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Channel: David S. Reynolds | The New York Review of Books
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The Slave Owners’ Foreign Policy

A slave family, Savannah, Georgia, early 1860sThe US Civil War was once commonly interpreted as a conflict between a progressive North, industrially strong and committed to a powerful central...

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Fine Specimens

Feinberg-Whitman Collection/Library of CongressWalt Whitman and his rebel soldier friend Pete Doyle, Washington, D.C., 1865Americans in the second half of the nineteenth century had no sure prospect of...

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The Popery Panic

HathiTrust‘Mother Abbess Strangling the Infant’; lithograph from the anti-Catholic pamphlet Popery!: As It Was and as It Is, 1845In the early 1830s, the Hôtel-Dieu nunnery in Montreal was reportedly...

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I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do…

F. H. LiebA postcard of Brigham Young and twenty-one of his wives, 1903The Mormon leader Brigham Young had more than fifty wives. Many of them lived in adjacent homes, the Beehive House and the Lion...

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When Slaves Fled to Mexico

There has long been a fascination with the plight of enslaved Blacks who ran away from southern slaveholders in the decades before the Civil War. Powerful autobiographies by runaways such as Frederick...

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He Was No Moses

Library of Congress ‘This Little Boy would persist in handling Books Above His Capacity—and this was the Disastrous Result’; cartoon of Andrew Johnson by Thomas Nast, 1868 Who were America’s worst...

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In the Shadow of Slavery

In How the Word Is Passed, Clint Smith evokes the horrors of slavery, from the discovery of the New World through the Civil War, and the widespread victimization of blacks since then. It’s an...

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Throngs of Unseen People

When eleven-year-old Willie Lincoln died of typhoid in the White House in February 1862, his parents were devastated. For weeks President Lincoln held solitary grieving sessions every Thursday, the day...

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The Remarkable Grimkes

Nineteenth-century America teemed with social reformers like the fiery abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison, who called the Constitution “an agreement with Hell” because of its compromises on slavery....

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‘A Fiendish Fascination’

Antisemitism has appeared in many times and places—and, as David Anthony shows in his informative, unsettling Sensationalism and the Jew in Antebellum American Literature, in many genres. Anthony has...

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