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Title: National Humanities Center


1
National Humanities Center Civil War Home
Fronts a live, online professional development
seminar
2
Focus Questions How did the total mobilization
of the Civil War affect the Northern and Southern
home fronts? What was life like for women on
the Northern and Southern home fronts? What was
life like for African Americans on the Northern
and Southern home fronts?
3
Fitzhugh Brundage National Humanities Center
Fellow 1995-96 William B. Umstead Professor of
History University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill A Socialist Utopia in the New South The
Ruskin Colonies in Tennessee and Georgia,
1894-1901 Lynching in the New South Georgia and
Virginia, 1880-1939

4
  • Scale of the Civil War
  • When we consider the home front during the Civil
    War, it is important to take into account the
    unprecedented scale of the American Civil War.
    Nothing in the experience of Antebellum Americans
    prepared them for a war of the magnitude of the
    Civil War. The only pre-Civil War conflict that
    was comparable was the Crimea War, fought a few
    years before the Civil War. Americans, however,
    had only the vaguest understanding of the carnage
    of that war, which took place in far-distant
    Russia, Turkey, and the Baltic region.

5
  • Scope of Wars Impact
  • Mobilizing for modern war necessarily places
    great strains on a society, often accelerating
    changes and magnifying tensions already present
    in a society. Because the Civil War was long and
    bloody, its impact was felt in virtually every
    corner of American society.

6
  • Civil War Casualties Compared
  • One way to highlight the immensity of the war is
    to compare and contrast the number of American
    combatants and casualties in previous wars with
    the Civil War.

7
  • Revolutionary War
  • 20,000 regulars served in the Continental Army.
    An estimated 25,000 American Revolutionaries died
    during active military service. About 8,000 of
    these deaths were in battle the other 17,000
    deaths were from disease, including about 8,000 -
    12,000 who died while prisoners of war. The
    number of Revolutionaries seriously wounded or
    disabled by the war has been estimated from 8,500
    to 25,000. The total American military casualty
    figure was therefore as high as 50,000.

8
  • War of 1812
  • At the beginning of the war, there were 7,000
    regulars in the Army. By the end of the conflict
    the ranks had swollen to almost 40,000.
    Approximately 2,260 were killed in action and
    another 4,505 wounded. Approximately 17,000 died
    from disease.

9
  • Indian Wars
  • The various Indian wars of the early nineteenth
    century, including the three Seminole Wars,
    claimed fewer than 1,000 casualties. At any
    given time there were perhaps 10,000 regulars
    engaged in the Indian wars.

10
  • Mexican War
  • For most Americans at the time of the Civil War,
    the Mexican War was their most recent experience
    with war and combat. During the Mexican War,
    78,700 soldiers served. Of these 1,733 were
    killed in battle, and another 13,271 died from
    disease, etc. 4,152 were wounded.

11
  • U.S. Civil War
  • Perhaps as many as 4 million men fought in the
    Civil War. 2.5 million men served in the Union
    Army. There are no definitive number of the
    strength of the Confederate States Army.
    Confederate war department reports recorded
    326,768 men in 1861, 449,439 in 1862, and 464,646
    in 1863 before declining to 358,692 in 1865.
    Based on these totals, the total number of men
    who fought for the Confederacy has been estimated
    between 1.2 and 1.4 million.

12
  • U. S. Civil War
  • Of the troops who fought for the Union, 110,070
    died in combat and an additional 249,458 of other
    causes. 275,175 were wounded.
  • Of the troops who fought for the Confederacy,
    74,524 died in combat, and 124,000 of other
    causes. An estimated 137,000 were wounded
    while in the ranks.

13
  • U. S. Civil War
  • In starkest terms, approximately 4 million out
    of an American population of 31.5 million fought
    in the war, and perhaps as many as a million of
    these soldiers died or were wounded.

14
  • U. S. Civil War
  • To mobilize a population to wage war and to
    endure casualties in this scale, arguably, was
    the greatest challenge that Presidents Lincoln
    and Davis confronted.

15
  • U.S. Civil War
  • Because of deeply rooted animosity to standing
    armies in the United States, both the Union and
    the Confederacy initially had to rely on
    voluntary support for the war effort. Even when
    both governments eventually adopted conscription
    to fill their armies, they insisted that their
    publics the home fronts -- enthusiastically
    supported the war.

16
  • Response of Women
  • How women in the Union and the Confederacy
    responded to the war is especially revealing of
    the pressures of modern war on the home front.
    Just what were the appropriate roles for women
    during war? What sacrifices could women be
    expected to make? To what extent were women
    expected/allowed to deviate from inherited codes
    of feminine conduct?

