African American
Related: About this forumJust saw the movie "The Free State of Jones". Recommended!
I thought it was about the Gullah wars but no, it was about a rebellion by confederate deserters and runaway slaves during the Civil War. They were led by Newton Knight. Pls google.
villager
(26,001 posts)Surprisingly unrestrained in its politics, too.
brush
(57,086 posts)political leeway.
villager
(26,001 posts)Easier if it's a star than get a movie greenlit...
brush
(57,086 posts)I hadn't heard about Knight. He existed and had a black wife and kids.
villager
(26,001 posts)Been reading a little about him online. Fascinating stuff, about a South that "might have been," had there only been more like him who'd "gotten it..."
lovemydog
(11,833 posts)I'm looking for a good movie. One can only watch so many remakes.
dflprincess
(28,437 posts)I did hear a discussion of it not being historically accurate. Just asking people to keep that in mind.
(Mcconaughey seems to be making a career of inaccurate films - contrary to Hollywood, the U.S. did not capture the Enigma machine.)
brush
(57,086 posts)Newton Knight did exist and did lead a pro-Union force of deserters and runaway slaves in the Confederacy.
I don't know if some artistic license was taken but it's some history I didn't know about.
TexasProgresive
(12,259 posts)suggested I read Tap Roots by James Street in 1962. I was immediately drawn into the saga of the Dabney family loosely based on the Knights. I didn't know that there really were holdout unionist around the southern states. Then as an adult I reread all of the Street books and found Vikki Bynum's site Renegade South and read her book about Newt Knight, Jones county, MS and his family. The following is from her site as to why she wrote her book.
Why I wrote the Free State of Jones
I wrote The Free State of Jones: Mississippis Longest Civil War for professional and personal reasons. As both a historian and an individual, I am on the hunt for ordinary people who commit extraordinary acts. I am especially drawn to those who confront systems of power in unlikely ways alongside unlikely allies. In Civil War Jones County, Mississippi, deep in the so-called solid South, some 100 ordinary white farmers banded together to fight against the Confederate Army (a few of my distant kin were among them). Doing so earned them the label of outlaws. But outlaw means different things to different people. To pro-Confederate Mississippians, these were cowardly deserters. The core members of the Knight band, however, viewed themselves as principled Unionists.
In my book, I struggled against writing a Great Man history; I did not want to portray Newt Knight as the Rambo of Jones County dissent. Rather, I dug deep into historical records from NC, SC, GA, and MS, to uncover the cultural and class roots of those families who contributed the greatest number of participants in the Jones County uprising. I emphasized how earlier historical eventsfor example, the American Revolution and the opening of the Southwestern frontiershaped attitudes toward authority and government among these plain folks of the Old South.
While my version of the Free State of Jones disputes the Lost Cause narrative of a solid white South united over a noble cause that continues to permeate much of popular Civil War history, it does not present the uprising as the tale of Southern abolitionism that some would like it to be. What I believe happened in Jones Countyand in other pockets of resistance throughout the Confederate Southis too complex to be told in broad strokes of Southern slaveholder versus Southern abolitionist. More fascinating to me, and more truthful, is how the expansion of slavery created class divisions among families who were equally Southern in their roots and their culture. In other words, the Jones County insurrectionists were neither abolitionists nor Southern Yankees; they were Southern white farmers driven by war to cross lines of race, question slavery, and to declare their own war on the Confederacy.
The Civil War constituted a crisis of authority for many such Southerners, especially those who lived outside the plantation belt. Newt Knight did not singlehandedly create the Knight band, although he became its charismatic leader. By his own admission, the Civil War transformed his life and his character. Would Newt have developed an open relationship with his grandfathers former slave, Rachel, one that led to creation of a mixed-race community that thrives today, had the war not erupted? Would he have become a New South Republican after the war? Like all important figures of history, Newt was as much shaped by his times as he in turn shaped them.
I hope that you are as fascinated by the history of this renegade county as I am. On Newt Knight, see also the post, Did Jones County Secede From the Confederacy?
https://renegadesouth.wordpress.com/about/why-i-wrote-the-free-state-of-jones/
Amazon link to her book:
https://www.amazon.com/Free-State-Jones-Movie-Mississippis/dp/1469627051?ie=UTF8&keywords=Victoria%20bynum&qid=1464016268&ref_=sr_1_1_twi_pap_2&s=books&sr=1-1
Link to Renegade South:
https://renegadesouth.wordpress.com/