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Savannah....just the name evokes mystery, intrigue, and long buried secrets. Readers will find all and more in "No Enemy But Time," a story spanning World War II years to the present. Imagine Savannah's coastal region: Driftwood Beach, Back River, Uncle Moses's Cabin, Sister Mystery's Cabin and what might have occurred if a spy had been stationed there during the war.
In this finely crafted narrative Francis Collins, a member of the IRA, agrees to spy for the Nazis. Following a rigorous training regime he is transported by submarine to the borders of Savannah with orders to contact a fellow German agent. Their goal? The destruction of a shipyard. When this plan is scuttled and arrests are made, Collins decides to immerse himself in his assumed American identity and disappear.
In later years he becomes a power in the local political and social scene, and a bulwark of support for a young politician.
As chance would have it one day the young politico is out driving when he discovers a downed submarine. The sub is not just a curiosity but the repository of dark puzzles from the past which, if brought to light, could destroy.
Harris is an author who knows his setting and his suspense. He weaves a satisfying Southern spell so surely that readers may wonder, "Is this fact or fiction?"
- Gail Cooke
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The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Ralph Ellison wrote that Aesop and Uncle Remus teach us that comedy "is a disguised form of philosophical instruction."
Growing up in the hotbed of philosophy that was Wren's Nest, the west Atlanta home where his father Joel Chandler Harris spun the engaging "Uncle Remus" stories, Julian LaRose Harris had to have experienced a good deal more intellectual growth than the average boy in Atlanta in the 1870s.
He also had to have gained from the stories a roundabout introduction to philosophy, and each day had rub off on him the gentleness and altruism of his famous father.
This upbringing and his world travel formed a sophisticated Georgian, one who would prove be out of place in his home state.
Julian LaRose Harris and his brilliant wife Julia Collier Harris counted among their friends the newspaper titan H.L. Mencken and the sociologist Howard Odum. The Harrises' were on the world stage at a pivotal time, while Julian was general manager of James Gordon Bennett's Paris Herald during World War I.
Julian covered the 1896 Democratic national convention in Chicago at which William Jennings Bryan was nominated; the Versailles peace conference; and the Scopes monkey trial.
You cannot retain the narrow world view of a west Atlantan of the 1870s while you are hearing firsthand the oratory of a Bryan, or watching the streets of Paris fill up with the wounded from the Battle of Verdun.
Julian Larose Harris emerged from all this far too progressive to last for long as editor of a Georgia daily in the 1920s. He flamed out on the Columbus Enquirer-Sun after nine years, but not before it won the Pulitzer gold medal for public service for facing up to the Klan. (That "it" is correct, for the gold medal goes to the paper and not the person.)
"Someone had to be hated" is a book you can like a lot.
It answers questions that I've long had about this engaging pair who formed the second generation of a distinguished Georgia journalism family -- Julian and Julia.
What experiences shaped their progressive views, ruinous for their careers? What are the details of their perilous defiance of the Ku Klux Klan while putting out the Columbus Enquirer-Sun? What made Julia a notable figure in U.S. journalism in her own right?
All these answers are provided by authors Gregory C. Lisby and William F. Mugleston, and Georgians owe them a debt.
Julian LaRose Harris got a jump-start on The Atlanta Constitution as an 18-year-old reporter, but he soon would depart on his journalism odyssey taking him to Chicago to Europe to the banks of the Chattahoochee River in Columbus. He initially didn't want any help from The Constitution, his father's newspaper, for fear of charges of nepotism. If only second-generation journalists strictly applied that standard!
Harris' clear flaw as a progressive editor was that he wrote for Georgia journalists at least as much as for the readers of Columbus. No wonder they never subscribed as heavily to his Enquirer-Sun as they did the rival Ledger of the nondescript Page family.
A frequent target for what the authors call Harris' "broadsides" was The Atlanta Constitution. It doesn't come across well at all. He described it as the "Atlanta Morning Moddle-Coddle." It made no editorial comment after the Enquirer-Sun exposed how Gov. Clifford Walker told journalists he was headed to Philadelphia for a rest - A rest? In Philadelphia? -- but in fact he went to Kansas City to address the convention of the Ku Klux Klan.
Perhaps Harrises' most strident criticism for the three Atlanta papers -- Constitution, Journal and Georgian -- was that in that era they "were not representative of anything except the cheapest politics, and the most childish rivalry in obtaining or controlling cheap political jobs." Ralph McGill's emergence as a progressive about 1938 turned that around.
Thomas Friedman of the New York Times has cautioned that we must give the Arab world time to democratize. In our own experience, he points out, we gradually enfranchised our citizens over a 200-year period.
It's in that light that journalism history must view the 58 years from Plessy v. Ferguson to Brown v. Board Education, from 1896 to 1954. That's a period squarely in the middle of which Julian LaRose Harris briefly flashed across the firmament as Georgia's liberal editor. Even so he never took an integrationist position. It put him at enough personal risk to advocate what them was progressivism of Georgia editorial pages. It was this: It's wrong to drag people from their beds and hang them from trees until they are dead.