17
  • What was life like for women on the northern and
    southern home
  • fronts?
  • In what capacities were women expected to
    contribute to the war? How did women justify the
    roles that they assumed?
  • In reading Sarah Morgans diary, we get an
    interesting perspective on female Confederate
    patriotism. Did Morgan distinguish between the
    expectations of patriotic behavior according to
    gender? What did she expect of loyal southern
    white women? Of southern white men? And what
    were her views of the enemy?
  • To what extent were Gail Hamiltons views of
    female sacrifice consonant with Sarah Morgans?
    In other words, were the expectations of feminine
    patriotism and sacrifice in both the Union and
    the Confederacy?
  • How much should we make of the Bread Riots in
    the South? Were they symptomatic of a deep
    crisis in the patriotism of Confederate women?

18
  • A Confederate Girls Diary
  • The diary entries of Sarah Morgan of Louisiana
    after the capture of southern Louisiana by Union
    forces in 1862 offer us a glimpse into how one
    white southern woman negotiated her conflicting
    roles as a Confederate, a lady, and an American.

19
  • Sarah Morgan Dawson, A Confederate Girls Diary,
    1913
  • May 9, 1862
  • If we girls of Baton Rouge had been at the
    landing, instead of the men, that Yankee would
    never have insulted us by flying his flag in our
    faces! We would have opposed his landing except
    under a flag of truce, but the men let him alone,
    and he even found a poor Dutchman willing to show
    him the road! . . . .
  • I wear one pinned to my bosom - not a duster,
    but a little flag the man who says take it off
    will have to pull it off for himself the man who
    dares attempt it - well! a pistol in my pocket
    fills up the gap. I am capable, too.
  • O! if I was only a man! Then I could don the
    breeches, and slay them with a will! If some few
    Southern women were in the ranks, they could set
    the men an example they would not blush to
    follow. Pshaw! there are no women here! We are
    all men!

20
  • Sarah Morgan Dawson, A Confederate Girls Diary,
    1913
  • May 14, 1862
  • Shall I acknowledge that the people we so
    recently called our brothers are unworthy of
    consideration, and are liars, cowards, dogs? Not
    I! If they conquer us, I acknowledge them as a
    superior race I will not say that we were
    conquered by cowards, for where would that place
    us? It will take a brave people to gain us, and
    that the Northerners undoubtedly are. I would
    scorn to have an inferior foe I fight only my
    equals. These women may acknowledge that cowards
    have won battles in which their brothers were
    engaged, but I, I will ever say mine fought
    against brave men, and won the day. Which is most
    honorable?
  • I don't believe in Secession, but I do in
    Liberty. I want the South to conquer, dictate its
    own terms, and go back to the Union, for I
    believe that, apart, inevitable ruin awaits both.
    It is a rope of sand, this Confederacy, founded
    on the doctrine of Secession, and will not last
    many years - not five.

21
  • Sarah Morgan Dawson, A Confederate Girls Diary,
    1913
  • May 9, 1862
  • If we girls of Baton Rouge had been at the
    landing, instead of the men, that Yankee would
    never have insulted us by flying his flag in our
    faces! We would have opposed his landing except
    under a flag of truce, but the men let him alone,
    and he even found a poor Dutchman willing to show
    him the road! . . . .
  • I wear one pinned to my bosom - not a duster,
    but a little flag the man who says take it off
    will have to pull it off for himself the man who
    dares attempt it - well! a pistol in my pocket
    fills up the gap. I am capable, too.
  • O! if I was only a man! Then I could don the
    breeches, and slay them with a will! If some few
    Southern women were in the ranks, they could set
    the men an example they would not blush to
    follow. Pshaw! there are no women here! We are
    all men!

22
  • Sarah Morgan Dawson, A Confederate Girls Diary,
  • 1913
  • May 17, 1862
  • O my discarded carving-knife, laid aside under
    the impression that these men were gentlemen. We
    will be close friends once more. And if you must
    have a sheath, perhaps I may find one for you in
    the heart of the first man who attempts to
    Butlerize me. I never dreamed of kissing any man
    save my father and brothers. And why any one
    should care to kiss any one else, I fail to
    understand. And I do not propose to learn to make
    exceptions.

