The Dissenting South Audiolibro Por JIM STOVALL arte de portada

The Dissenting South

Southern Opposition to the Confederacy Before and During the Civil War

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The Dissenting South

De: JIM STOVALL
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
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For more than 150 years, Americans have been told a simple story about the Civil War: that the South rose as one to defend its land, its people, and its way of life.
That story is a myth.

The Dissenting South: Southern Opposition to the Confederacy Before and During the Civil War reveals a very different reality—a South divided against itself. In every Confederate state, men and women refused to go along with secession. They denounced rebellion, defied local authorities, and in many cases fought shoulder to shoulder with Union forces. Their courage was remarkable, their suffering immense, and their memory nearly erased.

Historian Jim Stovall brings to life these forgotten Southerners—politicians, preachers, immigrants, farmers, and soldiers—whose loyalty to the United States never wavered even as their neighbors turned against them.
Readers will meet:

  • Andrew Johnson, the self-taught Tennessee tailor who stood alone in the U.S. Senate to defend the Union and later became Lincoln’s vice president.

  • William G. “Parson” Brownlow, the fiery newspaper editor who mocked Confederate leaders until his arrest and exile.

  • The mountain Unionists of East Tennessee, western North Carolina, and north Alabama, who formed guerrilla bands and plotted to create their own “Union state.”

  • The German settlers of Texas Hill Country, whose anti-slavery beliefs led to tragedy in the 1862 Nueces Massacre.

  • Newton Knight and the “Free State of Jones” in Mississippi, where deserters and escaped slaves defied Confederate control and declared their independence.

  • The 100,000 white Southerners who wore Union blue, fighting not against their country but for it.

Through their stories, The Dissenting South exposes the deep fissures that ran through the Confederacy—regional, economic, and moral—and shows how the planter elite’s grip on Southern politics and identity was never complete. For every plantation loyalist, there was a small farmer who saw no reason to die for slavery. For every Confederate recruiter, there was a Union spy, a hidden sympathizer, or a mother sheltering her sons from the draft.

But this story is not only about courage; it is also about memory.
After the war, Confederate apologists rewrote history. The so-called Lost Cause turned defeat into nobility, slavery into benevolence, and rebellion into righteousness. Organizations like the United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Sons of Confederate Veterans built monuments, rewrote textbooks, and silenced dissenting voices. The Southern Unionists—those who had fought for the United States—were vilified as traitors and largely forgotten.

Jim Stovall’s book restores their place in the American story.
It challenges readers to look again at what it meant to be loyal, patriotic, and Southern during the nation’s greatest crisis.
It reminds us that opposition to injustice often comes from within—and that dissent, far from being betrayal, can be the highest form of fidelity.

Deeply researched and powerfully written, The Dissenting South is both a work of history and a moral reckoning. It confronts the myths that have shaped our national memory and honors those who refused to surrender their conscience to the Confederacy. Their struggle, once hidden in shadows, now takes its rightful place at the center of the Civil War story—a story not of uniform rebellion, but of contested loyalties, moral courage, and the enduring fight over what kind of nation America would become.

Jim Stovall is an author of numerous works on American history and media. His website is www.jprof.com.

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