Richard Henry Whiteley participated firsthand in the epic events of
nineteenth-century America. He came to the United States as a boy in the
1830s, working first in Georgia's textile mills, where the Irish
immigrant climbed the ladder to become management. From there, he went
on to become a lawyer, an officer in the Civil War, a convert to
Southern Republicanism, and finally a U.S. congressman from 1869 to
1876.
This biography concerns Whiteley's entire life but focuses particularly
on his fight for political survival during the Reconstruction years.
Southern Republicans, known as scalawags, were widely reviled for their
efforts at fair treatment for ex-slaves, and Whiteley was no exception.
His participation in this turbulent era imparts to his career a profound
significance, as it reveals much about the post-war South. What
circumstances accounted for the election of a white Republican from a
Deep South congressional district? Once elected, could a man condemned
as a traitorous scalawag continue to hold office? Were the actions of
the Republican congressman demonstrably Radical? A Scalawag in Georgia
attempts to rehabilitate the record of Southern Republicans during
Reconstruction, and its answers to these questions have wide
implications not only for the South but the nation as a whole.