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Andrew Johnson and the Negro

Contributor(s): Bowen, David Warren (Author)

ISBN: 9781572333376

Publisher: University of Tennessee Press

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Pub Date: January 5, 2005

Dewey: 973.0496073

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Price on Product

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.55" H x 8.56" L x 5.60" W ( 0.60 lbs) 256 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

"Bowen has probed the working of Andrew Johnson's mind. His analysis illuminates the character of East Tennessee's tailor president and the contradictions--as well as the consistency--of his policies toward slavery and toward blacks."-- LaWanda Cox, author of Lincoln and Black Freedom: A Study in Presidential Leadership

Andrew Johnson, who was thrust into the office of presidency by Lincoln's assassination, described himself as a "friend of the colored man." Twentieth century historians have assessed Johnson's racial attitudes differently.

In his revisionist study, David Bowen explores Johnson's racist bias more deeply than other historians to date, and maintains that racism was, in fact, a prime motivator of his policies as a public official. A slave owner who defended the institution until the Civil War, Jonson accepted emancipation. Once Johnson became president, however, his racial prejudice reasserted itself as a significant influence on his Reconstruction policies.

Bowen's study deftly analyzes the difficult personality of the seventeenth president and the political influences that molded him. This portrait of a man who, despite his many egalitarian notions, practiced racism, will intrigue historians and readers interested in Civil War and Reconstruction history alike.

Review Quotes: "A tightly focused exploration of Johnson's world view and how it influenced the crucial decisions he made in the public arena."--Paul A. Cimbala "Civil War History"

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