883Abbott, Martin. The Freedmen's Bureau in South Carolina, 1865-1872. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1967] 162 p. F274.A23Bibliography: p. [145]-158.
884Allen, James S. Reconstruction; the battle for democracy (1865-1876). New York, International Publishers [c1937] 256 p. illus. [A history of the American people] E668.A45"Selected bibliography": p. 249-252.
884aAndrews, Sidney. The South since the war, as shown by fourteen weeks of travel and observation in Georgia and the Carolinas. Boston, Ticknor and Fields, 1866. 400 p. F216.A56
885Bentley, George R. A history of the Freedmen's Bureau. Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania, 1955. 298 p. E185.2.B4Thesis—University of Wisconsin.Bibliography: p. 266-279.
886Botume, Elizabeth H. First days amongst the contrabands. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 286 p. (The American Negro, his history and literature) E185.93.S7B7 1968Reprint of the 1893 ed., with a new introduction.
887Brock, William R. An American crisis: Congress and Reconstruction, 1865-1867. [New York] St. Martin's Press [1963] 312 p. E668.B85"Bibliographical note": p. 305.
888Bruce, Philip A. The plantation Negro as a freeman; observations on his character, condition, and prospects in Virginia. New York, G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1889. 262 p. (Questions of the day, no. 57) E185.6.B88
889Buckmaster, Henrietta, pseud. Freedom bound. New York, Macmillan [1965] 185 p. E185.2.B9Bibliography: p. 183-184.
890Carter, Hodding. The angry scar; the story of Reconstruction. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1959. 425 p. (Mainstream of America series) E668.C3Bibliography: p. [411]-414.
891Coulter, Ellis M. The South during Reconstruction, 1865-1877. [Baton Rouge] Louisiana State University Press, 1947. 426 p. illus., maps (1 fold.) (A History of the South, v. 8) F216.C6 [TR: Coulter, E. Merton]"Critical essay on authorities": p. 392-407.
892Craven, Avery O. Reconstruction: the ending of the Civil War. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston [1969] 330 p. E668.C9Bibliography: p. 308-315.
893Crowe, Charles R., ed. The age of Civil War and Reconstruction, 1830-1900; a book of interpretative essays. Homewood, Ill., Dorsey Press, 1966. 479 p. (The Dorsey series in American history) F209.C7Includes bibliographies.
894Current, Richard N., ed. Reconstruction, 1865-1877. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall [1965] 183 p. (A Spectrum book, S-114: Eyewitness accounts of American history) E668.C98
895Dennett, John R. The South as it is: 1865-1866. Edited and with an introduction by Henry M. Christman. New York, Viking Press [1965] 370 p. F216.D4 1965A series of articles written for The Nation, July 1865-Apr. 1866.
896Donald, Henderson H. The Negro freedman; life conditions of the American Negro in the early years after emancipation. New York, H. Schuman, 1952. 270 p. E185.2.D65Bibliography: p. [255]-258.
897Drisko, Carol F., and Edgar A. Toppin. The unfinished march; the Negro in the United States, Reconstruction to World War I. Illustrated by Tracy Sugarman. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1967. 118 p. col. illus. (Zenith books) E185.6.D7
898DuBois, William E. B. Black Reconstruction in America; an essay toward a history of the part which black folk played in the attempt to reconstruct democracy in America, 1860-1880. New York, Russell & Russell [1966, c1935] 746 p. E668.D83 1966bBibliography: p. 731-737.
899Dunning, William A. Reconstruction, political and economic, 1865-1877. New York, Harper, 1907. xvi, 378 p. maps, port. (The American nation; a history, v. 22) E178.A54 v. 22"Critical essay on authorities": p. [342]-357.
900Evans, William McKee. Ballots and fence rails; Reconstruction on the lower Cape Fear. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1967] 314 p. maps. F262.C2E9 1967Bibliography: p. [291]-301.
901Ficklen, John R. History of Reconstruction in Louisiana, through 1868. Gloucester, Mass., P. Smith, 1966 [c1910] 234 p. (Johns Hopkins University. Studies in historical and political science, ser. 28, no. 1) H31.J6 ser. 28, no. 1 1966Bibliographical footnotes.
902Fleming, Walter L., ed. Documentary history of Reconstruction, political, military, social, religious, educational & industrial, 1865 to the present time. Cleveland, A. H. Clark Co., 1906-7. 2 v. facsims., plates, port. E668.F58
903Fleming, Walter L., ed. Documents relating to Reconstruction. Morgantown, W. Va., 1904. [269] p. E668.F59Contents.—no. 1. The constitution and the ritual of the Knights of the White Camelia.—no. 2. Revised and amended prescript of Ku Klux Klan.—no. 3. Union League documents.—no. 4-5. Public frauds in South Carolina. The constitution of the Council of Safety. Local Ku Klux constitution. The '76 Association.—no. 6-7. Freedmen's Bureau documents. The Freedmen's Savings Bank.—no. 8. Laws relating to freedmen, 1865-6.
904Franklin, John H. The Emancipation Proclamation. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1963. 181 p. illus. E453.F8 [TR: Franklin, John Hope]"Sources": p. 157-162. Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [163]-173).
905Franklin, John H. Reconstruction: after the Civil War. [Chicago] University of Chicago Press [1961] 258 p. illus. (The Chicago history of American civilization) E668.F7 [TR: Franklin, John Hope]"Suggested reading": p. 232-242.
