Charles Swett (1828-1910) was a prosperous Vicksburg merchant and small plantation owner who was reluctantly drawn into secession but then rallied behind the Confederate cause, serving with distinction in the Confederate Army. After the war some of Swett's peers from Mississippi and other southern states invited him to explore the possibility of settling in British Honduras or the Republic of Honduras. Confederates in the Tropics uses Swett's 1868 travelogue to explore the motives of would-be Confederate migrants' fleeing defeat and Reconstruction in the United States South. The authors make a comparative analysis of Confederate communities in Latin America, and use Charles Swett's life to illustrate the travails and hopes of the period for both blacks and whites. Swett's diary is presented here in its entirety in a clear, accessible format, edited for contemporary readers. Swett's style, except for his passionate prefatory remarks, is a remarkably unsentimental, even scientific look at Belize and Honduras, more akin to a field report than a romantic travel account. In a final section, the authors suggest why the expatriate communities of white Southerners nearly always failed, and follow up on Swett's life in Mississippi in a way that sheds light on why disgruntled Confederates decided to remain in or eventually to return to the U.S. South.
Charles Swett (1828-1910) was a prosperous Vicksburg merchant and small plantation owner who was reluctantly drawn into secession but then rallied behind the Confederate cause, serving with distinction in the Confederate Army.
The Southern Dream of a Caribbean Empire, 1854-1861
This book internationalizes America's showdown over slavery, shedding new light on the Lincoln-Douglas rivalry and Lincoln's Civil War scheme to resettle freed slaves in the tropics.
In The United States and the Global Economy, Frederick S. Weaver gives readers a concise introduction to the patterns of change in international financial and trade regimes since World War II in order to deepen their understanding of recent ...
Similarly, William C. Davis concludes, “The Confederates failed due to their own inabilities, illusions, and poor adaptability to the wild country in which they settled.” Davis, “Confederate Exiles,” 43. 8. Robert C. Black III supports ...
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41 Sharon Hartman Strom and Frederick Stirton Weaver, Confederates in the Tropics: Charles Swett's Travelogues of 1868 (Jackson: University of Mississippi Press, 2011), 30. 42 Ibid., 4. 43 Ibid., 31. 44 Lieutenant Governor to Governor, ...
Thomas Schoonover , “ Latin America , " in James W. Cortada , ed . , Spain in the Nineteenth - Century World : Essays on Spanish Diplomacy , 1789-1898 ( Westport , Conn . , 1994 ) . 113-30 ; Antonia Pi - Suner , Mexico y Espana duranie ...
Like Buck, Ryan Dawson came from the West Virginia hills and spoke with a mountain drawl, in his case thickened by the Skoal he dipped from a can by the controls. “I was always told you wear out your boots at your first big job,” he ...
OVER THE NEXT Two WEEKS, THE ARCHAEOLOGISTS REmoved two more hull plates, each in a little worse shape than the last. However, none of them showed any signs of a hull breach resulting from the H0urat0n1'c's explosi0n—one theory of the ...