Edward King (1848–1896) was an American author and journalist born in Middlefield, Massachusetts. His 1875 travel memoir The Great South is an important historical document about U.S. society in the aftermath of the U.S. Civil War, and it formed part of the backlash against Black civil rights during Reconstruction. Each section of The Great South was originally published in an issue of Scribner's Magazine.[1]

For a time he was a correspondent in Paris on behalf of American periodicals.[2] During the Russo-Turkish War he was a correspondent in the Balkans with the Russian army.[2]

King's journal The Great South; A Record of Journeys, published in 1875, is an important source about attitudes in the post-Civil War United States. Its narrative writing style is engaging and was persuasive to many readers of his era. King's deeply racist characterizations of Southern society were influential in creating a view of Reconstruction as an economic failure and a political travesty. In a typical chapter on The Spoilation of South Carolina King writes that African Americans are "insolent and aggressive," whereas "The white people of the State are powerless to resist; they are trampled completely down." (Chapter LI) King's negative characterizations of Black Americans and of Reconstruction helped create stereotypes that proved long-lasting.

Publications

Europe in Storm and Calm (1885)

References

Notes

  1. ^ Darden, p. 113
  2. ^ a b A Supplement to Allibone's Critical Dictionary of English Literature and British and American Authors, By John Foster Kirk, Allibone, Samuel Austin. Published by J.B. Lippincott, 1891. p. 948