906Henry, Robert S. The story of Reconstruction. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill Co. [c1938] 633 p. map (on lining papers), plates. E668.H516Bibliography included in "Acknowledgments."
907Hyman, Harold M., ed. New frontiers of the American Reconstruction. Urbana, University of Illinois Press, 1966. 156 p. E668.H98Papers presented at a conference held at the University of Illinois in April 1965.Includes bibliographical footnotes.
908Hyman, Harold M., comp. The radical Republicans and Reconstruction, 1861-1870. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill [1967] lxxxvi, 538 p. (The American heritage series, 47) E668.H985Bibliography: lxix-lxxxvi.
909Lynch, John R. The facts of Reconstruction. New York, Neale Pub. Co., 1913. 325 p. ports. E668.L98"The state of Mississippi is made the pivotal one in the presentation of the facts and historical points touched upon in this work."—Preface.
910McCarthy, Charles H. Lincoln's plan of reconstruction. New York, McClure, Phillips, 1901. xxiv, 504 p. E456.M23
911McKitrick, Eric L. Andrew Johnson and Reconstruction. [Chicago] University of Chicago Press [1960] 533 p. E668.M156"Selected bibliography, with notes": p. 511-521.
912McWhiney, Grady, ed. Reconstruction and the freedmen. Chicago, Rand McNally [1963] 54 p. (The Berkeley series in American history) E185.2.M3Bibliography: p. 54.
913Nunn, William C. Texas under the carpetbaggers. Austin, University of Texas Press [1962] 304 p. illus. F391.N965Bibliography: p. 263-269.
914Pollard, Edward A. The lost cause regained. New York, G. W. Carleton, 1868. 214 p. E666.P77
915Randall, James G. The Civil War and Reconstruction. Boston, D. C. Heath [c1937] xvii, 959 p. illus., diagrs., facsims., maps, ports. E468.R26 [TR: Randall, James Garfield]"Bibliographical note": p. 881-883. Bibliography: p. 885-924.
916Richardson, Joe M. The Negro in the reconstruction of Florida, 1865-1877. Tallahassee, Florida State University, 1965. 255 p. (Florida State University studies, no. 46) AS36.F57 no. 46Bibliography: p. 241-249.
917Shenton, James P., ed. The Reconstruction; a documentary history of the South after the war: 1865-1877. New York, Putnam [1963] 314 p. E668.S543
918Sinclair, William A. The aftermath of slavery; a study of the condition and environment of the American Negro. With an introduction by Thomas Wentworth Higginson. Boston, Small, Maynard, 1905. 358 p. E185.6.S61
919Skaggs, William H. The southern oligarchy; an appeal in behalf of the silent masses of our country against the despotic rule of the few. New York, Devin-Adair Co., 1924. 472 p. F209.S62
920Stampp, Kenneth M. The era of Reconstruction, 1865-1877. New York, Knopf, 1965. 228 p. E668.S79"Bibliographical note": p. 217-[229].
921Sterling, Dorothy. Forever free, the story of the Emancipation Proclamation. Illustrated by Ernest Crichlow. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday [1963] 208 p. illus. E453.S83 1963Bibliographical references included in "Note to the reader" (p. [199]-204).
922Straker, David Augustus. The new South investigated. Detroit, Ferguson Print. Co., 1888. 230 p. port. F215.S89 [TR: Straker, D. Augustus]
923Swint, Henry L., ed. Dear ones at home; letters from contraband camps. Nashville, Vanderbilt University Press, 1966. 274 p. map. E185.2.S98Letters written 1861-1870, chiefly by Lucy and Sarah Chase.Bibliography: p. 259-267.
924Taylor, Alrutheus A. The Negro in South Carolina during the Reconstruction. Washington, Association for the Study of Negro Life and History [c1924] 341 p. E185.93.S7T3Bibliography: p. 314-322.
925Taylor, Alrutheus A. The Negro in the reconstruction of Virginia. Washington, Association for the Study of Negro Life and History [c1926] 300 p. E185.93.V8T3Bibliography: p. 287-292.
926Wallace, John. Carpet-bag rule in Florida; the inside workings of the reconstruction of civil government in Florida after the close of the Civil War. A facsimile reproduction of the 1888 ed., with introduction & notes by Allan Nevins. Gainesville, University of Florida Press, 1964. xxxii, 444 p. col. coat of arms, ports. (Quadricentennial edition of the Floridiana facsimile & reprint series) F316.W19 1888aBibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. xxv-xxvi).
927Whyte, James H. The uncivil war; Washington during the Reconstruction, 1865-1878. New York, Twayne Publishers [1958] 316 p. illus. F198.W45Bibliography: p. 296-305.
928Williams, George W. 1862—emancipation day—1884. The Negro as a political problem. Oration ... at the Asbury Church, Washington, D.C., April 16, 1884. Boston, A. Mudge, Printers, 1884. 40 p. E185.6.W72
929Williamson, Joel. After slavery; the Negro in South Carolina during the Reconstruction, 1861-1877. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1965] 442 p. E185.93.S7W73Bibliography: p. [419]-430.
930Wilson, Joseph T. Emancipation: its course and progress; from 1481 B.C. to A.D. 1875, with a review of President Lincoln's proclamations, the XIII amendment, and the progress of the freed people since emancipation; with a history of the emancipation monument. Hampton, Va., Normal School Steam Power Press Print, 1882. 242 p. port. E453.W77Revised and enlarged from a pamphlet published in 1881.