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Books > Humanities > History > American history > 1800 to 1900
Their long rivalry climaxed with the spilled blood of an American
president. Mathew Brady, nearly blind and hoping to rekindle his
artistic photographic magic, competed against his former
understudy, Alexander Gardner, to record the epic moments of
President Abraham Lincoln's death; the hunt for his murderer, John
Wilkes Booth; and the execution of the men and women who conspired
with Booth to cripple the United States government. The two
photographers rushed to the theater where Lincoln was slain, to the
gallows where the conspirators were hanged, and to the autopsy
table where Booth was identified, hoping to capture the iconic
images of their times . . . and to emerge as the nation's unrivaled
master of the new media. Shooting Lincoln tells the heart-pounding
story of their race for lasting camera-lens glory-and shows how, at
the end of the Civil War, photography had become the
photojournalism that would our change culture forever. Brady and
Gardner took some of the most memorable images ever recorded in
history, invented a new media industry, and became the fathers of
modern media, unlocking the passion of Americans for close-up views
of history as it happened.
The era known as Reconstruction is one of the unhappiest times in
American history. It succeeded in reuniting the nation politically
after the Civil War but in little else. Among its chief failures
was the inability to chart a progressive course for race relations
after the abolition of slavery and rise of Jim Crow. Reconstruction
also struggled to successfully manage the Southern resistance
towards a Northern, free-labor pattern. But the failures cannot
obscure a number of notable accomplishments, with decisive
long-term consequences for American life: the 14th and 15th
Amendments to the Constitution, the election of the first African
American representatives to the US Congress, and the avoidance of
any renewed outbreak of civil war. Reconstruction suffered from
poor leadership and uncertainty of direction, but it also laid the
groundwork for renewed struggles for racial equality during the
Civil Rights Movement. This Very Short Introduction delves into the
constitutional, political, and social issues behind Reconstruction
to provide a lucid and original account of a historical moment that
left an indelible mark on American social fabric. Award-winning
historian Allen C. Guelzo depicts Reconstruction as a "bourgeois
revolution" - as the attempted extension of the free-labor ideology
embodied by Lincoln and the Republican Party to what was perceived
as a Southern region gone astray from the Founders' intention in
the pursuit of Romantic aristocracy.
The Cambridge History of the American Civil War provides the most
comprehensive analysis to date of the American Civil War. With
contributions from over seventy-five leading historians of the
Civil War, the three-volume reference work investigates the full
range of human experiences and outcomes in this most transformative
moment in American and global history. Volume 1 is organized around
military affairs, assessing major battles and campaigns of the
conflict. Volume 2 explores political and social affairs, conveying
the experiences of millions of Americans who lived outside the
major campaign zones in both the North and South. Volume 3 examines
cultural and intellectual affairs, considering how the War's
duration, scale, and intensity drove Americans to question how they
understood themselves as people. The volumes conclude with an
assessment of the legacies of the Civil War, demonstrating that its
impact on American life shaped the country in the decades long
after the end of the War.
It is the most famous speech Lincoln ever gave, and one of the most
important orations in the history of the nation. Delivered on
November 19, 1863, among the freshly dug graves of the Union dead,
the Gettysburg Address defined the central meaning of the Civil War
and gave cause for the nation's incredible suffering. The poetic
language and moral sentiment inspired listeners at the time, and
have continued to resonate powerfully with groups and individuals
up to the present day. What gives this speech its enduring
significance? This collection of essays, from some of the
best-known scholars in the field, answers that question. Placing
the Address in complete historical and cultural context and
approaching it from a number of fresh perspectives, the volume
first identifies how Lincoln was influenced by great thinkers on
his own path toward literary and oratory genius. Among others,
Nicholas P. Cole draws parallels between the Address and classical
texts of Antiquity and John Stauffer considers Lincoln's knowledge
of the King James Bible and Shakespeare. The second half of the
collection then examines the many ways in which the Gettysburg
Address has been interpreted, perceived, and utilized in the past
150 years. Since 1863, African Americans, immigrants, women, gay
rights activists, and international figures have invoked the
speech's language and righteous sentiments on their respective
paths toward freedom and equality. Essays include Louis P. Masur on
the role the Address played in eventual emancipation; Jean H. Baker
on the speech's importance to the women's rights movement; and Don
H. Doyle on the Address's international legacy. Lincoln spoke at
Gettysburg in a defining moment for America, but as the essays in
this collection attest, his message is universal and timeless. This
work brings together the foremost experts in the field to
illuminate the many ways in which that message continues to endure.
