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They threw a birthday party for Andrew Jackson last month in the Waxhaws.1  The local museum offered cake and punch, hung balloons and hired an actor to greet visitors in the role of Old Hickory in his later years.  The actor spoke with a slight Northeastern accent, but Jackson probably didn’t speak with what we’d recognize as a Southern accent, anyway, and at least the actor looked a little like Jackson: tall and lanky, with a long face and jutting cheekbones.  The actor was suitably well-mannered2 and remained committed to the part, although I did overhear him talking with a family about the NFL.

His most obvious shortcoming in playing Andrew Jackson was also the most forgivable, the one most any actor would face, the one that can hardly be fixed: had the party turned ugly, I would not have been physically afraid of that man in the museum.  The real Jackson, meanwhile, though he was noted for his surprising social grace, must have been utterly, viscerally, wet-your-pants terrifying.

Imagine trying to have a pleasant little chat with the holder of the most powerful office in the young nation; a man who wielded the full power (and then some) of that office like no one before him3 and very few since; a man whom the wilderness, Tories, a British saber, smallpox, malaria, numerous duelists, multiple gunshot wounds, entire Indian nations, and the first would-be presidential assassin in the U.S. had notably failed to kill; a man who had ordered or caused the deaths of thousands, and had himself killed more than a few while staring them in the eyes, and who – as president, and an unwell old man – would have beaten to death that would-be assassin if aides had not restrained him.

He must have warmed rooms through sheer intensity.  He may have been deranged.  He was both the prime example and the grandest exaggeration of Dixie manhood, a veritable playground of the vices and virtues that created the Old South, and continue to shape the New.

Jackson could have claimed to have created the South.  Not in his own image, for he was already a reflection of an existing South, but he played first an active, then a primary, role in opening much of what we think of as the South to what we think of as Southern culture.  As a boy in the Carolinas he fought the British and the Tories for the cause of independence; as a young man he played a significant part in the settlement and defense of Tennessee.  The white settlement and eventual statehood of Alabama, Florida, Mississippi east of the river, and Georgia west of Macon happened because of him and his generalship.  He took the Black Belt from the Creeks and Florida from the Spanish, and secured New Orleans as an American port once and for all.

My wife teases me for having a man-crush on Jackson.  I’m not disturbed enough to crush on a prolific slaveowner who forced the Cherokees onto the Trail of Tears, but I do find him the most compelling figure in American history.  I’m fascinated by him, and I’ll admit to reveling in the wholesale badassery of so much of his life.4

Southerners of a certain cast of mind want to see Robert E. Lee as their model and embodiment, all ancient blood and martial dignity.  These Southerners tend to ignore quite a bit about Lee – his upbringing in genteel poverty, his father’s time in debtor’s prison and exile, his marked graciousness and even repentance after the war, the crushing sadness of his eyes in almost every late portrait of him5 – and hold him up as the symbol of all that the Southern gentleman was and should be.

The truth of the men of the South’s ruling class was far more muddy than the Lee ideal, and far more like Andrew Jackson.  As writers at least since W. J. Cash and Margaret Mitchell have pointed out, plenty if not most of the “gentleman planters” were self-made men, especially in what was called the Old Southwest, and plenty more were yeoman farmers at best.6  Cash in particular posits the frontier, not the Tidewater or the Low Country, as the essential condition of the Old South, writing that “the core about which most Southerners of whatever degree were likely to be built (was) a backcountry pioneer farmer or the immediate descendant of such a farmer,” who had more in common with “the half-wild Scotch [sic] and Irish clansmen” than with “the English squire to whom the legend has always assimilated him”:

“The whole difference can be summed up in this: that, though he galloped to hounds in pursuit of the fox precisely as the squire did, it was for quite other reasons.  It was not that hoary and sophisticated class tradition dictated it as the proper sport for gentlemen.  It was not even, in the first place, that he knew that English squires so behaved, and hungered to identify himself with them by imitation, though this of course was to play a great part in confirming and fixing the pattern.  It was simply and primarily for the same reason that, in his youth and often into late manhood, he ran spontaneous and unpremeditated foot-races, wrestled, drank Gargantuan quantities of raw whisky, let off wild yells, and hunted the possum: – because the thing was already in his mores when he emerged from the backwoods, because on the frontier it was the obvious thing to do, because he was a hot, stout fellow, full of blood and reared to outdoor activity, because of a primitive and naïve zest for the pursuit in hand.”

