During the troubled years following the Civil War many individuals from the North were involved in the economic, social, and political affairs of the former Confederate states. Because the elevation of freed blacks to full citizenship was one of their goals— and deeply resented by Southerners— these men were often castigated by contemporary native whites and subsequently by historians. Denounced as “carpetbaggers” who came into the South to plunder for personal gain while native leaders were disfranchised and unable to prevent it, these men received low marks from historians of all regions who studied the Reconstruction South
This dissertation is a study of organized, professional history in the American South centered on tw...
James Ford Rhodes and John Roy Lynch, who both lived through the period of Reconstruction, were hist...
Southern Reconstruction Mr. Leigh has written several books, including Lee\u27s Lost Dispatch and O...
Carpetbagger reputations suffered greatly for most of the century following the end of Reconstructio...
Historians discuss the struggles of African Americans during a turbulent period in Florida\u27s hist...
Until well into the 1930s historians accepted as standard the interpretations of Reconstruction offe...
To explain the reconciliation of the United States in the half-century after the Civil War, scholars...
A Closer Look at Reconstruction in a Southern State Mark L. Bradley, a historian with the U.S. A...
Despite the dramatic geographical expansion of the U.S. South after 1800, few historians have includ...
Between 1900 and 1925 a score of young Southern historians graduated from Columbia University and qu...
Until relatively recent times the historiography of the Reconstruction period in Florida could be su...
Ever since William Watson Davis, member of the so-called Dunning school of post Civil War historiogr...
Originally published in 1965. The Supreme Court's momentous school desegregation decision of 1954 wa...
When the European war erupted in 1914 the flow of immigrants to the United States was greatly curtai...
In some places, the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) was a social fraternity whose members enjoyed sophomoric hiji...
This dissertation is a study of organized, professional history in the American South centered on tw...
James Ford Rhodes and John Roy Lynch, who both lived through the period of Reconstruction, were hist...
Southern Reconstruction Mr. Leigh has written several books, including Lee\u27s Lost Dispatch and O...
Carpetbagger reputations suffered greatly for most of the century following the end of Reconstructio...
Historians discuss the struggles of African Americans during a turbulent period in Florida\u27s hist...
Until well into the 1930s historians accepted as standard the interpretations of Reconstruction offe...
To explain the reconciliation of the United States in the half-century after the Civil War, scholars...
A Closer Look at Reconstruction in a Southern State Mark L. Bradley, a historian with the U.S. A...
Despite the dramatic geographical expansion of the U.S. South after 1800, few historians have includ...
Between 1900 and 1925 a score of young Southern historians graduated from Columbia University and qu...
Until relatively recent times the historiography of the Reconstruction period in Florida could be su...
Ever since William Watson Davis, member of the so-called Dunning school of post Civil War historiogr...
Originally published in 1965. The Supreme Court's momentous school desegregation decision of 1954 wa...
When the European war erupted in 1914 the flow of immigrants to the United States was greatly curtai...
In some places, the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) was a social fraternity whose members enjoyed sophomoric hiji...
This dissertation is a study of organized, professional history in the American South centered on tw...
James Ford Rhodes and John Roy Lynch, who both lived through the period of Reconstruction, were hist...
Southern Reconstruction Mr. Leigh has written several books, including Lee\u27s Lost Dispatch and O...