June 16, 2019
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
The RESILIENCE of SOUTHERN TRADITION Brion McClanahan Writes
Friends,
I’ve been saving the following essay, “The Challenge of the
Southern Tradition,” by Dr. Brion McClanahan, since late March of this year.
Some may have read it when it first appeared at The Abbeville Institute Web
site, where Brion is editor. As a reflection it is both a superb and elegant
historical and philosophical exploration of the meaning, indeed, the essence of
what may be called “Southern tradition.” And, in a broader sense, it helps us understand
that it was that tradition—that Southern heritage—that was present at the very beginning
of what became the United States of America and influenced its Founding
profoundly.
Dislodged and defeated on the battlefield in 1865, that
heritage survives, though today it appears only barely. Too many, perhaps most,
of our political leaders have turned their collective backs on it (and us); too
many in their haste to absorb and profit from the crass crony capitalist Americanism
of 2019 would not even recognize it or its once-life giving power. Or, the fact
that its near disappearance is a major reason that this country seems to totter
on its last legs, perhaps headed for the waste heap of history where all
once-great empires seem to end ignominiously.
Yet, in the achievements of its great men of the past, in
the art of its poets and novelists, in its wonderful lore passed down from
father and mother to son and daughter, and still within many Southern families,
it lives. And as long as there is a spark, as long as the memory has not been extinguished, and as long as there are those willing to take up its cause and
fight for it intelligently and resiliently, it may yet emerge from the present
dark catacombs, reborn, and ready to offer sustenance to new generations.
Successful counter-revolutions—the rebirth of beaten down belief—are
most usually achieved by smaller groups of dedicated souls, a remnant, but a
remnant completely committed to a Cause. Have we not seen that historically?
Did we not see that in 1917 in Russia or after the worst phases of the French
Revolution and Napoleon's fleeting glory?
And still if the Faith be maintained and sustained, we may
see, almost as a miracle, the whimpering death of the Communist Behemoth in
1991, or the Restoration of the rightful French kings in 1814. Or, the triumph of
persecuted Christianity under the Emperor Constantine in the Fourth Century.
President Jefferson Davis’ prophesy spoken in 1873 was
never so true as today: Truth
crushed to earth is truth still and like a seed will rise again.
But that requires
men and families who are willing to stand against all the disdain, opprobrium,
and scorn of our modern American society and its self-satisfied establishment oligarchs
and those cretinous types who claim to be our defenders, but whose cowardice
leads only to more defeat and infamy.
We reject them,
and once again raise proudly the Battle Flag and cry out “Sic semper tyrannis.”
ABBEVILLE INSTITUTE
The
Challenge of the Southern Tradition
on Mar
25, 2019
In 1966, Senator Jim Eastland
of Mississippi walked into the Senate Judiciary Committee and asked, “Feel hot
in heah?” A staffer replied: “Well Senator,
the thermostat is set at 72 degrees, but we can make it colder.” Eastland, puzzled by the response, doubled
down, “I said, Feel Hot in heah?”
The staffer now was perplexed
and fearing that he might not understand the question suggested that he would
lower the temperature. Eastland shot back, “Damn it, son!” Is Sen-a-tor Feel
P-H-I-L Hot H-A-R-T in heah?”
I begin with this story
because it is emblematic of the regionalism of the United States. Or at least
it used to be. Listening to congressional debates from the middle of the 20th century
was like hearing a symphony of dialect. The Kennedy brothers—though hailing
from Irish Catholic bootleggers—sounded like they were from an old Brahmin
Massachusetts family. Stennis, Russell, Thurmond, Ervin and other Southerners
brought their instruments to the show.
I attended school in
Delaware, but my eighth grade English teacher was from Alabama. Yet because her
husband was a minister and had to move around, she dropped her accent and
adopted a flat Midwestern timbre all while assigning great Southern writers or
notably anti-Yankee partisans like Washington Irving. You can take the girl out
of Alabama, but you can never take Alabama from the girl.
