Flush Times and Fever Dreams
A Story of Capitalism and Slavery in the Age of Jackson
Publication Year: 2012
Published by: University of Georgia Press
Cover
Title Page, Copyright
Contents
Maps
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pp. xiii-xx
PROLOGUE. The Cotton Frontier, United States of America
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pp. 1-14
As he rode from the Choctaw Cession in northern Mississippi toward the plantation districts of western Tennessee, Virgil Stewart likely pondered his future and its possibilities. Possessed of a discontented soul and a firm sense that he was fated for greatness...
Part One. Self-Made Men and Confidence Men
CHAPTER ONE. Inventing Virgil Stewart
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pp. 17-50
Virgil Stewart came from a long line of restless men. Their migrations, extended over several generations, typified those of many families of Scottish and Scots- Irish ancestry...
CHAPTER TWO. Inventing John Murrell
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pp. 51-88
The overflow crowd of spectators gathered in and around the twostory brick courthouse in Jackson, Tennessee, on July 24, 1834, had come to see Virgil Stewart as much...
Part Two. Settlers and Insurrectionists
CHAPTER THREE. Exposing the Plot
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pp. 91-117
At first, what was happening near Beattie’s Bluff , Mississippi, did not seem to have anything to do with John Murrell, Virgil Stewart, or his pamphlet. Rumors passed of strange goings on, but no one could determine their source...
CHAPTER FOUR. Hanging the Conspirators
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pp. 118-154
For men who knew they might be suspected of helping plot the largest slave insurrection the United States had ever seen, Joshua Cotton and William Saunders were surprisingly easy to find. When Cotton had been summoned...
Part Three. Speculators and Gamblers
CHAPTER FIVE. Purging a City
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pp. 157-180
The Fourth of July began peacefully enough in Vicksburg. White residents of the city, located on the Mississippi River around fifty miles southwest of Livingston, had received word the previous day about the insurrection fears convulsing...
CHAPTER SIX. Defining a Citizen
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pp. 181-206
Even as it grew commercially successful and became integrated into the national and international economies, Vicksburg remained a rootless and unformed place. Plenty of people were drawn to Vicksburg, but few were inclined...
Part Four. Slave Holders and Slave Stealers
CHAPTER SEVEN. Suborning Chaos
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pp. 209-242
On the afternoon of July 7, 1835, after witnessing what he considered the farce of Angus Donovan’s trial, Henry Foote mounted his horse and started back toward his home in Clinton. He had gotten only about a mile south of Livingston...
CHAPTER EIGHT. Imposing Order
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pp. 243-270
On July 13, after receiving the second letter in as many days from William Jones on behalf of the Clinton committee of safety imploring him to call out the state militia...
EPILOGUE. Memory and Meaning
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pp. 271-302
Though panic had waned substantially by the end of July 1835, fears reverberated for months that John Murrell’s mystic clan still lurked in the slave states. In August, Alabamians in and around Huntsville created committees to watch for signs...
Acknowledgments
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pp. 303-306
When I first stumbled across the events at the heart of this book, I never imagined I would still be thinking about them nearly ten years later, and although I have tried to be diligent in keeping account of the very many people to whom I owe my gratitude...
Notes
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pp. 307-382
Index
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pp. 383-394
E-ISBN-13: 9780820344669
E-ISBN-10: 0820344664
Print-ISBN-13: 9780820333267
Print-ISBN-10: 0820333263
Page Count: 440
Illustrations: 14 b&w photos, 6 maps
Publication Year: 2012
Series Title: Race in the Atlantic World, 1700-1900
Series Editor Byline: Richard S. Newman, Patrick Rael, and Manisha Sinha, Series Editors


