Reconstruction (U.S. history, 1865-1877)
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Reconstruction (U.S. history, 1865-1877)
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Reconstruction (U.S. history, 1865-1877)
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Incoming Resources
- Freedom, racism, and Reconstruction, collected writings of LaWanda Cox, edited by Donald G. Nieman
- Forty acres and a mule, the rape of colored Americans : a manifesto to the United States government, by Edward L. Jones
- Prince of carpetbaggers, by Jonathan Daniels
- Forever free, the story of emancipation and Reconstruction, Eric Foner ; illustrations edited and with commentary by Joshua Brown
- Black reconstructionists
- Ossian Bingley Hart, Florida's loyalist Reconstruction governor, Canter Brown, Jr
- Letter of the Secretary of the Treasury, communicating, in compliance with a resolution of the Senate of February 5, 1867, information in relation to the amount of money received from sales of cotton or other property turned over to the Treasury Department under the several laws of Congress, and the disposition made of the same. March 2, 1867. -- Read, ordered to lie on the table and be printed
- Reconstruction, Laura K. Egendorf, book editor
- Black Reconstruction in America, an essay toward a history of the part which black folk played in the attempt to reconstruct democracy in America, 1860-1880
- Registers of signatures of depositors in branches of the Freedman's Savings and Trust Company, 1865-1874
- Fighting chance, the struggle over woman suffrage and Black suffrage in Reconstruction America, Faye E. Dudden
- Climbing up to glory, a short history of African Americans during the Civil War and Reconstruction, Wilbert L. Jenkins
- Freedom's lawmakers, a directory of Black officeholders during Reconstruction, Eric Foner
- Reconstruction: the ending of the Civil War, [by] Avery Craven
- African Americans in the Reconstruction era, Gao Chunchang
- Schooling the freed people, teaching, learning, and the struggle for Black freedom, 1861-1876, Ronald E. Butchart
- Andrew Johnson : a biography, Hans L. Trefousse
- A house reunited, how America survived the Civil War, by Jay Winik
- Women's radical reconstruction, the freedmen's aid movement, Carol Faulkner
- Fateful lightning, a new history of the Civil War & Reconstruction, Allen C. Guelzo
- The South since the war
- Statements, letters, and testimony relative to captured and abandoned property, before the Committee on Expenditures of the Treasury Department. First session Forty-fourth Congress
- Reconstruction, the second Civil War, original concept developed by Paul Taylor ; WGBH Boston
- Traveling the freedom road, from slavery & the Civil War through Reconstruction, Linda Barrett Osborne ; in association with the Library of Congress
- Black reconstruction in America, W.E.B. Du Bois ; with an introduction by David Levering Lewis
- The Nation reunited : war's aftermath, by Richard W. Murphy and the editors of Time-Life Books
- A ruined land, the end of the Civil War, Michael Golay
- Been in the storm so long : the aftermath of slavery, Leon F. Litwack
- Reconstruction, America's unfinished revolution, 1863-1877, Eric Foner
- The original meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment, its letter and spirit, Randy E. Barnett, Evan D. Bernick ; foreword by James Oakes
- The romance of reunion, northerners and the South, 1865-1900, Nina Silber
- American eras
- To protect loyal and peaceable citizens of the United States. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 3011.) February 20, 1871. -- Ordered to be printed and recommitted to the Committee on Reconstruction
- Emancipation and Reconstruction, Michael Perman
- Reconstruction, William Dudley, book editor
- After Appomattox, how the South won the war, Stetson Kennedy
- Those terrible carpetbaggers, Richard Nelson Current
- Rutherford B. Hayes, Hans L. Trefousse
- Letter of the Secretary of War, communicating, in compliance with a resolution of the Senate of December 17, 1866, reports of the assistant commissioners of freedmen, and a synopsis of laws respecting persons of color in the late slave states. January 3, 1867. -- Read and referred to the Committee on Military Affairs and the Militia. January 21, 1867. -- Ordered to be printed
- The two reconstructions, the struggle for Black enfranchisement, Richard M. Valelly
- I saw death coming, a history of terror and survival in the war against Reconstruction, Kidada E. Williams
- Reconstruction; an anthology of revisionist writings,, edited by Kenneth M. Stampp and Leon F. Litwack
- The South since the war, as shown by fourteen weeks of travel and observation in Georgia and the Carolinas, by Sidney Andrews ; abridged with a new introduction by Heather Cox Richardson
- The reconstruction of the Nation, [by] Rembert W. Patrick
- In the wake of slavery, Civil War, Civil Rights, and the reconstruction of Southern law, Joseph A. Ranney
- Color-blind justice, Albion Tourgée and the quest for racial equality from the Civil War to Plessy v. Ferguson, Mark Elliott
- The South, a tour of its battlefields and ruined cities, a journey through the desolated states, and talks with the people, 1867, John Townsend Trowbridge ; J.H. Segars, editor
- Reconstruction and redemption in the South, edited by Otto H. Olsen
- Reconstruction, Claudine L. Ferrell
- Message of the President of the United States, communicating, in compliance with a resolution of the Senate of the 31st ultimo, correspondence between the Department of State and any of the foreign ministers of the United States, with reference to the policy of the President towards the states lately in rebellion. February 23, 1867. -- Read ; ordered to lie on the table and be printed