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The "End" of Reconstruction: Disputed Election of 1876, and the "Compromise of 1877"

By David W. Blight - Yale
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Lecture Description

This lecture focuses on the role of white southern terrorist violence in brining about the end of Reconstruction. Professor Blight begins with an account the Colfax Massacre. Colfax, Louisiana was the sight of the largest mass murder in U.S. history, when a white mob killed dozens of African Americans in the April of 1873. Two Supreme Court decisions would do in the judicial realm what the Colfax Massacre had done in the political. On the same day as the Colfax Massacre, the Supreme Court offered a narrow reading of the 14th Amendment in the Slaughterhouse cases, signaling a judicial retreat from the radicalism of the early Reconstruction years. The Cruikshank case, two years later, would overturn the convictions of the only three men sentenced for their involvement in Colfax, and marked another step away from reconstruction. Professor Blight concludes with the Panic of 1873 and the seemingly innumerable political scandals of the Grant Administration, suggesting the manner in which these events encouraged northerners to tire of the Reconstruction experiment by the early 1870s.

Course Description

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Course Index

  1. Introductions: Why Does the Civil War Era Have a Hold on American Historical Imagination?
  2. Southern Society: Slavery, King Cotton, and Antebellum America's "Peculiar" Region
  3. A Southern World View: the Old South and Proslavery Ideology
  4. A Northern World View: Yankee Society, Antislavery Ideology, and the Abolition Movement
  5. Telling a Free Story: Fugitive Slaves and the Underground Railroad in Myth and Reality
  6. Expansion and Slavery: Legacies of the Mexican War and the Compromise of 1850
  7. "A Hell of a Storm": The Kansas-Nebraska Act and the Birth of the Republican Party
  8. Dred Scott, Bleeding Kansas, and the Impending Crisis of the Union
  9. John Brown's Holy War: Terrorist or Heroic Revolutionary?
  10. The Election of 1860 and the Secession Crisis
  11. Slavery and State Rights, Economies and Ways of Life: What Caused the Civil War?
  12. "And the War Came," 1861: The Sumter Crisis, Comparative Strategies
  13. Terrible Swift Sword: The Period of Confederate Ascendency
  14. Never Call Retreat: Military and Political Turning Points in 1863
  15. Lincoln, Leadership, and Race: Emancipation as Policy
  16. Days of Jubilee: The Meanings of Emancipation and Total War
  17. Homefronts and Battlefronts: "Hard War" and the Social Impact of the Civil War
  18. "War So Terrible": Why the Union Won and the Confederacy Lost
  19. To Appomattox and Beyond: The End of the War and a Search for Meanings
  20. Wartime Reconstruction: Imagining the Aftermath and a Second American Republic
  21. Andrew Johnson and the Radicals: A Contest over the Meaning of Reconstruction
  22. Constitutional Crisis and the Impeachment of a President
  23. Black Reconstruction in the South: The Freedpeople and the Economics of Land and Labor
  24. Retreat from Reconstruction: the Grant Era and Paths to "Southern Redemption"
  25. The "End" of Reconstruction: Disputed Election of 1876, and the "Compromise of 1877"
  26. Race and Reunion: the Civil War in American Memory
  27. Legacies of the Civil War