海角大神

Twilight of the Old South?

Rural Southerners are fighting to save the values that have long defined the region. But they worry they are losing ground. 

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Patrik Jonsson/海角大神
Jerry Hawn, a Vietnam veteran, talks about President Obama in Madison, Ga.
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Patrik Jonsson/海角大神
Madison, Ga., is famous for its well-kept antebellum mansions.

John Bostwick founded this cotton gin town back in 1902. Today, 114 years later, Mayor John Bostwick, looking like a weekend duffer in a short-sleeve button-down shirt, still runs the town.

The two John Bostwicks are three generations removed from one another. Yet, as in so much of the rural South, the past here seems present. Tradition is not only tangible but personal.

If the town of Bostwick (pop. 365) has changed, it seems more a victim than victor. The old rail spur that took away ginned cotton is long silent. The turn-of-the-century hotel now serves as Mayor Bostwick鈥檚 office, in which a stuffed fox squirrel forever grips a slab of bark. The town hall is open only three hours a week. The ancient and dusty hardware store became a video rental joint before it finally closed in 2009.

Yet that old cotton gin in the open tin barn still runs every fall, the only such machine still clawing cotton bolls in north Georgia.

鈥淥ur main mission here is to keep sprawl at bay,鈥 says Bostwick. And by 鈥渟prawl,鈥 he says, he means not just physical urbanization, but an ideological one, too 鈥 one culture, increasingly progressive, subsuming an older way.

The Old South, it seems, is on the ropes.

In Bostwick and many other rural towns throughout the South, recent years have come like a whirlwind颅 鈥 the Confederate flag abandoned and gay and transgender rights embraced.

To many, those shifts mean a more pluralistic, open-minded country. But here in the land of lost causes 鈥 from the Civil War to Jim Crow 鈥 there鈥檚 a keen sense among a vocal minority that where the federal government once came to crush the South鈥檚 institutions, it now comes, emboldened by court decrees and the leftward social tilt of the Millennial generation, to suppress Southern culture itself.

As one church sign here reads: 鈥淟egalizing sin doesn鈥檛 make it right.鈥

The backlash of the Old South is most apparent in recent state laws that rein in transgender rights in North Carolina and protect religious freedom at the expense of gay rights in Mississippi.

But it is centered in towns like Bostwick, Between, Good Hope, Fair Play, Monroe, and Madison, which see the spread of blue-state values as a tyranny of the majority.

鈥淚 think we鈥檝e just become class-less 鈥 and, by that, I don鈥檛 mean upper class or lower class, I mean class as in, people have no class in the way they speak and dress, or what they do,鈥 says Bostwick.

Southern values face 'wrecking ball'

So far, the closest to Bostwick that the cultural cannon rounds have rung is the nearby Target. The Minneapolis-based retailer recently established a policy that transgender customers could use the bathroom that matched their gender identity.

This was a 鈥渕istake,鈥 Bostwick says, and he is not alone in that view.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a hardy perennial in Southern discourse: saying to hell with what outsiders think,鈥 says Trent Brown an American studies professor at the Missouri University of Science & Technology and author of 鈥淲hite Masculinity in the Recent South.鈥

In Madison, Ga., just a few miles down Route 83 from Bostwick, Sandra echoes Bostwick鈥檚 sentiments.

Patrik Jonsson/海角大神
Madison, Ga., is famous for its well-kept antebellum mansions.

By the measure of the Old South, Sandra says she feels like an 鈥渙utsider鈥 鈥 the middle-age woman moved to Madison as a grade-schooler. Yes, the town can be insular and judgmental, so as a store owner she doesn鈥檛 give her last name. But there鈥檚 also a warmth that she doesn鈥檛 want to leave. Indeed, she鈥檚 even willing to vote for Donald Trump 鈥 albeit reluctantly 鈥 to save those values.

鈥淚鈥檓 being forced to vote for him, because anything else will ensure that the wrecking ball will continue to destroy our society,鈥 she says.

Mr. Trump is a curious avenger for the Old South, being neither Southern, religious, nor an avowed culture warrior 鈥 he once said Caitlyn Jenner could use whichever bathroom she wanted at Trump Tower.

