McKnight Family
There's not much left now to tell their story, save a small museum and scores
of
weather-beaten tombstones in a shaded cemetery far from the U.S. towns and cities
they once called home. Historians say theirs was the only political exodus of
U.S. citizens in the history of the United States, although it is rarely mentioned
in history books. In the latter half of the 1800's, thousands of Americans from
all over the South left their homes and families in search of new lives in Mexico,
Cuba and Brazil.
Many returned disillusioned soon afterward; others were wiped out or run off
by
locals. But in Brazil, they carved out a foothold, and many prospered.
This month, a dwindling handful of their descendants will gather, as they do
annually, at a special memorial ground surrounded by seemingly endless fields
of sugar cane in this city of 150,000 to pay homage to the men and women, most
buried nearby, who came as pioneers.
Men like Col. William H Norris, a former Alabama senator, Ezekiel B Pyles, the
final military escort for Confederate President Jefferson Davis, H.F. Steagall,
a
Confederate spy from Wall, Texas; George S Barnsley, an assistant surgeon in
the 8th Georgia Infantry; Johnathan Ellsworth, a drummer in the 1st Arkansas
Brigade, and Benjamin C. Yancy of the 16th Battalion, Alabama Sharpshooters.
Their grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-great grandchildren will
sing
a hymn in Portuguese, say a prayer and then unfurl three flags---the Stars and
Stripes; Brazil's green, yellow, and blue banner, and the red, white and blue
Stars and Bars of the old Southern Confederacy.
Once again, they will tell the stories, some even today speaking with a Southern
drawl, of how America's Civil War rebels made their last stand in Brazil. "They
came here because they felt that their ‘country' had been invaded and
their land confiscated," said Judith McKnight Jones, 68, great-granddaughter
of the original McKnight family that moved to Brazil from Texas, "To them,
there was nothing left there. So they came here to try to re-create what they
had before the war. I grew up listening to the stories. They were angry and
bitter. When they talked about it---moving here, the war, leaving their homes---it
was always a very sore subject for them." Jones is the resident historian
and keeper of the flame for the 350 members of Brazil's Fraternity of the Confederate
Descendants, to whom she sends a newsletter every three months. She has written
a 408-page book in Portuguese on the lives of the Confederate colonists in Brazil,
most now completely absorbed into Brazilian culture.
Her home sits on part of what was once a 5,000 acre plantation that was the
beginning of the most successful Confederate colony. Inside it are hundreds
of pieces of memorabilia that Jones has collected--tattered photographs, letters,
notes, diary entries. They represent the memories and lives of slave owners,
soldiers, belles, schoolteachers, dentists, doctors and farmers during their
early years in Brazil. Every year, about a dozen Americans--historians, students,
vacationers and Southerners whose ancestors told them of the emigration--make
their way to her home to inquire about what some call the "Lost Colony
of
the Confederacy." One was then-Georgia Gov.--and later U.S.President--Jimmy
Carter, who wept as he toured the cemetery. Patiently, carefully and often with
great humor, Jones, hobbled by age and arthritis, tells the stories of lost
ships, families wiped out by tuberculosis and fortunes made and lost in a new
land. But mostly she tells how a handful of Southerners left their stamp on
a large piece of this huge nation.
An estimated 10,000 to 20,000 Confederates emigrated from the United States
during the years right after the Civil War. The number would have been much
larger, historians say, had not still-revered Confederate Gen Robert E Lee publicly
urged Southerners to stay in the United States.
Still the fever to leave spread, and thousands shipped out of emigration stations
set up in Galveston, Tex; New Orleans; Baltimore; New York; Mobile, Ala., and
Newport News, Va.
Many chose Brazil, where the government promised cheap land in the hope that
the Americans' farming techniques would establish the country as a leader in
a worldwide cotton market depleted by the Civil War.
