In the aftermath of the Civil War and Reconstruction, new battles took place over the construction of memory and the meaning of historical events. The earliest historians to study Reconstruction and the Radical Republican participation in it were members of the
Dunning School, led by
William Archibald Dunning and
John W. Burgess. The Dunning School, based at
Columbia University in the early 20th century, saw the Radicals as motivated by an irrational hatred of the Confederacy and a lust for power at the expense of national reconciliation. For the Dunning School, the Radical Republicans made Reconstruction a dark age that only ended when Southern whites rose up and reestablished a "home rule" free of Northern, Republican, and black influence. In the 1930s, the Dunning-oriented approaches were rejected by self-styled "revisionist" historians, led by
Howard K. Beale along with
W.E.B. DuBois,
William B. Hesseltine,
C. Vann Woodward and
T. Harry Williams. They downplayed corruption and stressed that Northern Democrats were also corrupt. Beale and Woodward were leaders in promoting racial equality and re-evaluated the era in terms of regional economic conflict. They were also hostile towards the Radicals, casting them as economic opportunists. They argued that apart from a few idealists, most Radicals were scarcely interested in the fate of the blacks or the South as a whole. Rather, the main goal of the Radicals was to protect and promote Northern capitalism, which was threatened in Congress by the West; if the Democrats took control of the South and joined the West, they thought, the Northeastern business interests would suffer. They did not trust anyone from the South except men beholden to them by bribes and railroad deals. For example, Beale argued that the Radicals in Congress put Southern states under Republican control to get their votes in Congress for high protective tariffs. The role of Radical Republicans in creating public school systems, charitable institutions, and other social infrastructure in the South was downplayed by the Dunning School of historians. Since the 1950s, the impact of the moral crusade of the
civil rights movement led historians to reevaluate the role of Radical Republicans during Reconstruction, and their reputation improved. These historians, sometimes referred to as
neoabolitionist because they reflected and admired the values of the abolitionists of the 19th century, argued that the Radical Republicans' advancement of civil rights and suffrage for African Americans following emancipation was more significant than the financial corruption which took place. They also pointed to the African Americans' central, active roles in reaching toward education (both individually and by creating public school systems) and their desire to acquire land as a means of self-support. Democrats retook power across the South and held it for decades, restricting African American voters and largely extinguishing their voting rights over the years and decades following Reconstruction. In 2004, Richardson argued that Northern Republicans came to see most blacks as potentially dangerous to the economy because they might prove to be labor radicals in the tradition of the 1871
Paris Commune or
Great Railroad Strike of 1877 and other violent American strikes of the 1870s. Meanwhile, it became clear to Northerners that the white South was not bent on revenge or the restoration of the Confederacy. Most of the Republicans who felt this way became opponents of Grant and entered the Liberal Republican camp in 1872.
Notable people •
Amos Tappan Akerman: attorney general under the Grant administration who vigorously prosecuted the
Ku Klux Klan in the South under the
Enforcement Acts •
Adelbert Ames: Governor of Mississippi in 1868–1870 and 1874–1876 •
James Mitchell Ashley: representative from Ohio •
John Armor Bingham: representative from Ohio and principal framer of the
Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution •
Austin Blair: Governor of Michigan in 1861–1865 •
George Sewall Boutwell: representative from Massachusetts and Treasury Secretary under President Grant from 1869 to 1873 •
William Gannaway Brownlow: publisher of the
Knoxville Whig, Tennessee governor and senator •
Rufus Bullock: Governor of Georgia 1868–1871 •
Benjamin Butler: Massachusetts politician-soldier who was hated by rebels for restoring control in New Orleans •
Zachariah Chandler: senator from Michigan and
Secretary of the Interior under President Grant •
Salmon P. Chase: Treasury Secretary under President Lincoln and Supreme Court chief justice who sought the 1868 Democratic nomination as a moderate •
Schuyler Colfax: Speaker of the House (1863–1869) and the 17th Vice President of the United States (1869–1873). Was called the Christian statesman •
James A. Garfield: House of Representatives leader, less radical than others and president in 1881 •
Horace Greeley: the founder and editor of the
New-York Tribune, which became the most radical newspaper of the day. Greeley initially strongly supported
Radical Reconstruction, but over time became disenchanted with the corruption associated with it, and broke with the Radical Republicans to run for president on the Liberal Republican ticket against Grant. •
Joshua Reed Giddings: representative from Ohio and an early leading founder of the Ohio Republican Party •
Ulysses S. Grant: president who signed Enforcement Acts and Civil Rights Act of 1875 while as General of the Army of the United States he supported Radical Reconstruction and civil rights for African Americans •
Galusha A. Grow: representative from Pennsylvania and Speaker of the House 1861 to 1863 •
John Parker Hale: senator from New Hampshire and one of the first to make a stand against slavery. He was a former Democrat who broke away because of slavery •
Hannibal Hamlin: Maine politician and vice president during Lincoln's first term •
Friedrich Hecker: leader of the German-American
Forty-Eighters •
James M. Hinds: Congressman from Arkansas, murdered by the
Ku Klux Klan in 1868 •
William Woods Holden: Governor of North Carolina in 1868–1871 •
Jacob M. Howard: senator from Michigan •
Timothy Otis Howe: senator from Wisconsin •
George Washington Julian: representative from Indiana and principal framer of the
Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution •
William Darrah Kelley: representative from Pennsylvania •
Samuel J. Kirkwood: senator from Iowa •
James H. Lane: senator from Kansas and leader of the
Jayhawkers abolitionist movement •
John Alexander Logan: senator from Illinois •
Owen Lovejoy: representative from Illinois •
David Medlock Jr.: Texas House of Representatives for the 12th Texas Legislature – 1870 to 1873 and was on the Federal Relations Committee. •
Oliver P. Morton: Governor of Indiana (1861–1867) and senator •
Franklin J. Moses Jr.: Governor of South Carolina in 1872–1874 •
Samuel Pomeroy: senator from Kansas •
Harrison Reed: Governor of Florida in 1868–1873 •
Samuel Shellabarger: representative from Ohio and principal drafter of the Civil Rights Act of 1871 •
Rufus Paine Spalding: representative from Ohio who took a leading role in the Congressional debates over Reconstruction •
Edwin McMasters Stanton: Secretary of War under the Lincoln and Johnson administrations •
Thaddeus Stevens: Radical leader in the House from Pennsylvania •
Charles Sumner: senator from Massachusetts, dominant Radical leader in the Senate and specialist in foreign affairs who broke with Grant in 1872 •
Albion W. Tourgée: novelist •
Lyman Trumbull: senator from Illinois with strongly anti-slavery sentiments, but otherwise moderate •
Daniel Phillips Upham: Arkansas politician-soldier who was ruthless in a campaign that would temporarily rid the South of the Ku Klux Klan •
Benjamin Franklin Wade: senator from Ohio, next in line to become president if Johnson were removed •
Henry Clay Warmoth: Governor of Louisiana in 1868–1872 •
Elihu Benjamin Washburne: representative from Illinois •
George Henry Williams: senator from Oregon (1865–1871) and attorney general under President Grant •
Henry Wilson: Massachusetts Senator, chairman of the Senate Military Affairs Committee during the Civil War, and vice president under Grant •
James F. Wilson: representative from Iowa, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee during the impeachment of President Johnson and senator from Iowa •
Richard Yates Sr.: Governor of Illinois in 1861–1865 and Senator ==Notes==