|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
The American Civil War was the first military conflict in history
to be fought with railroads moving troops and the telegraph
connecting civilian leadership to commanders in the field. New
developments arose at a moment’s notice. As a result, the young
nation’s political structure and culture often struggled to keep
up. When war began, Congress was not even in session. By the time
it met, the government had mobilized over 100,000 soldiers, battles
had been fought, casualties had been taken, some civilians had
violently opposed the war effort, and emancipation was under way.
This set the stage for Congress to play catch-up for much of the
conflict. The result was an ongoing race to pass new laws and set
policies. Throughout it all, Congress had to answer to a fractured
and demanding public. In addition, Congress, no longer paralyzed by
large numbers of Southern slave owners, moved forward on
progressive economic and social issues—such as the
transcontinental railroad and the land grant college act—which
could not previously have been passed. In Congress and the
People’s Contest, Paul Finkelman and Donald R. Kennon have
assembled some of the nation’s finest scholars of American
history and law to evaluate the interactions between Congress and
the American people as they navigated a cataclysmic and
unprecedented war. Displaying a variety and range of focus that
will make the book a classroom must, these essays show how these
interactions took place—sometimes successfully, and sometimes
less so. Contributors: L. Diane Barnes, Fergus M. Bordewich, Jenny
Bourne, Jonathan Earle, Lesley J. Gordon, Mischa Honeck, Chandra
Manning, Nikki M. Taylor, and Eric Walther.
The American Civil War was the first military conflict in history
to be fought with railroads moving troops and the telegraph
connecting civilian leadership to commanders in the field. New
developments arose at a moment’s notice. As a result, the young
nation’s political structure and culture often struggled to keep
up. When war began, Congress was not even in session. By the time
it met, the government had mobilized over 100,000 soldiers, battles
had been fought, casualties had been taken, some civilians had
violently opposed the war effort, and emancipation was under way.
This set the stage for Congress to play catch-up for much of the
conflict. The result was an ongoing race to pass new laws and set
policies. Throughout it all, Congress had to answer to a fractured
and demanding public. In addition, Congress, no longer paralyzed by
large numbers of Southern slave owners, moved forward on
progressive economic and social issues—such as the
transcontinental railroad and the land grant college act—which
could not previously have been passed. In Congress and the
People’s Contest, Paul Finkelman and Donald R. Kennon have
assembled some of the nation’s finest scholars of American
history and law to evaluate the interactions between Congress and
the American people as they navigated a cataclysmic and
unprecedented war. Displaying a variety and range of focus that
will make the book a classroom must, these essays show how these
interactions took place—sometimes successfully, and sometimes
less so. Contributors: L. Diane Barnes, Fergus M. Bordewich, Jenny
Bourne, Jonathan Earle, Lesley J. Gordon, Mischa Honeck, Chandra
Manning, Nikki M. Taylor, and Eric Walther.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|