With a few exceptions, it
would hard to detect any regionalism among the current crop of 535 members of
Congress. As Americans move and consume, we become a less independent and more
plastic people dominated by a Midwestern Yankee Puritanism. Recent studies have
shown that children who move frequently are less likely to excel in school or
in a social environment. They aren’t from anywhere and have no real culture.
This is by design. Nationalization creates a crop of drones with an
“Americanism” that suggests saying the Pledge of Allegiance makes you an
American and that Abraham Lincoln and Hamilton’s state capitalist dream are the
greatest parts of American history. We have replaced Billy’s Grocery, Harvey
Lumber Company, and Daniel Appliance with Publix, Home Depot, and Best Buy
respectively. Buy your American flag at the Home Depot with your credit card
during our Presidents’ Day sale in every town USA. Let’s do this.
The South always offered a
counterweight to this type of “Americanism,” but today you can’t sound Southern
and still be taken seriously, just as you can’t suggest that anything from the
Southern tradition is true and valuable without being slapped over the head
with the book of bigotry. I’m surprised the modern left doesn’t walk about like
the monks in the Monty Python film the Holy Grail chanting “Pius Mother Planet
Earth, Save Us From Our Privilege, Slap.” The only thing they haven’t done is
require a bonfire of the vanities and demand that every heretic throw some
traditional vice—the Bible, your guns, precious metals, certainly your
Confederate flags—into the fire in a communal cultural cleansing. That’s
probably coming.
Senator John Stennis from
Mississippi said in 1974 that while people in the South “lacked for money, and
lacked for worldly things…they got plenty of things money can’t buy—like good
neighbors, good friends, the community spirit of sharing with the other
fellow.” Sam Ervin, the last Jeffersonian to serve in the Senate, shared a
similar sentiment when he suggested defeat was good for the soul because it
shook the glory out. Ervin was from Burke County, North Carolina and the spirit
of that place and people ran through is blood and bones.
Some interwar Southerners
knew that the world was changing, just as their ancestors knew the United
States was destroyed by fire in 1865 and replaced with a unitary American
empire beholden to Hamiltonian political economy and Yankee social engineering,
the very thing John Taylor of Caroline and other “Old Republicans” warned about
in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Nothing had changed after
the War. Robert Lewis Dabney derided the “New South Creed” for its infatuation
with progress in all forms. Industrialization was simply the mistress of social
transformation and the destruction of tradition. The fusion of big banks, big
business, and unconstitutional big government along with government sponsored
social engineering made for a Frankenstein that could not be tamed. There is a
reason Populist Senator Tom Watson of Georgia titled his newspaper the Jeffersonian in the early
twentieth century. The continuity between generations, the traditions that
shaped the South and her people, were the most important part of Southern
identity.
That identity has been
remarkably consistent even when it seems otherwise. Take for example the
efforts of “progressive” Southerners to tame the evils of Yankee finance
capitalism in the pre-World War I Congress. The War saw the complete victory of
Hamilton’s economic system in the post bellum period. Protective tariffs,
central banking, federally funded internal improvements, and corruption
signaled Republican rule. Southerners had some success in pushing back against
these measures in the 1880s and 1890s, but it wasn’t until the Wilson
administration that they achieved any sort of legislative victory. The
Glass-Steagall Act, the Clayton Anti-Trust Act, and the Underwood Tariff were
all part of a broad Southern effort to place a Jeffersonian stamp on the
economy. These were undoubtedly “big government” and constitutionally
questionable ideas and policies, but to these Southerners, using the apparatus
the Republican Party created to undermine what they considered to be the
backbone of anti-Southern and anti-Jeffersonian principles seemed natural.
Oscar Underwood of Alabama even classified the Federal Reserve as a Jeffersonian
inspired central banking system. Henry DeLemar Clayton of Alabama also secured
federal loans for farmers in the 1910s, a type of reparations for being
punished by poverty after the War.
