Almost a year ago now, when a Google+ follower asked for my
opinion on the then upcoming Gary Ross’ movie based on Newt Knight and the free state of Jones County,
Mississippi, I really couldn’t say much except that I didn’t intend to see the
thing. I knew from the git-go where the movie would go; and its focus, as is
all focus concerning the South at present, disturbed me. I’ve worked on this
post off and on since then. As far as the movie is concerned, I haven’t seen it
and a critique from a
pro-South point of view has already been done more effectively than I could
have managed. So in structuring my thoughts on the subject, I decided to let my
focus on writing and teaching Southern history be my guide. This is my first of
several posts resulting from this most recent regurgitation of the Jones’
County legend. Though discussion of the movie is now dated, the theme of
Southerners championing Southern history is not and, I hope, never will be.
At the time the question was asked of me, I had a general knowledge of Newton Knight and Jones County,
had been aware of the history since I was in high school—and that was a long
time ago. I had a copy of Ethel Knight’s Echo
of the Black Horn—I’d paid a pretty penny for it, too—but I hadn’t read it.
(It, as well as Thomas Knight’s tale of his father’s adventures, were reprinted
in time for the movie’s debut and are now on sale at a reasonable price).
Reading about a criminal and a deserter from Jones County didn’t interest me nearly
as much as sorting out the causes of unwarranted war (kidding—there’s always a
reason, but its noble justification is too often created by the twenty-twenty hindsight
of the victor. That’s the spin, and our War Between the States is a classic
example.). Of even greater interest to me is the war’s result—in this case the
loss of liberty and the creation of Hobbs’ Leviathan right here in North
America.
I have since read both Knight books and three more on the
subject. Aided with the ignorance of the masses, Ross’ movie, with its reach,
is one more notch in the gun of those pushing that spin of righteousness on the
part of Lincoln’s Union in waging war on the South. And the South is not the
only victim here. So, too, is our Founder’s Republic, now threatened by the determination of this most recent group of centralizers to portray what came out of Philadelphia in
1787 as the blueprint for democracy rather than a federal republic.
The present attack on Southern history has been ongoing since
the 60’s, but the intensity has fluctuated markedly over the past five decades.
The present onslaught hasn’t seen the like since Reconstruction and, for all
intents and purposes, is unwarranted—when taken out of the context of the
Left’s attack on all things American [ah, but that’s an important context to
note]—and amounts to nothing less than a purge of the South and its history. But purgers can only accomplish their objective through genocide of the people
they seek to erase...or if survivors themselves capitulate. What I’m saying
is the obliteration of Southern history, i.e. the South’s role in colonial history,
the Revolution, the framing of the Republic, and as the champion of state rights can only be destroyed if we Southerners
allow it to happen.
If I’ve connected the dots right, the book from which Gary
Ross derived his idea for a movie, The
Free State of Jones, was written by Victoria Bynum over fifteen years
ago. Sometime during the ensuing period, Ross wrote a screenplay and did some
research of his own, then turned that screenplay over to Sally Jenkins of the Washington Post and Paul Stauffer, a
Harvard history professor, to co-write The
State of Jones, a book paralleling/supportive of the screenplay. The Bynum
book is a scholarly piece of work and comes replete with a lot of history
regarding the origins of the families who settled the Piney Woods during territorial days—she is, in fact, a branch off the tree. For that reason,
if none other, folks interested in the history of the South and migration from
the Carolinas and Georgia west will find value in her work. It’s the spin that
I find disconcerting, but I expected it when I embarked on this study. Bynum meets
my expectations in the afterward to the second printing (timed again to
coincide with the movie’s release): Reviving this history is to undermine the
Lost Cause “myth” of a solid South struggling in defense of its way of life against
the Northern aggressor. The implication is that those who initiated the
struggle were slave owners determined to protect slavery, and, in this retelling
of the tale, there is a substantial number of Southerners who were against
secession and hence, war. Oh, then there’s the emphasis on an interracial
love story between Newt Knight (a married man with children) and Rachel, (his
grandfather’s slave with numerous children of her own), a “subplot” ignored
during the founding of the legend.
