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journal article
The Republican Party Press in Reconstruction Georgia, 1867-1874The Journal of Southern History
Vol. 61, No. 4 [Nov., 1995]
, pp. 725-760 [36 pages]
Published By: Southern Historical Association
//doi.org/10.2307/2211432
//www.jstor.org/stable/2211432
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Journal Information
The Journal of Southern History, which is edited at and sponsored by Rice University, is a quarterly devoted to the history of the American South and is unrestricted as to chronological period, methodology, or southern historical topic. The Journal publishes refereed articles and solicited book reviews and book notes on all aspects of southern history. As the organ of the Southern Historical Association, which is headquartered in the Department of History at the University of Georgia, the Journal also publishes items pertaining to the business of the Association as well as news and notices of interest to historians of and in the South. The purpose of the Southern Historical Association is to encourage the study of history in the South with an emphasis on the history of the South.
Publisher Information
The Southern Historical Association was organized on November 2, 1934 and charged with promoting an "investigative rather than a memorial approach" to southern history. Its objectives are the promotion of interest and research in southern history, the collection and preservation of the South's historical records, and the encouragement of state and local historical societies in the South. As a secondary purpose the Association fosters the teaching and study of all areas of history in the South. The Association holds an annual meeting, usually in the first or second week of November, and publishes The Journal of Southern History.
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Black Members of Congress remained loyal Republicans, but their allies at home and in Congress were quickly disappearing. As Democrats reasserted their power, southern politics in the post-Reconstruction years witnessed the rapid collapse of Radical Republican state governments, which had drawn from the ranks of newly freed African-American men. Over just a short time, a cadre of local, state, and national politicians—composed of many former Confederates and Democrats—undermined the Republican regimes and ended the regional experiment in multiracial democracy. In the “redeemed” South, the Democratic Party eventually became synonymous with the codification and formalization of racial segregation.
Though the Republican Party’s ideological makeup remained complicated in the late 1880s, two primary factions emerged—the “reformers” and the “money men.” Reformers clung to the idealistic plans of postwar Radical Republicans to extend full civil rights to African Americans. Yet they began to lose support in the face of popular demands to lay the unfulfilled egalitarian promises of Reconstruction America to rest. A growing interest in American commercial power—the stance of the “money men”—led Congress to deprioritize civil rights legislation.12
In the 1880s and early 1890s, control of the House chamber seesawed between Democrats unsympathetic to the concerns of African Americans and Republicans increasingly ambivalent to those same concerns. Though one reformer implored Republican colleagues to “never surrender the great principles of human liberty of which [the party] was the born champion,” Republican leaders sensed little electoral opportunity in pushing for black voting rights in the South.13 One historian explains that the Republicans “harbored some hope that if race was no longer salient in southern politics, other issues might rise to the surface and become the catalyst for a realignment of the parties. . . . [I]f the Republican Party in the South was no longer identified with and supported by black voters, it might have the opportunity to redefine itself and become accepted as a legitimate political entity” by white Southerners.14 Black Representatives admonished their party for abandoning the freedmen. “A veritable set of fools a few of our party leaders have been,” Thomas Miller said on the House Floor in February 1891. “They will listen to all the cheap sentimentality sounded under the name of negro domination and business prostration, be swerved from a plighted duty to a faithful constituency the country over.”15
Rapid industrialization brought major changes to America’s economy and, consequently, to American society. Race reforms, however, just as quickly disappeared from the political agenda and out of the public eye. Between 1869 and 1899, the population of the United States nearly tripled. Railroads extending to the Pacific Ocean allowed goods to travel around the country cheaply; the invention of the telephone in 1876 improved communication; entrepreneurs such as steel magnate Andrew Carnegie amassed fortunes in manufacturing. In 1890, for the first time in American history, industrial workers outnumbered farmers.16 Emigration from southern Europe had begun to increase, just as the American frontier was declared closed. Taking stock of the previous century of American development, the journalist and historian Frederick Jackson Turner argued that the nation had entered a new, uncertain era. “Movement has been . . . [America’s] dominant fact,” he told an audience at the American Historical Association, gathered for the 1893 World Columbian Exhibition in Chicago. “But never again will such gifts of free land offer themselves. . . . The frontier is gone, and with its going has closed the first period of American history.”17
Such tectonic social shifts created cultural uncertainty. Historian Robert Wiebe describes late-19th-century America as a “distended society.” Industrialization and expansion swept away the familiar rhythms and guideposts of local community life, leaving “a society without a core” and widespread “dislocation and bewilderment.”18 Even long familiar political landmarks were in flux. According to historian Robert Marcus, the issues of race and sectionalism during the Civil War and Reconstruction “[stabilized] political loyalties by keeping eyes focused on a past full of familiar friends and enemies,” and “fulfilled some of the need for order.” But by the 1880s and 1890s, “politicians could only guess at the direction in which the electorate was moving and wonder if the party system they knew was capable of containing the new populations, new pressures, and the new demands that all parts of an increasingly interconnected society made on the political system.”19 The Republican Party recast itself the party of commerce and hesitated at “waving the bloody shirt”—the tactic that Radicals used during Reconstruction to stir up resentment against the South by recalling the sacrifices of Union troops. Instead, as the memories of the war and Reconstruction faded by the mid-1890s, GOP politicians found unprecedented success with their new economic message.20
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