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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
44 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Worth two and a half stars, useful for general readers.,
By pnotley@hotmail.com (Edmonton, Alberta Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The South Vs. The South: How Anti-Confederate Southerners Shaped the Course of the Civil War (Hardcover)
William Freehling's book argues that one of the key reasons for the defeat of the American South was that it was internally divided amongst itself. It could therefore not fully raise the measure of support needed to ward off the stronger North, even given the rather awkward and men-consuming strategy the North produced. This is a plausible thesis, and it is an accurate one, and general readers will find it useful to study.Specialized readers, however, are likely to be disappointed. Much of the recent discussion of the divided south concentrates on the views of rural whites within the Confederacy. This is not where Freehling concentrates. Instead he deals with the much more obvious fact that the border states of Maryland, Missouri, Kentucky and Delaware did not join the Confederacy, and the 150,000 Black Southerners who joined the Union army. With the 200,000 border state Union soldiers, and the 100,000 whites from the Confederacy proper, a third of all Southerners fought for the Union in the Civil War. This is all well and good, but it is also rather obvious. The fact that the Border South did not join the Confederacy was after all startlingly clear at the time, and has been clear to all historians since then. There was a time when the African-American contribution to the war and to the slaves' own liberation was ignored, but for the last four decades that has been clearly rectified. Freehling does little more here than quote such established scholars as Leon Litwack, Benjamin Quarles, the documentation provided by Ira Berlin and his colleagues, and the unpublished dissertation of the late Armstead Robinson. Moreover, much of the work has a padded feel, as Freehling fills space discussing well known battles. He argues that runaways slaves were a major threat to its survival, though its not clear whether it was their flight or the fact that the South irritated the North by demanding illiberal Fugitive Slave Laws. Whether discussing what he considers Lincoln's equivocal and cold attitudes towards slaves, or whether slaves could have been mobilized for the Confederacy, Freehling does not really advance the discussion on these issues. At the end he argues that contrary to some scholars, there was little danger that the British would intervene to help the south, or that General McClellan would have agreed to an independent Confederacy if he had been elected President in 1864, or that a viable campaign of guerilla warfare could have been launched in 1865. These views are probably correct, but one wishes that Freehling could have provided more evidence to support them.
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Useful; well written,
By
This review is from: The South Vs. The South: How Anti-Confederate Southerners Shaped the Course of the Civil War (Paperback)
From the day after Lee's surrender at Appomattox, most historians, Civil War buffs, history teachers, and everyone else always said and wrote that the South lost the Civil War due, mainly, to a shortage of manpower and the fact that the North had more industry. Recently, though, several historians have started to say while those reasons are true, there are other factors to look at. Freehling, along with David J. Eicher, is one of the leading proponents of the thought that the anti-Confederate Southerners, as well as politics, played a large role in the South's losing the war. Freehling focuses on the idea of a non-unified South to explain the Confederate loss. While Freehling does point out some eye-opening statistics, most of what he writes will be old news to most well-read Civil War followers. The book is useful for the theory Freehling espouses as well as the chapters on the role of African Americans both North and South. Freehling also does an excellent job of agreeing with some of Gary Gallagher's points (who, he asserts in the prologue, gave him in the inspiration to write the book after Gallagher published a book about how the South lost due to inferior manpower, etc.) despite the fact he does not agree with Gallagher's overall hypothesis. This is good because it shows that Freehling is open to ideas besides his own and isn't doggedly pursuing his goal without doing any real research. The negative, though, is that Freehling's book could have been half the size as he seemed to restate many of his facts. Whether you agree with Freehling's idea or not, the book is still a useful, and well written, work.
13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Union's Southern Forces,
By A Customer
This review is from: The South Vs. The South: How Anti-Confederate Southerners Shaped the Course of the Civil War (Hardcover)
Sometimes, people need to be reminded of the basics. pnotley of Canada thinks it's obvious that the Border States didn't secede, but I never saw a Civil War volume before that made the simple point that more Southerners fought with the Federal Army and Navy than the entire Union death toll.Meanwhile, 'a reader' from Mobile thinks that Kentucky and Missouri joined the Confederacy! This is another example of people needing to be reminded of the obvious: despite the propoganda of the times, it wasn't KY and MO that seceded, it was their governors, plus a minority of the legislators. Nor is it true that Maryland would have seceded if Lincoln hadn't arrested Maryland legislators. The disloyal ones were arrested after the state made the decision to stay in the Union. If you can bear to have illusions punctured, Freehling's book is filled with fascinating facts on Lincoln's racism, the reluctance of the Union to free slaves, and the way the unsucessful war against secession became a succesful war against both secession and slavery. Recommended.
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