Revolution from Above
As a Confederate general observed, Southerners were engaged in a total war “in which the whole population and the whole production . . . are to be put on a war footing, where every institution is to be made auxiliary to war.” Jefferson Davis faced the task of building an army and a navy from almost nothing, supplying them from factories that were scarce and anemic, and paying for it all from a treasury that did not exist. Finding eager soldiers proved easiest. Hundreds of officers defected from the U.S. Army, and hundreds of thousands of eager young rebels volunteered to follow them.
The Confederacy’s economy and finances proved tougher problems. Because of the Union blockade, the government had no choice but to build an industrial sector itself. Government-owned clothing and shoe factories, mines, arsenals, and powder works sprang up. The government also harnessed private companies, such as the huge Tredegar Iron Works in Richmond, to the war effort. Paying for the war became the most difficult task. A flood of paper money caused debilitating inflation. By Christmas 1864, a Confederate soldier’s monthly pay no longer bought a pair of socks. The Confederacy manufactured much more than most people imagined possible, but it never produced all that the South needed.
Richmond’s war-making effort brought unprecedented government intrusion into the private lives of Confederate citizens. In April 1862, the Confederate Congress passed the first conscription (draft) law in American history. All able-bodied white males between the ages of eighteen and thirty-five (later seventeen and fifty) were liable to serve in the rebel army. The government adopted a policy of impressment, which allowed officials to confiscate food, horses, wagons, and whatever else they wanted from private citizens and to pay for them at below-market rates. After March 1863, the Confederacy legally impressed slaves, employing them as military laborers.
Richmond’s centralizing efforts ran head-on into the South’s traditional values of states’ rights and unfettered individualism. Southerners lashed out at what Georgia governor Joseph E. Brown denounced as the “dangerous usurpation by Congress of the reserved right of the States.” Richmond and the states struggled for control of money, supplies, and soldiers, with damaging consequences for the war effort.