LAUDERDALE COUNTY, ALABAMA
HISTORY
HISTORY OF THE SHOALS
page 5
The following was published in the Times Daily, Thursday, February 25, 1999. It is presented here with the permission of the Times Daily, and the permission of the author, Harry E. Wallace.
Reconstruction: 1865 - 1877
Historians, as usual, differ in their
interpretations of the Reconstruction period. They include William Dunning's
turn-of-the- century view that Reconstruction was a national disgrace perpetuated
by a vindictive North upon a helpless, defeated South.
Howard Beale's 1920s view questioned the motives of the Radical Republicans
in Congress. His conclusion was that the radicals were using Negro suffrage as a
vehicle to keep the Republican Part in power and that by doing so, they
threatened constitutional government.
After World War II, Kenneth Stampp turned those views upside down when he
said Reconstruction was just a continuation of ex- tending the American principles
of equality and justice.
Today, the general view is that Reconstruction was not all that bad: three
new amendments to the constitution were enacted, but equality for Negroes was
not fully achieved, only begun.
Perhaps the truth lies somewhere in between these views. History has taught
us many important, painful and expensive lessons, one of which is that only in a
very few instances has direct government intervention into the daily lives of
its citizens been successful.
One success story was the Great Depression and President Franklin Roosevelt's
New Deal. But equal examples of failure are Reconstruction and President Lyndon
Johnson's Great Society and War on Poverty programs.
Questions for the South
Immediately after the war, there were some
very interesting questions that
needed answering:
How would the South be reconstructed?
What would happen to nearly 4 million freed men?
How would the Southern states be readmitted into the Union?
Who would direct Reconstruction - the president or Congress?
After the death of President Lincoln on April 15, 1865, the nation began a
political power struggle between President Andrew Johnson, former Democrat and
military governor of Tennessee, and a Radical Republican Congress, dominated by
Rep. Thaddeus Stevens and Sen. Charles Sumner.
The south was in near total devastation: an entire civilization had collapsed
economically and politically. An Atlantian, upon returning to his hometown after
the war said, "Hell has laid her egg, and right here it hatched."
The authors of "Alabama: The History of a Deep
South State" said
"Alabama stood on the brink of a new frontier; starting over. Only this
time, change would be the product of a defeat instead of hope and expectation,
and the initial plans for the future would be drawn by the victors."
On June 19, 1865, Johnson named Lewis E. Parsons of Talladega as provisional
governor of Alabama. Historians William Rogers and Roger Ward said, "No
more moderate figure than Parsons existed among the state's hostile
factions."
Military control of Alabama fell to Gen. Charles A. Woods. Under a
proclamation of President Johnson, all laws except slavery were to remain and
all eligible voters had to take the Oath of Allegiance. A total of 50,000
Alabamians did so.
On Aug. 31, 1865, 56,000 voters elected 99 delegates to a constitutional
convention: 63 delegates were regarded as conservatives and 36 were
"anti-Confederates."
The new constitution revoked the Ordinance of Secession, declared void the
war debts, declared slavery illegal and pledged loyalty to the Union.
The Huntsville Advocate assessed the situation by saying, "This is a
white man's government and a white man's state." White citizens divided
before the war were more divided now. Many Alabamians moved west, to Mexico, and
some to Brazil.
Negro vote a dilemma
One question that unified all opposing forces was that of social and
political equality for Negroes. Consider the following political dilemma: If
Negroes did not vote, the northern and southeast counties of Alabama, strong
holds for Unionism, would dominate the state. However, if blacks were allowed to
vote, they could join with the poor whites and control the state. But if they
were controlled by their former owners they would help return the former
secessionists to power.
On Dec. 13, 1865, in the midst of turmoil and upheaval, Robert Miller Patton
of Florence was inaugurated as Alabama's 20th governor.
Patton was born in Russell County, Va., in 1809. His family moved to
Huntsville in 1818 where his father, William Patton, was one of the founders of
the Bell Factory Cotton Mill.
After his schooling at Greene Academy, Robert moved to Florence in 1829 and
became a well-respected businessman.
He married Jane Locke Weakley Brahan the daughter of War of 1812 veteran Gen.
John Brahan, who was a personal friend of both generals Andrew Jackson and John
Coffee. Brahan's plantation, Sweetwater, became Patton's property at the
general's death. The plantation consisted of some 4,000 acres and was tended by
300 slaves.
