists
123(2)
Democrats as Unwitting Traitors
125(1)
A Soldier Complains of Abolitionists' Failure to Support McClellan and the Troops
126(1)
"This War Should Never End Until the Rebellion is Completely Crushed"
126(1)
A Democrat Questions Emancipation
127(1)
A Republican Responds to Democrats' Opposition to the Emancipation Proclamation
128(1)
A Democrat Embraces Emancipation
129(1)
A Republican Editor Assesses Lincoln in 1863
130(3)
Michigan's Lone Democratic Representative Addresses the US Congress
133(1)
A Good Cause Ruined by Bad Management
134(1)
Democrats Have Been Supportive of the War
135(1)
A One-Time Supporter of Lincoln Renounces the President
136(1)
A Democratic Appeal for the Soldier Vote
137(2)
Kalamazoo Republicans' Appeal on the Eve of the 1864 Election
139(1)
Detroit Blacks Appeal to Michigan Legislature for Full Citizenship
140(3)
Eight The Civil War Changes Michiganians' Relationship to Slavery
143(17)
Increased Hostility to Slavery Yet Questioning Emancipation
145(1)
Democratic Reaction to 'Abolition Fanaticism"
146(2)
A Michigan Soldier Opposes Prospective Emancipation
148(1)
Heralding Lincoln's Signing of the Emancipation Proclamation
149(1)
Democratic Objections to the Emancipation Proclamation
149(1)
A Michigan Soldier Opposes the Enlistment of African Americans
150(2)
Michigan Whites Respond to African American Soldiers
152(1)
War Will Continue So Long as Slavery Exists
153(1)
The South Understood through the Lens of Slavery
154(1)
Freedom's Underside: A Civil War Refugee Camp
154(3)
We Are No Admirer of Slavery
157(1)
Michigan Ratifies the Thirteenth Amendment Ending Slavery
157(3)
Nine The Civil War's End and Reconstruction
160(27)
The Feeling in the Army: Soldiers' Reactions to Lincoln's Assassination
165(1)
Jefferson Davis's Capture
166(2)
The War Is Over and Soldiers Want to Go Home
168(1)
Jacob Howard on Reconstruction
169(1)
Michigan Democrats Embrace Andrew Johnson
170(2)
"Is the Union Restored?"
172(1)
A Lynching in Mason, 1866
173(1)
William L. Stoughton Denounces the Ku Klux Klan
174(2)
Zachariah Chandler's Last Speech
176(3)
The Michigan Civil Rights Act of 1885
179(1)
War Looks Much Different in Retrospect
180(1)
The Painful Lives of Disabled Veterans
181(2)
Jane Hinsdale's Successful Application for a Civil War Pension
183(2)
A Veteran Reflects on the Civil War in 1917
185(2)
Timeline 187(26)
Discussion Questions 213(4)
Notes 217(14)
Selected Bibliography 231(8)
Index 239
John W. Quist is a professor of history at Shippensburg University. He is the author of Restless Visionaries: The Social Roots of Antebellum Reform in Alabama and Michigan and coeditor of James Buchanan and the Coming of the Civil War.