"A Wilderness of Destruction": Confederate Guerrillas in East and South Florida, 1861–1865 by Zack C. Waters (review)

IF 0.8 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
Mary A. DeCredico
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Sutherland and Lorien Foote have argued that guerrillas played a significant role in the way the Union high command evolved its strategy from a soft <strong>[End Page 434]</strong> policy to “hard” war. Zack C. Waters’s <em>“A Wilderness of Destruction”: Confederate Guerrillas in East and South Florida, 1861–1865</em> contributes to the historiography by examining guerrilla bands in a state too often overlooked: Florida.</p> <p>In his introduction, Waters quotes Sutherland: “‘In proportion to the size of its population, Florida’s guerrilla war may have been the most intense in the Confederacy’” (p. 1). Yet save for Robert A. Taylor’s <em>Rebel Storehouse: Florida in the Confederate Economy</em> (Tuscaloosa, 1995), the state’s role in the Confederacy has been largely ignored. To be sure, Florida had only been a state for approximately twelve years when it seceded, and the state was sparsely settled. But Florida had an agricultural economy and, more specifically, large herds of cattle that would be critical to Confederate supply. Despite vociferous complaints from Governor John Milton, Florida was stripped of all Confederate units, forcing the governor to create militia units and to encourage towns and settlements to form guerrilla bands in order to protect white inhabitants.</p> <p>Waters’s book is organized chronologically, and he analyzes specific towns and regions in eastern and southern Florida counties within each chapter. He discusses in detail the local guerrilla leaders and their operations. Two major themes become clear: one, President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation led to Federal efforts in Florida to recruit African Americans into United States Colored Troops units; and two, the fall of Vicksburg meant Florida beef was crucial to Confederate commissaries in Tennessee and Virginia. Florida’s guerrillas ensured that the Army of Northern Virginia and the Army of Tennessee were supplied with beef until the very end of the conflict.</p> <p>Waters suggests that Floridians easily accepted guerrillas and partisans as a result of the Seminole Wars, 1816–1858. He also contends that Florida was a deeply divided state, but that Federal commanders often overestimated how many Unionists resided there. To Waters, the Confederacy basically abandoned Florida from 1862 on, forcing state officials to rely on guerrilla bands to defend the sparsely settled region from the South East Blockading Squadron and Federal units sent to seize Jacksonville, St. Augustine, and Tampa.</p> <p><em>“A Wilderness of Destruction”</em> could have benefited from better copyediting. There are a number of careless errors. Furthermore, some of the sources are curious. For example, Waters includes the dated and error-laden <em>A Diary from Dixie</em>, edited by Isabella D. Martin and Myrta Lockett Avary (New York, 1905) instead of C. Vann Woodward’s seminal <em>Mary Chesnut’s Civil War</em> (New Haven, 1981). Some abbreviations for military titles are incorrect, as are the citations for the <em>Official Records</em>. The book would have benefited from more maps that clearly delineate where the guerrillas were most actively involved. Finally, Waters needs to establish where his work fits into the broader historiography. He mentions Sutherland and Stephen V. Ash’s <em>When the Yankees Came: Conflict and Chaos in the Occupied South, 1861–1865</em> (Chapel Hill, 1995) but fails to demonstrate how his work complements such monographs.</p> <p>To be sure, Waters examines a region that has been neglected by historians. It remains unclear what key contribution the book makes to historiography on the Confederacy. <strong>[End Page 435]</strong></p> Mary A. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • “A Wilderness of Destruction”: Confederate Guerrillas in East and South Florida, 1861–1865 by Zack C. Waters
  • Mary A. DeCredico
“A Wilderness of Destruction”: Confederate Guerrillas in East and South Florida, 1861–1865. By Zack C. Waters. (Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press, 2023. Pp. xii, 259. $39.00, ISBN 978-0-88146-881-6.)

