Verified Free - State Of Jones
In the annals of American Civil War history, the narrative is often painted in stark black and white: North versus South, Union Blue versus Confederate Gray, abolitionists versus slaveholders. Yet, hidden in the piney woods and swamps of southeastern Mississippi lies a story that defies these simple categories—a story of a white farmer, an enslaved woman, and an armed uprising against the Confederacy. This is the story of the "Free State of Jones." The Man at the Center: Newton Knight The story revolves around Newton Knight, a poor white farmer from Jones County, Mississippi. By 1862, Knight was a reluctant Confederate soldier. Like many yeoman farmers in the Deep South, he owned no slaves and had little stake in the plantation economy that the war sought to protect. What he did have was a deep-seated resentment against the “Twenty-Slave Law,” a Confederate provision that exempted wealthy plantation owners with twenty or more slaves from military service, leaving poor families to fight and die for a cause that actually enriched their neighbors.
That is enough.
The Confederacy, already stretched thin by the Union army, sent Lieutenant Colonel Robert Lowry (later Governor of Mississippi) to crush the rebellion. Lowry hanged ten of Knight’s men and terrorized the countryside, but he never captured Newton Knight. The Knight Company, as they called themselves, fought on until the war’s end in 1865. What makes the Free State of Jones truly remarkable is not the rebellion itself, but what came after. free state of jones
