With all the supposed tightening of finances by the Confederacy by mid-war, it seems paying agents to defend slavery overseas came before shoes for the troops -- during a war claimed not to be about slavery! As with all modern books on the Civil War, take it with a grain of salt, it's not my view so please refrain from the personal stuff. I'm pretty sure it's ok to discuss new material written about our subject, CW era. This one excerpted here:
“It was no coincidence that a new society to study mankind was formed during the Civil War, and even less that the Confederacy had its paid agents inside. The Anthropological Society of London was founded in 1863, within weeks of Lincoln’s emancipation proclamation...
... The whipper-in for the new party...James Hunt...favored the issues critical to Knox and Types of Mankind; racial anatomy and ranking - and, with the war waging in America, the ‘Negro’s place’ was paramount. The majority of these self-styled ‘anthropologists’ shared... abhorrence of a common descent...the Society set itself the object to ‘record all deviations from the human standard’34. That standard was the white man...
...Not only did the Anthropologicals put Nott on their honorary fellowships rolls 35 ...but they had his friend Henry Hotze, a Confederate agent, permanently on the the Council...This pro-slavery advocate was actually paid to promote the South’s benevolent view of their ‘peculiar institution’. He had been recruited by the Confederate secret service and was bankrolled by the Confederate government in Richmond...Briefed to swing London opinion during the war, he put Nott and Glidden’s Types of Mankind and Indigenous Races into the Anthropologicals’ new library 36, paid Confederates inside the society (there were three on the Council alone)37, and swayed articles and pronouncements...printed and delivered thousands of sympathetic books and pamphlets, and fly-posted Confederate flags (joined to the British ensign) over street walls and railway stations.”
- pgs. 332, 333 excerpts from the chapter Cannibals and the Confederacy in London, in the 2009 book entitled Darwin’s Sacred Cause -How a hatred of slavery shaped Darwin’s views on human evolution. Adrian Desmond & James Moore. (Publisher info www.hmhbooks.com)
I apologize for trimming (the ... parts), but the entire page of copy is just too much to place here and trust anyone interested can see the entire page for themselves. I personally wasn't swayed by the authors' overall premise, but they did document their factoids so those are a valid topic for us.
Comments?
Dan Wykes
Fat Neck Mess
“It was no coincidence that a new society to study mankind was formed during the Civil War, and even less that the Confederacy had its paid agents inside. The Anthropological Society of London was founded in 1863, within weeks of Lincoln’s emancipation proclamation...
... The whipper-in for the new party...James Hunt...favored the issues critical to Knox and Types of Mankind; racial anatomy and ranking - and, with the war waging in America, the ‘Negro’s place’ was paramount. The majority of these self-styled ‘anthropologists’ shared... abhorrence of a common descent...the Society set itself the object to ‘record all deviations from the human standard’34. That standard was the white man...
...Not only did the Anthropologicals put Nott on their honorary fellowships rolls 35 ...but they had his friend Henry Hotze, a Confederate agent, permanently on the the Council...This pro-slavery advocate was actually paid to promote the South’s benevolent view of their ‘peculiar institution’. He had been recruited by the Confederate secret service and was bankrolled by the Confederate government in Richmond...Briefed to swing London opinion during the war, he put Nott and Glidden’s Types of Mankind and Indigenous Races into the Anthropologicals’ new library 36, paid Confederates inside the society (there were three on the Council alone)37, and swayed articles and pronouncements...printed and delivered thousands of sympathetic books and pamphlets, and fly-posted Confederate flags (joined to the British ensign) over street walls and railway stations.”
- pgs. 332, 333 excerpts from the chapter Cannibals and the Confederacy in London, in the 2009 book entitled Darwin’s Sacred Cause -How a hatred of slavery shaped Darwin’s views on human evolution. Adrian Desmond & James Moore. (Publisher info www.hmhbooks.com)
I apologize for trimming (the ... parts), but the entire page of copy is just too much to place here and trust anyone interested can see the entire page for themselves. I personally wasn't swayed by the authors' overall premise, but they did document their factoids so those are a valid topic for us.
Comments?
Dan Wykes
Fat Neck Mess
Comment