The State of Jones: The Small Southern County That Seceded from ... Cover Art

The State of Jones: The Small Southern County That Seceded from the Confederacy (Paperback)

By: John Stauffer (Author) and Sally Jenkins (Author)


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Review

"[W]ell written, well read, and well researched. The true South is revealed, from the hardships of the war to the hardscrabble, poverty-ridden lives of the farmers who wore gray. Their stories, and that of Knight, are in turn impressive, depressing, complex, and always compelling."

"Ms. Jenkins...and Mr. Stauffer...have brought fresh attention to a little-known and interesting sidebar of Civil War ­history."

"THE STATE OF JONES contains much that is moving and powerful....[T]his is an important story that personalizes what remains abstract and counterintuitive in much of our received history of the Civil War..."

"[T]his is an excellent work that casts light on an obscure aspect of the Civil War."

"[E]xceedingly readable and informative....THE STATE OF JONES is as interesting for its depiction of resisters' domestic and communal life--the Primitive Baptist, egalitarian, non-slave-owning farming society--as for Knight's exploits."

Annotation

Sally Jenkins and John Stauffer present the amazing-but-true tale of Newton Knight, a Southern abolitionist who led an insurrection against the Confederacy during the Civil War. Knight, a resident of Jones County, Mississippi, was the grandson of a prominent slave owner and a soldier in the Confederate army, but he and many other rebels deserted following the brutal Battle of Vicksburg. Using Jones County as their base of operations, Knight and his band, composed of both whites and blacks, launched a series of significant guerrilla attacks against the southern army, helping to turn the tide of the war in their area. Knight was married to a white woman, but he had a large second family with a former slave, and he continued his fight for integration long after the war was over, eventually inciting retaliation from his own kin, who felt that he was disgracing the family legacy.



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