Schooling the Freed People

Schooling the Freed People
Author: Ronald E. Butchart
Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press
Total Pages: 337
Release: 2010-09-27
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0807899348

Conventional wisdom holds that freedmen's education was largely the work of privileged, single white northern women motivated by evangelical beliefs and abolitionism. Backed by pathbreaking research, Ronald E. Butchart's Schooling the Freed People shatters this notion. The most comprehensive quantitative study of the origins of black education in freedom ever undertaken, this definitive book on freedmen's teachers in the South is an outstanding contribution to social history and our understanding of African American education.

The Coming of the Civil War

The Coming of the Civil War
Author: Avery Craven
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 508
Release: 1957
Genre: Slavery
ISBN: 0226118940

A stimulating and profound analysis of the factors which brought a nation into war with itself.

Reconstruction (Illustrated)

Reconstruction (Illustrated)
Author: Frederick Douglass
Publisher: Independently Published
Total Pages: 28
Release: 2019-07-26
Genre:
ISBN: 9781082858505

"It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men." ― Frederick Douglass - An American Classic! - Includes Images of Frederick Douglass and His Life

The Fateful Lightning

The Fateful Lightning
Author: Kathleen Diffley
Publisher: Print Culture in the South
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2021
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780820358550

This "is the second volume of Diffley's trilogy on Civil War magazine fiction, called Making War Civil ... In Fateful Lightning, Diffley traces the sectional conflicts in a postwar nation, and how region shaped the political agendas of these post-war editorials. Diffley argues that the journals she looks at in this project present stories that give 'unpredictable' results of sectional conflict and commemorate the Civil War differently from the Northeast publishing establishments. Diffley threads this through her analysis of four literary journals: the Baltimore's Southern Magazine, Charlotte's The Land We Love, Chicago's Lakeside Monthly, and San Francisco's Overland Monthly"--

The Civil War and American Art

The Civil War and American Art
Author: Eleanor Jones Harvey
Publisher: Yale University Press
Total Pages: 353
Release: 2012-12-03
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0300187335

Collects the best artwork created before, during and following the Civil War, in the years between 1859 and 1876, along with extensive quotations from men and women alive during the war years and text by literary figures, including Emily Dickinson, Mark Twain and Walt Whitman. 15,000 first printing.

America Aflame

America Aflame
Author: David Goldfield
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 642
Release: 2011-03-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 1608193748

In this spellbinding new history, David Goldfield offers the first major new interpretation of the Civil War era since James M. McPherson's Battle Cry of Freedom. Where past scholars have limned the war as a triumph of freedom, Goldfield sees it as America's greatest failure: the result of a breakdown caused by the infusion of evangelical religion into the public sphere. As the Second GreatAwakening surged through America, political questions became matters of good and evil to be fought to the death. The price of that failure was horrific, but the carnage accomplished what statesmen could not: It made the United States one nation and eliminated slavery as a divisive force in the Union. The victorious North became synonymous with America as a land of innovation and industrialization, whose teeming cities offered squalor and opportunity in equal measure. Religion was supplanted by science and a gospel of progress, and the South was left behind. Goldfield's panoramic narrative, sweeping from the 1840s to the end of Reconstruction, is studded with memorable details and luminaries such as HarrietBeecher Stowe, Frederick Douglass, and Walt Whitman. There are lesser known yet equally compelling characters, too, including Carl Schurz-a German immigrant, warhero, and postwar reformer-and Alexander Stephens, the urbane and intellectual vice president of the Confederacy. America Aflame is a vivid portrait of the "fiery trial"that transformed the country we live in.