The Bishop of the Old South: The Ministry and Civil War Legacy of Leonidas PolkLeonidas Polk was one of the antebellum South's most significant religious leaders. The son of a wealthy, slaveholding veteran of the Revolutionary War, Polk graduated from West Point in 1827 and seemed destined for martial service. Instead he pursued a ministerial career and was the first Episcopal bishop of Louisiana. Polk attempted to cultivate a religious solidarity among white Southerners of all classes and to broaden the social and cultural appeal of Episcopalianism in the South. Ultimately, Polk's Lost Cause mythmakers developed a public memory of the bishop general that celebrated the virtue of the Christian gentleman who had waged war for Southern independence. A considerable amount of new information on Polk's family, time at West Point, ministry, life as a planter, role with Sewanee, and his place within the pantheon of Lost Cause icons has been brought to light. What emerges is a clearer portrait of the Bishop of the Old South. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 46
Page x
... positions and the high church alternative to evangelical Protestantism , see R. Bruce Mullin , Episcopal Vision / American Reality : High Church Theology and Social Thought in Evangelical America ( New Haven : Yale University Press ...
... positions and the high church alternative to evangelical Protestantism , see R. Bruce Mullin , Episcopal Vision / American Reality : High Church Theology and Social Thought in Evangelical America ( New Haven : Yale University Press ...
Page xi
... positions . President Jefferson Davis , Secretary of the Treasury Christopher Memminger , and Secretary of the Navy Stephen Mallory were Episcopalian . Within the military , seven of the Confederacy's eight full generals were ...
... positions . President Jefferson Davis , Secretary of the Treasury Christopher Memminger , and Secretary of the Navy Stephen Mallory were Episcopalian . Within the military , seven of the Confederacy's eight full generals were ...
Page 6
... position on several local programs . In Raleigh , he delivered a memorable address to commemorate the French dignitary's visit to the capital city : " It is impossible to review the history of these times , and not dwell with delight on ...
... position on several local programs . In Raleigh , he delivered a memorable address to commemorate the French dignitary's visit to the capital city : " It is impossible to review the history of these times , and not dwell with delight on ...
Page 8
... position as president of the state bank . Such charges certainly embarrassed the Revolutionary War hero , but he refused to reverse his position . However , when the British forces sacked and burned the nation's capital in the summer of ...
... position as president of the state bank . Such charges certainly embarrassed the Revolutionary War hero , but he refused to reverse his position . However , when the British forces sacked and burned the nation's capital in the summer of ...
Page 13
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Contents
1 | |
Evangelical Origins | 35 |
The Planter as Priest | 74 |
The Emergence of a Southern Nationalist | 115 |
The Bishop as General | 151 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
antebellum Army of Tennessee Baton Rouge battle Belmont bishop of Louisiana Bishop Polk Braxton Bragg Breckinridge cadets campaign Chapel Hill chaplain Charles Colcock Jones Cheatham Christ Christian Church Intelligencer Civil Clapp clerical command Confederacy Convention culture death denomination Devereux Diocese of Louisiana elite Episcopalians Federal Georgia gospel historian honor Jackson James James Hervey Otey Jefferson Davis John Johnston Joseph Merrick Kentuckians Kentucky Leighton Leonidas Polk Papers Lost Cause Louisiana History Louisiana State University McIlvaine Memphis Merrick Jones Hall ministry Missions Mississippi Moreover neutrality North Carolina Old South Orleans Otey Pioneer and Agriculturalist plantation planters political Polk to William Polk's prayer Presbyterian President Protestant Episcopal Church Quintard religion Ruffin Sarah Polk secession Seminary sermon slaveholders slavery social society soldiers Solon Robinson Southern Episcopalians Southern Evangelicals Southern nationalism spirit Stephen Elliott sugar Thayer theological Tulane University United University of North University Press USMA Virginia vols West Point William Polk York
Popular passages
Page 5 - Polk and Middleton, who commanded the state infantry, were no less conspicuous for their good conduct than their intrepidity; and the troops under their command gave a specimen of what may be expected from men, naturally brave, when improved by proper discipline.