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Introduction: the tragic legend of Reconstruction, by K. M. Stampp |
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The friend of freedom, by R. N. Current |
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Andrew Johnson, outsider, by E. L. McKitrick |
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Johnson and the Negro, by LaWanda and J. H. Cox |
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Northeastern business and radical Reconstruction, by S. Coben |
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The "conspiracy theory" of the fourteenth amendment, by H. J. Graham |
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The ballot and land for the freedmen, 1861-1865, by J. M. McPherson |
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Negro suffrage and Republican politics, by LaWanda and J. H. Cox |
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The old alliance, by W. L. Rose |
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The meaning of freedom, by J. Williamson |
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Carpetbaggers reconsidered, by R. N. Current |
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The carpetbagger as corruptionist: Henry Clay Warmoth, by R. N. Current |
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The scalawag in Mississippi Reconstruction, by D. Donald |
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Persistent Whiggery in the Confederate South, 1860-1877, by T. B. Alexander |
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Who were the scalawags? By A. W. Trelease |
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Desegregation in New Orleans public schools during Reconstruction, by L. R. Harlan |
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The Negro and politics, 1870-1875, by V. L. Wharton |
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Social and economic forces in Alabama Reconstruction, by H. M. Bond |
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Southern Reconstruction: a radical view, by J. B. Scroggs |
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Black Reconstruction, by W. E. B. DuBois |
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The revolution of 1875, by V. L. Wharton |
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The waning of radicalism, by W. R. Brock |
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The political legacy of Reconstruction, by C. V. Woodward |
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Introduction: the tragic legend of Reconstruction, by K. M. Stampp |
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The friend of freedom, by R. N. Current |
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Andrew Johnson, outsider, by E. L. McKitrick |
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