Slavery's End In Tennessee
208 pages, 5 1/2 x 8 1/2
Paperback
Release Date:01 Oct 2002
ISBN:9780817311834
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Slavery's End In Tennessee

University of Alabama Press
This is the first book-length work on wartime race relations in Tennessee, and it stresses the differences within the slave community as well as Military Governor Andrew Johnson’s role in emancipation.  In Tennessee a significant number of slaves took advantage of the disruptions resulting from federal invasion to escape servitude and to seek privileges enjoyed by whites. Some rushed into theses changes, believing God had ordained them; others acted simply from a willingness to seize any opportunity for improving their lot. Both groups felt a sense of dignity that their slaves initiated a change; they lacked the power and resources to secure and expand the gains they made on their own.
    Because most disloyal slaves supported the Union while most white Tennesseans did not, the federal army eventually decided to encourage and capitalize upon slave discontent. Idealistic Northern reformers simultaneously worked to establish new opportunities for Southern blacks. The reformers’ paternalistic attitudes and the army’s concern with military expediency limited the aid they extended to blacks.
    Black poverty, white greed, and white racial prejudice severely restricted change, particularly in the former slaves’ economic position. The more significant changes took the form of new social privileges for the freedmen: familial security, educational opportunities, and religious independence. Masters had occasionally granted these benefits to some slaves, but what the disloyal slaves wanted and won was the formalization of these privileges for all blacks in the state.
In his solid account of race relations in war-torn Tennessee….Cimprich argues that the former slaves’ own actions gained them new privileges despite resistance by white Tennesseans. Cimprich’s analysis of the roles whites played, how they differed in motivation and policy, and how these differences affected blacks is especially strong.’
American Historical Review

John Cimprich is Assistant Professor of History, Southeast Missouri State University.

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