This post was published in The Wilson Times March 23, 2019.
As a native North Carolinian
with two great-great-grandfathers who served in the Confederate army and were
killed in the Civil War, I never was a great fan of Ulysses S. Grant. But after
reading Ron Chernow’s 1,000-page biography of Grant, simply titled “Grant,” I’m
more sympathetic.
I thought I knew what I
needed to know about Grant, the Union general who took over after President
Lincoln had fired or demoted all of his predecessors, including McClelland,
Hooker, Meade, Burnside, Butler, etc. Unlike his predecessors, Grant did not
reverse course and head back to the Potomac after being defeated or badly
outflanked by Robert E. Lee’s troops. From reading a number of Civil War books,
my image of Grant was of a man who used superior manpower and resources to
decimate the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia and ultimately force Lee’s
surrender. Grant stubbornly kept his Army of the Potomac on Lee’s heels until Lee
finally had no place to go.
That stubbornness also
showed itself at Cold Harbor, where Grant ordered consecutive, suicidal charges
against an entrenched Confederate line. Union troops were so resigned to dying
as they prepared for one more hopeless charge that they pinned their names,
written on scraps of paper, onto their clothing so their bodies could be
identified after the killing was over. Critics North and South called Grant “a
butcher.”
In a thousand pages, I
should certainly learn a lot about Grant, and I did. I have a greater
appreciation of the man who rode his Civil War fame to become the 18th
president of the United States. I’m still not convinced that Grant was a great
military tactician, but his strong determination to finish his work, whatever
it was, served him well in war.
Grant had a troubled
childhood with a domineering, unloving father, and his marriage to Julia Dent gave
him a difficult father-in-law, who was a demanding, slave-holding plantation
owner who never liked his son-in-law and his anti-slavery family. Grant went to
West Point for the free education and was not the best student. He resigned
from his Army career and tried to succeed in private business but repeatedly
failed.
Chernow frequently asserts
that Grant’s lack of business success was the result of an inability to judge
people who would take advantage of him. Grant lacked a healthy skepticism about
dishonest people. As a result, Grant found himself broke more than once. The worst
loss came after his two terms in the White House, when a slick financial
adviser fleeced him of his life’s savings, leaving his family destitute.
One critic said Chernow has
a tendency to see only the good in the subjects of his biographies, and that is
certainly true of “Grant.” It is difficult to swallow the author’s excuses for
Grant’s ignorance of basic personal finance and his trusting of shysters who
saw him as an easy mark. Nevertheless, Grant was very successful as a military
strategist, lauded by some as the greatest general of the century. His
presidential terms were fairly successful but difficulties arose from Grant’s
tendency to surround himself with untrustworthy people, making his presidency
perhaps the most scandal-ridden in U.S. history.
One aspect of this history
is the federal government’s failure during Reconstruction to stop violence against
newly emancipated African-Americans. Chernow documents numerous incidents of
violence and murder of former slaves and their families by Ku Klux Klan members
and other white supremacists. Grant was more willing than others to call out
federal troops to defend civil rights in the former Confederacy, but his
actions were not enough to stop the murdering racists determined to keep the
black population, as well as white Republicans, from voting, despite the 13th,
14th and 15th Amendments. The failure to protect the
rights of citizens should be an embarrassment to all Americans, and it has
shaped U.S history for 150 years. The public and elected officials both North
and South ignored cries for justice.
I don’t recall the U.S.
history courses I took making clear just how widespread violence, intimidations
and flagrant murders were in the post-war South. When I was in school, Reconstruction
was taught as a lamentable era of scandal, graft and wasteful spending by state
governments run by former slaves, some of whom were illiterate. The larger
issue, it is obvious, is the refusal of many whites to accept the results of
the Civil War that killed 600,000 Americans, gave former slaves the right to
vote, and left half the nation destitute, its economy destroyed and its
greatest form of wealth — African slaves — eliminated without compensation.
This biography of Grant is
worth reading just for what it tells us about the Radical Republicans vs. white
supremacist Democrats during Reconstruction. But there is much more in those
thousand pages.
Hal Tarleton is a former editor of The Wilson Daily
Times. Contact him at haltarleton@myglnc.com.
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