- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- Colonial Politics
- The Politics of the Constitution
- The Early Republic, 1789–1815
- Democrats and Whigs: The Second American Party System
- The Politics of Slavery and the Coming Civil War
- Politics of the Civil War and Reconstruction
- Politics in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era
- The Politics of Depression and War
- Party Politics and National Policy, Post–World War II
- The Rules of the Game
- Voting Rights
- Third Parties
- The Role of Money in Politics
- Political Advertising and the Media
- Religion and American Politics
- Ethnic Politics in American History
- Tax and Fiscal Regimes in the United States: The Long Swings
- Defense and Foreign Policy
- Gender and Political Citizenship
- Immigration Policy: Restrictive and Expansive Traditions
- The Three Regimes of American Transportation Policy
- Communications and Technology Policy
- Environmental and Energy Policy
- Social Welfare Policy
- Health Policy
- The Long Shadow of Prohibition: U.S. Drug and Alcohol Policy in the Twentieth Century
- Federal Education Policy
- Civil Rights Policy
- Index
Abstract and Keywords
This essay traces political developments in the Civil War Era between 1861 and 1877. In doing so, it argues that unpredictability and uncertainty defined the politics of the Civil War and Reconstruction. Political parties and party labels were fluid and malleable in the midst of contemporary predictions of political realignment. The essay attempts to interpret the major events of the period through this lens of political instability. It outlines party politics during the Civil War in both the North and the South, discusses the Lincoln administration, and interprets the elections of 1862 and 1864. The essay then moves to the politics of Reconstruction, discussing the clash between Andrew Johnson and Congress, Radical Reconstruction, and the presidential elections of 1868 and 1872. The essay concludes with political developments in the South, the failure of Reconstruction, and the presidential election of 1876.
Keywords: Democratic Party, Republican Party, Union Party, Liberal Republican Party, Abraham Lincoln, Andrew Johnson, Civil War, Reconstruction
Erik B. Alexander earned his PhD in history at the University of Virginia. He is an associate Professor in the Department of Historical Studies at Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville, where he teaches courses on United States history, the Civil War and Reconstruction, and Abraham Lincoln.
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- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- Colonial Politics
- The Politics of the Constitution
- The Early Republic, 1789–1815
- Democrats and Whigs: The Second American Party System
- The Politics of Slavery and the Coming Civil War
- Politics of the Civil War and Reconstruction
- Politics in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era
- The Politics of Depression and War
- Party Politics and National Policy, Post–World War II
- The Rules of the Game
- Voting Rights
- Third Parties
- The Role of Money in Politics
- Political Advertising and the Media
- Religion and American Politics
- Ethnic Politics in American History
- Tax and Fiscal Regimes in the United States: The Long Swings
- Defense and Foreign Policy
- Gender and Political Citizenship
- Immigration Policy: Restrictive and Expansive Traditions
- The Three Regimes of American Transportation Policy
- Communications and Technology Policy
- Environmental and Energy Policy
- Social Welfare Policy
- Health Policy
- The Long Shadow of Prohibition: U.S. Drug and Alcohol Policy in the Twentieth Century
- Federal Education Policy
- Civil Rights Policy
- Index