By Joel McMahon
United States Supreme Court Justice James Moore Wayne is the
most famous Georgian nobody knows. When his home state seceded from the Union
in 1861, Wayne retained his seat on the US Supreme Court and remained loyal to
the Union as the nation lunged headlong into war. He knew the insanity of
secession, and warned of the folly of disunion, but his son, Col. Henry Wayne,
resigned his commission in the US Army and cast his lot with the Confederacy.
This book tells their story and examines the nature of Georgia's strong and
largely overlooked unionist sentiment in the decades before the Civil War.
Wayne's father was loyal to the British crown during the
American Revolution, and was branded a traitor. His son remained loyal to the
Confederacy during the Civil War, and was branded a rebel. Yet, Wayne stood
foursquare for the Union and remained loyal to the nation he served, and in his
mind, remained faithful to the state he loved.
Wayne and his staunch stand for union before and during the
Civil War mark him as an outlier in the story perpetuated by the Myth of the
Lost Cause, but Wayne's story opens a long closed window into the economic,
political, and social dimensions of unionism in the state of Georgia.
Written with the precision of an engineer, analyzed with the
acumen of a financier, and researched with the critical eye of the historian, Our Good And Faithful Servant adds to a
growing number of works exploring the struggle between supporters of union and
disunion during the Antebellum Era.
About the Author
Joel McMahon is a
professor of History and Philosophy. He holds a degree in engineering from
Georgia Tech and a PhD in History from Georgia State University. Prior to an
award-winning career in academia, McMahon worked for some of the largest
financial institutions in New York City and Atlanta. His research and writing
focuses on stories of struggle and redemption. McMahon is a patent-holding
inventor and a Chartered Market Technician. He lives in Atlanta.
ISBN 978-0881466065, Mercer University Press, © 2017,
Hardcover, 320 pages, Photographs, Footnotes, Bibliography & Index.
$35.00. To purchase a copy of this book click HERE.