Armed with a letter of recommendation and some newly printed business cards, both courtesy of Dr. Douglas, Lou hung out his shingle and soon gained a reputation in Milwaukee as an excellent private-duty nurse. He pursued this calling for more than two decades. During those years he had the opportunity to travel with many of his patients, going to places as far away as Florida and California.30
In 1897, “in compliance with the suggestion of friends,” Lou published a memoir of his life as a slave. He probably could not have afforded to do this on his own, and the book is written in a polished style that is clearly not his. It is likely that one of his wealthy patients, captivated by Lou's bedside stories of his years in bondage and his harrowing escape, paid to have those stories transcribed, edited, and published.31
To the end of his life, Lou remained bitter about slavery. His memoir is a defiant reply to the romantic legend of plantation life in the Old South that had captured the popular mind of America by the late nineteenth century. In it, he graphically recounts the horrors he witnessed and speaks of “the scars which I still bear upon my person, and ⦠the wounds of spirit which will never wholly heal.” Nor had he any patience with the popular image of the Confederate States of America as a noble Lost Cause. Fighting to preserve an inhuman institution, he insisted, was hardly noble. Readers of his memoir are reminded that if the Confederacy had won its war for independence, Lou and his loved ones, along with millions of other men and women, would have spent the rest of their lives in harsh servitude.32
Though he traveled to the South on a number of occasions in his later years, he apparently never revisited any of the places where he had lived as a slave. Nor did he make any effort to learn what became of those who had held him in bondage. He resided in Milwaukee for the remainder of his days, moving in with one of his daughters and her husband after Matilda's death in 1907. By then he was a well-known figure in Milwaukee, thanks to his extensive business contacts and his published memoir. When he died in 1913, at the age of eighty, every newspaper in the city featured an article about him. He was laid to rest in Forest Home Cemetery next to Matilda.33
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
CPM
Â
Mrs. Cornelia McDonald,A Diary with Reminiscences of the War and Refugee Life in the Shenandoah Valley, 1860â1865 (Nashville, 1934)
JCR
Â
John C. Robertson Memoir, McClung Historical Collection, Knox County Public Library, Knoxville, Tennessee
LH
Â
Louis Hughes,Thirty Years a Slave: From Bondage to Freedom (Milwaukee, 1897)
SAA
Â
Samuel A. Agnew Diary, Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
NOTES
PROLOGUE
â
â
4 .â
Ibid., 14â15, 17â18, 19, 63â64.
â
â
6 .â
Ibid., frontispiece photograph, 78â79, 81.
â
â
9 .â
Ibid., 93, 94, 111â12.
10 .â
Ibid., 120â22, 136.
11 .â
Ibid., 127â37, 139â46.
12 .â
Ibid., 160â64; McGehee Family Genealogical File, Mississippi Department of Archives and History, Jackson.
13 .â
CPM, xiii-xiv, 1â7.
15 .â
Ibid., 4, 451â53; Mrs. Flora McDonald Williams,The Glengarry McDonalds of Virginia (Louisville, 1911), 331â32.
17 .â
Ibid., xiii-xiv, 5â6, 340â52; Williams,Glengarry McDonalds, 332; James B. Avirett, et al.,The Memoirs of General Turner Ashby and His Compeers (Baltimore, 1867), 318â31.
18 .â
CPM, xi, 6, 352â53, 413â33; Avirett,Memoirs, 331; Virginia Personal Property Tax Books, Frederick County, 1860, Library of Virginia, Richmond.
19 .â
CPM, xiii, 6, 353â54; Avirett,Memoirs, 332â33; Eighth Census, 1860, Manuscript Returns of Free Inhabitants, Frederick County, Virginia, p. 257/527, National Archives, Washington; Eighth Census, 1860, Manuscript Returns of Slaves, Frederick County, Virginia, District 4, National Archives, Washington.
20 .â
CPM, 16â38, 356; Avirett,Memoirs, 334â48.
21 .â
CPM, 40â176, passim.
23 .â
Ibid., 197; Avirett,Memoirs, 345â46.
24 .â
CPM, 201â37, 277â84; Avirett,Memoirs, 348â58.