Patton eventually would serve in both houses of the Alabama Legislature and
was Whig president of the state Senate when Alabama seceded from the Union. He
personally opposed secession but gave his full support to the confederacy during
the war, serving as a commissioner to raise needed money. Patton personally
raised $1 million.
Patton's inaugural address
During his inaugural address, Patton said, "I assume the duties of this
high position under circumstances which are peculiarly embarrassing. Our country
is beset on every side with difficulties which seem almost insurmountable. But
relying upon the support and assistance of the co-ordinate departments of the
state government, and trusting that a generous people will look with kind
forbearance upon whatever errors I may commit, and that an all-wise and good
providence will direct me in all my thoughts and conclusions, I willingly enter
upon the difficult task before me."
Patton faced immense social, economic and political problems and his every
move would be scrutinized by factions both in Alabama and in Washington. Alabama
had lost 35,000 to 40,000 men in the war and an equal number were wounded and
disabled. In addition there were 20,000 widows and 60,000 orphans.
In January 1866, Patton's office reported 52,921 destitute whites on the
verge of starvation. Historian Walter Fleming estimated that 20,000 people in
DeKalb, Franklin, Lauderdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Marshall and Morgan counties
were on the verge of starvation.
Patton, with the aid of Maj. Gen. Wagner Swayne, Alabama commissioner of the
Freedman's Bureau, issued emergency rations for some 20,000 per month.
Ironically, North Alabama, the strongest region against secession
was the
hardest hit.
Union Gen. James Wilson said, "The entire valley of the Tennessee having
been devastated by two years of warfare was quite as destitute of any supplies
as the hill country south of it. In all directions, for a hundred and twenty
miles, there was almost complete destitution."
Valley in devastation
Alabama historian Robert Somer described the Tennessee Valley in 1870:
"It consists, for the most part, of plantations of which the ruin is for
the present total and complete. The trail of war is visible throughout the
valley in burnt-up gin houses, ruined bridges, mills and factories, and in large
tracts of once cultivated land stripped of every vestige of fencing. The roads,
long neglected, are in disorder, and having in many places become impassable,
new tracks have been made through the woods and fields without much respect to
boundaries."
Economically, Patton said, the loss of slave property alone "is not less
than two hundred and fifty millions of dollars; and the aggregate amount of
losses in the various other descriptions of property must be equally as much.
Hence we find that in this state alone, we have sustained a loss, in actual and
substantial wealth, of at least five hundred millions of dollars.
Cotton land values dropped from $50 per acres in 1860 to between $3 and $5
per acres in 1865. Cotton was worth $250 per bale at the end of the war but it
had been raised by slave labor. It was taxed from $60 to $75 per bale. If the
bale was raised without slave labor, the tax was a mere 3 cents per pound or $12
to $15 per bale.
Alabama had been the leading producer of cotton before the war and Patton
stated Alabama produced "about one-fifth of the entire American crop"
in 1860.
The state debt was $3,445,000: $2,109,000 to New York City banks and
$1,336,000 to London banks. The interest per year was $73,680 bringing the
unpaid balance to $442,080 by January 1866, Patton proposed the Legislature
enact new tax laws to enable the prompt payment of the debts.
New taxes proposed
Since slave property had been the most reliable source of state
taxes before
the war, Patton proposed alternative tax sources. Before he left office in 1868,
the state debt had been reduced to about $1 million.
This figure is even more remarkable when you consider that for his first year
in office, no state property taxes were collected. The banking system was in
total disarray. Banks had loaned the state money in exchange for war bonds.
These bonds were part of the war debts that were revoked by congress. Patton
urged leniency on banks so they could gradually get back on their feet
financially.
University rebuilt
The University of Alabama had been burned by troops of Wilson's cavalry in
early 1865. Patton asked the Legislature to loan the University trustees $70,000
to rebuild the needed buildings. The state penitentiary system was on the verge
of bankruptcy and bands of lawless men roamed and preyed upon the innocent and
helpless.
This situation was particularly severe in North Alabama. Many of the outlaws
were deserters from both armies and homespun Tories. Patton appealed to Gen.
George H. Thomas to arm and supply a state militia of "one hundred and four
companies, of sixty men each" to hunt down these outlaws in cooperation
with Union occupation troops.
Since nearly half of the state's population was former slaves, Patton, in
accordance with Swayne, issued a statement that the Freedmen "must be made
to realize that freedom does not mean idleness and vagrancy."
