Saturday, January 6, 2018

Preaching Racial Hatred in the South

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Descending upon the prostrate South were the “Carpetbaggers” – Northern adventurers settling in the South and bent upon aiding the Republican Party through organizing the freedmen politically. Many were “astute demagogues who through vague speeches and tricks of mass organization won the confidence of the naïve Negro.” Northern newspaperman Horace Greeley described them as “stealing and plundering, many of them with both arms around Negroes, and their hands in their rear pockets, seeing if they cannot pick a paltry dollar out of them.” The infamous Union League was the destructive instrument of the Republican Party which drove a political wedge between Southern blacks and whites.
Bernhard Thuersam, www.Circa1865.com   The Great American Political Divide

Preaching Racial Hatred in the South

“Scalawags were Southerners willing to espouse Republicanism for reasons of opportunism. When the pro-Negro policies of the carpetbaggers caused the scalawags to desert Republicanism, Northern leaders, conscious of the power of numbers, to an ever greater degree relied upon pure Negro support.

The principal agency of the carpetbaggers was the Union or Loyal League. Initially it was composed almost entirely of white unionists with patriotic rather than political aims. As the [radical] plans of Congress unfolded in 1867, its main purpose became the organization of Negro voters [as Republicans]. In every Southern community trusting Negroes were organized into secret lodges of the order which indulged in mummery and high-sounding platitudes. In its heyday the Union League was said to have more than 200,000 members.

Ceremony, talk about freedom and equal rights, sententious references to the Declaration of Independence, accompanied by the clanging of chains, the burning of weird lights, and prayers and songs – all had their compelling effect upon the Negroes’ emotions and thoughts. They were repeatedly reminded that their interests were eternally at war with those of Southern whites, and that their freedom demanded the continued supremacy of the Republican party.

As a consequence of these teachings, the Union League “voted the Negroes like “herds of senseless cattle.” One member described it as the ‘place we learn the law.” When asked why he voted Republican, another member replied “I can’t read, and I can’t write . . . We go by instructions. We don’t’ know nothing much.”

During the presidential campaign of 1868, the Union League of North Carolina declared that if Grant were not elected, the Negroes would be remanded to slavery; if elected, they would have farms, mules, and hold public office.

One fact is of fundamental importance in understanding the course of radical Reconstruction: the Negroes were aroused to political consciousness not of their own accord but by outside forces. This revolution in Southern behavior, unlike the more lasting political revolutions of history, was not a reflection of accomplishments in other fields.

Attainment of political equality by the Negroes, in other words, was not attended by social and economic gains, possibly not even signifying a general demand for these advantages.

Such a lack of support not only meant that the radical political experiment could be destroyed almost as easily as it was created, but that participation of the Negro in politics would be erratic and irresponsible. Even if it had not been that way, it would have been so regarded, because the Negroes did not preface their attempt to win political equality with the attainment of respect in other fields of social endeavor.”

(A History of the South, Francis Butler Simkins, Alfred A. Knopf, 1953, excerpts, pp. 272-273)

10 comments:

  1. I can attest that the teaching of racial hatred did not end with the Union League.

    I used to work at an AM radio station in south Georgia that carried an 2 African Methodist Episcopal Churches on Sunday mornings. The recurring theme, Sunday after Sunday was that all problems that blacks had were because of whites, and government, and that government was a tool of whites to oppress blacks. Ministers, Doctors, etc... all as guest speakers espoused these same ideas.
    I suspect it still goes on.
    Not much changes it seems.

    ReplyDelete
  2. There was suppose to have been a rally for General Forrest
    today in Memphis but have not heard how it evolved:
    https://theroperreportsite.wordpress.com/2018/01/05/watch-live-stream-of-rally-for-forrest/comment-page-1/#comment-4860

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks and I was sent this: https://www.facebook.com/search/top/?q=Dixie%20Freedom%20Ride

      Delete
    2. I don't have a Facebook acct. What did it say.

      Delete
    3. Dixie freedom ride!

      Some videos but nothing exciting, unfortunately. Thanks.

      Delete
  3. I read on a Memphis news site that only about two dozen
    showed up. Disappointing. I wish a couple of thousand
    would have shown and beat some anti-Confederate ass.
    Alas!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No, nothing was mentioned about any confrontations.
      http://wreg.com/2018/01/05/confederat901-rally-planned-in-protest-of-statue-removals/

      Delete