23
  • Sarah Morgan Dawson, A Confederate Girls
  • Diary, 1913
  • June 10, 1862
  • It made me ashamed to contrast the quiet,
    gentlemanly, liberal way these volunteers spoke
    of us and our cause, with the rabid, fanatical,
    abusive violence of our own female Secession
    declaimers.

24
  • Sarah Morgan Dawson, A Confederate Girls
  • Diary, 1913
  • June 16, 1862
  • I would put aside woman's trash, take up woman's
    duty, and I would stand by some forsaken man and
    bid him Godspeed as he closes his dying eyes.
    That is woman's mission! and not Preaching and
    Politics. I say I would, yet here I sit! O for
    liberty! the liberty that dares do what
    conscience dictates, and scorns all smaller
    rules! If I could help these dying men!

25
  • A Call to My Country-Women
  • Gail Hamiltons A Call to My Countrywomen is
    an equally striking counterpoint to Morgans
    diary. Hamilton exploits every possible
    rhetorical device to appeal to the women of the
    North. In what ways does her appeal parrot or
    differ from the ideas that Morgan expressed in
    her diary?

26
  • A CALL TO MY COUNTRY-WOMEN
  • Gail Hamilton
  • (Mary Abigail Dodge)
  • Atlantic Monthly 6 (March 1863)
  • . . . If women, weak or strong, consider that
    praying is all they can or ought to do for their
    country, and so settle down contented with that,
    they make as great a mistake as if they did not
    pray at all. True, women cannot fight, and there
    is no call for any great number of female nurses
    notwithstanding this, I believe, that, to-day,
    the issue of this war depends quite as much upon
    American women as upon American men, and depends,
    too, not upon the few who write, but upon the
    many who do not.

27
  • A CALL TO MY COUNTRY-WOMEN
  • Gail Hamilton
  • (Mary Abigail Dodge)
  • Atlantic Monthly 6 (March 1863)
  • When I read of the Rebels fighting bareheaded,
    bare-footed, haggard, and unshorn, in rags and
    filth, fighting bravely, heroically,
    successfully, I am ready to make a burnt-offering
    of our stacks of clothing. I feel and fear that
    we must come down, as they have done, to a
    recklessness of all incidentals, down to the
    rough and rugged fastnesses (remote and secluded
    places) of life, down to the very gates of death
    itself, before we shall be ready and worthy to
    win victories.

28
  • A CALL TO MY COUNTRY-WOMEN
  • Gail Hamilton
  • (Mary Abigail Dodge)
  • Atlantic Monthly 6 (March 1863)
  • Take not acquiescently, but joyfully, the
    spoiling of your goods. Not only look poverty in
    the face with high disdain, but embrace it with
    gladness and welcome. The loss is but for a
    moment the gain is for all time. Go farther
    than this. Consecrate to a holy cause not only
    the incidentals of life, but life itself.
    Father, husband, childI do not say, Give them up
    to toil, exposure, suffering, death, without a
    murmurthat implies reluctance. I rather say,
    Urge them to the offering fill them with sacred
    fury fire them with irresistible desire
    strengthen them to heroic will.

29
  • A CALL TO MY COUNTRY-WOMEN
  • Gail Hamilton
  • (Mary Abigail Dodge)
  • Atlantic Monthly 6 (March 1863)
  • Therefore let us have done at once and forever
    with paltry considerations, with talk of
    despondency and darkness. Let compromise,
    submission, and every form of dishonorable peace
    be not so much as named among us. Tolerate no
    cowards voice or pen or eye. Wherever the
    serpents head is raised, strike it down. Measure
    every man by the standard of manhood.

30
By 1863 the rhetoric of sacrifice no longer could
assuage the mounting frustration and anger on the
home front. When scattered bread riots flared up
in Richmond and elsewhere observers and public
officials struggled to make sense of the unrest.
31
  • African American Response
  • Complicating the mobilization for the war in
    both the North and the South were African
    Americans, who had their own hopes for the wars
    outcome. What insights does A. Jacksons
    testimony give us about how blacks in the South
    responded to the war?

32
  • Testimony of Alonzo Jackson
  • An African American merchant in South Carolina
  • Yes, about 8 months before Georgetown was
    occupied by Union soldiers, while I was in the
    freighting business on my flat boat on Mingo
    Creek (up Black River) about 30 or 40 miles from
    Georgetown by water, three white men came near
    the boat which was at the bank of the river. I
    was on the boat with only one person, a colored
    man (in my employ named Henry). As soon as the
    three white men saw we were colored men they came
    to the boat and said, We are Yankee soldiers,
    and have escaped from the rebel stockade at
    Florence. We are your friends cant you do
    something for us, we are nearly perished.