With the demand for labor and real money scarce for wages, both Patton and
Swayne called for a contract system that later became known as sharecropping.
Swayne said blacks should "hope for nothing, but go to work and behave
yourselves."
Black Codes are born
Because the new state constitution did not grant equality for Freedmen, the
Black codes were issued.
They largely applied to blacks and white equally but their application and
enforcement would become racist. The education of these Freedmen was in the
hands of whites. The authors of "Alabama: The History of a Deep South
State" - William Rogers, Robert Waid, Leah R. Atkins and Wayne Flint -
wrote: "If education could emancipate and free, it could also enslave and
control. It was always the question of what people were taught - and by
whom?"
On the national scene, the Radical Republicans had refused to seat all
southern delegations in Congress on the grounds that Freedmen and Unionists were
discriminated against and many of the newly elected representatives were former
Confederates.
President Johnson blamed
Congress further blamed President Johnson for Southern resistance to social
and political change and the failure to control groups such as the Ku Klux Klan.
The Klan had been created in Pulaski, Tenn., in January 1866 and quickly
spread over the south. The first grand wizard was former Gen. Nathan Bedford
Forrest, who disbanded the Klan in 1867 and disassociated himself from it.
Congress was further infuriated with Johnson because he vetoed nearly all
legislation passed and gave speeches in which he labeled the Radicals as
traitors. The nation was on the verge of a power struggle for control of
Reconstruction and the governments of the South.
The general consensus is that the Radicals were motivated by their desire to
promote the Republican Party and would seek to run the nation through the
legislative branch, contrary to the constitution.
Historian A. B. Moore said, "Never was propaganda more successful.
Southerners made little effort to counteract it and there was enough friction
between the races, enough hostility to resident Northerners, though many of
them were unworthy of recognition by respectable people, and enough legislation
against the Negroes to invest it with a semblance of authenticity."
14th Amendment
One of the first Radical Republican moves was to require the ratification of
the 14th Amendment to guarantee citizenship and equality for Freedmen. Patton
was caught in a political dilemma. If he encouraged approval, conservatives
would label him a "scalawag" and work to undermine his influence. On
the other hand, if he did not work for approval, Unionists and Radicals would
label him a "Confederate" and work for his removal.
Patton personally opposed the amendment, but saw that Alabama, like other
southern states, was not in a favorable bargaining position. Patton believed
that only through cooperation would Alabama achieve its former status as a
state.
Historian A. B. Moore said, "The Fourteenth Amendment, a bitter pill
though it was, would in all probability have been ratified by the Legislature if
it had been known that this would be the last condition imposed on the people.
The prevailing thought was that its adoption would not satisfy Congress, that
the more the people surrendered the more would be expected of them."
The "Bourbon" opposition and many moderates who felt threatened
prevailed and the Legislature voted down the amendment.
The stage was now set for a power struggle to determine who would control
Alabama. Unionists promoted the Loyal League, which was organized in North
Alabama counties during the war as a secret society for unionism and to
encourage Confederate desertions. There were active organizations in Huntsville,
Athens, Decatur, Florence and Tuscumbia.
In 1867, Unionists numbered only one-fifth of the state population and held
majorities only in Winston, Fayette, Marion and Walker counties.
Historians Rogers and Ward said, "If Congress ordained black suffrage
and if Republicans could control black votes, the Unionists could become the
majority party in Alabama."
The Unionists "...wanted the black votes that could put them in power,
but they did not want the social equality that might go with it," the
historians wrote.
In September 1868 eight black members of the Tuscumbia loyal League plotted
to burn the town. After much discussion, they burned the Female Institute.
Almost immediately three were arrested and after one confessed and implicated
others, the three were hanged from the Tuscumbia railroad bridge. The remaining
five escaped to Kentucky.
A new constitution
In May 1867, Alabama was divided into 42 voter registration districts and
delegates were elected to attend a new constitutional convention to replace the
provisional, or white, constitution of 1865.
The new Republican constitution was ready for ratification in February 1868.
The law required 85,000 votes to ratify. The Democrats realized they could not
defeat the constitution outright so they urged all voters to stay home.
Only 70,812 voted to ratify with 1,005 opposed. Ratification failed by 13,550
votes. In Lauderdale and Madison counties, only 150 of 1,500 qualified voters
actually voted.
