Jefferson Davis, American by William J. Cooper Jr., Knopf, November 1st, 2001
Though I’ve long had an interest in the American Civil War, I’ve never written a dedicated post about it on the blog. On my one and only trip to the United States almost twenty years ago, I remember going out of my way to seeing some famous sites. I was on a university student exchange at the time and the college I studied at was located in the Shenandoah Valley in the state of Virginia where Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson’s brilliant military exploits took place. At that time, I was also able to have a visit to Richmond, Virginia where I could see the monuments to Confederate war heroes and after some further searching, to see the Confederate ‘White House’. These statues were all taken down and destroyed five years ago in one of the most disgraceful acts of cultural iconoclasm in the nation’s history; following orchestrated rioting across the country after the death of violent criminal, George Floyd. This death, although entirely by Floyd’s own actions, was used to justify a range of attacks on the American people which as I write has merely abated. It was fortunate then that I was able to see these statues and something of what was still a proud South before yet another attack on these people was perpetuated from the malignant powers above.
Although, I’m generally well-read on the Civil War (at least for an Australian), I had not read much about Jefferson Davis, the first and only president of the Confederate States of America. I knew him mostly by name but the history books do tend to focus a lot more on the battles. A few years ago, I sought out a biography and found this lengthy and comprehensive one by William J. Cooper Jr. which I finally got around to read this year. I thoroughly enjoyed it but naturally, I have further thoughts to share.






The Insider by Christopher Pyne, Hachette Australia, March 31st, 2021