This book offers the definitive history of how formerly enslaved
men and women pursued federal benefits from the Civil War to the
New Deal and, in the process, transformed themselves from a
stateless people into documented citizens. As claimants, Black
southerners engaged an array of federal agencies. Their encounters
with the more familiar Freedmen's Bureau and Pension Bureau are
presented here in a striking new light, while their struggles with
the long-forgotten Freedmen's Branch appear in this study for the
very first time. Based on extensive archival research in rarely
used collections, Dale Kretz uncovers surprising stories of
political mobilization among tens of thousands of Black claimants
for military bounties, back payments, and pensions, finding
victories in an unlikely place: the federal bureaucracy. As newly
freed, rights-bearing citizens, they negotiated issues of slavery,
identity, family, loyalty, dependency, and disability, all within
an increasingly complex and rapidly expanding federal
administrative state-at once a lifeline to countless Black families
and a mainline to a new liberal order.
For a century and a half, Abraham Lincoln's signing of the
Emancipation Proclamation has been the dominant narrative of
African American freedom in the Civil War era. However, David
Williams suggests that this portrayal marginalizes the role that
African American slaves played in freeing themselves. At the Civil
War's outset, Lincoln made clear his intent was to save the Union
rather than free slaves - despite his personal distaste for
slavery, he claimed no authority to interfere with the institution.
By the second year of the war, though, when the Union army was in
desperate need of black support, former slaves who escaped to Union
lines struck a bargain: they would fight for the Union only if they
were granted their freedom. Williams importantly demonstrates that
freedom was not simply the absence of slavery but rather a dynamic
process enacted by self-emancipated African American refugees,
which compelled Lincoln to modify his war aims and place black
freedom at the center of his wartime policies.
War in Kentucky
From Shiloh to Perryville
James Lee McDonough
A compelling new volume from the author of Shiloh--In Hell before
Night and Chattanooga--A Death Grip on the Confederacy, this book
explores the strategic importance of Kentucky for both sides in the
Civil War and recounts the Confederacy's bold attempt to capture
the Bluegrass State. In a narrative rich with quotations from the
diaries, letters, and reminiscences of participants, James Lee
McDonough brings to vigorous life an episode whose full
significance has previously eluded students of the war.
In February of 1862, the fall of Fort Henry and Fort Donelson near
the Tennessee-Kentucky border forced a Confederate retreat into
northern Alabama. After the Southern forces failed that spring at
Shiloh to throw back the Federal advance, the controversial General
Braxton Bragg, newly promoted by Jefferson Davis, launched a
countermovement that would sweep eastward to Chattanooga and then
northwest through Middle Tennessee. Capturing Kentucky became the
ultimate goal, which, if achieved, would lend the war a different
complexion indeed.
Giving equal attention to the strategies of both sides, McDonough
describes the ill-fated Union effort to capture Chattanooga with an
advance through Alabama, the Confederate march across Tennessee,
and the subsequent two-pronged invasion of Kentucky. He vividly
recounts the fighting at Richmond, Munfordville, and Perryville,
where the Confederate dream of controlling Kentucky finally
ended.
The first book-length study of this key campaign in the Western
Theater, War in Kentucky not only demonstrates the extent of its
importance but supports the case that 1862 should be considered the
decisive year of the war.
