Desertion As Localism: Army Unit Solidarity and Group Norms in the U.S. Civil War

Drawing from the experiences of 3,126 enlisted men from North Carolina who fought for the Confederacy in the U.S. Civil War, this article focuses on the determinants of desertion. I argue that men deserted because their identity as Southerners was eroded by an emergent localism, sustained and organized within the Confederate army. Desertion rates were highest in companies that evidenced a high degree of local homogeneity - company solidarity thus bred rather than reduced desertion rates. There is no supportfor any of the historical models of desertion that search for individual-level determinants, such as social class, occupation, status, family structure, age, or time of enlistment. Finally, contextual variables seem to be weak proxiesfor the central variable accounting for desertion - the emergence of a localist identity.

[1]  P. Escott After Secession: Jefferson Davis and the Failure of Confederate Nationalism , 1978 .

[2]  John G. Barrett,et al.  The Civil War in North Carolina , 1963 .

[3]  J. Hodges The Gray and the Black: The Confederate Debate on Emancipation , 1973 .

[4]  O. Patterson,et al.  Slavery and Social Death: A Comparative Study. , 1984 .

[5]  Jacob Torfing,et al.  State, Economy and Society , 1990 .

[6]  O. V. Burton,et al.  Farm Tenancy and the Census in Antebellum Georgia , 1989 .

[7]  S. Stouffer,et al.  The American soldier : combat and its aftermath , 1949 .

[8]  Douglas D. Heckathorn,et al.  Collective Sanctions and the Creation of Prisoner's Dilemma Norms , 1988, American Journal of Sociology.

[9]  Martin Crawford Political Society in a Southern Mountain Community: Ashe County, North Carolina, 1850-186 1 , 1989 .

[10]  T. Jeffrey,et al.  Parties and Politics in North Carolina, 1836-1865 , 1983 .

[11]  M. Allen,et al.  Men and Wealth in the United States, 1850-1870. , 1976 .

[12]  R. Stark,et al.  RELIGIOUS ECONOMIES AND SACRED CANOPIES: RELIGIOUS MOBILIZATION IN AMERICAN CITIES, 1906* , 1988 .

[13]  P. Escott,et al.  The Social Order and Violent Disorder: An Analysis of North Carolina in the Revolution and the Civil War , 1986 .

[14]  Donghyu Yang Notes on the wealth distribution of farm households in the united states, 1860: A new look at two manuscript: Census samples , 1984 .

[15]  E. Durkheim Suicide: A Study in Sociology , 1897 .

[16]  Ella Lonn Desertion During the Civil War , 1928 .

[17]  H. Watson Conflict and collaboration: Yeomen, slaveholders, and politics in the antebellum South∗ , 1985 .

[18]  William S. McFeely,et al.  Why the South Lost the Civil War , 1986 .

[19]  J. Mcpherson Ordeal by Fire: The Civil War and Reconstruction , 1982 .

[20]  Georgia Lee Tatum Disloyalty in the Confederacy , 1934 .

[21]  Edward Shils,et al.  Cohesion and Disintegration in the Wehrmacht in World War II , 1948 .