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Reconstruction's Ragged Edge

The Politics of Postwar Life in the Southern Mountains

Steven E. Nash

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The University of North Carolina Press img Link Publisher

Sachbuch / 20. Jahrhundert (bis 1945)

Beschreibung

In this illuminating study, Steven E. Nash chronicles the history of Reconstruction as it unfolded in the mountains of western North Carolina. Nash presents a complex story of the region's grappling with the war's aftermath, examining the persistent wartime loyalties that informed bitter power struggles between factions of white mountaineers determined to rule. For a brief period, an influx of federal governmental power enabled white anti-Confederates to ally with former slaves in order to lift the Republican Party to power locally and in the state as a whole. Republican success led to a violent response from a transformed class of elites, however, who claimed legitimacy from the antebellum period while pushing for greater integration into the market-oriented New South.

Focusing on a region that is still underrepresented in the Reconstruction historiography, Nash illuminates the diversity and complexity of Appalachian political and economic machinations, while bringing to light the broad and complicated issues the era posed to the South and the nation as a whole.

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Schlagwörter

Tobacco cultivation in the mountain South, Freedmen’s Bureau and Reconstruction in Southern Appalachia, Reconstruction in western North Carolina, Political Violence in Post-Civil War North Carolina, Expansion of the market economy after the Civil War, New South in Southern Appalachia, Southern Mountain Republicans, Western North Carolina Railroad, Internal improvements in 19th century North Carolina, Post-Civil War Loyalties, Ku Klux Klan in North Carolina, Asheville, Expansion of American State after the Civil War, Labor in the post-Civil War mountain South, African Americans in Southern Appalachia, Emancipation in Southern Appalachia