Historian E. Merton Coulter famously said that Kentucky "waited
until after the war was over to secede from the Union." In this
fresh study, Anne E. Marshall traces the development of a
Confederate identity in Kentucky between 1865 and 1925 that belied
the fact that Kentucky never left the Union and that more
Kentuckians fought for the North than for the South. Following the
Civil War, the people of Kentucky appeared to forget their Union
loyalties, embracing the Democratic politics, racial violence, and
Jim Crow laws associated with formerly Confederate states.
Although, on the surface, white Confederate memory appeared to
dominate the historical landscape of postwar Kentucky, Marshall's
closer look reveals an active political and cultural dialogue that
included white Unionists, Confederate Kentuckians, and the state's
African Americans, who, from the last days of the war, drew on
Union victory and their part in winning it to lay claim to the
fruits of freedom and citizenship.
Rather than focusing exclusively on postwar political and economic
factors,
Creating a Confederate Kentucky looks over the
longer term at Kentuckians' activities--public memorial ceremonies,
dedications of monuments, and veterans organizations' events--by
which they commemorated the Civil War and fixed the state's
remembrance of it for sixty years following the conflict.