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Brother Buzz

(36,356 posts)
2. Great Smithsonian article on the film, with a good read on the backstory
Sat Jul 23, 2016, 05:40 PM
Jul 2016
The True Story of the ‘Free State of Jones’

A new Hollywood movie looks at the tale of the Mississippi farmer who led a revolt against the Confederacy

With two rat terriers trotting at his heels, and a long wooden staff in his hand, J.R. Gavin leads me through the woods to one of the old swamp hide-outs. A tall white man with a deep Southern drawl, Gavin has a stern presence, gracious manners and intense brooding eyes. At first I mistook him for a preacher, but he’s a retired electronic engineer who writes self-published novels about the rapture and apocalypse. One of them is titled Sal Batree, after the place he wants to show me.

I’m here in Jones County, Mississippi, to breathe in the historical vapors left by Newton Knight, a poor white farmer who led an extraordinary rebellion during the Civil War. With a company of like-minded white men in southeast Mississippi, he did what many Southerners now regard as unthinkable. He waged guerrilla war against the Confederacy and declared loyalty to the Union.

In the spring of 1864, the Knight Company overthrew the Confederate authorities in Jones County and raised the United States flag over the county courthouse in Ellisville. The county was known as the Free State of Jones, and some say it actually seceded from the Confederacy. This little-known, counterintuitive episode in American history has now been brought to the screen in Free State of Jones, directed by Gary Ross (Seabiscuit, The Hunger Games) and starring a grimy, scruffed-up Matthew McConaughey as Newton Knight.

Knight and his men, says Gavin, hooking away an enormous spider web with his staff and warning me to be careful of snakes, “had a number of different hide-outs. The old folks call this one Sal Batree. Sal was the name of Newt’s shotgun, and originally it was Sal’s Battery, but it got corrupted over the years.”

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Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/true-story-free-state-jones-180958111/#0XhF2lUyRwzFyJaF.99



I saw it a few weeks ago upaloopa Jul 2016 #1
Great Smithsonian article on the film, with a good read on the backstory Brother Buzz Jul 2016 #2
It's a great story I am sure. alphafemale Jul 2016 #3
That wasn't that story. Photographer Jul 2016 #5
We want to see it mcar Jul 2016 #4
There were scattered pockets through LuvNewcastle Jul 2016 #6
So true. Well said. Photographer Jul 2016 #7
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