He describes the antebellum South’s ruling class as “the strong, the pushing, the ambitious, among the old coon-hunting population of the backcountry,” and baldly states that their “emergence of power can be exactly gauged by the emergence of Andrew Jackson.”

David Hackett Fischer’s groundbreaking Albion’s Seed examines how folkways from the war-plagued borderlands of north Britain became the ways of the Southern backcountry.  “Whenever a culture exists for many generations in conditions of chronic insecurity, it develops an ethic that exalts war above work, force above reason,” Fischer writes.  “The rearing of male children in the back settlements was meant . . . to foster fierce pride, stubborn independence and a warrior’s courage in the young.  An unintended effect was to create a society of autonomous individuals who were unable to endure external control and incapable of restraining their rage against anyone who stood in their way.”

(Fischer’s very next sentence begins, “A case in point was the childhood of young Andrew Jackson . . .”)

Fischer describes the endemic violence of a land where “cultural hegemony” belonged to men raised in such ways, “trained to defend their honor without a moment’s hesitation – lashing out instantly against their challengers with savage violence.”

A little more generously, John Buchanan – writing specifically about the Overmountain Men who fought at Kings Mountain, but in terms that could be applied throughout the Southern frontier – said, “If he survived falling trees, fever, snakebites, drowning, disease, backbreaking labor, blood poisoning, and the scalping knife, he rode into a fight a warrior for the ages.”

These were the men from whom Jackson came, the men who followed him in war and voted for him in elections.  In a time and a place dominated by men like that, a time and place full of men, women, and children who had to be hard as coffin nails just to reach middle age, Jackson was renowned as unbreakable, ferocious, volcanic.  He was like them and of them, only somehow more, as if he’d been given a double measure of their raw materials, or made by a hotter fire.

Faulkner7 called him, “An old duellist, a brawling lean fierce mangy durable imperishable old lion.”8  Not long after the start of his political career he would have shot John Sevier, Tennessee’s first governor and greatest hero, in the courthouse square of Knoxville, had he (Jackson) been armed with more than his cane.9  Later, as a circuit judge, he single-handedly brought in a rowdy drunk who had successively scared off the sheriff and the sheriff’s posse.  In the jailhouse they asked the man why he stood off all those other men, but surrendered to Jackson.  He said, “Why, when he came up, I looked him in the eye, and I saw shoot.  There wasn’t shoot in nary other eye in the crowd.  So I says to myself, says I: Hoss, it’s about time to sing small, and so I did.”

He fought his most famous duel with Charles Dickinson, acknowledged to be the best shot in Tennessee.  Knowing he likely could not fire an accurate shot faster than Dickinson could, Jackson decided to wait for Dickinson to fire first, take the inevitable bullet, then return fire with care and precision.  Dickinson’s shot hit Jackson in the chest and lodged near his heart, but Jackson neither cried out nor fell nor staggered.  He took aim and mortally wounded his foe.  Dickinson died believing he had missed Jackson.  Jackson’s own seconds didn’t know he had been hit until they were leaving the grounds, when one of them noticed that Jackson’s shoe was overflowing with blood.10

These episodes capture what set Jackson beyond the normal run of men, even in the volatile and violent South.  For all his fire, Jackson’s ferocity had a settled, studied side to it.  If most in the Southern backcountry applied their fierceness to what Cash called “whim,” Jackson demonstrated a self-mastery that subjugated the enactment of his whims to the service of higher purposes, usually his honor, often his ferocity itself.

