Deep in the Piney Woods: Southeastern Alabama from Statehood to the Civil War, 1800–1865

Author:   Tommy Craig Brown
Publisher:   The University of Alabama Press
ISBN:  

9780817319977


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   23 October 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Deep in the Piney Woods: Southeastern Alabama from Statehood to the Civil War, 1800–1865


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Overview

A chronicle of the Civil War era in one of Alabama's most overlooked and least studied regions.   Much of Alabama's written history concentrates on the Tennessee Valley, the hill counties, and the Black Belt, while the piney woods of south central and southeastern Alabama, commonly known as the wiregrass region today, is one of the most understudied areas in Alabama history. Deep in the Piney Woods: Southeastern Alabama from Statehood to the Civil War, 1800–1865 offers a comprehensive and long overdue account of a historically rich region of the state, challenging many commonly held assumptions about the area's formation and settlement, economy, politics, race relations, and its role in both the secession of the state and the Civil War.   Historians routinely depict this part of the state as an isolated, economically backward wilderness filled with poor whites who showed little interest in supporting the Confederacy once civil war erupted in 1861. Tommy Craig Brown challenges those traditional interpretations, arguing instead that many white Alabamians in this territory participated in the market economy, supported slavery, favored secession, and supported the Confederate war effort for the bulk of the conflict, sending thousands of soldiers to fight in some of the bloodiest campaigns of the war.   This thorough and expansive account of southeastern Alabama's role in the Civil War also discusses its advocacy for state secession in January 1861; the effects of Confederate conscription on the home front; the economic devastation wrought on the area; and the participation of local military companies in key campaigns in both the eastern and western theaters, including Shiloh, the Peninsula Campaign, the Overland Campaign, Atlanta, and Franklin-Nashville. Brown argues that the lasting effects of the war on the region's politics, identity, economy, and culture define it in ways that are still evident today.

Full Product Details

Author:   Tommy Craig Brown
Publisher:   The University of Alabama Press
Imprint:   The University of Alabama Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 50.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.563kg
ISBN:  

9780817319977


ISBN 10:   0817319972
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   23 October 2018
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

An outstanding contribution to Alabama history, and a long overdue chronicle of a too-often overlooked region, perhaps painting one of the most complete portraits of any region in the state during the war era. --Mike Bunn, author of Civil War Eufaula Older views of the Piney Woods held that the region only half-heartedly supported secession and, once the war began, was characterized by a less than enthusiastic participation on the battlefield, as well as the home front. Brown uses a wealth of primary documentation to make the point that this region demonstrated its loyalty to the cause by, among other things, raising and equipping numerous companies, thereby showing as much enthusiasm as other parts of the state. --Lonnie A. Burnett, author of The Pen Makes a Good Sword: John Forsyth of the Mobile Register and Henry Hotze, Confederate Propagandist: Selected Essays on Revolution, Recognition, and Race


Older views of the Piney Woods held that the region only half-heartedly supported secession and, once the war began, was characterized by a less than enthusiastic participation on the battlefield, as well as the home front. Brown uses a wealth of primary documentation to make the point that this region demonstrated its loyalty to the cause by, among other things, raising and equipping numerous companies, thereby showing as much enthusiasm as other parts of the state. - Lonnie A. Burnett, author of The Pen Makes a Good Sword: John Forsyth of the Mobile Register and Henry Hotze, Confederate Propagandist: Selected Essays on Revolution, Recognition, and Race An outstanding contribution to Alabama history, and a long overdue chronicle of a too-often overlooked region, perhaps painting one of the most complete portraits of any region in the state during the war era. - Mike Bunn, author of Civil War Eufaula


Older views of the Piney Woods held that the region only half-heartedly supported secession and, once the war began, was characterized by a less than enthusiastic participation on the battlefield, as well as the home front. Brown uses a wealth of primary documentation to make the point that this region demonstrated its loyalty to the cause by, among other things, raising and equipping numerous companies, thereby showing as much enthusiasm as other parts of the state. --Lonnie A. Burnett, author of The Pen Makes a Good Sword: John Forsyth of the Mobile Register and Henry Hotze, Confederate Propagandist: Selected Essays on Revolution, Recognition, and Race An outstanding contribution to Alabama history, and a long overdue chronicle of a too-often overlooked region, perhaps painting one of the most complete portraits of any region in the state during the war era. --Mike Bunn, author of Civil War Eufaula


Author Information

Tommy Craig Brown is a historian and archivist in Special Collections and Archives at Auburn University.

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