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- Until Justice Be Done: America's First Civil Rights Movement, from the Revolution to Reconstruction by Kate Masur
Until Justice Be Done: America's First Civil Rights Movement, from the Revolution to Reconstruction by Kate Masur
Until Justice Be Done: America's First Civil Rights Movement, from the Revolution to Reconstruction by Kate Masur
The half-century before the Civil War was beset with conflict over equality as well as freedom. Beginning in 1803, many free states, claiming the authority to maintain domestic peace, enacted laws that discouraged settlement by free African Americans and restricted their rights to testify in court, move freely from place to place, work, vote, and attend public school. But over time, African American activists and their white allies, often facing mob violence, courageously built a movement to fight these racist laws. They countered the states' insistence on local control with the equal-rights promises they found in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. They were pastors, editors, lawyers, politicians, ship captains, and countless ordinary men and women, and they battled in the press, the courts, the state legislatures, and Congress, through petitioning, lobbying, party politics, and elections. Long stymied by hostile white majorities and unfavorable court decisions, the movement's vision became increasingly mainstream in the 1850s, particularly among supporters of the new Republican party. When Congress began rebuilding the nation after the Civil War, Republicans installed this vision of racial equality in the 1866 Civil Rights Act and the Fourteenth Amendment. These were the landmark achievements of the first civil rights movement.
Kate Masur's magisterial history delivers this path-breaking movement in vivid detail. Activists such as John Jones, a free Black tailor from North Carolina whose opposition to the Illinois "black laws" helped make the case for racial equality, demonstrate the indispensable role of African Americans in shaping the American ideal of equality before the law. Without enforcement, legal change proved to be not enough. But it was a necessary start, and the antebellum movement built the foundation for a racial justice tradition that remains vital to this day.
W.W. Norton, Hardcover, 1st Edition, 1st Printing, 2021
THIS IS A BRAND NEW BOOK.