Brazil was also attractive to many Southerners because it still practiced slavery. (The country abolished it in 1888.) Many hoped to start a plantation system based on a life they had cherished in the South. They established several colonies: one in northern Brazil 500 miles from the mouth of the Amazon River, which became the city of Santarem; another in Rio Doce near the coast; three more--Juquia, New Texas and Xiririca--in southern Brazil, and another just outside a town called Santa Barbara, 80 miles northwest of Sao Paulo. "Most of the colonies failed." Jones lamented. "There were all kinds of problems. In Santarem, they were just too isolated. A few people did well, but most gave up, and they didn't hold together long.
There was a lot of disease--malaria, smallpox and then the soil wasn't real
good for farming in a lot of places. A lot of the families returned to the United
States. Some of the people moved to the cities, such as Sao Paulo and Rio de
Janeiro, but a lot of them came here, where things were going well." Initially,
the Confederates remained a cloistered community. They intermarried and established
their own schools and churches, sending back to the States for teachers and
ministers. They established a separate cemetery initially, because the Roman
catholic Church in Brazil did not allow the Protestant Confederates to be buried
with Catholics.
Even after 80 years in the country, many spoke exclusively English in their
homes. "I remember when I was 4 years old, I was lost in a textile factory,
and I couldn't tell the people anything because I only spoke English,"
recalled Allison Jones, 51, an engineer and third-generation descendant. "I
didn't learn Portuguese until I started school." Their community bordering
Santa Barbara was dubbed Villa Americana by native Brazilians and officially
became Americana in the mid-1930s. In the interim, the Confederates introduced
to Brazil baseball, peaches,
pecans and various strains of rice. There were fortunes made in cotton and watermelon
with seeds brought from Georgia. Rita Lee, a Confederate descendant named after
Robert E Lee, has become one of Brazil's most popular singers. Her uncle, Leonard
Yancy Jones, established the first public radio station in Sao Paulo. Others
have gone on to become elected officials and business leaders.
They also brought with them their rebel spirit. When a brief Brazilian civil
war erupted in 1932 as the state of Sao Paulo tried to secede, many of the Confederate
descendants, such as Roberto Steagall, fought on the side of the secessionists.
"Once a Rebel. Twice a rebel," reads Steagall's tombstone. Many of
the original Confederate families gave up farming and moved from Americana in
later years to Sao Paulo and Campinas, where they became professionals. In the
process, the spirit of kinship began to drift. To keep their history alive,
the descendants established a small museum in 1988 in Santa Barbara. There are
sporadic picnics throughout the year to keep the descendants updated, and an
annual celebration during which they don antebellum gowns and Civil War uniforms,
hoist the flags of the Confederate states, look at old pictures and reminisce
about an era that millions of Americans are happy is long past.
During one recent gathering, Daniel Carr de Muzio, son of an Italian father
and a Confederate descendant mother, brought his daughter and son out to look
again at the tombstone of their
great-great-great-grandparents on land that his relatives once owned. "Everybody
has roots, and you want to know your roots," said DeMuzio, a sales manager
in Sao Paulo and head of the newly established chapter of the Sons of the Confederacy
in Brazil. "It was passed on to me, and now I'm passing it on to my children."
He and others are mindful, however, that the tradition and symbols they hold
so dear have the onerous connotation of slavery to many Americans.
"I know what you're saying," said Allison Jones, "but it's not
something to be ashamed of. It's a good tradition. We try to value the good
qualities and try to forget some of the defects.
"Like the flag. I've seen it depicted with drunkards in bars, making a
lot of noise and yelling. That hasnothing to do with my flag. That kind of behavior
is not what the flag symbolizes to me.
"To me, it is the idea that you can fight for your own opinion. It's about
being defiant. It doesn't have to be about segregation. It arouses in me (the
feeling) that I can fight, even if I lose."
McKnight Family web page
http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~jlaros/brazilmcks.html
Return to Confederados Main Page
Anthony Spencer
Department of Communication Studies
University of North Texas