33
  • As soon as I saw them, before they spoke, I knew
    they were Yankee soldiers by their clothing.
    They were all private soldiers, so they told me.
    I invited them to come on the boat and told them
    I would hurry and cook for them, which I did and
    gave it to them in my boat. As soon as they
    entered the boat I shoved off from land and
    anchored in the creek about sixty feet from
    shore. I was loading cord wood in my boat when
    the soldiers came and had completed my load
    within about four cords. I did not wait to take
    it all, fearing that someone else might come and
    catch these Yankees. Neither of the three
    soldiers ordered me to take them in the boat or
    made any threats. They did not go in the boat or
    secure it in any way so that I could not leave
    it. They only entered the boat after they had
    told me who they were (as stated) and when I
    invited them. They were very weak and had no
    weapons. They had no shoes on. It was then winter
    weather, and cold.

34
  • The three Yankees did not suggest anything for
    me to do for them except to feed them, and wanted
    to get to the gun boats. They did not know where
    the gun boats were. I did, and I told them I
    would take them where they could get to the gun
    boats unmolested. The soldiers did not pay or
    give me anything, or promise anything to me at
    any time, and I have never received anything for
    any service rendered to any Union soldiers. They
    did not threaten me or use any violence. They
    were very friendly and glad to get into such good
    hands. They showed that they felt very grateful.

35
  • In about three days time we came to North
    Island (about twelve miles from Georgetown)
    which I then knew was in possession of the Union
    forces. I did not pass Georgetown by daylight for
    fear of being stopped by the rebels who had
    pickets all along the shore to stop all boats
    from going below. In the night I floated with the
    ebb tide (without being seen) to North Island.
    I got there in the night and landed the three
    soldiers in my small boat. I showed them the
    direction to cross the Island so as to get to the
    gun boats. I knew there were many of the gun boat
    people on the shore there at that time. I saw the
    three soldiers go as I directed. I never saw or
    heard from any of the three soldiers afterwards,
    but through a colored man named Miller (who was
    on the shore near the gunboats) learned about
    three soldiers had got to the fleet. Miller
    told me this about two weeks after I took the
    three soldiers. He saw them and described them so
    that I was certain he had seen the same three
    soldiers safe in the protection of the gun boats.

36
  • Slavery as Cornerstone
  • Given that Vice President Alexander Stephens had
    described slavery as the cornerstone of the
    Confederacy in 1861, how and why did Confederate
    General Cleburne justify emancipating slaves who
    fought for the Confederacy in 1864?

37
  • Home Front Fault Lines
  • Cleburne acknowledged the moral high ground
    that the Union occupied with its war against
    slavery. And yet only a year earlier New York
    City had erupted in rioting against the draft and
    African Americans. Just as the bread riots of
    1863 drew attention to fault lines in the
    Confederacy, so too the riots in New York exposed
    deep divisions there. What were those divisions
    according to the editorialists of Harpers Weekly?

38
  • What was life like for African Americans on the
    northern and southern
  • home fronts?
  • Alonzo Jacksons testimony is very matter of the
    fact. Yet, the actions he took reveal a great
    deal about the response of southern African
    Americans to their circumstances during the Civil
    War. Is there anything in particular that
    strikes you as noteworthy or surprising about
    either Jacksons actions or his description of
    them?
  • Do you think Jacksons actions are the sort of
    behavior that prompted Cleburne to offer his
    proposal for Confederate emancipation?
  • How different do you think the northern
    motivation for arming African Americans was than
    Cleburnes motivation? In other words, did the
    same exigencies that drove the North to arm
    blacks subsequently prod the South to contemplate
    doing so? How likely was it that blacks would
    have fought for the Confederacy?
  • The New York Draft Riots are a conspicuous
    reminder of how circumscribed freedom was for
    blacks in the North. From the perspective of the
    editorialists of Harpers Weekly, what did the
    riots reveal about New Yorkers?