28 .â
Population of the United States in 1860  ⦠(Washington, 1864), 466;Agriculture of the United States in 1860  ⦠(Washington, 1864), 132â35, 215, 238; Blanche Henry Clark,The Tennessee Yeomen, 1840â1860 (Nashville, 1942), chap. 1; Fred Arthur Bailey,Class and Tennessee's Confederate Generation (Chapel Hill and London, 1987), chaps. 2, 4.
29 .â
Eighth Census, 1860, Manuscript Returns of Free Inhabitants, Greene County, Tennessee, p. 58/361; Eighth Census, 1860, Manuscript Returns of Productions of Agriculture, Greene County, Tennessee, District 17, National Archives, Washington; J. T. Trowbridge,The South: A Tour of Its Battle-Fields and Ruined Cities  ⦠(Hartford, Conn., 1866), 243; Clark,Tennessee Yeomen, chap. 2; Donald L. Winters,Tennessee Farming, Tennessee Farmers: Antebellum Agriculture in the Upper South (Knoxville, 1994), chaps. 3, 4.
30 .â
JCR, 149, 156, 157, 236, 293; Bailey,Class and Tennessee's Confederate Generation, chap. 3.
31 .â
JCR, 186; Paul H. Bergeron, Stephen V. Ash, and Jeanette Keith,Tennesseans and Their History (Knoxville, 1999), 132â40.
32 .â
Noel C. Fisher,War at Every Door: Partisan Politics and Guerrilla Violence in East Tennessee, 1860â1869 (Chapel Hill and London, 1997), passim; W. Todd Groce,Mountain Rebels: East Tennessee Confederates and the Civil War (Knoxville, 1999), passim; Charles Faulkner Bryan Jr., “The Civil War in East Tennessee: A Social, Political, and Economic Study” (Ph.D. diss., University of Tennessee, 1978), passim.
33 .â
JCR, 1â8; Compiled Civil War Service Records, 39th Tennessee Mounted Infantry, National Archives, Washington.
35 .â
Ibid., 22â62;The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, 70 vols. in 128 (Washington, 1880â1901), Series One, 30(2): 639â40.
37 .â
Ibid., 76â80; “List of Persons Taken [sic ] the Oath,” Records of the Provost Marshal, ser. 2764, District of East Tennessee, Records of U.S. Army Continental Commands, RG 393, Pt. 2, No. 173, National Archives, Washington.
39 .â
Ibid., 99, 110â45.
40 .â
Ibid., 1, 8â11, 148.
41 .â
SAA, passim. The forty-five-volume diary spans the years 1851 to 1902.
42 .â
Ibid., 26 January, 26 February, 30 September, 16 October 1864, 6 January, 12, 18 February, 5 September 1865;The Centennial History of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church, 1803â1903 (Charleston, S.C., 1905), 42â44.
43 .â
Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Mississippi, 2 vols. (Chicago, 1891), 1:287â88;Centennial History of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church, 42â44.
44 .â
Eighth Census, 1860, Manuscript Returns of Free Inhabitants, Tippah County, Mississippi, p. 43/691; Tippah County Tax Rolls (Personal), 1861, Mississippi Department of Archives and History, Jackson.
45 .â
SAA, 1860â1865, passim, especially 24 February 1865.
46 .â
Ibid., 1861â1865, passim, especially 13 December 1861.
47 .â
Ibid., 5, 16, 22 January 1865.
48 .â
Rev. Samuel A. Agnew,Historical Sketch of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church of Bethany, Lee County, Miss. (Louisville, 1881), 12; Andrew Brown,History of Tippah County, Mississippi: The First Century (Ripley, Miss., 1976), chaps. 23â26; SAA, 6â15, 23 January, 26 June 1862, 13 December 1865.
49 .â
Brown,History of Tippah County, 156â57; O. Davis to William L. Sharkey, 28 June 1865, Provisional Governor William L. Sharkey Letters, Mississippi Department of Archives and History, Jackson; SAA, 6 October, 27â29 November 1863, 21 February, 24 July 1864.
50 .â
SAA, 9â13, 16 June 1864; Samuel A. Agnew, “Battle of Tishomingo Creek,”Confederate Veteran 8 (1900): 401â403; Margaret Agnew Simpson, “The Battle of Brice's Crossroads,” typescript reminiscence in possession of David Frazier of Guntown, Mississippi.