But in spite of or perhaps
because of this crushing economic dislocation, Southerners clung to their
history, their regionalism, and their culture and used it as both a shield and
a blanket when confronting modernity or in some cases adopting it. For example,
Fuller Callaway, a Southern industrialist in LaGrange, GA, told the muckraker
Ida Tarbell that he “made American citizens and used cotton mills to pay the
expenses.” His son Cason Callaway focused his energy on scientific agriculture
and eventually made his Blue Springs farm a private nature reserve called
Callaway Gardens. He and his wife Virginia cultivated the Jeffersonian agrarian
spirit and believed in independent farmers and localism. The family farm
dominated their lives, and azaleas, blue spring water, woods, and outdoor
recreation were their Southern legacy.
This is something every
Southerner took for granted in the 1920s and 1930s. Jimmy Carter’s agrarian
manifesto An Hour Before
Daylight portrays his father as a Jeffersonian worried about
New Deal regulations on hogs and tomatoes. Like a good Yankee, Franklin
Roosevelt drove through Georgia and thought he could fix it. It’s no
coincidence that the first industrial hog slaughterhouses appeared in the
United States in 1930s. Chicken houses followed in the 1950s and soon
“industrial farming” was ripping apart the family farm, the backbone of the
Southern tradition.
The twelve Southerners who
wrote I’ll Take My Stand in
1930 could not have been more prophetic, but most people, even some
Southerners, didn’t want to listen to what Mary Cuff, in a recent piece
in Modern Age, describes
as an “untenable” prescription. She writes: “Thus even for those who sympathize
deeply with the agrarian diagnosis of modern society’s ills—the social
alienation and dehumanization triggered by sprawling urbanism, industrialism,
and the dominance of technology—there is often the sense that agrarianism is
unhelpful as a solution in the twenty-first century.” These Southerners have
been labeled romantics who hectored about farming and never picked up a plow.
Southerners, even in the early twentieth century, seemed to agree. As
eleven-year-old Lillian Nettles of Magnolia, MS told a photographer in 1911,
“we like the mill work much better than farming.” Five of her nine family
members worked in the mill.
But these criticisms miss the
point. Did “agrarianism” make the man or did the man make “agrarianism?” More
directly, was I’ll Take My
Stand an agrarian or
a Southern manifesto?
The authors could have called themselves twelve farmers, twelve poets, or
twelve writers, but they chose twelve Southerners, and the title is certainly a
Southern choice. David Chandler in his book The Natural Superiority of Southern Politicians wrote
that “the South has produced the pre-eminent geniuses of American political
history.” That genius was only made possible by Southern culture, the root of
“agrarianism.” A Southern man
could still be agrarian and not live on a farm. It certainly helped, but at its
core the Southern agrarian tradition was based on an organic rhythm of life, a
Christian sensibility of “good friends, good communities,” faith, property,
independence, and a chivalric code that had honor as one of the highest traits
of man and organized society. To be Southern meant that you embraced the old
order of Western Civilization as handed down by the Anglo-American tradition
and peppered with the cultural mosaic of the various peoples that settled south
of the Mason-Dixon.
And as Southerners began to
wrestle with the implications of a Yankee victory in 1865, they became
consciously more Southern, but that did not change their traditions. The
historian Drew Gilpin Faust vaulted into a college presidency at Harvard by, in
part, continually insisting that “Confederate nationalism” was inorganic, a
creation of racism and white supremacy. But is this true? The evidence points
in another direction. Edwin Alderman, the first president of the University of
Virginia and editor of the comprehensive Library of Southern Literature, told a University
of California audience in 1906 that, “when the age of moral welfare shall
succeed to the age of passionate gain-getting; when blind social forces have
wrought some tangle of inequality and of injustice, of hatred and suspicion,
when calculation and combination can only weave the web more fiercely; when the
whole people in some hour of national peril shall seek for the man of heart and
faith, who will not falter or fail, in the sweet justice of God, hither shall
they turn for succor as once they turned to a simple Virginia planter.” This
Southern tradition had nothing to do with race. It was an expression of the
Jeffersonian mind, a critique of the Hamiltonian vision for America.
