Politics of Alabama

audiobook

Politics of Alabama

by Joseph C. (Joseph Columbus) Manning

EN·~1 hours·11 chapters

Chapters

11 total
1

E-text prepared by the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Internet Archive/American Libraries (http://www.archive.org/details/americana)

0:22
2

DEDICATION.

0:19
3

POLITICS OF ALABAMA.

0:01
4

CHAPTER I. - THE FAMOUS KOLB-JONES GUBERNATORIAL CONTEST.

28:27
5

CHAPTER II. - THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY ONE OF PREJUDICE.

3:07
6

CHAPTER III. - DIFFERENT KINDS OF “PARTY LASH” CRACKERS.

4:14
7

CHAPTER IV. - THE TROUBLE OF THE SIXTIES.

3:11
8

CHAPTER V. - WANT PRODUCES THINKERS.

3:24
9

CHAPTER VI. - “BOURBON” CAMPAIGN INTOLERANCE.

9:43
10

CHAPTER VII. - ELECTION METHODS OF THE DEMOCRATS.

14:41

Description

This work opens with a vivid portrait of Alabama’s 1892 gubernatorial race, a contest that shocked the South with its fierce competition between the entrenched Democratic establishment and the insurgent Kolb faction. The author recounts how the campaign ignited unprecedented public fervor, turning the state’s politics into a national spectacle and exposing deep divisions within the party.

Central to the narrative is Captain R. F. Kolb’s impassioned open letter, in which he denounces alleged ballot‑stuffing, corrupt returning officers, and a secretive party machine that, he claims, stole the election from the people. Through detailed recounting of conventions, factional battles, and the ensuing cries for a fair count, the book offers a window into the era’s struggle for honest government and the grassroots demand for a “free ballot and a fair count.” Listeners will gain a compelling glimpse of late‑19th‑century Southern politics and the enduring fight for electoral integrity.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (72K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2010-10-21

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Joseph C. (Joseph Columbus) Manning

Joseph C. (Joseph Columbus) Manning

b. 1870

A fiery Alabama journalist and political activist, he challenged the power structure of the 1890s South and later spoke out for Black civil rights. His writing captures the rough-and-tumble world of reform politics with firsthand energy.

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