51 .â
Brown,History of Tippah County, 150â55.
WINTER: LOUIS HUGHES
â
â
1 .â
T. L. Head Jr., “The Salt Works of Clarke County, Alabama,” 7, 15, unpublished typescript in Salt Commission File, Quartermaster DepartmentâCivil War and Reconstruction, Public Information Subject Files, Alabama Department of Archives and History, Montgomery;Clarke County (Alabama) Journal, 26 January 1865.
â
â
2 .â
Head, “Salt Works of Clarke County,” 1â2, 12, 14â15; Ella Lonn,Salt as a Factor in the Confederacy (New York, 1933), 112â13, 129, 134; LH, 161, 166â67.
â
â
3 .â
LH, 161; Malcolm C. McMillan,The Disintegration of a Confederate State: Three Governors and Alabama's Wartime Home Front, 1861â1865 (Macon, 1986), 95.
â
â
4 .â
LH, 164; McGehee Family Genealogical File; Benjamin Woolsey to Sarah McGehee, 8 February 1864, Alabama State Salt Works Letter Book, William R. Perkins Library, Duke University, Durham.
â
â
5 .â
Head, “Salt Works of Clarke County,” 8, 15â16; N. S. Brooks to E. G. Wagner, 18 December 1863, Benjamin Woolsey to Thomas Watts, 1 March 1864, to Thomas Blewitt, 28 March 1864, Alabama State Salt Works Letter Book; payrolls, February, March 1865, Alabama Salt Commissioner's Quarterly Reports and Abstracts, Alabama Department of Archives and History, Montgomery.
â
â
6 .â
Head, “Salt Works of Clarke County,” 15â16; Benjamin Woolsey to Thomas Watts, 12 April 1864, payroll, 30 October 1864, and “Abstract of Property Expended,” 31 March 1865, Alabama Salt Commissioner's Quarterly Reports; Benjamin Woolsey to Thomas Watts, 1 March 1864, and to Mrs. W. H. Ketchum, 28 March 1864, Alabama Salt Works Letter Book; J. Michael Bunn, “Slavery in the Clarke County Saltworks, 1861â1865,”Clarke County Historical Society Quarterly 24 (1999): 21.
â
â
7 .â
LH, 165â67; Bunn, “Slavery in the Clarke County Saltworks,” 22â23; payroll, February 1865, Alabama Salt Commissioner's Quarterly Reports.
â
â
8 .â
T. H. Ball,A Glance into the Great South-East; or, Clarke County, Alabama, and Its Surroundings (1879; repr., Tuscaloosa, Ala., 1962), 647; N. S. Brooks to Mrs. M. E. Fletcher, 11 November 1863, to Edmund McGehee, 5 December 1863, Benjamin Woolsey to Thomas Blewitt, 5 February 1864, to Thomas Watts, 1 March 1864, Alabama Salt Works Letter Book.
â
â
9 .â
Head, “Salt Works of Clarke County,” 16; Lonn,Salt as a Factor, 61â64; N. S. Brooks to E. G. Wagner, 18 December 1863, Benjamin Woolsey to Thomas Blewitt, 28 March 1864, to Mrs. W. H. Ketchum, 28 March 1864, to Thomas Watts, 1, 12 April 1864, Alabama Salt Works Letter Book; Bunn, “Slavery in the Clarke County Saltworks,” 21.
10 .â
Payroll, February 1865, Alabama Salt Commissioner's Quarterly Reports; Benjamin Woolsey to W. H. Ketchum, 26 March 1864, to Mrs. W. H. Ketchum, 28 March 1864, Alabama Salt Works Letter Book; Bunn, “Slavery in the Clarke County Saltworks,” 23; John Hope Franklin and Loren Schweninger,Runaway Slaves: Rebels on the Plantation (Oxford and New York, 1999), 36â37, 98â99.
11 .â
“Abstract of Monies Paid Out,” 31 December 1864, Alabama Salt Commissioner's Quarterly Reports; Franklin and Schweninger,Runaway Slaves, 125.