Dixie After the War / An Exposition of Social Conditions Existing in the South, During the Twelve Years Succeeding the Fall of Richmond
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About This Book
The author compiles eyewitness testimony, family correspondence, and travel-collected material to portray social and political conditions in the Southern states during the twelve years after the Confederate capital's fall. Chapters trace military occupation and the transition to Reconstruction, recount public events such as presidential visits and the detention of Confederate leaders, and examine race relations, voting contests, paramilitary violence, federal agencies, and disruptions to plantation life. The narrative blends anecdote, reportage, and commentary to illuminate shifting social hierarchies, partisan conflict, and everyday hardships as communities adapt to postwar governance and contested citizenship.
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