Tuesday, April 10, 2018

The First Penny




They called him Colonel Galloway. That’s odd, because during the War Between the States he was General Nathan Bedford Forrest’s Aide-de-camp, and I’m not certain his position carried a rank in the Confederate Army.  I can’t prove it, but I suspect he held the rank of Colonel in one of Memphis’s home guard militias (Memphis Minute Men perhaps) that was formed between 1857, when he arrived in Memphis, and late June of 1862 when he left Memphis to fight the Union invaders on other fronts.

Before and after the war, Galloway was the editor and part owner of the Avalanche, a staunch Democrat newspaper that never backed down from defending the cause of the South long after the war was over.

By mid June of 1862, Federal authorities in Memphis had suspended the Avalanche and Galloway was in Grenada, MS. His wife, Fannie Barker Galloway stayed behind in their house on the northeast corner of Court and Third.

Like another notable Confederate Memphis wife, Mrs. Elizabeth Avery Meriwether, Mrs. Galloway was expelled from Memphis by the Union occupiers. Mrs. Meriwether would be exiled by General Sherman in response to guerrilla activity in and around West Tennessee. Mrs. Galloway, who was suspected of passing information to the Confederates, was forced to leave days before Grant issued his infamous Special Order No. 14 (later revised and reissued as Special Order No. 15). 



Galloway revived the Avalanche by New Year’s Day of 1866 in a Memphis that remained under Federal occupation and was overrun not only by black soldiers, carpetbaggers, and abolitionist teachers, but by thousands of formerly enslaved people who mostly occupied South Memphis, Presidents Island, and Fort Pickering (the area south of the Overton Tract and the Mississippi and Tennessee Rail Road depot.

If that wasn’t bad enough, the city itself was in the hands of Irish Fenians who apparently ran roughshod over a drunken mayor, and most of the old citizens had been disfranchised as a consequence of their loyalties.

Five months later, the day the last black soldiers in Memphis were mustered out of the Union Army (and thus disarmed), the Irish cops instigated a three day massacre that targeted blacks who were beginning to enjoy a measure of economic success and making remarkable advances in their children’s education.

The role Galloway and the Avalanche played in the atrocities can’t be ignored. It was the Avalanche that laid the blame for the atrocities squarely on the heads of the blacks themselves. When we consider that the investigations revealed that aforementioned abolitionist teachers were on the mobs' (plural) hit lists, it’s more than a little odd that the the Avalanche's call for restraint marked the end of the violence.


In the course of the (politically motivated) investigations that followed, it was made clear by the “old citizens” that they deplored the actions of the low born Irish, but that they were rendered helpless by order of General Stoneman. What is missing from their denouncements is any effort or expression of desire to hold the guilty parties accountable after the fact. Worse was the lack of aid to help South Memphis recover from the losses.

The massacre of 1866 was followed by the appearance of the KKK in Memphis in 1867.

In Chapter XXIV of her memoir, Recollections, Elizabeth Avery Meriwether herself rationalizes the atrocities committed by the KKK (her husband, Minor, was one of “Supreme Grand Wizard” Forrest’s counselors and lieutenants), and reveals how Galloway played a role in obscuring the mere existence of the outlaw organization.

Fast forward ten years.

General Nathan Bedford Forrest died on the twenty-ninth of October, 1877 and the funerary rites that followed were the topic of National news. The local papers that reported on the proceedings read like a who’s who of Memphis and the Mid South, unless you count the absence of the Independent Order of Pole Bearers or any other notable black people.

The year after that, 1878, yellow fever made its annual appearance in Memphis, and it wouldn’t leave until October because it was accompanied by the warm mosquito friendly winds of El NiƱo. The old citizens (with notable exceptions, the Mayor for example) fled the city, and for the first time in our History, Memphis had a black majority. Who is going to say they didn’t protect and indeed rescue Memphis that year?

Of course, the white families who returned to Memphis properly thanked them, and then proceeded to send them back to South Memphis.

I would say that things went back to business as usual, but 1878 was two years after Hayes-Tilden, one year after the death of Gen N B Forrest, and less than a year before Memphis surrendered her charter.

Eighteen seventy nine was a significant year for our purposes because that was the year that M C Galloway donated the very first penny for the Forrest monument.


Let’s be careful about how we throw the “white supremacist” label around, but it is clear that M C Galloway did believe that white supremacy was a natural, if not God ordained, fact of life (I suspect a number of black people believed it as well).

It would be twenty six years before the monument was installed, and Memphis's attitude of white supremacy hardly changed for the better, what with lynch law, the pattern of bartering for and coercing black votes, and the ascendancy of a very young E H Crump that marked the turning of the century.

More specific to the funding of the statue, I have to wonder why Bob Church’s support is never mentioned.

You can object to my assertions on the grounds that we are in no way accountable for the sins of the father, but how can we deny that the noble symbolism of this particular monument is forever tainted by an image that was considered appropriate matter for a city newspaper?


One last question: How can Memphis be expected to embrace her Confederate Heritage, if we can’t bring ourselves to own our History?

Peace Y’all

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