German immigrants, race, and citizenship in the Civil War era

Author(s)

    • Efford, Alison Clark

Bibliographic Information

German immigrants, race, and citizenship in the Civil War era

Alison Clark Efford

(Publications of the German Historical Institute)

German Historical Institute , Cambridge University Press, 2013

  • : hardback

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 241-259

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This study of Civil War-era politics explores how German immigrants influenced the rise and fall of white commitment to African-American rights. Intertwining developments in Europe and North America, Alison Clark Efford describes how the presence of naturalized citizens affected the status of former slaves and identifies 1870 as a crucial turning point. That year, the Franco-Prussian War prompted German immigrants to re-evaluate the liberal nationalism underpinning African-American suffrage. Throughout the period, the newcomers' approach to race, ethnicity, gender and political economy shaped American citizenship law.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: naturalized citizens, transnational perspectives, and the arc of reconstruction
  • 1. The German language of American citizenship
  • 2. The 'freedom-loving German', 1854-60
  • 3. Black suffrage as a German cause in Missouri, 1865
  • 4. Principal rising, 1865-9
  • 5. Wendepunkt: the Franco-Prussian War, 1870-1
  • 6. The Liberal Republican transition, 1870-2
  • 7. Class, culture, and the decline of reconstruction, 1870-6
  • Epilogue: the Great Strike of 1877
  • Appendix: voting tables
  • Bibliography.

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