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5.0 out of 5 stars Montgomery family, June 13, 2011
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C. D. Cohron "chetdc" (Madison, MS United States) - See all my reviews
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Joseph Davis, the older brother of Jefferson Davis, sold the Hurricane Plantation south of Vicksburg to Ben Montgomery...his black plantation manager because he was trained and educated by Joseph and he felt he was the best man to make a success of the farm. His choice was good but floods over ran the farm from the Mississippi River. This meant that the Montgomery family could not make payment. This resulted in a long legal battle after Joseph's death by the Davis family...and the courts finally gave the land to Joseph's great grand daughter (born out of wedlock). Once the author accumulated all this information to write this book...she realized what a remarkable person Joseph Davis was and she wrote the book about Joseph Davis...giving us another snapshot of life in Pre-War Mississippi.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Reconstruction Reconstructed, August 28, 2009
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This review is from: The Pursuit of a Dream (Banner Books) (Paperback)
Joins the ranks of books such as Willie Lee Rose's Rehearsal for Reconstruction and Melvin Patrick Ely's superb Israel on the Appomattox as case studies of near-utopian experiments in the midst of the madness of the Civil War and so-called Reconstruction.
I recently read (yeah, really read, cover to cover) the fifth volume of the documentary history of reconstruction ably put together by Ira Berlin and his team and successors, and what struck me the most was the absolute lack of foresight on the part of the "radicals", including Lincoln.
Now Lincoln did not get to "see" or implement Reconstruction, but he appears to have left nothing of his thoughts (to Sumner, to Johnson, to us) about what a slave-free America would look like, as if he could not contemplate such a thing.
The "Redeemers" surely had a thought on what that would be, just a minor variation on slavery itself (and so it played out). What Professor Hermann has done here is shown an alternative, nearly visionary approach, with the visionary himself being the unlikely Joseph Davis, and the agents the remarkable Montgomery's.
How can a document such as The Emancipation Proclamation get written without serious thought to its consequences? Emancipation and the assimilation of freedmen became as a result a pretty chaotic mess--- much more attention paid to the secessionists' future than to the freedmen's--- and this is no slur upon the black reconstructionists, who did their best, but--- much more significantly--- did SOMEthing for which they and all other former slaves were, deliberately and calculatedly but sometimes inadvertantly, completely untrained, a situation never remedied except in noble experiments like Davis Bend and by noble men like the Montgomerys.
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The Pursuit of a Dream (Banner Books)
The Pursuit of a Dream (Banner Books) by Janet Sharp Hermann (Paperback - March 1, 1999)
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