Turning to the Virginia
planter—the “man of heart and faith”—not the industrialist or the shopkeeper,
had to be the solution, and that planter brought up on the traditions of his
people, the stories of his ancestors, men of action when the time called for
it, had to be a Southerner. This was a call to Washington or Jefferson, not
Lincoln or Grant, and certainly not J.P. Morgan or John D. Rockefeller. But would
America, now in the throes of industrialization, look to the sage of Monticello
for answers, and if not, how could a defeated people sell this tradition, or
should they?
Literature professor Charles
Kent advised Southerners to look inward, to become better Southerners, not
coopted Yankees. “It seems,” he wrote in 1907, “much more desirable that we
should endeavor to comprehend what our fathers stood for, especially in all
matters relating to self-government, then study calmly our own situation, and resolutely
acknowledge and adapt the principles and policies that seem most constant with
our welfare. So far as my own studies allow me to judge, no other people or
fraction of a people has a more admirable body of publicists from whose
writings inspiration and guidance may be derived.”
The Southerners who
wrote I’ll Take My Stand in
1930 and contributed to Who
Owns America in 1936 took this challenge seriously. Who Owns America is, in
some respects, a more interesting book. It is more prescriptive and less philosophical,
a practical application of the principles the twelve Southerners sought to
define just six years earlier, and while not explicitly Southern focused
like I’ll Take My Stand,
the Southern tradition dripped from its pages.
The great poet Donald Davidson
outlined a plan for regional government that incorporated Frederick Jackson
Turner’s prophecy that the core of American government was naturally the
relation of “section and nation,” not “state and nation.” Davidson called it a
“New Federalism,” not be confused with Richard Nixon’s bastardization of the
term in the early 1970s. He wrote, “For the United States, the ideal condition
would be this: that the regions should be free to cultivate their own
particular genius and to find their happiness, along with their sustenance and
security, in pursuits to which their people are best adapted, the several
regions supplementing and aiding each other, in national comity, under a
well-balanced economy.” This has not happened, he lamented, because the Constitution
could not allow it. The result had been the clash of competing imperialisms,
with the Northeast the ultimate victor. “The old outcry against Wall Street,”
Davidson argued, “is an outcry against a regional foe symbolized by a single
institution. It means that the towers of New York are built upon Southern and
Western backs.”
Andrew Nelson Lytle, the
philosopher as historian and writer, heaped praise on Franklin Roosevelt for
acknowledging the importance of the family farm, what Lytle called the “livelihood
farm.” He was giving FDR too much credit, for Roosevelt’s discovery that the
Southern agrarian tradition was vital to American prosperity was like Augustus
telling Livy to write glowing histories of Rome in the first century A.D., or
in [Senator] Josiah Bailey of North Carolina writing the “conservative
manifesto” in 1936 warning about the potential constitutional and legal hazards
of the New Deal. In both cases, the empire had already consumed its parents.
Regardless, Lytle insisted
that a United States with one quarter of the people engaged as livelihood
farmers would boast the most stable economy in its history. The tangible
benefits would be seen in the welfare of the general population, what he termed
their more “natural living conditions.” Lytle continued “this should be the
important end of polity, for only when families are fixed in their habits, sure
of their property, hopeful for the security of their children, jealous of
liberties which they cherish, can the state keep the middle course between
impotence and tyranny.”
This, however, required the
Southern tradition. John Crowe Ransom argued that “the South may be a valuable
accession to the scattering and unorganized party of all those who think it is
time to turn away from the frenzy of Big Business toward something older, more
American, and more profitable.” What Ransom loathed and feared most was a South
beholden to “foreign ideas.” And notice that he used the term “American” along
with the descriptive “older.” The Southern “agrarian” tradition is older than
the United States. The straight line from the “old Republicans” like John
Taylor of Caroline to Ransom, Davidson, and Lytle should be easy to see. But
that tradition, that “older, more American” vision of America was swallowed up
in the post-World War II nationalist orgy and Cold War propaganda. Us against
them had no room for regionalism and Southern agrarianism. The machine age and
the nuclear age required a Hamiltonian Americanism. We had to beat the commies,
but more importantly, beating the commies required a civic religion that also
took aim at tradition, the very thing Dabney said would take place immediately
following the War.
