Governor Wade Hampton wanted to convince the white Democracy in South Carolina that blacks, most of them former slaves, should be allowed to participate in the political process. This paper reviews the motives and relations with people up to the election of 1876
The United States was not always as united as its name suggests. In the middle of the nineteenth cen...
An article by Victor B. Howard published in the Summer 1982 issue of the Register of the Kentucky Hi...
After the American Civil War ended in 1865, the United States entered an era known as Reconstruction...
Governor Wade Hampton wanted to convince the white Democracy in South Carolina that blacks, most of ...
The Life of Wade Hampton Born in 1818 and living to see the turn of the twentieth century, Wade Ham...
Daniel Henry Chamberlain, as Republican Governor of South Carolina during the last two years of Reco...
The Life of Wade Hampton This is a first-rate biography of a valiant Confederate soldier, a grea...
This study examined the racial rhetoric of Wade Hampton with particular attention to claims that he ...
Carolina Cavalryman Stuart\u27s replacement became governor and senator of South Carolina The rec...
The election of 1978 was a unique event in the political history of Virginia. For the first time sin...
A review of Wade Hampton: Confederate Warrior to Southern Redeemer, by Rod Andrew, Jr
Interview with Rod Andrew, Jr. Interviewed by Christopher Childers Civil War Book Review (CWBR): ...
Another Look at South Carolina Reconstruction In the preface to his new book, York County, S.C., his...
Considered by many historians to be the birthplace of the Confederacy, South Carolina experienced on...
Coleman Livingston Blease was an active participant in South Carolina politics for over fifty years....
The United States was not always as united as its name suggests. In the middle of the nineteenth cen...
An article by Victor B. Howard published in the Summer 1982 issue of the Register of the Kentucky Hi...
After the American Civil War ended in 1865, the United States entered an era known as Reconstruction...
Governor Wade Hampton wanted to convince the white Democracy in South Carolina that blacks, most of ...
The Life of Wade Hampton Born in 1818 and living to see the turn of the twentieth century, Wade Ham...
Daniel Henry Chamberlain, as Republican Governor of South Carolina during the last two years of Reco...
The Life of Wade Hampton This is a first-rate biography of a valiant Confederate soldier, a grea...
This study examined the racial rhetoric of Wade Hampton with particular attention to claims that he ...
Carolina Cavalryman Stuart\u27s replacement became governor and senator of South Carolina The rec...
The election of 1978 was a unique event in the political history of Virginia. For the first time sin...
A review of Wade Hampton: Confederate Warrior to Southern Redeemer, by Rod Andrew, Jr
Interview with Rod Andrew, Jr. Interviewed by Christopher Childers Civil War Book Review (CWBR): ...
Another Look at South Carolina Reconstruction In the preface to his new book, York County, S.C., his...
Considered by many historians to be the birthplace of the Confederacy, South Carolina experienced on...
Coleman Livingston Blease was an active participant in South Carolina politics for over fifty years....
The United States was not always as united as its name suggests. In the middle of the nineteenth cen...
An article by Victor B. Howard published in the Summer 1982 issue of the Register of the Kentucky Hi...
After the American Civil War ended in 1865, the United States entered an era known as Reconstruction...