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Foner - Reconstruction: americas unfinished revolution, 1863-1877

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Foner Reconstruction: americas unfinished revolution, 1863-1877
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This masterful treatment of one of the most complex periods of American history (New Republic) made history when it was originally published in 1988. It redefined how Reconstruction was viewed by historians and people everywhere in its chronicling of how Americans -- black and white -- responded to the unprecedented changes unleashed by the war and the end of slavery. This smart book of enormous strengths (Boston Globe) has since gone on to become the classic work on the wrenching post-Civil War period -- an era whose legacy reverberates still today in the United States.

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Eric Foner RECONSTRUCTION Americas Unfinished Revolution 1863 1877 - photo 1

Eric Foner

RECONSTRUCTION

Americas Unfinished Revolution

1863 * 1877

ILLUSTRATED

For Lynn Contents ACAnnual Cyclopedia AgHAgricultural History - photo 2

For Lynn

Contents

ACAnnual Cyclopedia

AgHAgricultural History

AHRAmerican Historical Review

AI HQAlabama Historical Quarterly AMAAmerican Missionary Association

ArkHQArkansas Historical Quarterly

ASDAHAlabama State Department of Archives and History

CGCongressional Globe

CRCongressional Record

CWHCivil War History

DUDuke University

ETHSPEast Tennessee Historical Society Publications F1HQFlorida Historical Quarterly FSSPFreedmen and Southern Society Project, University of Maryland (with document identification number)

GaHQGeorgia Historical Quarterly

GDAHGeorgia Department of Archives and History

HLHuntington Library

HSPaHistorical Society of Pennsylvania

HUHoughton Library, Harvard University

IndMHIndiana Magazine of History

JAHJournal of American History

JEcHJournal of Economic History

JISHSJournal of the Illinois State Historical Society

JMHJournal of Mississippi History

JNHJournal of Negro History

JSHJournal of Southern History

JSocHJournal of Social History

LaHLouisiana History

LaHQLouisiana Historical Quarterly

LCLibrary of Congress

LMLLawson McGhee Library

LSULouisiana State University

MDAHMississippi Department of Archives and History

MHSMassachusetts Historical Society

MoHRMissouri Historical Review

MVHRMississippi Valley Historical Review

NANational Archives

NCHRNorth Carolina Historical Review

NCDAHNorth Carolina Division of Archives and History

NYPLNew York Public Library

Of/QOhio Historical Quarterly

PaHPennsylvania History

PaMHBPennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography

PMHSPublications of the Mississippi Historical Society

RG 105Record Group 105: Records of the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands

RG 393Record Group 393: Records of the United States Army Continental Commands

SAQSouth Atlantic Quarterly

SCSophia Smith Collection, Smith College

SCDASouth Carolina Department of Archives

SCHMSouth Carolina Historical Magazine

SCHSSouth Carolina Historical Society

SHSWState Historical Society of Wisconsin

SSSouthern Studies

SWHQSouthwestern Historical Quarterly

THQTennessee Historical Quarterly

TSLATennessee State Library and Archives

UGaUniversity of Georgia

UNCSouthern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina

USCSouth Caroliniana Library, University of South Carolina

UTxEugene C. Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas

VaMHBVirginia Magazine of History and Biography

WMHWisconsin Magazine of History

WVaHWest Virginia History

The New
American Nation Series

EDITED BY

HENRY STEELE COMMAGER

AND

RICHARD B. MORRIS

P ROBABLY no other chapter of American history has been the subject, one might say the victim, of such varied and conflicting interpretations as what attempts to give unity and coherence to the era we call Reconstruction. Even the chronology is chaotic. Did the process begin with the bizarre creation of West Virginia in 1861or should that be dated 1863? Did it conclude with the Compromise of 1877 or was its true conclusion Brown v. Topeka in 1954? Was its central theme politicalthe reconstruction of the old Union, or was it legal and constitutionalthe revolutionary Fourteenth Amendment that still functions as an instrument of revolution? Was its central theme social and moralthe end of slavery, or did the realities of slavery persist for another half century or more? Was its significance fundamentally in what has been called the Emergence of Modern Americainto the Triumphant Democracy that Andrew Carnegie celebrated, or was it rather the emergence of America to world poweror certainly to Pacific power? Or might it all be interpreted in philosophical termsthe Age of Darwin and Spencer, of Lester Ward and William James, who contributed so much to reconstructing American thought?

Reconstruction embraced, of course, all these chapters of our historya conclusion illustrated by successive generations of historians from James Ford Rhodes, Ellis Oberholtzer, John W. Burgess, and Vernon Parrington to the schools of William Dunning, W.E.B. Du Bois, Walter Fleming, and Allan Nevins.

It is to this distinguished lineage of Reconstruction scholars that Professor Foner belongs, and in nothing is he more distinguished than in his independence and originality. The most striking feature of that independence is his insistence that the Negro was the central figure and the most effective in Reconstruction: in this he was, to be sure, anticipated by the great Negro leader, Du Bois. To the support of his thesis, Mr. Foner has brought a prodigious body of evidence, organized it not only skillfully but also, we may almost say, with stylistic genius, and produced what is a scholarly convincing reconstruction of what is indubitably the most controversial chapter in our history.

H ENRY S TEELE
C OMMAGER R ICHARD B. M ORRIS

R EVISING interpretations of the past is intrinsic to the study of history. But no part of the American experience has, in the last twenty-five years, seen a broadly accepted point of view so completely overturned as Reconstructionthe violent, dramatic, and still controversial era that followed the Civil War. Since the early 1960s, a profound alteration of the place of blacks within American society, newly uncovered evidence, and changing definitions of history itself have combined to transform our understanding of race relations, politics, and economic change during Reconstruction. Yet despite this change in consciousness, so to speak, historians have yet to produce a coherent new portrait of the era.

The scholarly study of Reconstruction began early in this century with the work of William Dunning, John W. Burgess, and their students. The interpretation elaborated by the Dunning School may be briefly summarized as follows. When the Civil War ended, the white South genuinely accepted the reality of military defeat, stood ready to do justice to the emancipated slaves, and desired above all a quick reintegration into the fabric of national life. Before his death, Abraham Lincoln had embarked on a course of sectional reconciliation, and during Presidential Reconstruction (186567) his successor, Andrew Johnson, attempted to carry out Lincolns magnanimous policies. Johnsons efforts were opposed and eventually thwarted by the Radical Republicans in Congress. Motivated by an irrational hatred of Southern rebels and the desire to consolidate their partys national ascendancy, the Radicals in 1867 swept aside the Southern governments Johnson had established and fastened black suffrage upon the defeated South. There followed the sordid period of Congressional or Radical Reconstruction (186777), an era of corruption presided over by unscrupulous carpetbaggers from the North, unprincipled Southern white scalawags, and ignorant freedmen. After much needless suffering, the Souths white community banded together to overthrow these governments and restore home rule (a euphemism for white supremacy). All told, Reconstruction was the darkest page in the saga of American history.

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