This Article examines several legal aspects of Reconstruction. It first looks at how the Texas and North Carolina supreme courts helped mediate the transition from a pre-war to a post-war society. Were the courts composed of unconditional Unionists, Conservatives, or a mix? Did they try to help the people of their states accept slav- ery\u27s demise or did they aggravate the sting of defeat? A closely related issue is how Reconstruction lawmakers adjusted the legal rights of blacks following the abolition of slavery. Did they leave a permanent imprint on civil rights law or did they confirm Tourgee\u27s judgment that Reconstruction was ultimately a fool\u27s errand ?\u27 The Article next examines state constitutional history, which is also...
The end of Reconstruction involved an intricate interplay of legal rights and remedies with a bloody...
This Article examines whether interest-convergence and/or critical legal theory more thoroughly expl...
The Rise and Fall of Reconstruction in Alabama On the first page of Reconstruction in Alabama: From ...
This Article examines several legal aspects of Reconstruction. It first looks at how the Texas and N...
Part I of this article, on the historiography of South Carolina Reconstruction, explains the difficu...
Bringing the Law Into Dialogue with Civil War History A long-running debate among American historian...
After the Civil War, the South faced a problem that was almost entirely new in the United States: a ...
Although the government of the Confederate States of America has been formally treated as a legal nu...
This article provides an analysis of how slave women, during the period from the American Revolution...
This article draws on more than 600 higher court cases in eight southern states to show that African...
Reconstruction has variously been termed repressive. . . uncivilized and a sordid time as well a...
Citation: Ingraham, Irene. Reconstruction: 1866-1876. Senior thesis, Kansas State Agricultural Colle...
This paper deals with the complexity of the legal system in the American South during the Antebellum...
$outhern $elf-protection Debtors invoked federal law to protect businesses Bankruptcy in the Unite...
textThe two principal aims of this study are to grant insight into the complex relationship of sout...
The end of Reconstruction involved an intricate interplay of legal rights and remedies with a bloody...
This Article examines whether interest-convergence and/or critical legal theory more thoroughly expl...
The Rise and Fall of Reconstruction in Alabama On the first page of Reconstruction in Alabama: From ...
This Article examines several legal aspects of Reconstruction. It first looks at how the Texas and N...
Part I of this article, on the historiography of South Carolina Reconstruction, explains the difficu...
Bringing the Law Into Dialogue with Civil War History A long-running debate among American historian...
After the Civil War, the South faced a problem that was almost entirely new in the United States: a ...
Although the government of the Confederate States of America has been formally treated as a legal nu...
This article provides an analysis of how slave women, during the period from the American Revolution...
This article draws on more than 600 higher court cases in eight southern states to show that African...
Reconstruction has variously been termed repressive. . . uncivilized and a sordid time as well a...
Citation: Ingraham, Irene. Reconstruction: 1866-1876. Senior thesis, Kansas State Agricultural Colle...
This paper deals with the complexity of the legal system in the American South during the Antebellum...
$outhern $elf-protection Debtors invoked federal law to protect businesses Bankruptcy in the Unite...
textThe two principal aims of this study are to grant insight into the complex relationship of sout...
The end of Reconstruction involved an intricate interplay of legal rights and remedies with a bloody...
This Article examines whether interest-convergence and/or critical legal theory more thoroughly expl...
The Rise and Fall of Reconstruction in Alabama On the first page of Reconstruction in Alabama: From ...