"If indeed justice is done and truth is served, those visitors will be inspired by far more than certain particular dimensions of Grant. A superb modern general who, with Lincoln, finally unleashed the force required to crush the slaveholders’ rebellion, Grant went on, as president, to press vigorously for the reunification of the severed nation, but on the terms of the victorious North and not of the defeated South. Given all that he was up against—not simply from Confederates and Southern white terrorists but, as president, from high-minded factional opponents and schismatics from his own Republican Party—it is quite remarkable that Grant sustained his commitment to the freedmen for as long and as hard as he did. The evidence clearly shows that he created the most auspicious record on racial equality and civil rights of any president from Lincoln to Lyndon B. Johnson."
Sean Wilentz in The New Republic reviews Joan Waugh's U.S. Grant: American Hero, American Myth.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Disinterred
Labels:
1860s,
1870s,
1880s,
books,
Civil War,
Grant,
historians,
history,
Hofstadter,
nineteenth century,
political history,
race and ethnicity,
Reconstruction,
slavery,
Wilentz
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