John a. Quitman by Robert E May

John a. Quitman by Robert E May

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Summary

The premier secessionist of antebellum Mississippi, John A. Quitman was one of the half-dozen or so most prominent radicals in the entire South. In this full-length biography, Robert May reveals Quitman to have been an ambitious but relatively stable insider who reluctantly advocated secession because of a despondency over slavery's future.

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John a. Quitman by Robert E May

The premier secessionist of antebellum Mississippi, John A. Quitman was one of the half-dozen or so most prominent radicals in the entire South. In this full-length biography, Robert E. May takes issue with the recent tendency to portray secessionists as rabble-rousing, maladjusted outsiders bent on the glories of separate nationhood. May reveals Quitman to have been an ambitious but relatively stable insider who reluctantly advocated secession because of a despondency over slavery's long-range future in the Union and a related conviction that northerners no longer respected southern claims to equality as American citizens. A fervent disciple of South Carolina radical John C. Calhoun's nullification theories, Quitman also gained notoriety as his region's most strident slavery imperialist. He articulated the case for new slave territory, participated in the Texas Revolution, won national acclaim as a volunteer general in the Mexican war, and organized a private military or filibustering expedition with the intent of liberating Cuba from Spanish rule and making the island a new slave state. In 1850, while governor of Mississippi during the California crisis, Quitman wielded his influence in a vain attempt to induce Mississippi secession. Later, in Congress, he marked out an extreme southern position on Kansas. Mississippi's most vehement fire-eater, Quitman played a significant role in the North-South estrangement that led to the American Civil War. The first critical biography of this important figure, May's study sheds light on such current historical controversies as whether antebellum southerners were peculiarly militaristic or antibourgeois and helps illuminate theslave-master relations, mobility, intraregional class and geographic friction, partisan politics, and family customs of the Old South.
Robert E. May is associate professor of history at Purdue University and the author of The Southern Dream of a Caribbean Empire, 1854-1861.
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9780807112076
ISBN 10 0807112070
Title John a. Quitman
Author Robert May
Series Southern Biography Series
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher Lsu Press
Year published 1985-04-30
Number of pages 504
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
Note Unavailable