Reconstruction policy after the Civil War, observes Mark Wahlgren
Summers, was shaped not simply by politics, principles, and
prejudices. Also at work were fears--often unreasonable fears of
renewed civil war and a widespread sense that four years of war had
thrown the normal constitutional process so dangerously out of
kilter that the republic itself remained in peril.
To understand Reconstruction, Summers contends, one must understand
that the purpose of the North's war was--first and foremost--to
save the Union with its republican institutions intact. During
Reconstruction there were always fears in the mix--that the Civil
War had settled nothing, that the Union was still in peril, and
that its enemies and the enemies of republican government were more
resilient and cunning than normal mortals. Many factors shaped the
reintegration of the former Confederate states and the North's
commitment to Reconstruction, Summers agrees, but the fears of war
reigniting, plots against liberty, and a president prepared to
father a coup d'etat ranked higher among them than historians have
recognized.
Both a dramatic narrative of the events of Reconstruction and a
groundbreaking new look at what drove these events,
A Dangerous
Stir is also a valuable look at the role of fear in the
politics of the time--and in politics in general.