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The John Batchelor Show

3/8: Sheridan’s Secret Mission: How the South Won the War After the Civil War by Robert Cwiklik (Author)

The John Batchelor Show

John Batchelor

Arts, News, Society & Culture, Books

4.52.8K Ratings

🗓️ 5 October 2024

⏱️ 13 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

3/8: Sheridan’s Secret Mission: How the South Won the War After the Civil War by  Robert Cwiklik  (Author)

https://www.amazon.com/Sheridans-Secret-Mission-South-After/dp/0062950649/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=
In late 1874, nearly ten years after the Civil War, former slaves, or freedmen, found themselves under siege in the South by violent paramilitary groups like the White League, intent on erasing their newly won voting rights and other postwar gains and consigning them to a condition little better than slavery. President Ulysses S. Grant, vowing to enforce, “with rigor,” laws protecting the rights of former slaves, asked General Philip H. Sheridan to visit New Orleans and other Southern trouble spots to investigate the freedmen’s plight, all while pretending to be on vacation. Sheridan’s Secret Mission recounts the feisty Union war hero’s Southern sojourn amid tragic episodes of racial terror that ultimately fueled the overthrow of Reconstruction-era protections for black rights.
Sheridan made a splash on his arrival in New Orleans on New Year’s Eve, accompanied by family and friends and proclaiming they were sightseers bound for Cuba. But a few days later, through trickery and force, Democrats seized control of the nearby state House of Representatives, apparently assisted by White League operatives, although the state’s majority black electorate had arguably put Republicans, the party of Lincoln and the freeing of the slaves, in control of the legislature.
Federal soldiers stationed nearby ushered several Democrats out of the House chamber, and Sheridan publicly denounced the “spirit of defiance to all lawful authority” in Louisiana. He threatened to round up White League leaders to face trial before military tribunals. In years past, Northerners might have rallied to support the Union hero. But the public was weary of war issues. Many Northern newspapers condemned Sheridan’s actions and deplored the appearance of federal bayonets in a sovereign state legislature. Some called for Grant’s impeachment.
The controversial clash in the Louisiana legislature lies at the heart of this revelatory new narrative history. Sheridan’s Secret Mission illuminates the bitter career of racial oppression in the United States and resonates powerfully with our contemporary “post-racial” condition.

1972 NEW ORLEANS

Transcript

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0:00.0

I'm with Bob Swickley. His new book is Sheridan's Secret Mission,

0:05.8

How the South won the War after the Civil War. We're in New Orleans.

0:09.9

The massacre takes place in 1866 and following that there's a series of adjustments

0:16.8

that the Congress is making nationally as the nation attempts to heal from the Civil War where there are hundreds of thousands of dead

0:26.2

of disease and wounds and the whole country is now turned upside down as to how it's going to consist of half no longer half

0:36.8

slave and half free but all free and yet the resistance in the south especially

0:41.9

the southern states members of the Confederacy,

0:44.1

where there was more than 50% African American.

0:47.7

And we're concentrating on New Orleans because the record there is clear about the ambition of the freed men, the free men of Louisiana who want the

0:58.3

vote. And the vote means that they're going to a vote for people who are Republicans.

1:04.0

There have never been Republican successes in the South until now.

1:07.6

Bob, the Republican Party at this point, they're sometimes

1:11.2

known as Black Republicans, sometimes owned as radical Republicans.

1:15.6

And they're passing laws, the Freedman's Bureau in December 65, the Reconstruction Act in

1:21.6

67, and then they impeach Andrew Johnson for the

1:25.5

the offense that you've explicated. All of that was seen from the prism of

1:30.8

we're seeing it from the prism of New Orleans. Did that the Well, if you don't want, I'll step back just a little bit to, in response to the massacre at the mechanics hall

1:54.0

the nation was pretty alarmed at the northern population was pretty alarmed at that

2:01.0

and it wasn't the only incident of that kind there was

2:04.0

another a similar sort of police ride happened in Memphis if memory serves and so

2:10.9

the election in 1866 brought big Republican majorities,

2:18.0

veto proof, because Andrew Johnson

...

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