The American Civil War & Reconstruction
Whistlestop Bookshop’s first store opened in Gettysburg in 1985. Eventually, over 19 years there, our Civil War section grew to be three large wall cases. A disproportionate percentage of it, naturally, was about the battle of Gettysburg and biographies of those who fought there. In addition to this book selling experience, my southern upbringing and Army family life created a lifelong interest in the War Between the States and all of its complexities. It is an understandable national obsession, considering how the first half of our nation’s history contributed to its ferocity, and the second half of our history has been the struggle to live with and understand the consequences.
Reconstruction: Voices from America's First Great Struggle for Racial Equality
Reconstruction: Voices from America's First Great Struggle for Racial Equality
The defeat of the Confederacy and the adoption of the Thirteenth Amendment in 1865 brought about the final destruction of slavery in the United States. Americans were confronted for the first time with the possibility of creating a republic dedicated to the principle of racial equality. What followed over the next twelve years was one of the most complex, inspiring, and ultimately tragic eras in American history. Reconstruction: Voices from America’s First Great Struggle for Racial Equality brings this tumultuous and fateful period to dramatic and violent life through the vivid testimony of more than sixty participants and observers. Here is a vitally important book for anyone interested in this crucial period and its inescapable relevance for today.
Historian Brooks D. Simpson presents more than 120 speeches, letters, newspaper and magazine articles, reports, and testimonies by famous figures—Frederick Douglass, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Andrew Johnson, Thaddeus Stevens, Ulysses S. Grant, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Mark Twain, Albion Tourgée—as well as dozens of lesser-known men and women, black and white, northern and southern. Through their words, readers experience the fierce contest between President Andrew Johnson and the Republican Congress that led to the nation’s first presidential impeachment; the adoption of the revolutionary Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments; the growth of black political power in the South; and the murderous violence of the Ku Klux Klan and other terrorist groups that, combined with northern weariness, indifference, and hostility, eventually resulted in the restoration of white supremacy in the former Confederate states. Testimony by Cynthia Townsend, Maria Carter, and Margaret Ann Caldwell records the relentless cruelty of white mobs and assassins, while speeches by Joseph H. Rainey, Robert Brown Elliott, and Richard Harvey Cain demonstrate the eloquence, passion, and courage with which the first African American congressmen addressed the nation in the cause of racial justice.
Reconstructionincludes a chronology of events, brief biographies of the writers and helpful historical notes, full-color endpaper illustrations, and an index.
Brooks D. Simpson, editor, is ASU Foundation Professor of History at Arizona State University and the author of Let Us Have Peace: Ulysses S. Grant and the Politics of War and Reconstruction, 1861–1868, The Reconstruction Presidents, and Ulysses S. Grant: Triumph over Adversity, 1822–1865. He is a co-editor of The Civil War: Told by Those Who Lived It, a unique firsthand narrative published in four volumes by the Library of America.
This Library of America series edition is printed on acid-free paper and features Smyth-sewn binding, a full cloth cover, and a ribbon marker.