Missouri's Confederate

Missouri's Confederate
Author: Christopher Phillips
Publisher: University of Missouri Press
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2000
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0826262252

Claiborne Fox Jackson (1806-1862) remains one of Missouri's most controversial historical figures. Elected Missouri's governor in 1860 after serving as a state legislator and Democratic party chief, Jackson was the force behind a movement for the neutral state's secession before a federal sortie exiled him from office. Although Jackson's administration was replaced by a temporary government that maintained allegiance to the Union, he led a rump assembly that drafted an ordinance of secession in October 1861 and spearheaded its acceptance by the Confederate Congress. Despite the fact that the majority of the state's populace refused to recognize the act, the Confederacy named Missouri its twelfth state the following month. A year later Jackson died in exile in Arkansas, an apparent footnote to the war that engulfed his region and that consumed him. In this first full-length study of Claiborne Fox Jackson, Christopher Phillips offers much more than a traditional biography. His extensive analysis of Jackson's rise to power through the tangle that was Missouri's antebellum politics and of Jackson's complex actions in pursuit of his state's secession complete the deeper and broader story of regional identity--one that began with a growing defense of the institution of slavery and which crystallized during and after the bitter, internecine struggle in the neutral border state during the American Civil War. Placing slavery within the realm of western democratic expansion rather than of plantation agriculture in border slave states such as Missouri, Philips argues that southern identity in the region was not born, but created. While most rural Missourians were proslavery, their "southernization" transcended such boundaries, with southern identity becoming a means by which residents sought to reestablish local jurisdiction in defiance of federal authority during and after the war. This identification, intrinsically political and thus ideological, centered--and still centers--upon the events surrounding the Civil War, whether in Missouri or elsewhere. By positioning personal and political struggles and triumphs within Missourians' shifting identity and the redefinition of their collective memory, Phillips reveals the complex process by which these once Missouri westerners became and remain Missouri southerners. Missouri's Confederate not only provides a fascinating depiction of Jackson and his world but also offers the most complete scholarly analysis of Missouri's maturing antebellum identity. Anyone with an interest in the Civil War, the American West, or the American South will find this important new biography a powerful contribution to our understanding of nineteenth-century America and the origins--as well as the legacy--of the Civil War.

Colonial Virginians and Their Maryland Relatives

Colonial Virginians and Their Maryland Relatives
Author: Norma Tucker
Publisher: Genealogical Publishing Com
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2009-06
Genre: Maryland
ISBN: 0806345071

This copiously documented volume sheds new light on one of the earliest families to settle in Virginia, that of Captain William Tucker of London, and on a number of allied families whose progenitors figured in the early history of the Virginia and Maryland colonies.

Law Books, 1876-1981

Law Books, 1876-1981
Author: R.R. Bowker Company
Publisher: New York : R.R. Bowker Company
Total Pages: 1516
Release: 1981
Genre: Law
ISBN:

Subject Catalog

Subject Catalog
Author: Library of Congress
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1010
Release: 1978
Genre: Catalogs, Subject
ISBN:

Two May Families of Hollow Square, Greene County, Alabama

Two May Families of Hollow Square, Greene County, Alabama
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 432
Release: 1988
Genre: Alabama
ISBN:

John D. May (d.1825) married twice and moved from South Carolina to Hollow Square, Greene County, Georgia. John May (d.1767) married Elizabeth Stokes and moved from Virginia to Craven (later Camden District, and then Fairfield) County, South Carolina. Jonathan May (ca. 1790-1861), a grandson of John and Elizabeth, married twice, and moved to Hollow Square, Green County, Georgia about 1819. Descendants and relatives lives in Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, Texas and elsewhere.