The
Nickajack region was a loosely defined region of
North Alabama and
East Tennessee where public sentiment adhered more strongly to the
Union. In the period
leading up to the
American Civil War, there had been increasing talk of
secession by politicians representing the interests of wealthy
planters who had large cotton plantations in the
Black Belt. This area stretched across central and southern Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi. Citizens in the more mountainous regions of North Alabama and East Tennessee, where
slave ownership was less common, often favored the Union. Many believed, as some said at the time, that rebellion would become "a war for the rich, fought by the poor." People discussed that if Tennessee and Alabama attempted to secede from the Union, the adjacent territories of East Tennessee and North Alabama should secede from their respective states. They should form a new state to be called Nickajack and stay with the Union, joined at the southeast corner of Kentucky. Nothing came of the idea, although
Winston County, Alabama discussed secession. The area's reputation as the
Free State of Winston persists;
Harper Lee mentioned it in her bestselling novel
To Kill a Mockingbird. On January 7, 1861, Alabama Governor
Andrew B. Moore called delegates from Alabama to
Montgomery for a convention to debate the
Articles of Secession. Delegates from South Alabama wanted the convention delegates to determine the vote, while northern delegates wanted the issue put to a popular vote. Because the
apportionment of delegates to the convention was based on total population (including slaves), the Southern delegates effectively voted "on behalf" of enslaved
African-Americans, who made up a large proportion of the population in the region. The results of the poll determined that the balance of power would shift to the North, where the population was mostly white. Ultimately, the Alabama
Ordinance of Secession was passed by a vote of 61 to 39, split along geographic lines. In addition to Nickajack,
Winston County, Alabama, threatened to form its own
Free State of Winston. These threats of internal separation never materialized, but men in the region fiercely resisted conscription into the
Confederate Army. Many joined the
Union Army. ==Notes==