The author: James Lee McDonough, a native of Tennessee, is
professor of history at Auburn University. Among his other books
are Stones River--Bloody Winter in Tennessee and Five Tragic Hours:
The Battle of Franklin, which he co-wrote with Thomas L. Connelly.
Originally delivered as the Rede Lecture in the Senate House,
Cambridge, in 1910 and published the same year, this book addresses
the parallels between the English and American civil wars in order
to bring out the special characteristics of each. The similarities
between the two wars were commented upon during the American civil
war but the conflicts differ from one another in several important
ways, which Firth highlights. This book will be of value to anyone
with an interest in comparative history.
In this groundbreaking study, Barton A. Myers analyzes the secret
world of hundreds of white and black Southern Unionists as they
struggled for survival in a new Confederate world, resisted the
imposition of Confederate military and civil authority, began a
diffuse underground movement to destroy the Confederacy, joined the
United States Army as soldiers, and waged a series of violent
guerrilla battles at the local level against other Southerners.
Myers also details the work of Confederates as they struggled to
build a new nation at the local level and maintain control over
manpower, labor, agricultural, and financial resources, which
Southern Unionists possessed. The story is not solely one of
triumph over adversity but also one of persecution and, ultimately,
erasure of these dissidents by the postwar South's Lost Cause
mythologizers.
The Civil War is the greatest trauma ever experienced by the
American nation, a four-year paroxysm of violence that left in its
wake more than 600,000 dead, more than 2 million refugees, and the
destruction (in modern dollars) of more than $700 billion in
property. The war also sparked some of the most heroic moments in
American history and enshrined a galaxy of American heroes. Above
all, it permanently ended the practice of slavery and proved, in an
age of resurgent monarchies, that a liberal democracy could survive
the most frightful of challenges. In Fateful Lightning, two-time
Lincoln Prize-winning historian Allen C. Guelzo offers a marvelous
portrait of the Civil War and its era, covering not only the major
figures and epic battles, but also politics, religion, gender,
race, diplomacy, and technology. And unlike other surveys of the
Civil War era, it extends the reader's vista to include the postwar
Reconstruction period and discusses the modern-day legacy of the
Civil War in American literature and popular culture. Guelzo also
puts the conflict in a global perspective, underscoring Americans'
acute sense of the vulnerability of their republic in a world of
monarchies. He examines the strategy, the tactics, and especially
the logistics of the Civil War and brings the most recent
historical thinking to bear on emancipation, the presidency and the
war powers, the blockade and international law, and the role of
intellectuals, North and South. Written by a leading authority on
our nation's most searing crisis, Fateful Lightning offers a vivid
and original account of an event whose echoes continue with
Americans to this day.
This classic work by Pulitzer Prize winner Bruce Catton, one of the
great historians of the Civil War, takes an incisive look at the
turning point of the war, when the great armies of the North and
South came to Gettysburg in July 1863. Engaging and authoritative,
Catton analyzes the course of events at Gettysburg, clarifying its
causes and bringing to life the most famous battle ever fought on
American soil. Paying full heed to the human tragedies that
occurred, "Gettysburg: The Final Fury" gives an hour-by-hour
account of the three-day battle, from the skirmish that began the
engagement, to Pickett's ill-fated charge. Catton provides context
for the fateful decisions made by each army's commanders, and
examines the battle's military and political consequences, placing
it within the larger narrative of the Civil War and American
history.
When Confederate troops fired on Fort Sumter in April of 1861, Walt
Whitman declared it "the volcanic upheaval of the nation"-the
bloody inception of a war that would dramatically alter the shape
and character of American culture along with its political, racial,
and social landscape. Prior to the war, America's leading writers
had been integral to helping the young nation imagine itself,
assert its beliefs, and realize its immense potential. When the
Civil War erupted, it forced them to witness not only unimaginable
human carnage on the battlefield, but also the disintegration of
the foundational symbolic order they had helped to create. The war
demanded new frameworks for understanding the world and new forms
of communication that could engage with the immensity of the
conflict. It fostered both social and cultural experimentation.
