Unequal Freedoms: Ethnicity, Race, and White Supremacy in Civil War-Era Charleston
Unequal Freedoms: Ethnicity, Race, and White Supremacy in Civil War-Era Charleston
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Abstract
Charleston, South Carolina, was a cosmopolitan city during the mid-to-late nineteenth century. Germans, Irish, and a host of European and Latin American immigrants shared the same workplaces, neighborhoods, streets, residences, and even households. Charleston was a slave society, and its economy relied on the forced labor of thousands of slaves. Immigrants also worked as entrepreneurs, skilled artisans, and laborers. Immigrants and African Americans interacted on a daily basis, and their relations were often positive. White southerners found those positive relations threatening, and nativist sentiments prevailed during the 1850s. Slaveholding meant economic and political power, and although some immigrants owned slaves many found it objectionable. The Civil War presented slaveholding immigrants, and those that aspired to it, the opportunity to side with the Confederacy. While many German and Irish immigrants enlisted in the fight to preserve slavery, others avoided the conflict. Following the Civil War, German immigrants that had continued to operate their businesses during the war led efforts to rebuild the city. Reconstruction afforded German and Irish immigrants and African Americans political opportunities previously limited or denied. The majority of European immigrants supported the Democratic Party, the party of white supremacy, and African Americans chose the Republican Party.
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Front Matter
- Introduction
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1
Racial and Ethnic Diversity in the Urban South
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2
Slavery and Urban Life
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3
Antebellum Municipal Politics and Social Control
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4
Postwar Wage Labor and Petty Capital Formation
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5
Racial and Ethnic Relations during Reconstruction
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6
The German Schuetzenfest and the Culture of White Supremacy
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7
Postwar Municipal Politics and the Failure of Reconstruction
- Conclusion
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End Matter
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