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8. Black Political Mobilization and the Spatial Transformation of Natchez
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Justin Behrend
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Foreword xi
- Introduction: Historians and the Urban South’s Civil War 1
-
Part One: The Big Picture
- 1. Regionalism and Urbanism as Problems in Confederate Urban History 27
- 2. Urban Processes in the Confederacy’s Development, Experience, and Consequences 46
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Part Two: Secession
- 3. To Be the “New York of the South”: Urban Boosterism and the Secession Movement 77
- 4. Gender and Household Metaphors in Mid-Nineteenth- Century Nation-Building Cities 99
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Part Three: Gender
- 5. Stephen Spalding’s Fourth of July in New Orleans 125
- 6. “More like Amazons than starving people”: Women’s Urban Riots in Georgia in 1863 147
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Part Four: Emancipation
- 7. African American Veterans, the Memphis Region, and the Urbanization of the Postwar South 171
- 8. Black Political Mobilization and the Spatial Transformation of Natchez 190
- 9. African Americans’ Struggle for Education, Citizenship, and Freedom, in Mobile, Alabama, 1865–1868 215
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Part Five: A New Urban South
- 10. Invasion, Destruction, and the Remaking of Civil War Atlanta 239
- 11. Freeing the Lavish Hand of Nature: Environment and Economy in Nineteenth-Century Hampton Roads 261
- Conclusion: Cities and the History of the Civil War South 286
- Contributors 291
- Index 295
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Foreword xi
- Introduction: Historians and the Urban South’s Civil War 1
-
Part One: The Big Picture
- 1. Regionalism and Urbanism as Problems in Confederate Urban History 27
- 2. Urban Processes in the Confederacy’s Development, Experience, and Consequences 46
-
Part Two: Secession
- 3. To Be the “New York of the South”: Urban Boosterism and the Secession Movement 77
- 4. Gender and Household Metaphors in Mid-Nineteenth- Century Nation-Building Cities 99
-
Part Three: Gender
- 5. Stephen Spalding’s Fourth of July in New Orleans 125
- 6. “More like Amazons than starving people”: Women’s Urban Riots in Georgia in 1863 147
-
Part Four: Emancipation
- 7. African American Veterans, the Memphis Region, and the Urbanization of the Postwar South 171
- 8. Black Political Mobilization and the Spatial Transformation of Natchez 190
- 9. African Americans’ Struggle for Education, Citizenship, and Freedom, in Mobile, Alabama, 1865–1868 215
-
Part Five: A New Urban South
- 10. Invasion, Destruction, and the Remaking of Civil War Atlanta 239
- 11. Freeing the Lavish Hand of Nature: Environment and Economy in Nineteenth-Century Hampton Roads 261
- Conclusion: Cities and the History of the Civil War South 286
- Contributors 291
- Index 295