Long before the Montgomery bus boycott ushered in the modern civil
rights movement, black and white southerners struggled to forge
interracial democracy in America. This innovative book examines the
most successful interracial coalition in the nineteenth-century
South, Virginia's Readjuster Party, and uncovers a surprising
degree of fluidity in postemancipation southern politics.
Melding social, cultural, and political history, Jane Dailey
chronicles the Readjusters' efforts to foster political cooperation
across the color line. She demonstrates that the power of racial
rhetoric, and the divisiveness of racial politics, derived from the
everyday experiences of individual Virginians--from their local
encounters on the sidewalk, before the magistrate's bench, in the
schoolroom. In the process, she reveals the power of black and
white southerners to both create and resist new systems of racial
discrimination. The story of the Readjusters shows how hard white
southerners had to work to establish racial domination after
emancipation, and how passionately black southerners fought each
and every infringement of their rights as Americans.