If Jackson knew life as nothing but grim struggle, enlivened by the occasional war, he had cause.  If he came to see enemies all around, all out to get him and/or his beloved America, he had his reasons.  He was born fatherless on the frontier; before he was 15, the British had scarred him,The Young Andrew Jackson Defies a British Officer imprisoned him, and caused the deaths of his mother and brothers; he came to Nashville and began his career in the midst of the terroristic wars with the Chickamaugas and Creeks, just 8 years after the Battle of Fort Nashborough almost wiped out the young town.  He blamed the calumny of his political opponents for the death of Rachel, the wife he adored, just after his election to the presidency.  So dark was his subsequent depression that he delayed leaving for his own inauguration, and those closest to him feared for the sanity of the president-elect.

He always conflated and confused the political and the personal, equating the opponents who slandered Rachel into her grave with the enemies, foreign and domestic, who’d tried to kill off his US of A time and again, who’d tried to kill he himself time and again.  The Whigs could not just be in disagreement with him; they were traitors and poltroons, threatening the Republic, undermining the democracy, conspiring to bring about America’s demise.  “I have only two regrets,” he said after his two terms as President.  “That I have not shot Henry Clay or hanged John C. Calhoun.”

Stop me when this sounds familiar, those of you who know the South: good manners failing to hide an explosive rage, a boisterous love of contests of strength, an obsession with personal honor, a quickness to see disagreement as affront if not threat.  Old South manhood, hell; the New South is full of petty Jacksons, raised in and dedicated to his vices, lacking his virtues of absolute courage and steadfast moral code.

He was raging and bullying and frequently wrong, but he so dominated his era that it is the only period of American history we know by the name of an individual, the Age of Jackson.  Yet much of the South, to one extent or another, repudiated him, especially as the South solidified around states’ rights and secession and war.11  Jackson had vanquished John C. Calhoun and his Nullifiers, the forefathers of the Confederate notions of states’ rights, and had insisted on the primacy of the Union and the federal government.  In the politics that led to the Civil War – politics confused with the personal, politics that would spur South Carolina Representative Preston Brooks to cane almost to death Massachusetts Senator Charles Sumner on the floor of the Senate12 – Jackson’s vehemence that “the Union must be preserved” cast the founder of the Democratic Party, long after he was dead, among Lincoln’s Republicans, which made him less than a full Southerner.  No true Southern man, said the loudest Southern men of 1860, would fail to join his personal honor to the imagined injuries done to his native land, the continued profitability of the plantation economy, and race-based slavery.

Then the defeat and Reconstruction and the myth of the Lost Cause shifted and hardened the South’s focus, and a whole pantheon of Southern heroes – Jackson, Jefferson, Decatur, even Washington – faded into the background, ignored in the Dixie-fried imagination in favor of those who wore the gray.13  The greater nation was happy to claim them.

Their excellence, and their flaws, remained, though; the Age of Jackson stayed his.  Andrew Jackson never feared the opprobrium of his neighbors.  He dueled and roared and conquered, holding his iron notion of honor above all else, and none of it depends at all on our memory.  To forget or diminish his deeds – his triumphs and his crimes – diminishes us, not him.  His life and character remain outsized, and peculiarly of the South, whether the South he carved out admits it or not.

1  Jackson was born in the Waxhaws, either on the North Carolina side where the museum is, or a mile or two away, across the South Carolina line.  The two states still dispute it – well, a very, very few people in desperate need of better social lives within the two states still dispute it.

2  Those who met Jackson after he was famous always seemed to expect a frontier savage, and were always shocked by his courtly manner.  After the Revolutionary War orphaned him, Jackson made his way to Charleston, and spent too much time drinking and gambling with the city’s young gentlemen; biographers speculate that he learned his refined manners there.  Jackson’s family, though, despite their humble circumstances, taught young Andrew to think of himself as a gentleman.

