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With malice toward some : treason and loyalty in the Civil War era / William A. Blair.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Littlefield history of the Civil War eraPublisher: Chapel Hill : The University of North Carolina Press, 2014Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781469614069
  • 1469614065
  • 9781469615462
  • 1469615460
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: With malice toward someDDC classification:
  • 973.7 23
LOC classification:
  • E458.8 .B83 2014eb
Other classification:
  • HIS036050 | HIS027110
  • K712.43
Online resources:
Contents:
1 Treason before the Civil War 13 -- 2 Treason Expressed or Implied 36 -- 3 A Three-Branch War, with an Atlantic-World Flavor 66 -- 4 The Provost Marshal Confusion 100 -- 5 The Domestic Is the Public: The Occupied South 128 -- 6 The Military in Politics, 1861-1863 160 -- 7 Free Elections or a Free Fight 191 -- 8 The Politics of Mercy after Appomattox 234 -- 9 Suffrage, Debt, and the Limits of Punishing the Rebels 268.
Summary: "Few issues created greater consensus among Civil War-era northerners than the belief that the secessionists had committed treason. But as William A. Blair shows in this engaging history, the way politicians, soldiers, and civilians dealt with disloyalty varied widely. Citizens often moved more swiftly than federal agents in punishing traitors in their midst, forcing the government to rethink legal practices and definitions. In reconciling the northern contempt for treachery with a demonstrable record of judicial leniency toward the South, Blair illuminates the other ways that northerners punished perceived traitors, including confiscating slaves, arresting newspaper editors for expressions of free speech, and limiting voting. Ultimately, punishment for treason extended well beyond wartime and into the framework of Reconstruction policies, including the construction of the Fourteenth Amendment. Establishing how treason was defined not just by the Lincoln administration, Congress, and the courts but also by the general public, Blair reveals the surprising implications for North and South alike."-- Provided by publisher
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"Few issues created greater consensus among Civil War-era northerners than the belief that the secessionists had committed treason. But as William A. Blair shows in this engaging history, the way politicians, soldiers, and civilians dealt with disloyalty varied widely. Citizens often moved more swiftly than federal agents in punishing traitors in their midst, forcing the government to rethink legal practices and definitions. In reconciling the northern contempt for treachery with a demonstrable record of judicial leniency toward the South, Blair illuminates the other ways that northerners punished perceived traitors, including confiscating slaves, arresting newspaper editors for expressions of free speech, and limiting voting. Ultimately, punishment for treason extended well beyond wartime and into the framework of Reconstruction policies, including the construction of the Fourteenth Amendment. Establishing how treason was defined not just by the Lincoln administration, Congress, and the courts but also by the general public, Blair reveals the surprising implications for North and South alike."-- Provided by publisher

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Print version record.

1 Treason before the Civil War 13 -- 2 Treason Expressed or Implied 36 -- 3 A Three-Branch War, with an Atlantic-World Flavor 66 -- 4 The Provost Marshal Confusion 100 -- 5 The Domestic Is the Public: The Occupied South 128 -- 6 The Military in Politics, 1861-1863 160 -- 7 Free Elections or a Free Fight 191 -- 8 The Politics of Mercy after Appomattox 234 -- 9 Suffrage, Debt, and the Limits of Punishing the Rebels 268.

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