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Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide by Tony Horwitz
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“There was another, much clearer survival of freethinking ways. Sisterdale had never had a church, and Joe said his family had rarely spoken of religion except to dismiss it. "Dad would tell us, 'Dat's for Catholics', or 'Dat's for Lutherans, not us,' and said that if he wanted to talk to God he could do it in the fields.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“These westbound pioneers slogged through the morass on foot, or in wagons drawn by mules and oxen. Impossible for them to conceive that their mud march would one day become sport for modern Americans,”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“UPON LEAVING MEXICO, THE OLMSTEDS RODE STRAIGHT TO SAN Antonio and "prepared for more rapid travel," shedding "useless weight" for their journey out of Texas. Having spent more than four months traversing the state, they exited it in three weeks, via Houston and Beaumont.

By the time they neared Louisiana, "the hot, soggy breath of the approaching summer was extremely depressing." This was particularly so for John, who'd set off for Texas with "the hope of invigorating weakened lungs."

Instead, the "abominable diet, and the fatigue" had "served to null the fresh benefits of pure air and stimulating travel." While slogging through a swampy plan near Beaumont, John fell from the saddle "in faint exhaustion," lying facedown on the ground for half an hour, "hardly breathing, and unable to speak.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“Riotte fought to keep the Zeitung and free-state effort alive, but like Douai he was worn down by foes who "vomit fire and poison against me." Rather than "act the part of Sisiphus," he planned to found a new German colony in northern Mexico to "build up a more solid wall against slavery" than was possible in the US,

In his letters to Olmsted, Riotte also delineated, with keen transatlantic insight, a divide that he felt had doomed their efforts from the start. "We are judged from the standpoint of an American-indeed a very strange people!" he wrote.

Riotte and his ilk viewed society "as a congregation of men, whose aim it is to elevate the wellbeing of the aggregate by the combined exertion." Americans, by contrast, "look first upon themselves as private individuals, entitled to ask for all the rights and benefits of an organized community even to the detriment of the whole.... We idealize the community-you the individual! How is it possible, that we ever should amalgamate?"

Riotte closed by praising Olmsted's writing on the South but expressed doubt that it would diminish the Slave Power. "I don't know of any historical record of an Aristocracy giving up their privileges, except in the case of revolutionary pressure.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“Western Texas was just such a project: a grandiose scheme, germinated in secret, and unlikely to bear fruit for years. As laid out in private correspondence with Adolf Douai and other co-conspirators in Texas, the plan called for the "immigration of one or two thousand staunch and steadfast northern men, supporters of Freedom." These infiltrators should come quietly and in small groups at first, forming a "nucleus" in alliance with free- state Germans. Thereafter, migrants from the North and Europe would "pour in," aided by new railroad lines.

Olmsted kept refining and expanding on this plan, long after his return from Texas. It became, in effect, a dry run for his career as a landscape architect, including blueprints for a string of planned communities across the frontier of the Cotton Kingdom.

"I have a private grand political hobby which I must display to you," he disclosed to a Northern ally, in a letter filled with geometric shapes, lines, and arrows. The sketch was nothing less than a sweeping design for winning what Olmsted called the "war between the power of Slavery and of Freedom on this continent.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“In his letters to Olmsted, Riotte also delineated, with keen transatlantic insight, a divide that he felt had doomed their efforts from the start. "We are judged from the standpoint of an American-indeed a very strange people!" he wrote.

Riotte and his ilk viewed society "as a congregation of men; whose aim it is to elevate the wellbeing of the aggregate by the combined exertion." Americans, by contrast, "look first upon themselves as private individuals, entitled to ask for all the rights and benefits of an organized community even to the detriment of the whole.... We idealize the community-you the individual! How is it possible, that we ever should amalgamate?"

Riotte closed by praising Olmsted's writing on the South but expressed doubt that it would diminish the Slave Power. "I don't know of any histori- cal record of an Aristocracy giving up their privileges, except in the case of revolutionary pressure.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“I wandered over to the adobe birthplace of Ignacio Seguin Zaragoza, whose father was posted at the garrison in the early 1800s. Zaragoza went on to become a national hero in Mexico, leading a reformist revolt against Santa Anna and defeat- ing an invading French force on May 5, 1862, the date celebrated as Cinco de Mayo.
While exploring the birthplace, I met Alberto Perez, a history and so- cial studies teacher in the Dallas area who was visiting with his family. When I confessed my ignorance of Zaragoza, he smiled and said, "You're not alone. A lot of Texans don't know him, either, or even that Mexico had its own fight for independence."