39
  • January 2, 1864
  • COMMANDING GENERAL, THE CORPS, DIVISION, BRIGADE,
    AND REGIMENTAL
  • COMMANDERS OF THE ARMY of TENNESSEE
  • GENERAL
  • We can give but a faint idea when we say it
    means the loss of all we now hold most
    sacredslaves and all other personal property,
    lands, homesteads, liberty, justice, safety,
    pride, manhood. It means that the history of
    this heroic struggle will be written by the
    enemy that our youth will be trained by Northern
    school teachers will learn from Northern school
    books their version of the war will be impressed
    by all the influences of history and education to
    regard our gallant dead as traitors, our maimed
    veterans as fit objects for derision. It means
    the crushing of Southern manhood, the hatred of
    our former slaves, who will, on a spy system, be
    our secret police.
  • The enemy has three sources of supply First,
    his own motley population secondly, our slaves
    and thirdly, Europeans whose hearts are fired
    into a crusade against us by fictitious pictures
    of the atrocities of slavery, and who meet no
    hindrance from their Governments in such
    enterprise, because these Governments are equally
    antagonistic to the institution. . . . Apart from
    the assistance that home and foreign prejudice
    against slavery has given to the North, slavery
    is a source of great strength to the enemy in a
    purely military point of view, by supplying him
    with an army from our granaries but it is our
    most vulnerable point, a continued embarrassment,
    and in some respects an insidious weakness.
  • As between the loss of independence and the loss
    of slavery, we assume that every patriot will
    freely give up the lattergive up the negro slave
    rather than be a slave himself.
  • It enlisting slaves to fight for the
    Confederacy would remove forever all selfish
    taint from our cause and place independence above
    every question of property.

40
  • Harpers Weekly
  • July 25, 1863
  • The Draft
  • The leaders and principal actors in the affair
    were boysbeardless youths of fifteen to
    eighteen. Behind these, and seemingly operating
    as a mere reserve force, was a body of
    menoperatives in foundries and factories,
    laborers, stablemen, etc. who did the murdering
    of policemen, the gutting of houses, the firing
    of dwellings, etc., after the boys had opened the
    battle with volleys of stones. In all the crowds
    there was a fair sprinkling of women, not young,
    but married women, who were probably roused to
    fury by the fear of having their husbands taken
    from them by the draft. This kind of mixed crowd,
    though often good-humored and apt to be easily
    managed by a skillful leader, is likewise prone
    to the wildest excesses of passion and brutality.
    The boys and men invariably get drunk at an early
    stage of the proceedings the women appear to
    become equally intoxicated with excitement and
    all together commit crimes from which every
    individual in the crowd would probably shrink if
    he were alone. Such crowds are so cowardly

41
  • Harpers Weekly
  • August 1, 1863
  • The Riots
  • The outbreak was the natural consequence of
    pernicious teachings widely scattered among the
    ignorant and excitable populace of a great city
    and the only possible mode of dealing with it was
    stern and bloody repression. Had the mob been
    assailed with grape and canister on Monday, when
    the first disturbance took place, it would have
    been a saving of life and property. Had the
    resistance been more general, and the bloodshed
    more profuse than it was, on Thursday,
  • Some newspapers dwell upon the fact that the
    rioters were uniformly Irish, and hence argue
    that our trouble arises from the perversity of
    the Irish race. . . . Turbulence is no exclusive
    attribute of the Irish character it is common to
    all mobs in all countries. It happens in this
    city that, in our working classes, the Irish
    element largely preponderates over all others,
    and if the populace acts as a populace Irishmen
    are naturally prominent therein. It happens,
    also, that, from the limited opportunities which
    the Irish enjoy for education in their own
    country, they are more easily misled by knaves,
    and made the tools of politicians, when they come
    here, than Germans or men of other races. The
    impulsiveness of the Celt, likewise, prompts him
    to be foremost in every outburst. . . .

42
  • An Open Letter
  • MY DEAR FRIEND,YOU are a German and a Jew, and
    you have come to make your living in a foreign
    land, of which Christianity is the professed
    religion. You have no native, no political, no
    religious sympathy with this country. You are
    here solely to make money, and your only wish is
    to make money as fast as possible. You neither
    know our history nor understand our Government
    but, believing that all men are selfish and mean,
    nothing is absurder to your mind than the
    American doctrine of popular government based
    upon equal rights.
  • You are the material out of which despotisms are
    made. It is upon such people as you that the King
    of Prussia counts when he deliberately destroys
    the constitutional rights of his subjects. And
    whatever in this country is despotic, mean, and
    repugnant to the great and fundamental democratic
    doctrine of equal rights before the law, receives
    your hearty sympathy and support. The country you
    left did not regret your coming away the country
    in which you trade will not mourn your departure

43
Focus Questions How did the total mobilization
of the Civil War affect the Northern and Southern
home fronts? What was life like for women on
the Northern and Southern home fronts? What was
life like for African Americans on the Northern
and Southern home fronts?
44
  • Final slide.
  • Thank you.
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