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In this masterful portrait of life in Savannah before, during, and after the Civil War, prize-winning historian Jacqueline Jones transports readers to the balmy, raucous streets of that fabled Southern port city. Here is a subtle and rich social history that weaves together stories of the everyday lives of blacks and whites, rich and poor, men and women from all walks of life confronting the transformations that would alter their city forever. Deeply researched and vividly written, Saving Savannah is an invaluable contribution to our understanding of the Civil War years.
[Jones's] meticulous recreation of the Civil War in Georgia's rice kingdom…Jones, who teaches history at the University of Texas at Austin, traces this tragic story with the thoroughness and sophistication that have marked her distinguished career.
More Reviews and RecommendationsThe author of seven previous books, Jacqueline Jones teaches American history at the University of Texas–Austin. Among her numerous awards are the Taft Prize, the Brown Memorial Prize, the Spruill Prize, the Bancroft Prize (for Labor of Love, Labor of Sorrow), and, in l999, a MacArthur Fellowship. Saving Savannah won the Georgia Historical Society’s 2009 Malcolm Bell, Jr. and Muriel Barrow Bell Award.
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October 09, 2008: As an avid nonfiction reader, I have been eagerly awaiting this book. I'll say from the outset that I can be quite critical of books, especially those that fail to keep me engaged. This will probably be the most positive review I have EVER written! It's simple. Saving Savannah is brilliant. I can't remember the last time I read a book that was at once exciting and compelling and also deeply intelligent and thoughtful. The stories stand alone for their entertainment value - you'll get into it no matter who you are. The complex issues of race and politics really got me thinking, so I think this book will appeal to even the most discerning of intellectual readers. Personally, I devour books on the civil war it's fascinating to read the individuals stories and think about the nuances. This really added something new to the story for me. And thats hard to do. I felt compelled to write something because I so enjoyed this book. It might just change the way you think about the civil war, or slavery, or how communities rise and fall, or our nation on a broder level. I'd put this on a list of must-reads for american history. It's very Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. Better, in my opinion!
In this masterful portrait of life in Savannah before, during, and after the Civil War, prize-winning historian Jacqueline Jones transports readers to the balmy, raucous streets of that fabled Southern port city. Here is a subtle and rich social history that weaves together stories of the everyday lives of blacks and whites, rich and poor, men and women from all walks of life confronting the transformations that would alter their city forever. Deeply researched and vividly written, Saving Savannah is an invaluable contribution to our understanding of the Civil War years.
[Jones's] meticulous recreation of the Civil War in Georgia's rice kingdom…Jones, who teaches history at the University of Texas at Austin, traces this tragic story with the thoroughness and sophistication that have marked her distinguished career.
MacArthur fellow and Bancroft Prize-winning historian Jones (Labor of Love, Labor of Sorrow) combines comprehensive research and evocative prose in this study of a Southern city where complex rules of social and economic hierarchy blurred the lines between slavery and freedom well before the Civil War. The prosperous city and labor-intensive rice plantations depended as much on white workers, who tended to be fractious, as on black slaves. At the same time, some blacks, free before the war or emancipated by it, were determined to live on their own terms, economically, socially and, after 1865, politically. But the Civil War brought Northerners into the mix-soldiers, teachers, missionaries, businessmen-motivated by varying combinations of morality and enterprise. After the war, they colluded with Southern whites to keep blacks from attaining full self-determination through conflicts waged in streets and courtrooms, churches and schools and workplaces. Violence and chicanery sustained traditional forms of power, though that power now came through the ballot box and the jury box. With penetrating understanding Jones describes and analyzes the complex processes that impoverished black society but never succeeded in destroying it. 16 pages of photos, 5 maps. (Oct. 9)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Jones (American civilization, Brandeis Univ.; Labor of Love; Labor of Sorrow) interweaves the daily lives of ordinary people, political leaders, and powerful landowners into a fascinating narrative of the African American experience in the city of Savannah during the second half of the 19th century. In spite of the Civil War's prominence in the subtitle, the wartime experience of the city takes up less than a third of the book. The rest is given to the years before and after the war. Jones posits that slaves and freedmen created complex social systems that aided their own survival and the survival of the city, that African Americans in Savannah were not merely victims alternately oppressed by southerners and pitied by northerners. Jones relies heavily upon primary sources and succeeds in showing the creative contributions of African Americans facing intense racial hatred. However, the story feels incomplete, leaving one wishing that more primary material existed on the protagonists. Jones assumes a basic familiarity both with the Civil War and with southern society before and after the war, which could lose readers without this familiarity. Nevertheless, this is worthwhile for those with an appreciation of narrative histories of cities and an interest in the Civil War. The extensive selected bibliography will be helpful for those interested in further research. Recommended for public libraries and academic libraries with related collections. (Illustrations and index not seen.)
