Welcoming Ruin: The Civil Rights Act of 1875

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Welcoming Ruin: The Civil Rights Act of 1875
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Alan Friedlander
By (author) Richard Allan Gerber
SeriesStudies in Critical Social Sciences
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:692
Dimensions(mm): Height 228,Width 152
ISBN/Barcode 9781642590746
ClassificationsDewey:342.73085
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Haymarket Books
Imprint Haymarket Books
Publication Date 9 April 2020
Publication Country United States

Description

The Civil Rights Act of 1875, enacted March 1, 1875, banned racial discrimination in public accommodations-hotels, public conveyances, and places of public amusement. In 1883 the US Supreme Court declared the law unconstitutional, ushering in generations of segregation until 1964. This first full-length study of the Act covers the years of debates in Congress and some forty state studies of the midterm elections of 1874 in which many supporting Republicans lost their seats. They returned to pass the Act in the short session of Congress. This book utilizes an army of primary sources from unpublished manuscripts, rare newspaper accounts, memoir materials, and official documents to demonstrate that Republicans were motivated primarily by an ideology that civil equality would produce social order in the defeated southern states.

Author Biography

Alan Friedlander, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1982), is Professor Emeritus in History at Southern Connecticut State University. He is the author of Processus Bernardi Delitiosi: The Trial of Fr. Bernard Delicieux (American Philosophical Society, 1996), and Hammer of the Inquisitors: Brother Bernard Delicieux and the Struggle Against the Inquisition in Fourteenth-Century France (Brill, 2000). Richard Allan Gerber, Ph.D., University of Michigan (1967), is Professor Emeritus in History at Southern Connecticut State University, and Adjunct Professor in History at Charter Oak State College. He is the author of The System: The American Constitution in Historical Perspective (Cengage Learning, 2009) and Revolution and Union: The American Dilemma 1763-1877 (Cengage Learning, 2008). He has received a Scholarship award from the Organization of American Historians and the Teaching Excellence award from Lehman College (CUNY).