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Category Archives: Reconstruction
“kill the beast”
During Washington Birthday remarks in 1866 President Andrew Johnson identified Northerners Wendell Phillips, Senator Charles Sumner, and Congressman Thaddeus Stevens as being just as much traitors to their country as the rebels who fought against the Union for four bloody … Continue reading
anti-siesta
150 years ago today the United States Congress got so riled up that the House even canceled its intended Washington’s birthday holiday. Congress would be taking care of business the next day, but it wouldn’t exactly be business as usual. … Continue reading
Johnson vs. Grant
In August 1877 President Andrew Johnson suspended Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton and named General Ulysses S. Grant Secretary of War ad interim. The president’s actions complied with the Tenure of Office Act enacted the previous March. When the … Continue reading
unfunded mandate
In November 1867 the state of Georgia conducted an election to choose delegates for a convention that would rewrite the state constitution. The convention convened in early December 1867 in Atlanta; one of the first issues it faced was the … Continue reading
Posted in 150 Years Ago This Month, Aftermath, Postbellum Politics, Reconstruction, Southern Society
Tagged Aaron Alpeoria Bradley, Charles Jones Jenkins, George Gordon Meade, Georgia, John Aaron Rawlins, Reconstruction, Reconstruction Acts, Third Military District (Reconstruction), Thomas Howard Ruger, Ulysses S. Grant
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happy bleak year
Duties evaded in the past press with increasing urgency in the future. On Christmas Day 1867 an editorial in The New-York Times lamented the terrible condition of the American South: “the Christmas Day of 1867 will be a black day … Continue reading
black Christmas
An editorial 150 years ago today seemed at least somewhat nostalgic for the antebellum South. From The New-York Times December 25, 1867: Christmas at the South The contrast between the Christmas of to-day and the Christmas which was known before … Continue reading
bipartisan hoopla
Harold Holzer called Abraham Lincoln’s speech at the the Cooper Institute in New York City on February 27, 1860 his “watershed, the event that transformed him from a regional leader into a national phenomenon. Here the politician known as frontier … Continue reading
“a national holiday”
with regional characteristics Thanksgiving Day was celebrated 150 years ago today across the United State. The New-York Times thought that the observance was almost beyond the need for presidential or gubernatorial proclamations. Thanksgiving was becoming “a national holiday” anticipated by … Continue reading
“a sorry exhibit”
On November 21, 1867 the Fortieth U.S. Congress reassembled amid a great deal of curiosity about the possible impeachment of President Andrew Johnson. The spectator section in the House was packed an hour before the start time, but the Judiciary … Continue reading
Posted in 150 Years Ago This Week, Aftermath, Impeachment, Postbellum Politics, Reconstruction
Tagged 40th United States Congress, Andrew Johnson, George Sewall Boutwell, impeachment of Andrew Johnson, James Falconer "Jefferson Jim" Wilson, Reconstruction, Thomas Williams (Pennsylvania)
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