Yet in his candor, many Southerners cheer a willingness to speak hard truths and unpopular opinions that seemingly can no longer levied, on fear of social, even legal, retribution.

Jerry Hawn, a Vietnam vet, sounds downright Trumpian in his harsh comments about the president and first lady 鈥 criticizing their stance on gay and transgender rights. And like Trump, he鈥檚 not concerned about being labeled a bigot or racist.

鈥淲hen they鈥檙e calling me names, it gives someone else a rest,鈥 he says. 鈥淏esides, I can call people names, too.鈥

In Trump鈥檚 message of making America great again, many here hear notes of a return to a time when their society was not being pushed toward America鈥檚 cultural margins.聽

鈥淎 lot of Americans feel like they鈥檙e on the defensive [on both cultural and economic issues], which explains some of the success of Donald Trump in the Republican primaries,鈥 says Alan Abramowitz, a political scientist at Emory University in Atlanta. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got a group of Republican primary voters [especially in the South] who feel under siege and resentful, to the point where the fact that Trump himself is clearly not one of them doesn鈥檛 seem to bother them.鈥

Threating the traditional order

In Madison, Tice Clark has noticed many townspeople bracing against a push from the Obama administration to expand transgender rights.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e angry,鈥 says Mr. Clark, a native Marylander who arrived here with his antique business via California.

That view is echoed in Mississippi, where educators have been told to ignore the Department of Justice and its opinion that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 makes it illegal to deny transgender people the right to use the bathroom that corresponds with their gender identity.

Yet not all the change is being imposed from Washington. The New South has seen 10 million newcomers set up fresh stakes since 2000 鈥 transforming urban areas from Atlanta to Birmingham, Ala., to Charlotte, N.C. And some of the businesses lured to the South by low taxes and weak unions have used their clout to push for social change that, to many here, smacks of blue-state values.

Those changes are increasingly threatening the South鈥檚 traditional order.

For the Southern elites who once guided society, 鈥淚t鈥檚 a time of great change, and the old elite resists change, because it brings about the possibility of losing their elite status,鈥 says Jonathan Bryant, a historian at Georgia Southern University whose current research focuses on 鈥渓aw, fraud, and war in the making of the Deep South.鈥

Meanwhile, poorer white Southerners, both economically and culturally, also 鈥渇eel a distinct decline in their status. There is a pining for something they have created, a romanticized understanding of what things were like in 鈥榯he past,鈥 when it was better.鈥

Southern politics is showing signs of those shifts.

Acknowledging that 鈥渄iscrimination鈥 has no place in the modern South, Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal (R), who is not running for reelection, removed Robert E. Lee day from the state calendar and vetoed a religious liberty bill. South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley (R) demurred on the transgender bathroom issue, saying such laws address problems that don鈥檛 exist. Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam (R) vetoed a bill that would have made the Bible the official state book.

鈥淭he amount of fallout has basically been meaningless, reflecting what a very small minority actually remain wedded鈥 to Old South ideals, says Professor Bryant.

Two flags, one town

In Bostwick, however, the Confederate flag still flies from a sprawling compound strewn with boats and beach buggies across Route 83 from the Dixie King One Variety cotton gin.

Yes, prejudice still tempers the place, says resident W.D. Stone. But in looking around at his family and friends, he sees a more nuanced picture of the rural South 鈥 one where, perhaps, elements of the old and new can comingle. His family, he says, 鈥渉as never been prejudiced, because we all eat the same food.鈥

Mr. Stone remembers picking cotton as a boy, with crews of black women being bused in to work in the field. Their gospel singing filled the fields like 鈥渁 chorus of angels.鈥

Even though those field songs are gone, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think the town will ever change much.鈥

But to Boots Veasley, a black laborer who cuts and stacks sod for one of the biggest landowners in Morgan County, Bostwick is already changing.

As the country goes, Bostwick will eventually follow, he says.

After all, he notes, Bostwick鈥檚 Fourth of July barbecue picnic is becoming even bigger than the more Georgia-centric Cotton Gin Festival in the fall.

鈥淚 personally don鈥檛 know nothing about no Confederate flag,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he only thing I care about is the American flag.鈥

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