Silent Cavalry: How Union Soldiers from Alabama Helped Sherman Burn Atlanta--and Then Got Written Out of History

Silent Cavalry: How Union Soldiers from Alabama Helped Sherman Burn Atlanta--and Then Got Written Out of History

by Howell Raines
Silent Cavalry: How Union Soldiers from Alabama Helped Sherman Burn Atlanta--and Then Got Written Out of History

Silent Cavalry: How Union Soldiers from Alabama Helped Sherman Burn Atlanta--and Then Got Written Out of History

by Howell Raines

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Overview

A Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist reveals the little-known story of the Union soldiers from Alabama who played a decisive role in the Civil War, and how they were scrubbed from the history books.

“It is my sincere hope that this compelling and submerged history is integrated into our understanding of our nation, and allows us to embrace new heroes of the past.”—Imani Perry, professor, Harvard University, and National Book Award–winning author of South to America


We all know how the Civil War was won: Courageous Yankees triumphed over the South. But is there more to the story?

As Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Howell Raines shows, it was not only soldiers from northern states who helped General William Tecumseh Sherman burn Atlanta to the ground but also an unsung regiment of 2,066 Alabamian yeoman farmers—including at least one member of Raines’s own family.

Called the First Alabama Cavalry, U.S.A., this regiment of mountain Unionists, which included sixteen formerly enslaved Black men, was the point of the spear that Sherman drove through the heart of the Confederacy. The famed general hailed their skills and courage. So why don’t we know anything about them?

Silent Cavalry is part epic American history, part family saga, and part scholarly detective story. Drawing on the lore of his native Alabama and investigative skills honed by six decades in journalism, Raines brings to light a conspiracy that sought to undermine the accomplishments of these renegade southerners—a key component of the Lost Cause effort to restore glory to white southerners after the war, even at the cost of the truth.

In this important new contribution to our understanding of the Civil War and its legacy, Raines tells the thrilling tale of the formation of the First Alabama while exposing the tangled web of how its wartime accomplishments were silenced, implicating everyone from a former Confederate general to a gaggle of Lost Cause historians in the Ivy League and a sanctimonious former keeper of the Alabama state archives. By reversing the erasure of the First Alabama, Silent Cavalry is a testament to the immense power of historians to destroy as well as to redeem.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780593137758
Publisher: Crown Publishing Group
Publication date: 12/05/2023
Pages: 576
Sales rank: 17,254
Product dimensions: 6.40(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.50(d)

About the Author

Howell Raines is a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and former executive editor of The New York Times. He is the author of four previous books: Whiskey Man, The One That Got Away, Fly Fishing Through the Midlife Crisis, and My Soul Is Rested. Based in Pennsylvania, he was born and began his career in Alabama.

Read an Excerpt

1

What Happened to Me at Ma ’n’ Ada’s


I was born in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1943, when it was America’s most segregated city. The process by which I came not to believe what most white children of my era were taught about race and the Civil War was a haphazard affair. As a small child I became fascinated with all things rural and ancient, largely as a consequence of visiting my grandparents’ farm in Alabama’s poorest county, a throwback redoubt of Appalachian folkways called the “Free State of Winston.” It was so nicknamed because anti-­Secession farmers in the hill country made a legendary attempt to withdraw from Alabama when the state left the Union in 1861. In 1951, Esther Garrett, a tiny, ferociously flamboyant teacher who called herself “Mama Tadpole,” introduced me and the other “Tadpoles” to a glorified version of Alabama history, including the legend of the yellowhammer, our state bird. The black speckles on its tawny breast represented the bullet holes inflicted on Confederate soldiers by the Yankees, Mrs. Garrett explained. The red band on the bird’s neck stood for the blood Alabama boys shed for the southern cause, the yellow on its wings for the flashy scarves the soldiers wore on parade. The imagery was intended to school us in that crude, defiant, fatalistic sangfroid much admired in the Heart of Dixie then and now. Paradoxically, she also taught us to affect a high-­toned accent for singing the state song. In the chorus, “Alabama, Alabama, we will aye be true to thee,” we called our state “ah-­la-­BAH-­ma,” the posh enunciation to show we didn’t talk like hillbillies.

The next school year, I fell under the tutelage of the more reserved Telulah Rose Love, a stately matron who was in charge of the school library and presided over the reading list on which our report-­card marks were based. Miss Love doted on me and my two older siblings as brighter-than-­average kids. I was shaken when I laid my list in front of her and she noted with sadness and surprise that I had read only one book in six weeks. It was Mark Twain’s difficult miscegenation novel, Pudd’nhead Wilson, a didactic condemnation of prejudice based on skin color. To this day I’m amazed that it found its way into a Birmingham public school’s library, given that the state and city boards of education strictly policed our reading materials for signs of excessive sympathy for “Negroes,” “Communists,” or our enemy in the War Between the States. I had plowed through a text that was far beyond my understanding, never quite sure of why one infant was considered Black and another was white. I’m pretty sure Miss Love didn’t know what the book was about either. She just wasn’t going to give an E for “excellent” to a slacker who could finish only one book a month.

