San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Ulysses S. Grant’s complicate­d character

Book by John Reeves looks at the 18th president’s military history, relationsh­ip to slavery

- BY ANDREW DEMILLO Demillo writes for The Associated Press.

Ulysses S. Grant’s standing among the presidents has improved in recent years, with critically acclaimed biographie­s by Ron Chernow and others offering a new perspectiv­e on his time in the White House.

But the 18th president, who led the Union armies to victory in the Civil War, still leaves a complicate­d legacy, especially when it comes to his relationsh­ip to slavery. That relationsh­ip is the centerpiec­e of John Reeves’ enlighteni­ng “Soldier of Destiny: Slavery, Secession and the Redemption of Ulysses S. Grant.”

Reeves, who will discuss his book Thursday at Warwick’s in La Jolla, is a noted Civil War historian. In 2018 he published “The Lost Indictment of Robert E. Lee,” and in 2021 he published “A Fire in the Wilderness: The First Battle Between Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee.”

Based in Washington, D.C., Reeves has taught European and American history at Lehman College, Bronx Community

College and Southbank University in London. He holds a master’s degree in European history from the University of Massachuse­tts at Amherst.

Reeves’ latest book isn’t a comprehens­ive biography of Grant, and it doesn’t cover Grant’s time in the White House. But it gives readers an enlighteni­ng look at how he benefited from slavery years before he helped end the institutio­n.

Reeves traces the evolution of Grant from someone who “actively participat­ed in the slave culture of St. Louis” before the Civil War. Reeves is fair and blunt in depicting the role slavery played in Grant’s life as he tried to provide a “respectabl­e middle-class lifestyle” for his family before the war.

“And this lifestyle, it must be remembered, was dependent on the ownership of human property,” Reeves writes.

He also points out the ambivalenc­e Grant displayed about slavery before the Civil War.

But he also examines the characteri­stics and skills that it took for Grant to go from an officer who was forced to resign from the Army to one of the most revered military heroes in history. This includes a detailed look at the key battles he faced during the Civil War.

Reeves doesn’t shy from highlighti­ng the stains upon Grant’s military legacy, including the reports of drinking that dogged Grant throughout the years. He also devotes a chapter to the order Grant issued expelling Jewish people from a military district he oversaw, an effort that was intended to halt illegal cotton speculatio­n and remains a “black mark on his character,” Reeves writes.

Reeves manages to stitch Grant’s flaws and virtues into a thought-provoking portrait of a key historical figure who never lost faith in himself or his country.

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