The Reconstruction Presidents
Brooks D. Simpson
New in Paperback: September 2009
xii, 286, 6 x 9
Cloth: ISBN 978-0-7006-0896-6, $35.00
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1688-6, $19.95
During and after the Civil War,
four presidents faced the challenge of reuniting the nation and
of providing justice for black Americans--and of achieving a
balance between those goals. This first book to collectively
examine the Reconstruction policies of Abraham Lincoln, Andrew
Johnson, Ulysses S. Grant, and Rutherford B. Hayes reveals how
they confronted and responded to the complex issues presented
during that contested era in American politics.
Brooks Simpson examines the policies of each administration
in depth and evaluates them in terms of their political, social,
and institutional contexts. Simpson explains what was politically
possible at a time when federal authority and presidential power
were more limited than they are now. He compares these four leaders'
handling of similar challenges--such as the retention of political
support and the need to build a Southern base for their policies--in
different ways and under different circumstances, and he discusses
both their use of executive power and the impact of their personal
beliefs on their actions.
Although historians have disagreed on the extent to which
these presidents were committed to helping blacks, Simpson's
sharply drawn assessments of presidential performance shows that
previous scholars have overemphasized how the personal racial
views of each man shaped his approach to Reconstruction. Simpson
counters much of the conventional wisdom about these leaders
by persuasively demonstrating that considerable constraints to
presidential power severely limited their efforts to achieve
their ends.
The Reconstruction Presidents marks a return to understanding
Reconstruction based on national politics and offers an approach
to presidential policy making that emphasizes the environment
in which a president governs and the nature of the challenges
facing him. By showing that what these four leaders might have
accomplished was limited by circumstances not easily altered,
it allows us to assess them in the context of their times and
better understand an era too often measured by inappropriate
standards.
“An excellent study that will be consulted not only by specialists but by anyone interested in the history of the Civil War, American race relations, and American government.”
—American Historical Review
“A superb book that places the Reconstruction presidents—Abraham Lincoln, Andrew Johnson, Ulysses S. Grant, and Rutherford B. Hayes—in the context of their times and illuminates the difficult and complex task they faced.”—Florida Historical Quarterly
“A thoughtful and well-written book that deserves widespread attention.”—Journal of American History
"A thoughtful reminder both of the limits of the possible
in Reconstruction and of the need to expand the agenda of inquiry
beyond the concept of race in the minds of the nation's presidents.
Simpson has a fine sense of the politics of the age, an age where
the demands of politics propelled policy making profoundly."--Phillip
Shaw Paludan, author of The Presidency of Abraham Lincoln
"A valuable and lively account of Reconstruction as a
national policy problem. A very accessible perspective on a complicated,
even intractable, episode in American history that highlights
the differences in each man's policies and styles of leadership."--Michael
Perman, author of The Road to Redemption: Southern Politics,
18691879
BROOKS D. SIMPSON is professor of history at Arizona State University and author of Let Us Have Peace:
Ulysses S. Grant and the Politics of War and Reconstruction.
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