Cullen Montgomery Baker, sharing many white southerners' resentment toward the North, took to murdering individuals who cooperated with the South's reconstruction. His actions indirectly assisted in the formation of the Ku Klux Klan. This book shows how deeply class and race divided the South.
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Anbieter: Powell's Bookstores Chicago, ABAA, Chicago, IL, USA
Zustand: Used - Like New. 1997. illustrated edition. Hardcover. Fine. Dust Jacket is Fine. Artikel-Nr. DR004045
Anbieter: Old Bookie, Austin, TX, USA
Hardcover. Zustand: As New. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: As New. 1st Edition. xvi, 190 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm. ; black full cloth ; dj in mylar. INSCRIBED on title by both Brice and Crouch. Short obituary of Crouch from the H-Texas-Editor listserv laid in. In this engrossing biography, Barry A. Crouch and Donaly E. Brice sift through local folklore, legend, and fact to provide an accurate account of this southern desperado, whose exploits, if more widely publicized, "would [make] Jesse James and all the gunmen of pioneer days pale into insignificance," according to one promoter of the Baker legend. A disillusioned former Confederate soldier, Baker gained fleeting national notoriety promoting a defeated dream in the occupied South. Sharing many white southerners' resentment toward the North, he took to murdering individuals who cooperated with reconstruction efforts. His actions encouraged the rise of outlaw bands and indirectly assisted in the formation of the Ku Klux Klan. Influenced and led by men like Baker, the outlaw gangs brutalized Union agents and the freedmen. Locals concealed and otherwise aided gangs, making it difficult for police forces, politicians, and news agencies to gather reliable information on the "New Rebellion, "as it was termed by the New York Tribune in 1869. Numerous problems, from the powerlessness of the civil authorities to the insufficient numbers of the military, continued to weaken the Reconstruction government. Baker and his ilk had, in effect, incited a second civil war. Cullen Montgomery Baker, Reconstruction Desperado is essential to understanding how deeply class and race divided the South during the Reconstruction era. Inscribed by Author(s). Artikel-Nr. 002110