From Battlefields Rising explores the profound impact of the war on
writers including Walt Whitman, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Herman
Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Emily Dickinson, and Frederick
Douglass. As the writers of the time grappled with the war's impact
on the individual and the national psyche, their responses
multiplied and transmuted. Whitman's poetry and prose, for example,
was chastened and deepened by his years spent ministering to
wounded soldiers; off the battlefield, the anguish of war would
come to suffuse the austere, elliptical poems that Emily Dickinson
was writing from afar; and Hawthorne was rendered silent by his
reading of military reports and talks with soldiers. Calling into
question every prior presumption and ideal, the war forever changed
America's early idealism-and consequently its literature-into
something far more ambivalent and raw. Sketching an absorbing group
portrait of the period's most important writers, From Battlefields
Rising flashes with forgotten historical details and elegant new
ideas. It alters previous perceptions about the evolution of
American literature and how Americans have understood and expressed
their common history.
Richard B. Harwell Award Although often counted among the Union's
top five generals, George Henry Thomas has still not received his
due. A Virginian who sided with the North in the Civil War, he was
a more complicated commander than traditional views have allowed.
Brian Wills now provides a new and more complete look at the life
of a man known to history as "The Rock of Chickamauga," to his
troops as "Old Pap," and to General William T. Sherman as a soldier
who was "as true as steel." While biographers have long been
hampered by Thomas's lack of personal papers, Wills has drawn on
previously untapped sources-notably the correspondence of Thomas's
contemporaries-to offer new insights into what made him tick.
Focusing on Thomas's personality and motivations, Wills contributes
revealing discussions of his style and approach to command and
successfully captures his troubled interactions with other Union
commanders, providing a particularly more evenhanded evaluation of
his relationship with Grant. He also gives a more substantial
account of battlefield action than can be found in other
biographies, capturing the ebb and flow of key
encounters-Chickamauga and Missionary Ridge, Chattanooga and
Atlanta, Stones River and Mill Springs, Peachtree Creek and
Nashville-to help readers better understand Thomas's contributions
to their outcomes. Throughout Wills presents a well-rounded
individual whose complex views embraced the worlds of professional
military service and scientific inquisitiveness, a man known for
attention to detail and compassion to subordinates. We also meet a
sharp-tempered person whose disdain for politics hurt his prospects
for advancement as much as it reflected positively on his
character, and Wills offers new insight into why Thomas might not
have progressed as quickly up the ladder of command as he might
have liked. More deeply researched than other biographies, Wills's
work situates Thomas squarely in his own time to provide readers
with a more thorough and balanced life story of this enigmatic
Union general. It is a definitive military history that gives us a
new and needed picture of the Rock of Chickamauga-a man whose
devotion to duty and ideals made him as true as steel.
Prussian-born cartographer Oscar Hinrichs was a key member of
Stonewall Jackson's staff, collaborated on maps with Jedediah
Hotchkiss, and worked alongside such prominent Confederate leaders
as Joe Johnston, Richard H. Anderson, and Jubal Early. After being
smuggled along the Rebel Secret Line in southern Maryland by John
Surratt Sr., his wife Mary, and other Confederate sympathizers,
Hinrichs saw action in key campaigns from the Shenandoah Valley and
Antietam to Gettysburg, Petersburg, and Appomattox. After the
Confederate surrender, Hinrichs was arrested alongside his friend
Henry Kyd Douglas and imprisoned under suspicion of having played a
role in the Booth conspiracy, though the charges were later
dropped.
Hinrichs's detailed wartime journals, published here for the first
time, shed new light on mapmaking as a tool of war, illuminate
Stonewall Jackson's notoriously superior strategic and tactical use
of terrain, and offer unique perspectives on the lives of common
soldiers, staff officers, and commanders in Lee's army.
Impressively comprehensive, Hinrichs's writings constitute a
valuable and revelatory primary source from the Civil War
era.
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