Henry Watterson (1840–1921), editor of the Louisville Courier-Journal from the 1860s through World War I, was one of the most important and widely read newspaper editors in American history. An influential New South supporter of sectional reconciliation and economic development, Watterson was also the nation\u27s premier advocate of free trade and globalization. Watterson\u27s vision of a prosperous and independent South within an expanding American empire was unique among prominent Southerners and Democrats. He helped articulate the bipartisan embrace of globalization that accompanied America\u27s rise to unmatched prosperity and world power. This book restores Watterson to his place at the heart of late nineteenth-century southern and Ame...
My dissertation, “Austral Empires: Southern Investment in Latin America, 1808-1877,” argues that ear...
In the 1880s, Southern boosters saw the growth of industry as the only means of escaping the poverty...
Governor Wade Hampton wanted to convince the white Democracy in South Carolina that blacks, most of ...
era. In discussing the personalities and happenings of those decades, historians have accepted the t...
This project traces American slaveholding attitudes toward international affairs from British emanci...
After the American Civil War, and the collapse of the market in slave-produced cotton in the South, ...
The New South Expanded Conventional wisdom (and history books) tells us that Henry W. Grady was the ...
In April 1859 a group of well-to-do manufacturers and Republican politicians coaxed a reclusive Henr...
Between 1846 and 1867, J. D. B. De Bow, the editor of De Bow’s Review, promoted agricultural reform,...
Throughout much of the twentieth century, diplomatic and economic historians of the antebellum Unite...
My dissertation is a cultural and political history of Savannah, Georgia. Exploring the role of ethn...
Despite recent interest in the efforts of antebellum southerners to modernize their society, the rol...
After the depression of 1893, some New South prophets advocated a more assertive, foreign policy as ...
Operating under an outmoded system of urban development and faced by the vicissitudes of the Civil W...
On 21 December 1886, Southern editor Henry W. Grady gave a speech at New York\u27s Delmonico\u27s Re...
My dissertation, “Austral Empires: Southern Investment in Latin America, 1808-1877,” argues that ear...
In the 1880s, Southern boosters saw the growth of industry as the only means of escaping the poverty...
Governor Wade Hampton wanted to convince the white Democracy in South Carolina that blacks, most of ...
era. In discussing the personalities and happenings of those decades, historians have accepted the t...
This project traces American slaveholding attitudes toward international affairs from British emanci...
After the American Civil War, and the collapse of the market in slave-produced cotton in the South, ...
The New South Expanded Conventional wisdom (and history books) tells us that Henry W. Grady was the ...
In April 1859 a group of well-to-do manufacturers and Republican politicians coaxed a reclusive Henr...
Between 1846 and 1867, J. D. B. De Bow, the editor of De Bow’s Review, promoted agricultural reform,...
Throughout much of the twentieth century, diplomatic and economic historians of the antebellum Unite...
My dissertation is a cultural and political history of Savannah, Georgia. Exploring the role of ethn...
Despite recent interest in the efforts of antebellum southerners to modernize their society, the rol...
After the depression of 1893, some New South prophets advocated a more assertive, foreign policy as ...
Operating under an outmoded system of urban development and faced by the vicissitudes of the Civil W...
On 21 December 1886, Southern editor Henry W. Grady gave a speech at New York\u27s Delmonico\u27s Re...
My dissertation, “Austral Empires: Southern Investment in Latin America, 1808-1877,” argues that ear...
In the 1880s, Southern boosters saw the growth of industry as the only means of escaping the poverty...
Governor Wade Hampton wanted to convince the white Democracy in South Carolina that blacks, most of ...