Description
This lecture looks at how Americans tried to heal the wounds of the Civil War in a series of reforms enacted between 1865 and 1877 known as Reconstruction. To accomplish this great leap forward, they rewrote dozens of laws and thrice amended the Constitution of the United States to guarantee the extension of the full rights of citizenship to African Americans. And it wasn’t just Black political participation that flourished during Reconstruction—so too did Black schools, Black churches, and various other Black-led institutions. We’ll spend today examining these dozen hopeful years and conclude by looking at how and why most of these leaps forward were swept away in the mid-1870s, only a decade after the end of the war – leaving unfinished business.