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Disunion and Restoration in Tennessee / Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Faculty of Political Science, Columbia University cover

Disunion and Restoration in Tennessee / Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Faculty of Political Science, Columbia University

Chapter 26: AUTHORITIES.
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About This Book

The work traces the political breakup and reconstruction of a southern state during and after the Civil War, beginning with the forces and official actions that produced separation and assigning responsibility for secession. It examines regional loyalties, especially opposition in the mountainous east, the restoration of civil government, federal recognition and constitutional amendments affecting the state, and the financial and municipal administration under Radical rule. It documents violent reaction and vigilante campaigns attributed to white supremacist groups, the decline of Radical domination, and the deliberations and outcomes of the 1870 constitutional convention. Analysis combines narrative chronology with institutional and legal discussion of governance, policy, and public order.

AUTHORITIES.

Acts of Tennessee: Extra Session, 1861; 2d Extra Session, 1861; 1861-62; 1865; 1865-66; Extra Session, 1866; 1868; 1869; 1869-70; 1870; 1870-71; 1871; 1872; 1873; 1875; 1877; 1879; 1881. Extra Session, 1881; 1882; 1883.

Barnes, W. H. “History of the Thirty-ninth Congress.”

Bate, W. B. Messages to the General Assembly.

Blaine, James G. “Twenty Years of Congress.”

Brown, John C. Messages to the General Assembly.

Brownlow, W. G. “Sketches of the Rise, Progress, and Decline of Secession, with a Narrative of Personal Experiences among the Rebels.” Philadelphia, 1862.

Caldwell, Joshua W. “Studies in the Constitutional History of Tennessee.” Cincinnati, 1895.

Cox, S. S. “Three Decades of Federal Legislation.”

Dunning, W. A. “Essays on the Civil War and Reconstruction.” New York, 1898.

Everett, Edward. “Account of the Fund for the Relief of East Tennessee.” Boston, 1864.

Harris, Isham G. Messages to the General Assembly.

Hawkins, Alvin. Messages to the General Assembly.

House Journals for 1865, 1865-66, 1866. Extra Session, 1866, 1867-68. Extra Session, 1868, 1868-69, 1869-70.

Humes, Thomas William. “The Loyal Mountaineers of Tennessee.” Knoxville, 1888.

Journal of the Constitutional Convention of 1870.

Knoxville Whig, Knoxville, Tennessee.

Mark, Albert. Messages to the General Assembly.

MacPherson, Edward. “History of the Rebellion.”

MacPherson, Edward. “History of the Reconstruction.”

Miller, Chas. A. “The Official and Political Manual of the State of Tennessee.” Nashville, 1890.

Report of the Committee Appointed to Investigate the State Debt. Appendix to the Senate Journal for 1879.

Scott, W. A. “The Repudiation of State Debts.” New York, 1893.

Senate Journal for 1865, 1866, 1867-68, 1868-69. Extra Session, 1868.

Senter, De Witt. Message to the General Assembly.

Townsend’s Records of the Great Rebellion.

The Union and American, Nashville.

“Why the Solid South?” Hilary Herbert, Baltimore, 1890.

Wilson, Henry. “History of the Rise and Fall of the Slave Power.”