This book reiterates how the immediate heirs of Joel Chandler Harris could have used marketing and business know-how. In the teens, they sold away Wren's Nest to a mismanaging committee of 100, for a pittance. In the twenties, Julian and Julia never figured out that their Enquirer-Sun bookkeeper, Francis Edward LaCoste, was stealing them blind.
Whether they intended to or not , the authors relieve the heartbreak of the Harrises' loss of control of the Enquirer-Sun by relating the story of the "cornpone-and-potlikker debate." What a welcome thing it is for the reader!
Gov. Huey P. Long of Louisiana bragged how he won over road contractors by serving them potlikker, with a platter of cornbread for dunking in it. Julian Harris, now news director of The Atlanta Constitution, led as the paper galvanized support across the South for the view that it was far better to crumble cornpone in your potlikker rather than dunk it.
Clark Howell Sr., The Constitution's partisan owner, had not fared very well in the authors' narrative until now. We see his witty side as he cables dryly from his Hawaii vacation getaway: "The boys at home have overlooked my instructions not to engage in any serious controversy during my absence."
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William C. Harris, a professor of history at North Carolina State University, chronicles Lincoln's many attempts at restoring the nation to avoid war, and eventually to try and shorten the war in his fine work With Charity for All: Lincoln and the Restoration of the Union. (1997) Harris starts out analyzing Lincoln's first inaugural address and points out Lincoln's belief that the Southern states could not secede from the Union. Lincoln believed that the Union was inseparable and thus there was no legitimacy to the Confederate States of America, and their illegal government. Lincoln felt that individuals and not states had rebelled against the United States Government. Thus, Lincoln's task was clear, he had to suppress the rebellion and restore loyal governments in the South. Harris shows how Lincoln never wavered from this theory throughout his work. The states were indestructible and it was his job as president to return them to there "proper practical relationship with the Union." Everything that Lincoln did during his administration focused on this premise according to Harris.
Harris breaks down Lincoln's actions, from appointing military governors, proclamations, and other means that Lincoln employed trying to entice Southerners into rejoining the Union. As stated earlier the first attempt at restoration was during the inaugural address, in which Lincoln made it evident that Southerners had nothing to fear from him as president. Lincoln had no desire to ban slavery in the South, although personally he was opposed to it based on human dignity.
The second thing that Lincoln tried was the appointment of military governors in Virginia, Tennessee, North Carolina, and Louisiana. In this attempt, Lincoln was hoping that the loyal Union men in these states would reestablish governments that were loyal to the Federal government and the Union. For the most part this proved to be somewhat unsuccessful because these states were partially occupied by Confederate forces. Men such as Andrew Johnson of Tennessee, Francis H. Pierpont of Virginia and Edward Stanly of North Carolina served as military governors at one point or another in their respective states. Pierpont is responsible for the addition of the new state of West Virginia, because most men living in this part of Virginia were staunch Union men and did not own slaves nor support the slaveholding elite. Andrew Johnson served as military governor in Tennessee and later became Lincoln's second vice-president in 1864, eventually replacing Lincoln after his assassination.
Harris goes into great detail about the Emancipation Proclamation in which Lincoln declared that all slaves would be forever free on January 1, 1863 if the states that they lived in were still in rebellion on such date. Harris points out that Lincoln would have left slavery intact if the states had agreed to rejoining the Union before this date. The Emancipation Proclamation was another carrot offered in an attempt to end the war.
Harris continues detailing Lincoln's ten-percent plan in which he stated that if ten percent of the voters from the last Federal election took an oath of loyalty to the Union cause that they would be allowed to hold elections and restore state governments. The politics involved in this process are well explained and comprehensive. Not everyone was in total agreement over the restoration of states that had rebelled. Charles Sumner wanted the states punished for their insurrection, by relegating them back to territorial status. This flew in the face of Lincoln's premise that the states could not secede and therefore were never out of the Union. Harris makes this fact clear, and that Lincoln vigorously objected to this train of thought.
Harris also defends Lincoln's pocket veto of the Wade-Davis bill that would further erode Lincoln's policy towards restoration of the Union by taking power out of his hands, and placing it in the hands of the Congress, this too was totally unacceptable to Lincoln.
There is little doubt that Lincoln's plans for the restoration of the Union was a well thought out policy, however with Lincoln's untimely death and no one sure just what he would have done had he lived, Reconstruction turned into one of the most controversial periods in our history. If the Civil War was the defining point of who we were as a people, than Reconstruction in the hands of Johnson and later the Congress was the wedge that nearly split us apart again.
With Charity for All is a tremendous look at Lincoln's efforts to bind the nation back together in the face of trying circumstances to say the least. Harris has created a magnificent book that is current, comprehensive and thought provoking. His straightforward approach to a sometimes-controversial topic is refreshing and greatly appreciated. Many times historians try to waffle around subjects that are controversial in subject, but Harris is clear in his thesis and never veers from his point of view. The materials that he uses fully support his premise that Lincoln pursued his policy based on the fact that he felt that the Southern states had never really left the Union nor could they do so. With Charity for All is a welcome edition to the ongoing scholarship on the life and times of Abraham Lincoln.