Governors - U.S. Political Biography, United States - Ethnic & Race Relations, Civil War and Reconstruction - African American History, 19th Century American History - Reconstruction, Georgia - State & Local History, Southern State & Local Government
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Overview
This is the first full biography of Rufus Brown Bullock (1834-1907), the only elected Republican governor in Georgia history and a central figure both in the reconstruction of the state and the ascendancy of Atlanta as the premier city of the New South. Moreover, this work, which adds much revelatory material on political, social, and economic conditions in post-Civil War Georgia, constitutes the first in-depth study of the state during Reconstruction and the Gilded Age in twenty-five years. Russell Duncan follows Bullock's life from his abolitionist upbringing in Albion, New York, to his move to Augusta, Georgia, on the eve of the Civil War and his subsequent role in the Southern war effort. Elected governor of Georgia in 1868, Bullock was ousted by Democratic opponents before the end of his term. Duncan chronicles Bullock's trial on charges of corruption and malfeasance, his full acquittal, and his subsequent ventures in railroading, banking, manufacturing, textiles, and insurance. In one of many demonstrations of Bullock's business prowess and personal complexity, Duncan shows how he was able to serve for two terms as president of Atlanta's chamber of commerce even as he publicly rebuked New South sovereign Henry Grady for racism. The core of the book is a reevaluation of Bullock's personal character, gubernatorial administration, and business affairs. Offering new explanations of the most controversial points in Bullock's career, Duncan examines his Radical Republican views on racial and economic opportunity, his attempts to stimulate Georgia's devastated economy by expanding its rail system, and his many clashes with militant Democratic party reactionaries. At heart, says Duncan, Bullock was a consummate businessman. If, as governor, he formed unseemly alliances and overstepped his powers, there is much to show that personal gain was not a compelling motive. Further, Bullock's early views on racism - on its utter impracticality - stemmed from his unwaverinEditorials
Booknews
A biography of Rufus Brown Bullock (1834-1907), the only elected Republican governor in Georgia history and a central figure both in the reconstruction of the state and the ascendancy of Atlanta as the premier city of the New South. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)Book Details
Published
February 1, 1994
Publisher
Athens : University of Georgia Press, c1994.
Pages
272
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780820315577