Total embarrassment for the Radical Republicans was averted when, on March
11, they passed the fourth Reconstruction Act to allow approval of the 1868
Constitution by a simple majority. At the same time, Alabama was formally
re-admitted to the Union on condition that the 14th Amendment be approved.
According to Rogers and Ward, now "Reconstruction in Alabama was a
revolution that increasingly lost its cause and became an exercise in holding
power."
On July 13, 1868, Patton and his entire administration were removed from
office and the newly appointed Radical Republican administration of Gov. William
Hugh Smith took office.
Historians have labeled Smith a conservative, anti-black and despite the fact
he was appointed, he mistrusted the Radical Republicans.
Radicals take over
Alabama's experiences under Radical
Reconstruction have been considered harsh
and unmerited by many but short-lived.
During the administration of Smith, the Radical Congress demanded the passage
of the 15th Amendment, providing voting rights to former slaves and free blacks.
This action convinced many moderates that Republicans and blacks had to be
defeated.
Under the surface, the Bourbon conservatives, now joined by
many former
moderates who felt threatened, were maneuvering for the election of 1870.
When the election arrived, the Republicans were divided over white and black
control. To take full advantage of the situation, the Bourbons ran a moderate,
Robert Burns Lindsay of Colbert County. The old rivalry between North and South
Alabama was temporarily soothed.
The Republicans re-nominated Smith and selected a black man to run for
secretary of state. James Rapier of Florence became the first Negro to run for
any state office. Many believed this action would only benefit the Bourbon
Democrats.
Lindsay won by 1,429 votes. Many instances of violence, ballot stuffing and
outright fraud were reported on both sides.
Would the Congress allow the election to stand? Former Gov. Smith barricaded
himself in his office and refused to surrender the office until Congress
verified the election.
In 1870, because of the deaths of Radical leaders Stevens and Sumner and the
waning Northern interests, the election was approved.
Lindsay's administration fell between two Republican governors, Smith and
David Lewis, and was further hampered by a divided Legislature.
Lindsay is Alabama's only foreign-born governor. He came to America from
Scotland in 1844 and moved to Tuscumbia in 1849. After admission to the Alabama
Bar in 1852, he eventually served in both houses of the state Legislature.
Favoring secession, Lindsay served in Roddy's 4th Alabama Cavalry.
Rapier's historic election
In 1872, the Democrats split between the moderate Lindsay and Bourbon
conservative Herndon of Mobile. This division ensured a Republican victory. In
1872 U. S. Grant was re-elected, David Lewis was governor of Alabama and James
Rapier of Florence was elected to the U. S. House of Representatives.
Rapier was born to John Rapier, a free black barber, and Susan Rapier, a free
woman. According to Loren Schwenniger, of "James Rapier and
Reconstruction," James Rapier received his early education in Nashville
while living with his grandmother. From 1856 to '64 he attended school in
Buxton, Canada, a haven for runaway slaves.
After returning to the south in 1865, Rapier briefly worked as a
correspondent for a Northern newspaper and attended the Tennessee Negro Suffrage
convention in Nashville, delivering the keynote address.
In 1866 he returned to Florence, rented acreage from A. D. Coffee and became
a successful cotton farmer, only employing freemen. Because of his political
activities for the Republican Party, Rapier was threatened by the KKK and left
Lauderdale County.
In 1869, he attended the first National Negro Labor Convention in Washington,
D. C. Upon his return to Montgomery, he became the first Negro in Alabama
history to run for state office, secretary of state. In 1872-73, he presided
over the first meeting of the Alabama Negro Labor Union, published and edited
the first Negro newspaper in Alabama, the Republican Sentinel, and defeated
William C. Oates for a seat in the 43rd Congress.
During his short tenure in the House of Representatives, Rapier advocated a
national civil rights bill, introduced legislation to improve America's
commercial water lanes and voted to regulate railroad rates.
He was defeated for re-election bids in 1874 and '76. In 1878 President
Rutherford B. Hayes appointed Rapier collector of Internal Revenue for the
Second District of Alabama.
Gradually, Rapier became an ardent supporter of Negro emigration to the West.
He died in May 1883 from pulmonary tuberculosis and is buried in an unmarked
grave in St. Louis, Mo.
A bloody campaign
From 1872-74 the Bourbons, whose ranks were now swelled by the addition of
numerous moderates, prepared for the state elections of 1874.