Which brings us to 2019 and
Tucker Carlson’s now infamous—at least among neoconservatives—monologue criticizing
what he called “market capitalism.” This was a somewhat clumsy though
refreshing attempt to articulate the “older, more American” vision of the
twelve Southerners. The establishment panned it as anti-capitalist and foolish,
with media darling Ben Shapiro immediately going on the offensive in both print
and video.
Carlson mislabeled his enemy
“market capitalism.” He was really throwing barbs at Hamilton’s state
capitalist system and the over century long Republican Party led attempt to
remake America. That involved an economic, social, political, and diplomatic
transformation that replaced of the “older, more American” world of the
Southern agrarians with the Lincolnian American empire. Regardless, when
Carlson asked for “A fair country. A decent country. A cohesive country. A
country whose leaders don’t accelerate the forces of change purely for their
own profit and amusement. A country you might recognize when you’re old. A
country that listens to young people who don’t live in Brooklyn. A country where
you can make a solid living outside of the big cities. A country where
Lewiston, Maine seems almost as important as the west side of Los Angeles. A
country where environmentalism means getting outside and picking up the trash.
A clean, orderly, stable country that respects itself. And above all, a country
where normal people with an average education who grew up no place special can
get married, and have happy kids, and repeat unto the generations. A country
that actually cares about families, the building block of everything,” he was
channeling the Jeffersonian America that dominated politics and culture until
the close of the War in 1865 and that found a voice in fits and spurts in the
post-bellum period, particularly from Southerners who knew they told you so.
Richard Weaver offered the
best explanation for why the Southern tradition still has currency in modern
society in his The Southern
Tradition At Bay. He wrote, “The South possesses an inheritance
which it has imperfectly understood and little used. It is in the curious
position of having been right without realizing the grounds of its rightness.”
The interwar Southern critique of Hamilton’s America came closest to doing so,
and in the end, we are left with Weaver’s conclusion that the Southern tradition
offers not an example but a challenge. “The challenge,” he said,” is to save
the human spirit by re-creating the non-materialist society.” This is the very
challenge Carlson offered his viewers, the twelve Southerners scribbled about,
Dabney thundered from the pulpit, and Taylor of Caroline, the most Jeffersonian
of all Jeffersonians, insisted we remember when faced with Hamilton’s schemes.
Weaver concluded by suggesting that “The Old South may indeed be a hall hung
with splendid tapestries in which no one would care to live; but from them we
can learn something of how to live.” You don’t have to be a farmer to be an
agrarian. We could all use a little more of the Southern tradition, but it’s up
to us to take the challenge of “saving the human spirit” through an “older,
more American” worldview, seriously.
About Brion McClanahan
Brion McClanahan is the author or co-author of
six books, How Alexander
Hamilton Screwed Up America (Regnery History, 2017), 9 Presidents Who Screwed Up America and
Four Who Tried to Save Her (Regnery History, 2016), The Politically Incorrect Guide to the
Founding Fathers, (Regnery, 2009), The Founding Fathers Guide to the Constitution(Regnery
History, 2012), Forgotten
Conservatives in American History (Pelican, 2012), and The Politically Incorrect Guide to Real
American Heroes, (Regnery, 2012). He received a B.A. in History
from Salisbury University in 1997 and an M.A. in History from the University of
South Carolina in 1999. He finished his Ph.D. in History at the University of
South Carolina in 2006, and had the privilege of being Clyde Wilson’s last
doctoral student. He lives in Alabama with his wife and three daughters.
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