Current Civil War scholarship has focused on the activities of guerrillas and partisan rangers in support of the Confederate war effort. Daniel E. Sutherland and Lorien Foote have argued that guerrillas played a significant role in the way the Union high command evolved its strategy from a soft [End Page 434] policy to “hard” war. Zack C. Waters’s “A Wilderness of Destruction”: Confederate Guerrillas in East and South Florida, 1861–1865 contributes to the historiography by examining guerrilla bands in a state too often overlooked: Florida.

In his introduction, Waters quotes Sutherland: “‘In proportion to the size of its population, Florida’s guerrilla war may have been the most intense in the Confederacy’” (p. 1). Yet save for Robert A. Taylor’s Rebel Storehouse: Florida in the Confederate Economy (Tuscaloosa, 1995), the state’s role in the Confederacy has been largely ignored. To be sure, Florida had only been a state for approximately twelve years when it seceded, and the state was sparsely settled. But Florida had an agricultural economy and, more specifically, large herds of cattle that would be critical to Confederate supply. Despite vociferous complaints from Governor John Milton, Florida was stripped of all Confederate units, forcing the governor to create militia units and to encourage towns and settlements to form guerrilla bands in order to protect white inhabitants.

Waters’s book is organized chronologically, and he analyzes specific towns and regions in eastern and southern Florida counties within each chapter. He discusses in detail the local guerrilla leaders and their operations. Two major themes become clear: one, President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation led to Federal efforts in Florida to recruit African Americans into United States Colored Troops units; and two, the fall of Vicksburg meant Florida beef was crucial to Confederate commissaries in Tennessee and Virginia. Florida’s guerrillas ensured that the Army of Northern Virginia and the Army of Tennessee were supplied with beef until the very end of the conflict.

Waters suggests that Floridians easily accepted guerrillas and partisans as a result of the Seminole Wars, 1816–1858. He also contends that Florida was a deeply divided state, but that Federal commanders often overestimated how many Unionists resided there. To Waters, the Confederacy basically abandoned Florida from 1862 on, forcing state officials to rely on guerrilla bands to defend the sparsely settled region from the South East Blockading Squadron and Federal units sent to seize Jacksonville, St. Augustine, and Tampa.

“A Wilderness of Destruction” could have benefited from better copyediting. There are a number of careless errors. Furthermore, some of the sources are curious. For example, Waters includes the dated and error-laden A Diary from Dixie, edited by Isabella D. Martin and Myrta Lockett Avary (New York, 1905) instead of C. Vann Woodward’s seminal Mary Chesnut’s Civil War (New Haven, 1981). Some abbreviations for military titles are incorrect, as are the citations for the Official Records. The book would have benefited from more maps that clearly delineate where the guerrillas were most actively involved. Finally, Waters needs to establish where his work fits into the broader historiography. He mentions Sutherland and Stephen V. Ash’s When the Yankees Came: Conflict and Chaos in the Occupied South, 1861–1865 (Chapel Hill, 1995) but fails to demonstrate how his work complements such monographs.

To be sure, Waters examines a region that has been neglected by historians. It remains unclear what key contribution the book makes to historiography on the Confederacy. [End Page 435]

Mary A. DeCredico U.S. Naval Academy Copyright © 2024 The Southern Historical Association ...

