South Carolina Fire-Eater is the first book-length biography of Laurence Massillon Keitt, one of South Carolina s most notorious advocates of secession and apologists for African American slavery. A politician who wanted to be a statesman, a Hotspur who wanted to be a distinguished military leader, Keitt was a U. S. congressman in the 1850s, signed the Ordinance of Secession, and represented his rebellious state in the Confederate Congress in 1861. Through this thoroughly researched volume, Holt Merchant offers a comprehensive history of an important South Carolina figure. As a congressman, Keitt was responsible for no legislation of any significance, but he was in the midst of every southern crusade to assert its rights: to make Kansas a slave state, to annex Cuba, and to enact a territorial slave code. In a generation of politicians famous for fiery rhetoric, Keitt was among the most provocative southerners. His speeches in Congress and on the stump vituperated Black Republicans and were filled with references to medieval knight errantry, lance couched, helmet on, visor down, and threats to split the Federal temple from turret to foundation stone. His conception of personal honor and his hot temper frequently landed him in trouble in and out of public view. He acted as fender off in May 1855 when his fellow representative Preston Brooks caned Charles Sumner on the Senate floor. In 1858 he instigated a brawl on the floor of the House of Representatives that involved some three dozen congressmen. Amid the chaos of his personal brand of politics, Keitt found time to woo and wed a beautiful, intelligent, and politically astute plantation belle who after his death restored the family fortune and worked to embellish her late husband s place in history. After Abraham Lincoln was elected president, Keitt and the rest of the South Carolina delegation resigned their seats in Congress. He then negotiated unsuccessfully the surrender of Fort Sumter with lame-duck president James Buchanan, played a major role in the December 1860 Secession Convention that led his state out of the Union, and a lesser role in the convention that formed the Confederacy. Bored with his position as a member of the Confederate Congress, Keitt resigned his seat and raised the 20th South Carolina Infantry. Keitt spent most of the war defending Charleston Harbor, sometime commanding Battery Wagner, the site of the July 18, 1863, assault by the 54th Massachusetts Regiment of African American troops, made famous by the movie Glory. Keitt took command the day after that battle and was the last man out of the battery when his troops abandoned it in September 1863. In May 1864, his regiment joined the Army of Northern Virginia and Keitt took command of Kershaw s Brigade. Inexperienced in leading troops on the battlefield he launched a head-long attack on entrenched Federal cavalry in the June 1, 1864, Battle of Cold Harbor. Keitt was mortally wounded advancing in the vanguard of his brigade. With that last act of bravado, Keitt distinguished himself. He was among the few fire-eater politicians to serve in the military and was likely the only one to perish in combat defending the Confederacy."
亞歷山大大帝
"More than one hundred fifty years after General Robert E. Lee surrendered to General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Courthouse, the writings of these two remarkable men continue to spark interest in the Civil War.
In this Special Library Collector's Edition, Historian James W. Edwards has combined the essential elements of Grant's biography with detailed letters written to his family during his tenure, then concluding with all his State of the Union ...
An account of the lives of the commissioned officers during America's war of secession. Including a remarkable collection of photographs of historical and personal memorabilia.
The bloody conflict of North against South told through the stories of its great battles. Illustrated with collections of some of the rarest Civil War historical artificats.
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Mark S. Watson , U.S. Army in World War II , subseries : The War Department : Chief of Staff ; Pre - War Plans and Preparations ( Washington , D.C .: Office of the Chief of Military History ( OCMH ) , GPO , 1950 ) , pp . 132–36 . 32.
... 65 , 137-8 , 146–7 , 158 , 181 , Phillips , Admiral Sir Tom , 62 226 Pilar River , 77 Pearson , Drew , 42 Pogue ... 28 Pongani , 112 Perryville , 3 Popondetta , 114 Pershing , General John J. , 11-12 , 16–20 , 23-4 , Port Moresby ...
We Remember Him As Alexander The Great&Epic In Scope And Magisterial In Tone, Steve Pressfield S Breathtaking Novel Tells The Story Of This Legendary Colossus Of The Ancient World Who Was Driven And Ultimately Undone By His Insatiable Lust ...
The sound of artillery and musket came down from the west as Warren's corps bucked across the North Anna on hastily improvised pontoons . Lee was furious — though he himself had made the error in judgment — and stormed at Hill ...