Miss Love’s mother was an Owen, and she provided our entrée to the famous woman in Montgomery, the legendary Miss Marie, the widow of Thomas McAdory Owen. Until his untimely death at the age of fifty-­three, Tom Owen was a leading figure nationally in higher education. Despite its backwardness in so many fields, Alabama was the first state to establish a state archive to preserve official papers, and as its founder, Dr. Owen hobnobbed with the nation’s top scholars at American Historical Association conventions in Manhattan and New Orleans. He had also been the national historian-­general of the Sons of Confederate Veterans and an energetic promoter of the Lost Cause school of Civil War scholarship among American historians. Newly widowed in 1920, Miss Marie used her political connections to secure what she called her “meal ticket.” Since Marie Bankhead Owen’s father was a longtime senator from Alabama, and her brother William B. Bankhead was the Speaker of the House of Representatives, FDR had given her a New Deal grant to construct the archives building as an imposing alabaster shrine to her late husband. She was named only a week after his death to succeed her husband as director of the Alabama Department of Archives and History.

She reigned there for over three decades as the guardian of his memory and administrator of the gleaming museum of all things touching on the Old South and Confederate glory. Her tigerish reputation among legislators arose from the fact that, in her officerships in the Daughters of the American Revolution, the United Daughters of the Confederacy, the Alabama Library Association, and the Women’s Christian Temperance Union, she could flood the halls of the capitol with women supporting any cause she considered sufficiently genteel and conservative. Thanks to the Owen connection, Miss Love was able to lead my fourth-­grade class on a field trip to the archives. I remember that Miss Marie radiated the certitude of power and virtue as my classmates and I clustered around her in the high-­ceilinged Hall of Flags while she explained the holiness of the bullet holes in the large Rebel battle flag framed on the wall behind her.

Childhood memory is wavery in some spots and crystal clear in others. My mental image of Miss Marie on that long-­ago day in Montgomery is of the latter type. She looked to me like pictures I’d seen of Queen Victoria. But I think I must have garbled some of the lore we heard that day about the flag mounted on the wall behind her. For years, I believed Miss Marie had told us this was the flag of truce under which Lee surrendered at Appomattox. But it turned out that the actual fabric surrendered that time was a white dinner napkin carried by Captain Thomas Goode Jones, a Bourbon Democrat and future governor who helped get white supremacy written into Alabama’s 1901 constitution. In looking back, I’ve speculated that Miss Marie may have mentioned that Governor Jones was the father of one of her Montgomery courtiers, a judge and a part-­time journalist named Walter B. Jones. The judge, an eccentric who devoted his Sunday newspaper column to Confederate boasting and the defense of segregation, had his fifteen minutes of national fame in 1964. As presiding judge in the landmark libel case Times v. Sullivan, he lectured lawyers for my future newspaper on the uses of “white man’s justice” in dealing with “racial agitators.” Judge Jones also took pen in hand in 1934 to condemn a bestselling book entitled Stars Fell on Alabama, whose foreword thanked Marie Bankhead Owen by name.

All these names will recur in my narrative, and I mention them here by way of observing that Alabama is somewhat similar to Flannery O’Connor’s Georgia; there everything that rises must converge. The late Alabama folklorist Kathryn Tucker Windham said Alabama is “one big front porch,” and life on that porch is more horizontal; everything circles, overlaps, and sooner or later seems to connect. In his 1934 review of Stars Fell on Alabama, the book that taught me to see Alabama in its magisterial perversity, the influential New Yorker critic Clifton Fadiman dismissively referred to “the native tribes of Alabama,” but it was among these presumed primitives that my subversive reflections and my education as a contrarian began. And it’s hard to imagine a better family for an inquisitive child to be born to than mine.

Reconstructing my political education at the family hearth is like following a trail of crumbs that can be traced more clearly now than was the case in the beginning, the presidential election year of 1948. On November 2 of that year, I stood at the top of the porch steps of my grandmother’s house, a five-­year-­old watching my parents climb from our maroon Chrysler sedan and start up the sidewalk. They were dressed as if for church or business. My father, a partner with his two brothers in a decade-­old business that made store fixtures for the A&P grocery chain, then spreading across Alabama, held aloft two fingers and called out to me and my two sitters, my grandmother and my maiden aunt Ada, “Two for Dewey.”

I had no way of knowing how much his words told about Alabama and our family. In political terms, forty-­one-­year-­old Wattie Simeon Raines and his wife, Bertha Estelle Walker Raines, also forty-­one, were returning to the family fold by voting for the Republican presidential nominee, Thomas E. Dewey, who would lose to FDR by a landslide. As struggling newlyweds living in small-­town Alabama they bolted to the Democrats and voted for FDR in 1932 and in the next two elections. By 1948, with their family of five ensconced in the modern bungalow they built in 1937 in a rising neighborhood in Birmingham, they were city folk who could afford to become Republicans—again. Only a demographer with a good grasp of Alabama’s Civil War history could have understood that the Raines and Walker families were, as hereditary white Republicans, rara avises in the corrupt Alabama political jungle ruled by yellow dog Democrats.

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