The State of Jones,
the Jenkins and Stauffer book, is another entertaining read, an excellent
example of fiction masquerading as historical fact. The work is fraught
with “probablys,”
may-haves, can-be-guessed-ats, “perhapses,” and likes, to mention a few, followed by passages culled from valid
accounts and then near seamlessly superimposed into the Newt Knight story
leaving the non-partisan reader to accept the skewed narrative as fact.
What are these people trying to accomplish here? Would you
buy into their trying to establish a warm and fuzzy feeling between still
divided sections because after 150 years, two World Wars and numerous other major
conflicts with Yank and Reb fighting side by side we are still at each others’
throats? [Cow patties don’t stink, folks, unless someone takes a stick and
stirs them up.] Is the production of these recent books and movie an
acknowledgement by our intellectual betters that all Southerners aren’t really
bad after all? That the majority of our ancestors were merely the stupid dupes
of a few evil, self-aggrandizing men and their progeny has remained stymied in
that same ignorance ever since? And now, by swallowing this kaa-kaa being
rammed down our throats, we will be forgiven and welcomed back into the
egalitarian, feminist, and pure democracy of Thomas Jefferson as “true”
Americans?
Forget that ever happening. It never will. First off,
Jefferson was a slave owner and a Virginian and no amount of deflection will
change that—it’s such second guessing and apologizing for slavery for which we have no right or need to make that has painted the South into a corner. Second,
Jefferson believed in liberty, and the only way to ensure liberty is to limit government. Democracy and limited
government fell under the purview of the states and the locales within them, not the
general government. But no matter which road we take at this point in history, Southerners
will never be the intellectual equals of leftist elites; in fact very few
will, Southern or not. The elites are superior, don’t you know? More importantly, we should never aspire
to be. Once we Southrons swallow and digest their poison, the nation of our
forefathers will be worth no more than what we defecate out our other end. We will no longer be of concern to those supreme beings, because the threat we pose to their goals will have ceased to exist, our having finally achieved the
mainstream’s ideal of what an “American” is supposed to be. Then, all of us will be good for nothings. But, I digress.
Regarding secession, a major factor in the Jones County
legend, a lot of Southerners opposed it, but I’m informed enough to know that
being against secession and being pro-Union are two different things. For a
variety of reasons, including internal interests, anti-secessionists did not
think separating from the Union was a good idea, preferring to weather Northern
abuse. Understand they were aware of the problems with their Northern
counterparts: the tariffs, the application of public money for internal
improvements in the North, the efforts to minimize Southern representation in
Congress so the North could expand its advantage. A preference for staying in
the Union didn’t necessarily compute to agreeing with the Union cause, which,
as it turned out, meant keeping all the territory together under one supreme
ruler and keeping the South around to serve as its cash cow and cannon fodder; individual
liberty be damned. The Whigs—the biggest, richest slave owners in Mississippi
(and across the South), were passionately opposed
to secession, but do not delude yourself into thinking these Southern patriots,
regardless of their stance on slavery, accepted subordination to Northern
interests. They simply preferred the economic/defensive security guaranteed by
membership in the Union and hoped to negotiate the injustice/share in the
wealth; it was to their economic advantage to do so. Certainly, as in any other
state in the Union, each Southern state had diverse economic interests and
rivalries. That existed in the beginning and continues today. What I find galling are people, with an
agenda, assuming to tell Southerners the reason they seceded and what they were
fighting for, of twisting facts around to make them appear as something else. What
happened folks ain’t complicated and
it sure the devil wasn’t altruistic. Worse yet are native Southerners—and I
mean people who can trace their roots back to colonial days and the early
Republic, and there are lots of us down here, buying off on the so-called neo-Confederate/Lost Cause myth. Consider
that in January, 1864, Irish-born Confederate general Patrick Cleburne of
Helena, Arkansas stated:
“It is said slavery is all we are fighting
for, and if we give it up we give up all. Even if this were true, which we
deny, slavery is not all our enemies are fighting for. It is merely the
pretense to establish sectional superiority and a more centralized form of
government, and to deprive us of our rights and liberties.”
