Authors:
Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)
Historic Theme:
Subject:
October 2020 | Volume 65, Issue 6
Authors:
Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)
Historic Theme:
Subject:
October 2020 | Volume 65, Issue 6
Editor's Note: Last year I spoke at some length with Tony Horwitz about adapting an essay from his latest book, Spying on the South, for American Heritage. Tragically, shortly afterward, He passed away unexpectedly before we could work together.
We've gone ahead with the project anyway, in tribute to Tony, a favorite author of ours who wrote such national bestsellers as Confederates in the Attic, Baghdad Without a Map, Blue Latitudes, A Voyage Long and Strange, and Midnight Rising.
A native of Washington, D.C., Tony graduated from Brown University and the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism, then covered wars and conflicts around for the world for The Wall Street Journal. He returned to the U.S., won a Pulitzer Prize for national reporting, and wrote for The New Yorker, before becoming a full-time author.
To write Spying on the South, Tony set out in the footsteps of Frederick Law Olmsted who, as a young, restless writer in the 1850s, journeyed across the Southern states as an undercover correspondent for the New York Times.
Olmsted traveled 14 months by horseback, steamboat, and stagecoach, seeking dialogue and common ground. His vivid dispatches about the lives and beliefs of Southerners — white and black, free and enslaved, rich and poor — were a revelation for readers of his day and have endured as classic texts for the study of America on the brink of cataclysmic break-up. Olmsted, of course, later designed of New York's Central Park and so many other public spaces.
Amid the discord and polarization of our own time, Tony asks, Is America still one country? In search of answers, and his own adventures, Horwitz followed Olmsted’s tracks and, often, his mode of transport: through Appalachia, down the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers, into bayou Louisiana, and across Texas to the contested Mexican borderland.
Here are some of Tony's observations about West Virginia. It's absolutely heartbreaking to think this will be the last book from such a beloved author.
--Edwin S. Grosvenor
“Scene, the South; bound West. It could be nowhere else.”
With this theatrical flourish, Olmsted raised the curtain on his journey to Texas, while aboard a train in Maryland. He also recorded the “dramatis personae” of his rail trip, including a “Virginia gentleman” who expertly spat tobacco through a hinged window, a “black mamma” nursing a white child, and “buxom, saucy, slipshod girls” at rail-side inns, “bursting with fat and fun from their dresses.”
I looked up from my dog-eared travelogue at the coach car on Amtrak’s Capitol Limited. Men in suits staring into laptops. A