Reconstruction in Mississippi, 1862-1877
A comprehensive history of Mississippians struggling to define freedom after the Civil War
Description
Throughout the ten-year period following the end of the Civil War, Mississippians responded to broader movements in the country, to changes in the national and international economy, and to congressional and presidential initiatives as they worked to recover from the devastation of war and pursue new expressions of freedom. Reconstruction in Mississippi, 1862–1877 is a compelling account of how Black Mississippians embraced this freedom and how white Mississippians could not.
Recording the mechanics of how the Confederate states were allowed to resume representation in Congress, the restoration of civil governments, and the political freedoms the formerly enslaved people acquired, Reconstruction in Mississippi, 1862–1877 documents the ways economic freedoms, such as the acquisition of land and the negotiation of fair labor contracts, evolved. Jere Nash begins this exploration with how the formerly enslaved men and women changed the political landscape for Abraham Lincoln by taking matters into their own hands as the Union Army moved into Mississippi in 1862. Nash then traces the federal occupation of the state, the adoption of the infamous Black Codes by the state legislature in 1865, the drafting and approval of the new constitution in 1869, the selection of the first two Black men ever to serve in the United States Senate, and the use of terror and fraud by white Democrats to steal the election of 1875 and regain political power. Reconstruction in Mississippi, 1862–1877 is a detailed and comprehensive history of this turbulent and eventful era in Mississippi.
Reviews
"In Reconstruction in Mississippi, 1862-1877, Jere Nash highlights the efforts by Black Mississippians to define the meaning of their new status as free citizens. He also expertly draws on the voluminous Reconstruction literature of recent decades to place the Mississippi story in its national context. And he offers a new and important interpretation of the crucial elections of the era, which laid the foundation for a whites-only political system that endured for almost a century."
- Charles C. Bolton, author of Home Front Battles: World War II Mobilization and Race in the Deep South
"Nash masterfully explains Mississippi’s Reconstruction in a way that nods to practical politics and future impacts. Like his earlier works, the new Nash book would be a welcome addition to any thinking Mississippian’s personal library."
- Sid Salter, Magnolia Tribune
"Reconstruction in Mississippi, 1862–1877 is a timely and impressive reminder of how the failures of multiracial democracy during Reconstruction, not just in Mississippi but throughout America, produced deep and lasting racial and economic divisions that are still with us today."
- Jeffrey Boutwell, The Clarion-Ledger
"Nash’s decade-long project, ultimately strengthened by new research and recent scholarship, arrives at a time when Mississippians are again wrestling with the legacies of their past. Reconstruction in Mississippi, 1862–1877 seeks not only to clarify historical misunderstandings but also to inspire contemporary dialogue about justice, opportunity, and collective memory."
- Jon Alverson, Delta Democrat-Times
"Anyone who wants to know more about Mississippi’s history during the nineteenth-century period called Reconstruction could not do better than to start with Jere Nash’s new book, Reconstruction in Mississippi, 1862–1877."
- Luther Munford, The Greenwood Commonwealth