And Confederate General Richard Taylor pointed out in Destruction and Reconstruction
(published in 1879):
“During
all these years the conduct of the Southern people has been admirable....they
have struggled in all honorable ways, and for what? For their slaves? Regret
for their loss has neither been felt nor expressed. But they have striven for
that which brought our forefathers to Runnymede, the privilege of exercising
some influence in their own government.” (For those of you who don’t recall
from your social studies days, Runnymede is the place where the Magna Carta was
signed).
And my third and last rebuttal, though thousands of such
exist: It was Edward A. Pollard, editor of the Richmond Examiner, who, in 1866, first used the term, “Lost Cause,”
as the title of his book on the War Between the States. Yet today’s mainstream
historians/or pseudo-historians are trying to convince today’s Southerners we
don’t know what our ancestors were fighting for between 1861-1865 (1861-1877
actually) and The Lost Cause is actually a myth created by the Southern Democrats
at the end of the 19th century, then expanded upon well into the 20th to keep
themselves in power. Beyond its bogus application of the term “myth” in this
case, I won’t argue the mainstream’s point, but it has gotten a bit ahead of
itself here. First those Southern Democrats had to get themselves back in power.
Throughout the travails of Reconstruction while New
Departure Democrats, infiltrated with old-line Southern Whigs, routinely sacrificed principle in their efforts to counter the Republicans, the old-line Democrats, the Bourbons, stuck
to the principles of home rule, sovereign states, and decentralization. In the
end they prevailed over a corrupt and treasonous Republican Party—and in so
doing eclipsed the failed policies of the less Conservative Democrats. This
brings the reader up to 1875-1877 and a long way (in human years) from the turn
of the century.
What did develop near the end of the 19th century and
expanded well into the 20th in the wake of the perceived Negro betrayal of the
Populist Movement, when jolted white politicians decided it was more cost
effective to eliminate the Negro vote than court it, was the emphasis on white
supremacy historians link to pro-slavery. Now that those Southern Democrats did tie to the Lost Cause. They then
used the threat of “Negro rule,” which proved so devastating during
Reconstruction, to keep themselves in power. That today’s historians link the
evolution of the Lost Cause of state rights and limited federal government and
the legality of the South’s secession under the Tenth Amendment to the
white-supremacy tact of the old Southern Democrats nearly a half-century later is
indicative of one of two things, ignorant and unthinking historians or those
with an agenda. I don’t think they’re ignorant and I think they’re doing a lot
of thinking—about how to twist the facts to meet their agenda in tandem with
the hope readers don’t pick up a history book with a copyright prior to 1960.
Okay, I’m being facetious here, but you get my drift. This double whammy
against the South serves a (leftist) mainstream agenda, and is a real coup in supporting
their perversion of our federal system into the faux democracy lauded today as
the enemy of racism and champion of civil rights. For any American who cares
about our Republic, to buy off on this deflection due to ignorance is unconscionable.
Now, if, on the other hand, you believe the Founders were
wrong, and you reject the Constitution they framed, and you believe we really should
be a democracy where social norms are dictated and enforced by an all-powerful
central government, then have at it, but don’t ream the South for believing as
it did, because when it comes to the Founders and the Constitution, the South
was right and Southerners who aren’t aware of that, or deny it, shame on them. The
biggest threat to the preservation of Southern rights (state rights), values,
principles, and history is the Southerner.
My point in what I
presented above is to argue there is no break in the Lost Cause faith through
the war up to and including the present day and to imply it was all concocted
by the sons of Bourbons at the turn
of the last century, and that, in fact, the South seceded for the cause of an
institution that was legal and protected by the Constitution is a falsehood,
one perpetrated by design and bought only by the ignorant drunk on their own “feel-good”
propaganda...or those with a self-serving agenda. The mainstream media,
hopelessly infested with a leftist ideology, is not trying to expose a lie
inherent to the “Lost Cause”; it is determined to obliterate the truth, a truth
rooted in the Founding itself.
Next in this series I’ll delve into the real “myths” of the
War for Southern Independence—or the Civil War if you druther. That’s what the mythmakers call it, anyway.
Thanks for reading,
Charlsie
Good article, explaining a lot about the myth that there was a "Lost Cause" concocted at "the end of the 19th century". Good info about the "Free State" of Jones, too. I read all articles linked by you in this article.
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