Close Menu
Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Jump to Category…
    • All Events
    • Club Dates
    • Comedy
    • Exhibits
    • Film
    • Fundraisers
    • Learning
    • Literati
    • Outings
    • Other
    • Specials
    • Sports
    • Stage
    • Trivia
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Demo
    • CNY Events Calendar
      • Add My Event
      • Advertise On Calendar
    • News
      • News
      • Business
      • Sports
    • Arts
      • Art
      • Stage
      • Music
      • Film
      • Television
    • Lifestyle
      • Food
      • Wellness
      • Fashion
      • Travel
    • Opinion & Blogs
      • Things That Matter (Luke Parsnow)
      • New York Skies (Cheryl Costa)
    • Photos
    • Special Editions
      • 2019 Spring Times
      • 2019 Winter Times Edition
      • 2018 Holiday Times
      • 2018 SALT Awards
      • 2018 Best of Syracuse
      • 2018 Autumn Times
      • 2018 SNT Student Survival Guide
      • The 2018 Arts Issue
      • 2018 Summer Times
    • Family Times Magazine
    • CNY Community Guide
    Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Home»News»End of Slavery Didn’t End Different Experiences for Whites, Blacks
    News

    End of Slavery Didn’t End Different Experiences for Whites, Blacks

    Ed Griffin-NolanBy Ed Griffin-NolanJanuary 14, 2015No Comments3 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Sometimes when Le Moyne College history professor Doug Egerton is writing about the 19th century, he feels like his material could fit into today’s headlines.

    Egerton’s latest book, The Wars of Reconstruction: The Brief, Violent History of America’s Most Progressive Era (Bloomsbury Press, 2014) tells the story of a war we don’t usually hear about.

    It was a war of terror (his word) waged by armed white supremacists to reverse gains that black Americans had yearned for, fought for and died for. And in this war, the terrorists, backed by the president and the courts, won.

    I asked Egerton, via telephone from his Fayetteville home, about how the study of Reconstruction could illuminate modern American history. So many conversations about race, it seems, skip from slavery on King and then Obama, leaping right over Reconstruction and Jim Crow. As I read Egerton’s account, the decades after the Civil War offer astonishing and painful clues as to why black and white Americans see our nation through such different lenses.

    You don’t have to go to Ferguson, Mo., or Staten Island to notice how polarized we remain along racial lines. Why is it that half a century after passage of the Voting Rights Act, and more than 150 years after the Emancipation Proclamation, Americans of different races still see the country they love so differently?

    “Americans, especially white Americans, are notoriously optimistic creatures,” Egerton says. “We’d like to think that today is better than yesterday and tomorrow is going to be better still. In a larger sense, that’s true. We no longer hang witches; we no longer own people as slaves; and if Dr. King were alive, he would marvel at the first African-American president.”

    And what of King’s well-known article of faith: that “the arc of the moral universe … bends toward justice”?

    “I’m not sure I agree,” Egerton says. “The arc is bending, but sometimes it kinda snaps.”

    The undoing of Reconstruction was one big, loud snap.

    “If you were a black American in 1875, you would say life was so much better than it had been 20 years earlier. Slavery is dead, African Americans are serving in state assemblies, on school boards, many are voting … It all comes to a grinding halt by 1901,” he says. “There are steps backward.”

    The book details how violent those steps were. He quotes an astonishing statistic gathered by Robert Smalls, a former slave turned Civil War naval hero who represented South Carolina in Congress during Reconstruction. Smalls counted about 53,000 activists killed in both the North and South by white supremacists determined to revive the old order. Fifty-three thousand.

    “That’s more than the number of people who died at Gettysburg, and we all know about Gettysburg,” he says.

    “Violence for Southern Democrats accomplished a great deal,” he says. It ran pretty much every black office-holder out of any position of power by means of an organized and officially sanctioned campaign of terror, while the president stood by and the courts provided legal cover.

    Among Egerton’s lessons for today?

    “We ought to be very cautious to think that now that we have a black president, there can be no step backwards. Only the truly naïve believed that the election of Barack Obama indicated that America’s racial issues were behind us. I don’t think anybody was ready for the white backlash of the past six years. Many Americans think he is not a legitimate president because he is not sufficiently American. Race-based attempts to delegitimize his presidency — that’s a step backward.”

    Ed Griffin-Nolan

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Ed Griffin-Nolan
    Ed Griffin-Nolan

    Senior writer for the Syracuse New Times.

    Related Posts

    Is the U.S. Experiencing a New Online Poker Boom? The Numbers Say Yes

    July 15, 2025

    Under-the-Radar Breakout Candidates for the 2025 NFL Preseason

    June 16, 2025

    Your Guide to Using Telematics Software to Streamline Your Sales and Service Operations

    April 15, 2025

    The Most Common Causes of Manufacturing Downtime & How to Prevent Them

    March 27, 2025

    How Quality Monitoring Reduces Employee Burnout in Call Centers

    March 5, 2025

    A Historical Look at March Madness Champions

    February 26, 2025

    Comments are closed.

    • CNY Events Calendar
    • Club Dates
    • Food & Drink
    • Destinations
    • Sports & Outdoors
    • Family Times
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Community Code of Conduct
    • Staff/Contact Us
    • Careers
    • SALT Academy Applications & Awards Process
    • Family Times
    • CNY Tix
    • Spinnaker Custom Products

    Syracuse New Times
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube Dribbble
    © 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.