Splendid Failure: Postwar Reconstruction in the American South

Splendid Failure: Postwar Reconstruction in the American South

violence shut down the  “Reconstruction”

 

 

Book review:

Splendid Failure:

Postwar Reconstruction in the American South

 

by Michael W. Fitzgerald (b1956)

Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 2007

234 pages

 

Splendid Failure offers a shockingly realistic account of the so-called “Reconstruction” period after the Civil War. There was a lot more violence, much earlier in the time frame, than you probably know about.

The violence throughout the South was not successfully resisted by Northern forces after the war, and after the presidential election dispute of 1876, the Northern watchdogs withdrew their concern. Commercial and political interests asserted their primacy in the North.

Fitzgerald observes: “At the national level the Republicans were the party of economic growth” (p. 100).

The white elites who held the economic and political power in the South before the war basically regained their economic and political power after the brief period of nominally reformative so-called “Reconstruction.”

As we now know, the war and the so-called “Emancipation Proclamation” weren’t the end of the story.

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Book review. Copyright © Richard Carl Subber 2022 All rights reserved.

 

Starving with a tiger…

Pogo says you better watch out…

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In other words: Poems for your eyes and ears with 64 free verse and haiku poems,
and the rest of my poetry books are for sale on Amazon (paperback and Kindle)
and free in Kindle Unlimited, search Amazon for “Richard Carl Subber”

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Reconstruction After the Civil War (book review)

Reconstruction After the Civil War (book review)

the former slaves were forgotten in the North…

 

 

Book review:

Reconstruction After the Civil War

 

by John Hope Franklin

Eric Foner, foreword

Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 3rd edit., 1961, repr. 2013

 

Franklin changed the viewpoint of professional historians about the goals and failures of the Radical Republicans’ policies on “reconstruction” of the Confederate states after the American Civil War.

In the past historians reported the Reconstruction period as a politically motivated effort by Northern politicians to control the Southern states, with sometimes superficial attention to the concept and the abandonment of effectively giving millions of black Americans the right to vote.

Franklin’s thesis, in simplistic terms, is that contending political and business interests tried to pursue “reconstruction” to develop the economic capacity of the South, and the plight of freed slaves gradually slipped from the center of attention. The white folks who were leaders of the secession rather quickly resumed their control of the Southern states.

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Book review. Copyright © Richard Carl Subber 2022 All rights reserved.

 

Book review: Saint Joan

by George Bernard Shaw

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Writing Rainbows: Poems for Grown-Ups with 59 free verse and haiku poems,
and the rest of my poetry books are for sale on Amazon (paperback and Kindle)
and free in Kindle Unlimited, search Amazon for “Richard Carl Subber”

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