When litigants entered Southern courtrooms after the end of the Civil War, they encountered a tangled morass of unexpected legal questions related to the end of slavery. Though the need to face such problems was ubiquitous across the former slaveholding republic, each state contended with such matters uniquely, producing a series of different solutions to the same fundamental problems. Principal among them: Why were there so many legacies of slavery contested in court? How should the law treat slavery and former slaves after the supposed end of the peculiar institution? In what ways did litigants themselves help to shape the meaning of freedom? How complete was the abolition of slavery if the institution itself remained open to ongoing liti...
Reconstruction Reconsidered How did American slavery end, and what meanings can be derived from its ...
This paper deals with the complexity of the legal system in the American South during the Antebellum...
This Article examines several legal aspects of Reconstruction. It first looks at how the Texas and N...
When litigants entered Southern courtrooms after the end of the Civil War, they encountered a tangle...
While historians have long been aware of the haphazard and chaotic nature of emancipation in the imm...
This article draws on more than 600 higher court cases in eight southern states to show that African...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Law.In 1869, in Texas v White, the Supreme Court of the ...
This essay analyses the trial records of civil cases between former slaves and their former slavehol...
Only a few decades ago, it was possible to write accounts of the culture or economy of the antebellu...
This dissertation examines the political conflict over fugitive slave rendition from the era of the ...
This dissertation examines the political conflict over fugitive slave rendition from the era of the ...
The Thirteenth Amendment abolishes the institution of slavery rather than freeing individual slaves....
The thesis of Professor Donald Nieman\u27s paper, From Slaves to Citizens: African-Americans, Right...
The Thirteenth Amendment abolishes the institution of slavery rather than freeing individual slaves....
On January 1, 1863, Abraham Lincoln declared all slaves in the Confederate States to be free through...
Reconstruction Reconsidered How did American slavery end, and what meanings can be derived from its ...
This paper deals with the complexity of the legal system in the American South during the Antebellum...
This Article examines several legal aspects of Reconstruction. It first looks at how the Texas and N...
When litigants entered Southern courtrooms after the end of the Civil War, they encountered a tangle...
While historians have long been aware of the haphazard and chaotic nature of emancipation in the imm...
This article draws on more than 600 higher court cases in eight southern states to show that African...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Law.In 1869, in Texas v White, the Supreme Court of the ...
This essay analyses the trial records of civil cases between former slaves and their former slavehol...
Only a few decades ago, it was possible to write accounts of the culture or economy of the antebellu...
This dissertation examines the political conflict over fugitive slave rendition from the era of the ...
This dissertation examines the political conflict over fugitive slave rendition from the era of the ...
The Thirteenth Amendment abolishes the institution of slavery rather than freeing individual slaves....
The thesis of Professor Donald Nieman\u27s paper, From Slaves to Citizens: African-Americans, Right...
The Thirteenth Amendment abolishes the institution of slavery rather than freeing individual slaves....
On January 1, 1863, Abraham Lincoln declared all slaves in the Confederate States to be free through...
Reconstruction Reconsidered How did American slavery end, and what meanings can be derived from its ...
This paper deals with the complexity of the legal system in the American South during the Antebellum...
This Article examines several legal aspects of Reconstruction. It first looks at how the Texas and N...