The Origins of an Iconic Reconstruction Image On September 1, 1868, a crude and simply-drawn cartoon appeared in the Tuscaloosa Independent Monitor that shocked newspaper readers across the country. Titled “A Prospective Scene in the ‘City of Oaks,’ 4th of March, 1869, it showed a ...
The Battlefield of Reconstruction Published on the heels of Nicholas Lemann’s Redemption: The La...
In 1872 the Gwinnett County courthouse was burned by the Ku-Klux Klan. The events leading up to the ...
Historians have long focused on violence’s permeation of the postwar South. However, in The War Afte...
The Dark Side of Reconstruction Among other things, J. Michl Martinez\u27s Carpetbaggers, Cavalry, ...
The Rise and Fall of Reconstruction in Alabama On the first page of Reconstruction in Alabama: From ...
The tumultuous years of the 1860s continues to fascinate Americans long after the truce between Robe...
Why did Reconstruction fail? Perspectives on post-war African-American politics Over the past sev...
Originally published in 1965. The Supreme Court's momentous school desegregation decision of 1954 wa...
Invisible Empire\u27s Visible Reach in Georgia The Ku Klux Klan, a terrorist group with its origins ...
An article by Victor B. Howard published in the Fall 1982 issue of the Journal of Negro History, pag...
Faced with the challenge of reviving the struggling, impoverished, and lately shuttered Louisiana St...
After Congress took control of Reconstruction in 1866, thousands of former Confederates migrated int...
When the Civil War began in 1861, the conflict evoked feelings of pride, patriotism, and hatred in b...
This thesis seeks to advance scholars\u27 understanding of Civil War era Mississippi through an exam...
Louis Burnham. Behind the Lynching of Emmet Louis Till. New York: Freedom Associates, 1955. http://h...
The Battlefield of Reconstruction Published on the heels of Nicholas Lemann’s Redemption: The La...
In 1872 the Gwinnett County courthouse was burned by the Ku-Klux Klan. The events leading up to the ...
Historians have long focused on violence’s permeation of the postwar South. However, in The War Afte...
The Dark Side of Reconstruction Among other things, J. Michl Martinez\u27s Carpetbaggers, Cavalry, ...
The Rise and Fall of Reconstruction in Alabama On the first page of Reconstruction in Alabama: From ...
The tumultuous years of the 1860s continues to fascinate Americans long after the truce between Robe...
Why did Reconstruction fail? Perspectives on post-war African-American politics Over the past sev...
Originally published in 1965. The Supreme Court's momentous school desegregation decision of 1954 wa...
Invisible Empire\u27s Visible Reach in Georgia The Ku Klux Klan, a terrorist group with its origins ...
An article by Victor B. Howard published in the Fall 1982 issue of the Journal of Negro History, pag...
Faced with the challenge of reviving the struggling, impoverished, and lately shuttered Louisiana St...
After Congress took control of Reconstruction in 1866, thousands of former Confederates migrated int...
When the Civil War began in 1861, the conflict evoked feelings of pride, patriotism, and hatred in b...
This thesis seeks to advance scholars\u27 understanding of Civil War era Mississippi through an exam...
Louis Burnham. Behind the Lynching of Emmet Louis Till. New York: Freedom Associates, 1955. http://h...
The Battlefield of Reconstruction Published on the heels of Nicholas Lemann’s Redemption: The La...
In 1872 the Gwinnett County courthouse was burned by the Ku-Klux Klan. The events leading up to the ...
Historians have long focused on violence’s permeation of the postwar South. However, in The War Afte...