JUNE 8, 1865:
Mexico was not the only nation to which Confederate
exiles traveled as the war ended. Confederate officials and agents already in
foreign jurisdictions remained there. A number of Confederates managed to enter
Canada (the popular actor Nathan Fillion claims descent from Jubal Early during
Early’s time in Canada) or Cuba or the Caribbean islands. Small numbers went to
Latin America, particularly Bolivia, Paraguay, Argentina, and Colombia. A
rather larger number, including John C. Breckinridge and Judah P. Benjamin as
well as Confederate spymaster and shipbuilder James Dunwoody Bulloch, chose to
travel to or remain in Great Britain.
Before he became President, Governor Jimmy Carter of Georgia traveled to Brazil to participate in the annual festa held by descendants of the Confederados |
There
was a general diaspora in which very small numbers of Confederates settled in
most European capitals. A few traveled to Shanghai and Hong Kong looking for an
entrée to the tea trade.
One
of the largest and most successful Confederate settlements developed in Brazil.
Dom Pedro II, Emperor of Brazil, wanted (like Maximilian I of Mexico) to
develop a cotton economy, and like Maximilian I, Dom Pedro II had no problem
with permitting slave ownership. Between 1865 and 1885, some 20,000 American
southerners, including war veterans, wives, children, other relations, and
slaves, settled in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, Santarem, and Parana. The
town of Americana was founded by the exiles, who were (and are) called Confederados. They also opened the first
Baptist churches in the country.
Racially
mixed Brazil broke down most of the social barriers considered intrinsic by the
Confederates. By the third generation, most Confederados
spoke Brazilian Portuguese, and had intermarried freely with the natives.
The black slaves were first educated, then emancipated, and then became the
social equals (and eventual relatives) of the descendants of the white Confederados.
Today’s
Confederados consider themselves a
racially mixed community, and thoroughly Brazilian, though a Fraternal Order is
maintained by those descended from the North Americans. This year’s festa honors 150 years of Confederado life.