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The Civil Warriors

Frederick Douglass, Stand Watie, and the Balance of Power In the Nineteenth Century

by Reagan Fancher (Texas Woman’s University)

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Frederick Douglass and Stand Watie, two men on opposite sides of the American Civil War, may seem to have little in common. Yet in 'The Civil Warriors', Reagan Fancher seeks to help students of American History understand the nuances of both men’s actions and decisions while calling attention to the striking similarities between Douglass, an abolitionist leader and adviser to President Abraham Lincoln, and Watie, a “mixed-blood” Cherokee slaveholder who became the last Confederate general to surrender. Despite their stark contrasts, these two men proved more similar than different in their character and courage in striving to aid their respective peoples. Douglass’s liberty message contributed to the enfranchisement of the freedmen and the breaking of political barriers, while Watie’s wisdom in laying aside his personal grievances against the Northern Cherokee rivals of his Southern Cherokee people helped heal the Cherokee Nation’s simmering sectarianism, reignited by the Civil War and paved the way for intratribal peace.
In contrast to previous works, 'The Civil Warriors' examines the wartime and postwar lives and actions of both Douglass and Watie in a single volume for the first time, calling scholars’ attention to the similar paths on which each man embarked in serving his respective republic. Through this book, Fancher seeks to both inform collegiate-level students about Watie and Douglass’s lasting contributions that often seem to be overlooked or underemphasized in many other recent works and provide a useful classroom teaching tool for scholars while exploring both men’s lives and legacies. Revisiting and rebutting some popular misperceptions of each man, the book also fills a gap in Watie scholarship and seeks to both inform and inspire casual readers and scholars alike, bringing together those of different perceptions of the Civil War and Reconstruction and guiding today’s Americans in casting aside their differences and working together.

Reagan Fancher earned his B.A. and M.A. degrees in History at the University of Louisiana Monroe and his Ph.D. at the University of North Texas. Fancher is the author of several scholarly books, including 'The Holy Warrior: Osama Bin Laden and His Jihadi Journey in the Soviet-Afghan War' and 'The Red Warrior: U.S. Perceptions of Stalin’s Strategic Role in the Allied Journey to Victory in the Second World War'. His greatest inspiration, however, comes from teaching his students, an experience that motivated him to expand his knowledge base and research and write 'The Civil Warriors: Frederick Douglass, Stand Watie, and Their Journeys of Courage and Triumph in the American Civil War and Reconstruction Era'. He currently teaches a variety of history courses at Texas Woman’s University and the University of North Texas in Denton, Texas.

Southern History, U.S. Southern History, Black History, Civil War, Reconstruction Era, antebellum, postbellum, cotton-era economy, Southern Indians, Black Republicans, Southern Cherokees, Confederate Cherokees, Confederate Indians, Southern Unionists, Black lawmakers, civil rights champion, women’s rights champion, Capitol Hill lawmakers, Indian Territory, Trans-Mississippi Theater, TMT, 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, 55th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, Black Union soldiers, Black Union sailors, 1st Cherokee Regiment of Mounted Rifles, 2nd Cherokee Regiment of Mounted Rifles, Indian Brigade, Cherokee Braves, Confederate States Army, C.S.A., Union Army, U.S. Army, Union Navy, U.S. Navy, civil warrior, civil warriors, 1864 U.S. presidential election, Army of Northern Virginia, Stars and Stripes, Stars and Bars, surrender his sword, last C.S.A. general to surrender, Confederate Brigadier General, Cherokee Principal Chief, Cherokee Nation, Confederate Cherokee Nation, abolitionist, abolitionist leader, U.S. Marshal of Washington, D.C., U.S. Marshal, United States Marshal, U.S. Marshal of the District of Columbia, Minister Resident and Consul General, presidential candidate, vice-presidential candidate, Old South, New South, Black Codes, segregation, minstrel shows, white supremacist southern Democrats, Peace Democrats, War Democrats, Military Governor, C.S.A. Colonel, C.S.A. Brigadier General, Southern Cherokee Principal Chief, “mixed-blood” Cherokees, Black American Congressmen, Black Republican Congressmen, Black American United States Senator, Black American Representative, Enforcement Acts, Klan Act, Gilded Age, Hiram Revels, Joseph Rainey, Sequoyah, Ulysses S. Grant, Robert E. Lee, Abraham Lincoln, Watie the warrior, Douglass’s determination, Watie’s wisdom, fratricidal feuding, John Brown, Sojourner Truth, John Rollin Ridge, Buck Watie, Major Ridge, John Ridge, Harriet Bailey, Betsy Bailey, Clem Rogers, Will Rogers, Bill Adair, William Adair, John Adair Bell, Elias Boudinot, Robert Smalls, Andrew Johnson, John Ross, Sarah Watie, Anna Douglass, Helen Pitts Douglass, Saladin Watie, Charles Douglass, Treaty of Washington, Treaty of New Echota, Doaksville, Choctaw Nation, Rochester, Tahlequah, American Indian republics, Southern Indian republics, Southeastern Woodlands peoples, Army of the Trans-Mississippi, Army of the Frontier, Army of the Potomac, ghost town

Subjects

Sociology

History

Series

Series in World History

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