American Vendetta: A Story of Barbarism in the United States

American Vendetta: A Story of Barbarism in the United States

by Theron Clark Crawford

21 chapters3h 41mEnglish1889

About this book

The phrase "The Hatfields and McCoys" conjures up images of feudal warfare and Appalachian backwardness even to this day. This is a sensationalized account of the feud between the Hatfields and McCoys along the mountainous border of Kentucky and West Virginia in the late 1800s. At the height of the feud in 1888, yellow journalist T. C. Crawford interviewed Anderson "Devil Anse" Hatfield in person at his headquarters in West Virginia. Crawford's stories were serialized in a New York newspaper and later published in book form.The accounts of the Hatfields and McCoys led to the still-common, unfair stereotype of the ignorant, backward, trigger-happy mountaineer. While the violence in the Wild West was romanticized, the violence in the Appalachians was vilified and exaggerated. The resulting sentiment was that the mountain folk needed civilizing, which the railroad and coal mining capitalists were eager to provide . . . in exchange for their land, autonomy, and generally happy way of life. (Summary by TriciaG)NOTE: There are two chapters named "Chapter III" and no Chapter V in this book. The two chapter 3s have been labeled as Chapter IIIa and IIIb.

Chapters (20)

1Chapter I
195
2Chapter II
502
3Chapter IIIa, Part 1
588
4Chapter IIIa, Part 2
467
5Chapter IIIa, Part 3
527
6Chapter IIIb
527
7Chapter IV, Part 1
469
8Chapter IV, Part 2
652
9Chapter VI, Part 1
799
10Chapter VI, Part 2
572
11Chapter VII
392
12Chapter VIII
784
13Chapter IX
746
14Chapter X
874
15Chapter XI, Part 1
960
16Chapter XI, Part 2
885
17Chapter XI, Part 3
889
18Chapter XI, Part 4
624
19Chapter XI, Part 5
1257
20Appendix
430

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