The Guardian (USA)

Longstreet: the Confederat­e general who switched sides on race

- Rich Tenorio

On 14 September 1874, less than a decade after the end of the US civil war, the former Confederat­e general James Longstreet was back in arms. This time, he was seeking to prevent an insurrecti­on: a white supremacis­t bid to take over New Orleans.

Once seen by northerner­s as among the three most notorious Confederat­es – with his commander, Robert E Lee, and president, Jefferson Davis – Longstreet now led state militia and city police. His troops were Black and white, reflecting an unlikely commitment to post-war civil rights that would waver in later years. His complex life is the subject of a new biography, Longstreet: The Confederat­e General Who Defied the South, by Elizabeth R Varon, a history professor at the University of Virginia, currently the visiting Harmsworth professor of history at Oxford.

“This turnabout is so fascinatin­g,” Varon marvels. “I pitched the book as the story of the most remarkable political about-face in American history.”

An enslaver, Longstreet directed Confederat­e forces to capture Black people and take them south to slavery or imprisonme­nt. He fought until the surrender at Appomattox, then allied himself with those who had brought about his defeat: Ulysses S Grant and the Republican party.

“He was not the only one,” Varon says of white southern Republican­s who made such moves, “but [he was] the highest-ranking Confederat­e. He was a lightning rod for critics.”

Prominent figures such as Lee were honored with monuments, some of which have recently been pulled down. Longstreet never had this problem, because you’d be hard-pressed to find such tributes to him.

“It’s quite astounding,” Varon reflects. “Longstreet endorses Reconstruc­tion

at a time when the vast majority of white southern former Confederat­es pledged themselves to resist at all costs.”

The author is interested in such dissenters. A previous book chronicled Elizabeth Van Lew, a resident of the Confederat­e capital, Richmond, who spied for the Union. Varon hopes a future scholar will write about another dissenter, Longstreet’s much younger second wife, Helen Longstreet, née Dortch, who outlived her husband by 58 years. By the 20th century, she was also an outspoken voice for civil rights in the south.

Dissent characteri­zed Longstreet’s war years as much as his later life did. The 1993 film Gettysburg dramatizes his dispute with Lee at that famous battle. Longstreet argued for a defensive approach. Lee took the offense and the result was a disaster, a turning point in the war. Transferre­d west, Longstreet led an assault credited for the victory at Chickamaug­a, then lambasted his new commander, Braxton Bragg, for his failure to capitalize. Longstreet would later suffer for daring to criticize Lee.

Although Varon addresses Longstreet’s war years, she is more interested in his postwar career, which

stretched for nearly four decades and included leadership positions in Louisiana and Georgia. He even became the US minister to the Ottoman empire, where he met Sultan Abdul Hamid II and defended American missionari­es.

He owed much of his success to an improbable allegiance to the abolitioni­st Republican party of Abraham Lincoln and a lasting friendship with Grant.

Varon details an unconventi­onal but unsuccessf­ul peace initiative involving the Grant and Longstreet families near the end of the civil war. (The war years had been hard for Longstreet and his first wife, Louise Longstreet. They lost three children to scarlet fever in 1862, and two years later, the general was grievously wounded by his own men.) At Appomattox, Longstreet was impressed by Grant’s lenient terms, which helped convince him it was time to change. He explained his stance in a series of 1867 letters that were poorly received by many.

As Varon explains: “Longstreet said, ‘Yes, let’s give the Republican party a chance, try to make this work, we appealed to arms and the sword to arbitrate the political conflict with the north, they won, now it … requires me to try to make the best of it.’”

She adds: “He was absolutely thrown back on his heels by the backlash by ex-Confederat­es. For his willingnes­s to work with the Republican­s, he was called anathema, a Judas, Lucifer, Benedict Arnold, they wished he’d died during the war.”

A new battle began, a war of words with fellow former commanders such as Jubal Early, over who was responsibl­e for the defeat. Yet Longstreet was committed to Reconstruc­tion and the Republican­s and to his postwar home, New Orleans, a racially diverse city where he held political positions following Grant’s election as president in 1868, beginning at the customs house. Through such positions, which extended to militia and police leadership, Longstreet advocated some degree of civil rights. Allies included PBS Pinchback, who in 1872 became the first sworn-in Black governor of a US state.

In addition to Longstreet’s personal life and recognitio­n of the flawed rebel war effort, Varon identifies “the last element” in his turnaround as “New Orleans itself – a unique political environmen­t”. She cites the city’s AfroCreole male leadership class, many of whom served as officers in the Union army.

“They were politicall­y savvy, assertive men,” Varon says, “really pushing for votes and full civil, economic and social rights for Blacks in Louisiana.” Regarding Longstreet, she notes: “I don’t think it would have turned out the same if [he] was somewhere else in the postwar south. This particular setting was uniquely positioned to change his views on race.”

•••

By 1874, that change was profound. On George Washington’s birthday, Longstreet participat­ed in a review of interracia­l troops. Racist white discontent was simmering, in part over a disputed election two years earlier: after the Republican­s were declared to have won, Democrats set up a rival government, followed by a takeover attempt and a massacre of Black people at Colfax. Another slaughter of Black people followed, in Coushatta in the summer of 1874. That fall, a group called the White League led a march on New Orleans.

The insurrecti­onists targeted government property and overwhelme­d authoritie­s. Longstreet was wounded in the so-called Battle of Liberty Place, which ended with the rioters in control of the city. Their threeday takeover ceased with the approach of federal forces but the riot spelled doom for Reconstruc­tion in Louisiana, presaging the demise of the policy throughout the southern states.

Longstreet’s subsequent life brought something of a retrenchme­nt on civil rights. Relocating to Georgia, he maintained ties to the Republican party but focused on cultivatin­g white support. He also pursued two significan­t projects – restoring national bonds ruptured in the civil war, and defending his Confederat­e career, in part through a near 700-page autobiogra­phy.

“He focuses on setting the record straight and answering charges as he gets older,” Varon says. “He claws back some of his lost popularity among white southerner­s. He reinvents himself as a herald of reconcilia­tion. Both sides are going to have to make concession­s.”

As a US marshal, Longstreet did prosecute white supremacis­ts and continue to back voting rights for all eligible citizens.

“He remains kind of enigmatic,” Varon reflects. “In the last years of his life, he tries to reconcile his Confederat­e and Republican identities. It was not possible to ever fully do that.”

 ?? Varon says. Photograph: Alamy ?? ‘He was not the only one, but he was the highest-ranking Confederat­e,’ author Elizabeth
Varon says. Photograph: Alamy ‘He was not the only one, but he was the highest-ranking Confederat­e,’ author Elizabeth
 ?? Walt Bilous/Alamy ?? Few statues to Longstreet exist. This one is in Pitzer Woods, at Gettysburg National Military Park in Pennsylvan­ia. Photograph:
Walt Bilous/Alamy Few statues to Longstreet exist. This one is in Pitzer Woods, at Gettysburg National Military Park in Pennsylvan­ia. Photograph:

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