"The Tocsin of Freedom": The Black Leadership of Radical Reconstruction |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Albright America's Unfinished Revolution American History Antoine Dubuclet artisans became black community Black Leadership Black officeholding began black officials black population black supremacy blacks held Bradley brothers Bruce Carolina and Louisiana century Charleston colored Columbia University Congress congressman constitutional convention delegate convention and legislature customs Democratic economic election end of Reconstruction Eric Foner escaped Florida former slaves freed freedmen Freedmen's Bureau Georgia Gettysburg College held federal held office Hiram Revels James John Joseph Rainey Klux Klan Ku Klux Klan laborers large number Louisiana Louisiana's Reconstruction Lynch Merton Coulter Mississippi Negro North number of black occupied P. B. S. Pinchback planter political power positions post-Civil Professor Foner public office read and write Recon Reconstruction officials remarkable represented S.Carolina schools for black sheriff slavery South Carolina Southern Black superintendent of education Texas Thomas Bayne Tocsin of Freedom ture Virginia constitutional convention voting Washington white counterparts white Republicans William York