Kentucky's Last Cavalier: General William Preston, 1816-1887

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University Press of Kentucky, May 7, 2004 - Biography & Autobiography - 309 pages

Distributed exclusively for the Kentucky Historical Society William Preston was a leading representative of Kentucky's slaveholding, landed gentry, the group who dominated economic, political, and social life in the commonwealth before the Civil War. Preston was heir to valuable lands adjacent to Louisville and married to the daughter of the state's largest slave owner, and his Ivy League education and leadership abilities made him a natural spokesman for the interests of the South's antebellum elite. As a legislator, diplomat, and soldier, Preston defended the interests of his region for three decades, and his successes and failures were linked to the fortunes of the South. Among his many accomplishments, Preston served as President James Buchanan's minister to Madrid and, during the Civil War, as Jefferson Davis's minister to the Emperor Maximilian in Mexico. His story reveals much about the early history of Kentucky and the region.

 

Contents

Boyhood
xix
Youth
22
Husband and Soldier
41
Legislator
66
At the Court of Spain
96
Fighting for Southern Independence
127
Minister to Mexico
142
After the War
167
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Page x - ... idleness. A sense of this weighed heavily on him at times ; but it is not likely that he realized how pitifully he was undergoing a moral shrinkage in consequence of mere disuse. Actually, extinction had set in with him long prior to dissolution, and he was dead years before his heart ceased beating. The very basic virtues on which had rested his once spacious and stately character were now but the mouldy corner-stones of a crumbling ruin. It was a subtle evidence of deterioration in manliness...

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About the author (2004)

Peter J. Sehlinger is professor emeritus of Latin American and United States history of Indiana University, Indianapolis.

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