3  Keep in mind that the presidents who came before him included Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and George “Father of his by-God Country” Washington.

4  He’s in the top three of most badass American presidents.  Only Teddy Roosevelt and George Washington were as intimidating, as physically courageous, and as willing and able to beat the ever-living snot out of you.

5  They also tend to call it “the War Between the States” or the “War of Northern Aggression” or some such nonsense, ignoring that Lee himself called it the Civil War.

6  Cash made much of the South’s “yeomen” in The Mind of the South.  He was trying to puncture the myth of the “Southern gentleman,” but he ended up helping to create a new, differently pernicious myth – after the Civil Rights Era, it suddenly seemed that every white male in the South was descended from this yeoman class, mainly so they could claim that their ancestors “never owned slaves.”  It became a convenient way of asserting long and proud Southern heritage, while avoiding familial culpability.

7  When Faulkner sent Malcolm Cowley his “Appendix: The Compsons” for The Portable Faulkner, Jackson was the only non-fictional figure he saw fit to include.  I have to wonder how much Faulkner knew about Jackson, or how much Jackson was on his mind, when he created Thomas Sutpen.

8  I’m surprised Faulkner didn’t call him “implacable,” too.  “Implacable” was one of the novelist’s favorite words, and if anyone ever was implacable, it was Jackson.

9  Sevier and Jackson met and argued over political grievances new and old, and Sevier made sarcastic reference to Rachel Jackson’s first marriage.  Jackson, according to eyewitnesses, went pale, and then exclaimed, “Great God!  Do you mention her sacred name?”

10  Read that paragraph again.  Now let someone, say, throw a dart at you, and don’t flinch or dodge or shriek like a little girl.

11  This repudiation was never official or absolute, of course, and middle Tennessee clung to him fiercely.  He was a war hero, a planter, a slaveowner, a hater of Indians, a lover of fast horses, and a Democrat – so he couldn’t, to a Southerner, be all bad.  Boy Scout troops in western North Carolina are organized into the Old Hickory Council; but the nicest hotel in the area, until 1972, was called the Robert E. Lee.

12  In May 1856, Sumner said that S.C. Senator Andrew Butler kept as a mistress “the harlot, Slavery.”  Brooks, who was related to Butler, took this as an insult, and attacked Sumner three days later.  This may seem Jacksonian, but Brooks sucker-caned him; Sumner was unarmed, and – understandably – not expecting to be assaulted in the Senate chamber.  Jackson never did anything so base and cowardly.

13  I find it telling that the Museum of the Waxhaws, dedicated to the story of a small region that was of genuine significance to the Revolutionary War, and was the birthplace of Andrew Jackson, devotes as much space in its permanent exhibit to the area’s negligible participation in the Civil War.

On the eve of a Final Four with no NC team playing (long sigh), it’s good to know that fans in a border state can act every bit as dumb and rednecky as those of us further south.

Well, hell, y’all, I’ve just started this damn thing and I’ve already had to spend two posts marking passings.

Earl Scruggs died yesterday in Nashville.  If I have to explain to you who Earl Scruggs was, you’re probably not reading this in the first place.  I’d be willing to bet, though, that the majority of people in this country and around the world, when they think about the South, hear Earl Scruggs in their heads.

Harry Crews passed away yesterday, as well.  Next to Crews, Hemingway was an effeminate pretty boy, but Crews also had the self-awareness to say things like, “I like a lot of things that are really not fashionable and really not very nice and which finally, if you’ve got any sense at all, you know, are totally indefensible. Anybody who is going to defend much of the way I’ve spent my life is mad.”

That’s a lot of loss in one day, and I’m not happy about it at all.

I was 7 years old when I first went to North Carolina’s Outer Banks.  That was long enough ago that the desk clerk at our motel, the girls at the cash registers, even the DJs on the local radio all, to my young Piedmont ears, talked real funny.