Sturdy history of the Southern port city and its relationship to the "curious institution" of slavery. As Bancroft Prize-winning historian Jones (American History/Brandeis Univ.; Creek Walking: Growing Up in Delaware in the 1950s, 2001, etc.) notes, Savannah, like most ports, was cosmopolitan compared to the interior. Its white inhabitants included Protestants, Jews and Catholics from many European nations, most recently arrived from the Old World, and almost all members of a vigorous Democratic Party, which served as "testament to the mutual if wildly unequal dependence of the planter-merchant-lawyer elite and large numbers of teamsters, dockworkers, and sawmill hands." No matter how different, though, white Savannah was insistent in its defense of slavery. Jones opens with an account of a slave, Thomas Simms, who escaped via the port and traveled north to Boston, where his pursuers discovered him and forced his extradition, despite the protestations of abolitionist Northerners. Upon returning to Savannah, Simms received the maximum punishment allowed by law, 39 strokes with the lash, which, Simms later said, would have been more "but for the sympathy manifested for him in the North." Drawing on a trove of documents and firsthand accounts, Jones depicts the ordinary life of both whites and blacks. When the Civil War arrived, Savannah's secessionist fervor gave way to pragmatism, and, like those of Natchez and other Southern cities, its leaders surrendered quickly rather than let their city be attacked. The arriving Federals, Jones observes, were none too evolved in their view of the African-American populace (one colonel called them "perfectly childlike . . . no more responsible fortheir actions than so many puppies"), and Reconstruction was no more generous to most of them, replacing slavery with other forms of indenture. An important addition to the literature of slavery and African-American history, complementing the now-standard work of Eugene Genovese, Kenneth Stampp and other chroniclers. Agent: Geri Thoma/Elaine Markson Agency
Loading...List of Maps
Map of Savannah, Civil War Era
Antebellum
Prologue: I Am in the Hands of Kidnappers 3
Ch. 1 Sell and Buy and Sell and Buy 25
Ch. 2 Our Common Master in Heaven 51
Ch. 3 A Demon Ready with Knife and Torch 71
Ch. 4 Let's See Her Face 97
In Bello
Ch. 5 An Abiding Hope in Every Breast 117
Ch. 6 As Traitors, They Go Over to the Enemy 140
Ch. 7 Are We Free? 164
Ch. 8 We Have Dyed the Ground with Blood 186
Postbellum
Ch. 9 The Way We Can Best Take Care of Ourselves 213
Ch. 10 For I Have a Great Deal to Do 233
Ch. 11 A Dream of the Past 259
Ch. 12 To Have a Big Meeting, a Big Shooting, or Big Blood 282
Ch. 13 The Present Deranged System of Labor 302
Ch. 14 You Will See Them Studying 327
Ch. 15 I Came to Do My Own Work 346
Ch. 16 When You Leave Set Fire to All the Houses 369
Epilogue: Those Peaceful, Powerful Weapons 387
Appendices 411
Notes 419
Selected Bibliography 471
Index 495
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