"毁灭的荒野":南部和东部佛罗里达州的邦联游击队,1861-1865 年》,作者 Zack C. Waters(评论)
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: "毁灭的荒野》:扎克-C.-沃特斯(Zack C. Waters)著,玛丽-A.-德克雷迪科(Mary A. DeCredico)译,《毁灭的荒野》(A Wilderness of Destruction):1861-1865 年佛罗里达东部和南部的邦联游击队:1861-1865 年佛罗里达州东部和南部的邦联游击队。作者:扎克-C-沃特斯。(麦肯:梅塞尔大学出版社,2023 年。第 xii、259 页。39.00美元,书号978-0-88146-881-6)。当前的内战学术研究主要集中在游击队和游击游骑兵支持邦联战争的活动上。丹尼尔-E-萨瑟兰(Daniel E. Sutherland)和洛林-福特(Lorien Foote)认为,游击队在联邦最高统帅部将其战略从软 [尾页 434]政策演变为 "硬 "战争的过程中发挥了重要作用。扎克-C-沃特斯(Zack C. Waters)的《毁灭的荒野》("A Wilderness of Destruction"):扎克-C-沃特斯(Zack C. Waters)的《毁灭的荒野:1861-1865 年东部和南部佛罗里达州的邦联游击队》("A Wilderness of Destruction": Confederate Guerrillas in East and South Florida, 1861-1865 )通过考察一个经常被忽视的州的游击队,为历史学做出了贡献:佛罗里达州。沃特斯在引言中引用了萨瑟兰的话:"'就人口规模而言,佛罗里达州的游击战可能是南方联盟中最激烈的'"(第 1 页)。然而,除了罗伯特-A-泰勒(Robert A. Taylor)的《叛军仓库》(Rebel Storehouse:佛罗里达州在邦联经济中的作用》(塔斯卡卢萨,1995 年)一书之外,佛罗里达州在邦联中的作用在很大程度上被忽略了。可以肯定的是,佛罗里达州脱离邦联时才成立了大约 12 年,而且该州人烟稀少。但佛罗里达州拥有农业经济,更具体地说,拥有对邦联供应至关重要的大量牛群。尽管州长约翰-米尔顿(John Milton)大声疾呼,佛罗里达州还是被剥夺了所有邦联部队,迫使州长建立民兵部队,并鼓励城镇和定居点组建游击队,以保护白人居民。沃特斯的书按时间顺序编排,每一章都分析了佛罗里达州东部和南部各县的具体城镇和地区。他详细讨论了当地游击队领导人及其行动。有两大主题变得清晰可见:其一,亚伯拉罕-林肯总统的《解放奴隶宣言》促使联邦在佛罗里达州努力招募非裔美国人加入美国有色人种部队;其二,维克斯堡的陷落意味着佛罗里达州的牛肉对田纳西州和弗吉尼亚州的邦联小卖部至关重要。佛罗里达的游击队确保了北弗吉尼亚军和田纳西军的牛肉供应,直到冲突结束。沃特斯认为,由于1816-1858年的塞米诺尔战争,佛罗里达人很容易接受游击队和游击队员。他还认为,佛罗里达州是一个严重分裂的州,但联邦指挥官往往高估了那里有多少联邦党人。在沃特斯看来,从1862年起,南方联盟基本上放弃了佛罗里达州,迫使该州官员依靠游击队来保卫这个人烟稀少的地区,抵御东南封锁中队和被派去夺取杰克逊维尔、圣奥古斯丁和坦帕的联邦部队。"破坏的荒野》本可以通过更好的校对来获益。其中有不少粗心大意的错误。此外,一些资料来源也很奇怪。例如,沃特斯收录了伊莎贝拉-D-马丁和米尔塔-拉克特-阿瓦里编辑的《迪克西日记》(纽约,1905 年),而不是 C. 范-伍德沃德的开创性著作《玛丽-切斯纳特的内战》(纽黑文,1981 年),该书年代久远,错误百出。一些军衔的缩写不正确,官方记录的引文也是如此。如果能提供更多的地图,清楚地标明游击队最活跃的地区,本书将会更有价值。最后,沃特斯需要确定他的著作在更广泛的历史学中的位置。他提到了萨瑟兰和斯蒂芬-V-阿什(Stephen V. Ash)的《北方佬来袭》(When the Yankees Came:Conflict and Chaos in the Occupied South, 1861-1865》(查珀尔希尔,1995 年),但未能说明他的作品是如何补充此类专著的。可以肯定的是,沃特斯研究的是一个被历史学家忽视的地区。目前仍不清楚该书对南方邦联史学有何重要贡献。[End Page 435] Mary A. DeCredico U.S. Naval Academy Copyright © 2024 The Southern Historical Association ...
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