My parents explained to me that I was hearing the Outer Banks’ “hoi toide” brogue, that the isolation of the Banks and the Tidewater region preserved the accents of the original English settlers down through the centuries.  My little history-nerd self thought it was the coolest thing I’d ever heard.  (Years later, I was in a hotel room in London, falling asleep with the TV on, when I heard a voice speak in familiar tones.  I sat up, thinking they were talking to an Outer Banker; instead, I saw an old-timer from the west of England.  The accent was essentially the same.)

The British Library has completed a project to determine what Shakespeare sounded like; they’ve “completed a new recording of 75 minutes of The Bard’s most famous scenes, speeches and sonnets, all performed in the original pronunciation of Shakespeare’s time.”  The accent is so different as to be unintelligible at times, and though Scott Simon of NPR compares it to that of the Appalachians, to my (now much older) Piedmont ears, I’m hearing much of the same old “hoi toide.”  (I wonder what milepost the Globe was at?)

Chipper Jones announced yesterday that this season will be his last in Major League Baseball.

It’s more than a little sad for me – not because I’m such a big fan of Larry Jones, Jr. (I’m still not entirely sure about a grown man going by the name “Chipper” because he was a “chip off the old block”), but because he and I are the same age, and I distinctly remember the hype that accompanied his rookie season, and even though we’ve known for a couple of years that the time for him to hang ’em up was fast approaching, if now is in fact the time for him to hang ’em up, then that makes a statement as uncomfortable as my own aching knees and graying hair.

Did Chipper never get his just due because he played in Atlanta?  Would he be talked about more as one of the great players of his generation if Ted Turner, the Mouth of the South, still owned the Braves?  Was it because he only has that one World Series ring, from way back in his rookie season, that most baseball fans aren’t aware of how spectacular his numbers have been?

Going into the 2012 season, Jones has a lifetime .304 average, with 454 home runs, 526 doubles, 1,455 walks, a .402 on-base percentage and a .533 slugging percentage.  The only other players with those kinds of career numbers?  Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Stan Musial, and Ted Williams.  Note that two of those guys have had movies made about them.  (And Teddy Ballgame should, if they could ever find someone awesome enough to play him.)

Since the mid-1990s, Chipper has been the South’s iconic baseball player, and he played the role about as well as he played the game.

I don’t disagree with the basic premise of this column by Tina Dupuy – that the South needs to be more welcoming to “durn furriners,” and lay off a few helpings of Ma Romney’s “cheesy grits” – but her statements are so oversimplified that they undercut her argument.

What makes a “real Southern candidate”?  What makes anyone “real Southern”?  Sure, Newt Gingrich was born in Pennsylvania and still talks like he was, but he graduated from a Georgia high school, and then from Emory, and then from Tulane, and lived in the South longer than I have (and I was born here).  Is he still not a “real” Southerner because he doesn’t drawl?  (And, oh my God, am I actually defending Newt Gingrich?  Do I have a fever?  Will someone please check?)

How many of the South’s Republicans these days are “real” Southerners, and how many moved here for work or retirement during the Sun Belt boom?  How many of the voices of Southern conservatism sound more like Newt than, say, Haley Barbour?

How does anyone think saying the South’s economy should be more like California’s is a good idea right now?  (Immigration had little or nothing to do with California’s looming catastrophe, of course, but a better rhetorical strategy might be called for here.)

Some would argue that the South’s rise in the late 20th century was fueled by immigration from the Northeast and the Rust Belt.  Some would argue that this immigration was spurred by the South’s right-to-work laws, cheap labor and land, and the wonders of modern air-conditioning.  Some would argue that the South’s conservatism, nativism, exploitative labor practices, and love of fried foods have deep, deep roots.  Some would argue that any arguments that might pull up those roots will have to be stronger than Dupuy’s.

