Surveillance and spies in the Civil War : exposing Confederate conspiracies in America's heartland /
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Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Athens :
Ohio University Press,
[2015]
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Series: | Ohio University Press series on law, society, and politics in the Midwest.
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view |
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Table of Contents:
- Introduction: the secret history of the Civil War in the north
- "Secret secessionism in our midst": the failure of civilian investigations in the old northwest, 1861-62
- Investigating desertion and disloyalty: Henry B. Carrington and the Knights of the Golden Circle in Indiana, 1862-63
- "They are doing us an immense amount of good": the rise of army intelligence operations in the old northwest in 1863
- An odious system of espionage: the intelligence network created by the Enrollment Act, 1863
- Watching "Mr. Jones": army surveillance of Clement L. Vallandigham, the Ohio gubernatorial election of 1863, and plots to release Confederate POWs in the fall of 1863
- "It is impossible to doubt this": army intelligence in the Northern Department in early 1864
- "What I say about secret dangers is well considered and based on fact": how Rosecrans's detectives infiltrated the secret organizations in early 1864
- "When government determines to act": how Carrington's detectives infiltrated the secret organizations in 1864
- "I feel provoked beyond measure at the indifference of the president": convincing Lincoln of the danger of insurrection, summer 1864
- A "narrow escape from a Civil War": the triumph of military intelligence in august 1864
- "I make no assertions without proof": preserving the northwest in the fall of 1864
- Postscript: the evidence of conspiracy.