The son of Mexican immigrants, Perez had taught at a predominantly Hispanic school in Dallas named for Zaragoza. Even there, he'd found it hard to bring nuance to students' understanding of Mexico and Texas in the nineteenth century.

"The word 'revolution' slants it from the start," he said. "It makes kids think of the American Revolution and throwing off oppression."

Perez tried to balance this with a broader, Mexican perspective. Anglos had been invited to settle Texas and were granted rights, citizenship, and considerable latitude in their adherence to distant authority. Mexico's aboli- tion of slavery, for instance, had little force on its northeastern frontier, where Southerners needed only to produce a "contract" that technically la- beled their human chattel as indentured servants.

"Then the Anglos basically decided, 'We don't like your rules,"" Perez said. "This is our country now.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“The only person of color in any of the photographs was a black waiter. Blacks were otherwise barred from the dance hall, as were locals of Mexican descent. In the Texas of that day, laws and customs known as Juan Crow subjected Hispanics to discrimination and segregation similar to that inflicted on African Americans.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“the inscription at its base put San Jacinto on a par with Waterloo and other exalted fights. The defeat of Santa Anna, the "self-styled 'Napoleon of the West,"" led to the annexation of Texas, war with Mexico, and the "acquisition" of "one third of the present area of the American nation." As such, "San Jacinto was one of the decisive battles of the world.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“Bowlin was previously divorced and had learned a thing or two. "Set of titties or a college education-buy either of those for your old lady and she's done," he said, "She doesn't need you anymore.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“I respect those most who do what I want to do least.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“No way can be found in this boasted land of civilization and Christianity to punish the perpetrators of this bloody and monstrous Crime,” Grant lamented of Colfax. “The spirit of hatred and violence is stronger than law.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“they could not see how the North could be so foolish as to determinedly prevent the extension of Slavery.” Doing so would harm industry and commerce—which was all they thought truly mattered in the North. “This was the end of their track.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“Kristel had grown up in Piedras Negras but crossed the bridge to attend school in Eagle Pass and later found work in Texas. Her family also owned property in a rural town thirty miles from Piedras”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“Apache, Comanche,”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“He sensed this was part of a larger trend, to chase the remaining quirk out of Sisterdale and turn the sleepy community into a boutiquey getaway for wealthy weekenders.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“Bret Cali didn’t fit my image of a rural Texas storekeeper. A handsome man in his forties, blue-eyed with unruly black hair, he tuned the store’s sound system to jazz and popped two bottles of Shiner Bock. The store’s walls had Pulp Fiction and Blues Brothers posters; plastic pink flamingoes perched in the yard.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“Also inhabiting the river valley were what Olmsted called “political hermits,” single men who lived in “huts or caves” along the Guadalupe, “earning a tough livelihood chiefly by splitting shingles.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“Most Germans in antebellum Texas also lacked the large landholdings or capital needed to make slave labor practicable.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“I’d encountered Winders by the front door of the church and at first had mistaken him for a visiting Alamaniac. Bearded, and clad in a cravat, top hat, and frock coat, he stood before a clot of visitors, reading from William Travis’s letters from the Alamo proclaiming, “God and Texas! Victory or Death!!”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“industries and policies abetting this explosive growth—oil, defense, deregulation, hostility to unions and taxes—but”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“The interior was likewise plain, with an unpainted wood floor and bar, plank ceiling, and patrons drinking two-dollar beers from cans and bottles.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“territory to save his own skin after being captured at San Jacinto. “But many Mexicans still see what happened in the 1830s and ’40s as outright robbery of their land.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“The Nationalists, in turn, struck me as Super-Texans, taking the spirit of the state’s revolution to its libertarian extreme. No authority—save God—should tell them what they could or couldn’t do, anywhere, at any time.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“This turned out to be a promotional display for an upcoming rattlesnake roundup.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“This obligatory supersizing seemed incongruous, given that the state legislature only convened every other year, for 140 days—a testament to Texas’s long history of hostility to centralized authority.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“first Whole Foods Market,”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide
“had become the nation’s eleventh largest city and the center of a metro area of over two million.”
Tony Horwitz, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide

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