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Congress and the people's contest : the conduct of the Civil War

Title
Congress and the people's contest : the conduct of the Civil War / edited by Paul Finkelman and Donald R. Kennon.
ISBN
9780821423042
0821423045
9780821423059
0821423053
9780821446164
Publication
Athens, Ohio : Ohio University Press, [2018]
Physical Description
vi, 249 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.
Notes
"Published for the United States Capitol Historical Society by Ohio University Press, Athens".
Summary
The American Civil War was the first ever to be fought with railroads moving troops and the telegraph connecting civilian leadership to commanders in the field. New developments arose at a moment's notice. As a result, the young nation's political structure and culture often struggled to keep up. When war began, Congress was not even in session. By the time it met, the government had mobilized over 100,000 soldiers, battles had been fought, casualties had been taken, some civilians had violently opposed the war effort, and emancipation was underway. This set the stage for Congress to play catch-up for much of the conflict. The result was an ongoing race to pass new laws and set policies. Throughout it all, Congress had to answer to a fractured and demanding public. In Congress and the People's Contest, Paul Finkelman and Donald R. Kennon have assembled some of the nation's finest scholars of American history and law to tease apart the fraught interactions between Congress and the American people as they navigated a cataclysmic and unprecedented war. Displaying a variety and range of focus that will make the book a classroom must, the essays here show how these interactions took place-sometimes successfully, and sometimes less so.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
May 09, 2018
Series
Perspectives on the history of Congress, 1801-1877.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Freedom and democracy in "the people's contest": a complicated role for Congress in a complicated war / Paul Finkelman
A martyr, a speaker, and impending crisis: a prologue to the election of 1860 / Jonathan Earle
"Shatter this accursed union": the fire-eaters in Congress in 1860 / Eric Walther
"These Zouaves will never support us": cowardice, Congress and the First Battle of Bull Run / Lesley J. Gordon
The summer of '62: Congress, slavery, and a revolution in Federal law / Paul Finkelman
The radicals' war: how the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War tried to shape the course of the Civil War / Fergus M. Bordewich
We are coming, Father Abraham, but how will you pay for us? / Jenny Bourne
Why we fight: German American revolutionists confront slavery and secession / Mischa Honeck
Make mine an abolition war: George Luther Stearns, Frederick Douglass, and the Black soldier / L. Diane Barnes
Military emancipation before the Emancipation Proclamation: overcoming structural obstacles / Chandra Manning
Negotiating Black manhood citizenship through Civil War volunteerism and patriotism: Cincinnati's Black Brigade / Nikki M. Taylor.
Genre/Form
History.
Also listed under
Finkelman, Paul, 1949- editor.
Kennon, Donald R., 1948- editor.
United States Capitol Historical Society.
Citation

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