 

RIP, Furman Bisher

The sports editor of my college newspaper used to say that Furman Bisher had the best job in sports.  As sportswriter and then columnist for what’s now the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Bisher’s local beat included ACC basketball, SEC football, the Masters, and NASCAR – in other words, the best the sports world has to offer, at least to unreconstructed Southerners.  That’s not to mention Major League Baseball, the NFL, and the NBA.

Bisher died Sunday at the age of 93.  He retired in 2009, after 59 years covering sports in Atlanta, though he’d planned to go to Augusta in a few weeks for the Masters.

He was a North Carolina native who first made his name in 1949, when he managed to get the first (and, it turned out, last) interview with ‘Shoeless’ Joe Jackson since the 1919 Black Sox scandal.  He was an eyewitness to the birth of NASCAR, and respected it as a sport when most sportswriters thought it was just bootleggers turning left (most sportswriters still do, they just don’t admit it now).  He helped bring the Braves to Atlanta, and co-wrote Hank Aaron’s first autobiography.

Half of those living just west of the Georgia line, though, did not care for Bisher, at least after he went after the Bear in a 1962 essay for the Saturday Evening Post, accusing Bryant of bringing a “new hell-for-leather, helmet-bursting, gang-tackling game” to the SEC.  Bisher wrote, “College football appears to have gone absolutely silly on ‘hitting,’ even at the expense of clever execution.  A new term, ‘hard-nosed,’ is about as common in the conversation of football savants as punting, passing, and praying.”  He did not mean that, I should add, as a compliment.

Bisher was implicated in the later Saturday Evening Post story accusing Bryant and University of Georgia athletic director Wally Butts of conspiring to fix a game, implications that Bisher always denied.  The subsequent libel lawsuits by Bryant and Butts helped lead to the Post‘s demise.

Lay aside the question of whether Bisher’s indictment of “brutal” football was prescient, given football’s current crisis over concussions; or disingenuous, given how brutal a game tackle football has always been; consider, instead, how much of the South’s late-20th century history is on the sidelines of Bisher’s Post column.  When he wrote it, Georgia Tech was an SEC football powerhouse that had a fierce rivalry with Alabama, a reflection of the rivalry between Atlanta and Birmingham to be the “capital city of the South.”  By the end of the decade, Tech had left the SEC, and Bryant had won two national championships (to go with the one he’d already claimed in 1961, and the three more he’d win before retiring) – but Atlanta had the Braves, and the boom, and its “city too busy to hate” image, while Birmingham had the bitter aftertaste of Bull Connor and “Bombingham.”

Nowadays, it’s hard to imagine Alabama fans getting worked up over Georgia Tech like they do over LSU or Tennessee, much less Auburn.  It’s even harder to imagine another city in the South rivaling Atlanta as a center of population or influence.  The roads that led us here forked back in the 60s, though, and Bisher – even if he “only” wrote about sports – was one of those who chronicled the divergence.

I tend to wince out of reflex whenever the New York Times writes its way down South, but just the other day they ran an informative, mouth-watering, and minimally condescending article about Southern farming and Southern cooking.

Southern food may be our most durable signifier (though an NYC soul food joint will have pretty much the same menu as a Birmingham meat-and-three).  Nothing else evokes the South quite like corn bread or catfish.  And, yes, I did make sure to eat my corn bread, black eyed peas and turnip greens on New Year’s Day.

Lord knows the last thing I want to do is blog, but the Lord also knows I need some kind of web presence, and I’m too cheap/lazy for an actual website.  So it turns out blogging is not, in fact, the very last thing I want to do, and I trust and assume that the Lord knew that before I did.

Feel free to check this site as I get ready, without any particular hurry, for Dixie Babble’s “grand opening” at an unspecified future date.  My hope (I won’t yet call it a plan) is to turn Dixie Babble, one of these days, into something more like an online magazine than a blog.  We’ll see . . .