The campaign was particularly dirty and violent. The Bourbons ran George
Smith Houston of Limestone County. The Republican press assailed Houston as a
"front man for the secessionists, the KKK and White League Bourbons."
The Bourbons attacked the Republicans for their handling of Reconstruction
and raising the states' indebtedness.
The short-lived Florence Republican accused the Democrats of promoting false
democracy and of emphasizing the race issue in an attempt to restore the old
slave-holding aristocracy's control over the state. It also claimed that
disenfranchisement of the Negro would lead immediately to the disenfranchisement
of poor whites.
Both sides used questionable tactics and promoted violence. Statewide, 36
Republicans were killed. The Democrats also used 200,000 pounds of bacon to buy
votes.
On Nov. 24, 1874, Houston was elected Alabama's 24th governor. The victory
was almost total. Twenty-six Negroes remained in the Legislature but the
Democrats controlled both houses. The only fear was whether Congress would throw
out the election.
With the election of Houston, Radical Reconstruction in Alabama was over. It
had begun with the removal of Patton and ended six years later. The entire
social, economic and political life of this state had changed and life as was
known before the war was over.
Governor's ties to Lauderdale
Houston was born in Williamson
County, Tenn., and his family moved to
Lauderdale County in 1821, becoming successful and respected planters.
The plantation Wildwood was near the present Natchez Trace on Waterloo Road.
In 1834, Houston moved to Limestone County and became active in politics.
He served 18 years in the U. S. House of Representatives, resigning in 1861
when Alabama Seceded.
Personally opposed to secession, Houston took no personal action during the
war. When the war ended, he refused to take the Oath of Allegiance.
Under the State Constitution of 1865, he was elected to the U. S. Senate but
was refused his seat with all other Southerners by the Radical Republicans.
Under the Republican Constitution of 1867, Houston was re-elected to the Senate
and served for two terms.
As governor, Houston oversaw the conversion of the state penitentiary to the
prisoner lease system. State indebtedness was reduced from $30 million to less
than $5 million, and a new state constitution was written.
The new constitution, begun in September 1875 and finished in 27 days,
streamlined state government by cost reduction: biannual legislative sessions
instead of annual, and the elimination of state responsibility for public
education.
Reconstruction ends
Reconstruction was finally over in Alabama and generally has been regarded a
total failure.
The first attempt of the U. S. government to intervene directly in the lives
of its citizens had failed miserably. But was it a total loss? What was the
legacy of Reconstruction?
There was the legacy of corruption. One historian has said legislatures
become corrupt when there is money to be protected or made. In this arena,
Alabama fared better than other Southern states.
Rocky start for public schools
Another legacy was that of public education. According to the state
constitution, public schools were to receive one-fifth of state revenues but the
money was misappropriated, the state Department of Education was plagued by
mismanagement, and in some areas fraud existed.
The first school for black children in Florence was created by the American
Missionary Society. According to historian William L. McDonald, the teachers
were a couple named Meyers and the school was a single structure on the corner
of Spring (Veterans) and Pine streets.
Another bright education star was the establishment of state normal schools.
The first such school south of the Ohio River was Florence Wesleyan College,
which became Florence Normal College and in Huntsville, a black normal school
was established under the leadership of Hooper Council.
By 1870, eight normal schools existed statewide: four white and four black.
The University of Alabama had been rebuilt and reopened in
April 1869 with an
enrollment of 30 scholars.
New school in Tuscumbia
In Tuscumbia, the citizens petitioned the
state to incorporate a new female
academy. Created Sept. 12, 1870, the Deshler Female Institute opened and was
named for Brig. Gen. James Deshler, killed in action during the Battle of
Chickamauga on Sept. 20, 1863.
According to local historian Richard Sheridan, Deshler's father, David
Deshler, provided the first funds. Sheridan further stated the institute
remained open until the spring of 1918.
The school closed because of declining enrollment, the growth of public
schools and the need for repairs.
In 1918 the Tuscumbia School Board took possession of the property and
received family permission to raze the old structure, and in 1924 a new co-ed
school named Deshler High School was built. The school was moved to its present
location on the former Winston Plantation in 1950.
The grand plan of Reconstruction had promised great social, economic and
political changes but the utopian dreams were shattered by Southern and Northern
backlashes launching a legacy of hate, mistrust and regional warfare that lasted
more than 100 years.
Go to: History of the Shoals, page 6
[The Industrial Revolution]
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[Civil War]
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