Wednesday, April 08, 2015

Sesquicentennial of Reconstruction starting

The sesquicentennial of the Civil War ends this month.  However, the sesquicentennial of "Reconstruction" should not be ignored. If brought us 3 earth-shaking, freedom-enhancing constitutional amendments, 13th, 14th and 15th. All 3, but especially the 14th, when their promise was finally realized, changed the nature of federalism and strengthened the foundations of liberty in America.  Unfortunately, that is not what many remember. According to renowned historian Eric Foner:
"Reconstruction refers to the period, generally dated from 1865 to 1877, during which the nation’s laws and Constitution were rewritten to guarantee the basic rights of the former slaves, and biracial governments came to power throughout the defeated Confederacy. For decades, these years were widely seen as the nadir in the saga of American democracy. According to this view, Radical Republicans in Congress, bent on punishing defeated Confederates, established corrupt Southern governments presided over by carpetbaggers (unscrupulous Northerners who ventured south to reap the spoils of office), scalawags (Southern whites who supported the new regimes) and freed African-Americans, unfit to exercise democratic rights. The heroes of the story were the self-styled Redeemers, who restored white supremacy to the South.              
This portrait, which received scholarly expression in the early-20th-century works of William A. Dunning and his students at Columbia University, was popularized by the 1915 film “Birth of A Nation” and by Claude Bowers’s 1929 best-selling history, “The Tragic Era.” It provided an intellectual foundation for the system of segregation and black disenfranchisement that followed Reconstruction. Any effort to restore the rights of Southern blacks, it implied, would lead to a repeat of the alleged horrors of Reconstruction.
HISTORIANS have long since rejected this lurid account, although it retains a stubborn hold on the popular imagination. Today, scholars believe that if the era was “tragic,” it was not because Reconstruction was attempted but because it failed."

2 comments:

  1. The question of post civil war reconstruction remains how different it might have been if Lincoln was at the helm. John Wilkes Booth, for all the misplaced bravado, didn't do Southerners any favors with his senseless act. IMHO, he blew a hole through the bottom of the South's life boat. As a result, the defeated confederacy suffered at the hands of lesser men.

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  2. Agreed! Jonnson was a disaster as Pres.
    Ray

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